sadie
Stranger Things star to make her West End debut
Stranger Things actress Sadie Sink will make her West End debut in a new production of Romeo & Juliet. British actor Noah Jupe, best known for his role in horror series A Quiet Place, will play the Romeo to her Juliet. They will portray the star-crossed lovers on stage at the Harold Pinter Theatre in London from March 2026, as first reported by US outlet Deadline. Award-winning writer and director Robert Icke, who has previously adapted George Orwell's 1984 and Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, will direct the project. US actress Sadie, 23, rose to fame after joining the cast of Stranger Things in series two as as Max Mayfield.
- South America (0.15)
- North America > Central America (0.15)
- Europe > United Kingdom > Scotland (0.07)
- (16 more...)
- Media > Film (1.00)
- Leisure & Entertainment (1.00)
'Video games open us to the whole spectrum of human emotions': novelist Gabrielle Zevin on Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
Games have always been a part of writer Gabrielle Zevin's life. Her first experience, she recalls, was playing Pac-Man at the Honolulu hotel where her grandmother ran a jewellery store. "I was about three years old at the time and I remember thinking, wouldn't it just be perfect if I wasn't limited to a single quarter … if I could just keep playing this game for ever and ever?" Now 44, the veteran author has written her first novel about games. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is the story of two programmers, Sam and Sadie, who set up a studio in the mid-1990s and over the course of a decade, make interesting games while their lives and relationships entwine in complex, often heartbreaking ways.
Splunk for Maintaining a State of Good Repair (Part 1) – The Hot Tub Nightmare!
Imagine you are living in a townhome complex where expenses like water, landscaping and parking lots are managed by the Homeowners Association (HOA). All is well in the world until one day, the HOA instructs you to get rid of your hot tub because they have found that the meter you share with your neighbor is consuming significantly more water than any other townhome in the complex and they suspect because you have a hot tub, it must be your fault! If this sounds a little too specific to be a consequence (or a particularly nasty case of hot tub jealousy), that is because this nightmarish situation was exactly what my friend Sadie faced in 2017. Sadie fought the good fight and persevered to where she ultimately kept her hot tub after proving her neighbor had not one, but TWO leaking toilets that had been gradually getting worse and worse (for YEARS). Upon hearing of this -- as an unabashed data nerd -- I was of course thinking, "how could data from Sadie's meter have been used to detect and prevent this!?"
How the tech industry wrote women out of history
Susie and her computer friend Sadie appeared in 1960s adverts to promote a now defunct UK computer company, accompanied by a young, attractive, nameless woman. Feminised adverts like these were a common ploy in Britain at the time, when male managers, uninitiated in the complexities of this new technology, viewed the machines as intimidating and opaque. "Computers were expensive and using women to advertise them gave the appearance to managers that jobs involving computers are easy and can be done with a cheap labour force," explains technology historian Marie Hicks. They might have been on a typist's salary, but women like the one who appears alongside Susie and Sadie were not typists – they were skilled computer programmers, minus the prestige or pay the modern equivalent might command. As Hicks' book Programmed Inequality illustrates, women were the largest trained technical workforce of the computing industry during the second world war and through to the mid-sixties.
- Europe > United Kingdom (0.26)
- North America > United States > California (0.05)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government (0.30)
How the tech industry wrote women out of history
That's how the duo are billed when they appear in 1960s adverts to promote a now defunct UK computer company. Using young, attractive women to advertise computers was a common ploy in Britain at the time, when male managers, uninitiated in the complexities of this new technology, viewed the machines as intimidating and opaque. "Computers were expensive and using women to advertise them gave the appearance to managers that jobs involving computers are easy and can be done with a cheap labour force," explains technology historian Marie Hicks. They might have been on a typist's salary, but women like Sadie were not typists – they were skilled computer programmers, minus the prestige or pay the modern equivalent might command. As Hicks' book Programmed Inequality illustrates, women were the largest trained technical workforce of the computing industry during the second world war and through to the mid-sixties.
- Europe > United Kingdom (0.26)
- North America > United States > California (0.05)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government (0.30)