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Kae Tempest on creativity and his gender transition: ‘I’m just glad to be alive’ | Kae Tempest
Kae Tempest sidles into a pub near his house on a weekday afternoon and orders a pint of mineral water. At his side is Murphy, an enormous, 14-year-old alaskan malamute dog with startling blue eyes who settles down on the floor next to his master and goes to sleep. “He’s all right,” Tempest says. “He’s very friendly. He won’t even put his nose up.” The rapper, performance poet, playwright and novelist has a ginger beard and is wearing Timberland boots, baggy jeans and a black hoodie over a blue-and-white striped collared shirt. His hair is hidden by a cap. Years ago, his dramatic russet hair was long, but he cropped it when he dropped the “T” from his first name and came out as nonbinary, a watershed moment in his gender transition. Now testosterone has deepened his voice and his journey has reached its final stage – from they/them to he/him.
As Tempest has been famous since his late 20s, showered with accolades ranging from Mercury nominations for two of his albums (including his debut, Let Them Eat Chaos) to becoming the youngest poet ever to receive the Ted Hughes award for the epic performance poem Brand New Ancients, this odyssey has taken place in public. On his song I Stand on the Line, from his last album Self Titled, Tempest vividly describes the anxiety of having to deal with the hostility of some people’s reactions to his “second puberty” (“Out in the limelight like, please, nobody look at me / I’m looking for myself, all I’m seeing is the bitterness / Coming my way when I’m using the facilities”). So is it a heavy burden to be such a visible trans person? “It’s just my life,” Tempest replies, his voice a soft south London growl, much quieter than the thrilling, declamatory style of his performances. “I’m just glad to be alive. How beautiful,” he adds. “Because you felt like you might not be at some point.”
Tempest’s second novel, Having Spent Life Seeking, is full of characters who are also living precariously on the edge. It tells the story of Rothko, who has returned to Edgecliff, their seaside hometown, having spent 15 years in prison. Rothko’s mother Meg (who gave them their nickname because as a child they used to go as “red as a Rothko”) is a chaotic alcoholic and user of hard drugs; their father, Ezra, is unable to contain the anger and pain within his household. Rothko finds some solace in a teenage love affair with schoolmate Dionne, but it’s complicated by the pair’s society-induced shame about their sexualities and Rothko’s gender identity.
Like Tempest, Rothko is on a voyage of self-discovery, and their pronouns change over the course of the story: they/them for the bulk of the narrative; she/her when being misgendered. “When their pronouns switch in someone else’s imagination or address of them, it’s intentionally a bit of a misstep, you know?” Tempest says. “Hopefully you get that feeling of missing a step on the stairs, which is how it feels.” Rothko’s pronouns give rise to grammatically unconventional sentences like: “It was their first heartbreak. And they’d done it to themself.” “That’s just how it feels to me,” Tempest says. “It doesn’t feel like ‘themselves’.” He is proud of a euphoric moment towards the end of the novel when Rothko says “I’m a man” and is thereafter referred to as he/him, which Tempest describes as “the power of a new pronoun … I would hope that people that have no experience of anything remotely like this will feel the relief and release for that character.”
As readers of his 2020 book-length essay On Connection will know, Tempest is a fervent believer in the power of art and literature to make us experience the inner lives of people with whom we might think we have nothing in common – and also, he tells me, “to make us see more clearly our own internal experience”. His touchstones when writing Having Spent Life Seeking included Patrick Hamilton’s Hangover Square (“You don’t spend much time with the characters, but they walk on and off and you know so much about them”) and Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues, a classic but frustratingly hard-to-find queer bildungsroman about a gender nonconforming lesbian. “When I first encountered that text it was probably the first step of my journey towards accepting myself as I really was.”
Having Spent Life Seeking will surely take its place alongside it in the trans canon, but Tempest wants to reach a wider audience too. “For sure it’s for us,” he says, meaning the trans community, adding that the book’s early trans and genderqueer readers have reacted with “lots of crying because of the recognition, the feeling that ‘I’ve never seen myself like that’”. But, he adds, “I hope that there is something in Rothko that can resonate far beyond their gender in the same way that you can read For Whom the Bell Tolls and it doesn’t matter that the characters are male or female.”
Having Spent Life Seeking comes a full decade after Tempest’s first novel, The Bricks That Built the Houses, which sold well and got decent reviews, although Alex Clark in the Guardian noted an unevenness of tone, saying: “When Tempest’s angst-ridden lyricism is let off the leash, the effect is thrilling … But when that poetry is absent the dreary business of narrative comes to grief.” Today, Tempest says that writing novels is tough as they are big and difficult to approach (“It took writing the first one to work out what the fuck to do”). Though in all his work – which now also encompasses four plays, five albums and six volumes of poetry, all by the age of 40 – Tempest says that he usually learns on the job.
He wrote a second novel, but his then publisher turned it down, because the book, Tempest explains, “was pretty dark. It was quite a heavy thing.” Other forms of work started to claim his time, including Paradise, an adaptation of Sophocles’s Philoctetes directed by Ian Rickson, which was the first play the National Theatre staged on reopening after Covid. Tempest also met his partner there; she is the subject of Sunshine on Catford, a wonderfully ecstatic love song on Self Titled.
Self Titled’s lyrics discuss Tempest’s transition in detail; he and it were the subject of a 2023 episode of the BBC’s arts documentary Arena, which culminates in a tender scene in which he and his partner are filmed in the bath after Tempest had top surgery. As a child, he says, he felt free to be himself, but as he raps on Breathe: “I used to be a boy when I was young / Hit puberty then I had to be a girl.” Prodigious writing and rapping offered a way to alleviate the misery of his gender dysphoria, but by the age of 35 he was suffering such severe panic attacks that he could barely get on stage, which was the catalyst for him to start the transitioning process.
Having Spent Life Seeking came out of this period of tumult. Tempest says that writing it took about three years, first at a friend’s house (Tempest realised later that there was a Rothko poster in the room where he was staying) and later in two artists’ residencies in Italy and Spain. He submitted the first draft in November 2023, during the second week of a European tour. One version of the book was twice as long as the final novel, which comes in at 338 pages – he cut an entire section dedicated to a character who no longer appears. “I put everything into it – everything,” Tempest says. “And it gave everything to me. It kept me going through some really heavy stuff. I just love it. I’m so proud of it. I really can’t wait for people to meet these characters.”
Tempest regards his own creativity as a life force, something that has given him purpose, even when everything else seemed to be falling apart. “I have this relationship of wonder and gratitude for what mysterious power it is to make music, to write poems, to write lyrics,” he says. “No matter what I was going through as a person, as an artist I had a way to exist in the world that made sense to me.” He adds: “I don’t process trauma through what I make. But the fact is that everything is filtered through this lens. How beautiful to have that. So many people I know don’t have the capacity to express or reflect on life through their creativity.” He mentions Bessel van der Kolk’s famous book The Body Keeps the Score, which discusses the case of a five-year-old who witnessed the destruction in New York on 9/11, and later drew a picture of a trampoline next to the Twin Towers. “So that kid was not traumatised because they used their creative imagination to give these people a way out.”
Tempest gives a great deal of himself in his work, which may be why he has often been a reluctant interviewee – he would rather share intimate experiences on his own terms. In conversation, he does his best to avoid specifics, turning questions about them into discussions of his work. I ask whether the lyrics of Bless the Bold Future, another song on Self Titled, mean that he doesn’t want to have children, and he tells me that I’ve misinterpreted it. “It’s an address to the spirit world asking an unborn baby to stay where it is because it’s so fucking grim here,” he says. “But that song says, if you want to be here, fine. I will wash myself in the waters and make myself pure for you.” He’s paraphrasing a verse from the song which concludes: “I will do what a human is born to do / Lay my life down / To make sure home is warm for you.”
There’s also drug use, which is ubiquitous in Having Spent Life Seeking, and also in Tempest’s lyrics – one of his old songs is called Ketamine for Breakfast, while Breathe describes him helplessly watching someone get stabbed while he’s high at a rave. In On Connection, he writes that he was a drug and alcohol user from the age of 12 or 13 “to cope with a difficult brain, problems at home and gender dysphoria ”. He reveals that he was a drug dealer and had a period “sleeping in churchyards with my best mate and his heroin addiction”.
With lived experiences like these, it’s not surprising that Having Spent Life Seeking can be harrowing. “I’m not making any judgment,” Tempest says, of his stories of abuse and addiction. “Euphoric abandonment when you have something to escape is profound. But Rothko gets to a place where they want to arrive rather than escape, which is profound in a different way.” Towards the end of a book in which he has both overdosed on painkillers stolen from a cancer sufferer and been introduced to crack in horrific circumstances, Rothko dances happily sober at a queer rave.
Tempest does his best to fathom every aspect of his characters’ lives. His novel’s sex scenes are pivotal and detailed: I’d never read anything quite like the sequence which follows the teenage Rothko and Dionne from a sex shop, where they buy the necessary toys, into bed. “How wonderful,” Tempest replies. Was it important for him to write explicitly about trans masc/cis female intercourse? “Fucking hell, I wouldn’t describe it like that,” he splutters. “Sexuality is a life force. It’s very important. It’s not meant to be explicit. Writing about sex can be kind of awkward, but I hope that it doesn’t jar you out of the character. I remember talking to Ian Rickson when I was working on Paradise and he said that in order for an audience to feel pathos, there have to be five worlds activated in the character: the wider world of the gods, the heart world of the person, the gut world of my story, my vengeance, my pain, and there has to be love, or eros. There has to be romance, and that’s how we can recognise that a character is a full person. It’s an important part of knowing someone and knowing ourselves.”
It all comes back to that sense of connection, achieved through acts of the imagination. Tempest is eloquent and compelling on the subject of what books have done for him, and certain that his words can do the same things for others. “When I’ve been most lost, I’ve felt myself realigned by encounters with novels,” he says. “It’s been so profound for me what books have done to me in my life, this electric sense of reconnection that I’ve encountered when I’ve been at my most disconnected.
“So I feel, that because I’ve received so much from literature and from music, I stand on this line. And on this line, going back, are all the writers whose works have reached me and all the poets whose words have found me. I put myself on that line and I feel them charging up through my back. And because I can feel that charge, I can transmit it. Because I’ve received it, I can give it. So when I start to feel any doubt or anxiety or fear or overwhelm about any aspect of my creative life, I put myself on that line and visualise the line continuing, and I know that someone will receive this because I have – and I’m giving in the spirit that I have received. In the humblest spirit, that’s what I feel.” And even Murphy pricks up his ears.
UK News
Backlash against ‘short-termist’ UK plans to weaken EV sales targets | Electric, hybrid and low-emission cars
The UK government’s plans to further weaken electric car targets have provoked a furious backlash from the charging industry and the electric car brand Polestar, which would lose out from the changes.
The Labour government is expected to dilute rules known as the zero emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate. Government sources have said it will reduce a target for pure electric cars from 80% of all sales by 2030 to 50%.
The Labour government had already weakened the mandate last year by introducing loopholes – known as “flexibilities” – that allow the sale of more plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), which combine an engine with a small battery.
The slower shift to electric cars would be a huge blow in particular to the charging industry, which is investing on the basis of future demand.
Greg Jackson, the chief executive of Octopus Energy, said the government had chosen “short-termist incumbent lobbying instead of the long-term future of industry”. As well as being the UK’s largest retail energy provider, Octopus is also a large player in electric vehicle leasing and charging.
“The fossil fuel market is shrinking globally and our best hope is to speed up development of electric vehicles, not go the other way,” Jackson said. “This hesitation undermines the credibility of government commitments which were supposed to give certainty to investors.”
Vicky Read, the chief executive of the industry lobby group ChargeUK, said weakening the target was an “astonishing” proposal which could cost tens of thousands of jobs in the longer term.
“The charging sector has ploughed billions into putting chargers in the ground on the basis of this policy, ahead of profitability,” Read said. “This government said it would not flip-flop like the previous did. To move the goalposts again would be exactly that – an act of self-harm denying the country a forward facing, economically prosperous industry leaving us behind the rest of the world.”
The proposal would probably mean millions more cars with petrol engines on British roads and significantly higher carbon emissions. Plug-in hybrids produce about 135g of carbon dioxide per kilometre driven on average, compared with about 166g from petrol cars, according to T&E, a thinktank monitoring transport and environmental issues. Electric cars produce zero carbon directly and have much lower associated emissions over their lifetime.
The government’s decision followed heavy lobbying by car manufacturers as well as the Unite union, which represents many workers in British automotive factories. Unite’s general secretary, Sharon Graham, described the proposed changes as “a huge victory” and said it would “protect the jobs of UK automotive workers”.
However, Anna Krajinska, the UK director at T&E, argued that allowing more plug-in hybrid sales would ultimately harm the UK industry by leaving the door open to Chinese manufacturers. China’s Chery, owner of brands including Omoda and Jaecoo, and BYD, the world’s biggest electric carmaker, have sold about 30,000 cars each in the UK this year, many of them PHEVs.
“Slowing down targets and increasing hybrid sales will destroy the UK’s automotive sector,” Krajinska said. “Only a rapid transition to battery electrics can secure the future of UK manufacturing. For that to happen targets have to remain unchanged and [the business secretary] Peter Kyle needs to deliver a coherent and robust industrial policy to transition the sector and jobs.”
A weaker ZEV mandate would also represent a blow to manufacturers focusing on electric cars. Matt Galvin, the UK managing director of the Chinese-owned electric brand Polestar, said: “Weakening these targets allows car manufacturers to decelerate development of EVs at a time when they should be doing exactly the opposite and accelerating their investment and product offering.”
UK News
Arrest over push of woman into bus's path in 2017
A 44-year-old man is in custody over the incident where a woman appeared to be shoved into the path of a bus.
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World Cup 2026: Fifa urged to remove official over hand gesture; teams hit back at Ceferin; Iran arrive in US – live | World Cup 2026
Key events
More now on the hand gesture story mentioned earlier. Fifa’s discrimination monitor at the World Cup has called for a video assistant referee to be removed for appearing to make a hand gesture resembling a white supremacist sign.
“Advice from our experts is that the gesture used clearly resembles an upside down ‘OK’ hand symbol used as a ‘white power’ symbol in global far-right circles,” the Fare network, a longtime partner of Fifa and Uefa, the European football governing body, to monitor racist and discriminatory chants, flags and symbols at international games, said in a statement. “Clearly this official should have no further role to play in this World Cup,” Fare said in a statement, describing the gesture as “neo-Nazi.”
Kick-off times are more friendly for the UK viewer today. Spain v Cape Verdi at 5pm and Belgium v Egypt at 8pm. But we need to think globally so that’s 3pm for Cape Verdi viewers cheering on their team while in Egypt it’ll be 10pm for those tuning in to see if Mo Salah can inspire his team to victory over the Belgians.
The biggest test for the UK viewer today is Iran v New Zealand at 2am BST. In Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch that’ll be 1pm while in Tehran, Mashhad and Karaj it’s a less palatable 4.30am.
Thanks Sarah. As for World Cup songs, this one from the German 1990 squad always sticks in my mind. While England took the genre to a new level with New Order and John Barnes’ rap, the Germans very much went down the traditional route. A singer that looks like a cross between Chris de Burgh and Thomas Muller, Karl-Heinz Riedle on maracas, one or two playing air saxophone. Pleasingly dreadful.
I am off to grab some food and so I leave you in the hands of Dave Tindall who will take you through the next few hours of news. I’ll be back later on.
From requests of your favourite football songs to another on if you live in a World Cup host city. We want to hear from you if you have football teams in town from the atmosphere to how it is affecting business. Use the form on this page to get in touch:
We have another shout for the best/worst football song and I can’t decide which side of the forward slash this one belongs on. Graeme Neill said:
Timely given yesterday evening’s match. Japan’s Cornelius and his utterly bonkers Ball in Kick Off is worth a listen:
France will kick-off their tournament against Senegal on Tuesday and to say they have attacking quality is an understatement. The team boasts players like the captain, Kylian Mbappé, Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembélé, Michael Olise and Cherki but they all have a role to play, according to Adrien Rabiot. Read more:

Jacob Steinberg
The cat is well truly out of the bag. Nobody expected the conversation to be quite so revealing when Jude Bellingham and Morgan Rogers sat on the Lions’ Den sofa last week. Content controlled by the Football Association was an unlikely place for Bellingham to drop a few truth bombs, but the England midfielder was not minded to hold back when it was time to discuss his experience at Euro 2024.
“It didn’t feel like there was any kind of hierarchy,” the 22-year-old said. “I think at the Euros we got some things a little bit wrong off the pitch. I don’t feel like the group connected as well as it could have – for a number of reasons.”
Read more:
Fifa urged to remove official over hand gesture
Fifa have been urged to remove a video review official who appeared to make a white supremacy hand gesture during Germany’s 7-1 win over Curaçao.
The governing body’s discrimination monitor at the World Cup called for Shaun Evans from Australia to be removed from the tournament.
The gesture was also spotted by several fans who posted about it on social media.
“Advice from our experts is that the gesture used clearly resembles an upside down ‘OK’ hand symbol used as a ‘white power’ symbol in global far-right circles,” the Fare network said.
Fifa are yet to comment on the situation.
There have been some sights at the World Cup but Scotland fans taking over Fenway Park is one that has been one of the most surreal. The Boston Red Sox lost 6-4 to the Texas Rangers but Scotland fans stayed long after the game was over singing “super John McGinn” and during the match there was a rendition of “yes sir, I can boogie”.
Anil Patel has emailed:
This absolute banger wasn’t attached to any particular team but is one of the best themes out there.
This is a great shout and a fun fact for you about it, it was initially written to be a baseball anthem. Some baseball news coming your way soon…
If anyone is unsure of the song I referenced, here it is:
Football songs can be iconic or occasionally cringey, that one with Dizzee Rascal and James Cordon comes to mind for the latter for me. What are your best/worst anthems for a major tournament? Get in touch and let me know.
England may have banished some penalty shootout demons in the last few major tournaments but the question of who would step up to take one is one that will always be asked. One such player who said he would take on is Eberechi Eze, despite missing one in the Champions League final. Have a read of what he said:
There will be many questions raised at this World Cup. Who will win the trophy? Who will claim the Golden Boot? What will the next standout moment be? But there is another question that has been answered in the following piece: Where have the WAGs gone?

Matt Hughes
Fox will not face any punishment from Fifa for breaking the governing body’s advertising rules during the opening game of the World Cup between Mexico and South Africa last week.
The US broadcaster broke Fifa’s strict guidelines for showing commercials during hydration breaks on the first occasion they were in operation by returning to the live action 10 seconds after play had resumed during the second half at Mexico City Stadium.
Fifa’s tournament regulations, which were given to all rights holders two months ago, state that while broadcasters can show ads during hydration breaks they must return to the match 30 seconds before play resumes.
Read more:
Sometimes a team needs a player to have some standout performances to jump start a tournament and Jordan Henderson believes that player for England will be Jude Bellingham. Henderson said:
I’m sure he will have a big impact for us in this tournament. I can remember five years ago I gave him his first cap, it was away at Middlesbrough. How much he’s grown, as a player and as a person since then, is incredible really. I had a good idea when I first saw him playing and training, and the way he was.
I think everybody forgets how young he is. We do rondos and it’s the youngest in, and there’s people that I think should be going in before him, but he’s always one of the first in the middle to go in. It just reminds us how young he is. I honestly couldn’t speak highly enough of him.
Read more:
The travel at this tournament has grabbed more than a few headlines so far and there is another one pertaining to Australia. The Socceroos beat Turkey 2-0 in their opening game with their second against one of the co-hosts, the US, on Friday. Their focus will be on that game but recovery is also high on their list. Read more here:
There have already been so many historic moments at this tournament, including Scotland’s first World Cup win in 36 years. Mo Salah is hoping to replicate the moment and end Egypt’s long wait of 92 years for a victory at the tournament. The team have their first game against Belgium today to try and make history:
Spain, who start their campaign today against Cabo Verde, are among the favourites to win the World Cup after their European Championship success in 2024. Here’s a piece on how the team are embracing the tag and how they are using one trophy-winning tournament to potentially lift another:
Uruguay will take on Saudia Arabia later today but their travel was delayed amid challenges across the tournament.
The team’s initial flight from Mexico was cancelled with their replacment delayed. The Uruguay captain, José María Giménez, described the situation as “difficult”.
Read more:
There are more games to be played today with another four in store. The details for those kick-off times and match-ups are below but do get in touch to let me know what your World Cup routine is. Are you having to get up early to watch the games? Or are you in a time zone where you can get home from work and watch back-to-back football until it’s time for bed? Email me and let me know, here are today’s fixtures:
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Spain v Cabo Verde (5pm BST, 12pm ET, 9am PT)
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Belgium v Egypt (8pm BST, 3pm ET, 12pm PT)
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Saudi Arabia v Uruguay (11pm BST, 6pm ET, 3pm PT)
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Iran v New Zealand (2am BST, 9pm ET, 6pm PT)
So what happened in the matches yesterday? Four took place with the biggest win coming in Germany’s 7-1 dismantling of Curaçao. The island nation will be disappointed with the result but they also made history as they scored their first-ever World Cup goal. That came from Livano Comenencia, who plays his club football for Zürich. Have a read of that report and others for all the latest action on pitch:
Čeferin criticised for ‘uninteresting’ comment
UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin was criticised by multiple nations from Asia, Africa and the Caribbean after reportedly saying the expanded World Cup creates “uninteresting” matches.
According to Zurnal 24, the boss said at a conference last Monday: “We have a huge number of matches that are completely uninteresting.”
The associations of Cape Verde, Congo, Curaçao, Haiti, Jordan and Uzbekistan released a joint statement, which was in solidarity with the federations of Algeria, Egypt, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Morocco, Senegal, South Africa and Tunisia.
It said: “Football does not belong to a select group of nations. Its strength comes from its universality,” the statement said. “For many countries, participation in the FIFA World Cup is not only a sporting achievement. It is a moment that inspires a generation, accelerates football development and creates memories that last a lifetime.”

Ben Fisher
The Iran striker Mehdi Taremi has said the controversy and disruption surrounding their involvement at the World Cup undermines Fifa’s message of peace and conceded he felt the tension before arriving in Los Angeles on the eve of their opener, hours before a peace deal was announced. For the first time since the competition’s inception, a host nation has received a country with which it is at war.
On Sunday Iran flew to LA from Tijuana, Mexico, where they were relocated amid an ongoing row over visas, but are expected to face opposition from Iranians, many of whom believe the national team do not represent the country. Iran has been beset by problems in the buildup to the tournament, with several officials denied entry to the US.
Preamble
Hello and welcome to today’s World Cup news blog where we bring you the latest updates from the global event being hosted across the US, Canada and Mexico.
Any breaking news, team updates or reflections on what has happened so far will be all here for you to feast on, no matter what you are doing with your Monday.
Please do get in touch too, we always like to hear from readers. Potentially on the best underdog story at the World Cup or any quirky predictions you may have for the tournament.
Amongst several stories surrounding the competition today is Iran’s arrival in the US. The team landed on Sunday before they take on New Zealand.
More details on that story will be with you shortly, as well as the reports from the games that took place yesterday to catch up on all the latest action.
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