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Barcelona v Real Madrid: La Liga title on the line in clásico – live | La Liga
Key events
Tim Steppard gets in touch: “Never thought beloved and Bayern would ever be in the same sentence. Rather than FC Hollywood Real surely are appropriately more like the Windsors.”
As it stands at half-time:
Half-time: Barcelona 2-0 Real Madrid
As it stands. Barca are heading to a second successive title. Two fine goals have them on course, and though Madrid have not fallen apart – yet – it’s an awful long way back for a team struggling for coherency.
45+1 min: Joao Cancelo takes on Trent, who does his defensive job well. Madrid are yet to chuck in the towel just yet.
45 min: Pedri chants ringing out, as he takes control in midfield. Three minutes have been added on.
43 min: Trent is brought down by Dani Olmo. Madrid go on the attack, and Camavinga’s shot is blocked. A quick counter almost sends away Fermin Lopez. He’s the out-ball, with Trent being picked as a possible weakness.
42 min: Another free-kick from Rashford but this time it from a wider angle and Courtois punches it out with some ease.
40 min: Colin Livingstone gets in touch: “Well, first time Tchouameni hasn’t hit the target this week.”
Justin Kavanagh: “Just joining the game… 2-0 already? I would have thought Real Madrid would have more fight in them. They’re certainly less than a club these days.”
Camavinga gets the first booking, smashing downwards on Dani Olmo.
39 min: From the corner, Olmo slices wide. Madrid’s defence is rather less than secure.
38 min: Ooof, Rashford zips clear, afterburners on, from his own half, and forces a fine save from Courtois, after a fine ball from Eric Garcia. Great football all round.
37 min: Matt Dony gets in touch: “What a curious player Rashford is. There was a three or four month spell after the last World Cup when I genuinely think he was the best player in the world. (I say that as someone with a disdain for both Man United and England.) He hit an almighty, frustrating purple patch. But he’s had equally deep nadirs. And, let’s face it, he was monumentally badly managed at United. He’s generally flourished at Barcelona without pulling up trees, and that’s not exactly a low-profile gig. But he’s still hardly a shoo-in for this summer’s World Cup. At his best, he sort of reminds of of peak Sadio Mane. And that’s as high praise as I can imagine.”
36 min: Gonzalo and Martin clatter into each other. It’s getting tetchy out there, a few challenges coming in.
34 min: Alasdair Morrison gets in touch: “Is it just me or is Tino Livramento the spit of Pau Cubarsi? Genuine double take and Glendenning style “when did he move there?” moment.
“On a side note, always been a fan of your musical asides on the pod, not sure if you’re an electronic music fan, looking forward to the new Boards of Canada? If not, what are you listening to?”
I have heard the first song from the new one, looking forward to the whole album. I have everything they released, barring some of the early bootlegged stuff. Have lots of electronic stuff, off to see Kraftwerk and Autechre this year, not for the first time.
33 min: Tchouameni smashes wide, having been laid up by Vinicius.
32 min: Gavi, for such a small player, likes a tactical foul or two. This time, Camavinga is the recipient.
30 min: Barcelona are turning on the style, though this time Dani Olmo, a player of such movement and rare grace, is offside this time.
29 min: Charles Antaki gets in touch: “Thought for the day. If you’re going to win the league, you might as well do it playing fast, confident, entertaining football. And now, back to the London Stadium.”
28 min: Rebekah Voss gets in touch: “Mr. Brewin, my beloved FC Bayern has earned itself the moniker of “FC Hollywood” due to its tendency to start drama where there is none. Not undeserved, I must say; what went down with Nagelsmann and Tuchel was a comedy of errors that I never thought I would see again. I am seeing it now with the mighty Madrid. It makes me wonder if Real Madrid deserves the title of “FC Hollywood”more than Bayern.”
27 min: Colum Fordham gets in touch: “Rashford couldn’t have chosen a better moment to cement his place in the Barca team and convince Tuchel of his worth. What a stunning free kick from a position far more favourable to a left-footed player. That should set this El Clasico ablaze.”
26 min: Madrid have come back into it. Barcelona will always offer up chances. Their fans are already doing the olé stuff when their team starts passing the ball around.
24 min: A second look at that Gonzalo miss reveals he failed to make a proper connection.
23 min: Gonzalo steals between Martin and Cubarsi but hits the side-netting. That’s the closest yet for Madrid. Then Bellingham gets away and goes close to setting up Vinicius.
21 min: The party has already started in the Camp Nou. Madrid players have to deal with this barrage of noise. They’ve been well off it.
19 min: Barcelona’s switching of positions took Madrid apart there, and Lamine Yamal in the stands enjoyed that. Glum faces for Jude and Trent. This could get ugly, uglier than the scenes inside the dressing room?
Goal! Barcelona 2-0 Real Madrid (Ferran Torres, 18)
Cubarsi sets up a patient, glorious move, with Olmo’s flick sent to Ferran, and the finish is vicious.
16 min: Brahim Diaz is limping one minute, chasing a Gonzalo pass the next. He takes a whack from a Barca defender but is OK to keep playing.
15 min: Bellingham is fouled, and tells the referee that he’s been fouled twice now. This time it was Dani Olmo rather than Gavi.
14 min: Another piece of Brahim ball-carrying, and Trent bombs on, and that means Camavinga has to run back and cover.
13 min: Another “Trent” corner, knocked behind. Tchouameni heads the third in the sequence over the bar.
11 min: Brahim Diaz has been lively, and he forces a corner that “Trent” will take, which is flicked behind. Tchouameni has taken his shirt off for some reason.
10 min: Whatever happens to Rashford, and his future is uncertain, scoring a goal in a clasico is a special moment to take away.
Goal! Barcelona 1-0 Real Madrid (Rashford, 9)
A short run-up, and Rashford smashes in, and Courtois has no answer. What a goal!
8 min: Rudiger crops down Ferran. Barca have a free-kick on the very edge of the box.
6 min: Bellingham turns and is tripped by Gavi; that was a nasty one. Rashford gallops on and Asencio, who starts the game because of an injury to Dean Huijsen, comes across to clear.
4 min: Joao Cancelo sweeps the ball crossfield, it’s a slow pace so far, with injections of pace. Fermin Lopez sets off, past Trent Alexander-Arnold and his pass to Rashford is only just intercepted.
3 min: Long run, unchallenged, by Brahim, and he passes to Vinicius who shoots on goal but it’s not a clean hit.
Away we go on in the Clasico
1 min: Jeers great Madrid as they pass the ball around. Ferran Torres pushes up, and Gavi robs Brahim Diaz.
Vini Jr and Pedri shake hands at the toss of the coin ahead of a minute’s silence for Hansi Flick’s father, less a minute’s silence than a solemn moment of violin music.
Quite the scene as the two teams enter, a mosaic greeting them. Three Englishmen in the starting lineups, a first.
The teams are in the tunnel. Some warmth between the two sets of players before they head out. They won’t be able to show that once that kicks off.
Sad news: Hansi Flick’s father passed away in the small hours but the Barcelona coach is present in Camp Nou.
Pictures emerging of a fan in the stand with a Jose Mourinho scarf. A plant by the great man?
This Clasico win in October put Madrid five points clear.
The trophy will be presented to Barcelona tonight if they manage to put Real Madrid away.
Frenkie de Jong is on the Barcelona bench, having spoken to the Guardian last weekend.
De Jong faced regular rumours about a potential exit, with one leak claiming to detail his salary, though he says the figures were inaccurate. “The press can really influence how people see you; that’s something I especially noticed during that period. Back then, it was all about my contract, with all sorts of figures about what I was supposedly earning, while that was not true. But then you notice they [the outside world] see you differently from that point; they judge you differently … It starts to get into people’s heads.”
Last time out for both teams.
Reports from Barcelona and some social media footage of Real Madrid’s bus being attacked, and a window smashed.
The teams
Barcelona (4-2-3-1): J. Garcia; E. Garcia, Cubarsi, Gerard Martin, Cancelo; Gavi, Pedri; Ferran Torres, Olmo, Lopez; Rashford. Subs: Szczesny, Aller, Balde, Araujo, Lewandowski, Raphinha, Casado, Roony, De Jong, Bernal, Kounde, Espart.
Real Madrid (4-2-3-1): Courtois; Alexander-Arnold, Rudiger Huijsen, Fran Garcia; Camavinga, Tchouameni; Gonzalo Garcia, Bellingham, Diaz; Vinicius Junior. Subs: Lunin, Sergio Mestre, Alaba, Asencio, Carreras, Mastantuono, Cestero, Jiminez, Palacios, Thiago.
Sid Lowe has previewed a crucial Clasico.
This is a crisis that is cultural. When Vinícius Júnior stormed off having been substituted towards the end of the clásico in the autumn, threatening to walk straight out of the team, it brought the disconnect between him and Xabi Alonso into the open and in doing so made it irretrievable. He was not entirely alone in feeling that: Valverde too had made his discontent public. Nor, though, was the feeling unanimous. “It’s not the manager’s fault,” Tchouaméni had insisted, blame instead lying inside the dressing room, sides starting to be taken.
About that quiet week, it’s got to the stage where Jose Mourinho, just the man to calm things down, is in line for a return.
Preamble
Been a quiet week at Real Madrid? Well, even by the standards of the soap opera that is the world football’s equivalent of the Borgias, it’s been chaotic. On Thursday a fight with Aurélien Tchouaméni at Valdebebas left Fede Valverde bleeding and with what a club communique described as “craniofacial trauma”. Kylian Mbappe is missing, too, his popularity rating down at absolute zero. What’s worse is that Barcelona can clinch a second successive Liga title with a draw.
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‘Being offended isn’t the worst thing. Being poor is’: how Robby Hoffman became a controversial comedy sensation | Hacks
‘Once in a while, you get to see a legend at the absolute top of their game,” booms a voice at the beginning of Robby Hoffman’s Netflix special, Wake Up, welcoming her to the stage. High praise indeed – especially since the voice is that of the leading US comedian John Mulaney, who directed the special, and who clearly thinks this 36-year-old New Yorker is one of the hottest talents around.
He’s not the only one. Over the last year, Hoffman’s star has risen at a stunning pace. She is currently on TV in Rooster, a college campus comedy starring Steve Carell, as well as the fifth season of the critically acclaimed sitcom Hacks. This is only her second season as talent agency assistant Randi, but last year the role earned her an Emmy nomination.
“Last week, I was a Hassidic Lubavitch Jew living in Crown Heights, New York,” was Hoffman’s first line as Randi. “Now I’m in LA, I’m gay and probably an atheist.” Hoffman’s own life has taken a similar about-turn after being thrust into the spotlight. Randi, a role that was created for her by writers Lucia Aniello, Paul W Downs and Jen Statsky and draws on Hoffman’s own background, has been “a life-changing part”, she says on a video call from the home in Los Angeles that she shares with her wife, the reality TV star Gabby Windey. And meeting Carell, one of her childhood heroes, on the set of Rooster was “really good. I mean, he’s a doll.”
Hoffman herself seems like a bit of a doll, too, which might come as a surprise to those who have seen Hoffman’s comedy sets, in which she adopts a boorish, constantly exasperated persona. Wake Up includes gags about “disgusting” women (“always the hottest ones are sickest”) and abortion (“we raise the age of abortion till 10, we got a lot of well-fucking-behaved kids on our hands”). Not to mention the jokes about paedophilia.
But although her punchlines make some audience members bristle, “I just don’t get to choose my thoughts”, the comedian says. “I’m just sharing it with you. I wish I didn’t know some of these things. I truly wish paedophilia was not something that I was introduced to or heard about. I think it’s more democratic that I joke about everything, you know?”
Although Hoffman insists she isn’t trying to offend (“I do think that a lot of my jokes are misinterpreted”), she also doesn’t think being offended is the worst thing: “Being poor is.” She’s speaking from experience: she grew up in a family that relied on welfare payments, the seventh of 10 children.
During the early years of her life, she lived in Brooklyn, where her parents were part of what they would call a Hassidic Jewish community and what she has described in her comedy as a cult. “But I’m also loosey-goosey about what’s a cult,” she says. “I definitely would say it was a fanatic religious sect.” She hasn’t spoken to her father since her early 20s, and even before that, he hadn’t been a significant part of her life for some time. Her mother divorced him and moved back to her native Montreal with the children when Hoffman was in grade school, some time between the ages of five and 11 (she is hazy on the exact timings).
Home life in Montreal was chaotic, living in a house that was “so packed with so many people”, Hoffman says. She would frequently get into physical fights with her brothers and “cried every single day … sometimes I was kicking and screaming on the floor”. She got out as soon as she could, at 17, when she began renting a place of her own, taking on a part-time job to support herself through her Cégep, a type of pre-university college unique to Quebec. After that, “I almost stopped crying for ever”, she says. “It takes me so much to cry now.”
Despite its difficulties, Hoffman’s childhood was “somewhat” stable, she says, thanks to her mother, who would wake up at 5.30am every day to cook, clean and care for her children. Although “emotionally absent”, she was “definitely physically present, which is incredible”, Hoffman says. “No matter what, she was there.” Hoffman does her own bit for the family today by using half her earnings to support her siblings and her mother.
The comedian’s proclivity for referring to women, including herself and her mother, as “bitches” is an aspect of her onstage coarseness that carries over into our call, in which she is otherwise much more mellow and thoughtful. Sure, she doesn’t follow the typical Hollywood script of simpering self-deprecation, instead unapologetically backing herself and frequently talking about how great it is to be rich. But you get the impression that this is self-conscious gaucheness, a send-up of convention rather than outright rudeness.
“I come in hot,” Hoffman admits – especially on stage. But she is not pretending to be something she’s not – unlike, she says, supposedly “kind and nice” figures such as Will Smith, who was banned from the Oscars after slapping the comedian Chris Rock, or Ellen DeGeneres, whose talk show was cancelled after allegations that junior staff had been bullied. Off stage, “you’ll see that I’m a delight”, she says. I can’t argue with that – although I can’t actually see her, since she has refused to put her camera on for our call, her excuse being that she has only just woken up after travelling back from her most recent tour date.
Hoffman is endearingly grateful for her success. “Am I not living one of the greatest lives you’ve heard about?” she said during her recent appearance on Late Night With Seth Meyers. “I really do feel that,” she says. When she started out in comedy, it felt like “such a risk” to pursue a career with no promise of financial stability: “It’s becoming harder and harder to go from no money to money, so when we get one of our guys in, it always feels miraculous.”
She wishes it wasn’t so miraculous – Hoffman is a Bernie Sanders supporter and believes “everybody’s entitled to dignity”. She resents being an example of someone who “did it” – got herself out of poverty via talent and determination. “You shouldn’t have to be this special, you shouldn’t have to be this talented,” she says. (I told you, she backs herself.) Throughout her adolescence, she was “so sick of being poor”, so focused on working hard at the Jewish private school for which her grandfather had helped her win a scholarship, then pursuing a degree in accounting. She briefly worked for the consultancy KPMG after completing her degree at McGill University in Montreal, before swapping accounting for the comedy circuit and TV writing work.
“Comedy was foisted upon me, like Moses or something,” she says. (She makes more than one reference to religion and God in our conversation, although these days her only belief is that “there’s something larger than us”.) She was soon rewarded for following her calling, winning a daytime Emmy in 2019 as a writer on the children’s TV series Odd Squad and recording her first standup comedy special, I’m Nervous, the same year.
By the time she joined the cast of Hacks, she had developed a devoted following, via not just her standup, but also the podcast she co-hosted with the comedian Rachel Kaly, Too Far, and her high-profile relationship with Windey. The pair have become darlings of the LGBTQ+ community, with images of their 20-minute wedding ceremony shared all over the internet after they tied the knot in Las Vegas last year. The whole thing had an air of chic irreverence, including Windey’s Instagram announcement post captioned: “Husband and wife!!”
Despite identifying as a woman, Hoffman has had top surgery, the breast-removing procedure typically associated with transgender men and non-binary people. Using they/them pronouns “would have been a viable option for a person like me”, she tells the audience in a set she recorded for Netflix’s Verified Stand-Up series, before joking at length about the non-binary community.
She is gentler on the topic when we discuss it, although she stands by her gags (“If I can’t talk about it, who can? It’s crazy. You’re only going to let Joe Rogan talk about this shit?”). She says she is respectful of non-binary friends and uses their chosen pronouns (“of course”); when it comes to her own identity, she is “definitely in a genderqueer space”. She is broadly happy with being a woman, although “something is off”, she says, as “most girls don’t want to cut their tits off”. For her, the decision to get surgery came down to her preference for a “boyish physical appearance. I’m a lot more comfortable this way.”
When she feels it’s important, Hoffman is unapologetic about sticking her neck out, as she did in 2023 when the Writers Guild of America (WGA) announced a strike to secure higher pay for writers, better job security and tighter regulation of artificial intelligence. In a statement at the time, the WGA said major studios’ behaviour had “created a gig economy” that risked turning writing into an “entirely freelance” profession. Hoffman questioned that decision, having looked through the union’s financial statements with her accountant’s eye.
“I said: hey, hey, hey, have you sued? Why are we not? We should be paying for lawyers and litigating at every nook and turn and cranny. The idea to go on strike before you’ve exhausted all of our other litigious efforts really felt like a slap in the face.”
Months into the strike, WGA members became interested in her view. “I had so many people, hundreds of people in my DMs, saying: hey, what were you talking about? Or where can I see this information?” But her questions didn’t go down well in WGA’s initial meeting – she was booed – and she says now that “maybe my timing was autistic and off”.
Hoffman has described herself as autistic before, but she doesn’t have an official diagnosis. “But I will say that my wife, we watch Love on the Spectrum, and she feels like she understands me better with each episode.”
Towards the end of our call, I hear Windey’s distinctive vocal fry on the line; she has come to tell Hoffman there is avocado toast and orange juice ready for breakfast. “That is so nice, love. Thank you,” Hoffman says, her voice switching to a softer, more tender tone.
The comedian had been single for a while before she met Windey three years ago outside a bar in LA. “It was a little bar, but it was having a dyke night and I missed most of it because I was out doing standup,” Hoffman says. “But I went at the end of it to meet one of my friends and they were kind of filing out. And I said: let’s bum a ciggy.” So she and her friend headed outside, where Windey was waiting for an Uber: “I met my match.”
After some chatting, “I said: listen, I’m not going to beat around the bush – pun intended at the dyke bar – but I gotta get your number”, Hoffman recalls. It must have been surprising to see the former star of The Bachelorette, who had identified as straight before she met Hoffman, at a lesbian night, I say. “She said she was exploring,” Hoffman says with a laugh. “I heard that one before.”
She continues: “I feel so, so lucky to have met her. We love being together. We love living together. We’re not having kids – she is my family. She is my life and I am hers and we love it.” That’s not to say it’s always sunshine and roses. “We’re not going to live in a relationship where we don’t ever hurt each other’s feelings,” she says. “And that’s OK. Let’s deal with it.”
Hoffman’s refreshing honesty is surely a large part of the reason that audiences can’t seem to get enough of her. She has added 10 dates to her tour and has her own TV show in the works. All of us are “going to live a life of happiness and pain and suffering and joy and all of it”, she says. “I just don’t think it’s my job to spare anyone of anything necessarily.” So what does she consider to be her job? “My job is just to be me. I’m trying to allow myself to be as ‘me’ as possible.”
Hacks is available in the UK on Sky Atlantic and Now
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