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  Wordle Review No. 1,515 Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025. Ryan Hartley Smith   By New Yo...

Tuesday, 12 August 2025

 

Wordle Review No. 1,515

Scroll down for hints and conversation about the puzzle for Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025.

Ryan Hartley Smith

 

By New York Times Games
Aug. 11, 2025
Welcome to The Wordle Review. Be warned: This page contains spoilers for today’s puzzle. Solve Wordle first, or scroll at your own risk.
Wordle is released at midnight in your time zone. In order to accommodate all time zones, there will be two Wordle Reviews live every day, dated based on Eastern Standard Time. If you find yourself on the wrong review, check the number of your puzzle and go to this page to find the corresponding review.


Danielle Spencer, Child Star on ‘What’s Happening!!,’ Is Dead at 60

She played a witty teenager on one of the first American television shows that centered Black teenagers.

Danielle Spencer, who starred on the 1970s sitcom
 “What’s Happening!!,” died on Monday in Richmond,
 Va. Jeff Kravitz
Credit...

'Alien: Earth' is one of the best shows so far this year
























FX's new series Alien: Earth opens with a scene familiar to any fans of the storied science fiction horror film franchise: A crew of dysfunctional, blue-collar workers waking from extended hibernation in a sprawling spaceship.

In this case, it's the year 2120 — two years before the events of Ridley Scott's classic 1979 film Alien and about 60 years before the time depicted in James Cameron's 1986 sequel Aliens. The crew of the USCSS Maginot is working for Weyland-Yutani, the same corporation that ran everything in those earlier films.

And it becomes obvious that showrunner Noah Hawley — who also masterminded FX's TV adaptation of Fargo — has crafted a program that is, at least in part, a loving callback to the best elements of the original two films, especially Alien.

The area where the Maginot crew gathers looks a lot like the dining hall where an alien xenomorph exploded from John Hurt's chest in the first film. And the well-worn futuristic look of the spaceship in Alien: Earth matches nicely with the '70s-era vision of the future presented in Scott's film.

Turns out, the Maginot's crew has been on a 65-year mission for Weyland-Yutani — one of five corporations that run Earth — to grab up a host of awful alien species from deep space. And when their ship inevitably malfunctions and they crash in an area of Earth owned and run by a different corporation called Prodigy, the creepy aliens get out of their cages and the screaming begins.

All the companies are scrambling to offer life-extending services through different technologies. There are cyborgs — humans with artificial parts — alongside synths, who are completely artificial people, like Ian Holm's character Ash from the original Alien film.


Prodigy is controlled by a young trillionaire, Boy Kavalier (Samuel Blenkin), who acts like a cross between a barefoot Mark Zuckerberg and Dr. Frankenstein. And his company has developed the technology to create a third form — hybrids — by placing human consciousness inside superior, synthetic bodies. They start by putting sickly children into adult bodies — young minds can better handle the transition — creating a small cadre of physically superior hybrid characters with the minds of inexperienced youngsters. These hybrids don't age and, theoretically, won't die.

It's a great stew of different storylines, offering Hawley lots of room to play in. One of the backbone ideas of the Alien franchise, especially early on, centers on the notion of humanity undone by its own arrogance and ambition — so sure it can harness and control forces of nature which eventually rise to annihilate everything. (Sounds disturbingly like the conversations we're having in real life about artificial intelligence.)

Here, Hawley brings those ideas together in an interesting way: As the Maginot crashes in an area of Earth controlled by Prodigy, the hybrid children are sent in to corral the creatures originally captured by the ship's crew. Aliens from nature and creations of human technology meet in a volatile situation.










The children are led and mentored by a synthetic person named Kirsh, played with creepy precision by Timothy Olyphant. In the Alien franchise, the artificial people often bring a spooky contempt for their human masters, and Olyphant delivers — offering a particularly odd treatise on the nature of humanity.

"You used to be food … You built tools and used them to conquer nature. You told yourself you weren't food anymore. But in the animal kingdom, there is always someone bigger or smaller, who would eat you alive if they had the chance. That's what it means to be an animal."

Um, yeah. Looks like Kirsh, with his spiky blonde hair and aloof manner, may have inherited a bit of that human arrogance mentioned earlier.

All this adds up to one of the best TV shows of the year. I saw the first two Alien movies in theaters decades ago, enthralled by the suspense and tension Scott and Cameron cultivated in their work. Hawley evokes those same feelings stretched over eight bombastic episodes, as the characters — and viewers — learn more about these aliens and all their terrible ways of taking down humans.

And many of the franchise's classic themes recur: A modern world corrupted by corporate exploitation of average people. The question of whether technological advancements are meant to serve humans or replace them. The ways deadly threats can reveal the core of a person — are they smart, resourceful or stubborn enough to stay alive, even when the universe throws its worst at them?

Since the Alien franchise encompasses a lot of storytelling, science fiction nerds will spend time wondering about the implications of Hawley's series. Why, for example, haven't we seen hybrid people in Alien movies before? And why did people in early Alien movies act as if they had never heard of the xenomorphs, when Hawley's series shows they crash landed on Earth years before the events of the first film?

The science fiction geek in me is hoping these are questions Hawley gets to answer in subsequent seasons of Alien: Earth, which manages the slick feat of a story that feels new, builds on the past and offers loads of tantalizing possibilities for the future.

Victory in Innsbruck ahead of LaLiga opener


WSG Tirol

Finished

Real Madrid

An Mbappé brace and goals for Militão and Rodrygo hand our boys the win in their friendly with WSG Tirol.


Real Madrid were in fine scoring form, as they gear up for the start of their 2025/26 campaign. Goals by Militão and Mbappé in the first half set them on the way to victory, before the Frenchman doubled his tally after the break, and Rodrygo rounded off a fine madridista display at Innsbruck's Tivoli Stadion. Carreras played from the start, making his Madrid debut.

The team flew out the blocks in dominant fashion and Mbappé fired off an early warning shot, when he struck across goal and forced the hosts' goalkeeper to punch clear (8’). Shortly afterwards, Arda Güler could have opened the scoring when his left-footed drive from the edge of the box smashed off the crossbar. Madrid were relentless in their attacking play and, following two decent shots on goal by Tchouameni that were kept out by Turkish international Stejskal, Militão broke the deadlock on 10' with a superb header from Brahim's cross.

Total dominance
The second was not long in coming, either. Three minutes later, Arda Güler threaded a lovely pass into the box for Mbappé, who brought the ball masterfully under his spell and beat the goalkeeper with a powerful left-footed effort. With 20 minutes played, Brahim came within a whisker of making it three, when his shot from the right-hand side skimmed wide of the post. The minutes ticked by, and our team were still dominating the ball, despite the Austrian outfit presenting a slightly greater threat in opposition territory.

Mbappé at the double
Four minutes after the restart, the impressive Arda Güler curled a beautifully measured left-footed free-kick towards goal, only to see it come back off the bar once more. With the hour-mark ticking around, Mbappé notched up the third goal of the evening. Tchouameni's deep ball in behind found his compatriot, who stepped sweetly around the onrushing goalkeeper to stroke into an empty net.

At 0-3, Xabi Alonso brought on LuninCarvajalRodrygoGonzaloAlabaRüdiger and Fran García. Gonzalo could have put his name on the scoresheet just moments after coming on, but his header from Güler's cross failed to find the target (68’). A minute later, WSG Tirol enjoyed their best chance of the game, from the boots of Anselm, but Lunin came out on top in the one-on-one, showing some sublime reflexes. Eckmayr then did brilliantly to deny Mbappé his hat-trick, keeping out his rasping strike, before Asencio and Yáñez came off the bench. With 78 minutes on the clock, Mbappé once again forced the keeper into a good diving stop, but the madridista insistence did finally bear fruit on  81’, thanks to Rodrygo. Linking up nicely with Mbappé, the Brazilian unleashed that fierce right foot to make it 0-4. In the closing stages, our coach handed debuts to Thiago, who came close to getting a goal, and Roberto MartínXabi Alonso's boys now turn their attentions to their LaLiga opener, set for Tuesday, 19 August, against Osasuna at the Bernabéu (9:00pm CEST).


 

ITV Channel's August weather blog: When to see the Perseids meteor shower and what wildlife is about


Credits clockwise, starting top left: Glenn Strongitharm, Romano da Costa, John Le Ruez, Elizabeth Longbottom
From sunny skies to sunflowers and sandpipers, there's plenty to enjoy this month.Credit: Clockwise, starting top left: Glenn Strongitharm, Romano da Costa, John Le Ruez, Elizabeth Longbottom

With the school summer holidays in full flow, will the weather play ball?

Well, the signs are good - August is typically a warm month and tends to be our hottest time of the year, with an average daily temperature of 18.4°C.

This is because it takes time for the Earth's surface to fully heat up after the sun is at its strongest in June.

With shorter nights than days, there is more time for the earth to warm than there is for it to cool.

This means that as we progress through the summer, the ground stores up heat and August temperatures benefit from this cumulative heating effect.