Rebel Wilson Denies Lying in Defamation Case Over Social Media Posts
Rebel Wilson Denies Lying in Defamation Case Over Social Media Posts

Hollywood actor Rebel Wilson has denied lying and maintains she had no involvement in websites that attacked a producer with whom she is feuding, she testified today in her defence of a blockbuster defamation suit that began last Monday.

The Pitch Perfect star is being sued by Charlotte MacInnes, the Australian lead actor of the musical comedy The Deb. She claims she was defamed by Wilson in four social media posts that claimed the young actor made a sexual harassment complaint and then retracted it to further her career.

Top News

  • Woolworths broke its own rules intended to prevent price manipulation, court hears
  • Tech giants face new levy to pay for Australian news as Meta calls position ‘simply wrong’
  • Police believe five-year-old Aboriginal girl was led away by older man seen holding her hand
  • David Brat, Ayn Rand expert who once argued Christianity and capitalism should merge, named as US ambassador to Australia
  • Twelve arrests, 15 attacks and no clear motive: police launch taskforce after Melbourne bars and restaurants firebombed
  • Humanoid robots to become baggage handlers in Japan airport experiment

In Pictures

Yip Shun-Ting Carbon returned for the first time to salvage belongings at the Hong Kong apartment where he grew up, met his wife and built a life. He and his father, Yip Ka-kui, had spent decades in the estate before last November’s fire killed 168 people, including Yip’s mother.

Wide Pickt banner — collaborative shopping lists app for Telegram, phone mockup with grocery list

What They Said

“It didn’t land where it should have landed, and I have to wear that, and I take full responsibility for what I said.” – Ross Lyon. The St Kilda coach has received support from Indigenous players after he made a comment during a training session that was deemed “casual racism”.

Full Story

Inside the White House correspondents’ dinner shooting. When gunshots were heard from inside the White House correspondents’ dinner on Saturday night, guests weren’t sure what was happening or if they were in danger. Sitting at his table in the lavish ballroom as the events unfolded was the Guardian’s Washington DC bureau chief, David Smith. He tells Nour Haydar about it.

Before Bed Read

In Tehran, the Guardian spoke to six people about how the US-Israel war is transforming their feelings toward the Iranian regime and their country’s future. English teacher and psychology student Nika lives with her mother, but since the war began they have been forced into uneasy cohabitation at her estranged father’s country place. She says she has lost what used to steady her: her room, her privacy, the small solitude of ordinary life. Sometimes, exhausted by the constant stream of news her father listens to from morning to night, she goes to sleep in the car. “I don’t want anyone to be killed,” she says. “I want all of us to live together well and happily.”

Daily Word Game

Today’s starter word is: DIP. You have five goes to get the longest word including the starter word. Play Wordiply.

Pickt after-article banner — collaborative shopping lists app with family illustration