Eurovision Song Contest 2026: Who is the UK entry and how can you watch?

TheEurovision Song Contestslogan, “United by music”, gets more ironic by the day. The 70th edition of the competition is ploughing ahead in Vienna this Saturday (May 16), despite several countries boycotting due toIsrael’s participation, growing pressure on the UK’s entrant to also withdraw, and a high likelihood of vociferous protests on the night.

The Telegraph Delta Goodrem will be participating in Eurovision 2026

It should make for an even more bizarre Eurovision than usual, juxtaposing fraught geopolitics with the usual enjoyably bonkers, high-camp pop and retina-searing staging. So, who is actually participating (and sitting this one out), and does the UK have any chance of avoiding the infamous nul points? Here are all your burning 2026 Eurovision questions answered.

Where is Eurovision 2026?

We’re heading to Austria this year followingJJ’s victory in 2025with the glass-shattering techno-operaticWasted Love. This is the country’s third time hosting (the last stint was in 2015), and our base of operations will be the 16,152-seater Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna. On hosting duties are TV presenter Victoria Swarovski (yes,thatSwarovski – watch out for some seriously bling accessories) and actor Michael Ostrowski.

When is the final?

Tune in for pop and protests on Saturday, May 16. For the true superfans – or just gluttons for punishment – that grand final is preceded by two televised semi-finals on Tuesday, May 12 and Thursday, May 14.

How to watch the Eurovision final

The BBC is once again broadcasting all the action on BBC One andiPlayer. You can also follow along on BBC Radio 2 and BBC Sounds, should you wish to have the pure aural experience and miss out on such sights as a grown man running in a hamster wheel.

Of course, we would also recommend following along viaThe Telegraph’s dedicated Eurovision live blog for expert insight and a steady stream of snarky comments.

Eurovision 2026 hosts Victoria Swarovski (L) and Michael Ostrowski

What is the full Eurovision line-up and running order?

This year, 35 countries are participating in Eurovision, and 25 will make the grand final.

The “Big Five” nations (although there are only four competing in 2026 – about which more shortly) get automatic entry to the final because they provide extra financial support to the contest. Last year’s winner also gets a free pass. So the final will definitely feature:

  • Italy: Sal Da Vinci, Per Sempre Sì

  • Germany: Sarah Engels, Fire

  • France: Monroe, Regarde !

  • Austria: COSMÓ, Tanzschein

  • United Kingdom: Look Mum No Computer, Eins, Zwei, Drei

The running order for the first semi-final is:

  1. Moldova: Satoshi, Viva, Moldova!

  2. Sweden: FELICIA, My System

  3. Croatia: LELEK, Andromeda

  4. Greece: Akylas, Ferto

  5. Portugal: Bandidos do Cante, Rosa

  6. Georgia: Bzikebi, On Replay

  7. Finland: Linda Lampenius x Pete Parkkonen, Liekinheitin

  8. Montenegro: Tamara Živković, Nova Zora

  9. Estonia: Vanilla Ninja, Too Epic To Be True

  10. Israel: Noam Bettan, Michelle

  11. Belgium: ESSYLA, Dancing on the Ice

  12. Lithuania: Lion Ceccah, Sólo Quiero Más

  13. San Marino: SENHIT, Superstar

  14. Poland: ALICJA, Pray

  15. Serbia: LAVINA, Kraj Mene

The running order for the second semi-final is:

  1. Bulgaria: DARA, Bangaranga

  2. Azerbaijan: JIVA, Just Go

  3. Romania: Alexandra Căpitănescu, Choke Me

  4. Luxembourg: Eva Marija, Mother Nature

  5. Czechia: Daniel Zizka, CROSSROADS

  6. Armenia: SIMÓN, Paloma Rumba

  7. Switzerland: Veronica Fusaro, Alice

  8. Cyprus: Antigoni, JALLA

  9. Latvia: Atvara, Ēnā

  10. Denmark: Søren Torpegaard Lund, Før Vi Går Hjem

  11. Australia: Delta Goodrem, Eclipse

  12. Ukraine: LELÉKA, Ridnym

  13. Albania: Alis, Nân

  14. Malta: AIDAN, Bella

  15. Norway: JONAS LOVV, YA YA YA

Who is representing the UK?

UK entry Look Mum No Computer

The marvellously monikeredLook Mum No Computer. We’ve gone all down with the kids: our entry is a popular YouTuber (real name: Sam Battle), who is tackling workplace ennui through the medium of bouncy synth-pop and Germanic counting.

He has amassed more than 1.4 million social media followers by unveiling whimsical musical inventions that would tickle Wes Anderson – like a synthesiser made of Furby toys – and even has his own dedicated vintage museum in Ramsgate. He’s also a prolific singer-songwriter, and has legitimate musical experience to balance the effortful quirk: he used to be in the band Zibra, which played Glastonbury in 2015, and now tours as a solo artist.

Can the UK win?

Well, most of Europe’s voters seem to hate us, so probably not. Last year ouraptly namedsongWhat the Hell Just Happened?saw us finish in an ignominious 19th place. But might this be our year? Look Mum No Computer’sEins, Zwei, Dreiis catchy, naff, ridiculous and esoteric – in short, perfect Eurovision fuel.

It vaguely nods towards international sensibilities, but is also like a silly version of the London 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremony: the music video features baked beans, digestive biscuits, and a flying Mini Cooper wheezing over the White Cliffs of Dover. It brings a (confused) patriotic tear to the eye.

The choice of Battle also perhaps acknowledges Eurovision’s growing Gen Z fanbase. The choice of a geeky, clip-friendly YouTuber might see the UK get its best result in years. Or we could get shafted yet again. That essential tension is at the heart of the Eurovision experience.

Is Israel still in Eurovision?

Yes, in short. Yes, but… is the longer answer. The 2025 contest saw widespread protests due to the war in Gaza: pro-Palestinian protestors attempted to storm the stage when Israel’s Yuval Raphael was performing, some audience members booed and waved Palestinian flags, and in the streets of Basel, protestors threw smoke bombs and burned Israeli and American flags. Despite all of that, Raphael performed strongly and finished in second place.

This year, 28-year-old Noam Bettan is entering the fray as Israel’s contestant. His songMichelle, which is sung in a mix of English, French and Hebrew, is about a toxic relationship with “the queen of problems”, and also, as far as I can tell from the music video, about Bettan buying every terrible leather jacket that Shein has to offer.

Wait, didn’t Israel rig the vote last year?

There were raised eyebrows when Israel steamed into second place thanks to the televote – and actually looked like they might win the whole thing for a moment. Several nations, including Ireland, Spain and Belgium, then demanded that Eurovision organisers investigate the voting system.

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It was subsequently established that the Israeli government had run advertising campaigns to encourage public votes, and that ads in 2025 received more than 68 million impressions. In response, the contest has introduced new rules: entrants and broadcasters are banned from taking part in third-party promotional campaigns (including those run by governments), and fans are now only able to cast 10 votes each instead of 20.

Martin Green, director of Eurovision, said: “One of the clearest messages we received was the need to strengthen trust in the fairness of the contest.” He added that “governments do not participate in the Eurovision Song Contest, artists do.” To quote Ian Fletcher: “So that’s all good then.”

Who is boycotting Eurovision?

Ah, yes. Despite Green’s chipper hand-waving, it seems a few nations are still livid about Israel being in the contest at all – let alone their determined get-out-the-vote efforts. In September last year, Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Iceland and Slovenia threatened to boycott Eurovision unless Israel was excluded. In response, Austria and Germany said they would quit if Israel was chucked out, leaving organisers – who, lest we forget, wish us to be “united by music” – with a miserable dilemma.

They tackled that head on by announcing they would have an emergency vote on Israel’s participation in November… and then cancelling said vote following the ceasefire in Gaza. Alas, that did not appease the anti-Israel brigade, and those countries (Spain – which is normally one of the “Big Five” – Ireland, the Netherlands, Iceland and Slovenia) are now officially boycotting Eurovision. It’s the largest number of boycotting countries in the history of the contest.

What about the UK?

The UK is still taking part – despite some furious opposition. In April more than 12,000 people signed a Palestine Solidarity Campaign petitionurging Sam Battle to boycott.

Meanwhile the campaign group No Music for Genocide has released an open letter urging public broadcasters, performers, fans and more to boycott. The letter asks why Russia remains banned from the contest – after organisers said its presence would “bring the competition into disrepute” – but “the same standard” has not been applied to Israel. It’s signed by the likes of Brian Eno,Kneecap, Paul Weller, Paloma Faith, Massive Attack, Sigur Rós, and Primal Scream.

Who else is protesting?

Nemo, who won the contest for Switzerland in 2024, has handed back their trophy in protest at Israel taking part. The non-binary singer released a statement on Instagram, writing: “This is not about individuals or artists. It’s about the fact that the contest was repeatedly used to soften ⁠the image of a state accused of severe wrongdoing, all while the EBU insists that this contest is non-political.”

Dana International, who won Eurovision for Israel in Birmingham in 1998, has, in turn, denounced the boycotting nations, calling it a “violent and insulting” decision that added “only hatred and harm”. Once again, a reminder: united by music!

So Russia is still banned?

Yes, Russia is still banned. At the time of writing, no one is protesting that decision.

Will there be extra security at Eurovision 2026?

Oh yes. Vienna police are coordinating with contest officials to ensure the safety of the area around the Wiener Stadthalle, and conducting weekly threat assessments. Around 250 staff members from Vienna police and the interior ministry are working on security planning, and specialised teams, including explosive detection dog units, will likely be deployed in the run-up to the contest. There will also be background checks run on suppliers and staff, checks done on spectators, and airport-style security measures at the fan zones across the city.

Is Scott Mills still taking part?

Awkward. Mills was due to commentate on the Eurovision semi-finals and on the final on Radio 2 (as he has done since 2011), but wassacked by the BBClast month due to allegations of “serious sexual offences” against a teenage boy between 1997 and 2000. So no, he definitely won’t be part of the Eurovision team. The Sun has reported that Mills will be succeeded in his Eurovision role by Sara Cox, joining fellow commentator Rylan Clark.

Sarah Cox will join Rylan Clarke

Which acts should we look out for in 2026?

Putting all the many controversies to one side – let’s focus on the music. And the cheerful inanity of Eurovision. The current bookies’ favourite is Finland withLiekinheitin(or “Flamethrower”), which features angsty singing, literal flames, and a sexy blonde lady in a tinfoil dress dramatically playing the violin. It’s got everything.

Also keep an eye on France withRegarde !(yes, there really is a space before the exclamation mark, and yes, it’s driving me crazy), sung by 17-year-old Monroe, and Denmark’s thumping dance anthemFør Vi Går Hjem.

The UK isn’t the only entrant bemoaning office culture: Armenia is having a right old go as well (sample lyrics: “This meeting could have been an email / Free coffee won’t keep me here man”). Meanwhile Greece’s entry is a panic attack in human form, 50 per cent of Norway’s lyrics are “ya ya ya”, and Romania has courted controversy by selecting the songChoke Me, which campaigners say glamorises strangulation. Also Serbia has emotive death metal, and Australia is bringing out the big(ish) guns with actual chart-topper Delta Goodrem.

Wait, is Australia in Europe?

Not even a little bit, but here we are. Australians are superfans who enthused their way in. It was meant to be a one-off, in 2015, as part of the contest’s 50th-anniversary celebrations, but they were so popular (finishing an impressive fifth) that they were invited back. Eurovision also features Azerbaijan, so we’re really playing fast and loose with the “Euro” part of the equation here.

Do performers sing live?

Yes, it’s mandated in the rules that all lead vocals must be sung live – and in some cases, you can tell. (There is no corresponding rule that you must sing in tune.) Songs must only be original compositions and a maximum of three minutes long.

Remind me how the voting works?

Easily the most byzantine system of all these entertainment contests. In the final, contestants get two separate scores: one from a jury of music experts, the other from fan votes (cast via phone, text message or the official Eurovision app). Fans cannot vote for their own country.

The results are wheeled out in two stages in the grand final. First, the acts are ranked by jury vote, and then that order is slowly – agonisingly slowly – upended as each country’s spokesperson announces who they’re giving fan votes to, in the form of points, from one to 12. This is usually the time when the UK slides inexorably down the rankings, and we all lose faith in Europe, democracy and music.

Don’t countries just vote for their neighbours?

There is still neighbourly bloc voting, with the likes of Greece and Cyprus doggedly sticking together, year after year. Which is heart-warming. We need some certainties in life – and in Eurovision.

Eurovision Song Contest 2026: Who is the UK entry and how can you watch?

TheEurovision Song Contestslogan, “United by music”, gets more ironic by the day. The 70th edition of the competition is ploughing ahea...
Gisele Bündchen Shares Clearest Photos Yet of Her 1-Year-Old Son Alongside His Older Brother and Sister

Gisele Bündchen took to Instagram on May 10 to celebrate Mother’s Day with a handful of photos of her children.

InStyle Gisele Bündchen on November 22, 2025.Credit: Getty

The Gist

  • One photo shows the clearest glimpse yet of her youngest child, a 1-year-old boy whom she shares with husband Joaquim Valente.

  • The couple have never publicly released their son’s name, and often show photos of him from behind or the side so as to maintain his privacy.

Gisele Bündchencelebrated Mother’s Day with a new photo of her youngest child, whose name has still never been publicly revealed over a year after his birth.

On May 10, the supermodel shared the clearest photo yet of her son’s (adorable) faceon her Instagram, writing alongside it, “Nothing in this world fills my life with more meaning and joy than being a mom.” Bündchen shares her baby boy with husbandJoaquim Valente.

The carousel also included photos of her older children Benjamin and Vivian, who she shares with ex-husbandTom Brady. “I’m so grateful to experience life with them, learning and growing together every day,” she wrote. “Happy Mother’s Day to all moms, especially to my mama, who is always by my side in spirit and inspires me to be the best mom that I can be.❤️❤️❤️”

Elsewhere in the carousel, Bündchen shared cards she received for Mother’s Day, including one from Benjamin that read in part, “I will forever be thankful for everything you have taught me. Never change. I love you so much.”

The supermodel with her sons.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram

Brady alsoshared a sweet tributeto both Bündchen and exBridget Moynahan, who is the mother of his eldest child, son Jack. On Sunday, the former NFL quarterback wrote, “Happy Mother’s Day to all the amazing mothers in this world…❤️❤️❤️” atop a photo of the supermodel cuddling Jack, Benjamin, and Vivian.

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Marking her baby boy’s birthday in January, Bündchenwrote on Instagram, “I can’t believe it’s already been over a year since you came to bless our lives. Thank you, God, for so much.❤️ 🙏” That message came not long aftera post closing the year 2025where she wrote that her “heart is full. This year brought deep lessons and profound growth. Becoming a mother again reshaped everything—my time, my priorities, my heart. I’m grateful for these sacred moments that changed me in ways words can’t fully hold.”

Bündchen with her baby boy and her daughter Vivian.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram

The baby boy’s first name has never been revealed, though the supermodel hinted that it started with an “A” after she showed off a necklace with J, B, V, and A charms—for Valente, Benjamin, Vivian, and potentially her youngest child, as well.Peoplehas reported that the baby boy’s middle name is River.

She shared a photo of her children and husband Joaquim Valente on May 10, 2026.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram The family looking out at nature together.Credit: Gisele Bundchen/Instagram

Three months after welcoming her son last year, Bündchen toldVogue France, “Now that my little one is sleeping through the night, I’m back in control of my routine. As any new mom knows, it’s incredible how much sleep—or lack of it—can change everything!”

“But once again, I feel truly grateful,” she added. “Being able to be home with my kids and enjoy every moment with them is priceless.”

Read the original article onInStyle

Gisele Bündchen Shares Clearest Photos Yet of Her 1-Year-Old Son Alongside His Older Brother and Sister

Gisele Bündchen took to Instagram on May 10 to celebrate Mother’s Day with a handful of photos of her children. The Gist ...
Port of Dover faces high pressure May half-term as passengers swap planes for ferries

The boss of thePort of Doverpredicts its busiest May half-term for years – partly because travellers are switching from air toferry.

The Independent US

Doug Bannister, chief executive of the UK’s main departure point, toldThe Independent’s daily travel podcast: “We had a cracking Easter. It was our busiest since Covid and everybody flowed through very, very well.

“Our bookings for May half-term have been increasing, particularly since the war in Iran started. I think people are just getting a bit more nervous about it.

“People know that they’re always going to get away on a ferry when they come down to Dover. They’re always sailing, and actually, if I’m travelling in my car, I’ve got all my stuff with me. I’ve got entertainment for the kids, so I don’t have to worry about disruption and delay.

“At May half-term, we are looking at about 8,000 cars on the Saturday, so that is going to be the busiest of the three days. Our busy time for cars tends to be from about 5am till about 1pm.

“If you’re arriving for a sailing during that period of time, we ask people to not turn up more than two hours before you’re sailing so that we can keep everybody flowing through.”

A key challenge for the port is theEU entry-exit system(EES). Since 10 April, theEuropean Unionhas been, in theory, applying the EES in full: collecting biometrics from every British passport holder crossing aSchengen areafrontier.

ThePort of Dover, along with the Eurotunnel terminal atFolkestoneand London St Pancras International, has “juxtaposed” border controls. FrenchPolice aux Frontieresprocess departing passengers while they are still on British soil.

A new £40m EES registration area has been created on reclaimed land at Western Docks. For months, coach passengers have been processed here. After they reboard their vehicles, the coach is sealed and driven to the Eastern Docks to board the ferry.

But while the facility is ready to be used for motorists and families in private cars, French IT issues have prevented it from being deployed.

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“We’ve installed 84 kiosks out there to be able to handle all of the registration process,” Mr Bannister said. “So far, those are not activated yet, so right now if there is any EES work to be done, it is getting done at the booths in the ferry terminal.”

At present, French officials are creating entry-exit system profiles – recording passport details onto a central database – from British motorists and passengers as they go through border control at Eastern Docks.

No biometrics are collected. But profile creation adds time, typically extending the spell for each vehicle from one minute to 90 seconds.

Over from Dover: Eastern Docks at the Kent port (Simon Calder)

“In very busy times, that adds up very quickly,” the port CEO said. “We would like the whole process operational, having invested £40m and literally pulling out all the stops and getting everything ready to go.

“But shy of that, then clearly we need to make certain that we are not creating a situation that is going to have a lot of congestion.

“What I’m hopeful is that we will be able to come up with a regime agreed by everybody. Our government are working on it very hard, thePolice aux Frontieresand [French] Ministry of the Interior are working on it very hard to come up with a situation that will allow us to handle all the thousands of passengers that want to use this in the best possible way.

“We would really like for all the registration kiosks to get activated. We’d also like to have an app come in so that people can register the details ahead of travel.

“All those things would make the entire process work much more smoothly. But shy of that, then what we also need is to recognise that in these very busy times that we have, we might be seeking a relaxation of some of the process requirements. So that we can make certain that everybody can get through the port and the border just as quickly as possible.”

Mr Bannister also urged motorists not to try to divert through the centre of the Kent town to avoid traffic. He said: “Please also stick to the main routes when you’re coming to the ferry terminal because it allows us to keep the town of Dover clear so people can go out about theirbusiness– but equally it means that we can process everybody through much more quickly than having to unpick congestion.

“It’s a very flexible operation down here and if you do have an unfortunate event where you’ve missed your sailing, then of course the ferry operators will put you on the very next available one.”

Read more:Greece to fast-track UK visitors until EU entry-exit system is fixed, says tourism minister

Port of Dover faces high pressure May half-term as passengers swap planes for ferries

The boss of thePort of Doverpredicts its busiest May half-term for years – partly because travellers are switching from air toferry. ...
'Weekend Update' Spots Why Trump's Hantavirus Talk Is Frighteningly 'Familiar'

“Weekend Update” hostColin Josttook onDonald Trump’s attempt to alleviate concerns about a recent hantavirus outbreak aboard a cruise ship that’s left three passengers dead and several others sick.

HuffPost

Officials havebeen scramblingto track down and monitor those who disembarked the ship and may have been infected prior to the detection of hantavirus. (Note: Transmission between humans is rare, and theWorld Health Organization’s websiteassesses the risk to the global population as low.)

Buzz:'Weekend Update' Tears Apart Trump's Iran Attack Using This Key 'Expert' Analysis

“[That] sounds scary, but let the president calm your fears,” said Jost, teeing up a clip of Trump from Thursday.

Trump,when askedby a reporter if he’d been briefed on the virus, said, “You’re going to be told everything, and you already have” about the recent outbreak.

“It’s very much, we hope, under control,”he said.

Jost reacted to the clip, “Oh, my God, that’s — that’s such great news. But why does that sound familiar?”

Buzz:Shakira Unveils Official 2026 World Cup Song 'Dai Dai' With Burna Boy

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The host of the “SNL” news segment then made way for a clip of Trumptelling CNBC’s Joe Kernenin January 2020 that the U.S. had the coronavirus “totally under control.”

“It’s one person coming in from China. We have it under control. It’s going to be just fine,” said Trump at the time.

“And it was,” Jost quipped.

“So —,” added the comedian before flashing two thumbs up with a smile.

Buzz:Stephen Colbert Names 1 Guest He’s Still Desperate To Get On His Show Before It Ends

Watch more from “Weekend Update” in the clips below.

Like this article? Keep independent journalism alive.Support HuffPost.

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'Weekend Update' Spots Why Trump's Hantavirus Talk Is Frighteningly 'Familiar'

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Dua Lipa sues Samsung for using her face to sell TVs

Dua Lipa is suing Samsung after the tech company allegedly used her face to sell televisions without her permission.

The Telegraph Dua Lipa

The singer has demanded £11m after her photograph was used on the packaging for a £300 television sold bythe South Korean company.

Lipa has said she has the rights to the picture, used on the packaging for the Crystal 43in ultra-high-definitiontelevisionsets to promote Samsung’s XITE Hits music channel, which was taken backstage at a 2024 festival.

Lipa claimed the photo had appeared on a “significant portion” of the televisions sold in the US, and that her fans had bought the televisions with the impression that she had endorsed them, legal paperwork obtained by The Sun shows.

The packaging of the Crystal 43in ultra-high-definition television sets with Dua Lipa's face on it

The lawsuitincludes allegations of copyright infringement, trademark infringement and misappropriation ofLipa’slikeness and image.

Lipa, 30, is demanding $15m (£11m) in the filing, made in the Central District of California federal court.

She also claimed Samsung ignored “repeated demands” from her legal team to “cease and desist from infringing on her rights”.

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Christine Lepera, the singer’s lawyer, wrote: “Samsung used a copyrighted image of Ms Lipa without authority or licence and prominently featured it on the front of boxes containing Samsung-manufactured televisions for retail sale.

“The substantial revenue made on the sale is inextricably tied to the false message conveyed to consumers that Ms Lipa has endorsed the infringing products when she has not.”

‘Highly selective’ with partnerships

The television, which ended up being known on social media as the “Dua Lipa TV Box” by the singer’s fans, was first brought to Lipa’s attention in June 2025, the lawsuit states.

One fan is said to have put a photo of the box online with the caption: “I wasn’t even planning on buying a TV, but I saw the box so I decided to get it.”

Other Instagram comments the lawsuit points to include: “I’d get that TV just because Dua is on it. That’s how obsessed I am,” and “I’ve always said if you need anything selling, just put a picture of Dua Lipa on it.”

Ms Lepera added that Lipa – who is the face of Nespresso and Yves Saint Laurent’s beauty products, as well as partnerships with Porsche and Puma – would not have agreed a Samsung deal anyway as she is “highly selective in her commercial partnerships”.

The Telegraph has approached Samsung and Lipa’s agency and legal team for comment.

Dua Lipa sues Samsung for using her face to sell TVs

Dua Lipa is suing Samsung after the tech company allegedly used her face to sell televisions without her permission. The singer h...
Iran live updates: 'We'll see what happens,' Trump says on Iran response to proposal

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israeli strikes targeting military, government and infrastructure sites.

ABC News

Following the announcement of a two-week ceasefire,initial U.S.-Iran talksin Pakistan in April failed to reach a peace deal.

Trump later announced the open-ended extension of the ceasefire and the continuation of a U.S. blockade until negotiations are concluded "one way or the other."

A bulk carrier ship was struck by an "unknown projectile" in the Persian Gulf off the coast of Doha, Qatar, according to U.K. Marine Trade Operations, a maritime monitoring organization."The Master of a Bulk Carrier reports being hit by an unknown projectile," UKMTO said ina warningposted early on Sunday. "There was a small fire that has been extinguished, there are no casualties."The ship, which was not identified by UKMTO, was about 23 nautical miles northeast of Doha when it was struck, the organization said.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio met on Saturday with Qatari Prime Minister Al Thani, who also serves as foreign minister of the Gulf country, according to State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott.The readout says only that the pair discussed "Qatar's partnership on a range of issues."

Ina post on X, Rubio confirmed the meeting, writing that the two officials met to "discuss U.S. support for Qatar’s defense." Rubio's post added: "Our partnership is important to deterring threats and promoting stability in the Middle East."-ABC News' Chris Boccia

Iranian missiles and drones "are locked on American targets in the region and aggressor enemy ships," Commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps' Aerospace Force Gen. Majid Mousavi said in a short statement on Saturday, Islamic Republic state media reported.Mousavi added that the military is "awaiting the command to fire."In a separate note, the IRGC Navy Command warned in a post on X that any attack on Iranian oil tankers and commercial vessels will result in "heavy attack on one of the American centers in the region and enemy ships," the Iranian state media reported.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

Iranian officials on Saturday denied Reuters' report on a suspected oil spill near Kharg Island, calling the claims "false and part of the enemy’s psychological operations.""No official report has confirmed this issue so far," Musa Ahmadi, chairman of the energy commission of Iran’s parliament, told the semi-official ISNA News Agency on Saturday. "I have followed up on the matter, and official reports have not confirmed it," he added.Responding to claims about damage to Iranian oil reserves and oil leaking into the sea due to the country’s inability to store it, Ahmadi said Iran had adopted "appropriate measures for oil storage and production management."He added that oil production across the country’s fields continues "without any problems.""The stains observed in satellite images around Kharg Island are linked to oil residue and ballast water discharged by tankers," Pourkabgani said, according to the semi-official Tasnim News Agency on Saturday.He claimed that a European tanker "had discharged waste into the sea, causing environmental damage," but provided no further details about the vessel.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

The U.S. Central Command said it redirected 58commercial vessels and disabled four since April 13 as part of its blockade on Iran.

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"The U.S. Naval blockade against Iran continues be to fully enforced," CENTCOM said in aposton X.

The United Kingdom said it is sending a destroyer, the HMS Dragon, to the Middle East in anticipation of the deployment of a future international mission in the Strait of Hormuz, AFP reported in a post on X.The destroyer is currently in the Mediterranean, the AFP report added.The U.K. and France said in April they were planning a "peaceful multinational mission" that would ensure safe passage for ships in the strait as a defensive measure. The two countries said it would be separate from the warring parties to the conflict and intended to be deployed as soon as circumstances permit.

On Wednesday, France deployed its carrier strike group to the Red Sea as part of planning for a potential mission to secure the Strait of Hormuz, Reuters reported.-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

As the U.S. awaits Iran’s response to its peace proposal, President Donald Trump said Saturday that he "expects to hear very soon" from the Iranians, according to French news outlet TF1 Info.In an interview, Trump also told the outlet "they still very much want to conclude a deal."

President Donald Trump told reporters he was expecting to receive a response on a peace plan from Iran on Friday night but said, "We'll see what happens."Trump made his remarks as he left the White House on Friday evening.Asked if the U.S. had received a response from Iran, Trump said: "We're receiving a letter, supposedly tonight, but we'll see how that goes."

Trump was pressed on Iranian attacks that have persisted in Kurdish areas of Iraq amid the ceasefire, with the president saying that he was focused on getting the entire conflict in the Middle East ended."We want to get the whole thing ended, and we will," he said.-ABC News' Nicholas Kerr and Michelle Stoddard

The Treasury Departmentannouncedsanctions targeting 10 individuals and companies it claims are "enabling efforts by Iran's military to secure weapons" and providing raw materials for its drone and ballistic missile program.The individuals and companies are based across the Middle East, Asia and Eastern Europe, the department said."Under President Trump's decisive leadership, we will continue to act to Keep America Safe and target foreign individuals and companies providing Iran's military with weapons for use against U.S. forces," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

During the U.S.-Israeli strikes at the beginning of the war, Iran's supreme leader,Mojtaba Khamenei, was injured by a blast wave and suffered injuries to his kneecap, back and the area behind his ear, an Iranian official revealed during a state gathering on Friday, according to the semi-official Tasnim News Agency.This marks the first time an Iranian official has detailed the injuries sustained by the new leader of the Islamic Republic during the opening strikes.

The official -- Mazaher Hosseini, head of visits at the office of the late Islamic Republic Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei -- said that Mojtaba Khamenei was going up the stairs at the time and was thrown to the ground by the blast wave.He has recovered from his back injury and his kneecap is expected to heal soon, Hosseini said, adding that the leader is in "perfect health."-ABC News' Somayeh Malekian

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Iran live updates: 'We'll see what happens,' Trump says on Iran response to proposal

President Donald Trump announced "major combat operations" against Iran on Feb. 28, with massive joint U.S.-Israeli strikes t...
Trump’s Melania Autocorrect Moment Is Highlighting A Common iPhone Problem. Here’s How To Fix It.

This week, PresidentDonald Trumpshared that he has misspelled his wife Melania’s name as “Melody” on social media due to the autocorrect on “these crazy machines that we use.”

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During a May event honoring military mothers, Trump noted that an attendee was named Melody, and shared his own personal connection to the name: “I love the name Melody because, for a long time, you know, they have spell correct and word correct on these crazy machines that we use to put out Truths, or, they used to be called, tweets,” hebegan.

In a May speech for military mothers at the White House (pictured above), President Trump shared a common autocorrect mistake he has done.

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Trump claimed that “every time I wrote ‘Melania,’ it would correct to ‘Melody.’”

“She’s been called ‘Melody’ a lot,” Trumpclaimed. “I apologize.”

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This is not the first time this spelling mistake has apparently happened. Trump oncereferredto Melania as Melanie in a 2018 post about her hospitalization.

Trump then told the audience that these repeated autocorrect errors led him to ask, “What the hell is wrong with this machine?”

Although it’s unclear which kind of device Trump is referring to, there’s a known explanation for why smartphones’ autocorrect features generally do this, even for phrases and names we commonly say.

Smartphones learn how we type and adapt to the vocabulary they see us use to send messages to friends and read on sites we visit. In iPhones, there is a knowndynamic dictionarythat adapts to our unique vocabulary.

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“As you type, you can see choices for words and phrases you’d probably type next, based on your past conversations, writing style, and even websites you visit in Safari,” Appleexplainson its site.

So the more you mess up one word, the more your iPhone might assume your errors were intentional. This is how, if you keep writing “Melody” in your iPhone messages, your phone may see “Melody” as the only right word.

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Trump is just one of many who have complained about keyboard autocorrect features. Many iPhoneusersclaimthat iPhone keyboard predictive text has created annoying, embarrassing typos.

Trump said it took the U.S. military to fix his problem. “I said, ‘Come here. You got to correct this,’” herecalledin his speech.

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Reset Your Phone’s Autocorrect Or Add Specific Features To Fix This Problem For Good

You don’t need the armed forces to address this common mistake if it happens on your phone’s keyboard — this is an easy fix anyone with a minute to spare can do.

First, make sure you have completed the latest software update on your device. In Apple’s case,updatingto iOS 26.4 has fixed users’ complaints about autocorrect typing problems.

One other sure way to avoid the Melody mistake is to teach your phone which shortcuts are appropriate. If you benefit from using autocorrect but hate one embarrassing misspelling the feature does, you can tell your smartphone to only use certain shortcuts. If Trump was using an iPhone, he could have added a text replacement action to make sure “Melody” never appeared in his messages, only “Melania.”

To do this, go to your Settings app, then tap General, then Keyboard, then select Text Replacement. Once you hit the Add button, you can put all the shortcut phrases and the names that should replace them. For example, you can ensure that “Brb” will always become “Be right back” in a text. This way, your iPhone will know that “Mel” must be the beginning letters for Melania, not Melody.

Resetting your keyboard's memory of your grammar quirks is just a few taps away. Above is what appears when you reset your iPhone keyboard.

The next option is to reset your phone keyboard entirely and start afresh. To do this, go to Settings, then General, select “Transfer or Reset iPhone,” hit Reset, then “Reset Keyboard Dictionary.” Apple will then share a preview that warns that this action will “delete all custom words you have typed,” which can feel scary, but know that this won’t reboot your phone entirely to factory settings, just your keyboard. Once you do this, your phone will relearn a new dictionary for you that will hopefully not include wrong names.

If you have an iPhone, you can also choose to quit predictive text in your messages entirely and turn auto-correction off in your iPhone. This way, your phone will stop correcting words that aren’t in its keyboard dictionary, such as certain proper names. You can do this by going to the Settings app, tapping General, then Keyboard, then turning off Auto-Correction. Similarly, Android users can alsoturn offtheir Gboard keyboard’s autocorrect feature by going into their settings and toggling it off.

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Be warned: Our keyboards save us from ourselves, and you’ll quickly learn what grammar quirks your phone has been quietly correcting in the background for you. I’ve tried this and have been shocked at how much punctuation and capitalization my brain cannot do quickly on its own in an age of autocorrect.

Whichever option you choose, know that preventing embarrassing autocorrect mistakes in your phone messages is possible –– and anyone in the White House or at home can learn.

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Trump’s Melania Autocorrect Moment Is Highlighting A Common iPhone Problem. Here’s How To Fix It.

This week, PresidentDonald Trumpshared that he has misspelled his wife Melania’s name as “Melody” on social media due to the autocorrec...

 

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