High School Sports
Innate Pharma Highlights Abstracts Selected for ASCO 2025 Annual Meeting
MARSEILLE, France–(BUSINESS WIRE)–May 19, 2025– Regulatory News: 3

High School Sports
25 Sports Monday
PEORIA (25News Now) – Day one of the ICC Summer Volleyball League featured some great highlights. Bloomington’s hall of fame football coach and athletic director Terry McCombs passes away at the age of 78. Pekin’s DA Points returns to his hometown for a big AJGA Tournament. You can watch 25News – any newscast, anywhere – […]


PEORIA (25News Now) – Day one of the ICC Summer Volleyball League featured some great highlights. Bloomington’s hall of fame football coach and athletic director Terry McCombs passes away at the age of 78. Pekin’s DA Points returns to his hometown for a big AJGA Tournament.
You can watch 25News – any newscast, anywhere – streaming LIVE on 25NewsNow.com, our 25News mobile app, and on our WEEK 25News SmartTV streaming app. Learn more about how you can get connected to 25News streaming live news here.
Copyright 2025 WEEK. All rights reserved.
College Sports
What are the Best Documentaries on DocPlay
If you’re looking for the best documentaries in 2024, as well as this year, DocPlay is the ultimate destination of factual content, with the best in the world curated to deliver thought-provoking and poignant titles straight to your screens. DocPlay is a documentary-dedicated streaming service, offering almost 2,000 titles you can stream instantly. With several […]

If you’re looking for the best documentaries in 2024, as well as this year, DocPlay is the ultimate destination of factual content, with the best in the world curated to deliver thought-provoking and poignant titles straight to your screens.
DocPlay is a documentary-dedicated streaming service, offering almost 2,000 titles you can stream instantly. With several exclusives getting added each week, there’s always something new to watch on the service. Even better, you don’t need to subscribe to explore its library—simply go to the DocPlay website and scroll through categories.
However, if you watch documentaries on a regular basis, getting a DocPlay plan, which you can try for 14 days, is bound to be worthwhile. If you’re a Prime customer, DocPlay is available as an add-on via Prime Video channels in Australia.
For Foxtel users, the media giant launched DocPlay as a channel, allowing you to watch DocPlay content without the need for an additional subscription—available for all Foxtel customers.
To get started, here’s a list of top docos to watch, including some of the best documentaries 2024 and 2025 have to offer.
What are the Top 10 documentaries on DocPlay?
We’ve picked the Top 10 documentaries on DocPlay based on critics and audience ratings, as well as their enduring popularity on the service. Some newly released and acclaimed documentaries also made our Top 10 list. If you’re searching for the best documentaries of 2024 and 2025, you can find some of those films below.

1
Rank: #225
Nang Nak
Drama
•Documentary
•Crime
Overview
In a rural village in Thailand, Mak is sent to fight in a war and leaves his pregnant wife, Nak. Mak is injured and barely survives. He returns home to his doting wife and child, or so he thinks.
Director
Nonzee Nimibutr
Cast
Inthira Charoenpura, Winai Kraibutr, Manit Meekaewjaroen, Pramote Suksatit
Duration
100 minutes
1
Rank: #225

2
Rank: #248
The Act of Killing
Documentary
•Crime
•History
•War
Overview
In this chilling and groundbreaking documentary, former Indonesian death squad leaders reenact their real-life mass killings in the style of various film genres, from gangster epics to musicals. As they recreate their past atrocities, the line between reality and performance blurs, exposing the lingering impact of Indonesia’s 1965-66 anti-communist purge and the unsettling psychology of its perpetrators.”
Director
Joshua Oppenheimer
Cast
Anwar Congo, Herman Koto, Syamsul Arifin, Ibrahim Sinik, Yapto Soerjosoemarno
Duration
159 minutes
2
Rank: #248

3
Rank: #319
蒸発
Documentary
Overview
In Japan, thousands of people disappear voluntarily every year. And there are companies ready to help those who want to disappear without a trace and start a new life somewhere else. Meet some of them in a film that soberly examines a modern phenomenon.
Director
Andreas Hartmann
Duration
86 minutes
3
Rank: #319

4
Rank: #459
Becoming Led Zeppelin
Documentary
•Music
•Musical
Overview
The individual journeys of the four members of the band, as they move through the music scene of the 1960s, playing small clubs throughout Britain and performing some of the biggest hits of the era, until their meeting in the summer of 1968 for a rehearsal that changes their lives forever.
Director
Bernard MacMahon
Cast
Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, John Bonham, Robert Plant
Duration
122 minutes
4
Rank: #459

5
Rank: #463
Supersonic
Music
•Documentary
•Musical
•History
Overview
Supersonic charts the meteoric rise of Oasis from the council estates of Manchester to some of the biggest concerts of all time in just three short years. This palpable, raw and moving film shines a light on one of the most genre and generation-defining British bands that has ever existed and features candid new interviews with Noel and Liam Gallagher, their mother, and members of the band and road crew.
Director
Mat Whitecross
Cast
Noel Gallagher, Liam Gallagher, Paul Arthurs, Paul Gallagher, Peggy Gallagher
Duration
113 minutes
5
Rank: #463

6
Rank: #668
No Other Land
Documentary
Overview
This film made by a Palestinian-Israeli collective shows the destruction of the occupied West Bank’s Masafer Yatta by Israeli soldiers and the alliance which develops between the Palestinian activist Basel and Israeli journalist Yuval.
Director
Rachel Szor
Cast
Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Farisa Abu Aram, Nasser Adra, Harun Abu Aram
Duration
96 minutes
6
Rank: #668

7
Rank: #763
Tickled
Documentary
•Crime
Overview
Journalist David Farrier stumbles upon a mysterious tickling competition online. As he delves deeper he comes up against fierce resistance, but that doesn’t stop him getting to the bottom of a story stranger than fiction.
Director
Dylan Reeve
Cast
David Farrier, Dylan Reeve, David Starr, Hal Karp, Marko Realmonte
Duration
92 minutes
7
Rank: #763

8
Rank: #816
AUM: The Cult at the End of the World
Mystery
•Thriller
•History
•Documentary
•Crime
•Horror
Overview
The shocking story of Aum Shinrikyo, the doomsday cult that unleashed a deadly nerve gas in Tokyo’s subway system in 1995. Founded by disillusioned yoga teacher Shoko Asahara, Aum transformed into a terrorist organization while Japan’s police and media turned a blind eye. Featuring rare archival footage and an interview with one of Asahara’s former high-ranking disciples. A Sundance premiere.
Director
Ben Braun
Duration
106 minutes
8
Rank: #816

9
Rank: #929
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse
Documentary
Overview
A chronicle of the production problems — including bad weather, actors’ health, war near the filming locations, and more — which plagued the filming of Apocalypse Now, increasing costs and nearly destroying the life and career of Francis Ford Coppola.
Director
Fax Bahr, George Hickenlooper, Eleanor Coppola
Cast
Francis Ford Coppola, Eleanor Coppola, Orson Welles, John Milius
Duration
96 minutes
9
Rank: #929

10
Rank: #1270
The September Issue
Documentary
Overview
A documentary chronicling Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour’s preparations for the 2007 fall-fashion issue.
Director
R.J. Cutler
Cast
Anna Wintour, Grace Coddington, André Leon Talley, Hamish Bowles, Tonne Goodman
Duration
90 minutes
10
Rank: #1270
Best internet streaming plan
Check out more documentaries on DocPlay
DocPlay’s content library combines Australian originals and international documentaries to stream, which makes the service a haven for doco buffs. Last year was also a great time for factual content with several documentaries released to widespread acclaim.
Some of the best documentaries in 2024 include the Academy Award-winning piece No Other Land, as well as other nominees Porcelain War, Black Box Diaries, Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat, and Sugarcane.
Frequently asked questions
Every week, you can find new documentaries to watch on DocPlay. Some of the most notable additions recently are Johatsu: Into Thin Air, Black Coast Vanishings, Voice, Still We Rise, and One to One: John & Yoko. These latest additions are also some of the best documentaries released in 2024.
DocPlay’s curated library covers a wide range of genres, including history, music, sports, politics, culture, health, environment, biography, and true crime, catering to all interests and ensuring there’s something for every documentary enthusiast. Categories such as Australian Stories, New Zealand Stories, Social Justice, Short Film, and many more are also available.
Crime shows and movies are even higher-stakes when based on real events. Some of the best true crime documentaries to watch in Australia are Nisman: The Prosecutor, The President & The Spy, Dear Zachary, When Missing Turns to Murder, and Top 10 Secrets and Mysteries.
Newly released documentaries that are now streaming on DocPlay include No Other Land, Black Box Diaries, Porcelain War, The Road to Patagonia, and Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat. You can also explore the app without a subscription to check our more of the best documentaries in 2024.
You can sign up directly to DocPlay, which still offers a 14-day free trial. The monthly plan currently costs $9.99 per month, or you can save on plan fees when you get the annual plan at $99.99 (works out $8.33 per month).
If you’re a Foxtel customer, DocPlay is available as a channel (ch. 119). If not, Foxtel plans start at $73 per month to access its base entertainment channels, which includes DocPlay at no additional cost.
You can also get DocPlay as an add-on via Prime Video, although it’s worth noting that it’s not included for free with Amazon Prime. The subscription price remains the same, but the main advantage is that you can consolidate your streaming services under one account (Amazon Prime).
High School Sports
TSSAA football
AI-assisted summaryVote for the Ponce Law 2025 Preseason Top Defensive Back at the bottom of the page.Players listed are from the 2025-26 school year and ordered alphabetically by school.The Tennessean ranked the top 20 Nashville area high school defensive backs returning for the 2025 TSSAA football season. Now, you get to choose the best. Vote […]

AI-assisted summaryVote for the Ponce Law 2025 Preseason Top Defensive Back at the bottom of the page.Players listed are from the 2025-26 school year and ordered alphabetically by school.The Tennessean ranked the top 20 Nashville area high school defensive backs returning for the 2025 TSSAA football season.
Now, you get to choose the best.
Vote for the Ponce Law 2025 Preseason Top Defensive Back. Voting will close Thursday at noon.
Rankings were based on 2024 statistics, strength of schedule, observations, recruiting interest, and coach feedback. Players below are listed by their grade for the 2025-26 school year and in order of their schools alphabetically.
Jaden Lark, Blackman, Sr.: Lark, who has an offer from TSU, had three interceptions, seven pass breakups, one forced fumble and 32 tackles.
Easton Jointer, Brentwood Academy, Sr.: Jointer is a three-star prospect and the No. 36 player in Tennessee from the 2026 class, according to the 247Sports Composite. His offers include Miami (Ohio), South Florida, TSU and Eastern Kentucky.
Troy Porties, Brentwood Academy, Jr.: Porties had 32.5 tackles, 24 solo, four pass breakups and a forced fumble. His offers include Southern Miss and Miami (Ohio).Dominic Davis, Donelson Christian Academy, So.: Davis had five interceptions as a freshman, to go with 26 tackles.Kevontae Pitts, East Nashville, So.: Pitts had a big freshman season with four interceptions and 41 tackles.Justin Hopkins, Ensworth, Sr.: Hopkins is a four-star prospect, the No. 35 safety nationally and the No. 11 player from the 2026 class in Tennessee, according to the 247Sports Composite. He committed to Minnesota over Tennessee, USC and Georgia Tech. He had two interceptions, seven pass breakups, 16 tackles, two tackles for loss, one quarterback hurry and a defensive touchdown for Ensworth last season. He also had 42 catches, 705 yards, seven TDs and a 90-yard kickoff return for a score.Bishop Starling, Ensworth, Sr.: Starling’s offers include Syracuse, Marshall, Tennessee Tech and Colgate. He had two interceptions returned for touchdowns last season, including one for 99 yards, and finished with four picks. He had 17 tackles, one TFL, two QB pressures and two fumble recoveries.Omarii Sanders, Franklin Road Academy, Jr.: Sanders is being recruited as a linebacker but lines up at safety for the Panthers. He’s a four-star prospect and the No. 3 prospect from the 2027 class in Tennessee, according to the 247Sports Composite. He’s the No. 4 linebacker and No. 58 overall player nationally. His offers include Georgia, Tennessee, Ohio State, Michigan, Miami, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Vanderbilt, Arkansas, Auburn and Florida State, among others. He had five interceptions, three tackles for loss and 74 total stops.Will Butler, Green Hill, Jr.: Butler had three interceptions, six pass breakups, three forced fumbles, five fumble recoveries and 52 tackles.Graham Geshke, Montgomery Bell Academy, Sr.: Geshke, an all-region selection in 2024, had two interceptions and 46 tackles last season.Payton Niehaus, Mt. Pleasant, Sr.: Niehaus, last season’s Region 5-2A Defensive Back of the Year, had six interceptions, eight pass breakups and 35 tackles at Summertown last fall.Kyrie Gainor, Oakland, Sr.: Gainor had four interceptions and 67 tackles during Oakland’s run to the Class 6A state title. Craig Tutt, Oakland, Sr.: Tutt is a four-star prospect, the No. 22 safety nationally and the No. 6 player in Tennessee from the 2026 class, according to the 247Sports Composite. His 18 Power 4 offers include Tennessee and Ole Miss. The 2024 Mr. Football finalist also rushed for 1,232 yards and 18 touchdowns. He caught 21 passes for 417 yards and three touchdowns.Knight Wilson, Page, Sr.: Wilson, an Air Force commitment, recorded four interceptions and 60 tackles for the Class 5A state runner-up Patriots.Anthony Carnahan, Pearl-Cohn, Jr.: Carnahan, who has a TSU offer, had two interceptions, two tackles for loss and 59 tackles.Jaylen Pollard, Ravenwood, Sr.: Pollard had four interceptions, three defensive touchdowns and four forced fumbles. His offers include Austin Peay, Western Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky, Tulane, Miami (Ohio), Yale and Bowling Green.Hudson Fuqua, Riverdale, Jr.: Fuqua’s offers include Ole Miss, Arkansas, Mississippi State, Indiana, Maryland, Vanderbilt, Virginia Tech and Missouri. The 3-6A co-defensive back of the year and all-area performer had 78 tackles, three pass deflections and a caused fumble.Jermaine Cobbins, Springfield, So.: Cobbins created a buzz his freshman season, gaining offers from Tennessee, Maryland, Kentucky, Virginia Tech and Austin Peay. He had four interceptions, two tackles for loss, five pass breakups and 48 tackles.Omari Bledsoe, Stewarts Creek, Sr.: Bledsoe’s offers include Michigan State, West Virginia, TCU, Miami and Kansas. He transferred from Lipscomb Academy and sat out much of last season for the Mustangs. He had two pass breakups.Elom Ametitovi, Webb School – Bell Buckle, Sr.: Ametitovi had five interceptions, one defensive touchdown, five TFLs, one fumble recovery and 27 tackles.Tyler Palmateer covers high school sports for The Tennessean. Have a story idea for him? Reach Tyler at tpalmateer@tennessean.com and on the X platform, @tpalmateer83.He also writes The Tennessean’s high school sports newsletter, The Bootleg. Subscribe to the newsletter here.
High School Sports
Photo highlights from the third and fourth rounds of Wimbledon
LONDON (AP) — This gallery, curated by AP photo editors, showcases highlights from the third and fourth rounds of Wimbledon. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings. 0


LONDON (AP) — This gallery, curated by AP photo editors, showcases highlights from the third and fourth rounds of Wimbledon.
High School Sports
11 Warriors' Brohio
“Hey gang. Been awhile since I posted in the recruiting threads but I’m still a lurker from time to time. I’m not a recruiting insider or even an OSU football insider by any stretch of the imagination obviously. I’ve said before and I’ll say again, the only football related “inside scoop” I ever got was […]


“Hey gang. Been awhile since I posted in the recruiting threads but I’m still a lurker from time to time. I’m not a recruiting insider or even an OSU football insider by any stretch of the imagination obviously. I’ve said before and I’ll say again, the only football related “inside scoop” I ever got was finding out about McCord’s transfer a few hours before it went public. But over the holiday weekend, fate put me in front of arguably one of the bigger players in the sports agency world and we talked for like an hour about nothing but NIL and college football, specifically recruiting. We touched on rankings, recruit mindset and motivations, and we even touched on message board forums, social media and also Michigan. Some of this may be old news to many of you but the conversation fascinated me enough to write down some things in my Notes app mid-conversation. Important to note, we were talking in terms of NIL as it exists without all the new regulations being enforced just yet and in terms of what is happening right now. I figured I would share here.
The biggest thing he stressed to me is that there are 3 versions of recruiting: 1. Recruiting the top 100 players in the country. 2. Recruiting the 101st player through the 300th player and finally 3: Recruiting everyone else. He said that rejecting the “pay for play” model for the top 100 players in the country would be like quote “rejecting the internet in 2025.” He also made a point to mention that the conversations around NIL recruiting tend to center around inner city kids trying to change their family’s lives with first time generational money but he said it is completely untrue that kids and families that are well off are bowing out of NIL negotiations. He said in some instances, it can actually be tougher negotiations dealing with families that most would consider wealthy. The main point he kept coming back to is that you are either going to spend for top 100 recruits or someone else will. The market is resetting multiple times during each recruiting cycle and he doesn’t believe the new guardrails put in place are going to stop that. I pushed back that I thought player development and scheme, particularly at QB were bigger factors than NIL even for top 100 players and he flat out laughed at me. He said he wished he could show me some of the conversations he was having.
I let him skim through the 11W recruiting thread on my phone which coincided with the Felix Ojo commitment timeline and he reiterated that the sentiment that a team being unwilling to pay 5 star recruits out of principal was as antiquated as saying you’re just not going to use the internet. He enjoyed all of your posts as well as the passion. I explained a bit of the lore, 305, TeeDawg etc. He said this was much more interesting and less toxic recruiting discourse than his own fanbase (he’s a fan of an SEC school) This led me to ask if recruits decisions are ever affected by message board posts. He said he’d never heard of a recruit mentioning a message board specifically but he said X/Twitter interactions can definitely impact recruiting. He said that he’d seen more instances with players’ families than the players themselves but it has definitely been a factor which surprised me. I said what if a rival fan posed as a team supporter and purposely trolled a recruit to try to sway him away from a rival and he said he didn’t think someone would go that far (he has no idea I have spent 2 years semi-anonymously investigating the Connor Stalions sign stealing scandal consulting for a Netflix documentary for zero dollars lmao) So I definitely disagree with him on that particular tidbit.
On Ohio State’s perceived unwillingness to spend on unproven commodities: He doesn’t believe it to be true but he has no direct knowledge that OSU is keeping to this strategy out of principal. He says they’ve been competitive in the past and he hasn’t seen anything definitive that made him believe that they’ve now done a complete 180. But again, he didn’t know anything for certain here.
On Michigan 2026 recruiting. I asked if pending sanctions are a factor in recruit’s decisions and he said less than zero. He confirmed something that I suspected in saying that postseason bans would definitely impact transfers but he said he has never heard a single recruit from any tier say that impending sanctions would impact their recruitment decision.
On “fake money in NIL” This is probably what we spent the most time talking about. He says that the biggest players in the NIL game on the athlete side spend far more time policing the payment promises than they do seeking out and securing deals. It’s one of the most important part of any athlete pitch. He likened the NIL ecosystem to the crypto, NFT and sneakerhead communities. More shady characters than honest agents and can tend to be somewhat predatory at times if you don’t know the ins and outs of the game. He says that people wouldn’t believe how many people are “acting on behalf” of current athletes in an unofficial capacity. It’s extremely common for distant family members, high school friends and all kinds of loose connections to players managing to engage in extremely serious conversations with schools and collectives without the athletes themselves. “It’s a nightmare” He shared numerous anecdotes about specific recruits (all of them were SEC commits) that we’re interesting to say the least. I still find it hard to believe that a collective or even crazier, a blue blood program would engage in a conversation about money/recruiting with an 18 year old kid that’s speaking for a recruit, but he swears it happens.
I asked if he thought “bad investments” would eventually deter the kind of money we’re seeing right now. He said he believed it would depend on position. He said he was initially shocked to see how much OL recruits were getting in the early NIL days and he could see an eventual market correction there (excluding 5 stars/top 100) but he said he didn’t think 5 bad prospect investments in a row would deter teams from paying top dollar for QBs, DEs and potentially WRs and CBs. It’s the cost of doing business.
It was an awesome conversation and fortunately this was a yearly event that we will both hopefully return to next year so I can see what has changed if anything in the 12 months ahead. Again, if this is old news to some of you guys, apologies but it was super interesting to me as someone that just scratches the surface of recruiting topics.”
High School Sports
Photo highlights from the third and fourth rounds of Wimbledon
LONDON (AP) — This gallery, curated by AP photo editors, showcases highlights from the third and fourth rounds of Wimbledon. 0


LONDON (AP) — This gallery, curated by AP photo editors, showcases highlights from the third and fourth rounds of Wimbledon.
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