Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

This Year's Wildlife Photographer Of The Year Awards Offered Up Some Truly Stunning Snaps

This Year's Wildlife Photographer Of The Year Awards Offered Up Some Truly Stunning Snaps
A young male proboscis monkey, by Mogens Trolle, which is a 2020 category prize winner at the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition (Mogens Trolle/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

A profile shot of a young male proboscis monkey and a tigress hugging a tree are among the striking images captured on camera for this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition.

The Duchess of Cambridge, patron of the Natural History Museum and a keen photographer herself, announced the winner in the London tourist attraction's famous Hintze Hall.


Russian photographer Sergey Gorshkov scooped the prestigious Natural History Museum prize with his image The Embrace, showing a Siberian tigress hugging a fir tree.

Here are some of the category-winning images:

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Sergey Gorshkov/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Andres Luis Dominguez Blanco/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Alberto Fantoni/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Luciano Gaudenzio/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Jaime Culebras/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Jose Luis Ruiz/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Frank Deschandol/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Liina Heikkinen/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Songda Cai/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Shanyuan Li/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Ripan Biswas/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Sam Sloss/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Alex Badyaev/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020 winners(Gabriel Eisenband/Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2020/PA)

More from News

bride and groom cutting wedding cake
Wedding Dreamz on Unsplash

People Who Smashed Wedding Cake In Their Spouse's Face Reveal How Their Relationship Is Going Now

According to The Knot wedding resource magazine and website, smashing cake into the face of a spouse after tying the knot is a tradition tied to medieval England. To celebrate the marriage, the bride would toss a piece of piece of cake over her shoulder for good luck.

This evolved into newlyweds feeding a piece of cake to one another, then taking frosting or a small bit of cake and rubbing it gently onto each other's faces—usually the cheek or tip of the nose.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of U.S. Army veteran who criticized Donald Trump
@btnewsroom/TikTok

U.S. Army Vet Goes Viral With Blistering Speech Ripping Trump For Deploying Troops To L.A.

A U.S. Army veteran went viral after she spoke out to encourage other current and former military members to publicly condemn President Donald Trump for using them as "pawns" to suit his own ends after he deployed the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles amid ongoing protests against his administration's immigration raids.

Trump has activated over 4,000 National Guard members and 700 Marines, despite opposition from city and state leaders. He has painted a bleak picture of Los Angeles—claims that Mayor Karen Bass and Governor Gavin Newsom say are wildly exaggerated.

Keep ReadingShow less
Barack and Michelle Obama
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Obamas Just Shared A Rare Family Photo With Their Adult Daughters To Celebrate Sasha's Birthday

Former President Barack and First Lady Michelle Obama warmed hearts when they shared the same photo to their respective social media accounts, showing them with their adult daughters, Sasha and Malia, to commemorate Sasha's 24th birthday.

Sasha Obama was born in June 2001, nearly eight years before the family moved into the White House at the start of her father's first term in January 2009. She and her older sister, Malia, now 26, spent their formative years in the presidential residence, growing up there throughout their father’s two terms, until the family departed in 2017.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Joe Biden
Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images; Scott Olson/Getty Images

Trump Dragged After Hilariously Flubbing Insult About Biden's Mental Acuity

The term malaphor means when two or more colloquial phrases or idioms get confused and combined to create something nonsensical. According to the National Institute of Health (NIH), malaphors are a common symptom of frontotemporal dementia or other cognitive impairments.

So when a person seeks to accuse someone of being unintelligent, their use of malaphors is ironic and possibly very telling—narcissists will always accuse others of their own faults and failures.

Keep ReadingShow less
Christy Walton; Donald Trump
Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

MAGA Now Calling For Walmart Boycott After Heiress Funds Ad Promoting Anti-Trump Protests

MAGA fans are boycotting Walmart after Christy Walton, one of the retail giant's heirs, took out a full-page ad in The New York Times promoting the “No Kings” protests planned against President Donald Trump's military parade.

Walton, who is worth an estimated $19.3 billion and ranks among the wealthiest women in the U.S., urged critics of Trump to "mobilize" against the parade—echoing a similar message she shared in a New York Times ad back in March.

Keep ReadingShow less