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For native Czech speakers who want to sound like Elvis...

Why not study at Elvis Language school?  And for the english speakers- they're hiring!
(As seen in the Prague Post) Picture 1

mmm, cheese. mmm, Murray's cheese webisodes

Ep_1 Murray's Cheese is up to webisode 6 of Portion Control:

It took snow in London for me to know there's such a thing as "the etiquitte of snowball fights"


_45451506_snowball_pa_466 The etiquette of snowball fights

With swathes of Britain covered in snow this week innocent folk have found themselves the unwitting targets of snowball attacks launched by grinning children. But how to react, asks Brendan O'Neill?

When police in Hertfordshire warned children that throwing snowballs in an "irresponsible way" could face arrest or a fine, they were branded "winter killjoys". Yet one man certainly struggled to see the funny side after his van was pelted by a snow-wielding gang of children near Alexandra Palace in London. He pulled out a Stanley knife to frighten his woolly-gloved assailants away.

So what is the proper snowballing etiquette? Is it acceptable for children to lob snowballs at adults, including perfect strangers? And should the chucking of a snowball ever become a police matter?

Phoenix, kidnap-for-ransom capital

45011089 Interesting time to have a first trip to Phoenix planned for next week, as the LA Times reports:

Phoenix, kidnap-for-ransom capital
Juan Francisco Perez-Torres was abducted last month in front of his home and ransom demanded. Hundreds of such incidents occur each year in Phoenix, and Mexican drug-smuggling is usually involved.

Black Lips flee India

Had seen already a few articles on public displays of affection in India recently: File picture of Indian couple

No kissing please, we are Indians

A court in India recently dismissed criminal proceedings against a couple who were arrested for kissing. The BBC's Soutik Biswas examines India's tangled relationship with the kiss.

India couple's kiss 'not obscene'

Public displays of affection and sex are still largely taboo in India

A court in India has dismissed criminal proceedings against a married couple charged with obscenity for allegedly kissing in public in the capital.


Now (via the MeanRed Productions e-mail), is this letter from the Black Lips:

A LETTER FROM INDIA 

Dear fans,

Unfortunately, we have had to flee the country of India due to having our whole tour canceled and having to escape being held by police for indecent exposure during our most raucous set in Chennai at the Campus Rock Idol showcase.

After the fiasco, which the kids seemed to like, the financial backers of the event were furious and threw us off the tour. They tried to get security to restrain us until the Tamil police arrived. We locked the door while they were kicking and banging on it. Meanwhile, we slipped out the other emergency exit.

And that's only the start...

Feeling gravity's pull: is Peter Arnell the Alan Sokal of the ad world?

Snapshot 2009-02-12 21-46-32 Ad Age reports:

'Breathtaking' Is One Word for Purported Arnell Pepsi Doc
Mad Ave Buzzing About the Deep Thinking That Supposedly Went Into Brand Logo Redesign
NEW YORK (Adage.com) -- Over the past 24 hours, adland has been abuzz about "Breathtaking," a 27-page document purported to be the thinking behind Arnell Group's recent revamping of Pepsi-Cola's logo. Littered as it is with marketing jargon, images of yin-yangs, mobius strips and Da Vinci's Vitruvian man, you'll maybe wonder whether Michael Phelps wasn't the only one hitting that bong.


See the .pdf for yourself here.

Who was (is) Alan Sokal?

The Sokal affair (also Sokal's hoax) was a hoax by physicist Alan Sokal perpetrated on the editorial staff and readership of the postmodern cultural studies journal Social Text (published by Duke University Press). In 1996, Sokal, a professor of physics at New York University, submitted a paper for publication in Social Text, as an experiment to see if a journal in that field would, in Sokal's words: "publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if (a) it sounded good and (b) it flattered the editors' ideological preconceptions."

Crain's NY on the middle class exodus, wall street's compensation structure

Saw this article in Crain's NY Business: 

City’s middle-class exodus seen accelerating
“New York has long been a city that has groomed a middle class, but that’s a more arduous job today,” said Jonathan Bowles, director of the Center for an Urban Future, a Manhattan-based think tank dedicated to independent research on cities, and one of the report’s authors. “There’s a tremendous amount of positives about the city, yet so many middle class families seem to be stretched to their limits.”

Big surprise, that.

But it reminded me of this infuriating WNYC interview with wall street shill Greg David, Crain's editorial director, on bonus-based compensation. Worth checking out,or at least reading the comments!

Punctuation as ideological warfare

23crapstone_600  The globe and mail reports:

The city council of Birmingham, England, has decided to eliminate apostrophes from its street signs. Apostrophes are of course normally quite common in British place names, in constructions such as St. Paul's Square and Acock's Green. Apparently Birmingham has been quietly removing them from official signs since 1950, and now it faces a non-standardized mishmash of usage across the city.

Not exactly as interesting as "No Snickering: That Road Sign Means Something Else," the new york times article about UK place names:  

CRAPSTONE, England — When ordering things by telephone, Stewart Pearce tends to take a proactive approach to the inevitable question “What is your address?”

He lays it out straight, so there is no room for unpleasant confusion. “I say, ‘It’s spelled “crap,” as in crap,’ ” said Mr. Pearce, 61, who has lived in Crapstone, a one-shop country village in Devon, for decades.

US Airways double miles promo through 3/31

Via View from the Wing, US Airways is offering double elite qualifying miles through 3/31; now if only other airlines will match....

Oneworld Alliance 10th anniversary specials and chance to win a business class round-the-world ticket

Picture 3 To celebrate its 10th anniversary, the Oneworld Alliance (with members including American Airlines, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Qantas and more) is having a series of promotions. Included are 10% off their oneworld products, including oneworld explorer round-the-world tickets (now bookable online, even), and a chance to win a business class RTW.

Then again, it's a pretty good value-for-miles (on AA) to use miles for an RTW....

Another São Paulo guide on the way...

Total-sao-paulo Via PSFK, another São Paulo guide is on the way (in addition to Time Out):

Recognizing the lack of true insider looks at Latin America’s largest city, journalist Phuong-Cac Nguyen created “Total São Paulo: A Guide to the Unexpected”, a guidebook introducing curious visitors to the truly hidden, unexpected, and often amazing aspects of the city.

Time Out São Paulo on the way...


Picture 2 For a city of its size/importance, there are limited options for guides to São Paulo- there's a wallpaper guide, offering their design-y "Cliffs Notes" guide to the city. There are a few local guides- one from Unibanco, and Living in São Paulo: The L&T Guide, by two expats "for expatriates, executive spouses, and visitors to Sao Paulo, here on business or pleasure." And Fodor's combined their pocket guide with one for Rio.

Now, TIme Out (usually my preferred city guide) has a
Time Out São Paulo guide on the schedule for 11/4- can't come soon enough!

Why don't Arpey and Kellner just have a cage match? (AA vs. CO to China)

Not content to fly ORD-PVG (AA) or EWR-PEK (CO), AA and CO are enlisting the support of the
flying public to support new routes to China.

AA wants to fly DFW-PEK

CO wants to fly EWR to PVG

What everyone really wants: free frequent flyer miles...

With the exception of a mileage-earning credit card, my miles in recent years have come from travel related activity (flights, hotels and related bonuses). However, recently I've been dipping my toe back into other sources for mileage earning. So far, miles from Sprint long distance and NetBank have posted without hassle, and I've really benefitted from the help of Gary Steiger's Free frequent Flyer Miles web site. He lists ways to earn miles from credit cards, commmunications, finance, shopping and more, with the considerations to make and his own cost/benefit analyses of various activities. 

Good news for slackers (and latecomers) re: Continental privilege packs

Once again per the CO Insider on flyertalk, the ordering deadline for CO privilege packs has been extended until 9/15 for NA residents

Last call for Continental Privilege Packs

Over the past few years, The Continental Privilege packs have been a good opportunity (IMHO) to earn some CO miles/save some $ on CO travel. According to this post on flyertalk, the current benefits for the deluxe pack are:

Domestic Prestige Pack (USD $135.95)
- 7,500 OnePass Bonus Miles
- $99 Continental Airlines Companion Ticket
- $25/$50/$100 Off Roundtrip Airfare
- Complimentary President's Club Passes (2)
- Presidents Club Initiation Fee Waiver
- Leather document holder and luggage tag
- Complimentary 3-Month Subscription to InsideFlyer
- Caesar Park and Caesar Business Hotels Room Upgrade
- Free Avis Upgrade
- One Car Class Upgrade with Hertz
- 15% off Leisure Weekend Rentals with Hertz
- Earn Triple Miles with Dollar

However, the packs are being discontinued for North American residents, according to the CO Insider:

The Privilege Pack offer will indeed be discontinued for U.S.-based OnePass members. It was just announced internally today[posted 7/5]. If you'd still like to order one, you may do so by calling the OnePass Service Center (713-952-1630). We'll be honoring requests through 15-Aug 2006.

The next candidate for "Euroflation"? Slovenia

I think that' I've seen that economists deny the concept of Euroflation, but consumers don't always buy that. I'm sure it will still be a topic of conversation in Slovenia soon enough:

Slovenia begins euro entry countdown

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Slovenian euro coin production has begun as the EU finance ministers on Tuesday (11 July) gave a final formal go-ahead for the country's entry to the 12-member eurozone as of January 2007. 

The Slovenian central bank must distribute 155 million euro coins and 42 million bank notes by the beginning of the next year.

Cartoon from Metropole Paris

Euroflation

Yo, that dude eating lobster ... wasn't he on the Titanic? (What passes for celebrity gossip in Maine)

From the Press Herald:

Most visitors to the Old Port bring along a camera, a baseball cap and an appetite for lobster.

One visitor this past weekend brought along a Victoria's Secret model.

Star-spotters reported seeing Leonardo DiCaprio, the 31-year-old star of "Titanic" and "The Aviator," in the Old Port all day Saturday, one of the first major celebrity sightings of the summer season.

DiCaprio apparently learned what other high-profile celebrities such as Glenn Close and Bruce Springsteen already know - Maine offers a low-key atmosphere where celebrities can vacation without being bothered.

What's next for Time Out? Manchester, Liverpool, LA, Kiev, Delhi and Barcelona

The Independent has a feature on "Time Lord" Tony Elliott and the history and future of his Time Out empire. Some excerpts:

More than 38 years after he used a £75 21st birthday gift from an aunt to found a magazine named after a Dave Brubeck record, Tony Elliott, the founder of Time Out, has made a discovery that he is especially excited about.

...The discovery is this: that there are other cities here in the United Kingdom with the vibrancy and culture to justify a weekly Time Out magazine of their own. Next February, Elliott plans to launch simultaneously in Manchester and Liverpool.

...his next target is the West Coast. "I believe we can establish a business in Los Angeles and will do it in about 18 months, two years' time. The big question in LA is the relation between online and print. It's very spread out and is maybe a good place for us to explore a slightly different model, with online leading and print being a supplement to online." ...The most recent addition to the portfolio was Time Out Almaty (which, in case you didn't know, is the cultural capital of Kazakhstan). Launches will take place next year in Kiev, Delhi and Barcelona as well as Liverpool and Manchester.

The Scoop on the Wallpaper City Guides

They're no Vice City Guides (now with Austin, Montreal, Vancouver and Chicago), I'd bet, but I had noticed that Amazon had listed a bunch of Wallpaper city guides set for release in the fall. The NYT has the scoop:

Wallpaper's Glossy Guides Get Bookish

By MICHELLE HIGGINS  

 

For the design-conscious traveler, Wallpaper magazine— the hip architecture and interior design glossy — plans to roll out a series of illustrated pocket guides this fall.

The 6¼-by-4¼-inch guides, published by Phaidon Press, are expanded versions of the magazine's Navigator page — a pullout laminated map and miniguide on a featured destination — which is being eliminated as of the September issue.

For women travelers- the Thelma and Lousie Club

The Guardian's Flyer covers the Thelma and Lousie Club:

Good news for adventurous solo travellers, writes Travel editor Liane Katz
The Flyer's eye was caught this week by the launch of a new women-only online travelling network, intriguingly named the Thelma and Louise Club or TLC for short. The idea, according to promoters of the site, is for members to find their "ideal travelling buddy" to keep them company on anything from a shopping weekend in Rome to the trip of a lifetime.

Users search for any combination of destination, type of trip, or age band and turf up potential buddies to contact via private email or message boards.

Women travelling on business can also search for other members in the city they are visiting, with whom to share their expense accounts.

...

According to the promoters, the new club is all about "sisterhood and adventure", rather than the tragic ending of Ridley Scott's 1991 film, where the original Thelma and Louise encounter rape, murder and death on their American road trip adventure. Let's just hope that TLC's members have the same idea.

In the meantime, Gridskipper links to Budget Travel's "Girlfriend Getaways" special, including a few featuring current/ex members of the Gawker Media empire.

Updates on Australian Meat Pies in NYC

I like Tuck Shop on First St. near First Ave. in the East Village- great hearty, homemade pies and rolls, and they're even veggie-friendly- so I was glad to see they've expanded to a mid-town location, as well.

I've never been to the competition, DUB pies NYC, which "is proud to be the first specialty bakery to bring the authentic New Zealand-Australian experience - the culturally iconic meat pie - to New York City," but 423 Smith writes about them here.

In other East Village restaurant news, unfortunately-named A Salt and Battery''s East Village location looks dead (or "closed for renovations," at the very least), but Caracas Arepa Bar has expanded to have a real dining room a few doors down from the original space, which is now "Caracas to go."

Who says Americans don't travel well? "U.S. fan forgets hotel location in six-hour ordeal"

From Reuters, via Tripso:

U.S. fan forgets hotel location in six-hour ordeal

BERLIN, June 23 (Reuters) - German police rescued an American soccer fan lost in Hanover and unable to find his hotel again after helplessly wandering around the city for more than six hours after a match, federal police said on Friday.

At least he didn't end up in Hanover (or Manchester), New Hampshire.

The "wrong Manchester" is the new "wrong Sydney"

Remeber a few years ago when a young English couple had their 15 minutes of fame by booking tickets to Sydney, Nova Scotia instead of Australia?

Now, it's an English man's turn:

Man ends up in the wrong Manchester

MANCHESTER, N.H. --Before this week, Jim Hourihan of Liverpool, England, had never heard of Manchester, N.H. But thanks to a mix-up, he ended up there this week while trying to fly to another Manchester -- the one on the other side of the Atlantic.

Hourihan boarded a Continental Airlines flight in Los Angeles on Monday, but it wasn't until he got on a connecting flight in Cleveland -- a 50-seat regional jet -- that he realized he was headed to New England instead of jolly old England.

"When I first saw the plane I thought, 'That's not going to Manchester, England,'" Hourihan told WMUR-TV. "And it was then that it dawned on me. There must be two Manchesters."

The article continues on to say that he was flown to MAN for no additional charge, and brings up the issue of MHT's new name (Manchester Boston Regional Airport)- I imagine a lot more people will book to Manchester thinking that they're going to Boston than England, but will be almost as wrong.

Hourihan's review of Manchester?:

Hourihan said he liked Manchester, but felt it could use a few more pubs.

Give your blackberry a vacation

Reuters (via Tripso):

BlackBerry addict? - Hotel offers detox

BlackBerry addicts have a crack at freedom when they check into one Chicago hotel: the manager will put the communications devices and others like them under lock and key for guests who want a break.

Rick Ueno, general manager of the Sheraton Chicago Hotel, said the program which began on Wednesday grew out of his own personal BlackBerry addiction. His one-step recovery was switching to a regular cell phone.