Tuesday, July 31, 2012

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


Beijing company wants to recreate London Olympic opening ceremony

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 11:59 PM PDT

by CNNGo staff

While the world is still debating the good, bad and cheesy of the opening ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics, a Beijing-based entertainment company is already one step ahead.

British theater producer David King, who successfully brought a Christmas show to China last year, has been asked by an unnamed Chinese business concern to whip up a new musical based on the London Olympic opening ceremony, according The Telegraph. 

The production is supposedly meant to be ready by the end of 2012.

The Leeds native declined media requests to name the Chinese company, but revealed that he has previously worked with the same group.

More on CNNGo: London 2012: Ultimate guide to the Olympics

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World's largest Ferris wheel set to spin in Vegas

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 11:23 PM PDT

by CNNGo staff

The Linq is a 18,580 square feet shopping, dining and entertainment complex now under development in Las Vegas.

The Singapore Flyer, now the world's largest observation wheel, will be pushed into second place when Caesars Entertainment's High Roller opens in Las Vegas next year. 

Part of The Linq, a US$500 million retail, dining and entertainment district now under development on the Las Vegas Strip, the High Roller will top 167 meters.

Each High Roller cabin will fit up to 40 people, says Caesars. That's two meters higher than the Singapore Flyer and seven meters above the currect second highest Ferris wheel, China's Star of Nanchang. The London Eye is the third tallest, at 135 meters.  

Though preliminary construction on the Vegas attraction has been underway since late last year, Caesars Entertainment only recently obtained a key permit allowing them to proceed with construction. 

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Gallery: 101,000 drink, dance and succumb to Brit invasion at 2012 Jisan Valley Rock Festival

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 07:50 PM PDT

by CNNGo staff

A British invasion swamped Korea's largest music festival at Jisan Valley, with Radiohead performing for the first time in Korea along fellow headliners The Stone Roses and Beady Eye. 

In between sets, the 101,000 revelers drank, danced or held on to their square of grass for dear life over the course of three days. Revelers lucky enough to land a camping spot or -- gasp -- an actual room nearby gloated over the poor souls who had to trudge to the nearest jjimjilbang to catch some sleep for a few hours before being kicked out at 7 a.m. 

In response to the near-religious chanting for an encore from their frenzied fans, Radiohead went 40 minutes overtime, while Owl City tweeted after his show that Korea was his favorite place to play on the planet. 

Among the local lineup, rock group Nell was the huge standout, performing epic renditions of their hits "Stay" and "Standing in the Rain" as a preview for their September concert.

More on CNNGo: 50 music festivals for the summer 

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Hong Kong’s most talked-about new hotels

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 03:00 PM PDT

by Payal Uttam

Picking a Hong Kong hotel can be daunting. There are 62,000 rooms in the city and counting.

The range is extreme. From the decadent to the downright disgraceful (windowless rooms for HK$80 -- US$10 -- a night), we've got it all.

A clutch of new boutique hotels in Hong Kong has managed to stand out from the crowd with attention to detail and buzz-worthy backstories.

Some of them haven't even opened yet.

There's converted colonial buildings, celebrity designers and an old public housing estate -- these are the Hong Kong hotels that have made it into power lunch small talk.

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Blast off for Mars via Sydney at stellar new kids' workshop

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 01:00 PM PDT

NASA may be spending US$2.5 billion on the tricky feat of getting its Curiosity Rover to the Red Planet right now, but visitors to Sydney can top that by seeking asylum at the new Martian Embassy there, completely free of charge.

Admittedly, the Australian facility isn't an outpost for our neighbors' interplanetary outreach -- instead, it's a creative-writing center designed to aid kids' literary endeavors.

The non-profit complex is run by the Sydney Story Factory, an organization set up by former journalists Tim Dick and Catherine Keenan from The Sydney Morning Herald and inspired by a 2010 TED talk by author Dave Eggers.

As of this month, and with countless hours of pro-bono help with planning, design and construction behind it, the Martian Embassy is now open for business in Redfern.

Volunteer tutors help kids with everything from writing basics to story development. Building enthusiasm and confidence in their work is fundamental to the center's ethos.

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Captain Morgan's treasure unearthed in Panama

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 11:20 AM PDT

by Anthea Gerrie

PortobeloAerial view of modern-day Portobelo, which Captain Henry Morgan attacked in 1668 -- a key victory in loosening the Spanish stronghold in Panama.

The belongings of a real-life Pirate of the Caribbean have been discovered off the coast of Panama and are set to go on show for travelers keen to see how 17th-century buccaneers lived. 

The pirate was Captain Henry Morgan, of rum bottle fame, a Welshman who looted throughout the Spanish Main in the 17th century before losing five ships in the West Indies. 

Fritz Hanselmann, an underwater archaeologist with the River Systems Institute and the Center for Archaeological Studies at Texas State University, found swords, barrels and chests belonging to one of Morgan's ships after a three-year search.

"Morgan was one of the most infamous privateers of all time, so this was a chance to use archaeological research to bridge the gap between science and pop culture," Hanselmann says.

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Monday, July 30, 2012

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


African aviation reaches new heights ... with China’s help

Posted: 29 Jul 2012 09:20 PM PDT

by CNNGo staff

One of China's leading airlines is teaming up with a new low-cost African carrier, which is due to take to the skies on September 21.

Hainan Airlines (HNA), China's fourth-largest carrier and the first to receive a five-star award from Skytrax, will be spearheading Africa World Airline (AWA), which is based in Ghana.

Looking to end travel frustration in Africa

News of the fledgling "Chafrican" carrier comes in the wake of the demise of Ghana International Airlines, which ceased operations in 2010.

AWA, which has a reported start-up capital of US$50 million, hopes to spell an end to frequent flyer frustration in Africa.

"[Currently] to go to Cape Verde [off the west coast of Africa] from Accra, one has to fly to Lisbon in Portugal," said an AWA official. "In some cases, you take off from Accra, fly to Europe and catch a connecting flight, which will see you flying over Accra to get to your destination within Africa."

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Ditch the guidebook to avoid Japan's worst tourist draws

Posted: 29 Jul 2012 03:00 PM PDT

by C.B. Liddell

C.B. LiddellIt's no secret that Japan is trying hard to attract tourists. How can it not be, of course, after the industry fell to its knees in the wake of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami?

Sure, the country has much to offer, but mixed in with the interesting stuff there's also plenty of dross that means first-time visitors can easily end up having a very disappointing time.

Especially if they blindly follow the guidebooks ...

These often recommend extremely boring activities simply because all previous guidebooks have done so.

They also routinely misinterpret key Japanese concepts, like "wabi-sabi," which Western travel-guide writers think denotes an aesthetic of rarified beauty.

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Insider Guide: Best of Madrid

Posted: 29 Jul 2012 11:50 AM PDT

by Ian Hawkey

With its strident, martial statues peering down wide boulevards, even the best of Madrid can daunt at first glimpse.

Look for order, and you encounter bustle, sometimes even brusqueness. This shouldn't be mistaken for discourtesy.

Madrileños simply have a reputation for directness, of a haste that contrasts sharply with the pace of life in much of coastal Spain.

No offense is intended.

It's a proud capital city, fastidious about curating and displaying its national treasures, home of some of the world's greatest art and sculpture and a place that inspires great civic loyalty.

The attitude is part illusion.

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Mike Leahy's 10 terrifying creatures to make even hard-core travelers wince

Posted: 29 Jul 2012 11:20 AM PDT

by Mike Leahy

When traveling overseas most of us would get the relevant vaccinations, maybe take anti-malarial medication, and assume that we are safe.

This is potentially a very dangerous and painful assumption to make, because there are plenty of unexpected threats out there that could turn your vacation into a nightmare –- and possibly kill you.

Here are 10 you may never even have heard of. Not for the squeamish.

10. Loa loa

This disease is spread by the bite of the innocuous mango fly, but can leave you with worms crawling out of your eyeballs. (Google "Loa loa" at risk, the images are rather graphic.) 

It's only No. 10 on my list because it won't kill you, and may not even blind you, but it is pretty freaky. 

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In the footsteps of Graham Greene at the Continental Saigon

Posted: 29 Jul 2012 10:00 AM PDT

by Adrian Mourby

When I opened the French windows on to the balcony of my room at the Hotel Continental Saigon they squeaked and juddered.

Windows don't do that at the Park Hyatt or the Sheraton just across the road, but then the Continental is different. It was here first.

It opened in 1886 opposite the opera house in what was known then as Place Garnier. The French author André Malraux stayed here in the 1920s when he was founding his anti-colonial newspaper Indochine.

The legendary U.S. reporter Walter Cronkite stayed too when reporting on what is known in Vietnam as "The American War."  

But my reason for coming to the Continental was to pay tribute to one of the best-known English "man of letters" of the 20th century, Graham Greene, who 60 years ago holed up in room 214 to start work on a novel about the genesis of that disastrous conflict.

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