Saturday, August 14, 2010

Love boat: Bryan Ferry sails across Med with younger girlfriend

By Daily Mail Reporter

Ferry across the sea: Bryan Ferry and girlfriend Amanda Sheppard enjoy a relaxing holiday in St Tropez


Love used to be Bryan Ferry's drug. But by the look of his portly body, his addiction these days is extra helpings.

The Roxy Music star took his 28-year-old girlfriend Amanda Sheppard to the beach at Pampelonne, near St Tropez.

They lunched at Club 55 - Bryan will join Club 65 at his next birthday in September.


Look of love: The pair have been dating for two years, despite the 36 year age gap


Despite their 36-year age gap - is a just few months older than Ferry's eldest son Otis - the couple are still going strong after beginning a romance in 2008.

Last year, Amanda quit her job as a London PR girl after he offered to financially support her.

She is understood to be largely living at Ferry's London home and has enjoyed many trips to exotic and luxurious locations during the course of their relationship.

'No one expected the fling to last, but it's getting quite serious,' a source has previously said.

'They are a really lovely couple but there's no talk of marriage just yet. I don't think Bryan's that keen on getting married again.'


Lunch time: Bryan and Amanda stopped to have lunch at the trendy Club 55


All aboard: A chivalrous Bryan helps his leading lady off the boat


Ferry developed a penchant for dating younger women following the end of his 21-year marriage to socialite Lucy Helmore, 44, in 2008.

He enjoyed an on-off relationship with dancer Katie Turner, who was also half his age, after his divorce but they eventually split in 2008 because of she wanted to have children.

When quizzed about why he doesn't date women his own age last year, he replied: 'I don’t know... maybe I just don’t meet them.

'Maybe they’re all married. You are likely to meet more single younger girls than older ones... they get taken.'

Ferry, who has dated model Jerry Hall, has four grown-up sons from his 21-year marriage to Lucy Helmore - hunt activist Otis, Isaac, Tara and Merlin.



source: dailymail

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The world's best honeymoons: Holidays with a difference for travel-smart newlyweds

By Jane Anderson and Travelmail Writers

Wedded bliss: Couples are looking for honeymoons that give them something a little different


It is the most important holiday you will ever take as a couple - so two weeks lounging on a beach just doesn't cut it anymore as a honeymoon option.

A new generation of couples is coming to the fore, and they have their eyes on something beyond the stalwarts of sun, sea and sand. Instead, they are opting for that something extra, perhaps a few nights on a romantic safari or a magical train journey.

'Today's newlyweds are more travel-savvy than ever before,' says honeymoon expert Jane Anderson, editor of www.101honeymoons.co.uk.

'Couples are marrying later in life, so chances are, they're experienced travellers, and have already been on many beach holidays together.

'The recession has made couples consider how they can get the most out of their honeymoon budget and they're not prepared to fritter it away,' adds Miss Anderson.

'They want to be seen to be going to the latest hot destination, whether that's South America or Oman, or opulent destinations where they've seen their favourite celebrity honeymoon - be that Eva Longoria at Parrot Cay in the Turks & Caicos, or Beyoncé at Sanctuary on Camelback Mountain Resort & Spa in Scottsdale, Arizona.'

So, if you are looking for the ultimate honeymoon to follow your perfect wedding day, where should you choose? Jane Anderson's alternative top ten honeymoons should provide plenty of inspiration...

The Aegean

Turkey’s Aegean coast combines spectacular archaeological sites, such as the ancient cities of Ephesus and Troy, with life-affirming coastal beauty. You’ll find plenty of uber-chic boutique hotels so you don’t have to lift a finger. Top ‘n’ tail with a city stopover in intoxicating Istanbul, and an exclusive gulet cruise.

For more information visit: www.exclusiveescapes.co.uk.


Romance in the stones: The ancient city of Priene near the Turkish Aegean coast


On yer bikesCouples that play together, stay together. If you share a love of cycling, Headwater has done the legwork and come up with inspiring routes, some off-road.

Romantic itineraries include gastronomic routes in Chianti and Provence. And the best thing is, your bags are taken from hotel to hotel for you. They’ll even get the wine orders in. For more information visit: www.headwater.com


Half and half: A safari followed by a luxury beach break is a good way to enjoy two honeymoons in one


Southern Tanzania & the Zanzibar archipelago

This exotic twin-centre honeymoon combines all the high-octane joy of a safari in the Tanzanian bush - from game-spotting to luxury camps and sundowners on the boot of your 4WD - with the seductively spicy romance of Zanzibar, where you can explore the labyrinthine streets of Stone Town and relax on white sand beaches. Combine Selous Safari Camp with Fumba Beach Lodge - two honeymoons for the price of one. For more information visit: For more information visit: www.rainbowtours.co.uk


Bahamas

Honeymooners are swept off their feet by the diminutive and contrasting Out Islands of the Bahamas, where you can try everything from overwater spas to bone fishing.

The pastel cottages and pink sands of Harbour Island belie the fact that this is a millionaires' playground, while just across the water are the deserted surf beaches of rugged Eleuthera. As the saying goes, opposites attract. For more information, see www.bahamasflavour.co.uk.


The town of Fira in Santorini is a hilltop paradise for newlyweds


Boutique hotels in Santorini

Don’t be fooled by the twee white sugar cube dwellings that adorn Santorini. This is one of most sought-after of the Cyclades Islands, and behind the cobbled streets and blue domes lies a world of Greek chic. For short-haul honeymoon heaven, this Aegean idyll delivers, with infinity-pooled boutique hideaways, sexy tavernas, and swoon-inducing views over the caldera. For more information, visit: www.planet-holidays.co.uk


Sri Lanka

You can delight in the legacy of Sri Lankan architect Geoffrey Bawa when you stay at Kandalama Hotel or become an Aman-junkie when you combine Amanwella in the 17th century Dutch fortified town of Galle with Amangalla on the sensational sandy shore of Tangalle. And if you fancy tying the knot here, you can even do it on elephant back. For more information visit: www.ampersandtravel.com


Timeless: The Pyramids of Egypt have been welcoming couples ever since Anthony met Cleopatra


Egypt

Egypt is so easy to get to and so foreign, making it all the more alluring for couples who have never visited. Cairo is a crazy sprawl of a city, with breathtaking delights from the Sphinx to Villa Belle Epoque, a break-through boutique hotel.

Avoid the big boats and take a slow romantic cruise down the Nile on a colonial-style dahabiyya. For more information, visit: www.balesworldwide.com


Brazil

Havaiana flip-flops at the ready. It’s time to pull out all the stops with an intoxicating Brazilian honeymoon. Follow the jet-set and combine Ipanema beach life with after-sun partying in Rio, change pace with an Amazonian riverboat adventure, then kick back in trendy Trancoso on the Bahia coast, or opt for an exclusive retreat on the Emerald Coast. Multiple honeymoons for the price of one. For more information, visit: www.dehouche.com


Celtic charm: The Cornish coast is a treasure trove of hidden hideaways


Cornwall

Nestling on Portloe waterfront, The Lugger is one of Cornwall’s most romantic hideaways. A new Cottage Suite sits up the pathway from the main building, and offers arresting Atlantic views - as well as a sun-drenched private patio. Inside there’s a large bedroom, lounge with cozy log burner and kitchen, so you can hole up in wedded bliss. For more information, visit www.luggerhotel.co.uk


The Maldives

It’s new, it’s environmentally aware and it’s on a relatively untouched atoll. If you’re honeymooning with a conscience, but can’t resist the lure of the big azure, Alila Villa Hadahaa is the place for you. Dock your iPod in your aqua villa, indulge yourself at the spa and take advantage of free experiences such as a reef exploration. This is boutique Maldives with bells on. For more information, visit www.scottdunn.com

To find out what kind of honeymooner you are, why not try out the quiz, http://www.101honeymoons.co.uk/best-honeymoon-destinations/


source :dailymail

Hollywood at 100: From Beverly Hills to Rodeo Drive it's celebrity paradise

By Victoria Gooch

Alluring: The exclusive Beverly Hills Hotel


Hooray for Hollywood - this year marks 100 years of creating fantasy worlds and lives. The billion-dollar industry was born among citrus groves and fields in 1910, when DW Griffiths shot the first Hollywood movie, In Old California, in what was then a quaint village.

Within less than a decade, the bucolic backwater had been transformed into the bustling epicentre of the new entertainment industry - and an age of opulence, decadence and movie stardom had arrived.

The seismic shift - an appropriate metaphor for a city built near the vast San Andreas Fault - from farmland to dreamland in those early days was astonishing as this new California witnessed its second goldrush. East coast filmmakers and actors headed West, lured by the promise of perfect lighting under dazzling cloudless skies, and - no less dazzling - a job.

Troupe actor Charlie Chaplin rapidly became the biggest star in the world and the first to have a million-dollar contract, while a young actress named Mary Pickford became the nation' s sweetheart.

In just a few years, the citrus groves had made way for studios such as Paramount (the only major movie studio still operating in Hollywood itself) and the sprawling Universal City, the first to recognise as far back as 1915 that filmmaking attracts tourists.

Lavish theatres such as Grauman's Egyptian, El Capitan and the Chinese were thrown up on Hollywood Boulevard to showcase these new works of art, and still do so today. Of course, the property boom began as extravagant houses were built, torn down, and rebuilt by stars who found themselves with unprecedented incomes and adulation.


Luxury: An extravagant home tucked away in Beverly Hills


Among the most famous residences of all is Pickfair, the mansion created in 1919 by Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, who founded United Artists together with Griffiths and Chaplin that same year.

Hollywood's first golden couple drew stars to an area that was largely still fields of lima beans surrounding the luxurious, dusky-pink Beverly Hills Hotel. The city that grew around it soon became one of the most desirable areas to live for anyone connected with Hollywood.

Beverly Hills's 5.7 square miles of manicured perfection remains so sought after today, the only way to have a new home there is to demolish an old one. Anyone who's anyone has lived on the wide, curving streets that hug the hills, from Lucille Ball and Rudolph Valentino, to Russell Crowe and Robert Redford, in varying degrees of elegance and opulence. Pickfair may no longer exist (demolished by its new owners, of course, to much outcry) but you can still get an idea of what it was like to live - and be outrageously wealthy - in the Golden Age of Hollywood


New neighbour: Star Cameron Diaz has just moved in


Perched on a hill above Beverly Hills is the opulent mock-Tudor Greystone Mansion, built in the Twenties by an oil baron and now a public park.

Although the house itself, complete with two-lane bowling alley, is now open to the public only on special occasions such as the Concours d'Elegance, it's well worth a trip to see what was, at the time of its construction, the most expensive home in California.

Today's most expensive home - in the entire US - is up for sale, if you've got some spare change. The Manor, legendary TV producer Aaron Spelling' s dwelling, is on the market at the bargain price of $150 million. Well, it does have 123 rooms.

You get to see it, and dozens of other homes of the rich and famous, on an I-know-I-shouldn't-but-it's-so-fascinating celebrity home tour. Several companies offer the chance for a bit of drive-by snooping, but it was Starline Tours that was the first to recognise there was gold in them there hills.

Back in 1935, movie mogul Sid Grauman gave his young chauffeur, Bud Delp, some advice: 'All those tourists who come to Grauman's Chinese Theatre are just dying for a chance to find their favourite movie stars.

'Some one who knows where they live could make a pretty penny - even in the Depression.'

The chauffeur set up a firm to take visitors from the theatre to the stars' mansions, and 75 years later, the canny scheme has lasted longer than some of the houses.

Cameron Diaz is just the latest celebrity to buy into Hollywood, for a mere £6.5 million.

Those who don't have a home in Beverly Hills or the Hollywood hills beyond often choose to stay in the city's finest hotels. The waiting list for a bungalow in the Beverly Hills Hotel (a snip at upwards of $1,000 a night) is a long and exclusive one, with royalty - Hollywood and European - enjoying the 12 acres of luscious troppical gardens and shaping the industry in the booths of the fabled Polo Lounge.

Warren Beatty and Elvis both lived for a time in the nearby Beverly Wilshire, Richard Gere's residence in Pretty Woman, while those who prefer life away from the spotlight choose the views from the rooftop pool of the exquisitely elegant Peninsula Hotel or the new Montage Beverly Hills, designed to evoke those glamorous Twenties estates.

But when it comes to haute couture, there is only one place to go: Rodeo Drive, baby.

The likes of Prada, Chanel and Gucci sit cheek-implant-by-lipoed-jowl with Harry Winston and De Beers - so helpful to the stars nipping in to Beverly Hills on Oscars eve for an outfit and some bling. While the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences itself is but a stone's throw away on Wilshire Boulevard, the Academy Awards are held back in the heart of Old Hollywood, on Hollywood Boulevard.


Pool with a view: The Peninsula Beverly Hills is hangout for the stars


The first Oscars ceremony was held during a banquet in 1929 at the Roosevelt Hotel - just part of the evening's activities - but today's venue is across the street at the Kodak Theatre.

Adjacent to the Kodak is the wonderfully ostentatious Grauman's Chinese Theatre, where the hand and footprints of the famous have been captured in the forecourt ever since the eponymous Sid put his foot in wet concrete in 1927.

The enterprising showman never put a foot wrong; he had already built Hollywood's first movie palace (the Egyptian, further up the boulevard), which held Tinseltown's first premiere (the first of many Robin Hoods).

Both form part of the new Hollywood and Highland retail and leisure complex, designed to give a tired area a nip 'n' tuck.

The complex, in the shadow of the iconic Hollywood sign, fittingly acknowledges the area's history with a huge courtyard inspired by another DW Griffiths film, the 1916 epic Intolerance. You may feel a little intolerance yourself as you run the gauntlet of hawkers and lookalikes patrolling Grauman's forecourt and the 50-year-old Hollywood Walk of Fame beyond, hoping for a quick photo and fast buck.


Iconic: Rodeo Drive is the Hollywood home of haute couture


Now, where Marilyn Monroe and Shirley Temple were immortalised in concrete is both a temple to the past and a pest - but don't let that put you off.

Where else but Hollywood could you gaze out at the world's most famous hillside sign, vying with Cinderella, Edward Scissorhands and Zorro on a replica of an epic silent film set, right where it all began?

Now that's entertainment.

Travel factsAir New Zealand flies from Heathrow to Los Angeles from £467 (0800 028 4149, airnewzealand.co.uk). The Beverly Hills Hotel (00 1 310 276 2251,

beverlyhillshotel.com) has rooms from £300. Rooms at the Peninsula Beverly Hills from £220 (00 1 310 551 2888, peninsula.com). For more information, contact Beverly Hills Conference and Visitors Bureau (00 1 800 345 2210, beverlyhillsbehere.com)



source: dailymail

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Saturday, April 10, 2010

CK Louis On Bad Drivers


It's been a couple weeks since my last post. I didn't know whether to explain myself or what so I decided to best way to come back would be to post a video that made me literally laugh out loud. Now me laughing out loud will be of no value to you personally but what will be of value is you laughing which I can assure will happen. Press play, take a listen and enjoy.... CK Louis on bad, irrational drivers and how to one up them.