Be Prepared

Many of us who live on the East Coast of the United States have been rudely schooled on the importance of being prepared for natural disasters and emergencies. Lots of folks that I know will wish that they had heard of the brilliant little Biolite Campstove before Hurricane Sandy arrived.

  It can cook a meal or boil water with twigs, converts heat into electricity and recharges cell phones, lights and other electronic gadgets. And, it does it all utilizing renewable resources.

I’ve got a feeling that after this week these little gems are on backorder.

Posted in Tech, Tourism, USA | Tagged , | Leave a comment

No Dikes Yet

In 2009, the RTL television network in the Netherlands filmed a feature in New York City on a proposal to construct a Dutch-style storm barrier across New York harbor. In light of last week’s visit by Hurricane Sandy, it seems like a damn good idea. (Please note that most of the video in in Dutch)

Posted in Europe, Film, USA | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

There and Back Again

Air New Zealand —the official airline of Middle Earth (really)—recently released a new safety video. Titled An Unexpected Briefing , the video was produced in conjunction with WETA Workshop, which created the special effects for Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. The video features cameos by Peter Jackson, Fili the Dwarf, Gollum and J.R.R. Tolkien’s greatgrandson.

Posted in Books, Film, movies, Tourism | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Travel Randomly

Are you a spontaneous traveler? Would you trust a website to randomly plan your travel? If the answer is yes, you might want to give the oddly named “adventure generator” Drungli a try.

Pick your departure city and dates that you want to travel, click on “Take me wherever” and discover where Drungli wants to send you.

The folks at the website say “It is time to escape the tourist type legacy and find more adventurous ways to travel and experience the world!”

Drungli currently is covering European destinations, but plans are in the works for worldwide exposure.

Posted in apps, Europe, Tech, Tourism | Tagged | 2 Comments

My Kind of Mayor

I recently heard about  an interesting initiative by the French railway company SNCF. To celebrate its new high-speed line direct from Lyons to Brussels, SNCF recently set up a giant cube to introduce the citizens of Lyons to Belgium’s capital through virtual means.

SNCF’s new high-speed line links Lyons and Brussels directly in just 3 hours and 20 minutes. To celebrate the launch of the new service, SNCF in late September set up a giant white cube in Lyons’ Place de la République. “Put your head here” beckoned a round opening in the cube; when someone looked into the opening, their face was projected via live video feed onto a screen in Brussels. There, the mayor and townspeople of Brussels asked the person their name and welcomed them with a song.

 

Posted in Europe, Tourism | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Worst Hotel In The World

A dirty, cold, tiny hotel room can put a damper on your trip. But for the Hans Brinker Budget Hotel in Amsterdam, those attributes are essential to the promotional pitch. That’s because the Hans Brinker is proud to be dubbed the “worst hotel in the world.”

The budget establishment has ironically enjoyed 16 years of success due to its bizarrely negative advertising. The strange approach has consistently attracted guests who want to see for themselves if the place is as terrible as it claims to be.

A legal notice posted on the hotel’s website states that guests book there “at their own risk and will not hold the hotel liable for food poisoning, mental breakdowns, terminal illness, lost limbs, radiation poisoning, certain diseases associated with the 18th century, plague, etcetera.”

The website describes the Hans Brinker as a “cheap, dirty, cold, poorly lit youth hostel” that offers a “rusty bed” in an “awkwardly shaped dormitory” and “spectacularly un-spacious suites, each of which does not feature a flat-screen TV, a double bed or free access to our non-existent swimming pool and spa area.” Is this truth in advertising or a just clever marketing? No one has lost a limb at the Brinker yet, but it certainly is an old-school shabby hostel. Still, the tourists keep coming

At less than 30.00 a night, the Hans Brinker offers one of the cheapest beds in Amsterdam. And every room has a shower and toilet. Just don’t expect all the modcons. In fact, most travel review sites are packed with biting comments about dirty linens, poorly functioning plumbing, inconsistent heating, snarky staff and bad food.

But hotel guests should not complain—they were fairly warned.

Posted in Europe, Hotels | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Happy Halloween

One of the first true horror films that I saw as a child was F.W. Murnau‘s 1922 silent vampire flic Nosferatu. When I was a little older and I finally read Bram Stoker’s classic Dracula, I realized that the Murnau’s film shamelessly ripped-off the original story. But to this day, Nosferatu still is menacing Halloween fun.

Posted in Books, Europe, Film | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Is Book Art Blasphemy

I admire the cut-out book collages of Alexander Korzer-Robinson, but still cringe a little at the evisceration of antiquarian books. He says of this work: “By using pre-existing media as a starting point, certain boundaries are set by the material, which I aim to transform through my process. Thus, an encyclopedia can become a window into an alternate world, much like lived reality becomes its alternate in remembered experience. These books, having been stripped of their utilitarian value by the passage of time, regain new purpose. They are no longer tools to learn about the world, but rather a means to gain insight about oneself.”

 

You can see more of his work on his website and discover more about his process which uncovers new narratives utilizing the illustrations, graphs, charts and other artwork in the old volumes.

 

Posted in Art, Books | Tagged | Leave a comment

Bibliomania

Rosalie Osman is a freelance animator based in Melbourne, Australia. She describes her film Bibliomania as:

A twisted fairytale about a young man obsessed with the acquisition of books to the detriment of all else. Having inherited his father’s library as well as his lust for books, Thomas Phillips casts his greedy eyes on the town to feed his ever growing collection. Thomas’s book-lust reaches epic proportions as the film approaches its thrilling climax.

Posted in Animation, Art, Books | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Above Paris (revisited)

The first time zeppelins flew over Paris, it was to bomb the city during World War I. Now, a German zeppelin company says it is nearing agreement with a company in Paris that plans to offer flights around the Eiffel Tower.

The company, Airship Paris, already has a website showing the zeppelin over Paris.The builder of the blimp-like craft would lease the first zeppelin by 2013 to the French company, and Air Paris’s own zeppelin would be finished by 2014.

French air authorities have not yet given the necessary permission. However, Airship Paris  says it will “soon” allow visitors to book zeppelin tours starting in July 2013.

The zeppelins will fly 300 meters above Paris and Versailles, in cabins with “large panoramic windows.” The flights will not be cheap, 450 euros per person. According to the company, there will be little disturbance from the balloon, whose noise is comparable to that of “a dishwasher.”

Posted in Europe, History, Tourism | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment