It was confirmed by police on Tuesday that George Michael, British pop singer, was taken into custody. He is charged with smashing a London store while driving a car. That accident happened early in the morning on Sunday. According to numerous reports, the 47-year-old star, who previously participated at a gay pride march held in [...]
Posts Tagged ‘High Street’
When Amy Winehouse shoved a fan in face for taking her picture
‘Rehab’ singer Amy Winehouse is said to have attacked a fan of hers as he was trying to take a picture of her.
Winehouse, 26, was seen and photographed lashing out before grabbing the man’s iPhone and shoving it in his face on March 16 outside a supermarket with pals in Marylebone High Street, central London.
She [...]
Beer You’ve Never Heard Of
A few years back we went with our neighbors to make some beer at the local self brewery. I made up some custom labels for us and stumbled upon them last week and I still got a laugh out of them so I thought it would be worth posting.
The beer was a light lemon brew, [...]
Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood Arrested For Domestic Violence
Rolling Stones rocker Ronnie Wood, 62,was released on bail Thursday after being arrested for suspicion of assault in southern England overnight, police and his spokesman said.
Police in Surrey say Wood was picked up in the town of Esher Wednesday night on suspicion of assault in connection with a domestic incident on Claygate High Street, south [...]
Web-a-ccino

By Ana Lucia Gonzalez
BBC News
It’s 15 years since the first internet cafe opened in the UK. Yet, while home and work access have proliferated, the internet cafe shows no sign of disappearing. Why are there still so many of them
When Cyberia, widely considered to be the first internet cafe in the UK, opened its doors in London in 1 September 1994, it offered access to what was then a novelty.
The picture has changed a lot since then, with around 65% of households in the UK having internet access.
Send us your internet cafe stories
But you can still see internet cafes in every High Street in UK towns and cities. From local shops which offer web access, along with services like printing and money wiring, to cavernous underground spaces open 24 hours a day in which gamers gather to compete and share tips.
This survival act has even surprised Eva Pascoe, the founder of Cyberia, who says she thought that the need for public access to the web would be temporary, and that by now "everyone would have a computer built into the watch or earring".
So why is the internet cafe still going strong if people can now surf the web from the comfort of their own desks
Digital divide
While in UK cities the percentage with internet access has increased over the years, some areas still haven’t reaped the benefits of the digital age.
The Megabytes Cafe has been providing services since 1996 for the people at Aberfan, in Merthyr Vale.
It started out as place where young people could go to do their homework or play games, but the grandparents of the children also wanted to learn more about computers.
"As a result, the younger and the older generation were brought together, so in terms of community cohesion it has been an absolutely terrific project to undertake," says Jeff Edwards, founder of the cafe which is part of the Aberfan Merthyr Vale Youth and Community Project.
The web cafe plays an essential role in a community in which only a third of the population owns a personal computer, he says.
"Older people, for example, can get cheaper electricity by going to comparison sites. And the problem with fuel poverty is deep here."
The internet cafe also runs online auction taster sessions in community centres where people can bring their unwanted items to sell.
Albert Lloyd, 70, started visiting when he became a widower. Through the web he has found some of his old friends from when he was stationed as a soldier in Libya 40 years ago.
He also uses Google Earth, he says, "to retrace my steps. It just brings it all back."
Gamers and nostalgia
So what about London and the South East, where households have the highest proportion of internet access in the UK at 74% Do people still feel the need to go elsewhere for their surfing needs

Alex Deane is the managing director of Quarks, a small internet cafe chain with premises in Guildford and Reading. His company did some research last year and found that two-thirds of their customers had internet access at home or at work.
"People need a change of scene," Mr Deane says. "Also, some people are not good at maintaining their computers, because this is quite a job these days. Another element is that some companies have restricted the access to websites like Hotmail and Facebook at work. So we have rush hour at lunch time."
Apart from practical needs, it seems like some people still go to the smallest web cafes because they want to feel part of a community, and surf and chat in a familiar atmosphere.

The Videoclip internet cafe is a new addition to Distriandina, a Colombian coffee shop in the Elephant and Castle station arches in South London.
Tucked between Colombian food products, soap opera DVDs and a dance hall which usually holds salsa evenings and political gatherings, the venue is popular with Colombian expats who come to talk to their families back home.
"I can open the internet at home and at work, but I like it here because I can see my friends, they speak my language, I can play ‘sapo’ [a traditional Colombian game] and then buy some Colombian food before going home," says Carlos Guzman, a customer who visits the cafe on the weekend to talk to his family through the camera.
Ye olde concept
Cyberia itself is no longer – Ms Pascoe sold up to a South Korean company, which transformed it into a gamers’ haven. Now all that remains is a vacant shop.
So does the internet cafe still play a role as a social space Ms Pascoe says her idea of Cyberia was based on the coffee shops in eastern Europe.
WHERE PEOPLE GO ONLINE- 2003: At home 82%, internet cafes 6%
- 2006: At home 85%, internet cafes 8%
- 2008: At home 90%, internet cafes 5%
ONS figures
"I’m Polish and we have coffee shops everywhere, and I don’t see them going away. We all have coffee at home but still go to coffee shops because they fulfil a social function. We just added internet to a concept that is hundreds of years old."
The most successful internet cafes are those which have gone back to the original format of a "public access space, plus IT support centre, plus a social space", she says.
This concept can be seen at Netstream, a 24/7 internet cafe in Soho in central London. A giant silicon chip decorates the main wall along with magazine cuttings from the 1930s. Customers can get technical support for their laptops and can also have their lunch delivered.
"We always play chill-out music and jazz, and try to give people a bit of a relaxing atmosphere, a place where they don’t get disturbed and can work," says manager Alex Karev.
"Sometimes you just can start speaking to people just because they’re sitting so close next to you, you can’t help but speak to each other"
Ali, a gamer
Different groups come at different times, says Mr Karev. "During the day it’s mostly business people who come to work on the computers and need something right here, right now. Once the normal working hours are gone, you get the gamers. Some of them are married or have families, so they come here to relax and play games for a couple of hours, and make friends with other people playing games."
Ali, a gamer, says he makes friends playing community games. "Sometimes you just can start speaking to people just because they’re sitting so close next to you, you can’t help but speak to each other."
And it might be that, 15 years later, the internet cafe is still a space where we can combine the act of solitary surfing with the physical proximity of other humans.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
De Beers profits lose their gleam

Profits at De Beers, the world’s biggest diamond producer, have slumped in the "most difficult" economic environment in decades.
In the first six months of 2009, it made a profit of $3m (£1.8m), down from $316m a year earlier.
Diamonds may – as the song goes – be forever, but they have proved to be as vulnerable to the recession as other, less enduring, consumer goods.
Demand is weak in the US, but many in China and India are still buying gems.
Production cut
As consumers have conserved their cash for more mundane expenditures, De Beers has cut its production.
In the first six months of this year, production was 73% lower than last year at 6.6 million carats – the weight of a diamond is expressed in carats, with one carat equivalent to 0.2 grams.
De Beers will produce roughly half the amount of carats in 2009 that it did in 2008.
Mines in South Africa, Canada, Botswana and Namibia have all taken production holidays as demand fell.
This has helped the company reduce inventories of rough diamonds in cutting centres by 30%. It has also shrunk its global workforce by 23%.

A future sparkle
While its profit statement may make gloomy reading, De Beers says it has reason for optimism. The rate of decline has slowed so the second half should be better, it said.
Diamond sales, it points out, typically do well after recessions. It pointed to "significant price growth seen in almost every recovery period dating back to the 1970s".
While diamond prices have fallen, there have been no major diamond discoveries in more than a decade, a fact which should support prices.
"We have had to make our prices fairly competitive to win the sales"
Joe Boll, JP Diamonds
"With worldwide reserves at an all-time low, diamonds will become more scarce," it said. "As demand grows in emerging markets, it is likely that sales will outpace forecast diamond supply for many years to come."
Hidden gems
But, as things stand, there is "still poor demand for diamond jewellery in major markets," wrote Des Kilalea, an industry analyst at RBC Capital Markets, in a research note earlier this week.
"Diamond jewellery sales in all markets but China and the Middle East remain under pressure. This trend is highlighted by poor department store revenues in the US (where 45% of all diamond jewellery is sold) with June’s sales down 10%, according to government figures, " he wrote.
For those with money to spare, now may be the time to get a bargain on the High Street.
People are still buying diamonds, said Joe Boll, owner of the UK’s JP Diamonds, but they are looking for a good deal.
"People are still buying, certainly engagement rings and eternity rings. People are buying a little more carefully, and looking to get a reasonable price," he said.
"Generally, we are probably 20% cheaper this year than last year. We have had to make our prices fairly competitive to win the sales. It has worked, our volumes are up, we have taken a little hit in margin."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The worst best films ever made
La Dolce Vita, The Searchers, Schindler’s List … some movies are so universally acclaimed, you just can’t slag them off. Or can you?
I’d like to begin, not with the customary introduction, but by asking forgiveness – because given the passion that cineastes nurture for the films they love, this piece might be seen as a malicious provocation. But it is merely, for me, a clearing of the air – a personal catharsis to shake off the years of tolerating, or even pretending to admire films that, in reality, I profoundly dislike.
What follows isn’t so much an objective article as a personal caprice – the “outing” of a number of films that are claimed by those in the know to be not merely good but “great”.
This is the story of why those films leave me cold, bored and searching desperately for the eject button.
Is there anybody today, for instance, who will stand by the once widely held conviction that Luchino Visconti’s Death in Venice is a masterpiece? Apparently: Peter Bradshaw of this newspaper asserted in a five-star review that it is “magnificent”. It won a Palme d’Or, an Oscar and a Bafta. It was lauded to the skies for its cinematography.
But as David Mamet once observed, if you come out of a film only admiring its cinematography, then you have probably been sitting through a lousy film. That’s certainly true of Death in Venice, which is a lot of window-dressed camp nonsense smuggling itself into the canon disguised as art.
That plot in full: German novelist Gustav von Aschenbach (Dirk Bogarde) goes to Venice to recover his inspiration, checks into a hotel and spends the next two hours, as cholera threatens the city, rubbernecking a beautiful adolescent boy in repressed paedophiliac lust. After several months of this, Aschenbach drops dead in his deckchair.
It is beautiful, luscious, leisurely, elegiac and so forth. But it has the regrettable drawback of being staggeringly tedious. It captures none of the nuance of Thomas Mann’s original novella, which was an eloquent meditation on the creative impulse, longing, the fading of artistic powers and the final triumph of the body over the mind. The film, in contrast, is not so much a masterpiece as a colossal piece of soft-focus masturbation.
Many critics have now rumbled Death in Venice. Not so John Ford’s The Searchers. Cahiers du Cinéma rated it the 10th best film ever made. The American Film Institute recently hailed it as the greatest western of all time.
It’s 1868. Comanches attack a homestead, slaughter most of the occupants and abduct a young girl, Debbie Edwards. John Wayne, playing Ethan Edwards, Debbie’s uncle, sets out with a posse to find her. When he does – after several years – Debbie decides she doesn’t want to go home because the Comanches are now her people. Ethan, infuriated, tries to kill the girl, but Martin, her step-brother, prevents him. Then after a brief interregnum, during which Martin and Ethan return to the homestead for some light relief, they track her down once more and Ethan again looks as though he’s going to execute Debbie. But he changes his mind. He tenderly takes a now-willing Debbie home.
The film fails to explain why Ethan would go to such trouble to find the girl if he only wants to kill her. Nor does it explain why he changes his mind at the end (or, for that matter, why Debbie changes her mind about sticking with the Comanches). The rude mechanicals of the piece – such as the absurd Swedish homesteader, Lars Jorgensen, whose verbal repertoire is limited to statements like “Yumping Yiminy!” – add a patina of slapstick that at times drags the film down to the level of Blazing Saddles.
Beautiful landscapes, yes, but you could put Basingstoke High Street in Monument Valley and it would look mysteriously evocative. A critique of racism? Only if you believe that portraying Native Americans as sadistic, rapacious savages is enlightened. A subversion of the whole genre? John Ford would have laughed at the idea.
Like The Searchers, François Truffaut’s Jules et Jim has few detractors. I am definitely and proudly one of them. In fact, I would very happily tell Ethan Edwards that the cast and crew were Comanches and set his psychotic rage on to them.
High concept? It’s a nouvelle vague buddy movie, set in France before the first world war. A pair of dreary, self-obsessed young men, one Austrian (Jules) and one French (Jim), meet Catherine (Jeanne Moreau), a “free spirit”. They spend the film competing for her affection. They have philosophical discussions about art and literature. Then, to pep up the storyline a bit, war breaks out and J&J are called up. Afterwards, they move to Austria and have some more philosophical discussions about love and poetry. They swap partners, and, despite the agony involved, show no emotion at any time – they are too cool for that sort of thing. Then Catherine dies in a car crash with Jules, or possibly Jim. Who cares? Fin.
Despite its historical setting, it is a film anticipating attitudes of the 60s by people who have an absurd, privileged and conceited idea of what the 60s should or will be. Its wit is not witty, its insights are nonexistent and its script is mannered and self-indulgent. Jeanne Moreau is beautiful. That alone does not make it one of the greatest films of all time – or even of 1962. Had Jules, Jim and Catherine been born a few generations later, they could have sustained 10 minutes of interest on the Jerry Springer show. Or at least five.
Fellini’s La Dolce Vita makes Jules et Jim appear restrained in its commitment to the unintentionally absurd and facetiously tedious. Marcello, the central character, a showbiz hack, has a clinging fiancee, Emma, with whom he lives in a dreary flat. Being Italian, he has lovers, one of whom, the bored and jaded Maddalena, he takes to a prostitute’s flat and slips some of the old Salami Romano. Emma attempts suicide but Marcello is unmoved – as characters in continental arthouse movies unaccountably are when faced by unusual or tragic circumstances. Then he finds himself alone with an “American” movie star, Sylvia (Anita Ekberg, who, being Swedish, is staggeringly miscast). Sylvia is one of the most tiresome and unconvincing creations in world cinema. She vogues in the Trevi fountain, giggles like a hyena and repeatedly thrusts her enormous breasts at the camera.
The film was hailed as a non-narrative masterpiece and a unique exercise in the “aesthetic of disparity” (that’s the critic Robert Richardson), but it could more easily be summarised as a turgid, lazy mess of half-realised conceits. And yes, I understand that it’s a satire on decadence, not a tribute to it. But only in that same sense that the Sun vilifies people over sex, while being obsessed with undressed women. It’s called having your panettone and eating it.
Shifting to modern cinema, there is Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List, which features at No 9 in the AFI’s list of the greatest American movies and No 1 in Tim Lott’s list of all-time embarrassments. This film is actively offensive. To watch a group of cringing Jews gather around the “good German” during the Holocaust is bad enough. To manipulate one’s emotions, as when a group of incongruously good-looking refugees are tempted into the camp shower block only to receive – yes, showers! – is disgusting. And the final scene, straight out of a prime-time soap, when Schindler breaks down in tears and weeps “I didn’t save enough”, is enough to make the toughest stomach regurgitate its contents.
The only genuinely moving moment is when the movie is over, and the authentic Schindler survivors are shown visiting the real Schindler’s grave. For documentary or literature are the only forms big enough and true enough to fit the Holocaust. Go and see Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah, or read a book by Primo Levi, if you want to know about the death camps. And if you want to be entertained by a tragedy with a happy ending set in an inhumane prison environment, go to see The Shawshank Redemption instead.
Or not. The Shawshank Redemption is a perfectly OK B-movie, worth three and a half stars from any critic, but the idea that it is the greatest movie of all time – repeatedly voted No 1 by cinemagoers (though not by critics) – is not so much offensive as simply mystifying.
It’s a straightforward Hollywood prison drama, in which the good people are a bit too good and the bad people are a bit too bad. The hero, Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins), accused of a murder of which he is innocent, settles into prison life after having the misfortune of being repeatedly sodomised for several years by those nasty sex-crazed monsters that always seem to make a cameo in these prison films. He makes friends with Ellis “Red” Redding (Morgan Freeman), who is unaccountably pretty much the only black person in the prison. He builds a library – well, this is Hollywood – and helps the nasty warden swindle his accounts. Eventually he gets revenge on the warden, escapes and goes to live on a beach. Freeman later joins him. The end.
The narrative is mildly engaging and the characters well enough drawn – so it’s a decent movie, and certainly an improvement on Escape from Alcatraz – but not by all that much. And it’s certainly not the best movie ever made.
Dear reader, if I haven’t offended you personally yet – be patient. Other films I consider to be profoundly overpraised include Kieslowski’s Three Colours Red (nothing happens), Tarkovsky’s Solaris (nothing happens in space) and Von Stroheim’s Greed (nothing happens in the desert for 10 hours).
Marcel Carné’s Les Enfants du Paradis is dated, overlong and absurdly wordy – in short, overly French. Jean Renoir’s La Règle de Jeu (according to many francophile critics, the greatest film ever made), is only a country-house drama with less veracity or dramatic power than Upstairs Downstairs. Charles Laughton’s The Night of the Hunter has moments of melodrama that would not shame an episode of Scooby-Doo. On the Waterfront is a masterclass in ham acting – and if you really want to witness the Method at its best, check out Sidney Lumet’s The Pawnbroker, from 1964.
None of these “masterpieces” deserves a place in history more than large numbers of other films that are either forgotten, not noticed in the first place, or languish on the outer periphery of the canon. The Blair Witch Project and The Innocents, for example, are much scarier and more innovative than the highly lauded Psycho. The dialogue-free Philip Glass/Godfrey Reggio project Koyaanisqatsi is one of the most original movies of the last 30 years. South Pacific and All That Jazz both make Singin’ in the Rain look like the empty spectacle it is. Try, also, The Rapture, a weirdly wonderful film about religious cults by Michael Tolkin (who wrote The Player), Max Reinhardt’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Terence Davies’s masterful Trilogy and my personal greatest of all time, Elem Klimov’s Come and See, a 1985 Russian war epic that makes Apocalypse Now look lightweight.
Please feel free to write in and tear any of these films to shreds. They might even deserve it. And let me tell you – it will make you feel a whole lot better. God knows, writing it down did wonders for me.



