Wall Street 2’s Shia LaBeouf looks every bit the stockbroker as he suits up in a Club Monaco three-piece on the cover of the April issue of GQ.
Shia opens up about his “wild nights†with some of Wall Street’s bad boys as he researched his role in Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps, his [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Monaco’
Shia LaBeouf GQ Magazine April 2010
Jan. 21, 1911: All Roads Lead to Monte Carlo … Rally
1911: The first Monte Carlo Automobile Rally is held. Twenty-three cars starting out from 11 different locations around Europe eventually converge on the tiny Principality of Monaco.
The event, officially the Rallye Monte Carlo, was organized at the behest of Prince Albert I (great-grandfather of current Prince Albert II and grandfather of Prince Rainier III, [...]
Tuna and pollock: A tale of two fisheries
How to pillage the oceans deliberately, and by accident
THERE are two ways to overfish the sea. One is to ignore scientific advice and plunder on regardless. The other is to accept the advice, and then discover it isn’t good enough.
For decades the Atlantic bluefin-tuna fishery has fallen into the former camp. The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the group charged with managing this fishery, has been a disgrace. Every year, its member states have handed themselves quotas far in excess of those prescribed by the organisation’s scientific advice. Last year things were so bad that ICCAT’s chairman warned members that if they did not do better their power to manage the bluefin would end up being taken away from them. But they failed to restrain themselves, and the backlash has begun. Earlier this year Monaco proposed that the bluefin be listed in Appendix I of CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora). Such a listing would ban all international trade while the stock recovered. …
Alberto Contador wins Tour; Lance Armstrong 3rd
PARIS — Lance Armstrong’s children were dressed in yellow. He was not.
When the seven-time Tour de France champion returned to the Tour podium Sunday, his family was there. His fans were there. And so was rival and teammate Alberto Cont…
Live text – Tour de France
Stage 21 – Montereau Fault Yonne to Paris Champs Elysees, 167km
LATEST ACTION (all times BST)
606: DEBATEYour thoughts on the action
To get involved use 606 or text us your views & comments on 81111 and put "Cycling" at the start of them. (Not all contributions can be used)
By Chris Bevan
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1142: pigeons in the park on 606:"Here’s to Last Day madness and some final Cav glory!"
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1137: I’m not forgetting Bradley Wiggins in all of this by the way.
He has had an unforgettable Tour and, despite missing out on a podium place in Paris, to finish fourth and equal Robert Millar’s best finish for a British rider from 1984 is an incredible achievement. When Contador and co break open the champagne on the way into the French capital, as is the norm, Wiggo deserves to take a big swig for himself. He has proven himself to be a genuine contender for future Tours.
1135: It’s a big ask – all Thor realistically needs to do is stay on Cav’s shoulder all day and, assuming neither of them contest those intermediate sprints, then, even if Cav does win the stage, place in the first 15 will bring enough points keep Thor in green. Personally, I’d settle for a stage win for Cav, the green jersey can wait!
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1132: Cav, the Manx Missile, has already won more stages this year than last – five to four – and is set to finish his first Tour. You also might have heard him talking about victory in Paris since before the race began three weeks ago, not much though…he’s not said a lot during the Tour!
There is also a slim chance he could achieve his other aim of this year’s Tour and snatch the green points jersey from Thor Hushovd. The Norwegian leads the Manxman by 25 points – there are 35 up for grabs for the stage winner, and up to another 12 from the two intermediate sprints on the second and fourth laps of the Champs Elysees. Can he do it
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1130: From Richard, via text on 81111: "Morning Mr Bevan. The last three weeks have been great, thanks for the coverage and entertainment from you and all contributors. And every hero prepared to take on Le Tour."
I echo what Richard is saying here – thanks to all you texters and everyone on 606 – you know who you are. This Tour wouldn’t have been the same without you.
1127: Today’s stage begins in Montereau Fault Yonne and will begin as a victory parade into Paris for Contador, the man in yellow, who will be joined on the podium by Andy Schleck and seven-time champion Lance Armstrong.
Only when the Eiffel Tower is in sight, and the riders begin the first of eight laps on the cobbles of the Champs Elysees, will the race for the line begin.
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1123:Yep, we already know that, barring disaster, the formidable Alberto Contador will be crowned this year’s Tour de France winner – and rightly so after a superb display in the mountains and time trials. He is the King.
But can the Isle of Man’s Prince of Sprints Mark Cavendish sign off with his sixth stage win of this year’s race I certainly hope so.
1120 BST: It began in Monaco 22 days ago as the Tour de Lance. Will it finish in Paris today as the Tour de Manx<br/
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Wiggins makes hay but Contador flies
• Wiggins goes fourth after stage 18
• Contador wins time trial to increase his lead
“Time is my everything,” Bradley Wiggins tapped out on his Twitter site a couple of hours before the start of race today’s against the clock, quoting Ian Brown, the former lead singer of the Stone Roses, but it was not destined to be a day on which the clock became his plaything.
After losing the advantage of a promising start to a 40km time trial around Lake Annecy, however, he did well enough to ensure that he ended the day in fourth position in the general classification of the Tour de France, two places above his standing when he rolled down the starting ramp.
The time trial is his speciality, its disciplines honed during his reign as the world’s finest individual pursuit rider, and the course, including a third-category climb, appeared to be made for him. But, like all the contenders for the overall victory, he was outshone by a staggering ride from Alberto Contador, who took over the maillot jaune in Verbier last Sunday and used today’s stage 18 to make it virtually certain that he will wear it all the way to Paris this weekend.
Starting last, Contador was a yellow-clad streak of lightning cutting through the heavy air on a day when thunder rumbled in the surrounding mountains. Much earlier in the day the Swiss rider Fabian Cancellara, the Olympic time trial champion, set an impressive time of 48min 33sec and appeared to have secured a repeat of his victory in the opening stage in Monaco. But when Contador arrived at the first check-point, after 18km, the stopwatch suggested that he was moving in another dimension.
Inevitably his exertions took a toll, and his margin over the field gradually diminished as he circled the lake, but he came home in a time three seconds faster than that of the Swiss rider, with Wiggins, the closest of the challengers to his overall leadership, a further 40sec behind.
It was a demonstration worthy of his compatriot Miguel Indurain, a prodigious time trial performer who won the Tour five times in a row between 1991 and 1995, and on Sunday there will surely be a second victory in three years for Contador.
He explained that he had eased up towards the end of Wednesday’s stage, when he and the Schlecks were climbing the Col de la Colombière, in order to conserve his energy for the time trial. “That was an important factor,” he said.
He had started off thinking only of preserving his leadership, but when he saw his time at the top of the hill he decided to go for the stage win. “I knew Cancellara had gained a lot of time on the descent,” he said, “so I focused on going down the other side of the climb as fast as possible.”
The Schleck brothers, whose combined assault on Wednesday had lifted them to second and third places overall, experienced mixed fortunes. Neither is a time trial expert but, while the elder, Frank, lost 2min 34sec to Contador and dropped to sixth in the standings, the younger, Andy, limited his deficit on the day to 1min 45sec and held on to his second position, now 4min 11sec behind the yellow jersey, as a reward.
“I didn’t lose too much,” the 24-year-old Luxemburger said with a relieved smile at the end of a day that might have brought much worse news. He emphasised that he and his brother are looking forward to Saturday, when the race’s penultimate stage takes the riders up the Mont Ventoux, where they will again be hoping to use their climbing skills to isolate and attack Contador.
On the day Lance Armstrong announced that the principal sponsor of his new team will be RadioShack, a US chain of electronics stores, the seven-times winner failed to respond to signals and could finish no higher than 16th, 1min 30sec behind Contador. Frank Schleck’s bad display, however, lifted Armstrong to third place in the standings, 1min 14sec behind the younger Schleck but now a mere 11sec ahead of Wiggins.
The Englishman’s performance was clearly compromised by his earlier labours in the Pyrenees and the Alps, where he kept pace with the world’s greatest climbers. He was always likely to be presented with a bill, and it arrived on the Côte de Bluffy where he began to struggle.
His start had been fast enough to raise hopes of an ideal way to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the last time the Tour stopped by the side of this lake in the Haute-Savoie, when a stage from Annecy to Chalon-sur-Saone was won by Brian Robinson. That day the Yorkshireman was following up his achievement of the previous year when he had become the first British rider to win a Tour stage.
Wiggins has yet to join the list of Britain’s Tour de France laureates, but one of them, his current Garmin-Slipstream colleague David Millar, did not stint with his praise. “If you’d asked me three years ago whether Brad would have been in contention going up the mountains, I’d have said no,” the Scot announced after coming in with a time good enough for fifth place on the day, two seconds ahead of Wiggins. “But after seeing his determination and how hard he’s worked to be in such great physical condition, I’m proud to call him a team-mate. He inspires me.”
Saturday’s rolling stage from Bourgoin-Jallieu to Aubenas is likely to be a day of recovery rather than inspiration for those still in contention for a place on the podium, before the Giant of Provence discloses how much Wiggins, Armstrong, Andy Schleck and Andreas Kloden have left in the tank. The man in yellow, however, appears to be away and gone.
Starting to get crowded in 100-year-olds’ club
WASHINGTON — It’s starting to get crowded in the 100-year-olds’ club. Once virtually nonexistent, the world’s population of centenarians is projected to reach nearly 6 million by midcentury. That’s pushing the median age toward 50 in man…




