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This BBQ shack is giving away massive platters of meat to launch video game 'Monster Hunter: World'

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  • A giant BBQ shack in London is serving food for free.
  • It’s for the launch of the video game "Monster Hunter: World."

  • The BBQ spit is over 8 feet tall and 8 feet wide.

  • The event runs until January 28.


 

A massive BBQ shack is serving giant platters of meat in London's Flat Iron Square.

The event is for the launch of the video game "Monster Hunter: World" which launches on January 26 on PS4 and Xbox One.

A day before the game's launch, the organisers set up a BBQ spit is over 8 feet tall and 8 feet wide with half a cow roasting on it weighing around 100kg. They expect about 5 cows to be eaten over 4 days, until the event closes on January 28.

Monster Hunter is very popular in Japan. It's a role-playing game which sees players hunting and capturing giant creatures. 

Guests at the BBQ shack can enjoy massive meat platters for free to celebrate the latest release in the series. 

Produced and filmed by Claudia Romeo.

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The recent drastic moves by MoviePass make one analyst believe it's 'skating on thin ice' (HMNY, AMC)

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4d movie theater movie goers

  • The movie-theater subscription service MoviePass is getting into the distribution business, as it has teamed with The Orchard to acquire a Sundance Film Festival title.
  • A day after the buy at Sundance, MoviePass announced its service would no longer be available at some AMC theaters.
  • A media analyst believes MoviePass is "skating on thin ice."


It's been a roller-coaster ride this week for MoviePass.

On Wednesday, the movie-theater subscription service announced that it was teaming with a distribution company, The Orchard, to take the North American rights for "American Animals," a heist movie that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Then on Thursday, MoviePass revealed that it was pulling its service from some AMC theaters.

Entering the acquisition game with MoviePass Ventures, the company hopes that by investing in movies it can share in their box-office success. Such investments could help counter losses from the company's main business model, in which it pays the full price for tickets at most theaters where MoviePass subscribers use the app.

There's skepticism, however, that this is the right move for MoviePass.

"It's a diversion from their focus and a loss, as most film investments are," Hal Vogel, a media analyst who founded Vogel Capital Management, told Business Insider. "In my opinion, they're skating on thin ice."

AMC theater

Another move that will not be universally praised is MoviePass’ decision to pull its service from some theaters owned by AMC, the largest movie chain in the US. Subscribers will no longer be able to use the app at major theaters like Empire 25 in New York City, Universal CityWalk in Los Angeles, and AMC Loews Boston Common, according to Deadline.

In all, 10 AMC theaters have been pulled from the service, according to Ted Farnsworth, the CEO of Helios and Matheson Analytics, the parent company of MoviePass, in a statement to Business Insider.

In a statement about the move obtained by Business Insider, MoviePass CEO Mitch Lowe said: "As we continue to strive for mutually beneficial relationships with theaters, the list of theaters we work with is subject to change."

MoviePass covers over $2 million in ticket sales weekly to AMC, according to Deadline.

Though AMC is the country's biggest chain, MoviePass probably anticipated problems early on. Ever since the company decided to change its model in the summer to a $9.95-a-month subscription plan, a big price cut that in some cases would cause the company to lose money on subscribers who see just one movie a month, AMC has been lukewarm about being supportive.

The chain initially announced it was looking into whether it could block the service from its theaters, saying it would create unrealistic expectations about ticket prices, but it eventually decided to continue accepting MoviePass.

Lowe has said the company's goals going forward include making deals with exhibitors to get discounted tickets in exchange for promotion and using its data to help market movies. But that never seemed likely to happen with AMC.

On a earnings call in November, AMC CEO Adam Aron said: "AMC has absolutely no intention, I repeat no intention, of sharing any — I repeat, any — of our admissions revenue or our concessions revenue with MoviePass."

Farnsworth's statement to Business Insider, however, suggests MoviePass sees itself as having some leverage in relationships with theaters.

"We already know in past testing that MoviePass subscribers are not theater-loyal," Farnsworth said. "They're happy to drive by a theater that may be closer to a theater that will accept MoviePass — because of the MoviePass value."

At the same time, Vogel believes pulling out of some AMC theaters in major cities represents a "significant loss of traction."

"AMC has taken no action to block the acceptance of MoviePass at our theatres," a spokesperson told Business Insider on Friday. "We have no further comment about MoviePass’ unilateral actions. We are, however, disappointed that MoviePass continues to make false statements about AMC, including today when MoviePass greatly exaggerated its contributions to AMC’s profitability."

SEE ALSO: The 15 Oscar best-picture winners that made the most money at the US box office

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NOW WATCH: Here's how LeBron James stays in incredible shape

Inside the £2 million mansion that has caught the eye of new Man United forward Alexis Sánchez, complete with a piano room, fully stocked bar, and a garden fit for football

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Alexis Sanchez

Alexis Sánchez swapped London for life in Manchester when he transferred from Arsenal and signed a £350,000-per-week contract at Manchester United this month.

The 29-year-old forward is taking little time to settle into his new city as he has reportedly viewed a £2 million mansion near Altrincham, according to the Daily Mail, which is south west of Manchester city centre.

Complete with a piano room, a fully stocked bar, and a garden perfect for a few games of football, scroll down for a look inside the home that has caught the attention of new United forward Alexis Sánchez.

SEE ALSO: Inside Arsenal star Mesut Özil's £10 million home, which is decked out in Turkish marble and boasts a massive Yeezy Boost collection

After leaving north London club Arsenal for Manchester United earlier this month, 29-year-old Alexis has reportedly visited a £2 million property near Altrincham. Having signed a contract worth £18.2 million a year, this means it would take Sanchez just six weeks to pay for the property in full.

Sources:Rightmove and Goal.com.



The mansion is in between Altrincham and Manchester Airport, which is an eight mile (or 25 minute drive) from United's stadium at Old Trafford.



The 5-bedroom house has a huge garden, a gymnasium, and a three-car garage that has plenty of room for his £150,000 Bentley.

Sources:Rightmove and Daily Mail.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Shake Shack has a new chicken sandwich in its lineup — here's how it tastes

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Shake Shack Chicken Club Sandwich

  • Shake Shack's new grilled chicken club sandwich is being rolled out nationwide after being tested in Brooklyn, New York locations.
  • It'll be available for a limited time starting Friday.
  • The sandwich is decent, but the chicken itself leaves something to be desired.


Shake Shack has a new grilled chicken sandwich in its lineup.

The "Griddled Chick'n Club" is a decidedly healthy item for a chain that serves cheese fries, hot dogs, and double cheeseburgers. Of course, this isn't the first chicken item on Shake Shack's menu — that honor goes to the deliciously crispy and near-perfect Chick'n Shack fried-chicken sandwich.

The sandwich will be rolled out nationally, excluding airport and stadium locations, for a limited time starting Friday. But is it as good as the rest of the chain's chicken? We grabbed one from a Brooklyn Shake Shack to find out. 

SEE ALSO: We tried everything on McDonald's new value menu — here's the definitive ranking

Right off the bat, the smell is intoxicating. The smoky aroma of bacon dominates the senses — always a good thing.



The sandwich follows Shake Shack tradition and is embraced by the chain's dense, ever-so-lightly sweet, potato bun. It's a rare bun that goes with nearly any sandwich, and this bun is one of them. It's even good with Shake Shack's breakfast sandwiches.



Let's look at the mechanics. It's a simply constructed sandwich — a club is a club is a club, and simplicity is a good thing here. The tomatoes are firm and vibrant, which is no surprise given Shake Shack's creed of quality ingredients and sourcing.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A startup that makes cannabis oil for vaping wants to be America's first $1 billion 'marijuana unicorn'

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cura cannabis solutions select oil vape 1

  • Cura Cannabis Solutions, maker of the Select Oil vape cartridges, wants to be the first "unicorn" with a $1 billion valuation in the US marijuana industry.
  • The company raised at a $400 million valuation in 2017.
  • While other cannabis brands tout being vertically integrated, Cura is focused on building a singular product: cannabis oil.

 

Cura Cannabis Solutions, a startup that makes marijuana oil for vape cartridges, wants to be the first US company in the cannabis industry to achieve elusive "unicorn" status with a billion dollar valuation.

"We've had a lot of nicknames. 'Unicorn' is definitely a new one," said Cura president and cofounder Cameron Forni.

Cura is currently raising funding at a $400 million valuation, which represents a 1,300% increase from its valuation in 2016 and puts it ahead of the combined market value of the two biggest publicly traded marijuana companies in the US: Terra Tech and Kush Bottles.

cura cannabis solutions select oil vaping 4The Oregon-based company closed the year with $40.5 million in sales, and it predicts revenue will rise to $120 million in 2018 as California's recreational marijuana market comes online.

Sales of recreational marijuana began in California on January 1, and the state market is expected to haul $3.7 billion in revenue this year as dispensaries pop up in new cities and counties. Cura, which operated in California's medical marijuana market, is positioned to piggyback on the market's success because it already has distribution there.

The vaping market is also exploding. In California, vaporizers account for 32% of sales on Eaze, a marijuana delivery service. In 2017, 72% of millennial Eaze customers bought a vaporizer.

Cura's colossal growth stems from a decision it made early on to focus exclusively on cannabis oil, a product that's highly concentrated in the chemical compounds found on the outside of the plant. The company does not grow its own marijuana, but sources it from third-party farmers.

The company's signature line of vape cartridges, Select Oil, uses a Japanese organic cotton wick that absorbs the oil through its fibers and delivers it to a heating chamber. According to Forni, the system allows users to take quick draws without the burned taste of a standard cotton wick.

Select Oil offers over a dozen formulations with various potencies, flavors, and desired effects. Its biggest seller is a $60 cartridge called Select Elite, which has the highest concentration of THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, of all its vape cartridges.

cura cannabis solutions select oil vaping 3

Cura has been able to scale quickly by having a broad supply chain. In 2017, there were 240 licensed marijuana farms in Oregon, and 180 of them sold all of their trim (plant material that's leftover from trimming the marijuana bud) to Cura for making oil, according to the company.

Some cannabis brands say that being vertically integrated— growing the plant that's processed for oil or other products — allows for greater quality control. Brands also pocket a bigger profit, because they don't have to share the revenue with farmers and middlemen distributors.

"What other industry does everything from production to processing to retail?" said Forni, who got into the cannabis industry after working on agriculture technology. "In cannabis, these companies want to be the best at everything. It's very difficult to be the best at everything."

Cura sells its products in California, Nevada, Oregon, and is eyeing an expansion to Arizona, Florida, New Jersey, and Ohio. It also provides oil wholesale to marijuana edibles makers.

Founded in 2015, Cura has grown from a modest 15-person operation to a workforce of 285 employees. Its CEO, Nitin Khanna, has remained at the helm of the company in spite of allegations leveled against him. (In 2014, Khanna settled a civil suit accusing him of sexual battery and rape.)

Cura declined to comment on the matter.

SEE ALSO: A craft marijuana brand is turning a famous California winery into a Wonka Factory for weed

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Legal marijuana may have several health benefits

A look at the career of Olympic gold medalist Lindsey Vonn, who competed just hours after an 'excruciating' crash in 2006 and recently said she doesn't represent Trump

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Lindsey Vonn ski skier skiing

• In the Winter Olympics and beyond, Lindsey Vonn is the face of alpine skiing for Americans.

• She began skiing at the age of three and competing at the age of six.

• Vonn won a gold medal in downhill skiing at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, but missed the subsequent Olympic Games in Sochi due to a major injury. She also placed eighth during the 2006 Turin Olympics, just 48 hours after a horrific crash.

• She'll be tackling the downhill, Super G, and combined events in the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.



For years, Lindsey Vonn has reigned as the queen of alpine skiing for many Americans. As one of the most visible skiers out there, she's become the face of the sport in the US.

And now, with Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang approaching, she may be preparing to close one chapter of her athletic career.

Reuters reported the upcoming games "are likely to be her last Winter Olympics."

And the 33-year-old competitor is looking to make this last one count. 

"I want to win more than everyone else expects me to win," she told CBC. "The biggest competitor will be just myself, trying to stay relaxed and stay focused, because I have been waiting for these Olympics for so long and I want to win so badly that I need to be able to keep it together."

Here's a look at the career that's gotten her to this point:

SEE ALSO: An inside look the historic career of 'unlikely ballerina' Misty Copeland, who went from 'pretty much homeless' to dance superstar

DON'T MISS: Here's what former gymnast Kerri Strug has been up to since she stuck the unforgettable vault that won her team the 1996 Olympic gold

Vonn was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on October 18, 1984. Her father, Alan Kildow, is a lawyer and a former competitive skier. Her mother, Linda Krohn, is a lawyer who suffered a stroke while giving birth to Vonn. She grew up with two brothers and two sisters.

Source: The Washington Post, Team USA, Red Bull, The New York Times



Vonn first put on skis when she was only three years old, and was competing by the age of six. Instructor Erich Sailer, who also trained her father, said she skied like a slow "turtle" in her first event, according to The Washington Post.

Source: Team USA, The Washington Post



But her "turtle" phase didn't last long. Vonn told The Washington Post that over the years, Sailer was able to motivate her to go faster. "He just knew what button to push in order to make me ski faster. I think that's rare in coaches."

Source: The Washington Post



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Take a tour of the brand new global headquarters of Insider Inc., steps away from Wall Street

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Insider Inc NYC

• Insider Inc., which includes Business Insider, INSIDER, Markets Insider, and BI Intelligence, moved to a new office in Manhattan's Financial District in January 2018.

• The company was previously based in the Flatiron District.

• As international offices open in countries such as Italy, France, Japan, Singapore, and England, the FiDi base will serve as the new global headquarters.



Insider Inc. has a new home.

In early January, the Business Insider, INSIDER, Markets Insider, and BI Intelligence teams bid adieu to our previous digs in the Flatiron District. We've since set up shop downtown at a new address: Liberty Plaza, just a few steps away from Wall Street, in Manhattan's Financial District.

This new workspace will serve as the company's global headquarters for our 16 editions worldwide.

Here's an inside look at our new office:

SEE ALSO: Facebook was just named the best workplace of 2018 — step inside its New York office, where employees enjoy an in-house pastry chef and tons of celebrity cameos

DON'T MISS: At PayPal and Venmo's New York offices, employees enjoy as much free food as they can stomach, from Taco Tuesdays to secret stashes of candy

DON'T FORGET: Inside the offices of Jigsaw, an elite think tank created by Google where employees sample food from around the world and take naps in rooms named Narnia and Mordor

Business Insider launched in 2007 with a staff of five, as a fledgling tech blog called Silicon Alley Insider operating out of a loading dock.



Ten years later, we've landed on two floors of a high-rise building in FiDi. As of December 2017, the New York office was home to 349 full-time employees and 44 interns.



"I think the new office is a testament to how far we've come in just ten years and the commitment we're making to the next ten years," said Caitlin Harper, our director of operations and culture.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Trump's being slammed for this photo of his desk — here are past presidents' desks for comparison

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Donald Trump Desk

  • US President Donald Trump was lambasted on social media after a photo in a White House handout showed him working during the government shutdown.
  • Online commenters pointed to Trump's stiff posture and empty desk.
  • Trump's desk has previously been busier, but his workspace lacks the family photos that previous presidents often showcased.


Your desk can shine a light on some of your work habits and personality traits.

So it's not surprising that a recent photo of US President Donald Trump spawned several reactions on social media.

The photo, in a White House handout, shows Trump sitting at the Oval Office's Resolute Desk, the surface of which is mostly clear, aside from a phone. Trump is leaning forward in his chair, apparently listening to a phone call, while wearing a white "Make America Great Again" hat.

Some Twitter users speculated about whether the president was getting much done at all, pointing to his stiff posture and empty desk.

Honor Sachs, a history professor at Western Carolina University who wrote "Home Rule: Households, Manhood, and National Expansion on the Eighteenth-Century Kentucky Frontier," compared Trump's workspace with that of previous presidents, including Barack Obama's tidy workspace and Teddy Roosevelt's paper-strewn desk.

trump desk tweet

Business Insider also found some photos of past president's desks — photos that, of course, aren't definitive portrayals of their typical workspaces. It's relatively easy to move objects around and clear things when it comes time to sign a bill or pose for a photo op.

But it's clear that Trump's White House workplace setup lacks one element that past presidents have prominently featured: family photographs.

Here's a look at some of the desks of previous US presidents.

SEE ALSO: Management experts break down Trump's leadership style during his first 100 days as president

DON'T MISS: A body language expert breaks down 6 of Trump's handshakes

In fairness, Trump's desk hasn't always appeared so clutter-free. Getty's Drew Angerer captured stacks of files during the president's contentious phone call in January 2017 with Australia's prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull.



But the president's desk is now barer than it was in his former spot in Trump Tower. That desk was piled high with papers and flanked by a row of trophies, photos, and bobblehead dolls on the windowsill.



In Barack Obama's White House, pictures of the president's family were prominently featured behind his desk.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

There's even more evidence that one type of diet is the best for your body and brain

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hiker happiness joy strength fitness exercise mountain climber Aoraki National Park new zealand outside

In a world dominated by celebrity fad diets that range from absurd, like Reese Witherspoon's alleged "baby-food diet," to absurdly unaffordable, such as the $200 "moon dust"-infused smoothie that Gwyneth Paltrow drinks, many people don't believe there's a single best diet for your health.

But a growing body of evidence suggests that a plant-based diet— which focuses on vegetables while incorporating whole grains and lean proteins — reigns supreme. It's been found to be ideal for losing weight, staying lean, and keeping the mind sharp.

Plant-based diets are "good for the environment, your heart, your weight, and your overall health," according to US News and World Report's most recent report on the best eating plans.

Such diets come in many forms, but recent research — including a new preliminary study presented at the American Stroke Association's International Stroke Conference — suggests that the best plans for protecting the brain from age-related cognitive decline are the Mediterranean diet and the MIND diet, a version of the Mediterranean plan that focuses on "brain-healthy" foods.

avocado smoked salmon blueberries healthy food meal bowl tomatoes lunchThe Mediterranean diet is rich in vegetables, fruits, whole grains, beans, nuts, olive oil, and fish; it's low in red meat, processed foods, poultry, and dairy. The MIND diet emphasizes green leafy vegetables, nuts, berries, beans, whole grains, seafood, poultry, olive oil, and wine. Those following this regimen limit or eliminate red meat, butter and stick margarine, cheese, pastries, sweets, and fried foods. 

Mediterranean and MIND for the mind

The lastest preliminary study suggests that in people who've survived a stroke, the MIND diet may help slow cognitive decline that can follow the episode. Stroke survivors are twice as likely to develop dementia compared with the general population.

That builds on the findings of a study published last summer in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, in which researchers looked at data from close to 6,000 older adults who participated in a large study on health and retirement. First, they asked participants about their diet and the types of foods they ate or did not eat. Then they measured their memory and attention skills using reliable tests like word lists and backward counting exercises.

The researchers compared the participants' diets to how they performed on the cognitive tests. Those whose eating plans lined up with Mediterranean and MIND-style diets did significantly better than those on other types of diets did.

In fact, the more closely aligned their diets were with a Mediterranean-style plan, the lower their risk of scoring poorly on the brain tests.

"These findings lend support to the hypothesis that diet modification may be an important public health strategy to protect against neurodegeneration during aging," Claire McEvoy, the lead author of the paper and a nutritional epidemiologist at the University of California San Francisco, wrote in the paper.

older man elderly man jogging nature running exercise thinking outdoorsResearchers still aren't sure why these type of eating plans appear to be so beneficial for the brain, but they have some clues.

Both diets are rich in antioxidants and two types of healthy fat — monounsaturated and omega-3 fatty acids. Previous studies have found a link between these ingredients and a reduced risk of dementia as well as higher cognitive performance. And the green vegetables and berries emphasized in the MIND diet have been shown to help protect against progressive loss of the structure or function of brain cells. This loss, known as neurodegeneration, is a key characteristic of diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.

But plant-based diets aren't just good for the brain — they have key benefits for the body as well.

Why plant-based diets are good for the body

Cara Anselmo, a nutritionist and dietitian at New York's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, told Business Insider that she frequently advises her clients to ramp up their intake of plant-based foods and cut back on red meat and refined carbohydrates like white bread.

toast avocado tomato sandwichTo keep your energy levels up and help you feel healthy in the long term, your diet needs to feed more than your stomach, Anselmo told Business Insider. It has to satiate your muscles, which crave protein; your digestive system, which runs best with fiber; and your tissues and bones, which work optimally when they're getting vitamins from food.

A plant-based diet's combination of whole grains, fruits, vegetables, proteins, and fats accomplishes that goal.

This balance is also key to keeping you full after a meal and energized throughout the day so you don't feel the need to overeat, Nichola Whitehead, a registered dietitian with a private practice in the UK, told Business Insider.

"You need to have a balanced meal — things like whole grains, fiber, and vegetables — in order to sustain your blood sugar. Empty calories [like white bread or white rice] give a temporary fix," she said.

Plant-based diets also tend to reduce the risk of certain diseases including heart disease, diabetes, and some types of cancer.

"When you look at overall dietary patterns it's a more whole-foods, plant-based diet that tends to be healthier in terms of less disease risk," Anselmo said. "People get caught up in things like, 'Well, how much iron or Vitamin C does this have?' But the reality is that the whole foods are just going to naturally be higher in those things."

SEE ALSO: Americans have been making a huge diet mistake for 100 years — here's what they should do instead

DON'T MISS: A Stanford researcher is pioneering a dramatic shift in how we treat depression — and you can try her new tool right now

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here’s how the American diet has changed in the last 52 years

'Game of Thrones' star Maisie Williams says the show will return in April 2019

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arya stark game of thrones season seven premiere

  • "Game of Thrones" star Maisie Williams may have accidentally said when the eighth and final season will premiere on 2019.
  • According to an interview with Williams in the UK publication Metro, the show will return in April 2019.
  • A rep for HBO told Business Insider said that a premiere date and month cannot be confirmed at this time. 

 

We have a long way to go until "Game of Thrones" returns for its eighth and final season. But now, thanks to Maisie Williams (who plays Arya Stark), we might know what month to expect its return in 2019.

In an interview with the UK publication Metro, Williams said the show would air its first episode of the last season in April 2019.

“We wrap in December and we air our first episode in April [2019]," she said. "That’s a four-month turnaround for these huge episodes. There’s a lot that goes into the final edit. You would not want to rush this season at all. We owe it to our audience and our fans to really do this final season to the best of our abilities.”

So according to Williams, shooting for season eight will end in December 2018, with the season premiere airing sometime in April. Season eight will only have six episodes, but they'll be feature length. (Season seven aired in the summer of 2017, but the previous six seasons had their premieres in April as well.)

As for Williams' feelings about the show ending, she told Metro, "It’s going to be really odd not seeing the cast regularly. We all get on so well and we are such a tight-knit group."

As badly as we want to see what happens, we still don't want the show to end. But it will, and more characters will probably die, because that's how "Game of Thrones" works. 

In a response to Business Insider's request for comment, a representative said that HBO can't confirm an air date or month at this time, only that it is returning in 2019. 

SEE ALSO: Reese Witherspoon seems to have 3 legs in a Vanity Fair cover that people think is disastrously Photoshopped

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: An exercise scientist explains what everyone gets wrong about stretching

This 'Game of Thrones' themed hotel is made entirely of snow and ice

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People are obsessed with the "Game of Thrones" ice hotel, located in Muonio, Finland. Experience the fantasy at Lapland Hotels SnowVillage.

Here's what's inside:

The hotel is made entirely of snow and ice. It's kept between 23° and 28° F. SnowVillage builds a new ice hotel each year. This year, everything's "Game of Thrones" themed!

Janne Pasma, Operating Manager of SnowVillage:

"Everything just matches with our concept. So that winter is coming but that winter is again here. And all the themes and pictures of the 'Game of Thrones' fit perfectly to our SnowVillage." 

Enter through a glittery tunnel. The Ice Throne welcomes you, while The Mountain stands guard. 

Janne Pasma:

"My first vision was to create the Iron Throne from ice with The Mountain next to it. That was also the first thing we created inside the SnowVillage." 

An ice dragon overlooks the ice bar. The Wall of Faces watches guests as they booze. Each of the 24 rooms has a "Game of Thrones" character overhead. Sleep under a White Walker or a House Tully's silver trout sigil. Rooms worthy of a lord or lady of Westeros. Seven Hells! There's even an ice slide. There's also a screening room. 

A partnership between SnowVillage and HBO Nordic brought the hotel to life. Construction began in November 2017. They used 44 million pounds of snow and carved everything by hand. The ice hotel will melt away come April.

Join the conversation about this story »

HBO has bought explosive Sundance hit film 'The Tale' starring Laura Dern, reportedly for $7 million

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The Tale Sundance Institute

  • HBO has bought the rights to "The Tale," a hit at Sundance, reportedly for $7 million.
  • In the film, director Jennifer Fox recounts being sexually abused at the age of 13.
  • Laura Dern plays Fox, who after coming across a story she wrote at 13, begins to uncover her "special" relationship with two adult coaches.
  • The movie got an incredible response at the Sundance Film Festival.

 

HBO has picked up the worldwide rights to Sundance hit "The Tale" starring Laura Dern for $7 million, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

As THR notes, it's rare for HBO to buy a finished narrative film out of a festival. The company usually prefers to develop in-house.

The movie comes from director Jennifer Fox, who has spent her career making documentaries. With this movie, Fox turned to narrative storytelling and uses the structure to explore her experience with sexual abuse.

In the era of the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements, “The Tale” is a project that has shown up right when everyone in Hollywood is publicly grappling with sexual misconduct. But the process of making "The Tale" started long before the Harvey Weinstein sexual misconduct allegations kick-started the conversation.

Unlike documentaries, which can be shot and edited at a quick pace (while a hot-button issue is in the zeitgeist), narrative storytelling takes a lot longer. You have to develop a script, get the money, cast it, shoot it, edit it, and so on. It takes years, and can lead to movies with a social pulse feeling dated when finally released.

Fox didn’t anticipate our culture’s current examination of sexual misconduct when she decided to make “The Tale,” but sometimes a story and an issue link up.

"The Tale"

At 13 years old, Fox wrote a story titled “The Tale” for a school project. It addressed a girl talking about her “special” relationship with two adult coaches — one male, one female. She said the work was fiction, but in fact it was all too true. Fox has now taken it and adapted it into a movie.

In the film, Laura Dern plays Jennifer. Like Fox, she’s a thriving documentarian. But when her mother (Ellen Burstyn) comes across “The Tale” story she wrote at 13, she sends it to her daughter as she realizes, reading between the lines, that what Jennifer wrote was truth not fiction.

Jennifer Fox Nicholas Hunt GettyAt first, Jennifer deflects her mother’s theory. Reading the story she composed 40 years ago, she doesn’t see anything that would suggest that the relationships she had with her coaches (the female, her horse riding coach; the male, her running and conditioning coach) were inappropriate. But quickly her childhood memories return, and eventually Jennifer heads out on a fact-finding mission that leads to her confronting the two coaches (played by Frances Conroy and the late John Heard in the present day, and Jason Ritter/Elizabeth Debicki in flashbacks).

But what is striking about “The Tale” is the unconventional way the story is told.

Flashbacks and unreliable memories

Fox uses flashbacks to recount her 13-year-old self in the 1970s. But she often replays scenes and sequences numerous times, as the character receives revelations from friends and family that change what she thought happened. This dramatizes how memory can never be 100% reliable, and shows how the brain can alter facts to cope with bad memories.

Fox also uses her documentary style, setting up scenes in which grown-up Jennifer asks questions to her younger self, and the two coaches, as if the scenes were revealing one-on-ones for a doc.

However, the part of the movie that’s going to get the biggest reaction is the graphic nature of the sexual content. Fox doesn’t hold back in showing how the coaches manipulate Jennifer into a sexual relationship with the male coach, with scenes depicting the coach having sexual encounters with her, even taking her virginity.

The scenes are very tough to watch, but they are essential to the movie. They are not there to glorify or titillate, but to lay out to the audience how the coaches made Jennifer feel she was the one with the power, and was becoming a woman through their guidance, when in fact she was just their pleasure toy.

Dern gives a powerhouse performance as a strong-willed woman who has to reexamine her life. Child actress Isabelle Nélisse plays 13-year-old Jennifer with a maturity that’s astounding to watch. Burstyn, Ritter, Debicki, Conroy, and Heard all give strong supporting performances (Common plays Jennifer’s boyfriend — but it’s not his best work).

“The Tale” is the first movie that really epitomizes the #MeToo movement. Though there will likely be a lot of talk about the sex scenes in the movie, this is a story that needs to show the horrors to tell it correctly.

The powerful stories of victims revealed in newspapers, magazines, and websites since last October is what has made the country take notice. This is not the time to water things down.

SEE ALSO: Nicolas Cage's movie at Sundance, "Mandy," uses his vintage, insane acting style to prefection and has all the makings of a cult classic

Join the conversation about this story »

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The 10 most expensive cities to live in around the world in 2018

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The world's most expensive cities to live in have been revealed in a major survey of almost 300 population hubs.

The destinations are named in the 14th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey: 2018.

It analysed 293 metropolitan housing markets in nine countries — Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, the UK, and the US — in the third quarter of 2017.

Using the "median multiple" approach, which involves taking an area's median house price and dividing it by — the median household income. So if the aver gae income was $50,000 and the average house cost $250,000, the median multiple would be 5.

The method found 26 "severely unaffordable" locations, with the worst offenders in the USA, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and China.

The survey also looked at all cities, non-major markets included — which is the data we've compiled below.

Scroll down to see the 10 most expensive cities to live in around the world in 2018.

SEE ALSO: The 10 most expensive cities to live in around the world in 2017

10. Tauranga, Western Bay of Plenty, New Zealand — New Zealand's housing is severely unaffordable with an overall median multiple of 5.8, and in Tauranga the average home costs 8.9 times the average income.



=9. Salinas, Monterrey, California, USA — Located in the county of Monterrey, Salinas — a city with a population of less than 150,000 — has a median multiple of 9.1.



=9. San Francisco, California, USA — Tied with Salinas is hilly, much more populous San Francisco, also with a median multiple of 9.1.



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This Instagram-famous pilot's photos of thunderstorms, blinding sunrises, and the Northern Lights show what it’s like to work from the cockpit at 37,000 feet

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34-year-old Christiaan van Heijst, Dutch senior first officer and cargo pilot, flies the Boeing 747-8 and -400 Freighter — and he's racked up 8,000 hours of flying time.

Van Heijst is also a travel blogger and photographer. He takes photos of the incredible views he enjoys from the cockpit via his Instagram account, then writes about them on his blog.

From blinding sunrises to the Northern Lights — or navigating his way through a violent front of thunderstorms — scroll down to see some of the insane things he has experienced from 37,000 feet in the air.

SEE ALSO: Fitness influencers, trainers, and models show us what's inside their fridges — and reveal why you should avoid 'fat-free' foods and 'cheat days'

Meet 34-year-old Christiaan van Heijst, senior first officer and cargo pilot. This is his office — he's logged 8,000 hours flying the Boeing 747-8 and -400 Freighter.

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From 37,000 feet, Van Heijst gets a unique perspective on the world — and he shares his insane photos on his blog and with his 58,000 Instagram fans.

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According to the post above, this photo captures moonlight as it covers the mountains over Iran and Iraq, "giving it a ‘One Thousand and One Nights’ atmosphere.

"Millions of villages and cities pass by and even the burning fires from oil wells in Iraq are glowing in the distance," he writes.



He enjoys some pretty spectacular views in this line of work.

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The 13 cheapest holiday destinations in the world for couples

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Bali, Indonesia

With dreary weather and low moods, planning a holiday can be the perfect January pick-me-up — especially for couples considering a Valentine's Day getaway.

The Post Office Holiday Money Report has revealed the cheapest holiday hotspots in the world in 2018 that make for the perfect holiday for two.

To produce the ranking, the company looked at the cost of the following items in 42 destinations around the world: a three-course meal for two with a bottle of house wine, cup of coffee, bottle of local beer, can of Coca-Cola, glass of wine, bottle of still water, suncream, and insect repellent.

It doesn't include how much it costs to get somewhere, or the price of accommodation.

The costs were compiled with the help of national and regional tourist boards and specialist tour operators. And there's good news — in more than 40% of the places on the list, the costs of items like meals and drinks are less than they were a year ago.

From Bali to Budapest, scroll down for a look at the cheapest holiday destinations in the world for couples, ranked in ascending order by the total cost of key holiday essentials:

SEE ALSO: This under-the-radar European city has been named the best in the world for a night out

13. Mombasa, Kenya — £66.77 for holiday essentials.

Cup of coffee:£1.63

Beer: £2.29

Coca-Cola: £1.51

Glass of wine: £3.26

Bottle of mineral water: £0.50

Suncream: £11.25

Insect repellant: £2.27

Meal for two: £44.06



12. Bali, Indonesia — £66.61.

Cup of coffee: £2.10

Beer: £1.38

Coca-Cola: £0.51

Glass of wine: £4.50

Bottle of mineral water: £0.36

Suncream: £10.32

Insect repellant:£0.64

Meal for two: £46.80



11. Hoi An, Vietnam — £65.85.

Cup of coffee: £1.45

Beer: £2.18

Coca-Cola: £1.45

Glass of wine: £5.08

Bottle of mineral water: £0.54

Suncream: £4.35

Insect repellant: £1.81

Meal for two: £48.99



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Frequent travellers tell us why you should always take the hotel room with the sofa bed — and reveal 9 other easy ways to make a cheaper room feel like a suite

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chl river suite bedroom cmyk mr corinthia london hotel

  • Getting the suite experience can be possible even if you're staying in a standard hotel room.
  • Business Insider asked frequent travellers and experts for the things they always do to ensure they have the most comfortable stay possible and receive the best service.
  • Their advice includes things like always arriving at your hotel on time, or requesting the room with the sofa bed.


Flying first class and staying in penthouse suites is every traveller's dream, but for those on a regular budget, it's hardly a reality.

But just like there are things you can do to make economy feel like first class, there are also ways you can make staying in a standard hotel room feel like a luxurious suite experience.

Business Insider asked a range of travel experts for the things they always do when they're booking or arriving at a hotel in order to make their stay as seamless and comfortable as possible — and get the absolute best service.

Here are 10 ways to make a standard hotel room feel like a suite, according to travel experts.

1. Tell the hotel what time you'll be arriving — and stick to it

front desk hotel

This is what 20-year-old aviation expert Alex Macheras always does, and he said: "It means they often a better prepared for my arrival, including if it’s early morning — with a ready-made tea/coffee — or perhaps late at night, by ensuring check in is very fast so that I can head straight to sleep."

2. Take tips from past travellers

"I use 'Room Tips' on TripAdvisor to note down the most popular room numbers being mentioned," Macheras said. "Not all standard rooms are created equally, some are superior to others despite being the same category room. More often than not, rooms at the end of the corridor are slightly larger."

3. Always tell the hotel if it's a special occasion

champagne in hotel room

If you're celebrating a birthday or anniversary, be sure to let the hotel know. "The front desk team will note it down, and help you celebrate in one way or another," Macheras said. "Every time I’m travelling to celebrate something, there is often cake, fruit platters, or Champagne in my room, upon my arrival to the hotel."

4. Ask for a deal or an upgrade

"Try to actually get a suite — if you arrive late, especially at an independent hotel, you might be able to buy a cheap upgrade if the hotel knows by that point that no one is going to book one for cash," said Rob Burgess, founder of air miles blog Head for Points. "This works better on shorter stays, as the longer you are staying the more risk the hotel takes by giving you a better room for a discount."

5. Get rid of hotel literature

"All of those brochures, leaflets, and stand-up cards on the desk, TV, side table etc. — put them in a drawer," Burgess said. "They kill the homely feel."

5. Ask for anything missing from your room

hotel robe and slippers

"Ask for extras that are 99% of the time free and included in the room, but may not physically be in the room," Macheras said. This can include a robe, slippers, or softer/firmer pillows.

6. Take the room with a sofa bed

"Many hotels advertise an extra sofabed in some rooms, often for the same price as a room with just a bed," Burgess said. "Take the room with a sofabed, even if you're not bringing a child. This guarantees that you will get the biggest standard room available, as they are the ones where the sofabeds get put."

7. Bring luxury with you

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"I always travel with some mini travel candles, of either Cire Trudon or Diptyque, to have at hand as good smells and candlelight make everything prettier," said Emma Day, the celebrity makeup artist who spends most of her time travelling.

"I also always take This Works Pillow Spray as I’m often a bad sleeper and this is really soothing and seems to help. Also, I always take a rather old lilac cashmere Brora throw, which is not only quite luxurious looking but doubles up as a blanket if the heating is not amazing or there aren’t extra blankets. It’s so comforting!"

8. Make use of hotel loyalty programmes...

Even if it's your first time at the chain, you should register with the hotel's loyalty programme, according to Macheras, "so the front desk team are aware you have an interest to return, and therefore ensure they 'wow' you first time...which often means a room upgrade."

9. ...and credit cards

amex gold card

"Many chain hotels give out elite status with credit cards," said Burgess, who suggested looking into the following cards:

  • American Express Platinum in the UK, which gives all cardholders Starwood Preferred Guest (Sheraton, Westin, W, etc.) Gold, Hilton Honors Gold, Club Carlson (Radisson, Park Inn) Gold, Melia Rewards Gold, and Shangri-La Jade status.
  • IHG Rewards Club MasterCard, which is free, gives you IHG Rewards Club Gold status, valid at Holiday Inn, HI Express, Crowne Plaza, Indigo, InterContinental, etc.
  • IHG Rewards Club Premium MasterCard (which comes at a £99 ($132) fee) gives you IHG Rewards Club Platinum status.
  • Hilton Honors Platinum Visa (also free) gives you Hilton Honors Silver status and upgrades you to Gold if you spend £10,000 in a calendar year.
  • Starwood Preferred Guest American Express (free again) gives you SPG Preferred Plus status for free and upgrades you to Gold if you spend £15,000 in a calendar year.

"Whilst you are never guaranteed an upgrade, having status with that particular chain will give you some benefits, will put you at the top of the list for upgrades, and will give you more clout if you do want to try to get an upgrade via cash or complaining," Burgess said.

10. If in doubt, find something to complain about

"I was, in my youth, a bit of an over-complainer because it was actually successful," Burgess said. "If you end up changing rooms, you are usually given a better one as compensation. Even not liking the view counts. Do this as soon as you check in as, once you've unpacked, it becomes a bit of a chore."

SEE ALSO: 5 easy ways to make an economy flight feel like first class

Join the conversation about this story »

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How to use air travel to meet influential people and boost your career, according to a tech exec who was once a flight attendant

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Ryan Bonnici

  • Ryan Bonnici started his career as a flight attendent.
  • A meeting with a Microsoft exec on a flight forever changed his career and his life.
  • That meeting led to a job at Microsoft which led to a career in tech.
  • He's now an executive who flies first-class and he's mastered the art of turning an airplane trip into a way to meet influential people.


Ryan Bonnici spends about 60% of his time traveling as the CMO of startup G2 Crowd, he tells Business Insider. He has a fabulous, high-paying career in tech and it all happened because of a chance encounter with a Microsoft exec on a flight when he was a kid in college working as a flight attendant.

That meeting, plus his years as a flight attendant along with his current lifestyle which has him flying all over the world, has given Bonnici a unique view about business trips.

For him, airplane trips are not something to be endured while traveling to the important business meeting. They're also not to be dedicated to head-down work on the computer. They are an incredible resource for meeting powerful people that could, in one fell swoop, help you advance your career.

Bonnici knows this first hand. He became a flight attendant for Qantas when he was 19, putting his business degree on the part-time back burner so he could travel the world.

One day, a senior executive from Microsoft came aboard his flight. They talked, hit it off and she encouraged him to apply to a marketing leadership program at Microsoft and gave him tips on how to get through a grueling application process that involved beating out thousands of applicants. Low and behold, he was one of about 9 people to get the job.

He's been climbing the tech career ladder ever since: ExactTarget, Salesforce, HubSpot, and now he's an executive — the chief marketing officer — at G2 Crowd, a fast-growing startup that helps business find and rate software suppliers. (G2 Crowd was one of Business Insider's 51 enterprise startups to bet your career on in 2018).

Since his chance encounter with the Microsoft exec, Bonnicih has learned to always treat every flight as an opportunity for business networking. Over the years, he's met clients on airplanes that brought in millions of dollars of business, founded partnerships, and even discovered a career coach.

"I’ve learned a few tactics obviously," he said. Here are his top pro tips:

You don't have to fly business class to use these tips. "I fly all classes," he says.



But do try and travel first-class or business class as much as possible, as it will increase your odds of meeting business execs and others who can become valuable contacts. "If someone is traveling up there, they are more likely successful."



If you must fly coach, book a seat as close to the front of the plane as possible. That's where frequent flyers — which tend to be business people — often fly when they get bumped from their first-class upgrade. Booking early helps you obtain those up-front seats.



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The 14 most beautiful airports in the world

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  • Many major American airports are unreliable or outdated.
  • Their best global counterparts have stunning architectural features and amenities like golf courses and movie theaters.
  • The world's most beautiful airports are located in major cities like Tokyo and smaller destinations like Incheon.


Many major American airports have seen better days, but some of their global counterparts are seriously impressive. Whether they're in major global cities like Hong Kong and Tokyo, or stand out in less prominent locations, the world's most beautiful airports have stunning architectural features and amenities like golf courses and movie theaters.

These are the 14 most beautiful airports in the world.

SEE ALSO: These are the 15 best airports in the world

Adolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport — Spain

The airport saw its first commercial flights take place in 1933. A new terminal was unveiled in 2006, and the airport has seen over 50,000,000 travelers in each of the past two years.



Vancouver International Airport — Canada

Vancouver International Airport is the rare airport you might want to visit even if you don't have a flight. In addition to its sculpture collection, the airport has multiple aquarium exhibits. 



Singapore Changi Airport

Singapore Changi International Airport has been named the best airport in the world by the consumer-aviation website Skytrax for five years in a row. It's easy to see why, as the airport's amenities include multiple gardens, a movie theater, and a swimming pool.



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9 habits of unsuccessful people

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• Nobody's perfect — most of us have picked up a bad habit or two at some point.

• Most of the time, a bad habit won't wreck your whole life.

• Still, it's probably best to avoid these success-sabotaging tendencies.



Bad habits may not seem like a big deal on their own, but sometimes they can seriously drag you down in your life and career.

Of course, no one is perfect. In most cases, bad habits only result in relatively minor problems. So if you recognize one of these compulsions as your own, you probably have nothing to worry about.

However, in more extreme cases, certain tendencies can actually thwart you dreams of success.

Here are the top nine habits of unsuccessful people:

SEE ALSO: I spent a week skipping breakfast and working out for 2 hours a day just like Gwyneth Paltrow — and it helped me break some of my worst habits

1. You're always tardy

Sure, things happen, but consistent tardiness is typically unacceptable in a professional setting. Showing up late makes you look careless and unreliable.

As Laura Schocker wrote for the Huffington Post, one San Francisco State University study linked " chronic lateness and certain personality characteristics, including anxiety, low self-control and a tendency toward thrill-seeking."



2. You hold grudges

You don't need to walk around singing kumbaya. It's fine and normal to dislike and distrust certain people in your life.

But holding intense grudges is just a waste of your valuable time and energy. In an article for Web MD, Mike Fillon cited one Hope College study that found that holding a grudge can even have negative health effects.

So learn to let things go.



3. You conform

Conforming was a survival tactic in middle school, but you're an adult with a career now. Stop caring intently about what others think and falling in line just for the sake of getting along. Do what works for you.

If you devote all your time to blending in, you'll never stand out.



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Step inside New York's oldest health club, where celebrities, millennials, and businessmen mingle over Dead Sea mud treatments and a 190-degree steam room

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Russian Turkish Bathhouse New York City

  • Russian and Turkish Baths is a health club in New York City's East Village neighborhood.
  • Open since 1892, the bathhouse serves as a meeting place for the city's Russian and Jewish enclaves — and a hotspot for celebrities, millennials, businessmen, and tourists.
  • For over 30 years, the Baths have been owned by two Russian émigrés who manage the facilities on alternating weeks.

 

Step through the tenement door on 10th Street in Manhattan's East Village, and you'd be forgiven for thinking you'd walked through a time warp.

Open since 1892, the Russian and Turkish Baths is about as old New York as it gets. The institution has survived wave after wave of tumultuous change in the city, it's grimy come-whoever spirit intact. 

The baths have played host to New York royalty, including actor Robert De Niro and the late singer Frank Sinatra. More often, it has been a meeting place for the city's Russian and Jewish enclaves. Lately, it has attracted a new crowd of adventurous tourists and Brooklyn millennials.

Since 1985, the bathhouse has been owned by two Russian émigrés, Boris Tuberman and David Shapiro, who run the business under an unusual arrangement. After the two men realized they hated running a business together, they decided to split the baths. Each month is now split between "Boris weeks" and "David weeks." Besides sharing utilities and repair costs, the businesses operate separately.

Though the clientele has changed over the years, the bathhouse remains one of the few, true melting pots in the city. A day pass to the Baths costs $48, while a three-month pass has a price tag of $600.

We visited the baths on a recent Monday afternoon — on a "David week" — to see what we could find in the steam.

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Originally called the Tenth Street Baths, the bathhouse has been open in Manhattan's East Village since 1892. In the early 1900s, the baths were a popular place for the Lower East Side's immigrant population. Few apartments had bathtubs at the time.

Google Maps Directions»



Tuberman and Shapiro purchased the building and the business in 1985 for $850,000. Shapiro's son Dmitry, who now runs his father's side of the business, said the two were looking for a job where they could be their own bosses. Shapiro had spent the previous five years as a taxi driver.

The baths weren't exactly an attractive buy at the time. The AIDs crisis was in full swing and the city was trying to shut down all the bathhouses, as many had become central to the gay swinging scene. 

The Russian and Turkish Baths were a mess when Shapiro and Tuberman bought them. The building was falling apart, the roof was caving in, and there were hardly any clients left. But the men liked the fact that they were the only baths in town, Shapiro said.

"Everybody thought we were stupid," the elder Shapiro told The Wall Street Journal in 1997.

 



Tuberman and Shapiro quickly found they had completely different philosophies on how to run a business. Within a few years, they decided to split the business and alternate weeks.

The split business produces some complications. Shortly after I arrived at the Baths, a young woman came in with a pass for a "Boris week." Shapiro had to explain to the confused woman that she would either need to buy another pass or come the following week.

He said that happens from time to time and most people are understanding. 

Because of their unusual management schedule, Shapiro hauls in his computers, his point-of-sale system, his merchandise, and his muds and scrubs, every other week.

Shapiro has also put the Baths on Groupon and other e-commerce sites to generate more business. But if someone tries to use a Groupon on a "Boris week," they're out of luck.

Tuberman still operates with pen and paper and refuses to do any promotion.

"It's a very bizarre way to run a business. I don't think anyone else would do it," Shapiro said.



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