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Drone Pilots Say Their Job Is Not Like A Video Game

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star wars rogue squadronThe unmanned aircraft patrolling the skies above Afghanistan are controlled by pilots sitting in front of screens as far as 7,000 miles away.

Kandahar Airfield in southern Afghanistan is reckoned to be as busy as Gatwick. Every few minutes the cloudless skies are filled with the roar of a military fighter taking off – hugging the ground to avoid pot shots by the Taliban’s crude rockets before disappearing into the heat haze.

In between there is a more persistent sound: the high-pitched whirr of 'drones’ – military aircraft without a human on board – as they head out for 18-hour stints monitoring the vast empty spaces of Afghanistan. This sound, generated by the aircraft’s tail propeller, is a constant white noise for the inhabitants of Kandahar Airfield.

It is said the term 'drone’ originated with a 1930s pilotless version of the British Fairey Queen fighter, the 'Queen Bee’. But, with the new generation of insect-like small aircraft, together with its monotonous engine noise, the name has never been more apt.

Before 9/11, drones were a new, untried technology. Now it is estimated that 40 countries are trying to buy or develop unmanned aircraft. The United States operates 7,500 drones or, in the official parlance, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), making up more than 40 per cent of Department of Defense aircraft. They have been the weapon of choice for the US to assassinate 'high value targets’ – as the military call them – from al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Last year in Libya an American drone identified and attacked the convoy Colonel Gaddafi was travelling in. A few hours later, after fleeing, he was caught by rebels and killed. And since the killing of Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda’s top ranks have been eviscerated by drone strikes, culminating in June in the killing of Abu Yahya al-Libi, the al-Qaeda deputy in Pakistan. In military terms, their success is not in doubt. They have disrupted al-Qaeda by forcing its commanders to abandon telephones (drones can listen in on calls) and avoid meetings, communicating only by courier.

But drone strikes have also led to mass protests in Pakistan and spawned numerous campaigns against them. Do they really represent a new, sinister form of battle in which moral judgments are delegated to machines? And does their deadly accuracy ensure that 'collateral damage’ is minimised, protecting civilians in war zones? Or do they encourage trigger-happy pilots, free from risk in their cockpits on the ground?

Since 2007 the RAF has operated 39 Squadron, a detachment of five US-built MQ-9 Reaper aircraft at Kandahar Airfield. While America has a sprawling UAV programme targeting Islamic militants everywhere from Pakistan to Somalia, British Reapers have only ever been used as part of the official combat mission against the Taliban over Afghanistan.

The vast majority of the 38,500 hours of operations flown by the RAF Reapers have been in intelligence-gathering rather than in attacking targets. Most of the 35 RAF Reaper pilots are based at Creech, an airfield near Las Vegas, where they control the aircraft via satellite as they fly over Afghanistan.

But the two-second delay between a pilot moving a joystick in Nevada and an aircraft responding in Afghanistan is enough to cause a crash during take-off and landing. Crews in Afghanistan control 'launch and recovery’ through direct contact with antennae on the aircraft. Half an hour after take-off, control of the Reaper is handed to a crew in Nevada; half an hour before landing, it returns to the crews on the ground in Kandahar.

Kandahar Airfield is a vast, crowded military camp, full of private-security contractors in new SUVs, soccer pitches, traffic jams, and the 'boardwalk’ – a Midwest-style town square where soldiers carrying automatic weapons visit frozen-yogurt outlets and TGI Friday’s. Far from prying eyes, the Reaper pilots work in a corner of the airfield behind concrete blast barriers to protect them from the sporadic Taliban rocket attacks.

Their cockpit is a cabin full of wires and computer servers – a sealed and spotless world without the film of white dust that covers Kandahar Airfield. The crew sit side by side in leather seats as if in a conventional aircraft, dressed in all-in-one khaki flight suits. A technician fiddles with wires on a bank of hard drives. Office carpets cover the floor. Apart from the low rumble of the air-conditioning, it is as silent as a cathedral.

A black-and-white screen is filled with the featureless landscape of southern Afghanistan’s red desert. The conventional head-up display is superimposed on the screen, as in any fighter aircraft, giving the details of altitude and pitch that a pilot needs. But, unlike in a conventional aircraft, the pilot can switch the camera view in front of him to see behind or below. He manoeuvres the aircraft with a games console-style joystick. In front of the pilot is a keyboard, next to him a telephone. Reaper pilots can make telephone calls, or email photographs to operational commanders; they can go to the lavatory or get coffee during a flight.

A slogan among Reaper pilots is 'no comms, no bombs’: the system is wholly dependent on satellite links working. If there is an IT breakdown, the Reaper’s lost link’ program directs it to land at the nearest air base. Seated next to the pilot, the sensor operator controls a swivelling electronic eyeball on the nose of the Reaper, fitted with infrared sensors for night vision.

'We can say to troops on the ground, “Hey, we saw this guy run out of the compound – he’s hiding in the field,”’ Winston, an American former F-16 pilot who has moved to the Reaper, says. 'We can see headlights and engines that are hot from vehicles that have run recently. If a command wire has been placed across the road, the infrared will show the earth a different colour where it has been disturbed – and you can save a convoy from driving over an IED.’

Half an hour earlier, via Internet Relay Chat (a kind of instant messaging), the pilots took control back from the crews in Nevada at the end of a mission without a word being spoken. The word ready appeared on the screen in front of us, typed by the pilot in Creech. The pilot in front of us replied, ready. ours. Then yours flashed up on the screen, confirming the handover.

Tension fills the cabin as the pilot lines up the Reaper with the runway for landing. No speaking is allowed, since landing the aircraft, with its long, glider-style wings and lightweight body, requires concentration. Sandstorms and 60-knot crosswinds frequently buffet the aircraft, and the margin of error between a safe landing and a crash is only one degree of pitch. As the infrared outline of the hot tarmac looms into view on the pilot’s screen, there is no sense that the aircraft is descending, nor any jolt as the undercarriage retracts.

All the sensory instincts a pilot normally uses are missing; he is forced to fly by the instruments. Reaper pilots rely on forward-facing camera and see through the 'soda-straw’ view. As the Reaper nears the ground, the pilot calls out the altitude: '10, 9, 8, 7, 6…’ The only way we know he has landed is when the altitude reading on the head-up display is zero feet.

A short walk from the flight cabins are the mess rooms of the huge US Reconnaissance Force Reaper unit that shares facilities and operations with the RAF. On the wall are children’s paintings with messages to Daddy, and vintage Apocalypse Now posters. Small talk is of next week’s squadron barbecue. In this US military milieu, the RAF has colonised a corner with Union flag-covered lockers and photographs of the Duchess of Cambridge. More startling are the 1970s photographs of a thickly mustachioed Burt Reynolds, mirrored in the upper-lip growths of the airmen sitting drinking soda. (It is the end of 'Moustache March’, an annual USAF contest to grow facial hair for charity.)

The RAF crews based at Creech take their place in a four-month rotation in the 'launch and recovery unit’ in Afghanistan. Sitting in the mess are Oz, a bald, middle-aged RAF Reaper pilot who has flown three tours of duty in the Tornado, and DJ, a former Royal Navy helicopter pilot. Both seem too grizzled to be described as PlayStation warriors. Like these two, all the RAF Reaper pilots have been trained to fly conventional aircraft, and most have fought in previous wars.

These pilots talk up the similarities with manned aircraft. Although they don’t suffer the exhausting effects of g-force and can’t look out of the window, they admit to flinching when they see something coming towards the aircraft.

'It’s irrelevant where you are physically sitting,’ Oz says. 'You’re attached to the airframe, you’re attached to the view that you see, and you’re attached to the laws of armed conflict.’

He reacts with cool anger to suggestions that this mode of war reduces victims to the status of players in a video game. 'It’s a bugbear of mine because I’ve had the accusation levelled that it’s a Star Wars game. It’s anything but. If we act like it’s Star Wars, there are people in the command centre watching us and listening to what we do. The taking of human life is not something to be considered lightly. OK, they are bad guys we are killing, but they are still human beings.’

He also bridles at the suggestion that UAVs leave moral judgments to machines. 'The plane cannot start, cannot fly and cannot release a weapon without us doing it. Human beings are in the cockpit – exactly the same as when I was flying a Tornado. We just happen to be 8,000 miles away from the plane.’

The courtly, upright American colonel in charge of Reaper operations, 'Ghost’, arrives, just back from the Kandahar military hospital, where he was visiting an American soldier shot in the leg on the battlefield. His Reapers provided 'overwatch’ while the soldier was evacuated by helicopter. It is common for the squadron to receive texts or emails of thanks from those they have protected. A group of Royal Marines made a trip to Las Vegas last year to thank the pilots in person.'We’ve had Humvees breaking down,’ Ghost says, 'and we’ve provided overwatch. You’re not going to get a good night’s sleep in the middle of the desert in Afghanistan normally, but if you’ve got a Reaper overhead that’s got your back, then you can.’

Afghanistan has been the ideal conflict for the Reaper. Unlike conventional fast-jets, which provide intelligence to troops on the ground only for short periods before having to refuel, the Reaper can stay in the air for 18 hours. It can stream real-time video feeds to troops for the duration of a skirmish, allowing them to see the Taliban’s positions on their laptops. And if they are required to fulfil their other major role, killing Taliban forces judged an immediate threat, they can circle for hours above a compound or a village, waiting for a confirmed sighting in the open of their target, before dispatching one of their laser-guided Hellfire missiles. These Taliban fighters won’t even know that they are being watched – at 15,000ft, Reapers usually fly too high to be seen or heard.

Stories spill out of the pilots. 'A British vehicle was disabled and the troops had to leave it,’ Oz says. 'The Taliban showed up in numbers. And we provided overwatch for them for hours while they [British troops] withdrew. They were able to withdraw without the fear of being overrun.’ Sometimes the threat of force isn’t enough, DJ says: 'We got called in because US Marines were under fire and were pinned down. We prosecuted [military jargon for 'killed’] two chaps. That broke their fire. The other four scampered, allowing the other Marines to withdraw.’

The Reaper pilots insist their high-resolution cameras, as well as the long periods that they can stay airborne, give them more time to weigh decisions before weapons are fired.

'On a fast-jet, because of the speed you’re coming in at, you don’t have the fuel and the time to hang around. But we can sit on top of this thing for hours at a time,’ Oz says. 'We have the luxury to pick up the phone and say, look – something just doesn’t look right here.’

This recently happened when the RAF Reaper pilots saw what they thought were Taliban insurgents preparing to fire. 'But something didn’t make sense. These guys seemed a bit too casual. So we checked for longer. As soon as these guys hit the road, they suddenly went into tactical column. We suddenly realised they were Afghan National Army. They weren’t the best-disciplined troops until their sergeant was looking at them. The luxury we have is that we can just sit there and say, we’ll just watch this for a few more minutes.’

The mantra that the Reaper pilots repeat is 'zero expectations of civilian casualties’. They are forbidden to attack buildings if there are women and children in the area and they avoid targeting property. In Afghanistan village life, Taliban fighters are never far away from women and children.

In internal reporting the RAF has dropped the term 'compound’ because it obscures the simple truth that these are houses. As one senior commander told me, 'We’re trying to get it into the guys’ heads that this is not compound no 28, it’s 34 Acacia Drive – so you don’t hit it.’

According to Oz, 'We’ll spend hours watching some guy. There have been plenty of times when I’ve had a clearly identified enemy combatant under my crosshairs and I haven’t been able to fire at him because he’s in a village and there are civilians around. If there’s any doubt, we won’t fire. Apart from the tragedy of wounding or killing an innocent civilian, it plays straight into the hands of the enemy for propaganda – it’s a double whammy. You have to wait for your opportunity.’

It is curious that civilian casualties from drone strikes receive so much attention, while those caused by conventional attack aircraft, whose pilots are also miles away from their targets, are overlooked. But this is because anti-drone campaigners doubt the MoD’s estimates of civilian casualties.

Reapers have, as of September this year, fired their weapons 319 times and killed four civilians in total since they started operating in Afghanistan, according to the MoD. These civilians died, along with two Taliban 'insurgents’, when two pick-up trucks carrying explosives were targeted by an RAF Reaper in Helmand. A military investigation concluded that this attack had been in accordance with correct procedures and UK rules of engagement.

Campaigners complain that the system for counting civilian casualties is flawed because it relies on villagers in remote parts of Afghanistan making the effort to report deaths to coalition forces. They also complain more generally about the secrecy around the Reaper programme, which fuels distrust. Only 40 per cent of drone strikes have been revealed in official RAF operational updates – the others remain classified. And there are no figures of how many 'insurgents’ have been killed (the deliberately vague term includes Taliban and al-Qaeda). The MoD attributes this to the need to not let their enemy know exactly how it is being targeted, and to difficulties in collecting information for an accurate body count.

The lengths of deployment for Reaper pilots, split between short stints in Kandahar and three years in Nevada, means that they have more experience of the war in Afghanistan than many of the soldiers on the ground. The terrain and the 'pattern of life’ in the villages they watch for suspicious changes become as familiar as those of their home towns. Often they observe a building for their whole shift and come back the next day to watch the same deserted building for another eight hours.

Does it get boring? Winston, the US Reaper pilot, admits, 'The honest answer is yes. You may get information that the unit is going into an area in three days and you’re told, “Don’t take your eyes off that building.” So you will fly in a circle for an eight-hour shift looking at it, and four hours in somebody walks in or walks out. You have no idea who it is. But somebody is watching the feed.’ (The audience for a drone feed can include troops on the ground, commanders in Afghanistan and intelligence analysts thousands of miles away.)

At times like this they find ways to relieve the boredom. 'You try and find humorous things. You see kids getting into fights and you’ll watch that, or traffic jams where some guy moves his goats across the road and people get upset.’ The stress of constant operations and long shifts, albeit with rest breaks, has led to fears of burnout among Reaper pilots. The almost limitless demand for 'overwatch’ creates a huge workload: every stream and every suspicious-looking building on a convoy route is checked for IEDs or a potential ambush by Reapers before troops go out on patrol.

The usual pattern of war fighting is to spend four months in a war-zone before returning home. But the Reaper pilots at their base in Nevada are commuter warriors: they work five days a week and drive home to their families at the end of their shifts. A tour of duty for them can last years. This changing tempo of war is taking a toll on pilots, even though they are not themselves in harm’s way. According to a survey by the Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, nearly half the operators of UAVs have high levels of 'operational stress’ caused by long hours and extended tours of duty.

The RAF is moving some pilots from three years in Nevada back to three more years on operations in a new Reaper control centre in Britain, where they will also pilot Reapers over Afghanistan. According to a squadron leader with several years’ experience flying the Reaper, 'Six years of permanent ops is something that we’re going to have to pay great attention to. Chronic fatigue could become an issue.’ The effect on pilots of this strange new state of being simultaneously at home and at war has not yet been tested.

About four per cent of US UAV operators have developed post-traumatic stress disorder, which some have attributed to the fact that powerful cameras show close-up footage of the targets of drone strikes after they have been killed. 'The cameras are good,’ Oz says. 'A Hellfire missile does have significant effects on the human body, and you should get to see that. If you can’t accept it, you are in the wrong job. But the weirdest thing for me – with my background [as a fast-jet pilot] – is the concept of getting up in the morning, driving my kids to school and killing people. That does take a bit of getting used to. For the young guys or the newer guys, that can be an eye opener.’

At sunset at Kandahar we walk on to the flight line to see the angular, insect-like Reapers close up. Two of the RAF Reapers, distinguishable by RAF roundels, are being refuelled and armed with Hellfire laser-guided missiles before being sent out again, two hours after their last mission. 'This is only a small fraction of the Reapers we have here – the rest are in the air,’ Ghost says.

The Reapers are sleek, shark-grey and about the size of a light aircraft – 'a Cessna with a missile’, as some of the fast-jet pilots like to call them. They are so compact because they do not need systems to support a human: no air system, pilot’s instruments or ejector seat. If a Reaper is shot down or crashes, the taxpayer loses tens of millions, compared with the hundreds of millions that a conventional jet can cost. And they never risk a pilot being killed or captured.

As a Reaper taxis by, I ask the 39 Squadron pilots how they cope with the 'chair-force’ jibes that come from fighter pilots. 'They can say whatever the hell they like,’ DJ says, more than a little testily. 'This is the leading edge of combat. As time progresses there is going to be a bigger appetite for these airframes,’ Oz admits. 'Flying a fighter aircraft was more fun. It was big, it was pointy, it went bloody fast and it carried big bombs. It was sexy. Who wouldn’t want to do that? Twenty-five years later I asked to come to the Reaper because it makes a significant contribution to the war.’

A short drive in a battered Land Rover across Kandahar Airfield is the headquarters of 617 Squadron, 'The Dambusters’, which flies Tornado fast-jets over Afghanistan. In the mess-room, where a flat-screen television and piles of DVDs kill time when they are on call to 'scramble’, I ask the pilots whether they would give up their fast-jets for UAVs. With varying degrees of politeness, they decline: 'I’ve no interest in flying Reaper. If I’m flying I want to be airborne,’ one says. But could their jobs eventually be replaced by UAVs? 'Reaper is absolutely the asset for Afghanistan but as soon as you start going up against anyone with a credible air threat we will have to pour money into aircraft that can fight back.’

It is a frequent criticism that Reapers work well in Afghanistan, where there is no air force and no accurate surface-to-air missiles, but in a conventional war these slow, fragile aircraft would be easy to shoot down. Though fast-jets such as the Tornado cannot stay airborne for as long, they can travel long distances more quickly. If troops are under fire at the far side of Afghanistan, the battle is likely to be over long before a Reaper arrives on the scene. Nor would Reapers fare well in colder, wetter weather.

Already the high rate of UAVs is a matter of concern to military planners. Figures are difficult to verify, but the UK Drone Wars website, run by anti-drone campaigners and using imperfect information, has recorded 14 drone crashes so far in 2012. The Los Angeles Times estimated in 2010 that 38 Reaper and Predator UAVs had been lost in Afghanistan and Iraq.

During the Balkan Wars, experiments with UAVs were abandoned because so many were lost in the bad weather. Fast-jet pilots argue that a crew in the air above the target can always make better judgments than a crew thousands of miles away. 'We can give more an interpretation of what’s going on,’ a Tornado flight commander says. 'It’s hard to put into words, but there is just that feeling of being there. You can see the whole situation and not just the target. The fact that you can look out of a cockpit and say, “There’s a village next to us.” We could be talked into thinking that a couple of men kneeling in the middle of the road at night look dodgy when it’s actually a guy changing a motorbike tyre that’s just had a puncture.’

Whatever the counter-claims between Reaper and fast-jet pilots, the arguments in favour of UAVs have been won in the Ministry of Defence. Later this year a new squadron will be established in Lincolnshire to pilot remotely five more Reapers – the first time that drone missions in Afghanistan will be been controlled from British rather than American soil. However, there are practical difficulties to overcome first. It remains unclear where the UK Reapers will be legally able to take off and land when combat operations end in Afghanistan in 2014. Civil Aviation Regulations prevent them from flying in British airspace since reaction times might not be fast enough to avoid collisions.

By 2030, the RAF estimates, a third of the force will be unmanned aircraft. An MoD report, 'The UK Approach to Unmanned Aircraft Systems’, predicts, 'Unmanned aircraft will eventually take over most or all the tasks currently undertaken by manned systems.’ The expensive F35B Lightning II fighter currently on order will be, it predicts, the last RAF fighter with a pilot in the air.

The UAV technology under development sounds like science fiction – from bee-size nano drones that can fly through windows to nuclear-powered drones that can fly for weeks without refuelling. Even if these wilder plans never see the light of day, the MoD has been funding the development of Taranis, a long-range jet-powered UAV attack aircraft that will be able to fly across continents.

The moral question overshadowing UAVs is whether their use trivialises the business of killing. According to the report 'Armed Drones and the PlayStation Mentality’ by Chris Cole, the director of the Drone Wars website, 'Young military personnel raised on a diet of video games now kill real people remotely using joysticks. Far removed from the human consequences of their actions, how will this generation of fighters value the right to life?’

From my experience at Kandahar this vision of teenage warriors seems far-fetched: the Reaper pilots I met were approaching middle age, softly spoken and sober about the life-and-death decisions with which they were charged.

It does, however, seem plausible that risk-free, long-distance strikes using UAVs could insulate the Western public from the human toll of war. If we can kill with such ease while protecting Western lives and avoiding the costs of deploying troops, will the bar be lower for governments to make war? Already, the creep towards a permanent state of war, via drone strike, can be seen. This year alone, the Obama administration has conducted drone strikes against al-Qaeda and its allies in Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, Pakistan and Somalia. The Ministry of Defence candidly warns of these dangers in its report: 'We must ensure that by removing some of the horror, or at least keeping it at a distance, we do not risk losing our controlling humanity and make war more likely.’

These speculations become even more complex with the Frankenstein fear that, as UAVs become more advanced, they will be able to launch weapons without human input. There is a danger of an 'incremental and involuntary journey towards a Terminator-like reality’, the paper warns, and Britain must 'quickly establish a policy on what will constitute “acceptable machine behaviour”’.

Drones deliver death out of a clear blue sky. Victims will not have known their fate for more than a fraction of a second. Most of the time they won’t even have heard the Reaper’s engine. Is it possible such powerful weapons will hand a propaganda victory to those they are targeted against?

At some point military planners will have to face these issues. But, for the moment, the public is more likely to be swayed by the belief, shared by everyone on the ground in Afghanistan, that the Reaper has saved the lives of hundreds of British troops.

For the pilots, misgivings over a new weapon changing the nature of war are nothing new. On the flight line in Kandahar, DJ has to shout over the whine of a fully loaded Reaper about to take off for another long mission. He is dismissive of the angst surrounding unmanned aircraft. 'This goes back centuries. When it was sword versus sword and somebody started slinging an arrow over their head to the enemy – every time there’s an advance in military hardware, the other side says, “Are you playing fair?”’

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Roger Moore Shares His Favorite Vacation Spots

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roger moore the spy who loved me james bondThe James Bond actor on punctuality, packing and meeting Burma’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Great holidays...

Which was your best holiday?

My best ever holiday is coming home or being at home and being with my own computer, television set, my own things around me, and not having to bloody well pack a bag. I’m most comfortable with my wife, Kristina, at home, which these days is either at our chalet in Crans-Montana in Valais in Switzerland or at our apartment in Monaco.

We’ve enjoyed some fabulous holidays, though. Cruising down the Nile was unforgettable, and Sardinia, where we filmed part of The Spy Who Loved Me and stayed at the Cala de Volpe Hotel, was absolutely beautiful.

And the best hotel you’ve stayed in?

Certainly the Ritz in London. It’s not just five-star, it’s 10-star. It’s so elegant and comfortable and everything works. The Four Seasons everywhere are also fantastic.

What do you need for a perfect holiday?

My own pillows. We stay occasionally at La Colombe d’Or in Saint-Paul de Vence, and Kristina takes pillows from home. Culture’s important, too, so we love Vienna and I narrate a chamber music festival every year in Dubrovnik, which is a stunningly beautiful place with some fantastic restaurants. People are of course vitally important too – the staff of the hotels; the kitchen staff even more important; and, most important of all, the sommelier.

What do you always take with you?

Apart from my pillows? No Bond gadgets, unfortunately. They took them all back. I wish I did have a few, then I could auction them off for Unicef. I take books. I’ve discovered a Norwegian detective writer, Jo Nesbo. You know those days when you try to hold onto that last chapter because you don’t want to finish it? He writes those sort of books. I like showbusiness autobiographies, too.

What’s your best piece of travel advice?

Don’t miss the plane. I’ve never missed a plane in my life. If I have any fault I’m always too early. With the help of Kristina I’m a very well prepared traveller.

Where do you want to go next?

I’ve got a little tour of theatres in England in October starting off with Malvern. About 10 dates. On my birthday I shall be at Kingston doing a Q&A and signing books that people have bought. There’ll be a curiosity queue: is he still alive?

We also had the pleasure of meeting Burma’s pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, in Dublin a few weeks ago, so we’re looking forward to going out there and exploring that country.

...and disasters?

Which was your worst holiday?

I don’t think any particular one would go down as a complete, or even a mild disaster. I’m acutely aware that I’ll find disappointment somewhere, so I’m quite happy when I do.

What has been your worst experience on holiday?

I was unfortunate enough to be struck down with an illness in Beijing. It was a Unicef event and I got the bad fish or whatever it was. We were supposed to go to Xian to see the terracotta warriors, but I was too ill to make the journey. There were 10 other people at lunch and I was the only one to be ill.

What’s the biggest packing mistake you’ve made?

I’m a very well designed planner, but I can’t pack any more because my back aches bending over a case, so we’re fortunate enough to have a wonderful lady who looks after us. And if she doesn’t, my wife does. If I find something has a slight wrinkle I hang it on a shower rail on a bath in the hotel bathroom and turn on the hot tap and shut the doors, which normally does the trick.

Except for the time we visited Prince Edward Island in Canada and I unfortunately had three suits hanging and the trousers slipped off into the hot steamy bath. That was at about 8pm; fortunately I managed to make the trousers that I’d been travelling in look OK with a jacket, so I didn’t have to go down to dinner in my Y-fronts.

The worst hotel you’ve stayed in?

In my touring days I stayed in theatrical digs. One in Bath, which didn’t have a bathroom, was on the top floor, the attic room, up five flights of stairs. I shared it with one of the understudies, a nice fellow, and we had this room with a bed down each wall, one under the sloping roof and the other going toward the centre.

That night we kept hearing this tapping, scratching noise on the wall and, thought, “God. There are rats.” Next day we discovered that in the next room there was Mademoiselle Fifi, the star of the variety show in another theatre. She was staying with her lover and the bedstead was a little far from the wall. But on the Friday an ambulance came and took the lover away. He’d knocked holes in the wall by that time. And her, I suppose.

That night I trudged down five floors to the lavatory, opened the door, and there was Mademoiselle Fifi sitting with a pair of blue knickers around her ankles, a fag hanging from her mouth and reading a paperback. I said, “Oh, I do beg your pardon,” and she replied in a thick Lancashire accent, 'It’s all right, love, shut t’door on way out.’” I wouldn’t go back.

What do you avoid on holidays?

After my experience in Beijing – dysentery.

What do you hate about holidays?

Packing or unpacking. I find it to be a terrible waste of a day.

  • Bond on Bond by Sir Roger Moore is published on October 4 by Michael O’Mara Books.

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The Billionaires Behind The Michael Kors IPO Just Bought A Pair Of $50 Million Apartments At One57

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one57 construction

The billionaire fashion moguls who took Michael Kors public in December have each purchased a $50 million apartment at One57, the ultra-luxury skyscraper that's currently going up in midtown Manhattan, according to The New York Post's Jennifer Gould Keil.

The men, Canadian Lawrence Stroll and his Hong Kong business partner Silas Chou, are the first confirmed buyers in the building, The Post reports.

Both tycoons reportedly bought full-floor apartments above the 80th floor. Like all buyers in the building, they paid 25 percent of the purchase price up front.

Stroll and Chou acquired Michael Kors in 2003 along with the company's current CEO and turned it into a company with a current market cap of $8.6 billion, according to Knowledge@Wharton Today.

Now take a tour of One57 >

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Mercedes-Benz Hits The Water With A New Luxury Yacht Concept

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mercedes-benz yacht silver arrow monaco

Before heading to the Paris Motor Show to reveal the electric version of the B-class, Mercedes-Benz stopped at the Monaco Yacht Show last week to debut renderings of an unusual project for the automaker: a new yacht concept.

Mercedes-Benz Style is collaborating with Silver Arrows Marine, a new collective of marine architects and engineers, to create a motor yacht that brings the style of the luxury automobiles to the water.

Details on the design are scarce so far. The yacht is narrow and, at 46 feet long, relatively short.

It is inspired by the Silver Arrow, a highly successful line of racing cars produced by Mercedes-Benz in the 1930s.

The Silberfeil, or Silver Arrow, was a 1930s race car that inspired the design.



So far, only renderings of the "Silver Arrow of the seas" have been released.



Mercedes-Benz Style chose the materials and color combinations for the interior.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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JEFF GUNDLACH IS GOING 'RANSOM': Prepares To Host Press Conference On The Massive Theft Of His Art

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Jeff Gundlach is apparently going "Ransom," the famous movie where Mel Gibson publicly calls out those who took his kid.

In this case, Gundlach will apparently call out the people who stole $10 million worth of his art and cars.

The below message just hit our inbox. Gundlach is going to have a public conference call on his art theft.

Before you read that, here's the epic scene from Ransom.

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Jeffrey Gundlach will hold a news conference at 1 pm Pacific/4 pm Eastern today (Monday Sep 24) regarding the burglary earlier this month and the reward for the recovery of undamaged artwork taken in the burglary.

 The conference will be held at the RR Donnelly conference room in the Wells Fargo building in downtown Los Angeles:

333 S. Grand Avenue (parking is off Hope Street)

Suite 4350 (43rd Floor)

Los Angeles, CA   90071

Those attending in-person, please RSVP with your name and organization, so that we may notify building security.

For those wishing to listen to the news conference by telephone, here is the call-in information:

Dial- In Numbers:

Toll free 888-582-3528

Local 847-944-7361

Passcode 6007587#

SEE ALSO: The Collection Of Art Stolen From Jeff Gundlach Is Stunning >

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Sotheby's Will Become The First International Auction House To Sell In China

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auction auctioneer bid sotheby's

(Bloomberg) -- Sotheby’s has signed a 10-year joint-venture agreement to form the first international auction house in China, the company said.

Sotheby’s will be investing $1.2 million to take an 80 percent stake in the venture with state-owned Beijing Gehua Cultural Development Group, pending government approval, the New York-based company said today in an e-mailed news release.

Until now, international auction houses have not been allowed to hold sales inside China. The venture comes at a time when Beijing is moving to clean up the auction industry that is fraught with fakes, smuggling and non-payment among its more than 1,000 auction houses.

“China and its growing class of collectors has been the single most attractive growth market for the company,” Kevin Ching, the chief executive of Sotheby’s Asia, said in the release.

The joint venture, called Sotheby’s (Beijing) Auction Co. Ltd., plans to take advantage of the new Tianzhu Free Trade Zone in Beijing being developed by Gehua.

Sotheby’s may also hold sales outside the free-trade zone and is free to partner with other entities, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Booming Market

Gehua has also partnered with Swiss logistics group Euroasia Investment SA to build a $100 million tax-free storage facility next to Beijing Capital International Airport to tap the booming Chinese art market.

Christie’s International has licensed its trademark to Beijing-based auction house Forever. The London-based auction house does not hold sales in China itself.

Last year, China overtook the U.S. to become the world’s largest art and antiques market, said a report published by the Netherlands-based European Fine Art Foundation.

Auctions in mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan raised 9.8 billion euros ($12 billion) in 2011, said the report.

In a separate development, China Guardian Auctions Co. Ltd., the country’s oldest auction house, will be holding its first sales in Hong Kong.

The company’s inaugural auction at the Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong on Oct. 7 will include more than 300 Chinese ink paintings and 40 pieces of classical furniture. The 1922 work “Album of Mountains and Rivers” by Qi Baishi is estimated at HK$16 million ($2 million) to HK$26 million.

Government-owned Guardian (founded 1993) and Poly International are China’s two biggest auction houses, according a report published by the European Art Foundation in March.

With demand from Chinese collectors contracting in 2012, both houses are keen to attract wealthy international clients. China Guardian opened an office in New York in December 2011 and has said it has plans to establish a similar presence in London.

(Frederik Balfour is a reporter-at-large for Muse, the arts and leisure section of Bloomberg News. Scott Reyburn writes about the art market for Muse, Opinions expressed are their own.)

Muse highlights include Mark Beech and Farah Nayeri on arts, Lewis Lapham on history and Zinta Lundborg’s New York weekend.

--Editors: Mark Beech, Richard Vines.

To contact the writers on the story: Frederik Balfour in Hong Kong at fbalfour@bloomberg.net or on Twitter @frederikbalfour; Scott Reyburn in London at sreyburn@hotmail.com.

Now see how China is dominating the global art market >

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Manuela Hoelterhoff at mhoelterhoff@bloomberg.net.

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The Most Popular Snack Food In America

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Ritz Crackers

Even though Ritz Crackers have been around for almost 80 years, they are still #1 in Americans' hearts—and stomachs.

YouGov BrandIndex polled U.S. consumers to discover which chips or crackers are the best perceived snack brands. And for the second year in a row, Ritz Crackers were proclaimed the ultimate favorite.

Rounding out the top five were Lay's, Doritos, Fritos, and Orville Redenbacher. Wheat Thins, Cheetos, Tostitos, Pringles, and Triscuit all made the top 10 cut as well.

Fritos and Pringles each moved up a spot from last year, while Redenbacher and Triscuit dropped down one rank. But the snack brand to gain the most in American consumer perception was the up-and-coming Kettle Brand Chips at spot 14, though it has yet to break into the big 10.

The poll, which was conducted by YouGov BrandIndex's Impression score, asked, "Do you have a general positive feeling about the brand?" Scores ranged from 100 to -100, and were compiled by subtracting negative feedback from positive. A score of zero meant equal positive and negative feedback.

See the top 10 snack rankings of 2012 below.

2012 Favorite Snack Foods

Now find out the most popular fast food restaurants in America >

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K-Pop Star Psy Will Get His Own 'Gangnam Style' Designer Clothing Line

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Psy is apparently getting his very own clothing line with fashion designer Jill Stuart. 

A rep told Fashionista that the collaboration would not be a part of Stuart's collection and will only be available in Asia.

The collection is surprising because Stuart is known for her feminine, demure dresses. 

Fashionista reports: 

The news comes via a video (which perhaps will go viral a la Gangnam Style) that we found on K-Pop site AllKPop.com. In the OTT, theatrical video, Psy tells us to “Dress classy and dance cheesy” and pits “Gangnam Style” against “New York Style.”'

If you aren't familiar with Psy, here's his viral video: 

DON'T MISS: Why Michael Kors Is Having A Blockbuster Year >

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The 16 Best Superyachts On Display At This Year's Monaco Yacht Show

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monaco yacht show 2012

Last week's annual Monaco Yacht Show featured some of the most luxurious ships on the water today. Since with yachts, luxury usually means size, it comes as no surprise that the most attractive offerings were also among the biggest.

The 103 superyachts on display averaged 153 feet. The 290-foot Nirvana, with six decks and a 3D cinema, was topped only by the 195-foot Athena, a sailing yacht on sale for nearly $100 million.

The three-masted 'Athena' has room for 12 guests and is on sale by Royal Huisman for $92,966,400.



'Diamonds Are Forever,' owned by a fan of 007, measures 200 feet.



'Vertigo' won the Monaco Yacht Show Design Award this year.



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Steven Cohen Is Auctioning Off His Richter Painting For An Expected $15 Million

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"Prag 1883" Richter

A painting by German abstract artist Gerhard Richter that's owned by "king of hedge funds" Steven Cohen is going on the auction block in New York City.

Christie's said "Prag 1883" is estimated to sell "in the region of $15 million" on Nov. 14.

The title of the painting depicting swirling bright yellow, blue and red colors refers to the birthplace and birth date of Franz Kafka. Kafka was one of Richter's favorite authors.

Before it was acquired by Mr. Cohen, the monumental 1983 work was owned by the Duke of Bavaria.

Mr. Cohen is a self-made billionaire with a world-renowned collection of modern and contemporary art. He's the founder of SAC Capital in Stamford, Conn.

The current Richter auction record is $21.8 million for his "Abstract Picture (7938-3)."

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Termites And Mold Have Destroyed Part Of The World's Most Notorious Shoe Collection

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imelda marcosMANILA, Philippines (AP) — Termites, storms and neglect have damaged part of former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos' legendary collection of shoes and other possessions left behind after she and her dictator husband were driven into U.S. exile by a 1986 popular revolt.

Hundreds of pieces of late strongman Ferdinand Marcos' clothing, including the formal native see-through barong shirts he wore during his two-decade rule, have also begun to gather mold and fray after being stored for years without protection at the presidential palace and later at Manila's National Museum, officials told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The Marcoses fled the Philippines at the climax of an army-backed "people power" revolt which became a harbinger of change in authoritarian regimes worldwide. Ferdinand Marcos died in exile in Hawaii in 1989 and his widow and children returned home years later.

They left staggering amounts of personal belongings, clothes and art objects at the palace, including at least 1,220 pairs of Imelda Marcos' shoes.

More than 150 cartons of clothes, dress accessories and shoes of the Marcoses were transferred to the National Museum for safekeeping two years ago after termites, humidity and mold threatened the apparel at the riverside palace. They deteriorated further at the museum after the fragile boxes were abandoned in a padlocked hall that had no facilities to protect such relics and was inundated by tropical rains last month due to a gushing leak in the ceiling, museum officials said.

Museum staffers, who were not aware the boxes contained precious mementoes from the Marcoses, opened the hall on the fourth floor of the building after noticing water pouring out below the door. They were shocked to see Marcos' shoes and gowns when they opened the wet boxes, officials said.

Workers hurriedly moved the boxes to a dry room and some were later brought to a museum laboratory, where a small team of curators scrambled to assess the extent of the damage, a process that may take months given the huge volume of the apparel. Some items have been damaged by termites and mold beyond repair, according to museum curator Orlando Abinion, who is heading the effort.

"We're doing a conservation rescue," Abinion told the AP. "There was termite infestation and mold in past years, and these were aggravated by last month's storm."

"It's unfortunate because Imelda may have worn some of these clothes in major official events and as such have an important place in our history," he said.

AP journalists saw a badly tattered box at the museum filled with damaged and soiled leather bags and designer shoes belonging to Imelda Marcos. Termites had damaged the heel and sole of a white Pierre Cardin shoe. Other shoes were warped out of shape or badly stained.

About 100 of Ferdinand Marcos' barong shirts were squeezed tightly into another box, some still attached to plastic hangers. A white barong shirt on top, with the presidential seal emblazoned on its pocket, had reddish stains and a sleeve was nearly torn off.

Imelda Marcos, now a member of the House of Representatives, was not available for comment Sunday.

Her massive shoe collection, including top U.S. and European brands, astounded the world and became a symbol of excess in the Southeast Asian nation, where many still walked barefoot out of abject poverty.

Ferdinand Marcos' successor, democracy icon Corazon Aquino, accused him of stealing billions of dollars during his 20-year rule and ordered many of his assets seized.

The clothes and shoes of the Marcoses were not among the assets allegedly stolen by them and sequestered by the government following the dictator's fall, according to Presidential Commission on Good Government official Maita Gonzaga. The government has so far recovered $2.24 billion worth of cash, bank accounts and prime real estate from the Marcoses and their cronies, she said.

After the 1986 revolt, Aquino had Imelda Marcos' shoes displayed at the presidential palace as a symbol of the former first lady's lavish lifestyle. The shoes were then removed from public view and stored in the palace basement when Aquino stepped down in 1992.

Mrs. Marcos once claimed most of her foreign-branded shoes were fake, though that has never been independently verified. But the world's fascination with her footwear, including a battery-operated pair that blinked when she danced, has ensured a hefty price tag. A 1990 U.S. charity auction of one pair donated by her fetched $10,000.

Imelda Marcos claimed many of the shoes were gifts from Filipino shoemakers in suburban Marikina city, the country's shoemaking capital. Marikina officials borrowed 800 pairs of her shoes in 2001 for a shoe museum, which has become a tourist spot.

Unapologetic about the past, Mrs. Marcos said her shoes became her best defense.

"They went into my closets looking for skeletons, but thank God, all they found were shoes, beautiful shoes," she told reporters when she inaugurated the shoe museum.

Massive flooding, however, damaged dozens of pairs of Marcos' shoes in Marikina in 2009.

About 765 pairs, including famous brands like Gucci, Charles Jourdan, Christian Dior, Ferragamo, Chanel and Prada, survived the Marikina floods. The shoes, size 8 1/2 to 9, still look remarkably new due to meticulous museum care, which includes displaying them in airtight and dust-free glass cabinets in an air-conditioned gallery, away from direct sunlight. The shoe collection draws a daily crowd of 50 to 100 Philippine and foreign tourists, who almost always leave in awe, museum manager Jane Ballesteros said.

"The first word they utter is 'Wow,' followed by the question, 'Was she able to wear all of these?'" Ballesteros said. "When I say, yes, look at the scratches on the soles, the next reaction is, 'Really?'"

"It's amusing," Ballesteros said. "Her shoes never fail to astound people years after."

Now meet the world's wealthiest politicians >

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How We Traveled To Necker Island, Richard Branson's Private Paradise

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necker island trip, getting there, beach and red dock

Necker Island is the famous home of Sir Richard Branson, and a getaway spot for many celebrities and CEOs.

Click here to see how we got to Necker Island >>

Google's Larry Page got married on the island in 2007, Mariah Carey has been a frequent visitor, and Prince Harry has been rumored to have vacationed there before partying in Las Vegas.

Necker Island in the British Virgin Islands is part of Virgin Limited Edition, a collection of Branson's luxury vacation properties around the world, and is available for rent from April to December.

When we interviewed Sir Richard back in April, he talked at length about kite-surfing and partying on the island and about the rebuild of one of the villas, The Great House, which burned down a year ago after being struck by lightning. (Actress Kate Winslet, who was staying at the house at the time, saved Branson's elderly mother by carrying her out of the house.)

He also invited Business Insider to come and see that everything on the island is very much back to normal despite the loss of the Great House, so our videographer Robert Libetti and I were flown along with other journalists by Virgin Limited Edition last week.

We are sharing here our experience of getting to Necker Island, and we will be publishing posts about our trip in the upcoming days. You'll be able to find them all here.

While many of the VIP guests opt for a direct private jet ride to the nearby Tortola Island or a helicopter ride to Necker, our journey was much more eventful.

Disclosure: We were flown out to Necker Island, BVI by Virgin Limited Edition, which covered our travel and lodging expenses.

It's 4:30 a.m. and I am all packed and ready to go, but not before having my morning coffee.



It's drizzling and a bit cold as I leave my house in Harlem, New York. Garbage is piled up for pickup.



The A Train is here, and it will take me straight to JFK.



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Jeff Gundlach Is Offering An Additional $1.5 Million Reward For The Return Of Four Very Special Paintings

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jeff gundlach

Bond god Jeffrey Gundlach just had a press conference call to recover his stolen high-end art collection among other items.

During the call, he said he's still offering a $200,000 no questions asked reward for information leading to the recovery of his stolen items. 

In addition, Gundlach said he's offering $1 million reward for the undamaged return of his Piet Mondrian. 

He said he's also offering $500,000 for the return of his Jasper Johns and Joseph Cornells.

Earlier this month, Gundlach, the CEO of DoubleLine Capital, was the victim of a the victim of a more than $10 million burglary earlier this month.



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An Australian Man Has Designed The Ultimate Tsunami Survival Pod

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Tsunami Survival Pod

Do you know what you would do if a tsunami hit?

If you're lucky, you'd be inside one inventor's Tsunami Survival Pod.

Matt Duncan, the Australian man behind the pod, was better known for his steel-hulled house boats, but after watching news footage of last year's tsunami in Japan that claimed the lives of 23,000 people, he knew he wanted to do something in case a tsunami ever hit in Australia.

To make his survival craft, Duncan used spiral-welded steel and designed strategic crumple zones to absorb the impact of the waves and withstand six tons of pressure. The occupants of the pod strap themselves into racing seats complete with five-point safety harnesses and helmets to prevent passengers from being violently thrown around and injured.

The Tsunami Survival Pod can seat up to four people, and has accommodations for infant and child restraints. Once the water-tight doors are shut, the survival craft has enough air inside for approximately two and a half hours with inward-opening access panels to let fresh air in if needed, as well as 1-inch bulletproof glass to allow light into the pod.

Duncan's design even incorporates the worst-case scenario of being swept off to sea. The pod has exterior flashing beacon lights to attract the attention of rescuers and lifting hooks for a helicopter rescue. The streamlined design also prevents the pod from being snagged by debris, and the wheels can detach once the vehicle is floating.

The fully-outfitted pod (complete with emergency supplies) will be selling for around $8,872 USD. So if you're in a high-risk area and can afford it, better to have Duncan's invention in your garage than be sorry.

Below are some more images of Duncan's completed Tsunami Survival Pod.

Tsunami Survival Pod

Tsunami Survival Pod

Tsunami Survival Pod

DON'T MISS: Google Street View shows devastation in Japan 17 months after the tsunami >

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The Cornell Homecoming Concert That Sent 6 People To The Hospital Looks WAY Crazier Than We Realized

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avicii cornell

Wooh! College!

This weekend, alumni and students alike partied in Ithaca for Cornell's Homecoming celebration. And in what has become a tradition at American Universities, the Ivy League school held a massive concert to cap it all off — Electronic Dance Music DJ Avicii performed.

That's when things got wild. According to the Cornell Daily Sun, 6 people ended up in the hospital after the concert spun out of control. That's on top of reports of forcible touching in the concert ticket line, defecation on school bleachers, alcohol and drug abuse.

Check out a few great quotes from The Cornell Daily Sun that can paint the picture for you:

  • “We try to keep those bleachers open so people have the chance to sit, but we never imagined that people would start relieving themselves in the bleachers,”(Dave) Rodriguez said. “It completely baffles me that somebody would think that was an okay thing to do … [it was] definitely a first.”
  • “There was definitely a lot of rolling [on ecstasy] going on; I saw it numerous times firsthand,” he (student, Jared Hoffman) said. “The comment from most people was that it was as hardcore as any concert that you could hope for that wasn’t part of a festival. It was definitely the craziest I’ve seen at Cornell.”
  • Jayant Mukhopadhaya ’15 said he had a “creepy” experience during the concert....“There was this really funny moment when this guy tried to jump on my shoulders — not just once, but twice,” Mukhopadhaya, who is also a designer at The Sun, said. “He half got up on my shoulders and then asked me to put him down. So I put him down and 15 minutes later he jumped on me again.”

Sounds wild, right? We knew we had to see how all of this looked, so we contacted Cornell alums, hit up Twitter and Instagram, and found a bunch of photos of the event.

One inspired tweet we saw: "Missing @Avicii last night at Cornell would be like your parents missing The Beatles when they did a college tour."

Source: Twitter, @topherstrayer



The Cornell police got 12 calls about alcohol related incidents the night of the concert.

Source: The Cornell Daily Sun



One student said there was a lot of rolling on ecstacy going on at the concert.

Source: The Cornell Daily Sun



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HOUSE OF THE DAY: A Gilded Apartment In A Fifth Avenue Hotel Just Hit The Market For $95 Million

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$95 million co op in nyc

A co-op on the 18th floor of the Sherry-Netherland hotel in New York City has hit the market for $95 million, The New York Times first reported.

The home encompasses the entire floor, spanning 7,000 square feet. It has seven bedrooms and eight bathrooms.

Liberty Travel co-founder Gilbert Haroche is selling the pad, which he transformed from several separate apartments into his 17-room home.

It's one of several New York City apartments to hit the market lately with an asking price close to $100 million.

Hotel amenities are incorporated in the cost of the home, and include daily housekeeping and turndown service, a 24-hour concierge, and room service.



The new owners will still have to pay around $54,000 a month in service and maintenance fees.



The kitchen is up to "professional grade" and includes warming stoves.



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The Weird Way The Experts At Flight Deal Find Those Stellar Fares

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flight, plane

Travel has gotten insanely expensive, so when a blogger tipped us off to a site called The Flight Deal, we were eager to learn what they're up to. 

Rather than round up a bunch of cheap deals, the site goes much further by providing tips and tricks for maximizing and redeeming frequent flier miles and rewards points.

What's more, they only highlight fares that meet one quirky criteria (emphasis ours): All deals cost 6 cents per mile. Curious as to how this golden rule came about, we emailed the team to learn more. 

"We looked at routes and fares we flew regularly, such as New York to San Francisco/Los Angeles," they told Business Insider. "At 6 cents per mile, it would cost about $300 to fly to either destination. At 8 cents, it's closer to $400. If you look at the trend for these routes, $300 and under is the sweet spot, so to speak." 

The other reason they like this criteria is that it works like a rebate. 

"Let's say you want to go to Europe from the United States -- it takes 60,000 frequent flier miles with most carriers," they said. "Using 6 cents per mile as a guide, you would need to spend at most $3,600 to acquire those miles. With Europe fares from the U.S. hovering around $1,000 for most destinations, you would effectively get a 28% rebate for your money spent. No other form of rewards give this much back!" 

Beyond the 6 cent rule, the Flight Deal team chooses flights based on the fare, not the destination. 

"Yes, we publish great deals, but we don't want [our readers] to be fixated on a destination. Chase the fare, not the destination," they said. "We have gone to some awesome places that we wouldn’t have normally visited – like Lima for $270 or Stockholm for $150. The world is vast, so go explore." 

DON'T MISS: 23 secrets to booking cheap flights > 

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See The FBI's Most Sought-After Pieces Of Stolen Art

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Bond titan Jeffrey Gundlach got a nasty surprise when his stunning art collection was stolen recently.

News emerged Monday that he plans to pay one of the highest rewards in history to recover his paintings.

But Gundlach isn't the only collector to lose his goods.

The FBI has long tracked and documented massive art thefts, including one heist of six works of art collectively worth as much as $300 million.

Almost makes Gundlach's loss look tiny in comparison.

10) Thousands of historical artifacts were stolen from the Iraq National Museum in March and April 2003. A value was never assigned to the stolen goods. One of the pieces, the statue of King Entemena of Lagash, was recovered on July 25, 2006.

Source: FBI



9) Four works of art were stolen from Rio's Museu Chacara do Céu on Feb. 24, 2006. Their total value hasn't been estimated.

Source: FBI



8) Renoir's "Madeleine Leaning on Her Elbow with Flowers in Her Hair" was stolen during an armed robbery on Sept. 8, 2011. It's estimated to be worth $1 million.

Source: FBI



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Pizza Hut Has Invented Another Absolutely Ludicrous Type Of Pizza

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pizza hut cone crust pizza

The pizza-makers over at Pizza Hut Middle East have made some crazy pies in the past.

There's the pizza with cheeseburgers in the crust. And the pizza with chicken nuggets in the crust. And the pizza with meatballs and cream cheese in the crust.

But it's trying to one-up those again with its newest offering: the Cone Crust Pizza.

Foodbeast's Dominique Zamora describes it perfectly:

Instead of having a plain crust (yawn) or worse, stuffing the crust with your basic mozzarella (double yawn), this unique technique actually puts to work the pizza’s flabby leftover bits by folding them into cones and filling them with cream cheese, honey mustard chicken or an alternating combination of the two.

Yes. It's "reshaping tasty fun."

NOW SEE: Japan's Epic Fast Food War Inspired These Crazy Menu Items >

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SPOTTED: A Sparkling Fisker Karma In LA's Little Tokyo

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Reader Charlie H. came across this sparkling Fisker Karma on the streets of Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles.

The luxury plug-in hybrid gets 47.3 mpg by Fisker's most recent count. The 2012 model starts at $102,000.

Have you spotted a rare or unusual way of getting around in your travels? Did you take a photo? Do you like sharing? Let me know via e-mail: adavies@businessinsider.com or on Twitter: @adavies47.

fisker karma

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