Eissalon Tichy Saturday, Oct 17 2009 

As temperatures rise, the Viennese descend on the Tichy ice-cream parlour in the 10th district. Famed as Vienna’s finest purveyor of gelati for almost 50 years, Tichy have nonetheless remained true to their origins by keeping the kitsch 1950s’ graphic style of their advertising and resolutely refusing to open any other branches in the city. Those who wish to partake of their famed apricot ice-cream dumplings or their 25 different flavours can take the underground to the bustling Reumannplatz, the heart of working-class Vienna, and get a whole new angle on the city.

Tom Yum’s Tuesday, Apr 28 2009 

The trend these days is to make a cartoon character out of the creature that features mostly on your menu. So if you saw Tom Yum’s cheery prawn glaring at you from its Soho home, you’d feel right assuming it’s a seafood place. Wrong. This Thai eatery is the latest in the successful Phuket’s group and serves a fairly predictable fayre of rice dishes, meats and, of course, tom yum soups. A meal for two will set you back about HK$350.

Puff Daddy Wednesday, Feb 25 2009 

He’s been arrested on weapons charges, (allegedly) punched Boyzone upstart Shane Lynch and lost friends through gangsta killings. Is there anything tame about Seán ‘Puffy’ Combs? Yes, his music. Puff Daddy is the Val Doonican of hip hop, serving the antithesis of Public Enemy’s urgent and angry beats. This is the man, after all, who made Sting’s ‘Every Breath You Take’ sound more mawkish than the original. There is, however, one good reason to attend this concert: the remote possibility that his drop-dead-gorgeous girlfriend, Jennifer Lopez, might be in the audience.

Bartenders Wednesday, Feb 18 2009 

Love ‘em, hate ‘em, bartenders have played a variety of roles in our lives. They’ve been friend, confidant and psychotherapist. Your local bartender has helped you impress a date and has seen you at your drunken worst. As long as you’re buying, he/she is always there to listen. In his one-man show, Louis Mustillo examines the bar life and the people who work in them.

Iris Viewing Saturday, Jan 31 2009 

It’s no great secret that Japanese people have a thing about flowers, and the blooming of the irises in the mid-June rainy season is seen as the traditional harbinger of summer. Just about all of the city’s traditional gardens – including the popular Meiji Jingu inner garden – will be filled to bursting with cameras, tripods and amateur photographers, but if you can see past them, the iris flowers are actually quite spectacular.

Basque country Friday, Dec 19 2008 

Franco’s death in 1975 ushered in democracy in Spain, but resentment over 35 years of dictatorship still lingers in Basque memory. Since the late 60s, a terrorist movement led by Euskadi ta Askatasuna (ETA; “Basque country and freedom”) demanded that the four Basque provinces on the Spanish side-Gipuzcoa, Navarra, Alava, and Vizcaya-receive complete political independence. Violence has erupted on both sides, resulting in the deaths of numerous public officials and occasionally brutal backlash by the civil guard. Nevertheless, the Spanish have granted the Basques more autonomy over the years, and a cease-fire was declared in 1998. Talks have since stalled and ETA announced in October 1999 that it would take up arms again. However, even in the days prior to the cease-fire, ETA generally chose state-related targets. Tourists rarely feel threatened and demonstrations usually end peacefully. [Note: as of January 21st the truce has come to a de facto end with the explosion of two car bombs in Madrid]

Despite all of this, exuberant nationalism has had its plusses. Basque language, music, and dance have flourished in the last two decades. Parents give their children formerly forbidden names like I?aki, Idoya, and Estibaliz. Sporadic violence has not disrupted the economic vitality of the region, one of the most industrialized and prosperous in Spain. Visitors to the Basque Country (an area no bigger than the U.S. state of New Hampshire) enjoy its resplendent green mountains and pretty beaches, besides joining the locals in a near spiritual appreciation of food and drink. These qualities overflow during the bacchanalian festival of San Ferm?n, known by everybody else as the Running of the Bulls. As a contrast to this traditional agricultural setting stand Basque cities with their finger on the millennial pulse, for example San Sebasti?n, and especially Bilbao with its futuristic Guggenheim art museum.

Look and ye shall find Sunday, Nov 9 2008 

Look and ye shall find

Odaiba/Tokyo Sunday, Oct 19 2008 

Odaiba/Tokyo

L’Entracte Saturday, Sep 20 2008 

As you’d expect from the location steps away from the grands magasins, this café draws a mix of visiting nationalities during the day, replaced after hours by a more Gallic crowd of couples deep in conversation. Make for the first floor, and if you’re lucky, you’ll arrive as one of the tables by the huge front window becomes vacant – an unbeatable viewpoint across to the Palais Garnier, especially romantic despite its grime, as the blue Paris evening darkens. Inside, four fans connected to a pulley wheel rotate idly above a plush décor of wood panelling, velveteen seats and wine memorabilia – wine posters, maps of wine-producing regions and polished table-tops made from wine casks. Prices are par for the course; you can also eat snacks at all hours.

Pompeii Wednesday, Sep 17 2008 

The destruction of this small Italian town in AD79 and its subsequent preservation by volcanic ash are the subjects of this huge exhibition in one of Tokyo’s newest galleries. As well as artefacts from Pompeii, there are astonishing photos of the site, featuring what look like statues, but are in fact people, petrified in the last moments of their lives. Perhaps as people wander round, they’ll pause to glance nervously in the direction of Mount Fuji, which last blew its top a mere 292 years ago.

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