UNFAIR TRADING

Hotel booking platform Booking.com have been censured by the German regulator, the Federal Cartel Office (FCO) for a clause in their contracts with hotels which prevented the hotels from selling rooms more cheaply on their own website than on Booking.com’s website. The FCO say this infringes European competition law, an aspect contested by the company, which has announced it will appeal. (Source: Pinsent Curtis solicitors.)

Nevertheless Booking.com have removed the offending clause from their contracts.

The consumer-unfriendly nature of online booker’s contracts came to light when FCO’s president Andreas Mundt stayed an extra night in a Bavarian hotel and was charged more for it by the hotel directly than the nights he had booked on another online booking platform.

FIRE CLOSES DUBAI HOTEL

The five-star, 63-storey Address Downtown Dubai hotel is currently closed after a major fire broke out there in the closing hours of 2015.

The blaze, thought to have been started by a stray firework, took hold on the 20th floor around 9.00pm on December 31st 2015. All guests were evacuated. There were no reported fatalities, 14 people suffered minor injuries, one suffered moderate injuries and one suffered a heart attack during the evacuation. Continue reading

ART AND EVENTS

Organisers looking for a London venue with strong artistic connections can enjoy the sumptuous surroundings of the Leighton House Museum, in Holland Park Road, just north of Kensington High Street. This is the former studio and home of celebrated Victorian artist and President of the Royal Academy, Frederic Lord Leighton (1830-1896), who was knighted in 1878.

Leighton’s most famous work was Flaming June, which featured a beautiful woman in a transparent orange gown curled up asleep on a marble surround, and for which the model was said to be the strikingly classical-looking actress Dorothy Dene. Before she changed her name and turned to acting Dene was Ada Pullan from Clapham, and working as a head model for a Kensington studio cooperative. She was 19 when the 49 year-old Leighton met her in 1879 and was captivated by her, and she became his favourite model and muse, also rumoured but never proven to be his mistress. Given Leighton’s high position in London society and Dene’s strong cockney accent there was speculation that the relationship was the inspiration for George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion. Another beautiful painting of Dene by Leighton, Crenaia, Nymph of the Dargle, showed her standing full-length and semi-naked, and looking beguilingly demure. Continue reading

CHEERS

Caterers Searcys are offering £1500 worth of drinks, including VAT, free for new event bookings at The Gherkin for January – March.

The offer applies to evening drinks receptions for up to 250 or seated banquets for up to 140 using levels 39 and 40 of the building.

Drinks prices at the Gherkin will be around £5 for a 33cl bottle of beer, £10 for a cocktail and £10 – £20 for a glass of champagne.

THE QUIET MAN

With the name Marion Michael Morrison the man was probably not going to make it in some of the best action movies made but with the stage name of John Wayne the man, known to his friends and family as “Duke” after a family dog, was memorably good many times over.

The Quiet Man, directed and produced by John Ford in 1952 from a 1933 short story of the same name by Maurice Walsh starred the Duke as American ex-boxer Sean Thornton who tragically kills a man in the ring in the USA and seeks peace by returning to live in his parent’s old cottage in the Irish hamlet of Innisfree. Here, as well as meeting some cringe-worthy Irish caricatures he spies Mary Kate Danaher, a flame-haired beauty played by Maureen O’Hara who first plays love-struck like a frightened fawn around Wayne but a spirited and even bolshie young woman around everyone else. Fortunately they have something in common to hate in the form of Danaher’s bullying brother Squire “Red” Will Danaher, a star turn from the burly Victor McLaglen. Continue reading

GREED NOT GOOD

Greed might work for Wall Street but it is not an attractive, nor appropriate, option for the third sector.

The Times newspaper has just published its first analysis of charity pay, said to average a modest £20,000 a year for most employees. However a few charity trustees are allowing their chief and senior executives to significantly line their pockets, with more than 1,000 of them trousering at least £100,000 a year, with some of those grabbing considerably more, and more than enough to bring the sector into the disrepute warned of by the Charity Commission. Continue reading

WHISTLE BLOWN ON FUNDRAISER

A former employee of fundraising firm Wesser has alleged that the company deliberately targets elderly and vulnerable people living alone for donations, and pockets 45 pence for every pound collected from donors in their first two years of donations.

Following the allegations published in The Sun newspaper St John Ambulance, Wesser’s largest client, has suspended its dealings with them while it carries out its own investigation. Continue reading

CHARITY CASUALTIES

The chairman of the trustees of the collapsed Kids Company charity, Alan Yentob has resigned his £183.000 job as creative director of the BBC, saying that the furore in the wake of the August collapse was proving a “serious distraction”.

Yentob was widely blamed for his part, as trustee’s chairman, in the financial failure of the charity, which had received £46 million in public funding. He was also hit by media allegations that he misused his power at the BBC, asking Newsnight to delay a critical report into the charity. Continue reading

SETBACK FOR LEAGUE

A prosecution of a hunt brought by the League Against Cruel Sports has collapsed after the court heard of the close links between the League’s expert witness, Professor Stephen Harris of Bristol University and his friend at the League, Paul Tillsly, the head of investigations.

The court heard that an academic paper by Harris was sponsored by the League, that Harris had appeared at their campaign events and that a book written by Harris had been published by the League.

The revelations call into question the seven previous convictions of huntsmen where Harris was an expert witness.