MAGIC WEARS OFF FOR MERLIN

A boycott of Merlin Entertainment brands has been called for by the Captive Animals Protection Society (CAPS) over Merlin’s running of Sea Life aquaria, which dominate this sector in the UK (Ethical Consumer).

As well as Sea Life centres the called-for boycott by those who care about animal welfare also includes Merlin’s UK theme parks Alton Towers, which recently admitted responsibility for a serious accident on its Smiler extreme roller-coaster, Thorpe Park, Chessington World of Adventures and Legoland, as well as attractions such as Warwick Castle, Madame Tussauds, The Dungeons, Blackpool Tower and the London Eye, along with other big wheels in other parts of the UK. In addition Merlin brands in Germany, Italy and Australia are included. Continue reading

NIGHT TUBE SERVICE LAUNCHED

Transport For London (TFL) are launching a night tube service for Friday and Saturday nights.

Commencing in the wee hours of Saturday September 12th the service will run trains every 10 or 15 minutes on Saturday and Sunday mornings, until 04.30. Initially offered on the whole of the popular Jubilee and Victoria lines, the Piccadilly line from Cockfosters to Heathrow Terminal 5 and long lengths of the Central and Northern lines, the service will extend in future to parts of the Circle, District, Hammersmith and City and Metropolitan lines. Continue reading

HOTEL NEWS

o The Radisson Blu hotel in Leeds is spending £3.5 million on a revamp, due to be completed in 2016. Half of the hotel’s 147 bedrooms have been refurbished, along with the meeting spaces, and a cocktail bar and grill restaurant have been added. (The Business Desk)

o Bredbury Hall Hotel and Country Club, near Stockport, has been bought out of administration after 15 months by a Bangladeshi investor who plans to spend an initial £1 million on it. This is to refurbish the 147 bedrooms, along with the nightclub, central lounge and reception, and planned for 2016 are new leisure and spa facilities. (The Business Desk)

GRAND IN LISBON

One of the best-placed five-star hotels in Lisbon is the Altis Grand, a business and conference property located between two Metro stations just off the North end of the Avenue da Liberdade, the city’s upscale Champs-Elysees artery that runs several kilometres down to the atmospheric Baixa Old City and port. The city is built on seven hills and ladies not catching taxis everywhere will need to choose their footwear with care however, given the very steep slopes around the Altis, and uneven and broken pavements that could spell trouble for those in high heels. Continue reading

SAME OLD SAME OLD COMFORT IN BRUSSELS

Fans of Hilton hotels looking for the group’s high levels of comfort in Brussels won’t be disappointed with the Hilton Brussels Grand Place, until last November Le Meridien.

Like many luxury hotels these days this one presents itself as a four-star, to get and keep the highly-lucrative business from pharmaceutical companies that are strongly discouraged, on ethical grounds, from using five-star facilities to incentivise doctors and others buying or prescribing their products. Comfort levels, however, we judged as definitely top drawer on a recent two night stay there. Continue reading

CLICK IN CAMBRIDGE

The free one-day conference for event organisers, clic+ 2015, is taking place at Robinson College, Cambridge, on Thursday October 1st.

This commences with breakfast at 08.30 and concludes with drinks at 17.30, incorporating a range of educational sessions and a networking lunch.

Some accommodation is available and there is also a fundraising dinner on the night of Wednesday September 30th in aid of the Muscle Help Foundation, tickets price £50 plus VAT

MEMPHIS

Those who enjoy whoopingly feel-good musicals with exuberant vocal gymnastics and great dancing will be truly sorry if they don’t catch MEMPHIS, the story of the rise of “nigger music” in 1950’s segregated America, before it finishes in the West End in October.

Originating in California and Massachusetts in 2003 the show ran on Broadway for nearly three years between 2009 and 2012, picking up a Tony award for Best Musical and a Drama Desk award for Outstanding Musical in 2010, along with a crop of awards and nominations for the orchestration, the original score, the performances and the choreography. It is loosely based on the life and times of pioneering white Memphis radio DJ Dewey “Daddy-O” Phillips, a big fan of rock n’ roll, jazz, boogie-woogie, rhythm and blues and country music. Phillips was one of the first to play the “race music” of the black community to America’s young white community. He was also the first to play the Sun Record’s 1954 debut of a white boy singing like a black one on upbeat versions of “That’s All Right” and “Blue Moon of Kentucky”, lorry-driver Elvis Presley. Continue reading

LIFE OF RILEY

Those who enjoy Mike Leigh’s intelligent and bitter-sweet dissections of humanity will enjoy Life of Riley, the last film made by the famed French “New Wave” film maker Alain Resnais, who died suddenly on 1 March this year, aged 91. In a career spanning more than 60 years and nearly 50 films the highly-rated works he left – and some were too irritatingly ambiguous for some tastes – include Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959) in which archive footage of the horrors of the bomb is juxtaposed with scenes of a French film star enjoying the caresses of her Japanese lover, while recalling a previous affair with a German lover, and Nuit et Brouillard (Night and Fog, 1955), a painful but poetic and utterly memorable 30-minute documentary about Auschwitz. Later films celebrated the similarities between film and theatre, as did his last. Continue reading

CHARITIES IN THE DOCK

Cases of aggressive and illegal marketing by charities have dominated recent news media, including the pages of specialist marketing magazine Decision Marketing.

On May 6th the body of Olive Cooke, the UK’s oldest poppy seller at 92, was found in Avon Gorge, Bristol. She was thought to have committed suicide whilst being in ill-health and depressed. However it has emerged that she had been plagued by phone and post by hundreds of different charities. Cooke told the Bristol Post last November “I have always donated to charities but as I am getting older I have been told I need to start cutting back” She then revealed that she got up to six mailings a day from charities, and “more because Christmas is coming” and added “I think the elderly are targeted with this sort of mail on purpose, as charities think they have lots of disposable money, or they might have donated in the past, but receiving so much is overwhelming”. Continue reading

CHARITY DONATION “ABHORRENT”

A donation of £3 million of her £10 million bonus to charity by Harriet Green, former CEO of Thomas Cook, has been described as an “abhorrent attempt to gain public sympathy”.

This is the view of the mother whose two children were killed in Corfu by carbon monoxide poisoning from a faulty water heater at a hotel recommended and booked for them by the tour operator. A recent inquest heard that Thomas Cook accepted without checking the statement by the hotel that there were no gas-fuelled water heaters there, an approach that prompted a recent inquest to find that the tour operator had failed in its duty of care towards its customers.