Dhofar eyes new tourist markets with charter flight boost

Salalah – The Ministry of Heritage and Tourism (MHT) is focusing on promoting Dhofar as a year-round tourist destination, with an aim to attract new markets and boost visitor numbers to the southern region of Oman.
As part of the initiative, 26 travel agencies from Armenia landed on Sunday in Salalah for a familiarisation trip for representatives from the Caucasus country. These trips provided a firsthand experience of Dhofar’s rich historical and cultural attractions, offering a glimpse of the region’s unique appeal to potential tourists.
The fam trips coincide with Dhofar’s annual charter flight season, during which over 400 special flights typically land in Salalah from Europe.
Speaking at the 2nd Arab Forum for Tourism Statistics earlier this month, H E Salim Mohammed al Mahrouqi, Minister of Heritage and Tourism, announced that more than 450 charter flights are expected this winter season, providing a significant boost to Dhofar’s tourism industry.
Dhofar received its first charter flight of the season from Hungary on October 13, bringing 176 tourists, including 46 representatives from Hungarian tourism offices. This marked a strong start to the season, with more flights from Europe expected in the coming months.
To further entice visitors, the ministry hosted a series of events under the banner Marhaba Dhofar (Welcome to Dhofar) in September.
These events targeted both regional and international markets, with a focus on strengthening tourism ties between Oman and Saudi Arabia.
The events drew participation from over 50 tourism companies and 15 media professionals from Saudi Arabia, featuring business meetings between Omani and Saudi companies as well as visits to key tourist sites across Dhofar governorate.

Travellers and businesses face months-long wait for Spirit bookings, but new ships won’t be operational until 2026

Melissa Cunningham’s dog transportation business depends on her being able to book vehicles on the Spirit of Tasmania ferry each week.But a shortage in space on the ships for tall vehicles is making The Dog Transporter unviable.”We’re virtually going to shut it down. It’s just impossible to get spots on the Spirit,” she said.”This week we’ve got one vehicle on — we could have filled up three.”Melissa Cunningham’s dog transportation business is scaling down because she hasn’t been able to secure enough spots on the Spirit of Tasmania.

Ashland business believed to be first in town to use AI in day-to-day operations

Within a year of Brett and Kate Lofing starting Howdy Owl in the garage of their home in Ashland in 2015, they had to switch locations to a warehouse in Lincoln because of how much the custom wall decor business grew.But when Etsy, Howdy Owl’s main retail platform, changed its advertising strategy in 2021, its sales plummeted.The Lofings now run Howdy Owl on their own, having just moved operations from Lincoln back to Ashland. With a downsize in personnel comes many challenges. One of them, Brett Lofing said, is customer service.“In this world today that we’re in, everybody wants answers,” he said. “This can be the person that is searching at 3 a.m. for something online, and they’re ready to purchase, but they got a question. Well, I’m not up at 3 a.m. answering emails.”That’s where Brown Bacon AI comes in.

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The tech company is collaborating with Howdy Owl in what is believed to be the first use of generative AI in an Ashland business’ day-to-day operations, using an AI chatbot that automatically answers customer service questions.Tony and Aimee Arnold, who are also based in Ashland, have developed the patent-pending SomAI, which was created to help restaurants and other food-related businesses.When customers email Howdy Owl with a question, they get a reply in about a minute. Lofing said he has Howdy Owl’s version of SomAI set up to review the answers that are generated before they are sent to customers.“Our engine is very, very specific to only your business. So it really stays in that box,” said Tony Arnold, the CEO of Brown Bacon AI.What makes SomAI different from other AI services like ChatGPT, Tony Arnold said, is that it only generates answers based on information given by the business owner, and doesn’t collect data on the users who send in questions.

The SomAI chatbot used by Brett Lofing, the co-founder of Howdy Owl, to answer questions for his business’ customer service. Howdy Owl is believed to be the first Ashland business to use generative AI for day-to-day operations.

Courtesy image

In Howdy Owl’s case, all the information comes from its website.Tony Arnold also said SomAI simultaneously works alongside other services like ChatGPT to supplement its answers with relevant information that isn’t in the provided materials.“Most restaurants aren’t going to have the winemaker info and the soil type, but yet, you can ask that to our AI, and it will tell you about who the winemaker was,” Tony Arnold said.Brett Lofing said SomAI has helped him and Kate Lofing free up time to focus on orders and creating pieces, while also saving them money on hiring a customer service employee. Brown Bacon AI has plans starting at $500 a month.Although the Lofings have started to focus more on selling their products locally, Howdy Owl still fulfills orders from around the country, Brett Lofing said, adding that SomAI will work even when a question has a dialect from another region.“The AI software doesn’t care. It still answers it, and it does it in a way that we would answer it,” Lofing said. “Sometimes better than what we would do.”

An order being put together in Brett and Kate Lofing’s garage in Ashland. The Lofings started Howdy Owl in 2015.

Courtesy photo

Beyond SomAI, the Arnolds have also developed AImee, a separate AI model that provides basic medical information for users also in a chatbot form.“AI, it’s one of those things, it’s not going away,” said Brett Lofing, who started using ChatGPT about two years ago to help him write website content. “It’s one of those things that is evolving so quickly, and you have to embrace it as a business owner.”In the future, Brett Lofing said he hopes to use SomAI to power the search engine on the Howdy Owl website.Aimee Arnold, the CMO and CWO (chief wine officer), of Brown Bacon AI, said AI has the potential to create a boom in the opening of small businesses.“Everyone’s got some sort of idea, they just don’t necessarily know how to implement it, or they don’t know how to hire the people,” Aimee Arnold said. “AI is there and can help you walk through that, and, in a lot of ways, it can help people achieve that dream of being a business owner.”
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Top Journal Star photos for October 2024

Norris’ Crew Moeller (4) dives into the endzone over Waverly’s Trev Greve (2) to score a touchdown in the second quarter to score a on Friday, Oct. 18, 2024, at Norris High School.

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

Lincoln North Star junior Skyler Shaw practices welding at The Career Academy. Ten years since its grand opening, The Career Academy at Lincoln Public Schools has more than doubled its enrollment and district officials expect that growth to continue.

JUSTIN WAN, Journal Star

Factory Manager Dan Neil (from left), associate maintenance manager Tanner Winberg, predictive maintenance tech Kenny Rose, PDM Tech Chu Fung Wong, and IT tech Gary Schellhorn pose for a photo alongside their new Boston Dynamics robot dog Spot at Nestle Purina Petcare Company on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024, in Crete.

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Gretna’s Alexis Jensen celebrates after the final out of the fifth inning during a Class A state tournament game on Thursday in Hastings.

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Oliver Degner, 4, (from left) Charlotte Degner, 6, and Noelle Gormley, 7, all of Lincoln, run to the finish line during the Pumpkin Run on Sunday in Lincoln’s Haymarket.

JUSTIN WAN, Journal Star

Erika Madison, Capital Humane Society animal welfare specialist manager, weighs a Goldendoodle on a scale during intake on Friday. The city of Lincoln is balking at signing a new long-term contract with the humane society to provide shelter for stray animals after the amount nearly tripled over previous years.

KENNETH FERRIERA, Journal Star

Russ Marr works on a wooden portion of “Vlad the Impaler” — an art piece depicting a goose that has the fangs of a vampire, the tongue of a serpent and the tail of a rattlesnake. The body of the piece uses an original tank from a 1977 Harley-Davidson Super Glide.

JUSTIN WAN, Journal Star

Malcolm’s Cole Tiedeman (center) celebrates with his teammates after the Clippers defeated Raymond Central 27-19 on Friday, Oct. 11, 2024, at Raymond Central High School.

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Lincoln Northwest High School seniors Brookelynn Wheeler (from left), Tyjian Deerinwater, Kareem Yahya and Haylie Helmick investigate a crime scene during a forensics class on Tuesday.

JUSTIN WAN, Journal Star

Lincoln Lutheran’s McKenzie Sidlo (center from left) goes to hit the ball over the net while defended by Pius X’s McKenzie Becker and Faith Venable (2) during the third set on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, at Lincoln Lutheran High School

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

As seen from outside the UNL Union, Sen. Deb Fischer (right) speaks about her responsibilities as a senator and answers questions from students during a UNL College Republicans meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024, at the UNL Union. Fischer, the Republican from Nebraska seeking her third term in the US Senate.

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

Lincoln Southwest’s Ja’Sara Wilson kicks up dirt as she slides into second base in the first inning of the A-2 district championship on Thursday, Oct. 10, 2024, at Doris Bair Complex .

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

Henry Oetjen augers corn from his combine into a grain cart while harvesting on Monday, Oct. 7, 2024, at Oetjen Farms near Walton.

KATY COWELL Journal Star

Pius X’s Faith Venable (left) is mobbed by her teammates after scoring the set winning kill in the second set on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, at Lincoln Lutheran High School

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From left, Nola Broderick, 7, and her twin Rose Broderick ride their bikes past the Halloween decorations at the home of Wade and Debbie McGinnis at 5043 Leighton Avenue is seen on Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024, in Lincoln.

JUSTIN WAN Journal Star

Malcolm players are silhouetted by the sun as they warm up before the game on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, at Malcolm High School.

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

Nebraska players huddle up the North endzone in the fourth quarter against Rutgers on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Memorial Stadium.

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

Wicked Bones band members Marshall Johnson (left) and Jobe Sullivan rock out onstage during at UNL’s Battle of the Bands on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024, at the Bourbon Theatre. Six local bands comprised of UNL students competed for a spot to perform as part of UNL’s homecoming. The final two bands will perform during Cornstock on Friday.

KENNETH FERRIERA, Journal Star

Nebraska’s Isaac Gifford (2), Nebraska’s Ceyair Wright (15), DeShon Singleton (8) and Nebraska’s MJ Sherman (48) celebrate a defensive stop during the third quarter of the game against Rutgers on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Memorial Stadium.

KATY COWELL Journal Star

Nebraska’s Jahmal Banks is defended by Rutgers’ Eric Rogers is ruled as a incomplete pass, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Memorial Stadium.

JUSTIN WAN Journal Star

Mark Thornton, executive director of Jacob’s Well, sees potential in an old grocery store at 2001 J St. He hopes to create a new gather place and make it part of the neighborhood again.

JUSTIN WAN, Journal Star

Lincoln Southwest’s Sage Strait competes in the Girls 5K during the LPS cross country championships at Pioneers Park on Friday, Oct. 4, 2024, in Lincoln.

KENNETH FERRIERA Journal Star

Norris’ Crew Moeller (4) stiff-arms Lincoln Pius X’s Sam Kassmeier during the first quarter on Friday at Aldrich Field.

KATY COWELL, Journal Star

Teacher Maileigh Camp holds Tailey Helmstadter, 7 months, at an Early Head Start classroom Tuesday at the Community Action Head Start K Street Center.

JUSTIN WAN, Journal Star

Lincoln Southwest’s Brenly Noerrlinger (from left), Ja’Sara Wilson and Hadley Madson sing a chant during a game against Fremont on Tuesday at Doris Bair Complex.

KENNETH FERRIERA, Journal Star

USC’s Ally Batenhorst (left) reacts as Nebraska fans cheer for her before Sunday’s match at the Devaney Sports Center.

KATY COWELL, Journal Star

Amy Bolton arranges several skeletons in tutus as she decorates her front yard for Halloween on Monday, Sept. 23, 2024, at her Lincoln home near 48th and High Street. Bolton has been decorating her yard with skeletons since she bought her home in 2020.

KATY COWELL Journal Star

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‘Four Mothers’ Review: Slight But Charming Irish Comedy Treats Family Heartache With Tenderness – London Film Festival

There is always space, it seems, for another warm-hearted story about the foibles of Irish working-class women, cosy as a fireside chat with a nice cup of tea. As for gay men and their mams, that’s a rich  seam of drama, comedy and whatever lies in between that is probably inexhaustible. The four mothers who give Darren Thornton’s film its title all have gay sons and have come to some sort of accommodation with that uncomfortable knowledge, however badly it sits with the church where these sons deliver them dutifully every Sunday morning. After all, they couldn’t live without their boys — literally. Who else would put up with them and still show the love? “It does get easier,” mutters one of the sons to another as they huddle in a back pew. “When?” is the anguished reply.

Except that it’s not real anguish, just a comedy version of it: Thornton keeps the tone light and the pace frisky. The demands and difficulties of looking after an elderly person whose grip on reality is drifting are mostly the source of rueful jokes; the men’s shared desire to have a bit of a sex life before middle age closes over their heads is not the stuff of existential crisis, simply a reminder that boys just want to have fun. When three of them decide to abscond to the Maspalomas Pride in Spain, an exuberantly bacchanalian event where they will be ridiculously old — but better late than never — they contrive to leave their respective mothers with Edward, the most dutiful son of them all, for three impossible days.  

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Edward (James McArdle, giving a performance that is the closest thing in movies to a cuddle) is a writer whose YA novel about a young gay boy has had rave reviews and is about to hit the ultimate market, the United States. His mother Alma (the eternally formidable Fionnula Flanagan) has a degenerative illness that has left her unable to speak. She remains sharp, however, delivering her zingers on an iPad in the voice of an AI bot. She is not keen to share her small home with three women she doesn’t know, each of whom is impossible  in her own way. Too bad: they were left on the doorstep, a done deal. Edward gives up his bed for one of the ladies and settles into carers’ purgatory.

Meanwhile, his publishers have arranged a whistle-stop book tour through the US.  Ann Patchett is booked to do an on-stage interview. He’ll be on chat shows. Except, as he keeps saying to them weakly, he doesn’t really think he can go, not with his mother the way she is. Meanwhile, the lads sent pictures of themselves being festive.  It’s all very vanilla, although the most recently “out” of the group does send a WhatsApp selfie asking if he doesn’t look too silly in a leather harness. He does, obviously.

Four Mothers is based on an Italian comedy by Gianni Di Gregorio  called Mid-August Lunch, which had hitherto resisted several efforts to adapt it as an English-language story. Thornton and his brother and co-writer Colin loved the original film, but were able to put a different spin on it with their own lived experience. Coincidentally, they had both just moved home to be with their own mother, whose reliance on an iPad to “speak” — often very incoherently, given her shaky spelling — was frustrating but also the source of much comic relief  in the stressed Thornton household. The year they spent with their mother is wound into this story, giving the glow of the cheeky golden girls story a slight rub of real rust.  

Thornton, along with DOP Tom Comerford, also tailors a visual style that wards off excessive cuteness: the color palette is determinedly muted, the women no more glamorous than they would or should be, the skies seemingly always gray. But the story arcs gently into a grab-bag of happy endings. The women bond, as you know from the outset they will, as they talk  about their missing husbands (“You’d love to see them walking through the door, asking for their dinner”) and thrill to the idea of visiting an online tarot reader in Galway, six hours’ drive way. Niamh Cusack gives a marvelous cameo performance as the medium, whose fraudulence is neither affirmed nor denied; as she stares into the corner to commune with hovering spirits, you want to believe in her. It’s all very charming, which is fortunate  because it is clearly intended to charm us.  A film probably best enjoyed with that aforementioned cup of tea, I’d say — and forget the bondage harness. A snuggly blanket would be so much nicer.

Title: Four MothersFestival: London (Official Competition)Sales agent: MK2Director: Darren ThorntonScreenwriters: Darren Thornton, Colin Thornton,Cast: James McArdle, Fionnula Flanagan, Dearbhla MolloyRunning time: 1 hr 39 mins

Etxalar has a National Tourism Award for beautification of the town

Etxalar (Sp. Echalar) is a town and municipality of the Foral Community of Navarre, located in the Pamplona merindad, in the Cinco Villas region, Atlantic Pyrenees, Spain.

Cinco Villas de la Montaña or simply Cinco Villas (in Basque, Bortziriak or Bortzerriak) is a region and a sub-zone located on both sides of the Bidasoa River, in the north of Navarre. Bordering France and Basque community, it is made up of the five municipalities of Arantza, Yanci, Lesaka, Etxalar and Bera and is part of the Merindad de Pamplona. It is an area with a Basque-speaking majority.

Tourism
Etxalar stands out for its traditional popular architecture, very careful, which earned it the National Tourism Award for beautification and improvement of the towns.

Both the town and the surroundings are worth visiting and enjoying.

Despite its small size, Etxalar offers a wide variety of tourist accommodation, ranging from rural houses (full rental and by rooms), hotels, hostels, tourist apartments and pensions.

It also has a varied gastronomic offer.

An interesting place to visit is the Church of Our Lady of the Assumption, which highlights a calvary from the year 1600, a baptismal font from the XVIII century and a beautiful organ from the beginning of the XX century.

In the gardens of the Church there are numerous funerary steles, which were found in the foundations of the walls of the church warehouse.

In addition to the same houses that we can see in the town, other places of interest for tourists are the Errotagaraia lime kiln, the Molino del Medio, the Chapel of Fátima and the Santa Cruz Hermitage.

How to get to?

From Pamplona 58 min (63.4 km) via N-121-A
From Madrid 4 hr 47 min (496 km) via A-1 and AP-1

Main information
Area: 47 km²
Coordinates: 43°14′01″N 1°38′14″W

Population: 828
Languages: Spanish, Basque

Currency: Euro
Visa: Schengen
Time: Central European UTC +1
See here Andorra travel guide
See here Pyrenees travel guide
See here France travel guide
See here Spain travel guide

PM Modi Inaugurates Rewa Airport: CM Flags Off Rewa-Bhopal Flight, Affordable Air Travel & Cargo Services For Vindhya Region (WATCH)

Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh): Prime Minister Narendra Modi virtually inaugurated the Rewa airport from Varanasi on Sunday. He said that till 2014, country had only 70 airports and now their number is more than 150. Old airports are being renovated.  He said that compared to past governments, the development works are happening at triple speed. Within 125 days of formation of the new government, works on schemes and projects of more than Rs 15 lakh crore has begun. There is a major thrust to develop infrastructure across the country that will not only provide facilities to the people but also provide employment to youth in the country. The PM said that the new highways, train routes and new airports are providing more facilities. Chief Minister Mohan Yadav said that PM had given a big gift to the Vindhya people before Diwali. The Rewa airport will open the gates of development for Vindhya region and will change its scenario.Accusing previous Congress governments of ignoring Vindhya and leaving it in a mess, he said that now regular efforts are being made for development of Vindhya region. Rewa did not have rail facility before 1993 and now it has an airport facility. One expressway will also be constructed from Rewa to Bhopal.  

As Rewa received the airport on Karwa Chauth festival, the enjoyment has doubled. Along with six airports, 25 airstrips have been developed in the state. Airstrips will be constructed in every district. Ujjain, Shivpuri and Datia airstrip will be developed as airports. Speaking about Chitrakoot where Lord Ram stayed for a long duration during his exile, he said that Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh are jointly working to develop Chitrakoot.
 To speed up the development activities, Rewa Regional industry summit will be organised on October 23. On this occasion, deputy CMs Rajendra Shukla, Jagdish Devda and other elected representatives were also present. Rewa airport at a glanceThe Bhumi Poojan for Rewa airport was done on February 15, 2023. It has been constructed on 300-acre land. Initially, there will be flights to Bhopal and Khajuraho. This airport was built in record time and Madhya Pradesh government has given land free of cost. Its runway is 1800 meters and is suitable for landing ATR 72 aircraft. It has two parking ways and at one time, 100 people can be handled. Airports Authority of India (AAI) has constructed the airport building. It is equipped with 24 -hour operation with night landing facility and instrument landing. CM flags off Rewa- Bhopal flightChief Minister Mohan Yadav flagged off Rewa Bhopal flight from Rewa airport on Sunday. He was accompanied by Deputy CM’s Rajendra Shukla and Jagdesh Devda. CM said that along with passenger planes, cargo plane also take off from Rewa airport shortly. Along with this, cheap air service will be provided to common people of Vindhya area. They will be able to avail air travel facility in just Rs 999. Through the efforts of PM Narendra Modi and under Udan Yojana, even poor people have received the air travel facility. Vindhya industrialists will get the container facility for export. For goods storage, Inland Container Depot (ICD) will be constructed in Rewa.

Agency areas draw more tourists as temperature dips in ASR district

A slight temperature drop in the Agency areas of Alluri Sitharama Raju (ASR) district has been drawing a large number of tourists over the past few weeks. Araku, Dumbriguda, G. Madugula, Hukumpeta, Paderu, Chintapalli are recording around 16 to 20 degrees at night, followed by foggy weather conditions in the early hours.Various hotspots like Araku Valley, Paderu, Ananthagiri, Lambasingi and Vanjangi have been receiving a huge influx of tourists. Other noted spots like Borra Caves, Tribal Museum, Chaparai waterfalls, Kothapalli waterfalls, Ananthagiri Coffee gardens, and Araku Pinery are also witnessing tourist rush, as most hotels are getting steady occupancy.Notably, several tourists are pouring in to see the sunrise and view of the clouds at Madagada, Vanjangi, Lambasingi and a few other view points. The picturesque sunflower farms spread across the Araku Valley and Dumbriguda areas have become a photoshoot spot for the visitors. Demand has also risen for adventure tourist sports like zip-lining, sky-cycling in Ananthagiri mandal.As per the authorities, Chaparai waterfalls has seen 738 and 510 visitors, Araku Tribal Museum has recorded 980 and 1,315 visitors, and Padmapuram Gardens has recorded 870 and 595 visitors on Saturday (October 19) and Sunday (October 20) respectively.A senior official from the ITDA Tourism Cell said: “Usually, the number of tourists visiting these spots are half of what we are seeing now. We are expecting the rush to continue this weekend and pick up post Diwali, as the winter is yet to fully set in. Then the number of tourists visiting will double.” Published – October 20, 2024 11:43 pm IST
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Gladiator II hailed ‘best movie of the year’ and a ‘true epic’ in first reviews for Paul Mescal

OUT of the ashes of Russell Crowe’s legendary performance in Gladiator as Maximus, Decimus Meridius, rises Ridley Scott’s sequel and critics have called it a masterpiece.The first reviews for Gladiator II, starring Oscar-winning actor Denzel Washington, 69, and Normal People star Paul Mescal, 28, are in and film critics have predicted the sequel to be the ‘movie of the year’ and a “true epic.”4Paul Mescal has been hailed a natural successor to Russell Crowe in the original filmCredit: Aidan Monaghan4Oscar winning actor Denzel Washington’s performance has been described as scene-stealingCredit: Paramount PicturesThe historical action film centres on Lucius (Mescal) who after witnessing the death of Maximus at the hands of his uncle, decides to enter the coliseum, after the powerful emperors of Rome conquer his home.With the future of the empire at stake, Lucius trains under the tutelage of former slave Macrinus (Washington) in a bid to overthrow the young emperors.Now film critics have flooded social media with their glowing reviews, including high praise for the Mescal’s performance and Denzel Washington whose been described as “scene-stealing.”TV journalist Scott Menzel wrote: ‘Gladiator II is Ridley Scott’s best film since The Martian. A big, bloody and bad ass action spectacle that builds upon the legacy of the original. read more about’The film showcases beautiful set pieces and a lot of epic battles. Paul Mescal shines. Denzel Washington chews up the scenery quite a bit here and looks like he is having the time of his life here. Meanwhile producer, director and journalist Simon Thompson said: ‘#GladiatorII serves up the richest feast in the epic action set pieces and deliciously ribald treachery. ‘Dovetailing stylishly with the original, Paul Mescal leads a solid, stellar cast with aplomb. Denzel Washington, Joseph Quinn and Fred Hechinger are a collective powerhouse.’AwardsWatch founder Erik Anderson added: ‘GLADIATOR II is a true epic and Ridley Scott’s best in years. Paul Mescal is a great action star without sacrificing his indie grit , a worthy heir to the throne. Denzel Washington EATS every line and costume without ever overplaying.”Ridley Scott returns to the Colosseum to prove to the world that HE’S. STILL. GOT. IT,’ FilmSpeak host Griffin Schiller added. Indeed after the overwhelmingly positive reaction, film buffs are calling for Sir Ridley Scott to finally win his first Oscar at the age of 86. The acclaimed British director whose resume includes classics including, The Martian, Thelma and Louise and Blade Runner, lost out for the first film in 2001, to Steven Soderbergh for Traffic who bagged the gong for his film, Traffic.Over two decades after the events of Gladiator 2000, the latest trailer sees Mescal’s Lucius seek vengeance against Rome, in a bloody battle against his captor, general Marcus Acacius.A former heir to the Roman empire, Lucius lives with his wife and child in a coastal town in Numidia. He hasn’t been in touch with his mother Lucilla (Connie Nielsen) in 15 years. But he is imprisoned by Marcus , a feared general who honed his fighting skills under the tutelage of Maximus, and his marauding army of troops. Played by young actor, Spencer Treat Clark in Scott’s original film, Lucius is now an adult and intent on breaking free of the fighting pits, at all costs. Along the way, he encounters and befriends Denzel Washington’s Macrinus, a power broker who keeps a stable of gladiators and sees battle-thirsty Lucius as a worthwhile investment. Ridley Scott’s Gladiator II hits cinemas nationwide on 15th November.But he is imprisoned by Marcus , a feared general who honed his fighting skills under the tutelage of Maximus, and his marauding army of troops. Played by young actor, Spencer Treat Clark in Scott’s original film, Lucius is now an adult and intent on breaking free of the fighting pits, at all costs. Along the way, he encounters and befriends Denzel Washington’s Macrinus, a power broker who keeps a stable of gladiators and sees battle-thirsty Lucius as a worthwhile investment. Read more on the Scottish SunRidley Scott’s Gladiator II hits cinemas nationwide on 15th November.4Paul Mescal went through a rigorous training programme to get in shape for the roleCredit: Aidan Monaghan4Could Paul Mescal be in line for an Oscar in the next awards season?Credit: Paramount Pictures

Extreme Travel Tales With Best-Selling Author/Journalist Mike Finkel

Michael Finkel has reported from over 50 countries, and has written several best-selling books, and countless articles in major publications. His newest book is The Art Thief, about Stefan Breitweiser, probably the most prolific art thief of all time.

Here’s a lightly condensed and edited conversation we recently shared, focusing on Mike’s extreme adventures and challenges, and his philosophy of travel.

You moved from Montana to the South of France in 2014, lived there full-time for seven years, and got to know Stefan Breitweiser, the subject of your latest best-selling book. How did it feel being an expat?

The frisson and excitement of traveling is a constant when you’re an expat. I had three children in elementary school and I remember having conferences with the school teachers, of course all in French, and even the smallest things were semi-struggle, semi-adventure.

Travel itself is partially a mindset, partially something real. I don’t actually feel like I’m traveling, or an expat very often. Therefore, I’m always home.
You started as a ski writer and you’ve skied all over the world. Tell us about some of your experiences.
I skied off the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro and then I put my skis in the back of someone’s house and traveled in Tanzania. I skied in Iran, where the slopes were divided between men’s slopes and women’s slopes, but really I put my skis in a locker and traveled through Iran. I skied one of the earliest ski slopes to open in China, but I also spent five more weeks traveling through China. So I used my skis as a bulky piece of baggage, a way to open up other cultures.
Tehran skyline view with Alborz Mountains.getty

Let’s focus on some of your travel adventures and destinations, starting with Alaska?
I spent about 20 years before I moved to France living in Montana. We used to refer to the rest of the United States as the Lower 47. My neighbor said if you really like winter, and to experience mountains, go to Alaska. I was 22 years old and it blew my mind: the scale, the scope of it all.

Way before Deadliest Catch, I got a job on a crab fishing boat in the Bering Sea in Alaska, in January. I worked — no exaggeration, 20 hours a day for several weeks. Hard physical labor, one of the absolute worst experiences of my life; it brought me to my limits physically, mentally, psychologically. And I got paid two percent of the catch. I mentally pat myself on the back, thinking that I worked an extremely rugged physical job and was actually invited back rather than fired. I’ll never forget the experience, and I think neither will my lower back.Working vessels within the Inside Passage near Ketchikan, Alaska.getty
You’ve tested your limits there. What about traveling to Afghanistan?
I was in Afghanistan from October 2001 for the better part of six months. At the time there were no ATMs or credit cards, except that I think I came in with $10,000 stuck in my belt, and in the soles of my shoes. I traveled with a photographer and experienced what it was like to exist in the middle of a very undefined war: the Northern Alliance versus the Taliban.
There were a lot of U.S. soldiers around, but I was not embedded in the military like other journalists were. There were no hotels, so you had to find someone who was willing to put you up. So many memories from that.
There was a terrible incident in which a room in which I was staying with about 20 other journalists was attacked, and two people were killed in the same room that I was sleeping in. I dove out a window and ran to a U.S. Army base.
What did you learn about yourself there?
Almost everyone I met fed me, put me up. My theory of humanity, which has been unchanged for 30 years of constant travel, is that almost everyone is kind and almost everywhere is safe, including Afghanistan.
I think what I learned mostly is that you are a product of your upbringing. If I had been born in a certain part of Afghanistan and went to a madrasa and was exposed to the learning, I might have fought against the United States as well.
Let’s talk about beautiful places. How about Italy?
We lived a two-hour drive from the Italian border and all I thought about most of my time living in France was how can I get to Italy again. Funny, when you live in Europe, you know it’s like going to another state in the United States, how we would sometimes say “let’s go to dinner in Italy.”
The Amalfi Coast in Italy, the Cinque Terre, the tiny villages — the west coast of Italy, it’s almost like a dream.Positano, on Italy’s Amalfi Coastgetty
You’re doing very well with jet lag right now, considering you just got back to the states from Japan less than 24 hours ago, with an 11-hour time change. Any suggestions?
Ignore it a little. Mind over matter. If you think it’s midnight but it’s seven in the morning, don’t go to bed, have breakfast.
I agree. Just keep going, pretend it doesn’t exist. You’ll sleep eventually.
This was my third trip to Japan. My daughter, my oldest child, just graduated from high school and it was a father-daughter trip, just the two of us, and that was a unique travel experience for me, traveling with my child for nine days eating our way through Japan. I have an adventurous eating daughter.An array of Japanese cuisine.getty
I assume you avoided blowfish, Fugu, considering you could be poisoned if it weren’t cooked by a licensed chef?
We did not have any. The funny thing about travel is if I go to Botswana for three weeks, I’ll come back, and now there’s a hundred places I haven’t been to because there’s little details. So the more you travel, the less you’ve seen. In a funny sort of way, there’s no end to it. So no, I haven’t had Fugu, and I haven’t climbed Mount Fuji. There are 17 places in Tokyo that were on my list. The idea of travel is truly endless.
Tell us about Haiti, another amazing story.
I’ve reported from 50 countries; I’ve probably been in 100 countries. I do not know of a single country on planet Earth that is in a more difficult situation than Haiti. If you want to have your eyes not just open, but ridiculously opened, travel in Haiti. It’s not for those who highly regard safety, but almost everyone is kind and will treat you well.
I will never forget the soundtrack to the streets of Port-au-Prince. Funny sounds. It’s like I remember the World Cup in South Africa many years ago, when everyone was blowing in those strange trumpets; I still hear that in my head.
The soda vendors in Port-au-Prince have a soda opener, and they bang it against these bottles and there’s hundreds of them going around and I think about people beating on the sides of glass bottles with an opener, and there’s a really interesting sound that seemed unique to Port-au-Prince. A sound memory.A young Haitian man carries a crate of empty bottles on his head in Port au Prince, Haiti.getty
I’ve read about your memorable trip on a Haitian refugee boat.
I did document the struggles that some people are willing to take to get to the United States. I purchased a seat on a 23-foot long boat made completely out of wood. Five people could comfortably fit — and there were 43 of us crammed in a dank hole.
The boat was foundering in the water and was sinking. We were rescued by the United States Coast Guard. In my life, I’ve been rescued by United States military forces two separate times, in Haiti and also in Afghanistan.
You’ve covered conflicts in Israel, as well.
This was 2000, during the second Intifada. The more things change, the more they stay the same. You could literally read in the Bible about the Israelites and the Philistines, and now you have the Israelis and the Palestinians. You know it’s only a conflict that’s been going on for a couple of thousand years.
And once again, I’m Jewish and I lived in Gaza City for more than a month without leaving the confines of the Gaza Strip and again was treated by most people extremely kindly.
In Central Africa, you documented the impact of animal poachers. What’s your feeling there in terms of good?
I think that someone who’s going to kill an elephant for a hunk of ivory is in no way performing anything good. But I know bankers who make money off of other people’s bankruptcies. I don’t think that’s particularly good either, and that’s not only legal, but celebrated. The world is all shades of gray. I don’t know if you’ve ever been really hungry, but in desperate situations you don’t really know what you would do.
Speaking of hunger, you crossed the Sahara with migrant workers.
I jumped on the back of a truck that was crossing the Sahara for three days. We were mostly Muslim migrants and so the truck would stop five times a day so everyone could pray, and I would crawl underneath the truck to sit in the shade. There were maybe 75 people on a pretty big dump truck, all crammed in.Typical cargo truck, often carrying migrant workers, breaks down in the Sahara desert.getty
For dinners, each group of 20 had this birdbath-sized bowl, and everyone would dig around in their belongings for a can of tuna fish or some sardines. We would all dump it in this communal bowl and share whatever we could come up with.
I’ve eaten at some Michelin-starred restaurants, but I’ve probably not had any more memorable meals than with 19 of my favorite migrant workers, none of us sharing a language, putting our hands into the same bowl in the middle of the Sahara Desert on a scorching day.
In the Congo you worked for National Geographic magazine, and spent time with field scientists descending into a volcano. What was that like?
I think of the word ‘sublime’ when it comes to something that’s overwhelming in its beauty and its nature, and you feel forces so much greater than you. Some amazing things I’ve seen in my life include the Northern Lights, and a full solar eclipse. And I had the great fortune to descend into Nyiragongo, one of the world’s most active volcanoes, to see a lake of lava. It makes me feel, as it does just simply laying on my back on a clear night when I see the stars, both extraordinarily significant and completely insignificant.Nighttime view of the lava lake in the pit crater, Nyiragongo Volcano, Democratic Republic of the … [+] Congo.getty
You’ve given us so many extreme travel experiences. Can you tell us perhaps your most challenging one?
Extremes of emotion or feelings are what I seek. Like you mentioned earlier in this wonderful free-ranging conversation, I’ve been in Afghanistan, Haiti, covered conflicts in the Middle East, tried to climb an 8,000-meter peak in Tibet, been tortured in many ways.
I’m a journalist, an outgoing person, and I decided that I would do a 10-day silent meditation retreat at the Damagiri Meditation Center in India. You couldn’t even make eye contact with anyone. You couldn’t bring anything to read, and I am an inveterate reader. You couldn’t bring a pen or a pencil, and I’ve kept a journal for 30 years.
Ten days included hours and hours a day of sitting on a cushion doing guided meditation. I cannot tell you the depth of how difficult that was for me. I hated it in a level that was so deep, and yet there was no chains attaching me. I could have left at any moment, and that also made it harder. If I was literally locked up, it might’ve been easier. Within 24 hours, every fiber of my being wanted to run out.Meditating.getty
I managed to stay completely silent, without any distractions, for 240 hours. Some people thought it was the absolutely most fulfilling experience, but I will never forget the difficulty of that. To explore the outer world is amazing, and to explore the inner world is no less vast.
The Buddha himself used Vipassana meditation to achieve enlightenment. That’s how old it is and how well-respected. The people that teach these courses around the world, do it for free. The trip that cost me nothing, in which the entire itinerary was to do nothing, was the absolute most challenging trip of my life.
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Listen to the complete interview, and over 100 other episodes on my award-winning travel podcast, Places I Remember with Lea Lane, wherever you get podcasts; and subscribe to my YouTube channel, Places I Remember: Travel Talk with Lea Lane.