Thursday, August 4, 2011
Take a Look Video!!!!!
This is a must see for a view of the riders in the PBR Bull Riding.....http://youtu.be/JDiRAcwbMMo
People on Beaches
It's hard to top the beach -- any beach -- as a prime people-watching venue. From bikini babes to metal detector fanatics to toddlers enjoying their first wave action, it's nonstop performance art. But some beaches take that art to new heights, with casts of characters to delight the most jaded voyeurs. Here are a few of our favorites.
Venice Beach, Los Angeles
Think of it as a sort of sandy Times Square -- a magnet for the crazed, the crazy and everyone in between. Southern California's landmark Venice Beach teems with surfers, bodybuilders, skateboarders, musicians, fortune-tellers, street artists and garden-variety freaks -- and the tourists who gawk at them. Most of the action is concentrated on Ocean Front Walk, a 2.5-mile promenade lined with eateries, surf shops and one-of-a-kind vendors. Rent skates or a bike and join the parade. Oh, and the beach is pretty nice, too
Everybody's beautiful to someone, as the song goes, but in South Beach it seems that everybody's beautiful, period. The models, moguls and movie stars strutting their stuff along Ocean Drive do nothing to dispel that notion. Start your day with breakfast outdoors at the News Cafe, a local hot spot, then stake out your spot on the beach -- which, by the way, is as good as it gets, with white sand and warm turquoise waves. Back on the streets, grab a bite, check out the shops, admire the Art Deco architecture and hit the clubs. When you tire of it all, stroll down to newly-renovated South Pointe Park, on the beach's southernmost tip, and watch the cruise ships sail out to sea.
Where else to watch surfer dudes and dudettes in action than Honolulu's Waikiki Beach? Yes, it's tourist central, but that's the point. Hawaiian royalty once gathered here; now the hotel-lined shores beckon visitors from around the world. It's hard to top the iconic backdrop of Diamond Head for a classic photo op. Beloved native son Duke Kahanamoku, aka the father of modern surfing, honed his craft here, and his bronze, 9-foot beachfront statue is a good place to get your bearings. But don't just stand there, hodad. Take a surfing lesson (Waikiki's calm waters are ideal for beginners), sample some poi (a Polynesian dish made from the taro plant), and check out the shopping, dining, cute cafes, hula dancing demos, outrigger canoe races and surfing competitions.
Tall and tan and young and lovely, the denizens of Rio de Janeiro's Ipanema Beach don't have to work very hard to live up to their worldwide reputation as gorgeous -- or so it seems. But the hugely popular stretch of sand, immortalized in the mid-1960s in the hit bossa nova song "The Girl From Ipanema," offers more than eye candy. Ipanema’s beaches attract locals and tourists alike, who come for the lively ambience, pickup games of soccer and frescobol (like tennis without a net), good surfing and tons of vendors. The surrounding neighborhood is packed with museums, galleries, fashionable shops, eateries and trendy night spots.
You didn't think we'd write about the best beaches for people-watching and not list a nude venue, did you? Without any further ado -- or clothing -- we give you Vancouver's Wreck Beach. Lovingly maintained by the dedicated members of the Wreck Beach Preservation Society, the 5-mile wilderness-like beach is accessible via Trail No. 6 from Pacific Spirit Park. Popular with families, couples and singles, the beach features international vendors and food concessions, impromptu music jams, pickup games of volleyball and bocce ball, a nude-only "casino," and shallow, kid-friendly tide pools. Body-painting (free for kids; suggested donation for adults) is an art form here.
Venice Beach, Los Angeles
Think of it as a sort of sandy Times Square -- a magnet for the crazed, the crazy and everyone in between. Southern California's landmark Venice Beach teems with surfers, bodybuilders, skateboarders, musicians, fortune-tellers, street artists and garden-variety freaks -- and the tourists who gawk at them. Most of the action is concentrated on Ocean Front Walk, a 2.5-mile promenade lined with eateries, surf shops and one-of-a-kind vendors. Rent skates or a bike and join the parade. Oh, and the beach is pretty nice, too
Everybody's beautiful to someone, as the song goes, but in South Beach it seems that everybody's beautiful, period. The models, moguls and movie stars strutting their stuff along Ocean Drive do nothing to dispel that notion. Start your day with breakfast outdoors at the News Cafe, a local hot spot, then stake out your spot on the beach -- which, by the way, is as good as it gets, with white sand and warm turquoise waves. Back on the streets, grab a bite, check out the shops, admire the Art Deco architecture and hit the clubs. When you tire of it all, stroll down to newly-renovated South Pointe Park, on the beach's southernmost tip, and watch the cruise ships sail out to sea.
Where else to watch surfer dudes and dudettes in action than Honolulu's Waikiki Beach? Yes, it's tourist central, but that's the point. Hawaiian royalty once gathered here; now the hotel-lined shores beckon visitors from around the world. It's hard to top the iconic backdrop of Diamond Head for a classic photo op. Beloved native son Duke Kahanamoku, aka the father of modern surfing, honed his craft here, and his bronze, 9-foot beachfront statue is a good place to get your bearings. But don't just stand there, hodad. Take a surfing lesson (Waikiki's calm waters are ideal for beginners), sample some poi (a Polynesian dish made from the taro plant), and check out the shopping, dining, cute cafes, hula dancing demos, outrigger canoe races and surfing competitions.
Tall and tan and young and lovely, the denizens of Rio de Janeiro's Ipanema Beach don't have to work very hard to live up to their worldwide reputation as gorgeous -- or so it seems. But the hugely popular stretch of sand, immortalized in the mid-1960s in the hit bossa nova song "The Girl From Ipanema," offers more than eye candy. Ipanema’s beaches attract locals and tourists alike, who come for the lively ambience, pickup games of soccer and frescobol (like tennis without a net), good surfing and tons of vendors. The surrounding neighborhood is packed with museums, galleries, fashionable shops, eateries and trendy night spots.
You didn't think we'd write about the best beaches for people-watching and not list a nude venue, did you? Without any further ado -- or clothing -- we give you Vancouver's Wreck Beach. Lovingly maintained by the dedicated members of the Wreck Beach Preservation Society, the 5-mile wilderness-like beach is accessible via Trail No. 6 from Pacific Spirit Park. Popular with families, couples and singles, the beach features international vendors and food concessions, impromptu music jams, pickup games of volleyball and bocce ball, a nude-only "casino," and shallow, kid-friendly tide pools. Body-painting (free for kids; suggested donation for adults) is an art form here.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Phone Hacking !
ew revelation deepens crisis at News of the World after it emerges that officers will review child murder cases
The phone-hacking crisis enveloping the News of the World intensified on Tuesday night after it emerged that Scotland Yard has started to contact the relatives of victims of the 7 July 2005 attacks to warn them they were targeted by the paper.
The revelation that bereaved family members may have had their mobile phone messages intercepted by Glenn Mulcaire, a private investigator employed by the paper, in the days following the 2005 London bombings will heap further pressure on the title's owner, News International, part of Rupert Murdoch's media empire.
Graham Foulkes, whose son David was killed in the attack at Edgware Road tube station, confirmed that he had been contacted by officers from Operation Weeting, the Met's investigation into phone hacking. He said they had told him his mobile phone number, ex-directory landline number and address had been found in records made by Mulcaire that were recovered from the investigator's office in south London.
Foulkes's solicitor, Clifford Tibber, who represents several families who had relatives killed in the terrorist attack, said the news had "come as a terrible shock" to them as they prepared to mark the sixth anniversary of the bombings this week.
The news capped a dramatic day of unfolding developments in the News of the World phone-hacking scandal.
Police officers are turning their attention to examine every high-profile case involving the murder, abduction or attack on any child since 2001 – in response to the revelation that journalists from the tabloid newspaper hacked into the voicemail messages of the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler.
Officers have already told the parents of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, the girls killed in Soham in 2002 by Ian Huntley, that their mobiles had been hacked. Documents seized by the Metropolitan police in a 2006 raid on Mulcaire's home show he targeted Leslie Chapman, the father of Jessica Chapman.
It is understood the name "Greg" appeared in the corner of notes taken by Mulcaire – believed to be a reference to the News of the World's former assistant editor (news) Greg Miskiw. It is thought that parents of Holly Wells, were also targeted.
The move is a direct response to the Guardian's exclusive story on Monday that Mulcaire caused Milly's parents to wrongly believe she was still alive – and interfered with police inquiries into her disappearance – by hacking into the teenager's mobile phone and deleting messages.
On Tuesday night it also emerged that News International had given the Metropolitan police details of payments made by News of the World to senior police officers between 2003 and 2007, the period when Andy Coulson was the paper's editor.
The development brings the crisis closer to the door of prime minister David Cameron who appointed Coulson as his director of communications when in opposition and then staunchly defended him until Coulson quit in January 2011.
News International said on Tuesday night: "As a result of media enquiries, it is correct to state that new information has recently been provided to the police. As News International and News Group Newspapers has reiterated many times, full and continuing cooperation has been provided to the police since the current investigation started in January 2011. Well understood arrangements are in place to ensure that any material of importance to which they are entitled is provided to them. We cannot comment any further due to the ongoing investigations."
The revelation also suggests there is now a breaking of ranks inside News International since the files on payments to the police are unlikely to have emerged only yesterday, but instead were released to the police as senior executives said the paper could no longer continue to cover up the scale of the wrong doing at the paper.
Pointedly, News International insisted on Tuesday night that the payments to the police did not relate to the period from 2000-2003, when Rebekah Brooks was the paper's editor. Commentators suggested that was a way for the company to deflect the blame on to Coulson.
Pressure has intensified on the newspaper and Brooks – now News International chief executive – who insisted she knew nothing of the Dowler hacking allegations. She edited the News of the World at the time the hacking of Dowler's phone messages took place. On Tuesday night, former News of the World journalist Paul McMullan claimed on BBC Newsnight that Brooks was aware of the phone hacking. Asked if his former editor knew of the activities, he said: "Of course she did."
McMullen, who made similar claims in a conversation that was secretly by taped by actor Hugh Grant earlier this year, described the hacking of Dowler's phone as "not such a big deal".
He said: "The journalists might have helped. The mistake that was made was that [Mulcaire] was so keen to get new messages he deleted the old ones."
The case of Madeleine McCann is expected to be one of the first to be re-examined by detectives.
Clarence Mitchell, Kate and Gerry McCann's spokesman, said he had been interviewed and was due to be interviewed a second time.
Another case likely to be re-examined is that of 15-year-old Danielle Jones, who was abducted and murdered in East Tilbury, Essex, in 2001 by her uncle.
Police officers will trawl through their collection of 11,000 pages of notes kept by Mulcaire, and seized from him in 2006, when he and the News of the World's royal editor, Clive Goodman, were jailed for hacking into mobile phones belonging to aides to Prince William and Harry.
Mulcaire issued a public apology on Tuesday to all those hurt or upset by his activities, saying that after the developments of the past 24 hours he had to "break his silence". He said: "I want to apologise to anybody who was hurt or upset by what I have done. I've been to court. I've pleaded guilty. And I've gone to prison and been punished. I still face the possibility of further criminal prosecution.
"Working for the News of the World was never easy. There was relentless pressure. There was a constant demand for results. I knew what we did pushed the limits ethically. But, at the time, I didn't understand that I had broken the law at all."
The media regulator, Ofcom, is understood to be ready to examine whether News Corporation directors would be "fit and proper persons" to own BSkyB – if any senior employees at News Corporation or its UK arm, News International, were charged with hacking-related offences.
Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation is closing in on winning regulatory approval for its proposed £8bn-plus takeover of the 61% of BSkyB it does not own. Sources close to the culture secretary Jeremy Hunt, who will decide on the issue, insisted he could not take phone hacking into account in the decision that is focused on "media plurality".
Meanwhile a string of high-profile companies – including Ford, npower, Halifax, T-Mobile and Orange – said they would be reviewing or withdrawing their advertising in the News of the World. Those five brands are estimated to account for more than £2m worth of advertising in the tabloid in the past year. T-Mobile and Orange are thought to have spent an estimated £1.5m between them.
Ford said it would be using "alternative media within and outside News International Group instead of placing Ford advertising in the News of the World" while it awaited the outcome of an internal investigation.
The company added: "Ford is a company which cares about the standards of behaviour of its own people and those it deals with externally."
Calls for boycotts of the News of the World appeared on Twitter and Facebook, and companies came under sustained pressure to pull their advertising from it.
Those wishing to direct their fury at the firms who advertise through the News of the World were provided with a one-stop page where they could automatically tweet their concerns to companies such as the Co-operative, easyJet, Butlins and Renault. Others went further, and calling for direct boycotts of the firms unless they took their advertising money elsewhere.
John Bercow, the speaker of Commons, granted a debate – which will happen on Wednesday – into calls for a public inquiry into phone hacking by News International journalists, and whether there was a potential cover-up by its senior executives.
Ministers in the Commons opposed the emergency debate but, in what will be seen as another show of force by Bercow, he accepted arguments in favour put by the Labour MP Chris Bryant.
The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, said Brooks needed to "examine her conscience" and that he was sure that she would because "this happened on her watch".
Although his words were Labour's strongest intervention so far on the phone-hacking crisis, the party is still undecided about whether to put forward a substantive motion calling for a public inquiry that could be subject to a vote or amendment.
Media regulator Ofcom is understood to be standing by ready to examine whether News Corporation directors would be "fit and proper persons" to own BSkyB – if any senior employees at News Corporation or its UK arm News International were charged with any hacking related offences. Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation is closing in on winning regulatory approval for its proposed £8bn-plus takeover of the 61% of BSkyB it does not own – with sources close to the deciding minister, culture secretary Jeremy Hunt, insisting again that he could not take phone hacking into account of a decision that is focused on "media plurality".
Channel 4 News reported that Brooks was confronted by the Met in 2002 about the fact a senior detective investigating the murder of a private investigator, Daniel Morgan, was targeted by Mulcaire on behalf of the News of the World. The main suspect in the case, which was being led by Detective Superintendent David Cook, was a man with close links to the News of the World.
Cook and his wife, Jackie Haines, were told by Scotland Yard in April this year their mobile phone numbers and payroll details had been found in Mulcaire's notebook. News International said it could not confirm or deny whether Brooks had ever attended such a meeting.
Lady Buscombe, the chairman of the Press Complaints Commission, said she was lied to by the News of the World over phone hacking.
"There's only so much we can do when people are lying to us. We know now that I was not being given the truth by the News of the World," she told the BBC's Daily Politics.
Brooks emailed employees at News International on Tuesday to insist she knew nothing about phone hacking: "It is inconceivable that I knew or worse, sanctioned these appalling allegations. I am aware of the speculation about my position.
"Therefore it is important you all know that as chief executive, I am determined to lead the company to ensure we do the right thing and resolve these serious issues."
The phone-hacking crisis enveloping the News of the World intensified on Tuesday night after it emerged that Scotland Yard has started to contact the relatives of victims of the 7 July 2005 attacks to warn them they were targeted by the paper.
The revelation that bereaved family members may have had their mobile phone messages intercepted by Glenn Mulcaire, a private investigator employed by the paper, in the days following the 2005 London bombings will heap further pressure on the title's owner, News International, part of Rupert Murdoch's media empire.
Graham Foulkes, whose son David was killed in the attack at Edgware Road tube station, confirmed that he had been contacted by officers from Operation Weeting, the Met's investigation into phone hacking. He said they had told him his mobile phone number, ex-directory landline number and address had been found in records made by Mulcaire that were recovered from the investigator's office in south London.
Foulkes's solicitor, Clifford Tibber, who represents several families who had relatives killed in the terrorist attack, said the news had "come as a terrible shock" to them as they prepared to mark the sixth anniversary of the bombings this week.
The news capped a dramatic day of unfolding developments in the News of the World phone-hacking scandal.
Police officers are turning their attention to examine every high-profile case involving the murder, abduction or attack on any child since 2001 – in response to the revelation that journalists from the tabloid newspaper hacked into the voicemail messages of the murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler.
Officers have already told the parents of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, the girls killed in Soham in 2002 by Ian Huntley, that their mobiles had been hacked. Documents seized by the Metropolitan police in a 2006 raid on Mulcaire's home show he targeted Leslie Chapman, the father of Jessica Chapman.
It is understood the name "Greg" appeared in the corner of notes taken by Mulcaire – believed to be a reference to the News of the World's former assistant editor (news) Greg Miskiw. It is thought that parents of Holly Wells, were also targeted.
The move is a direct response to the Guardian's exclusive story on Monday that Mulcaire caused Milly's parents to wrongly believe she was still alive – and interfered with police inquiries into her disappearance – by hacking into the teenager's mobile phone and deleting messages.
On Tuesday night it also emerged that News International had given the Metropolitan police details of payments made by News of the World to senior police officers between 2003 and 2007, the period when Andy Coulson was the paper's editor.
The development brings the crisis closer to the door of prime minister David Cameron who appointed Coulson as his director of communications when in opposition and then staunchly defended him until Coulson quit in January 2011.
News International said on Tuesday night: "As a result of media enquiries, it is correct to state that new information has recently been provided to the police. As News International and News Group Newspapers has reiterated many times, full and continuing cooperation has been provided to the police since the current investigation started in January 2011. Well understood arrangements are in place to ensure that any material of importance to which they are entitled is provided to them. We cannot comment any further due to the ongoing investigations."
The revelation also suggests there is now a breaking of ranks inside News International since the files on payments to the police are unlikely to have emerged only yesterday, but instead were released to the police as senior executives said the paper could no longer continue to cover up the scale of the wrong doing at the paper.
Pointedly, News International insisted on Tuesday night that the payments to the police did not relate to the period from 2000-2003, when Rebekah Brooks was the paper's editor. Commentators suggested that was a way for the company to deflect the blame on to Coulson.
Pressure has intensified on the newspaper and Brooks – now News International chief executive – who insisted she knew nothing of the Dowler hacking allegations. She edited the News of the World at the time the hacking of Dowler's phone messages took place. On Tuesday night, former News of the World journalist Paul McMullan claimed on BBC Newsnight that Brooks was aware of the phone hacking. Asked if his former editor knew of the activities, he said: "Of course she did."
McMullen, who made similar claims in a conversation that was secretly by taped by actor Hugh Grant earlier this year, described the hacking of Dowler's phone as "not such a big deal".
He said: "The journalists might have helped. The mistake that was made was that [Mulcaire] was so keen to get new messages he deleted the old ones."
The case of Madeleine McCann is expected to be one of the first to be re-examined by detectives.
Clarence Mitchell, Kate and Gerry McCann's spokesman, said he had been interviewed and was due to be interviewed a second time.
Another case likely to be re-examined is that of 15-year-old Danielle Jones, who was abducted and murdered in East Tilbury, Essex, in 2001 by her uncle.
Police officers will trawl through their collection of 11,000 pages of notes kept by Mulcaire, and seized from him in 2006, when he and the News of the World's royal editor, Clive Goodman, were jailed for hacking into mobile phones belonging to aides to Prince William and Harry.
Mulcaire issued a public apology on Tuesday to all those hurt or upset by his activities, saying that after the developments of the past 24 hours he had to "break his silence". He said: "I want to apologise to anybody who was hurt or upset by what I have done. I've been to court. I've pleaded guilty. And I've gone to prison and been punished. I still face the possibility of further criminal prosecution.
"Working for the News of the World was never easy. There was relentless pressure. There was a constant demand for results. I knew what we did pushed the limits ethically. But, at the time, I didn't understand that I had broken the law at all."
The media regulator, Ofcom, is understood to be ready to examine whether News Corporation directors would be "fit and proper persons" to own BSkyB – if any senior employees at News Corporation or its UK arm, News International, were charged with hacking-related offences.
Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation is closing in on winning regulatory approval for its proposed £8bn-plus takeover of the 61% of BSkyB it does not own. Sources close to the culture secretary Jeremy Hunt, who will decide on the issue, insisted he could not take phone hacking into account in the decision that is focused on "media plurality".
Meanwhile a string of high-profile companies – including Ford, npower, Halifax, T-Mobile and Orange – said they would be reviewing or withdrawing their advertising in the News of the World. Those five brands are estimated to account for more than £2m worth of advertising in the tabloid in the past year. T-Mobile and Orange are thought to have spent an estimated £1.5m between them.
Ford said it would be using "alternative media within and outside News International Group instead of placing Ford advertising in the News of the World" while it awaited the outcome of an internal investigation.
The company added: "Ford is a company which cares about the standards of behaviour of its own people and those it deals with externally."
Calls for boycotts of the News of the World appeared on Twitter and Facebook, and companies came under sustained pressure to pull their advertising from it.
Those wishing to direct their fury at the firms who advertise through the News of the World were provided with a one-stop page where they could automatically tweet their concerns to companies such as the Co-operative, easyJet, Butlins and Renault. Others went further, and calling for direct boycotts of the firms unless they took their advertising money elsewhere.
John Bercow, the speaker of Commons, granted a debate – which will happen on Wednesday – into calls for a public inquiry into phone hacking by News International journalists, and whether there was a potential cover-up by its senior executives.
Ministers in the Commons opposed the emergency debate but, in what will be seen as another show of force by Bercow, he accepted arguments in favour put by the Labour MP Chris Bryant.
The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, said Brooks needed to "examine her conscience" and that he was sure that she would because "this happened on her watch".
Although his words were Labour's strongest intervention so far on the phone-hacking crisis, the party is still undecided about whether to put forward a substantive motion calling for a public inquiry that could be subject to a vote or amendment.
Media regulator Ofcom is understood to be standing by ready to examine whether News Corporation directors would be "fit and proper persons" to own BSkyB – if any senior employees at News Corporation or its UK arm News International were charged with any hacking related offences. Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation is closing in on winning regulatory approval for its proposed £8bn-plus takeover of the 61% of BSkyB it does not own – with sources close to the deciding minister, culture secretary Jeremy Hunt, insisting again that he could not take phone hacking into account of a decision that is focused on "media plurality".
Channel 4 News reported that Brooks was confronted by the Met in 2002 about the fact a senior detective investigating the murder of a private investigator, Daniel Morgan, was targeted by Mulcaire on behalf of the News of the World. The main suspect in the case, which was being led by Detective Superintendent David Cook, was a man with close links to the News of the World.
Cook and his wife, Jackie Haines, were told by Scotland Yard in April this year their mobile phone numbers and payroll details had been found in Mulcaire's notebook. News International said it could not confirm or deny whether Brooks had ever attended such a meeting.
Lady Buscombe, the chairman of the Press Complaints Commission, said she was lied to by the News of the World over phone hacking.
"There's only so much we can do when people are lying to us. We know now that I was not being given the truth by the News of the World," she told the BBC's Daily Politics.
Brooks emailed employees at News International on Tuesday to insist she knew nothing about phone hacking: "It is inconceivable that I knew or worse, sanctioned these appalling allegations. I am aware of the speculation about my position.
"Therefore it is important you all know that as chief executive, I am determined to lead the company to ensure we do the right thing and resolve these serious issues."
Monday, July 4, 2011
watching.....
People Watching"
Well I'm just people watching
The other people watching me
And we're all people watching
The other people watching we
We're as lonely as we wanted to be
We're all as lonely as we wanted to be
Just as lonely as we wanted to be
I'm just you, you're just me
But it's only true if we believe
Well there really ain't no use in stopping
What nobody never told me not to do
So I'll keep people watching, watching me now
Finding my way back to you
We're as lonely as we wanted to be
We're all as lonely as we wanted to be
I'm just as lonely as I wanted to be
I'm just you, you're just me
But it's only true if we believe
I see so many feet going so many ways
People passing by, they got nothing to say
All on our own, just watching and confused
Nobody told me what to do
I can't stop breaking all the rules
And I'm just people watching
The other people watching me
We're all people watching
The other people watching we
We're as lonely as we wanted to be
We're not so lonely as we wanted to be
I'm just as lonely as I wanted to be
Not so lonely
Lonely, lonely, lonely
Well I'm just people watching
The other people watching me
And we're all people watching
The other people watching we
We're as lonely as we wanted to be
We're all as lonely as we wanted to be
Just as lonely as we wanted to be
I'm just you, you're just me
But it's only true if we believe
Well there really ain't no use in stopping
What nobody never told me not to do
So I'll keep people watching, watching me now
Finding my way back to you
We're as lonely as we wanted to be
We're all as lonely as we wanted to be
I'm just as lonely as I wanted to be
I'm just you, you're just me
But it's only true if we believe
I see so many feet going so many ways
People passing by, they got nothing to say
All on our own, just watching and confused
Nobody told me what to do
I can't stop breaking all the rules
And I'm just people watching
The other people watching me
We're all people watching
The other people watching we
We're as lonely as we wanted to be
We're not so lonely as we wanted to be
I'm just as lonely as I wanted to be
Not so lonely
Lonely, lonely, lonely
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Best Cities for people watching
America's Best Cities For People Watching (PHOTOS)
Best American Cities 2011 , Best American Cities To Visit , Best Cities For People Watching , H
For many travelers, people-watching is the best entertainment money can't buy, and one of the easiest ways to get a feel for a city.
Brooklynite Alisha Miranda says she likes to go sit in Manhattan's Union Square "and just take in the crazy around me." The freelance writer adds, "I love watching couples walking by, skateboarders, the ice cream trucks parked on the corner, and the man doing flips shirtless as people fork over spare change."
The City That Never Sleeps, no surprise, came in near the top of the people- watching category in the 2011 edition of America's Favorite Cities (AFC). The annual survey asks Travel + Leisure readers to rank 35 cities in 54 categories-ranging from hotels and restaurants to the general vibe of the places, such as how clean they are, how safe they feel-and how fun it is to "take in the crazy."
Best American Cities 2011 , Best American Cities To Visit , Best Cities For People Watching , H
For many travelers, people-watching is the best entertainment money can't buy, and one of the easiest ways to get a feel for a city.
Brooklynite Alisha Miranda says she likes to go sit in Manhattan's Union Square "and just take in the crazy around me." The freelance writer adds, "I love watching couples walking by, skateboarders, the ice cream trucks parked on the corner, and the man doing flips shirtless as people fork over spare change."
The City That Never Sleeps, no surprise, came in near the top of the people- watching category in the 2011 edition of America's Favorite Cities (AFC). The annual survey asks Travel + Leisure readers to rank 35 cities in 54 categories-ranging from hotels and restaurants to the general vibe of the places, such as how clean they are, how safe they feel-and how fun it is to "take in the crazy."
Sunday, June 26, 2011
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