Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: For $50,000, a floating hotel room in Denver's skyline is yours

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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For $50,000, a floating hotel room in Denver's skyline is yours
Aug 1st 2013, 03:25

By Keith Coffman

DENVER | Wed Jul 31, 2013 11:25pm EDT

DENVER (Reuters) - If being a mile above sea level is not high enough for visitors to Denver, guests at one hotel can pay a cool $50,000 to get an additional 22-foot (7-meter) boost in an inflatable room hoisted into the downtown skyline.

Perched atop a mechanical scissor lift affixed to the roof of a van parked outside the Curtis Hotel in downtown Denver, "the world's only floating pop-up hotel" is a small but fully functional guest room, according to hotel promotional material.

The 5-foot-by-7-foot (1.5-meter-by-2.1-meter) inflatable chamber - about the dimensions of an elevator - is the brainchild of New York-based artist Alex Schweder, who created the work for a local festival to promote the arts.

Made of clear vinyl with inflated walls like a bouncy room for kids, the chamber is furnished with a bed, chair, couch, and complete lavatory facilities. The couch and chair retract when the bed is deployed, similar to a pop-up book.

An aluminum railing around the room provides a measure of security lest a sleepwalker decide to take a midnight stroll.

The floating room concept is part of the Curtis Hotel's pop culture-themed lodging experience, said sales and marketing director Kate Thompson.

Other amenities included in the $50,000-per-night charge are limousine service, a Tiffany's diamond pendant and earring set, binoculars for viewing, and "groovy in-room" swag like 1960s-era scarves and bell-bottom pants.

Patrons can also host a disco party at the main hotel's '70s-style lounge. And guests who buy the package will be greeted at their hotel room by Sonny and Cher impersonators.

Although the quirky concept is creating a buzz in downtown Denver, so far no one has reserved the room, which will be available for another few weeks, Thompson said.

"We've had one serious phone call but no one has booked it yet," Thompson said.

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Eric Walsh)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: George Zimmerman pulled over by Texas police, warned for speeding

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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George Zimmerman pulled over by Texas police, warned for speeding
Aug 1st 2013, 03:34

George Zimmerman leaves the courtroom a free man after being found not guilty in the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center in Sanford, Florida, July 13, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Joe Burbank/Pool

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: George Zimmerman pulled over by Texas police, warned for speeding

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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George Zimmerman pulled over by Texas police, warned for speeding
Jul 31st 2013, 20:59

George Zimmerman leaves the courtroom a free man after being found not guilty in the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center in Sanford, Florida, July 13, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Joe Burbank/Pool

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Belarus leader beats Putin's pike with man-sized catfish

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Belarus leader beats Putin's pike with man-sized catfish
Jul 31st 2013, 14:52

1 of 3. Russia's President Vladimir Putin poses for a picture as he fishes in the Krasnoyarsk territory in the Siberian Federal District July 20, 2013. Picture taken July 20, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Alexei Nikolskyi/RIA Novosti/Kremlin

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Billionaire Saudi prince loses UK court battle over Gaddafi jet

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Billionaire Saudi prince loses UK court battle over Gaddafi jet
Jul 31st 2013, 11:15

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Prince Alwaleed bin Talal leaves the High Court in London July 2, 2013. REUTERS/Neil Hall

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal leaves the High Court in London July 2, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Neil Hall

LONDON | Wed Jul 31, 2013 7:15am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - A billionaire Saudi prince lost a London court battle on Wednesday when a judge ordered that he should pay a $10-million commission linked to the sale of a luxurious private jet to former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

The High Court ruling is an embarrassment for Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, a nephew of Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, who gave evidence in person for two days at the trial earlier this month.

The prince was being sued by Daad Sharab, a Jordanian businesswoman who said she was not paid any commission for brokering the sale of the jet to Gaddafi, which was completed in 2006 for $120 million.

The prince's defense was that there was no agreement to pay a $10-million commission but rather that Sharab would be paid "at his discretion". He told the court he paid her nothing because during the protracted sale she had "moved to the Libyan camp".

Judge Peter Smith ruled in favor of Sharab, who issued a statement urging Prince Alwaleed to heed the court ruling and pay up.

The prince is number 26 on the Forbes global ranking of billionaires. The U.S. magazine estimates his fortune at $20 billion while he says the figure is closer to $30 billion.

Through his Kingdom Holding Company, the prince owns large stakes in Citigroup, News Corp and Apple Inc, among other companies. He is also the owner or part-owner of luxury hotels including the Plaza in New York, the Savoy in London and the George V in Paris.

(Reporting by Estelle Shirbon; editing by Stephen Addison)

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Guantanamo prisoners clamor for 'Fifty Shades of Grey': report

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Guantanamo prisoners clamor for 'Fifty Shades of Grey': report
Jul 30th 2013, 13:33

An unidentified prisoner reads a newspaper in a communal cellblock at Camp VI, a prison used to house detainees at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, March 5, 2013. REUTERS/Bob Strong

An unidentified prisoner reads a newspaper in a communal cellblock at Camp VI, a prison used to house detainees at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, March 5, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Bob Strong

Tue Jul 30, 2013 9:33am EDT

(Reuters) - The "Fifty Shades of Grey" series of erotic novels are the favorite reading material among former CIA captives held at the Guantanamo detention camp, the Huffington Post quoted a U.S. congressman as saying.

Democratic Representative Jim Moran of Virginia was among congressional delegates who last week toured Camp 7, the top-security facility that holds more than a dozen "high-value" prisoners, including five men charged with plotting the September 11 attacks on the United States in 2001.

"Rather than the Koran, the book that is requested most by the (detainees) is 'Fifty Shades of Grey.' They've read the entire series in English, but we were willing to translate it," the Huffington Post quoted Moran as saying on Monday.

"I guess there's not much going on, these guys are going nowhere, so what the hell."

Moran, who favors shutting down the detention camp on the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba, said he learned about the book's popularity while touring Camp 7 with the base commander and deputy base commander, the head medical official and the officer in charge of that camp.

Moran's office did not return a call from Reuters. A military spokesman said he could not discuss details of Camp 7, whose inmates were held in secret CIA prisons before being sent to Guantanamo in 2006.

"We don't discuss our high-value detainees except in the most generic terms. Further, we do not discuss the assertions made by members of Congress," said Lieutenant Colonel Samuel House, a spokesman for the prison camp.

Some prisoners are taking part in a hunger strike to protest their indefinite detention.

Journalists are not allowed to visit that part of the detention camp but can tour the other prisons and the library that provides books, magazines and DVDs to all 166 captives.

During a visit last week, Reuters saw an eclectic mix of books in numerous languages, from religious tomes to Star Trek novelizations, Agatha Christie mysteries, stress reduction workbooks and the Greek classic "The Odyssey."

Also on offer is "The Hunger Games," according to a librarian who goes by the nickname Zorro."We have the movie and the book too," he said.

Guantanamo librarians have said in the past that they screen reading material for sexual content, even blacking out photos of scantily clad women in the advertisements in sports magazines.

(Reporting by Jane Sutton; editing by Christopher Wilson)

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Russians smell something fishy in Putin's latest stunt

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Russians smell something fishy in Putin's latest stunt
Jul 29th 2013, 10:47

Russia's President Vladimir Putin poses for a picture as he fishes in Tyva Republic in the Siberian Federal District July 20, 2013. Picture taken July 20, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/RIA Novosti/Kremlin

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: Russia's Putin gets big fish, quality time with protege PM

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Russia's Putin gets big fish, quality time with protege PM
Jul 26th 2013, 21:49

1 of 7. Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev are pictured on a boat in the Siberian Federal District July 20, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Alexander Astafyev/RIA Novosti/Pool

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Turkey frees bird accused of spying for Israel

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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Turkey frees bird accused of spying for Israel
Jul 26th 2013, 16:16

ISTANBUL | Fri Jul 26, 2013 12:16pm EDT

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkish authorities detained a bird on suspicion it was spying for Israel, but freed it after X-rays showed it was not embedded with surveillance equipment, newspapers said on Friday.

The kestrel aroused suspicion because of a metal ring on its foot carrying the words "24311 Tel Avivunia Israel", prompting residents in the village of Altinayva to hand it over to the local governor.

The bird was put in an X-ray machine at a university hospital to check for microchips or bugging devices, according to the Milliyet newspaper, which carried a front-page image of the radiogram with the title "Israeli agent".

Ties between Turkey and Israel, long military allies, have been tense since May 2010 when Israeli commandoes killed nine Turkish activists aboard the Mavi Marmara, a ship in a Turkish-led convoy seeking to break a naval blockade of the Gaza Strip.

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: "Pink Panther" jewel thief escapes Swiss jail

Reuters: Oddly Enough
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"Pink Panther" jewel thief escapes Swiss jail
Jul 26th 2013, 16:33

ZURICH | Fri Jul 26, 2013 12:33pm EDT

ZURICH (Reuters) - Armed men have broken a member of the so-called Pink Panther gang of jewel thieves out of a Swiss prison, police said on Friday.

Bosnian gang member Poparic Milan escaped the jail in the Swiss canton of Vaud on Thursday night, along with another prisoner, after accomplices in two vehicles forced their way through a gate and fired at prison guards.

The Pink Panthers, who have a weakness for expensive watches, have staged about 340 robberies on luxury stores in Europe, the Middle East, Asia and the United States since 1999, making off with booty worth more than 330 million euros ($436.77 million), according to Interpol.

Milan, 34, had been serving a jail sentence of six years and eight months for robbing a jewelry store in Switzerland's watch-making capital Neuchatel in 2009.

Known for their spectacular heists, the gang drove two cars into a Dubai shopping mall and through the window of a jewelry store in 2007, swiping goods worth 11 million euros in a raid lasting less than a minute.

The following year the group walked away with loot worth up to 85 million euros after entering the Harry Winston jewelers in central Paris disguised as women. ($1 = 0.7555 euros)

(Reporting by Alice Baghdjian; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: With Pope in town, ribald Rio a land of outdoor confessionals

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
With Pope in town, ribald Rio a land of outdoor confessionals
Jul 26th 2013, 07:51

A man with the Australian flag confesses at the confessional booths set up at Quinta da Boa Vista park at the World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro July 24, 2013. REUTERS/Sergio Moraes

1 of 4. A man with the Australian flag confesses at the confessional booths set up at Quinta da Boa Vista park at the World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro July 24, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Sergio Moraes

By Paulo Prada

RIO DE JANEIRO | Fri Jul 26, 2013 3:51am EDT

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Ah, Rio.

The sun. The sand. The absolution.

Often, tourists and travelers leave this hedonist hotspot with a feeling of guilt. This week, however, thousands of young visitors are dropping to their knees and asking for forgiveness.

Never mind that they might still fall prey to the temptations of the famous nightclubs, bars and beaches of the coastal metropolis, let alone the allure of the many other young pilgrims gathered here for a week long visit by Pope Francis.

As part of the ongoing World Youth Day gathering, a Catholic confab that has attracted more than 1 million faithful to Rio de Janeiro, the Church is making it easy for sinners to seek forgiveness at 100 makeshift outdoor confessionals. The white plywood structures, in a regimented array resembling a tent camp, await the contrite at two focal points of the gathering.

Shaped like the mountain atop which the city's Christ the Redeemer monument looms large, the confessionals are staffed by polyglot priests from around the world. On Friday, Pope Francis himself is scheduled to tend to a few penitents at the Quinta da Boa Vista, a park north of central Rio where the confessionals sit amid hot-dog stands and popcorn vendors.

Confession is a central rite of Catholicism.

By confessing their sins to priests, Catholics not only discuss and reflect upon wrongdoing, they receive a penance through which they seek contrition and make themselves worthy of mass and other rituals.

"It's a way to get closer to God and we as priests have to facilitate the process," said Juan Gabriel Guerra, a Mexican priest now living in the U.S. state of Georgia and who this week is hearing confessions in Spanish and English.

INHERENT CONFLICT

The practice reflects the inherent conflict that most religions grapple with: People may really want to be good, but they have a mighty hard time toeing the line.

Francis himself, like many other Christian leaders, frequently counts himself among the sinners. A Christian, Francis said during a June mass at the Vatican, must "make this confession to himself and to the Church" in order to "understand the beauty of salvation."

Despite heavy rains and temperatures dipping well below the seasonal average, hundreds of young Catholics have waited in line to seek salvation this week. At the Rio park, signs along the muddy lawn where the confessionals sit segregate pilgrims by the language in which they choose to confess - from the local Portuguese to more distant Polish, German and French.

"This is way cooler than confession in a church," says Elise Johnson, a 20-year-old design student from Seattle, who last confessed eight months ago. She was inspired to do so here because of the energy of the assembled youth and the ambience of the outdoors, she added.

For the priests, who are working two-hour shifts seated behind the white screen where each penitent kneels, the occasion presents an opportunity to harness the enthusiasm of the gathering, especially because many Catholics have trouble finding time to confess regularly. The problem is compounded by a shortage of priests worldwide, making schedules at confessionals in some local parishes a hit-or-miss affair.

"It should be something natural, something you want to do," said Ademir Alves, a Brazilian priest from the central state of Goias. "Each confession helps you find your way back to God."

Noelia Meza, a 28-year-old Argentine, said she decided to re-embrace Catholicism only recently, after a breakup with a longtime boyfriend and some trouble with a part-time job.

"I just feel the need to share what I've done," she said.

She emerged from the confessionals just past dark on Wednesday, after most of the priests and other remorseful had already filed out and walked toward a Catholic rock concert on a nearby stage. Her long lapse away from the Church, she said, means that she has rarely bared her soul since her first confession two decades ago.

"I still have a lot to tell," Meza explained, noting a long mental list she has of her sins, from the biggest misdeeds down to the minor. She declined to detail her list.

Some said the confessionals are opportune considering the extracurricular activities some of the pilgrims are bound to enjoy while in Rio.

"There's some partying, too," said Estevão Ostrowsky, a 23-year-old fashion student from the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina. "These are really convenient."

(Editing by Todd Benson and Cynthia Osterman)

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Reuters: Oddly Enough: 60 tons of Eiffel Tower trinkets seized in Paris

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
60 tons of Eiffel Tower trinkets seized in Paris
Jul 25th 2013, 19:29

By Alexandria Sage

PARIS | Thu Jul 25, 2013 3:29pm EDT

PARIS (Reuters) - Paris police have seized 60 tons of miniature Eiffel Towers that black-market vendors were hoping to sell to tourists.

Paris is one of the world's top destinations, visited by about 29 million tourists a year, but with the holidaymakers comes an influx of bootleg souvenirs, from replica towers to fake Hermes scarves.

Police play a cat and mouse game with the mostly immigrant sellers who flood the top tourist sites, taking business from the authorized vendors and paying no taxes.

Police said on Thursday the tin trinkets, brightly colored and barely 8cm high, were seized on Tuesday from a warehouse near Le Bourget airport north of Paris. A woman of Chinese nationality was in police custody.

Authorities say Chinese gangs, many based in the east of Paris, import the trinkets from China before selling them to other groups who control the sellers.

Up to 300-400 black-market sellers hawk their wares around the Eiffel Tower at the height of the summer season, say police, who circulate flyers to tourists encouraging them not to buy from street sellers.

Police said in a statement they had also raided an office in Paris' Marais district where some 100 black-market sellers per day would buy replica Eiffel Towers to sell on, seizing thousands more models and over 150,000 euros in cash.

However, police are hindered by the inability of over-stretched courts to prosecute the waves of illegal sellers, many of whom come from Senegal and India.

When sellers are caught, their goods confiscated but they are released because most are unable to pay a maximum fine of 3,750 euros ($5,000). Few are sent back to their home country - a bureaucratic process plagued by delays, authorities say. ($1 = 0.7555 euros)

(Reporting by Alexandria Sage; Editing by Alison Williams)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: With Pope in town, ribald Rio a land of outdoor confessionals

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
With Pope in town, ribald Rio a land of outdoor confessionals
Jul 25th 2013, 19:42

A man with the Australian flag confesses at the confessional booths set up at Quinta da Boa Vista park at the World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro July 24, 2013. REUTERS/Sergio Moraes

1 of 4. A man with the Australian flag confesses at the confessional booths set up at Quinta da Boa Vista park at the World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro July 24, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Sergio Moraes

By Paulo Prada

RIO DE JANEIRO | Thu Jul 25, 2013 3:42pm EDT

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Ah, Rio.

The sun. The sand. The absolution.

Often, tourists and travelers leave this hedonist hotspot with a feeling of guilt. This week, however, thousands of young visitors are dropping to their knees and asking for forgiveness.

Never mind that they might still fall prey to the temptations of the famous nightclubs, bars and beaches of the coastal metropolis, let alone the allure of the many other young pilgrims gathered here for a week long visit by Pope Francis.

As part of the ongoing World Youth Day gathering, a Catholic confab that has attracted more than 1 million faithful to Rio de Janeiro, the Church is making it easy for sinners to seek forgiveness at 100 makeshift outdoor confessionals. The white plywood structures, in a regimented array resembling a tent camp, await the contrite at two focal points of the gathering.

Shaped like the mountain atop which the city's Christ the Redeemer monument looms large, the confessionals are staffed by polyglot priests from around the world. On Friday, Pope Francis himself is scheduled to tend to a few penitents at the Quinta da Boa Vista, a park north of central Rio where the confessionals sit amid hot-dog stands and popcorn vendors.

Confession is a central rite of Catholicism.

By confessing their sins to priests, Catholics not only discuss and reflect upon wrongdoing, they receive a penance through which they seek contrition and make themselves worthy of mass and other rituals.

"It's a way to get closer to God and we as priests have to facilitate the process," said Juan Gabriel Guerra, a Mexican priest now living in the U.S. state of Georgia and who this week is hearing confessions in Spanish and English.

INHERENT CONFLICT

The practice reflects the inherent conflict that most religions grapple with: People may really want to be good, but they have a mighty hard time toeing the line.

Francis himself, like many other Christian leaders, frequently counts himself among the sinners. A Christian, Francis said during a June mass at the Vatican, must "make this confession to himself and to the Church" in order to "understand the beauty of salvation."

Despite heavy rains and temperatures dipping well below the seasonal average, hundreds of young Catholics have waited in line to seek salvation this week. At the Rio park, signs along the muddy lawn where the confessionals sit segregate pilgrims by the language in which they choose to confess - from the local Portuguese to more distant Polish, German and French.

"This is way cooler than confession in a church," says Elise Johnson, a 20-year-old design student from Seattle, who last confessed eight months ago. She was inspired to do so here because of the energy of the assembled youth and the ambience of the outdoors, she added.

For the priests, who are working two-hour shifts seated behind the white screen where each penitent kneels, the occasion presents an opportunity to harness the enthusiasm of the gathering, especially because many Catholics have trouble finding time to confess regularly. The problem is compounded by a shortage of priests worldwide, making schedules at confessionals in some local parishes a hit-or-miss affair.

"It should be something natural, something you want to do," said Ademir Alves, a Brazilian priest from the central state of Goias. "Each confession helps you find your way back to God."

Noelia Meza, a 28-year-old Argentine, said she decided to re-embrace Catholicism only recently, after a breakup with a longtime boyfriend and some trouble with a part-time job.

"I just feel the need to share what I've done," she said.

She emerged from the confessionals just past dark on Wednesday, after most of the priests and other remorseful had already filed out and walked toward a Catholic rock concert on a nearby stage. Her long lapse away from the Church, she said, means that she has rarely bared her soul since her first confession two decades ago.

"I still have a lot to tell," Meza explained, noting a long mental list she has of her sins, from the biggest misdeeds down to the minor. She declined to detail her list.

Some said the confessionals are opportune considering the extracurricular activities some of the pilgrims are bound to enjoy while in Rio.

"There's some partying, too," said Estevão Ostrowsky, a 23-year-old fashion student from the southern Brazilian state of Santa Catarina. "These are really convenient."

(Editing by Todd Benson and Cynthia Osterman)

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: TV goes to the dogs with first channel for canines

Reuters: Oddly Enough
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com 
TV goes to the dogs with first channel for canines
Jul 25th 2013, 16:02

By Patricia Reaney

NEW YORK | Thu Jul 25, 2013 12:02pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Lonely, bored dogs left at home all day while their owners are at work could soon be getting some digital company - a TV channel with programming just for pooches.

DOGTV, a 24/7 channel designed specifically for man's best friend, will air nationally next month on the U.S. satellite operator DirecTV, with hopes of attracting dogs in some of the 46 million U.S. households that have at least one.

"It is the first and only television channel that is dedicated to our four-legged friends and not to their parents," Gilad Neumann, the chief executive of the Tel Aviv-based company, said in an interview.

The channel won't be showing the canine equivalent of "Modern Family," "Mad Men" or "Downton Abbey" but will feature programs with music, visuals, animation and the occasional human that are designed to relax, stimulate and ease the loneliness of home-alone pets.

"It's more than just entertainment for dogs. We are creating more of an environment," Neumann said of the channel that costs $4.99 a month. "They are bored and many suffer from separation anxiety. What we are trying to do is to give dogs something to focus on in the background."

Unlike children and adults who can watch TV for hours at a time, Neumann said dogs view the medium differently and will be attracted to it once in awhile when they see something that interests them.

"We have no intention of generating a new generation of couch potatoes out of our dogs," he added.

While not taking any official position, the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) said any relaxation and stimulation for pets is good. But it doubted that all dogs will take to it.

"It could work for some dogs and it might not interest others," a spokesman for the AVMA said.

David Frei, director of communications at the Westminster Kennel Club and a co-host of its annual dog show, thinks if it can help relieve separation anxiety for pets and their owners then DOGTV is a good thing.

"I get pictures every year from viewers at home (of the dog show) of their dogs watching television, or standing up on their hind legs when they see a dog. It's kind of cute," he said.

Neumann said the programs were developed with input from Professor Nicholas Dodman, a veterinary behaviorist and director of clinical sciences at Tufts University in Massachusetts, British dog trainer Victoria Stilwell and animal rights activist and trainer Warren Eckstein, and tested on focus groups.

The images are meant to be compatible with a dog's vision, and sounds include a range of frequencies tailored to their sense of hearing.

"We've seen that dogs are interested in certain colors, certain animations," he explained, adding that DOGTV is not meant to replace quality time with owners.

The company, which is in talks and planning to launch the channel in other countries, is also contemplating a TV channel for cats.

"They are not as social as dogs so suffer less from being alone," Neumann said.

(Editing by Mary Milliken and Cynthia Osterman)

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Rescued Florida sea turtle headed for Las Vegas casino "retirement"
Jul 25th 2013, 15:04

Staff at the Florida Keys-based Turtle Hospital scrub down OD, a 320-pound green sea turtle, to remove algae in Marathon, Florida, July 24, 2013 in this handout provided by the Florida Keys News Bureau.

Credit: Reuters/Andy Newman/Florida Keys News Bureau/Handout via Reuters

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: Being rude to French president no longer an offence

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Being rude to French president no longer an offence
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Members of the Front de Gauche political party hold a sheet with a puppet figure in the likeness of France's President Nicolas Sarkozy during a protest demonstration on the eve of traditional carnival festivities in Nice February 17, 2012.

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Reuters: Oddly Enough: German town raises ire for scheme using asylum seekers as porters

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German town raises ire for scheme using asylum seekers as porters
Jul 25th 2013, 13:12

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File photo of luggage on a platform at the Hauptbahnhof main railway station in Berlin March 4, 2011. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/Files

File photo of luggage on a platform at the Hauptbahnhof main railway station in Berlin March 4, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch/Files

BERLIN | Thu Jul 25, 2013 9:12am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - A German town has halted a scheme offering asylum seekers 1.05 euros an hour to carry luggage at a station after rail operator Deutsche Bahn refused permission due to a public outcry and criticism that the project harked back to colonial times.

The southern German town of Schwaebisch Gmuend started the scheme on Monday for nine asylum seekers to help passengers get up a steep flight of metal steps erected at the station due to construction work.

The mayor originally said he hoped the program would help the integration of the town's 250 asylum seekers, but pictures of the refugees, mostly from African nations, in bright red T-shirts and straw hats unleashed an outcry.

Complaints about the hourly rate - about eight times below the level German politicians cite for a minimum wage - poured into the mayor's office and sparked a Facebook campaign.

"Having refugees as bag carriers is a shameless exploitation of the people's situation," said far-left Linke lawmaker Ulla Jelpke, who called it "colonial" behavior.

Deutsche Bahn said it had not been aware of the conditions and would pay its own employees their normal rate to do the job.

"The railway cannot support these conditions," the railway said in a statement.

A spokesman for Schwaebisch Gmuend told Reuters the conservative mayor was disappointed at Deutsche Bahn's decision and blamed misplaced political correctness.

"At a first glance, pictures of black people carrying white peoples' suitcases don't look good and conjure up images of neo-colonialism and racism, but this is not the case - the asylum seekers want to do this," said the spokesman.

He added that the 1.05 euros was not a wage as such, as asylum seekers are not allowed to be employed, but is the maximum amount it is possible to give them under the asylum seekers law.

The Bild newspaper quoted one asylum seeker from Gambia, Lamin G, as saying: "It was a good job, I could help people."

(Reporting by Madeline Chambers; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

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