$20 million party for the grand opening of the Atlantis on Dubai's Palm Island, an artificial island in the shape of a palm tree. The $1.5 billion marine-themed resort was aglow during an unprecedented pyrotechnics show, witnessed by some of the world'"23 March 2009
Worlds Most Expensive Party
$20 million party for the grand opening of the Atlantis on Dubai's Palm Island, an artificial island in the shape of a palm tree. The $1.5 billion marine-themed resort was aglow during an unprecedented pyrotechnics show, witnessed by some of the world'"F.P. Journe Watches
F.P. Journe Watches – The Sonnerie Souveraine Watch $560,000
F.P. Journe Watches presents the exceptionally unique Sonnerie Souveraine Grand-Strike Clock watch and Minute Repeater wrist watch priced at an expensive $560,000. This fine luxury watch is unmatched in terms of its looks and watch collectors - please note that only four of this watch is made for sale each year.
The F.P. Journe watches’ Sonnerie Souveraine is not just a grand sonnerie – it is a “grand et petite” sonnerie with a minute repeater. For those who don’t know, a sonnerie is a clock watch that strikes the hour and the quarters just like your traditional grandfather clock. The F.P. Journe watches’ grand and petit sonnerie will let you hear the sharp strike of each quarter hour as well as the full hour. For example, if the time is 5.45 you would hear five strikes for the hour five and three strikes for the three quarters. Sadly, watch collecting fans that are impressed with this collectible watch must wait not less than three years. Fair enough - considering that it took six years to develop this designer watch, involving ten patents.
What makes the F.P. Journe watches’ collectable Sonnerie Souveraine especially outstanding is the fact that is manages to integrate highly complex features within the wrist watches’ limited energy with absolutely no compromise in terms of quality of sound and dependability. What is interesting with these wrist watches is, in spite of their value, they only come with steel cases. According to Journe, steel conducts and transmits sound far better than gold or platinum and that is the reason why the Sonnerie Souvernaire is housed only in steel.
The F.P. Journe watches’ Sonnerie Souvernaire does not come with a serial number, in spite of being a limited edition. This fabulous watch brand takes the custom even further - when you place your order, you will have your name custom engraved on both the movement and the case. This cool watch is a forty jewel watch that houses a Calibre 1505 and is manually wound. There are more than four hundred pieces in the watch. The movement measures 35mm x 7.8mm. The watch has a power reserve with an indicator, of 120 hours without the chime, 48 hours with the grand strike and 24 hours of autonomy after the strike runs down. The case with the watch face within measures 42 mm x 12.25 mm.
F.P. Journe has given the world a horological marvel that is one of its best wrist watches that is unlikely to ever go out of fashion and can be worn with any dress code.
Maddaloni Jewelry
Maddaloni Jewelry Store - Home of Fine Luxury Jewelry
Maddaloni Jewelry Store select time pieces are truly a world class discovery of diamonds, precious stones and first class watches. Maddaloni started as a young man’s dream in 1978 and has evolved into a famous and elite jewelry and watch retail store.
Maddaloni prides itself on quality, distinct and beautiful pieces that will truly take your breath away. The Maddaloni’s travel the world to find only the best jewelry and watches to display. With such high standards, Maddaloni is truly an upscale and exclusive place to purchase the finest jewelry.
Maddaloni has a dedicated following of customers who appreciate the rare art of select jewelry. With personal attention to each of the customers and a commitment to only having the most exquisite products available, Maddaloni has made it to a famous family name that is synonymous with elegant and valuable jewels and time pieces.
The choices at Maddaloni are pricey, but the extravagant nature of diamonds and precious stones, as well as finely crafted time pieces, makes the Maddaloni collection quite special. Choose a deluxe time piece or a luxurious gem stone ring that will stand the test of time and be beautiful still to pass on as an heirloom. Choosing a unique piece is paramount to Maddaloni’s dedication to customer service, which makes their pieces not only special and unique, but also collectible.
What are you waiting for? If you’re looking for a gift for that special someone, check out all the exquisite pieces that Maddaloni has to offer. There’s something unique and perfect for everyone, whether you are looking for a ring, engagement ring, set of earrings, necklace, bracelet or pendant for that special lady or an elegant watch to grace her wrist, Maddaloni has the perfect choice. There’s also a selection of men’s watches as well – so ladies, you can find the perfect watch for the man of your dreams.
World Most Valuable Gold Products
Posted by Revathy Arjunan at 8:01 PM
http://amirtheswaran.blogspot.com/2009/03/world-most-valuable-gold-products.html
World Largest (Biggest) Cell Phone
Cricket and Samsung Telecommunications of America (Samsung Mobile) are displaying the world's largest working cell phone today in Pioneer Court in downtown Chicago.
The largest working cell phone in the world is a working replica of a Samsung Messenger phone.
The biggest wireless handset is approximately 15 feet long, 13 feet high and 3 feet deep. Cricket invited Chicagoans to visit Pioneer Court and make unlimited free phone calls and text messages on the life-size Samsung Messager through March 15.
A Guinness World Records representative will be on hand to certify the record-breaking phone for the record.
By: http://amirtheswaran.blogspot.com/2009/03/worlds-largestbiggestcell-phone.html
World Largest Swimming Pool
Acknowledged by Guinness World Records as being the world’s largest swimming pool, the lagoon measures 1013 metres in length, including the Orthlieb pool in Casablanca, Morocco, itself a huge 150 meters by 100 meters – the San Alfonso pool is 1km in length.
Children’s play in the clear waters of the 3,323 ft long pool
The revolutionary clear water artificial lagoons, transparent to a depth of 35 meters,the pool has been very attracting the people,since it’s opened last month.
Top 10 World’s Youngest Billionaires 2009
Prince Albert von Thurn und Taxis
Net worth: $2.1 billion Age: 25
First appeared on our World’s Billionaires list at age 8, but officially inherited his fortune in June 2001 on his 18th birthday. Attended high school in Rome, studied economics and theology at Edinburgh University in Scotland. Assets include real estate, art, a technology company and 30,000 hectares of woodland in Germany. This eligible bachelor tours with a German auto-racing league.
Sergey Brin
Net worth: $12 billion Age: 35
Google co-founder continues to dominate search business despite facing strong headwinds. Company’s stock is down 30% in the past 12 months, slicing $6.7 billion from personal balance sheet. Posted better than expected earnings in January; trimmed staff and employee perks. Professor’s son emigrated from Russia, met partner Larry Page in a computer science Ph.D. program at Stanford University. Duo dropped out in 1998 to start Google from a friend’s garage. Sales: $21.8 billion. Net margins: 19%.
John Arnold
Net Worth: $2.7 billion Age: 35
The youngest billionaire in America keeps getting richer. Wunderkind’s Centaurs Energy hedge fund said to be up 80% in 2008. Energy trader diversifying into hard assets: power plants, storage facilities. Father was a lawyer, mother an accountant. Raised in Dallas, graduated in three years from Vanderbilt University. Became an oil trader at Enron in 1995; said to have generated $750 million of the firm’s profits in 2001. Founded Centaurs after Enron’s bankruptcy. Returns said to exceed 200% a year since 2002.
Larry Page
Net Worth: $12 billion Age: 36
Professor’s son, heads Google’s product division. Met partner Sergey Brin in a computer science Ph.D. program at Stanford University. Duo dropped out in 1998 to start Google from a friend’s garage. Initial financing came from angel investors I. Ram Shriram, Andy von Bechtolsheim, professor David Cheriton. Venture capital firms Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Sequoia Capital pitched in $25 million; everyone made billions when Google went public in 2004. Fortune down $6.6 billion since last March after stock fell 30%.
Andrei Melnichenko
Net worth: $1 billion Age: 37
Young industrialist’s fortune fell more than 80% since last year as energy and fertilizer prices plummeted. The son of a respected Soviet physicist studied physics at Moscow State University. Dropped out in 1993; founded MDM Bank. Teamed up with Sergei Popov, accumulated industrial empire: coal, fertilizer, energy. Married to Yugoslavian model and pop princess Aleksandra Nikola. Reportedly spent $2 million in 2007 for Jennifer Lopez to perform at his wife’s 30th birthday party. Couple’s Web site lists favorite music, travel destinations and bios of Andrei, Aleksandra and their prized pup, Vale.
William Ding
Net Worth: $1.1 billion Age: 38
Founder of China’s No. 2 online game company, Net ease. Was once China’s richest man. Flagship game, "Fantasy Westward Journey," among nation’s top 10 downloads. Signed three-year contract with U.S. game developer Blizzard Entertainment to distribute "StarCraft II" and Battle.net to Chinese mainland. Netease’s U.S.-listed shares up 9% in past year. Enjoyed double-digit profit growth.
Sheik Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahayan
Net Worth: $4.9 billion Age: 39
Investor with hoards of cash is a member of Abu Dhabi’s royal family. Last September, he shelled out $300 million for soccer team Manchester City. One month later, he rescued British bank Barclays from possible nationalization with a controversial $5 billion cash investment. Wields major clout at home: chairs the state’s oil-oriented sovereign wealth fund; serves as minister of United Arab Emirates Presidential Affairs. Avid sportsman–enjoys soccer and endurance riding.
Chu Lam Yiu
Net Worth: $1.5 billion Age: 39
Chairs Huabao International, which makes fragrances and flavorings for use in cigarettes, detergents, beverages, dairy products and cosmetics. Fortune fell 20% since last March after manufacturing slowdown. Founded the company a decade ago; took it public through a backdoor listing. Sold 9% in 2008; still owns two-thirds of shares. Holds several leadership positions in local industry groups.
Jerry Yang
Net Worth: $1.1 billion Age: 40
Embattled Yahoo! co-founder quit as chief executive in January. Settled proxy contest with shareholder activist Carl Icahn for control of company. Icahn won three board seats. Yahoo! stock is down nearly 55% since original Microsoft offer last February. Met partner David Filo in grad school at Stanford, turned Internet directory project into Web portal Yahoo!. Took it public 1996. Agreed to ad partnership with Google last June following Microsoft debacle; deal to deliver Google ads alongside Yahoo!’s search results fell through months later
Kenneth Griffin
Net Worth: $1.5 billion Age: 40
Founder of Chicago hedge fund outfit Citadel reeling from steep losses: Flagship Wellington Fund plunged 55% in 2008. Shut down Fusion, a $1 billion hedge fund of funds, in October. Net worth down $2.2 billion–60%–since September. Started trading stocks from Harvard dorm room; founded Citadel with $4.6 million in 1990. Today, firm manages $13 billion (down 35% from peak last year); accounts for roughly 10% of U.S. equity trading volume. One of five billionaire hedge fund managers to go before congressional panel last November. Bought Jasper Johns painting "False Start" for $80 million in 2006.
Top 10 Richest Person In The World 2009
William Gates III
Rank: 1 Net Worth: $40.0 bil, Fortune: self made
Software visionary regains title as the world's richest man despite losing $18 billion in the past 12 months. Stepped down from day-to-day duties at Microsoft last summer to devote his talents and riches to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Organization's assets were $30 billion in January; annual letter lauds endowment manager Michael Larson for limiting last year's losses to 20%. Gates decided to increase donations in 2009 to $3.8 billion, up 15% from 2008. Dedicated to fighting hunger in developing countries, improving education in America's high schools and developing vaccines against malaria, tuberculosis and AIDS. Appointed Microsoft Office veteran Jeffrey Raikes chief exec of Gates Foundation in September. Gates remains Microsoft chairman. Sells shares each quarter, redeploys proceeds via investment vehicle Cascade; more than half of fortune invested outside Microsoft. Stock down 45% in past 12 months. "Creative capitalist" wants companies to match profit making with doing good.
Warren Buffett
Rank: 2 Net Worth: $37.0 bil, Fortune: self made
Last year America's most beloved investor was the world's richest man. This year he has to settle for second place after losing $25 billion in 12 months. Shares of Berkshire Hathaway down 45% since last March. Injected billions of dollars into Goldman Sachs, GE in exchange for preferred stock last fall; propped up insurance firm Swiss Re in February with $2.6 billion infusion. Admits he made some "dumb" investment mistakes in 2008. Upbeat about America's future: "Our economic system has worked extraordinarily well over time. It has unleashed human potential as no other system has, and it will continue to do so." Scoffs at Wall Street's over-reliance on "history-based" models: "If merely looking up past financial data would tell you what the future holds, the Forbes 400 would consist of librarians." Son of Nebraska politician delivered newspapers as a boy. Filed first tax return at age 13, claiming $35 deduction for bicycle. Studied under value investing guru Benjamin Graham at Columbia. Took over textile firm Berkshire Hathaway 1965. Today holding company invested in insurance (Geico, General Re), jewelry (Borsheim's), utilities (MidAmerican Energy), food (Dairy Queen, See's Candies). Also has noncontrolling stakes in Anheuser-Busch, Coca-Cola, Wells Fargo.
Carlos Slim Helu & family
Rank: 3 Net Worth: $35.0 bil, Fortune: self made
Economic downturn and plunging peso shaved $25 billion from the fortune of Latin America's richest man. Global recession testing his ability to live up to the principles he sets for his employees: "Maintain austerity in times of fat cows." Son of a Lebanese immigrant bought fixed line operator Telefonos de Mexico (Telmex) in 1990; now controls 90% of Mexico's telephone landlines. Would be a billionaire based on his dividends alone. Biggest holding: $16 billion stake in America Movil, Latin America's largest mobile phone company with 173 million customers. America Movil and Telmex reportedly planning to jointly invest $4 billion to bolster telecom infrastructure in Latin America. Buying up cheap media, energy and retail assets. Last year took stakes in New York Times Co., former billionaire Anthony O'Reilly's Independent News & Media and Bronco Drilling; also increased position in Saks. Baseball statistics aficionado, art collector
Lawrence Ellison
Rank: 4 Net Worth: $22.5 bil, Fortune: self made
Database titan continues to engulf the competition; Oracle has racked up 49 acquisitions in the past 4 years. Bought BEA Systems for $8.5 billion last year. Still sitting on $7 billion in cash. Revenues up 11% to $10.9 billion in the six months ended November 30; profits also up 11% to $2.4 billion. Stock down 25% in past 12 months. Invested $125 million in Web software outfit Netsuite; took public in 2007, stock has fallen 80% since. His shares still worth $300 million. Chicago native studied physics at U. of Chicago, didn't graduate. Started Oracle in 1977. Public 1986, a day before Microsoft. Owns 453-foot Rising Sun; built a smaller leisure boat because superyacht is hard to park. Squabbling in court with Swiss boating billionaire Ernesto Bertarelli over terms of next America's Cup. Recently unveiled hulking 90-foot trimaran he intends to use to win it.
Ingvar Kamprad & family
Rank: 5 Net Worth: $22.0 bil, Fortune: self made
Peddled matches, fish, pens, Christmas cards and other items by bicycle as a teenager. Started selling furniture in 1947. Opened first Ikea store 50 years ago; stores's name is a combination of initials of his first and last name, his family farm and the nearest village. Retired in 1986; company's "senior adviser" still reportedly works tirelessly on his brand. Discount retailer now sells 9,500 items in 36 countries; prints catalog in 27 languages. Revenues up 7% to $27.4 billion in fiscal year 2008. Opened tenth store in China this February; planning to open first in Dominican Republic later this year. Three sons all work at the company. Thrifty entrepreneur flies economy class, frequents cheap restaurants and furnishes his home mostly with Ikea products.
Karl Albrecht
Rank: 6 Net Worth: $21.5 bil, Fortune:self made
Source:Aldi , Age:89, Country Of Citizenship:Germany,Residence:Mulheim an der Ruhr
Industry:Retail.
Germany's richest person owns discount supermarket giant Aldi Sud. Retailer faring well amid economic downturn; analysts expect its 2008 sales to be up 9.4% to $33.7 billion. Sales in the U.S. up estimated 20% last year to $7 billion. Plans to open 75 U.S. stores in 2009, including first in New York City. With younger brother, Theo, transformed their mother's corner grocery store into Aldi after World War II. Brothers split ownership in 1961; Karl took the stores in southern Germany, plus the rights to the brand in the U.K., Australia and the U.S. Theo got northern Germany and the rest of Europe. Retired from daily operations. Fiercely private: little known about him other than that he apparently raises orchids and plays golf.
Mukesh Ambani
Rank: 7 Net Worth: $19.5 bil, Fortune: inherited and growing
Oversees Reliance Industries, India's most valuable company by market cap despite stock falling 40% in past year. Merging his Reliance Petroleum with flagship Reliance Industries. As part of deal, will exercise right to buy back Chevron's 5% stake in Reliance Petroleum at $1.20 per share—the same price at which he sold it 3 years ago. Today the stock trades for $1.80 a share. Increased stake in Reliance Industries in October; paid $3.4 billion to convert 120 million preferential warrants into shares. Reliance Petroleum refinery on India's western coast began operating in December despite falling global demand and declining margins. Late father Dhirubhai founded Reliance and built it into a massive conglomerate. After he died Mukesh and his brother, Anil, ran the family business together for a brief time. But siblings feuded over control; mother eventually brokered split of assets. Brothers may be looking to bury hatchet; played joint hosts at mother's recent 75th-birthday bash. Has yet to move into his 27-story home that he's building at a reported cost of $1 billion. Ardent fan of Bollywood films. Wife, Nita, oversees school named after his father.
Lakshmi Mittal
Rank: 8 Net Worth: $19.3 bil, Fortune: inherited and growing
Indian immigrant heads world's largest steel company; ArcelorMittal was formed via hostile takeover 3 years ago. Stock in company makes up bulk of his fortune; shares at a 4-year low with steel prices down 75% since last summer. Company forced to pay heavy fines after a French antitrust investigation found 10 companies guilty of price-fixing in European steel markets. Arcelor posted $2.6 billion loss in most recent quarter; announced plans to slow acquisitions, cut capital expenditures, pay down debt. Started in family steel business in the 1970s, branched out on his own in 1994. Initially bought up steel mills on the cheap in Eastern Europe. Company bought 19.9% stake in Australia's Macarthur Coal last year. Also owns pieces of Mumbai's Indiabulls Group, London's RAB Capital; owns stake in, sits on board of Goldman Sachs. Holds substantial cash; owns 12-bedroom mansion in London's posh Kensington neighborhood.
Theo Albrecht
Rank: 9 Net Worth:Net Worth:$18.8 bil, Fortune:self made
Source:Aldi, Trader Joe's, Age:87, Country Of Citizenship:Germany
Residence:Foehr, Industry:Retail
Runs discount supermarket group Aldi Nord; firm holding up amid economic downturn. Sales expected to hit $31 billion in 2008. After World War II he and older brother Karl transformed their mother's corner grocery into Aldi. Brothers split ownership in 1961; Karl took the stores in southern Germany, plus the rights to the brand in the U.K., Australia and the U.S. Theo got the northern Germany stores and the rest of Europe. Unable to operate Aldi stores in U.S., Theo developed discount food store Trader Joe's; now has more than 320 U.S. stores. Also owns stake in Supervalu. Became a recluse after being kidnapped for 17 days in 1971; said to collect old typewriters; loves golf.
Amancio Ortega
Rank: 10, Net Worth: $18.3 bil ,Fortune: self made
Railway worker's son started as a gofer in a shirt store. With then-wife Rosalia Mera, also now a billionaire, started making dressing gowns and lingerie in their living room. Business became one of world's most successful apparel manufacturers. Today Inditex has more than 4,000 stores in 71 countries. Sales: $12.3 billion. Ortega is chairman. Company exported its cheap chic Zara stores to 4 new markets last year: Ukraine, South Korea, Montenegro and Honduras. Stock up 1% in past 12 months, but fortune down because of weak euro. Also has personal investments in gas, tourism, banks and real estate. Owns properties in Madrid, Paris, London, Lisbon, plus a luxury hotel and apartment complex in Miami, a horse-jumping circuit, and an interest in a soccer league. Shuns neckties and fanfare. Daughter Marta works for Inditex; recent speculation suggests she is being groomed to eventually replace her father.
Barack Obama
The first time I met Barack we had coffee together at a shop in downtown Chicago. He was in a small law firm, and I was at the Justice Department's civil rights division in the Clinton Administration. Like many who meet him, I hoped he would one day run for public office. You just want people of his caliber to lead.When at last he decided to run for the Illinois Senate, he called to ask for my help, and I was eager to give it. "I'll contribute at the max," I pledged. "Deval," he said, "in Illinois there is no max." I said, "Brother, I'm sorry, there has to be a max!"
Barack, 46, has already changed American politics. We often hear about the size of the crowds he attracts, as a measure of the excitement about his candidacy. It's the variety of the crowd that is the real phenomenon: little kids who sit on the floor in front of the podium, and the 101-year-old gentleman who stood up from his wheelchair in Iowa and said, "I'm with him too." Farmers in overalls next to people in business suits. Every race, religion and creed. Every political party and no party at all.
You can feel their excitement about being in Barack's presence—and about being in the presence of one another. They glimpse for a minute what it might be like to find common cause across differences. That's how Barack has changed politics.
Walt Disney
Walter Elias Disney (December 5, 1901–December 15, 1966) was an American animated film producer and animator. He was also the creator of an American-based theme park called Disneyland, and the founder of the highly profitable corporation, now known as The Walt Disney Company.Childhood
Disney was born in Chicago to Elias Disney and Flora Call. He was named after his father and after his father's close friend Walter Parr, the minister at St. Paul Congregational Church. In 1906, his family moved to a farm near Marceline, Missouri. The family sold the farm in 1909 and lived in a rented house until 1910, when they moved to Kansas City. Disney was nine years old at the time.
Walt Disney
According to the Kansas City, Missouri, Public School District records, Disney began attending the Benton Grammar School 1911, and continued his formal education there until he graduated on June 8, 1917. During this time, Disney also enrolled in classes at the Kansas City Art Institute. In the fall of 1917, Disney rejoined his family. He left school at the age sixteen and became a volunteer ambulance driver in World War I, after he changed his birth certificate to show his year of birth as 1900 in order to be able to enlist in the service. He served as a member of the American Red Cross Ambulance Force in France till 1919.
Origins of the studio
Disney returned to the USA, moved to Kansas City and started looking for a job. He was also interested in becoming a political cartoonist but after some time of being unemployed he had to settle for a job in Posman-Rubin Commercial Art Studio. In his new job Disney met and befriended Ubbe Ert Iwerks, later known as Ub Iwerks. The two friends were interested in creating their own company and in January, 1920 they formed "Iwerks-Disney Commercial Artists".
In 1922 Disney started making longer shorts based on well known fairy-tales like "Cinderella". In 1923 Disney also started experimenting with shorts combining live-action and animation. Few of the shorts that Disney worked on during these years have survived but they were locally successful at the time and Disney was getting ambitious.
Disney was now working on his own company again along with Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harman, Rudolf Ising and Carmen Maxwell but the Laugh-O-Grams weren't satisfying him any more. Though reasonably popular near Kansas City they weren't truly financially successful.
Mixing live action and animation
His next attempt at success would involve the combination of live-action and animation. This was already the basis of the moderately successful series Out of the Inkwell by Max Fleischer and his brother Dave Fleischer that had begun in 1918 and was still running. However, the Fleischer brothers had their animated star Koko the Clown interacting with a live-action setting. Disney wanted to create a series of cartoons, called the Alice Comedies in which a live action little girl interacted with animated characters. The idea would be used successfully much later in Roger Rabbit cartoons but was quite original for its time.
Disney and his team put all their efforts on creating Alice's Wonderland. The young actress playing Alice in this film was Virginia Davis, who had worked for the Kansas City Film Ad Company. Unfortunately for them, their profits from Laugh-O-Graphs weren't enough to cover the expenses and the company went bankrupt in July, 1923. But Disney had his finished project in his hand and he left for Hollywood in hopes of finding interested distributors. Reportedly he had only 40 dollars left at this point. Ub followed him. But Ising, Harman and Maxwell decided to follow their own separate path. They would form Arabian Nights Cartoon Studio and later Harman-Ising Studio.
Contract and new studio
In Hollywood Disney found the interested distributors he was looking for, Margaret Winkler and her fiancee (and soon husband), Charles Mintz. They were already distributing the Felix the Cat series by Pat Sullivan and Otto Messmer. On October 16 they signed a contract for twelve films. However Disney, at this point, had no studio, artists or actors while the contract asked for the participation of Virginia Davis, still living in Kansas. But Disney was enthusiastic and started working on his problems.
He enlisted the help of his older brother Roy Oliver Disney who became his new partner. They established a small studio at 4651 Kingswell Avenue and started working. Although they only managed to make ten films during 1924 they were successful enough. The two brothers were able to move to a larger studio at 4649 Kingswell and hire more staff. Besides artists (including Disney's later wife), more child actors were hired, playing secondary roles. Disney convinced Virginia Davis and her family to move to Hollywood. At the distributors' suggestion a recurring animated character was added to the series, Alice's cat Julius. He first appeared in Alice's Spooky Adventure released on April 1, 1924 and originally Disney didn't intended to use him again. But the distributors were familiar with animated cats and insisted that the cat would join the cast permanently. In Julius they formed a copy of Felix.
The budding mogul
Disney married a female artist under his employ, Lillian Marie Bounds, on July 13, 1925 and became the father of two children:
Diane Marie Disney (born December 18, 1933)
Sharon Mae Disney (born December 21, 1936)
Meanwhile, the Alice series was becoming successful and Disney had his contract renewed, this time asking for eighteen more films. But the distributors asked for a reduction in the production costs. Disney decided to reduce Virginia Davis's regular monthly salary to a daily-rate pay. The Davis family refused and Virginia continued her career as a child actress elsewhere. She was replaced by Dawn Paris under the stage name Dawn O'Day (she would later use the stage name; Anne Shirley). But Dawn's payment wasn't enough as the only source of income for her family and she quit, too. She was replaced by Margie Gay. Despite these problems, fifteen films of the Alice series were released during 1925.
In 1926, Margaret Winkler married Charles Mintz and retired from business. Disney now had to deal with one distributor who felt that the series was declining. By this time Ub Iwerks was in charge of the animated films and Disney just supervised and dropped some ideas. The animation was getting better, the gags increased, but the live-action sequences were becoming less important and the scenarios tended to be repetitive. But the series was still successful enough. During the year, the name of the company changed from "The Disney Brothers Studio" to "The Walt Disney Studio". From then on Roy would still play an important part in the Company's financial department but had little to do with the films. Disney was now the head of the Studio, which moved to Hyperion Avenue. Disney felt that his youthful appearance (he was 25 years old) worked against him during contract negotiations and grew a mustache in an attempt to look older and more serious.
The end of Alice, the start of Oswald
In 1927 Winkler Pictures ceased ordering cartoons for the Alice series. It had reached its limitations and with Alice in the Big League released on August 27, 1927 it was over. Besides Black Pete, none of the series characters would appear again.
But Disney had other plans. Charles Mintz's own employer Carl Laemmle, the head of Universal Studios was interested in a new animated series starring a rabbit. Mintz assigned this to Disney and his company. They developed the new character and named him: Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.
Poor Papa was produced by Spring of this year but Laemmle was less than pleased with the character. They wanted a likeable character like Charlie Chaplin's Tramp, Felix the Cat or even Julius from the Alice Comedies. What they got was a rabbit looking old, fat, sloppy and scruffy with a hooligan's personality.
Poor Papa would be released on August 6, 1928 when the character's popularity was at its height but this wasn't the introduction of the character to the public that Universal wanted. The Disney studio had to redesign the character. But the next short they produced was what Universal wanted. Trolley Troubles featured a younger, slimmer, better Oswald with the personality of a naughty young boy. The film's release on September 5, 1927 made the character instantly successful.
Nine shorts featuring Oswald were released during the year and the character became popular. Oswald merchandise appeared though Disney had nothing to do with it. Black Pete was now used as a recurring antagonist to Oswald. Disney had success at his hands... or so he thought.
One of the more famous Disney quotes has been, "Remember, it all started with a mouse." But it more likely started with the Rabbit. Disney was successful enough to be able to hire his old colleagues Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising, who hadn't been so successful on their own but had improved in skills. Seventeen of Disney's Oswald cartoons were released during 1928, the final being Hot Dog, released on August 20, 1928.
Oswald moves on
Disney was quite confident when he went to negotiate with Charles Mintz in New York. He wanted his fee to increase from 2250 dollars per short to 2500 dollars per short. Instead Mintz wanted Disney's fee to decrease to 2000 dollars per short. When Disney refused, Mintz had some announcements to make. He didn't need Disney anymore. He had secretly met with a number of Disney's employees including Harman and Ising and had signed them on contracts of their own. As the distributor Universal held the rights to Oswald and they could make their own cartoons with him if they wanted to, Disney returned to his Studio in defeat and along with Ub Iwerks and the remaining employees he started working on a new project to replace Oswald as Disney's star.
This meeting was very important for the history of animation because of its consequences in the long run. It is well known that Disney's next project was Mickey Mouse but there were other developments spawned from the meeting. Charles Mintz wasn't idle either. He continued to provide Universal with Oswald cartoons, produced now in a new Studio under his brother-in-law George Winkler. Thanks to Harman and Ising, now chief animators, the 25 shorts produced till mid-1929 were of the same quality as those produced by Disney's Studio.
But then Carl Laemmle decided to create an animation department for Universal and hand the rights to Oswald to it. The new Studio would be run by Walter Lantz and would later spawn even more famous characters like Woody Woodpecker. Ozzie of the Circus, released on January 5, 1929 was the first in a long series of shorts produced by Lantz' Studio. As for Mintz and Winkler, their Studio and their careers were over.
But Harman and Ising weren't even started yet. They found employment again creating a partnership with producer Leon Schlesinger. Together they created an animation Studio on behalf of Warner Bros.. The short Sinkin' in the Bathtub, released on April 19, 1930 was the first of a long series of cartoons called Looney Tunes that would spawn more famous characters like Bugs Bunny.
Ironically enough, Oswald, the reason for these developments, has long been obscured by characters later created by the Studios formed as a result of his creation.
Discovering Mickey
Returning to Disney's new project, his company claimed that it was the blowing of a train's whistle that inspired him to create Mickey Mouse. Apparently the whistle blowed "A moooouse! A mooouse!" It seems likely that Mickey evolved from a more pragmatic conversation between Disney and Iwerks. Mickey in fact was little more than a truncation of Oswald, round ears instead of long ones, and so forth.
It has also been said that the name Mickey came from Disney's wife Lillian who disapproved of Disney's choice of Mortimer. The name itself came from an occasion when a young Mickey Rooney walked into Disney's office whilst on a visit; Disney showed Rooney some pictures of Mortimer Mouse (as he was called at the time), and it occurred to him that the name Mickey would have a better ring to it. A tall, strapping Mortimer would appear later in a Disney cartoon attempting to woo Minnie away from Mickey.
He continued this inventive film making with Mickey Mouse. Mickey's first cartoon was Plane Crazy, in a story inspired by Charles Lindbergh. The best-remembered today, however, was the first "talkie" cartoon, Steamboat Willie.
Disney found out that his distributor was stealing from him, so he broke away from them. Lessons learned from this experience would later prompt him to distribute his films with his own distribution company, Buena Vista. But Disney's distributor persuaded Iwerks to leave Disney and work for them. Iwerks owned one third of the Walt Disney Studios. He eventually returned to Disney and worked for him in R & D creating such historic inventions as the multi-plane camera which created three dimensional backgrounds in animated films. But his choice back then to leave the studio and sacrifice his percentage of the company cost him countless millions of dollars. While Iwerks's contribution may be overlooked by most people, among Disney historians his name is as well known as any Disney character.
Mickey's films were successful, but it was in merchandising the studio became truly lucrative. Starting out with Mickey Mouse pencils and then expanding into watches, comics and toys, the Mouse created a true financial empire.
The shorts also had success with their musical scores. The Three Little Pigs was so successful when it was released in theaters that it was actually billed above the features. The title song, composed by Frank Churchill, was a huge popular hit, subsequently covered by other artists like Benny Goodman.
Risk and reward in feature films
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, released in 1937, was Disney's first feature-length animated film, as well as the first American animated feature in color. To acquire the funding to complete, Disney had to show a rough cut of the motion picture to loan officers at the Bank of America. A string of animated films, such as Fantasia (1940) and Pinocchio (1940), followed. Not all were commercial successes, and Disney's financial situation was at times threadbare. Disney's relationship with his animators was strained when they went on strike in 1941, almost crippling the studio.
To compensate for the diminished resources, Disney came out with movies like The Three Caballeros and Melody Time that were less complicated and relied upon short musical segments. Learning from the lack of success he had with Fantasia, Disney used music from artists like Dinah Shore and Nelson Riddle as opposed to Johann Sebastian Bach and Igor Stravinsky. There might have been even more of these films if not for World War II. The Army occupied part of Disney's studio. Perhaps the most important Disney film from this time would be Victory Through Air Power. Disney agreed to make training films for the United States Armed Forces. In these, the Seven Dwarfs would demonstrate how to set up camps and so forth. But Victory Through Air Power, in which an eagle defeats an octopus, was used by the military to explain the strategy behind D-Day.
The need to diversify
After the war, the unfavorable economics of concentrating exclusively on animated movies finally caught up with Disney and his company, as they diversified into television and live-action movies, still retaining their family-friendly nature. However, Disney testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee, and he named several of his employees as Communist sympathizers. Some historians believe that the animosity from the studio strike caused him to bear a grudge, along with his dislike and distrust of labor unions, leading to his testimony.
Building the Disney empire
Disney opened Disneyland, a theme park located in Anaheim, California in 1955.
In the months before his death, Disney dreamed of building EPCOT, an Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow. He passed away before he could make that dream a reality. While the Walt Disney World theme park was built, the EPCOT, also known as the "Florida Project", was translated by Disney's sucessors into the EPCOT of today, essentially a living world's fair. The Epcot park that currently exists is a far cry from the actual living city that Disney envisioned. However, the Celebration, Florida new town built by Disney Corporation adjacent to Walt Disney World harkens back to the EPCOT vision.
Disney and space exploration
Well before any vehicles traveled to space, Disney produced three educational films on the space program in collaboration with NASA rocket designer Wernher von Braun:
Man in Space which aired March 9, 1955 followed by
Man and the Moon also 1955, and
Mars and Beyond, December 4, 1957.
The films attracted the attention of not only the general public, but also the Soviet space program.
Trivia and rumors
It is often stated that Disney had his body frozen and became a cryonics patient after his death. This is in fact an urban myth; Disney was cremated, and his remains lie in a family crypt at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale.
Disney had very simple tastes in food. According to his daughter Diane, "He liked fried potatoes, hamburgers, western omelets, hotcakes, canned peas, hash, stew, roast beef sandwiches. He doesn't go for vegetables, but loves chicken livers or macaroni and cheese." Lillian Disney would complain, "Why should I plan a meal when all Disney really wants is a can of chili or a can of spaghetti?"
In 1940, the US FBI recruited Disney as an Official Informant. He was later designated Special Agent in Charge.
David Beckham
David Robert Joseph Beckham OBE (born May 2, 1975) is an English footballer born in Leytonstone, London. He is a midfielder for Real Madrid and captain of the English national team. He is noted for the quality of his crossing and ability to hit free-kicks and corners, particularly at long-range free-kicks and also for his marriage to a Spice Girl. He has played most of his career for Manchester United. Although there are arguably many better current players in world football none are as famous.Manchester United 1995-2003
Beckham first signed a YTS (youth training scheme) contract (this is similar to an apprenticeship) with United in 1991, and made his League debut in 1995, aged 19. The next year he helped the side to the Premiership and FA Cup trophies and to their dominance of domestic football. In the 1998-99 season, he was part of the United team that won the "treble" - Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League, a feat unprecedented in English football, which earned the club's manager, Alex Ferguson, a knighthood.
In total, Beckham scored 86 goals in 397 games for Man United, a rate of roughly 2 goals every 9 games, highly commendable for a midfielder.
Club Career
Real Madrid 2003-present
On June 17, 2003, Beckham signed a four-year contract with Real Madrid of Spain, potentially worth up to €35 million (£25 million, USD 41 million). Plus 2.
Apart from benefiting from his football ability, this transfer gives the Spanish club an opportunity to profit from merchandising, especially in the Far East, where Beckham is enormously popular, and Manchester United have until now had the lion's share of interest. It is probably no coincidence that Beckham was transferred just before Real started a far-eastern tour, but it would be very unfair to say that his marketing potential alone was the only reason for his transfer. At the time of the announcement of his transfer to Real Madrid, Beckham and his wife (Victoria) were on a week-long tour of Japan, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand promoting beauty products, chocolate, motor oil, and mobile phones, which it was reported would earn them more than the entire first year of his Real Madrid contract. (Western journalists are excluded from the Japanese "press conferences" organised by his sponsors because of the embarrassment they would cause him in the West.)
He successfully completed the transfer on July 1 and was presented with the squad number of 23 on July 2. He is believed to have chosen the number as a tribute to his idol, Michael Jordan, who made number 23 famous with the Chicago Bulls. Real Madrid shirts bearing his name and number were sold out in Madrid on the day his transfer was completed and Real Madrid were expected to receive €624,000 for the sale of the shirts.
His transfer to Real Madrid has proven very fruitful for both Beckham and the club. Beckham scored five times in his first 16 matches (including Real's 600th goal in the European Cup/Champions League, against Olympique Marseille on 26 November 2003), a higher scoring rate than his last year at Manchester United (11 goals in 52 games). He has become a favourite of the notoriously fickle Real Madrid crowd, and established an excellent playing relationship with Ronaldo.
During the summer of 2004, Real also signed Englishmen Michael Owen and Jonathan Woodgate.
International Career - England
By 1998 he was a regular international, and travelled with the England squad to the FIFA World Cup. In the second round of that competition he received a red-card for retaliation, following a foul challenge by the Argentine Diego Simeone. This act arguably cost England the game (which they lost on penalties) and the chance of advancing in the tournament. On returning home, Beckham became the target of criticism, sometimes justified (the accusation of petulance, for example) but much merely gratuitous. He received a similar vilification following his dismissal for a dangerous challenge in the World Club Championships the next year.
Following England's poor performance in the 2000 European Championship (from which Beckham was one of the few players to emerge with credit) and later poor performances, the departure of Kevin Keegan as manager saw Beckham promoted to captain, initially under caretaker manager Peter Taylor and maintained by Sven-Göran Eriksson. His leadership, mainly by example due to his fitness and workrate helped England to qualify for the 2002 World Cup Finals and the 1-5 defeat of Germany in Munich during a qualifier (a pivotal event for English football fans). The final step in Beckham's conversion from villain to hero happened in England's 2-2 draw against Greece. Needing only one point from the match in order to qualify for the World Cup, Beckham dragged an otherwise poor England side to qualification with sheer determination and a perfectly executed, last-minute free kick. Meanwhile, taking the role of captain seems to have helped mature him, in both skill and temperament.
Beckham played in all England's matches at Euro 2004, but failed to shine. He had his penalty saved by former Manchester United team-mate Fabien Barthez in his side's 2-1 defeat to France in their opening group game. Then, when England's Quarter-Final against hosts Portugal went to a penalty shootout, he was the first England player to attempt a shot. Beckham fired his shot far over the crossbar and England went on to lose the shoot-out 6-5 after Englishman Darius Vassell also missed. Beckham later blamed the miss on the poor state of the pitch, the British press blamed referee Urs Meier for the loss (he had earlier disallowed a contentious goal by Sol Campbell) even publishing his phone number and postal address.
The Spanish spectator who caught Beckham's miss put the ball up for auction on eBay España. eBay soon determined that virtually all of the bids, including one for €10million , were fake. When bidding closed on 22 July, the winning bid of €28,050 was made by the Canadian internet casino GoldenPalace.com, which announced that it plans to exhibit the ball around the world for charitable purposes.
Beckham's celebrity lifestyle
Beckham's highly publicised marriage to Spice Girl and media celebrity Victoria Adams, otherwise known as Posh Spice, has made them both popular targets for the tabloid press, which has dubbed the couple "Posh and Becks". They have two sons, Brooklyn, born March 4, 1999 and Romeo, born September 1, 2002, with a third child due to be born in March 2005. Beckham is well-known for his frequent hairstyle changes and has changed his hairstyle for many times after being criticised for influencing teenagers' hairstyle.
David Beckham is, according to the Google search engine, the most famous sports personality in the world, however the producers of The Simpsons decided that he wasn't famous enough to make a cameo appearance in an episode of the show set in London. He is also the most famous metrosexual.
However, he has become more well known in North America since the success of the British film Bend It Like Beckham. It is about a Sikh girl whose ambition is to be a football player because she can play like David Beckham.
In 2001, Beckham became the BBC Sports Personality of the Year. In the summer of 2003, Beckham was made an OBE in Queen Elizabeth II's honours list.
In May of 2003 Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson ordered David Beckham not to wear his hair band during matches. It has been speculated that he believed it to be too effeminate.
In April 2004, the British tabloid News of the World carried claims by his former personal assistant Rebecca Loos that he and Loos had had an extramarital affair. A week later, a second woman, Malaysian-born Australian model Sarah Marbeck, claimed that she had slept with Beckham on two occasions. Beckham has denied both allegations, describing them as "ludicrous".
In July of 2004, an intruder was arrested at David Beckham's home for scaling a wall with a can of gasoline. The Sun newspaper reported that the man appeared angry with Beckham and intended to burn down the house.
Transfer rumours
Near the end of the 2003-04 season, The Daily Telegraph of London reported that Beckham's major sponsors were trying to arrange for him to return to England for the 2004-05 season. Sources within the family told the Telegraph that Beckham would almost certainly be back in London. Real Madrid denied rumours that they were interested in selling Beckham, and banned British reporters from access to the team.
Because of the extremely high fee that Real Madrid Football team could command for a Beckham deal, and the fact that the other teams that could afford the fee, had financial constraints (Arsenal, Liverpool) or personality issues (Man U) that would have made a deal unlikely, speculation immediately focused on Chelsea, with its billionaire owner Roman Abramovich. Adding fuel to the rumours, Chelsea's manager at that time, Claudio Ranieri, told an Italian newspaper that the club was pursuing both Beckham and Ronaldo, and The Evening Standard of London reported that Chelsea was prepared to pay £40 million for Beckham.
However, on 20 May, Beckham, in a statement issued through his agent, quashed the transfer rumours, stating that he would see out the remaining three years of his contract in Madrid. He added that his wife and sons, who had yet to move to Spain, would join him there. In November 2004 it was reported that Real Madrid intended to offer Beckham a two-year extension to his contract, which would effectively keep him in Madrid for the remainder of his playing career.
Books
Beckham: Both Feet on the Ground: An Autobiography by David Beckham & Tom Watt (ISBN 0060570938)
Beckham: My World by David Beckham & Dean Freeman (ISBN 0340792701)
World's Most Expensive Hotels
It should come as no surprise that the world's richest man, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, has been to two of the world's most expensive hotels--Frégate Island Private in the Seychelles and Fiji's The Wakaya Club. It helps to be a billionaire (or at least a millionaire) to be able to afford a stay there.
For the past two years, Forbes.com has been tracking the most expensive hotel suites in the world, but this year we decided to do something slightly different. Instead of looking at the most expensive penthouses and presidential suites at a hotel--because they will always be the priciest--we looked at the most expensive hotels in the world, where rates start at $1,395, our benchmark. Our list ranges from the $1,395-a-night Little Palm Island in the Florida Keys to the most expensive hotel in the world, The Mansion at the MGM Grand (nyse: MGM - news - people ) in Las Vegas.
The hotels on our list have quite a few things in common, apart from the number of zeroes trailing on the price tag and Gates as a guest. The list is dominated by African game lodges and private island resorts in far flung locations, such as The Wakaya Club and Turtle Island in Fiji, and Frégate Island Private. The resorts' remote locations drive up the sticker price of a room, since all supplies must be flown in and many of the hotels have to generate their own electricity and water.
While jacking up prices is always a way to ensure exclusivity and create buzz, the formula works with the hotels on our list. The majority of these hotels continue to raise their prices each year, and seasonally as well. Turtle Island's high season rates start at $1,975 while low season rates start at (a mere) $1,646, which proves that values (and bargains) are in the eye of the beholder.
To put these prices in perspective, the worldwide average rate for a deluxe room in 2003--booked through American Express Corporate Travel--was $182. So what exactly are guests getting for $1,400, $2,000 or even $5,000 a night? Most of the resorts on the list are all inclusive, covering everything from food, expensive French wines, scuba diving and game drives to laundry service, which (when broken down) makes the room rate less outrageous. Guests are also paying a premium for privacy and location; many of the world's most expensive hotels, such as The Wakaya Club, have only a handful of villas and chances are rare guests will see another soul.
But at the world's most expensive hotel, The Mansion at the MGM Grand, the $5,000 price tag is simply for the room. Meals and alcohol are charged separately. What guests are getting for their money is plenty of space--the villas range from 2,400 to 12,000 square feet--as well as original Picassos on the walls, and the prestige that comes with being able to afford a room there.
The second most expensive hotel in the United States, Little Palm Island in the Florida Keys, has a similar pricing strategy. High season rates start at $1,395, and meals and activities are not included. But for San Diego resident Lynn Mercurio, 53, price is no object when it comes to luxury. Mercurio and her husband have been coming to Little Palm Island for ten years, and regularly spend about eight days there.
"We just want to go someplace where we can relax and shut down," she says. "I can't put a price on the value and the pleasure I get from returning there, and knowing that everything will be taken care of. The cost doesn't mean anything."
Mercurio says a main reason she returns to Little Palm each year is to "fall in love all over again" with her husband. While it's entirely possible to reconnect in a Sheraton, it's obviously much nicer (and more romantic) to be in a secluded resort with private beaches, 24-hour room service and oodles of space--as well as to be surrounded by a staff that never says no. Put another way, it's the difference between a vintage French champagne and a sparkling cider; they are both drinks but there's no comparison.
While the Little Palm is certainly expensive, it only ranks last on our list of most expensive hotels in the world. To compile the list, we looked at high season double room rates for each of these hotels, and indicated how the pricing system works (per person or per room). We did not include private island resorts such as Musha Cay in the Bahamas or Richard Branson's Necker Island, which can be rented in their entirety.
Christina Valhouli
The World's Most Expensive Hotel Rooms
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Who would be willing to spend that kind of money on a hotel room? While all of the 497 individuals on Forbes' 2002 list of the World's Richest People would consider $25,000 pocket change, it's a good bet that they didn't get to be billionaires being frivolous. To paraphrase the old saying: $25,000 here, $25,000 there, and soon you're talking real money.
According to the hotels on our list, the majority of the clients who book their top rooms are wealthy families in the middle of remodeling their homes, film companies and corporations. Of course, there are always stories of the random sheik, deposed dictator or pop star who stays in a $10,000 hotel room--for a month or two--but they are the exceptions.
In fact, as with all hotels, there is plenty of bargaining room (no pun intended). The family looking to spend a month or so will usually be able to negotiate a lower price, and companies can save by using a corporate rate. The numbers of people who actually pay full freight are rare. Billionaires also didn't get where they are by being suckers.
So what exactly do you get when you're spending between $5,000 and $25,000 for a hotel room, which is the range of our list? Space is the most obvious. All of the rooms on the list are huge, averaging more than 5,000 square feet, and that is not counting terraces and balconies--and the occasional private cinema. The other amenity is service. Most of these hotel rooms come with a personal butler or a chauffeured Rolls-Royce at your disposal. Those that do not have a butler or assistant on hand have an implied "anything you want" rule.
When looking at the list as a whole, the hotels in the $5,000-$6,000 range (in Hong Kong, London and Las Vegas) seem like a relative bargain compared with the priciest (New York, Cannes and Rome). Of course, if you want to rationalize the expenditure you could say that the rooms topping the list are a good value: The Martinez Hotel in Cannes comes out to 44 cents a square foot, while the Ciragan Palace Hotel Kempinski is 66 cents a square foot. Anyone, even a billionaire, can afford that.
Christina Valhouli