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I Just Spit Out My Sugar Free Red Bull Cackling At These Complete Strangers Who Came Out Of Nowhere With The Funniest Possible Reply To A Random Comment

I Just Spit Out My Sugar Free Red Bull Cackling At These Complete Strangers Who Came Out Of Nowhere With The Funniest Possible Reply To A Random Comment

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The World's Best Hotels for Music Lovers
The World's Best Hotels for Music Lovers

Condé Nast Traveler

time5 hours ago

  • Condé Nast Traveler

The World's Best Hotels for Music Lovers

Music isn't just something we stream—it's something we seek out. In an era where live experiences are more coveted than ever, travelers are chasing sound in all forms: flying to Europe to catch Taylor Swift on the cheap, crisscrossing the country to see Dead & Co. on their (latest) farewell tour, or mapping out itineraries around festivals, crate-digging sessions, or that perfect late-night set. Gig tripping may be a deemed a recent trend, but fans have been doing this for decades. Hotels have taken note. Music programming is becoming more intentional, and properties are investing in everything from intimate performance spaces and analog listening rooms to in-house vinyl libraries. Some are designed around musical eras, with suites named for opera characters; others curate playlists to pair with tasting menus. I get the appeal. My first job out of college was at an indie rock magazine. I married a former music writer and DJ, and together we've amassed a vinyl collection in the thousands. We even produced a toddler so into music that we've built entire vacations around exposing him to new instruments and genres (sitar in India, qanun in Saudi Arabia, and dancehall in Jamaica). What follows are 10 hotels where music isn't just background noise—it's the whole reason to book. Our top picks: Best for shredding in your suite with a borrowed Fender: Hotel Ziggy Best for grunge pilgrims and indie rock fans: Hotel Crocodile Best for classical connoisseurs: Schloss Elmau

Country singer Bill Anderson, 87, cancels Grand Ole Opry show after ‘freak accident'
Country singer Bill Anderson, 87, cancels Grand Ole Opry show after ‘freak accident'

New York Post

time9 hours ago

  • New York Post

Country singer Bill Anderson, 87, cancels Grand Ole Opry show after ‘freak accident'

Bill Anderson is recovering after a 'freak accident' forced him to abruptly cancel his performance at the Grand Ole Opry on Saturday, Aug. 16. The country crooner, 87, who earned the nickname 'Whispering Bill' for his soft-spoken tone, opened up about the incident on his personal website on Monday, Aug. 18. 'I appreciate your concern, but I'm here to let you know I'm doing fine. It was a freak accident where I simply twisted or tore some ligaments or muscles or something in the back of my left leg trying to climb into bed, and I fell to the floor unable to walk,' Anderson explained. 9 Bill Anderson attends the 57th Annual CMA Awards at Bridgestone Arena on November 08, 2023 in Nashville, Tennessee. FilmMagic, Telling his fans he was 'in excruciating pain,' the legendary singer revealed it wasn't just his Opry show that he missed out on due to his injury. '[I] had to cancel a songwriting appointment with T. Graham Brown on Friday, the Opry on Saturday, and an appearance at the State Fair for WSM on Sunday,' he added. 'If you know me, you know how much it bothers me to go back on any commitment I may have made.' The Country Music Hall of Famer said he's on the mend, 'thanks to a bunch of ice packs and pain pills.' 'I'm feeling much better today, and hopefully this will all be behind me shortly. Thanks for your thoughts and prayers and most of all for caring,' he concluded. 9 Bill Anderson at Universal Music Group's GRAMMYS after party celebration at Milk Studios Los Angeles on February 05, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images 9 Bill Anderson's statement explaining the cancellation of his Grand Ole Opry appearance. Anderson was supposed to appear alongside Brown, Jordan Davis, Wyatt Ellis, Kylie Morgan, Don Schlitz, Monte Warden and the Opry Square Dancers over the weekend at the famed Nashville venue. The 'Still' singer recently became the longest-serving member of the Grand Ole Opry, celebrating 64 years as part of the iconic venue. Anderson is considered a pioneer of the country subgenre of talk-singing. 9 Bill Anderson performing at the Grand Ole Opry on June 3, 2025. MBS/MEGA 9 Bill Anderson at the 50th Annual CMA Awards, hosted by Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood, at the Bridgestone Arena. Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images The singer-songwriter was a fixture in the country TV scene from the 60s to 80s, hosting various shows while remaining a staple on the radio. In September 2024, Anderson released his EP, 'Forevermore.' On song, in particular, 'The Last One I'll Forget,' has lyrics about a man who's living out his final years and reflecting on the love of his life. 9 Grand Ole Opry members performing onstage at Jeannie Seely's 5,398th Opry Show in August 2025. Getty Images 9 Louise Mandrell, Larry Gatlin, Becky Isaacs, Jamie Dailey, Bill Anderson, Ricky Skaggs and Rhonda Vincent perform onstage at Jeannie Seely's 5,398th Opry Show: A Public Celebration of Life at Grand Ole Opry House on August 14, 2025. Getty Images 'I wrote the lyric by visualizing myself as a man in his final years making sure he clearly communicated his everlasting and undying love for the woman who had been, 'the best part of my years,'' he told People at the time. Anderson was married twice during his lifetime. He wed his first wife, Bette, in 1959, but they divorced 10 years later, with the country star revealing she never understood the music business. Bette died in 2010. 9 Jeannie Seely and Bill Anderson perform on stage during the Grand Ole Opry's 5000th Show at The Grand Ole Opry on October 30, 2021. Getty Images Anderson's second wife was named Becky, whom he married in the '70s. She suffered permanent brain damage in 1984 after a drunk driver smashed into her vehicle. In 1986, Anderson and Becky were awarded $1.2 million in damages after taking the drunk driver to court. The pair divorced around 1997. The singer later moved on to his guitar player's ex-wife, Vickie Salas. She passed away in 2019 at age 66 after losing her battle with cancer. 9 Ricky Skaggs and Bill Anderson perform at the Grand Ole Opry in June 2025. MBS/MEGA Anderson opened up about their 12-year relationship after her death, calling their time together 'very short' and 'very wonderful.' 'We never married, we never lived together, but she became my everything from that moment forward,' he said. 'It wasn't supposed to be this way. She was 15 years younger than me. The roles were supposed to have been reversed. She was supposed to be sitting at the side of MY bed feeding ME soup and ice cream, not the other way around,' Anderson continued. 'I have a lot of faith and I believe God's hand is in everything that happens in this old world, BUT … The first thing I'm going to do when I get to Heaven is ask Him to explain this one to me. Because right now, I just don't understand.'

Joe Caroff, who gave James Bond his signature 007 logo, dies at 103
Joe Caroff, who gave James Bond his signature 007 logo, dies at 103

Boston Globe

time12 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Joe Caroff, who gave James Bond his signature 007 logo, dies at 103

Advertisement For the first Bond movie, 'Dr. No' (1962), Mr. Caroff was hired to create a logo for the letterhead of a publicity release. He began working with the idea that as a secret agent, the Bond character combined lethality with little remorse, but Mr. Caroff did not find Bond's compact Walther PPK pistol to be visually appealing. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up As he sketched the numerals 007, he drew penciled lines above and below to guide him and noticed that the upper guideline resembled an elongated barrel of a pistol extending from the seven. He refined his drawing and added a trigger, fashioning a mood of intrigue and espionage and crafting one of the most globally recognized symbols in cinematic history. With some modifications, the logo has been used for 25 official Bond films and endless merchandising. Advertisement 'I knew that 007 meant license to kill; that, I think, at an unconscious level, was the reason I knew the gun had to be in the logo,' he said in a 2022 documentary, 'By Design: The Joe Caroff Story.' Mark Cerulli, who directed the documentary, said in a recent interview that the logo was a 'marvel of simplicity that telegraphs everything you would want to know about 007.' The going rate for a letterhead logo was $300 at the time, profit-sharing and film credits not included. 'My only regrets are that they never paid any royalties for any of these things that were done in those days,' Phyllis Caroff, Joe's wife, said in the documentary. 'We would have been rich.' But Mr. Caroff, who received a 007-engraved watch from the Bond producers on his 100th birthday, did not appear to be a sentimentalist. Thilo von Debschitz, a German designer, wrote in a 2021 profile in EYE magazine that Mr. Caroff viewed himself as a 'service provider' in working with associates to create more than 300 movie posters, keeping none of them in his Manhattan apartment. 'Time is a constant motion,' Mr. Caroff said in the article. New York City resonated in some of his most renowned work. He drew inspiration from his neighborhood to create the movie poster for 'West Side Story' (1961), scuffing the lettering to suggest rugged brick and perching balletic dancers on fire escapes. For a 1979 Woody Allen movie, the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building, the twin towers of the World Trade Center, and the Citicorp (now Citigroup) Center formed a clever skyline of letters that spelled 'Manhattan' on a black-and-white poster. Advertisement Joseph Caroff was born Aug. 18, 1921, in Roselle, N.J.. His parents were Jewish immigrants from what is now Belarus. His father, Julius Caroff, was a painter and his mother Fanny (Sack) Caroff ran the household for six children. When Joseph was 4, a friend stopped by one day with a watercolor set. Fascinated, he began painting designs on a white summer suit that he was wearing for a family trip. 'That's when I knew I wanted to be an artist,' he said in 'By Design.' While attending the Pratt Institute, he became an assistant in the Manhattan office of Jean Carlu, a prominent French poster designer who had lost his right arm in an accident. In 1942, Mr. Caroff helped create a famous propaganda poster with the exhortation: 'America's answer! Production,' which featured a gloved hand using a wrench to turn a bolt-like 'O.' After serving overseas in the Army Air Forces during World War II, he returned to New York, was hired, and then fired by a design firm and went into business for himself, designing sample book jackets that his wife showed to various publishers. His first assignment, at age 27, came in 1948 for a first-time novelist, Mailer, who was 25. For the cover of 'The Naked and the Dead,' a classic about the toll of war, Mr. Caroff, using the name Joseph Karov, drew a haunted figure with a thousand-yard stare and a suggestion of disordered thoughts circling his head like electrons randomly orbiting the nucleus of an atom. His movie posters could be more playful. In an era of graphic puns, his poster for 'A Hard Day's Night' (1964) featured a guitar neck tied into a knot, perhaps signaling young fans' convulsive delight in the Beatles. For a 1967 black comedy, 'Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad,' he portrayed Dad folded like a pair of pants on a hanger. Advertisement Mr. Caroff spoke of the 'annihilation of the extraneous' in extracting the essential in his work. He deftly wove the lowercase abc network logo with interlocking Olympic rings when it broadcast the Summer and Winter Games in the 1980s. The title sequence and poster for 'The Last Temptation of Christ' (1988) featured a crown of thorns set against a blood-red background. For another Allen movie, about a chameleonlike character, the poster repeated the title 'Zelig' (1983) with different font styles. To depict the dance-hall grittiness and hedonism of Weimar Berlin, he placed the likeness of Liza Minnelli atop a vertical marquee in 'Cabaret' (1972). He created the seductive lettering for the poster for 'Last Tango in Paris' (1972) and futuristic lettering that resembled skates for 'Rollerball' (1975). In addition to his sons, Mr. Caroff leaves a granddaughter. His wife Phyllis (Friedman) Caroff, a longtime professor at the Hunter College School of Social Work, died in February. They were married for 81 years. When he saw his designs in public, he sometimes thought to himself, 'I did that,' but modesty, Mr. Caroff said, mostly prevented him from telling others about his work. 'I never made a big thing of it,' he said in 'By Design.' 'It was a job, I wanted to get it done. I always met my deadlines.' This article originally appeared in Advertisement

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