
France to loan iconic Bayeux tapestry to London's British Museum
23/05/2025
Cara Delevingne: 'Women who resist inspire me'
France
21/05/2025
What's forbidden on the red carpet at Cannes Festival
France
20/05/2025
Cannes Festival: Behind the scenes of a press junket
France
18/05/2025
Austria's JJ wins Eurovision 2025 with opera-techno fusion
Culture
18/05/2025
Inside Eurovision : An insider's guide with Eurovision podcaster Charlie Sohne
Culture
17/05/2025
Werenoi, best-selling artist in 2023 and 2024 in France, dies at the age of 31
Culture
17/05/2025
Harvard thought it had a cheap copy of the Magna Carta. It turned out to be an original.
Culture
17/05/2025
Lights, camera, action: Eurovision reaches its grand final
Culture
13/05/2025
Who is Juliette Binoche, the head of the 2025 Cannes Festival's jury?
Culture
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
9 hours ago
- France 24
Rare 'Hobbit' first edition auctioned for £43,000
Purchased by a private collector in the United Kingdom, the book is one of 1,500 original copies of the British author's seminal fantasy novel that were published in 1937. Of those, only "a few hundred are believed to still remain", according to the auction house Auctioneum, which discovered the book on an bookcase at a home in Bristol. Bidders from around the world drove the price up by more than four times what the auction house expected for the manuscript. "It's a wonderful result, for a very special book," said Auctioneum rare books specialist Caitlin Riley. "The surviving books from the initial print run are now considered some of the most sought-after books in modern literature," Auctioneum said in a statement. Auctioneum unearthed the book during a routine house clearance after its owner passed away. "Nobody knew it was there," Riley said. "It was just a run-of-the-mill bookcase." "It was clearly an early Hobbit at first glance, so I just pulled it out and began to flick through it, never expecting it to be a true first edition," she said. "I couldn't believe my eyes," she added, calling it an "unimaginably rare find". The copy is bound in light green cloth and features rare black-and-white illustrations by Tolkien, who created his beloved Middle Earth universe while he was a professor at the University of Oxford. The book was passed down in the family library of Hubert Priestley, a botanist connected to the university. "It is likely that both men knew each other," according to Auctioneum, which said Priestley and Tolkien shared mutual correspondence with author C.S. Lewis, who was also at Oxford. "The Hobbit", which was followed by the epic series "The Lord of the Rings", has sold more than 100 million copies worldwide. The sagas were turned into a hit movie franchise in the 2000s. A first edition of "The Hobbit" with a handwritten note in Elvish by the author sold for £137,000 at Sotheby's in June 2015.


France 24
2 days ago
- France 24
Gen Z shift, high costs force UK nightclubs to reinvent
Pryzm Kingston is a well-known club in southwest London popular with students, where artists like Billie Eilish, Rod Stewart, and Stormzy have performed. But the converted cinema closed its doors for renovation last month, with its owners saying it was time to "look to the future and reimagine this venue for the next generation of partygoers." It will be transformed into a smaller club and a dance bar -- "creating venues that reflect what people are looking for now," they added. Many other British clubs are also trying to re-adjust after around a third of them, about 400 venues, have shut down since 2020, according to the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA). "Whilst nightclubs were in gentle decline prior to Covid, the pandemic profoundly accelerated things," Tony Rigg, a music industry consultant, told AFP, noting that the cost-of-living crisis had sent bills and rents soaring. As the first pints of the evening were poured in central London, 26-year-old account manager Conor Nugent told AFP he only goes clubbing for "special occasions," after asking himself "if it's really worth it." Like 68 percent of 18-to-30-year-olds, the Londoner has cut back on nights out for financial reasons and prefers to save up for concerts and events. Rigg pointed out that Covid-19 caused a "cultural shift" among Gen Z — those born between 1997 and 2012 — who generally drink less alcohol and largely miss out on the "rite of passage of going out, experiencing clubs and learning some social behaviours." Lure of Paris, Berlin Rekom UK, the company behind iconic clubs like Pryzm and Atik, filed for bankruptcy in 2024, shutting down 17 venues across the country, citing multiple pressures. About 20 others, including Kingston, were acquired by Neos Hospitality, which decided to convert some into dance bars or host alcohol-free events. "The sector has to evolve otherwise it will become obsolete," Rigg acknowledged. To stop hemorrhaging party-seekers lured by Berlin or Paris, London Mayor Sadiq Khan launched an independent working group called the "Nightlife Taskforce," which is set to publish a report later this year. "One of the reasons why people love London is our nightlife, our culture," Khan told AFP. "When I speak to mayors in Paris, in New York and Tokyo, I'm jealous of the powers they have" especially on licensing issues, he said, adding he was looking at other cities like Paris "with envy" as it enjoys a nighttime boom. He was granted approval in March to overrule certain local authorities who had forced pubs, restaurants, concert halls, and nightclubs to close early. The government has also announced plans to change regulations to support nightlife venues in certain areas. "Sadly, in the UK, we struggle with reputational issues and a narrative that makes (clubbing) more of a counterculture element rather than a real economic and cultural driver," NTIA head Michael Kill, who advocates for greater recognition of electronic music and club culture, told AFP. The night-time sector contributes a vital £153 billion ($203 billion) a year to the UK economy, employing around two million people, according to NTIA. And with London still enjoying a long, well-established reputation, all is not lost. The capital remains an "exciting" city, 25-year-old Carys Bromley who recently moved to London from the island of Guernsey, told AFP. "There's a lot of parties, clubs, and a big nightlife. The places stay open longer, it's busier, a bit more wild," she said.


Le Figaro
2 days ago
- Le Figaro
Last Man Down
The Last Man on Earth - VF - Diffusé le 27/09/18 à 07h05 sur CANAL +