
Airbnb guest bewildered by missing detail in luxury pad: ‘We've been ripped off'
It was too good to be true.
Nothing is worse than being excited for a trip, arriving and then discovering that the pictures of where you planned to stay were nicer than the real thing. Unfortunately, that's exactly what happened to a model and her friend.
Pilar Sarrión booked what she thought was a luxury short-term vacation rental in Barcelona, Spain, with promised views of the city's cathedral, according to What's The Jam.
3 Pilar Sarrión thought she had booked a luxury vacation rental.
Jam Press/@pilarsarrion
Upon arriving at their destination, Sarrión, who is from Madrid, and her friend were beyond stunned at the scam they fell for.
When the friends ventured out to the apartment's patio, they were shocked to find that the supposed stunning views of the city's Cathedral of the Holy Cross and Saint Eulalia they were expecting, were a measly cardboard print.
3 The cardboard print of the promised view.
Jam Press/@pilarsarrion
The fashion model took to TikTok to share their unexpected experience.
'We've been ripped off by Airbnb,' Sarrión said in the video.
While laughing, she's heard in the video asking her friend, 'How much are you paying per night?'
$568 a night,' her friend joked.
The video has garnered over 2 million views, with people in the comment section just as horrified as the friends were.
'I'll rent you my place in Getafe, it has views of the Eiffel Tower,' teased a commenter.
3 The two friends posing in front of their 'view.'
Jam Press/@pilarsarrion
'They never said it was going to be the real cathedral…' a comment read.
'$568 a night for an Airbnb? Isn't it better to stay in a good hotel?' one person asked.
In another video, the content creator clarified that they were kidding about the expensive nightly rate. 'Of course, we didn't pay $568 a night. We were joking, we didn't think the video would go viral.'
Sadly, this isn't the first time a person has gotten scammed by being promised a good view when traveling.
A flight attendant named Angela Ruth Strong traveled to Mexico with colleagues, as reported by Jam Press.
Her coworkers raved that they were all staying in one of the best hotels.
'This was my first overnight in the city, and another flight attendant had told me that it [the unnamed hotel] was one of her favorites,' the crew member.
However, when Strong arrived at this hotel, she quickly learned that her alleged skyline view was actually a print on a shade.
'I think I was more entertained than anything, and I had to share,' the flight attendant said, referring to her posting about it on social media.

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USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
'I am exactly who God made': Why travel is a battleground for drag and trans performers
'I am exactly who God made': Why travel is a battleground for drag and trans performers Show Caption Hide Caption Hunter Schafer says passport now lists sex assigned at birth Hunter Schafer, a prominent trans actress and model, warned TikTok followers against complacency, saying her passport sex had been changed to "male." Transgender drag performers Aja, Bosco and Kerri Colby face difficulties and anxieties when traveling internationally due to gender marker discrepancies on passports. They view these difficulties as systemic erasure and part of a larger political attack on the trans community. Despite the hardships, these performers find power and purpose in their visibility and advocacy for the trans community. When Aja, a transgender drag icon and RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 10 contestant, books an international gig, the logistics go far beyond packing wigs and rhinestones. There's also the mental checklist: Is her passport up to date? Where is she least likely to encounter an issue if she has a layover? Could she get detained at the airport? Will her female gender marker cause extra headaches at the Transportation Security Administration checkpoint? 'I've had to cancel international gigs because I can't travel without risking being detained or harassed,' Aja told USA TODAY. 'This isn't just about me – it affects trans people across the country, especially those without a platform.' That fear isn't unfounded. In recent months, trans and nonbinary travelers have faced delays and outright denials from the U.S. State Department when trying to update gender markers on their passports, even when their other legal documents are in order. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, these delays disproportionately affect trans people trying to work, travel or simply exist safely across borders. Even though Aja's current passport and identification documents match her gender identity, she was still denied a passport renewal with a female marker, she said. 'Basically, (the State Department) was calling my documents fraudulent and, you know, after I've gone through the trouble of updating all of them to what visibly makes sense, what do you think that says about our government making this arbitrary decision that puts my life at risk?' 'When your basic right to move freely is denied, it's a message: 'You don't belong here.' It's bigger than bureaucracy. It's systemic erasure,' she added. A scarlet letter in your passport Bosco, another fan favorite contestant in All Stars 10, put it bluntly. 'I've navigated international tours with a male marker on my passport before,' she said. 'It's not ideal and it really, really will gum up the process … I could get detained if we have certain stop-offs and layovers.' For trans performers like Aja, Bosco and Kerri Colby, the freedom to move – the lifeblood of any performing artist – is increasingly under attack. Travel, once a means to connect with international fans and grow their careers, now has an additional level of scrutiny from their own country. 'It just complicates everything,' Bosco added. 'And then it just feels like a scarlet letter… It's simply just to discourage people from transitioning and to create more legal barriers.' Kerri Colby describes it as psychological warfare. 'It's more about that feeling of dread just walking into an airport… having that fear flood you of, like, 'am I going to be able to get back in? Am I even going to make it home?'' Even those who haven't faced passport issues understand the emotional toll. 'Collectively, we all have to tap into our intuition,' Kerri said. 'We have to be very careful, but I also don't think it's right that (when) entering spaces when we're traveling and working, our first thought is fight or flight or fear. And then the second thought is, like, 'OK. Made it through TSA. This time I'm OK. I got that F on my passport.' There shouldn't be so much fear.' A State Department spokesperson confirmed to USA TODAY that it would issue passports "in the applicant's biological sex at birth" but did not respond to questions about what happens to individuals who legally change their birth certificates to match their identities. "The White House Executive Order 'Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government' states that it is the policy of the United States to acknowledge only two sexes: male and female," the spokesperson continued in an emailed statement. "It directs that U.S. government identity documents, including passports and visas, must reflect the individual's sex as defined in the Executive Order." Drag as political resistance These challenges come amid a broader climate of anti-trans legislation and rhetoric that has made drag itself a political scapegoat. 'The rhetoric has just been so poisonous against trans people for the past year,' Bosco said. For many trans performers, drag is not just art, it's a lifeline for themselves and others. 'My drag has become a protest,' Aja said. 'I used to try to blend in more, but now I wear things that scream, 'I'm trans, I'm powerful and I'm here.'' All three performers spoke about how being visible in drag and in media has become a form of resistance. 'You don't have to approve of who I am or what I do,' Kerri said when asked what she would like to say to lawmakers and institutions. 'But at the end of the day, I am an American citizen. I am a human being and you can't take that away from me. You can't legislate that away from me.' Community as survival What makes the drag community powerful and resilient is not just its cultural impact, but the way it sustains itself, especially in times of crisis. 'Without our community, I don't think I would be making it right now,' Kerri said. 'I go to Thanksgiving. I'm not gonna see anyone with my last name, but I'm gonna be in a room with nothing but complete family.' Bosco said there's not enough political action focused on defending trans lives, even as society often depends on the queer community for the creation of many aspects of its broader culture. Still, the struggle is undeniable. 'We're not fighting for anything else but our ability to basically breathe,' Kerri said. 'And I think that's crazy.' The power of being seen Despite the barriers, each of these performers holds onto the joy of visibility. It's not about fame, it's about impact. 'When people say they saw me and it helped them live more authentically? That's power,' Aja said. Bosco agreed. 'It feels very full circle to be able to provide that for someone else now. It's healing.' Whether on tour in Europe, walking through TSA, or taking the spotlight in a packed ballroom, these queens carry more than costumes – they carry entire communities, histories and futures on their shoulders. 'I am exactly who God made me to be and no one can do anything about that,' Kerri said. You can watch Aja, Bosco and Kerri on RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 10 on Paramount+ with new episodes every Friday. Contributing: Kathleen Wong, USA TODAY
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
She Thought Her Best Friend Came Over to Hang Out. Then She Played Her Own Funeral Montage (Exclusive)
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The moment, which was captured in a TikTok clip that quickly went viral, showed Alexis hitting play on her carefully curated farewell video. The caption read: 'Having a morbid best friend who works in funeral and cemetery services is not for the weak.' For Alexis, who's spent over six years in the cemetery and funeral industry, this kind of planning is second nature. 'I've always just been a little morbid and creepy myself,' she admits, adding that her Mexican-American upbringing helped her embrace death rather than fear it. Their friendship, Jasmine says, has always felt fated. 'We've always been kind of connected,' she shares. 'Like we were meant to meet. We would have met somehow.' The inspiration for Alexis's montage came after Jasmine's cousin's motorcycle accident left everyone unprepared for the worst. 'He's a young man, so he had no will, he had no nothing,' Alexis says. 'That was one of the questions I was asking: does he have anything like a power of attorney? Who's making the decisions here?' Thankfully, he didn't die, but that experience, along with the loss of another relative, motivated Alexis to take control of her own story. 'I'm really particular, and I don't trust anybody to do things the way that I want to do it,' she says. 'If this happens to me, you make sure I'm right. Don't have me looking all crazy with two different-shaped eyebrows. I got to have my nails done. I want a specific color of flowers.' She laughs about wanting only the 'hottest photos' in her montage, but her motivation is deeply practical. 'By pre-planning and getting your affairs in order and even doing stuff like this, you're unburdening your family from having to do this,' Alexis explains. 'I've been in this situation where I've had to put this together at the time of somebody's passing, and you're just miserable.' Jasmine remembers the night vividly. 'She comes over to my house with a laptop and says, 'I need to screen play onto your TV.' I'm like, 'what did you do?' And she's like, 'I made my funeral montage.' I was like, girl, get this out of my house.' But Alexis insisted, and soon the video was playing — sad music, special montages for Jasmine's kids and all. The tears came quickly, but so did the laughter. 'We were both crying watching it. I'm right here, what am I doing?' Jasmine says. 'They're looking at us like, what's the matter with you guys?' For Alexis, humor and honesty are essential parts of coping with life's hardest moments. 'I just want everybody to be miserable without me,' she jokes, but she also wants her loved ones to have something to smile about when the time comes. The TikTok's success was a surprise to both. Jasmine originally posted it to her private Instagram, thinking it was just another silly video between friends. 'It just so happened to go viral,' she says. 'At the time, I wasn't thinking about that. But I was like, let me show all the people that follow me what this dummy's up to today. Because it's always something with her.' The internet's reaction was immediate and divided. Some people worried Alexis was 'manifesting' her own death, while others praised her for being so prepared. 'What's the difference between doing this and making a will?' Jasmine says. 'You're not manifesting your own demise. You're just being prepared.' Alexis's approach to death — and life — has even changed Jasmine's perspective. 'I used to be super afraid of death. Like, don't even talk about it,' Jasmine admits. 'But being friends with her, going through my own medical traumas and things, I've learned to cope with it through comedy, laughing, and accepting it. We all know we're going to pay taxes, and we're all going to die. None of us know when.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Their friendship, Jasmine says, is built on honesty, laughter and a willingness to tackle even the toughest topics together. 'If you have people in your life that care for you the way we care for each other, hold on to them. Say sorry when you mess up,' Alexis says. 'Nothing's ever that serious in life. Even death isn't that serious.' Every detail of Alexis's final wishes is planned out — from who gets her favorite Darth Maul t-shirt to the color of her funeral flowers. 'I have my power of attorney. I have my last will. It literally goes down to the t-shirts that I have,' she says. 'This is the last time I'm going to see that video because I won't be there when they play it.' Read the original article on People


News24
4 hours ago
- News24
From AI-powered public health breakthroughs to smarter social media feeds and reimagined fast food – the cutting-edge tech reshaping our world
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The Open Buildings dataset, including tutorials and its new 2.5D visualisation layer, is freely available at OPPO Watch X2 Lands in South Africa: Smarter Health, Smarter Life OPPO has launched its most advanced smartwatch yet, the OPPO Watch X2 designed for South Africans who want seamless health tracking, fitness features, and lasting battery life, all in one premium device. The Watch X2 brings a sleek stainless steel body, a sapphire crystal glass display, and military-grade durability. Built for the boardroom, gym and hiking trail, it offers a 60-second health scan at the tap of a button, tracking heart rate, blood oxygen, arterial stiffness, and stress in real time. For active users, there are 100+ workout modes, including badminton and tennis tracking, plus dual-frequency GPS for pinpoint outdoor performance. Supplied The Watch X2's sleep tracking is also a standout, offering insights into sleep quality and breathing patterns synced to OPPO's OHealth app. Inside, the Watch X2 is powered by a dual-chip architecture and offers up to 5 days of battery life, with 24 hours of use from a 10-minute charge. It runs Wear OS by Google, supporting Google Assistant, Maps, Wallet, and third-party apps via Google Play. Our mission is to empower South Africans to take charge of their health, time and ambitions says Bradley Young, OPPO Available from 20 June in Lava Black for R6999, the OPPO Watch X2 delivers a smart, stylish companion ready for whatever life throws at you. The Nintendo Switch 2 launches in SA Nintendo Switch 2 officially lands in South Africa, bringing with it a brand-new Mario Kart experience, improved hardware, and a fresh wave of more than 20 game titles ready to play. Nintendo Switch 2 offers a bigger 7.9' HD screen, upgraded graphics, 256GB of storage, and smart new features like GameChat, letting up to 12 friends chat live while playing even across different locations. There's also CameraPlay, which lets players video chat in-game using a USB-C camera which is sold separately. The headline game, Mario Kart World, is the biggest Mario Kart to date. Players can now race with up to 24 drivers in huge, open racing environments. It also introduces Free Roam mode and Knockout Tour, where the slowest drivers are eliminated at each checkpoint. Supplied The Switch 2 launch lineup includes Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition, Street Fighter™ 6, SPLIT FICTION, and a new Nintendo GameCube – Classics library. There's also a Switch 2 + Mario Kart World Bundle available in stores and online. Whether you're racing with friends, exploring new missions solo, or catching up on your favourite franchises in 4K, Nintendo Switch 2 is designed for more powerful play—anytime, anywhere. More info at Tech and Ideas Take Centre Stage at Singularity South Africa Summit 2025 Africa's future will be front and centre this October as the SingularityU South Africa Summit returns to the Sandton Convention Centre on 22–23 October 2025. Now in its seventh year, the annual event brings together leading voices in technology, business and innovation to explore how exponential tech can unlock progress across the continent. With the theme Igniting Africa's Future, this year's summit will feature two physical stages, immersive workshops, a premium expo and networking sessions, plus a fully interactive metaverse experience via local platform UBU. Over 30 global and local speakers are expected, covering everything from AI and robotics to spatial computing, health tech and leadership. Confirmed speakers include biotech trailblazer Tiffany Vora, disruption expert David Roberts, and AI pioneer Vukosi Marikate of Lelapa AI, alongside innovation leaders shaping everything from future cities to accessible healthcare. Backed by headline sponsor Old Mutual, the event is focused on real-world impact. 'We're backing technology that improves lives and builds long-term opportunity,' says Old Mutual's Celiwe Ross. In-person and metaverse ticket sales are now open, with early bird prices available until 1 June. Visit for more details. JAWS Turns 50: Spielberg and National Geographic Dive Deep into a Cinematic Classic This July, National Geographic and Disney+ South Africa are making waves with the premiere of JAWS @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story, the only authorised documentary marking the 50th anniversary of Jaws, the blockbuster that redefined cinema and sparked decades of shark fascination. Supplied Premiering Sunday 13 July at 21:00 CAT on National Geographic (DStv 181) and later on National Geographic Wild and Disney+, this 90-minute film gives fans and cinephiles unprecedented access to the making of Jaws. Directed by Laurent Bouzereau (Faye, Music by John Williams), the film features never-before-seen footage from Steven Spielberg's personal archive, as well as brand-new interviews with Spielberg, the original cast, and some of Hollywood's top directors including James Cameron, J.J. Abrams, Guillermo del Toro, and Jordan Peele. Supplied Expect candid stories from malfunctioning sharks to Spielberg's post-production stress that reveal just how risky and revolutionary the production was. The documentary also reflects on the cultural impact of Jaws, from its controversial 'shark fear' legacy to its influence on marine conservation, with commentary from scientists and ocean advocates like Wendy Benchley and Philippe Cousteau. This isn't just a behind-the-scenes doc, it's a celebration of a film that changed everything. XLink Crowned Africa's Top Tech Company South African fintech leader XLink won Technology Company of the Year at the 2025 Africa Tech Week Awards. Recognized for innovation in payments and connectivity, the PASA-certified firm bridges financial access gaps across Africa. 'We're unlocking Supplied futures, not just connecting businesses,' said CEO Dr. Thanusha Govender. The award cements XLink's role in shaping Africa's digital economy through secure, agile solutions. Zoho Targets SA Solopreneurs with New App Zoho reported 35% South African growth and launched Zoho Solo, a mobile app for freelancers. The all-in-one platform handles invoicing, tasks and expenses, with features like real-time profit tracking. Solo understands solopreneurs' unique needs Andrew Bourne, Zoho Africa Priced from R99/month, it joins Zoho's expanding local offerings amid rising demand for AI-powered business tools. Salesforce Showcases AI Workforce in Joburg Salesforce's Agentforce Tour hit Johannesburg, demonstrating AI's role in modern business. The event highlighted how enterprises use AI agents to automate tasks and boost efficiency. This is the biggest tech shift of our time Linda Saunders, Salesforce Africa With 5,000+ recent contracts, Agentforce signals AI's growing impact on Africa's digital workforce. Supplied Beyond expert-led sessions, attendees at the Salesforce Agentforce World Tour Johannesburg will gain hands-on experience in building AI agents and explore the broader Salesforce ecosystem through networking with peers, industry leaders, and Trailblazers. They'll hear firsthand how South African brands are using Salesforce to strengthen customer relationships and drive productivity. Salesforce executives will also share insights on key cloud and AI trends, alongside the company's growth plans for Africa. A special media roundtable will feature Robin Fisher, Linda Saunders, and Ursula Fear, offering a closer look at Salesforce's vision and the future of AI across the region.