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A giant sculpture of Gandalf riding an eagle departs Wellington airport for good

A giant sculpture of Gandalf riding an eagle departs Wellington airport for good

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — For more than a decade, passengers at New Zealand 's Wellington Airport have boarded flights below the figures of two giant, hovering eagles from the Hobbit films, one bearing a bellowing wizard Gandalf.
With 50-foot (15-meter) wingspans and weighing 2,600 pounds (1.1 ton) each, the sculptures that hover in the terminal have delighted tourists and scared children since 2013. Their tenure was eventful — one became unmoored from its fixings during a severe earthquake in 2016, and plummeted onto the terminal floor below. No one was hurt.
But this month the majestic creatures, which underscore the capital city's connection to Peter Jackson 's 'Lord of the Rings' and Hobbit films, will depart the terminal for good, Wellington Airport announced Monday.
'It's been quite a Lord of the Rings-heavy storytelling theme in here,' said airport chief executive Matt Clarke. 'Now we're looking to change that to something new.'
'It breaks my heart,' said one traveler, Verity Johnson, who sat beneath a grasping eagle claw in the food court on Monday. The sculptures had impressed her since she was young. 'Please, please reconsider.'
'Taking them away is un-New Zealand,' joked another airport visitor, Michael Parks.
The eagles were crafted by the film props and effects company Wētā Workshop, which created tens of thousands of props for the Oscar-winning fantasy films directed by Jackson -- one of Wellington's best-known residents, who lives on an isthmus near the airport. The movies based on J.R.R. Tolkien 's beloved novels generated billions of dollars in tourism revenue for New Zealand and employed thousands of people in Wellington over the 15 years of the movies' production.
But during the years the eagles have hovered in the terminal, Tolkien tourism has waned in Wellington — although the city will perhaps always be synonymous with Jackson's films. Guided tours still convey fans to the settings of famous scenes from the films and to visit production companies such as Wētā, which will create a new display for the airport, to be unveiled later this year, Clarke said.
Travelers have until Friday to admire the birds, which will then be put into storage, Clarke said. He hopes the creatures – which each feature 1,000 3D printed feathers – will find a home at a museum.
'It's a spectacular thing for little kids to see,' Clarke said. 'Even your old, grizzled businessmen, they still pull out their phones and take a quick cheeky photo too.'
Wellington Airport isn't losing its quirky side. An enormous sculpture of The Hobbit's gold-hoarding dragon, Smaug, will remain overlooking the check-in counters.

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White shirts. Black ties. Bald caps. Pitbull's fans party like clones worldwide
White shirts. Black ties. Bald caps. Pitbull's fans party like clones worldwide

Hamilton Spectator

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  • Hamilton Spectator

White shirts. Black ties. Bald caps. Pitbull's fans party like clones worldwide

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White shirts, black ties, bald caps: Pitbull's fans party like clones worldwide
White shirts, black ties, bald caps: Pitbull's fans party like clones worldwide

CBS News

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  • CBS News

White shirts, black ties, bald caps: Pitbull's fans party like clones worldwide

Londoners have reported thousands of sightings of Pitbull this week. With that bald head, goatee and suit, he's pretty hard to miss. On closer inspection, though, it becomes clear that Mr. Worldwide is not actually everywhere all at once — in his stead, those are clones swarming London, on their way to the O2 Arena to see him onstage. That goatee? Drawn on. That bare head? Bald caps, in lieu of a dramatic shave. Fans gather in front of the O2 Arena prior to a performance by Pitbull on Monday, June 9, 2025, in London. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP) Scott A Garfitt More than two decades into his career, the Miami superstar whose hits — from "Hotel Room Service" to "Timber" and "Give Me Everything" to "El Taxi" — have become permanent playlist staples of weddings, bar mitzvahs and, yes, the club is stoking a growing fan frenzy in the U.K. and beyond. He started noticing the odd look-alike or two at concerts back in 2021, emerging from the pandemic-era lockdowns. "Maybe out of 20,000 people coming to the show, 30,000 coming to show, you'll see a thousand," he says of what happened next. But that's before he hit the U.K. "We jumped the pond and we ended up in London and it was just something else. It was definitely a whole new movement, took it to a whole new level," Pitbull told The Associated Press, the day after Monday's show in London. The phenomenon is something that has rapidly grown from a minority to the majority — or from a negative to a positive, as Pitbull is known to say. Unlike the celebrity look-alike contests that reward uncanny resemblance to the likes of Timothée Chalamet,Glen Powell or even Ernest Hemingway, it's less about the ability to grow the right facial hair and more about the vibe. After all, the vast majority of those dressed up at Monday's concert were women. (Pitbelles, one could say.) Fans dance in front of the O2 Arena prior to a performance by Pitbull on Monday, June 9, 2025, in London. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP) Scott A Garfitt These wannabe clones were spotted on the underground to North Greenwich, where they proceeded to dance outside the arena to a live DJ set for hours before the show even started. Photos were taken in front of a giant poster of Pitbull and goatees were carefully colored in on friends' faces before, finally, the sunglasses went on. Rebecca Petrie and Jamie Lee Hart spent hours online to get tickets, traveling from Scotland for the gig. They suggested that girls are more drawn to dressing up than guys. "Women are more brave," Hart said. And Pitbull appreciates that. "To have more women in the crowd, it just goes to show you that they are feeling what the most powerful woman in my life has taught me on stage," he says, referencing his mother, "which is a gentleman that knows how to have a good time. Sometimes a little naughty, sometimes a little nice, but more than anything a good person that will do the right thing to the best of my ability." Videos from Pitbull's London show in February flooded social media with a decent number of look-alikes vibing out to tracks like "On the Floor" and "Fireball." When additional June shows for his "Party After Dark" tour went on sale, ticket buyers got the memo: Dress up or stand out as one of the few who didn't. Indeed, the floor of the arena on Monday looked like a sea of baked beans, courtesy the bald caps, while the stands looked like the destination of an unlikely school trip, with rows after rows of white shirts and black ties askew. "If you're going to go to a Pitbull concert you need to really feel his energy and you can't do that without a bald cap and a suit," attendee Keeley James Elliot said, while posing with Mr. Worldwide-inspired inflated globes outside the venue. Expect similar scenes at his upcoming Europe dates, as he winds his way through Paris, Prague and Poland. He'll jaunt back to the U.S. for dates in South Dakota, Las Vegas and a stop at the Iowa State Fair, before making his way to Australia in October. The 305 may be an area code, but it reaches far beyond South Florida. Fans should know that Pitbull wholeheartedly appreciates their efforts and makes sure to watch the crowds arriving for the show. He too is a fan — of them: "To have people out here feeling that good dressed up as me — man, unbelievable."

Pitbull is a fan of his fans. He says it's his job to make them feel good
Pitbull is a fan of his fans. He says it's his job to make them feel good

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Pitbull is a fan of his fans. He says it's his job to make them feel good

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The day after Monday's 'Party After Dark' concert at the O2 Arena in London, Pitbull sat down with The Associated Press to discuss what it's like to stand onstage and see a crowd of look-alikes staring back. This conversation has been edited for clarity and brevity. AP: How do you feel now, because that show is very high energy? PITBULL: Look, to be able to be over here in London and get that kind of love and that kind of energy and being in the game for 25 years, it is — now I'm going to tell you how I really feel — phenomenal, spectacular, amazing, extra, how is it? Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. Just don't ask me to spell it, but everything feels good. AP: And where do you get your stamina and energy from? Because you're jumping so much. PITBULL: The music gets me going and when I'm making those records we are making those records in a way where we program those parts in, in the song and in the shows so we know we're going to jump. We know where they're going to scream. We know what the chants are going to be at. We know when they're going to dance. So I look forward to perform it. And just think of it like me going crazy in my own club on stage. AP: And then do you need to lie down or sit in an ice bath or something like that? PITBULL: No, nothing like that. I do actually need to decompress. It takes me about an hour and a half after the show to just come down from that amazing high, let's just say. AP: On the tube home, everyone's taken their bald caps off, and they're all just flaked out. It's like they've had the time of their life and now they've got to get home. PITBULL: (Laughs) That's what it's about. You get them up there and make sure that they, like I always say, get off the chain, off the glass, off the flip, off the rip, and bottom line, have a good time. So we wear them out, we did our job. AP: When did you first notice fans were dressing up as you? PITBULL: I want to say that started around 2021 when we came out of the, you know, when the world came out the shutdown. That was the tour, it was called 'I Feel Good.' And you started to see it, I want to say maybe out of 20,000 people coming to the show, 30,000 coming to show, you'll see a thousand. But then when we came over, we jumped the pond and we ended up in London and it was just something else. It was definitely a whole new movement, took it to a whole new level and it's flattering. AP: Can you remember when you looked out and noticed that they were all wearing the caps? PITBULL: If they only knew, as much as they are fans of mine, I am fans of them. So when I watch the fans on the way to the show, I see them all. I see them all walking down the block. I see all playing certain songs, just having a great time getting each other, what we call, boost up, ready for the concert... It touches my heart because who would have known, you know, somebody from Miami and all the things that I've been through in life, and that's why I would say from a negative to a positive, to have people out here feeling that good dressed up as me — man, unbelievable. AP: You seem to take moments on the stage as well to appreciate it. Is that important for you? PITBULL: I appreciate the opportunity. I appreciate the love, I appreciate the support. I just don't say it, I live it. It's the truth, it's real. And to be able to feel that on stage, I want them to feel what I feel. Because not only that, I want them know that I appreciate that love that they're giving me and they can relate and when they leave there, they're not only fans but they're connected at another level. They sent me a picture of a woman that was pregnant and had the globe around her belly and it said, 'Baby Worldwide.' When you see those kinds of things, it's a blessing, like I said before, and if she happens to be watching this, I want to say congratulations and thank you, because that was a priceless picture. And so to have more women in the crowd, it just goes to show you that they are feeling what the most powerful women in my life has taught me on stage, which is a gentleman that knows how to have a good time. Sometimes a little naughty, sometimes a little nice, but more than anything, a good person that will do the right thing to the best of my ability. Perfect — I'm not, angel — I am not, but definitely here and move the way that I do due to the powerful women in my life that raised me. AP: Would you ever dress up for a concert of somebody else? PITBULL: I definitely would, but it would be artists from back in the day. I love to have fun, I love to enjoy, and I love to make fun of myself, to be honest with you. I think one of the most beautiful things a human being can have is a sense of humor and not take themselves too seriously. But if back in a day I could go to, I don't know, a Prince concert, or I mean, I love Earth, Wind, and Fire. Jimmy Buffett was a good friend, may he rest in paradise. AP: At the moment it seems to be that people go to Beyoncé dressed as a cowboy, Taylor Swift obviously had lots of dressed up people going to hers. Tyler, The Creator has everyone wearing green and then everyone comes to you in costumes. PITBULL: Well, it's an honor to be able to be mentioned with those kind of names that have worked very hard to be able to be where they're at and to be able to have the fans that are, let's just say, relating at a whole 'nother level.

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