Thursday, June 7, 2012

Reuters: Lifestyle: Southern, western U.S. cities among best for retirees

Reuters: Lifestyle
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Southern, western U.S. cities among best for retirees
Jun 7th 2012, 18:32

NEW YORK | Thu Jun 7, 2012 2:32pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A combination of balmy weather, low taxes and healthy lifestyle helped many southern and western cities in the United States dominate an annual Forbes list of the best places to retire in 2012.

Asheville in North Carolina, Florida's Cape Coral and Austin, Texas, were among the 25 cities on the list compiled by Forbes.com, along with Albuquerque in New Mexico and Phoenix, Arizona.

"There is a bias to warm weather," said Janet Novack, Forbes Washington bureau chief and executive editor. "Nevertheless, we do have some cold places because they excel, and either the economy is good or the crime rate is low. We also look at the availability of doctors."

Only about six chillier cities, including Pittsburg in Pennsylvania and Fargo in North Dakota, made it into the annual list, which was not a ranking.

Forbes considered factors such as cost of living, crime rates, taxes, opportunities to stay active and to volunteer, the availability of doctors, and home prices to select the cities.

Fargo wasn't cited for its climate but scored points for its solid economy, low cost of living, active lifestyle, low crime rate and affordable housing.

"One of the things we look at is taxes, so that rules out certain places like New York and New Jersey, and we look at affordability. We look at the job climate, so some southern places that aren't doing well might be eliminated," Novack said.

Nine states - Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Texas, Tennessee, Washington and Wyoming - have no state taxes. Others offer tax breaks to retirees, Forbes.com said.

For the first time this year, Forbes factored in the local job economy in selecting the cities, to cater to retirees who may wish to work part time.

"Just as retirement is changing, what people look for if they are going to move in retirement is changing. We do think that affordability is important to people but the opportunities to stay active are also important to people," said Novack.

She said that for people approaching retirement in five to 10 years, now would be considered a good time to think about buying a retirement home.

Two important factors that were not considered when selecting the cities were scenic beauty and family proximity, Novack said.

"We know that a lot of people aren't going to move because they want to be near children and grandchildren," she said.

(See the full Forbes list of best cities to retire here link.reuters.com/zen68s )

(Reporting by Patricia Reaney. Editing by Christine Kearney and Bernadette Baum)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Post your pro-pope postcard to "sad" pontiff now

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Post your pro-pope postcard to "sad" pontiff now
Jun 7th 2012, 16:04

BERLIN | Thu Jun 7, 2012 12:04pm EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - German Catholics upset about media attacks on Pope Benedict over the "Vatileaks" scandal can now show solidarity with the German-born pontiff by sending pre-printed postcards bearing the message "We are with you!"

Benedict, 85, has criticized press coverage of the scandal that began in January with the leaking of confidential documents alleging corruption, mismanagement and cronyism in the awarding of contracts in the Vatican.

Germany's 'Pro-Papa' group said it wanted to do "something more than praying" to support Benedict, who has expressed "sadness in my heart" over the scandal rocking the Church.

"Anyone can download the postcard template with Benedict's image and the preprinted solidarity message 'Pope Benedict, we are with you!' and then send it to the Holy Father," the head of the group, Sabine Benedikta Beschmann, told Reuters.

Around 1,000 people have downloaded and sent the postcard since the launch of the initiative a week ago, she said.

It is not the first time Pro-Papa has rallied support for Benedict, who was known as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger before he became pope in 2005.

In 2010 the group organized a rally of 10,000 people in Germany to back him after a sexual abuse scandal.

"We did not want to dispute the seriousness of the abuses but only to say that the attacks against the pope and against Catholics made by the press were unbearable," Beschmann said.

The "Vatileaks" scandal has led to the arrest of Pope Benedict's butler on suspicion of stealing documents. Vatican insiders say he is merely a scapegoat in a much wider power struggle within the Holy See.

The 'Pro-Papa' group will meet Benedict's older brother Georg Ratzinger, a priest based in southern Germany, on Saturday, to present their initiative, said Beschmann.

Ratzinger will then inform Benedict about the postcard project as "he did for the 2010 gathering as Benedict greeted us from St Peter's Square during Sunday's mass," she added.

(Reporting By Elisa Oddone, editing by Gareth Jones and Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Porsche SUVs put off die-hard sports car fans

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Porsche SUVs put off die-hard sports car fans
Jun 7th 2012, 13:12

Workers screw on the wheel section of a Cayenne car at the final production unit at the Porsche plant in Leipzig, in this June 2, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Tobias Schwarz/Files

1 of 5. Workers screw on the wheel section of a Cayenne car at the final production unit at the Porsche plant in Leipzig, in this June 2, 2009 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Tobias Schwarz/Files

By Andreas Cremer

BERLIN | Thu Jun 7, 2012 9:12am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - Manfred Wilke loves nothing more than speeding down the German Autobahn in his 911 coupe.

Gazing at a 911 Carrera GTS with a 100,000 euro ($125,000) price tag in Porsche's flagship showroom in Berlin, the real estate manager said only cars like the sporting two-seater deserved to carry the Porsche badge.

He is one of a number of Porsche purists who are appalled at the Stuttgart-based sports car maker's aggressive push into sport utility vehicles and family-style saloons.

Nearly 50 years after the launch of the 911, its newer, more roomy siblings, the Cayenne SUV and four-door Panamera, account for almost three quarters of Porsche's sales, and some customers fear the company is straying too far from its racing roots.

"Only delusional marketers could attempt to turn Porsche into an offroader company," said Wilke, 53. "It's a flat-out insult to Porsche's image and fame."

The powerful 911, driven by Steve McQueen at the start of the 1971 movie "Le Mans", has captivated -- and sometimes frightened -- fans for decades and came fifth in the 1999 Car of the Century awards.

Its timeless design, refreshed again last year, evolved from the Porsche 356 designed by Ferry Porsche in 1948, the sports car maker's first vehicle in series production.

But for now the bulky four-door cars are king, as demand for large luxury models is growing faster than the sports car market. Porsche's next major new model is a compact SUV called the Macan, which goes into production in 2013.

"Even at Porsche, SUVs promise stronger growth than the classical two-door sports cars," said Willi Diez, head of the Institute for Automobile Industry in Nuertingen and an adviser to former Mercedes-Benz CEO Helmut Werner.

"The Cayenne, Macan and Panamera become the profit-laden springboard needed to develop the core Porsche stuff."

Diez and other see Porsche becoming a two-brand company with the 911 and its other sports cars sitting alongside a portfolio of top-end luxury models.

Other marques such as Ferrari and Lamborghini have kept largely to sports cars, leaving their parents Fiat and Volkswagen to develop other types of cars.

SUV BUILD-UP

Turning its focus from one of the world's most recognizable sports cars to the bulky Cayenne was not a natural progression, but a necessity if Porsche was to hit its targets.

Bolstered by its alliance with Europe's biggest car maker Volkswagen, Porsche aims to sell 200,000 cars a year by 2018, up from 116,978 last year. It wants to keep its return on sales above 15 percent after achieving 18.7 percent last year.

Sales of the Cayenne, which saves costs by sharing a platform with VW's Touareg and Audi's Q7 SUV models, are expected to surge 40 percent in major auto markets to 52,076 vehicles by 2017 from 2010, research firm IHS Automotive predicts.

The Macan should hit almost 37,000 in its first five years, and sales of the Panamera could jump 67 percent to 33,643. Porsche sold 17,607 911s last year and IHS expects a slower growth rate in the next five years of about 37 percent.

Porsche is spending 500 million euros to expand its factory in the eastern German city of Leipzig, adding body and paint shops and a new assembly line to produce the Macan. Porsche also increased production of the Cayenne and the Panamera in January.

But Porsche's efforts to meet demand for upscale 4x4s has cost it the top spot in terms of its cars' perceived sporting image, according to a survey of 4,000 consumers by Germany's ADAC automobile club, Europe's largest.

"There seems to be a greater emphasis (at Porsche) on short-term sales gains at the expense of the famous brand's image," said ADAC analyst Marcus Krueger.

But others said the overall Porsche brand was benefiting from the broader product range and the onus was on Porsche to keep the 911 at the top of its game.

"Porsche still stands for luxury and performance. But it is also important that flagship brands such as the 911 continue to convince through innovation," said Cassidy Morgan, head of Central and Eastern Europe at brand consultancy Interbrand.

RACING HERITAGE

Porsche, which achieves high ratings in quality studies by companies such as J.D. Power & Associates, maintains that brand perception is vital.

The brand, the product of Porsche's racing heritage, "is the most important reason to buy a Porsche," Chief Executive Officer Matthias Mueller has said.

Porsche sales chief Bernhard Maier told Reuters the company was not neglecting its sports car line but was creating demand with new models after revamped versions of the 911 and the Boxster roadster reached showrooms in December and in April.

A new version of the hardtop Cayman two-seater will be launched later this year, and the 918 Spyder - a 768,000-euro plug-in hybrid supercar - will arrive next year, Maier said.

Helmut Becker, a former chief economist at BMW who now runs a consulting firm in Munich, said Porsche's new-found passion for big cars made business sense, even if it turns away purists.

"Two-seater sports cars are completely uneconomical, their customer base is shrinking," Becker told Reuters. "Even a classical sports car maker has a right to broaden its portfolio."

Back in the Berlin dealership, real estate manager Wilke directed his scorn at a Panamera sedan, a car that at first glance looks like a 911 that has been elongated.

The vehicle's bulky rear stems from the fact that former CEO Wendelin Wiedeking, who is 6 foot 2 (1.88m), insisted he should be able to sit comfortably in the back, a company manager has said.

"The Panamera is too big and too compromised," Wilke said. "It simply lacks the timeless fascination of a 911. That's what Porsche is all about."

(Additional reporting by Christoph Steitz; Editing by Giles Elgood)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Lifestyle vies with heredity in centenarian stakes

Reuters: Lifestyle
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Lifestyle vies with heredity in centenarian stakes
Jun 7th 2012, 13:09

By Patricia Reaney

NEW YORK | Thu Jun 7, 2012 9:09am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Genetics may be the best predictor of longevity, but lifestyle choices, including staying connected with family and friends, are key components to reaching the age of 100, according to a new poll released on Wednesday.

More than 80 percent of 100 men and women who have already hit the milestone said being socially active had helped them get there, and a similar number of baby boomers believe it will help them reach their 100th birthday.

"Scientifically we know that the formula, the best predictor, for how long someone will live has traditionally been how long their immediate relatives have lived, so we know genetics is a strong factor," said Dr. Rhonda Randall, chief medical officer of UnitedHealthcare, which conducted the survey.

"But we are seeing more and more that lifestyle choices -- physical exercise, diet, staying engaged, having a social purpose -- are becoming a stronger and stronger influence," she said in an interview.

Like their children and grandchildren, centenarians have turned to the Internet to stay connected.

About a quarter of 100-year-olds questioned in the telephone survey said they had access to the Web, double the number just a year ago. Of those, more than half use the Internet to view and share photos, and nearly as many send and receive email and search the Internet for information.

Centenarians were also almost as likely as baby boomers to have used an online dating service -- 6 percent of boomers, compared with 4 percent of the oldest generation.

"They are all realizing that the keys to longevity are around mental, physical and emotion health," said Randall.

About 10 percent of the 100-year-olds have watched a video on YouTube or listened to music on an iPod, according to the poll, but only 3 percent have used Facebook, and just one of them has used Twitter.

PHYSICAL, MENTAL, EMOTIONAL HEALTH

Centenarians, along with the over-65 group, are the fastest-growing segment of the population. More than 10,000 boomers will turn 65 every day for the next decade, according to U.S. Census Bureau predictions.

Many of the boomers will help to swell the number of U.S. centenarians to 600,000 by 2050 from an estimated 72,000 at the end of 2010, the Census Bureau said.

Boomers aiming to reach 100 could take some cues from the older generation, who know the importance of exercise and a healthy diet, along with a strong, active mind.

For nearly half of 100-year-olds, walking is their favorite physical activity, but 11 percent practice yoga, Tai Chi or something similar. Eight percent ride a bicycle regularly, 5 percent still jog, and 2 percent play a sport such as tennis.

"We are seeing more of a diversification in the types of exercise people are getting," said Randall.

Centenarians can also teach their younger counterparts a thing or two about staying healthy. More than 80 percent of the oldest generation say they eat nutritiously balanced meals, compared with 68 percent of boomers.

Seventy one percent of 100-year-olds sleep eight hours or more each night, but only 38 percent of boomers are getting that much rest.

Both groups say they are politically active, and nearly three-quarters of centenarians said they would be heading to the polls in November to vote in the presidential election.

Boomers and centenarians also agree on the importance of lifestyle: Both groups rate it higher than heredity as having a greater impact on lifespan.

(Reporting by Patricia Reaney; editing by Christine Kearney and Lisa Von Ahn)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Chinese undertakers brave fear, stigma to honor dead

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Chinese undertakers brave fear, stigma to honor dead
Jun 7th 2012, 06:12

By Royston Chan

JIAXING, China | Thu Jun 7, 2012 2:12am EDT

JIAXING, China (Reuters) - Zeng Liangliang faced strong opposition from his family when he first told them his plans for a job, despite being guaranteed employment with a good salary right out of school.

He intends to be an undertaker, a good job in many places, but one that is generally shunned in China due to traditions that make death unmentionable and lead many to steer clear of those working in the industry, fearing they carry bad luck.

But Zeng is one of a new breed of young and confident Chinese undertakers fighting centuries-old taboos to gain social acceptance for their profession, saying they help the deceased and their families make their final parting with respect.

"At first, my dad was very against me going into such a profession. He did not understand why I would want to take up such a job, and did not support me at all," said the 22-year-old student in Jiaxing, eastern Zhejiang province.

"We are young people and we think differently," he added. "I feel that undertakers were not too respectful in the past to the deceased. So through our services, we hope that the deceased leave this world in a more dignified way."

Superstitions regarding death remain so strong that many Chinese avoid the number 4, which has a similar sound to the word for death. And speaking of the topic is taboo.

But as a business, it is going strong. China's annual report on funeral services listed the industry as worth 200 billion yuan ($31 billion) a year, and it is seen as one of the top 10 most profitable businesses in the country.

There are four main technical colleges across the country offering studies in funeral services. The Changsha Social Work College in China's central Hunan province is the pioneer, having started in 1995 to standardize practices in the industry.

According to the school, there are more than 1,500 students across the country studying to become undertakers each year, with the field increasingly popular among those looking for a guaranteed job after graduation.

Courses in funeral services take three years to complete, with students learning basic skills while being encouraged to take on internships in the thousands of funeral homes across the country during their holidays.

GREATER RESPECT

The Changsha college said the average pay for a graduate undertaker ranges between 4,000 to 5,000 yuan ($628 to $785) a month in first-tier Chinese cities, a slightly better starting pay than that of the average graduate, and they can almost be sure to get a job immediately.

Through skills gained in their studies, which include embalming, funeral make-up and rituals, Zeng feels the new breed of undertaker shows more respect for the deceased by taking greater care to prepare the body.

A typical, simple undertaker service in China has long included things such as washing the body, as well as providing funeral make-up and dressing it.

But now the cleansing can include things similar to a spa treatment for the body, as well as gently massaging it before applying cosmetics - services that have been popular in Taiwan and Japan for years.

Newer undertakers also take extra efforts with cosmetics, hoping to make the deceased look much as they did in life. Older undertakers, Zeng feels, often leave the body looking unnatural.

But the training is not without obstacles. Another student, Cui Wenchao, spoke for many when she said she was overwhelmed the first time she touched a dead body despite practicing the techniques on mannequins.

"It was cold when I felt it. I did not expect it to be that cold and I had not prepared mentally," the 22-year-old said.

"It was not a feeling of fear but the kind of emotion associated with the fact that the passing of a life is actually like this."

Despite their dedication, undertakers still face strong social stigma. Many suffer pressure from friends and family to change their job while others fail to find a marriage partner.

Change will be slow, but people in the industry said they hoped the influx of younger undertakers would help change the general mindset.

"Traditionally, older folks would say this profession is only for those people who are not married, have no children, and have no choice," said Taiwanese instructor Lin Leijie.

"We hope that more young people take up the profession and show others there is nothing to fear."

(Reporting by Royston Chan; editing by Elaine Lies and Bob Tourtellotte)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Greek tourism battered by political crisis, fear

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Greek tourism battered by political crisis, fear
Jun 7th 2012, 09:26

A Greek flag flutters as the sun sets framed by palm trees on the beach front of Olympia Riviera resort in the town of Killini, some 285 kms southwest of Athens May 31, 2012. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis

1 of 20. A Greek flag flutters as the sun sets framed by palm trees on the beach front of Olympia Riviera resort in the town of Killini, some 285 kms southwest of Athens May 31, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Yannis Behrakis

By Yannis Behrakis and Renee Maltezou

KILLINI, Greece | Thu Jun 7, 2012 5:26am EDT

KILLINI, Greece (Reuters) - When he took a job as the manager of one of Greece's biggest resorts overlooking a sandy beach near Ancient Olympia, the cradle of the Olympic Games, Michalis Minadakis thought he had the goose that laid the golden egg.

But seven years later, his dream of a bonanza with sun-seeking tourists is in ruins as the country's debt crisis has deepened, sparking talk of a Greek exit from the euro and social unrest that has begun to scare off visitors.

"Germans have been good friends of Greek tourism but they're afraid to come over now," said Minadakis, his eyes fixed on empty sunbeds around a pool at his Olympia Riviera Resort that boasts four hotels and a beach that is 1.2 miles long (2km).

"This will be a very tough year. The hurdles we are facing are huge," he said, adding that he had suffered a 25 percent drop in bookings this year and received 50 percent fewer visitors from Germany, Greece's biggest tourist market.

Tourism, which slumped by 25 percent in 2009-2010 only to rebound last year, is crucial to Greece's economy, accounting for 15 percent of its output and one in five jobs in a country where unemployment has hit a record high of 21 percent.

Greece's sandy resorts, azure waters and ancient temples remain popular, but will not, it seems, be enough to pull it out of a fifth year of recession.

Andreas Andreadis, the head of Greece's tourism enterprises association (SETE), said he feared revenues would plunge this year. "We will see a considerable drop," he told Reuters. "A negative number, something like 10-15 percent."

The pain is already being felt - tourist receipts for the first quarter tumbled by 15.1 percent to 396.3 million euros from 466.7 million euros, the Bank of Greece said.

The Greek tourism minister held a brainstorming session with industry officials last week to try to draw up an anti-crisis plan and later said the state needed to spend more on advertising to attract last-minute bookings.

Separately, Greek and European tourist operators are mounting their own publicity and price-cutting campaigns.

"We are trying to save what can be saved," said Yannis Retsos, head of the hoteliers' association. "Anything close to a 10 percent revenue drop would be a success."

POLITICAL TURMOIL

Last month's inconclusive parliamentary election, which left the country without a government and saw a party intent on renegotiating an international bailout that has kept the country afloat come second, increased the uncertainty.

Days after the election, reservations slumped by 50 percent. A repeat election on June 17 that may determine Greece's future in the euro - during what is the first month of the lucrative tourist season - has hoteliers and travel agents on edge.

Retsos said the uncertainty was damaging tourism and that the country needed a stable government to restore confidence.

The battle now was to contain losses, he added.

"We've already lost half of the season and are fighting for July, August and September," he said.

International media reports reflecting growing resentment against Germany among ordinary people, political pundits and the popular press, coupled with warnings that anti-austerity strikes and protests could disrupt people's holidays, are not helping.

"I was a bit anxious coming here because of what the media reported about Greeks hating Germans," said Britta Missler, a German tourist. "When I go back to Germany I'll tell everybody there is no need to worry."

About 2.2 million Germans visited Greece last year, but many now appear to be plumping for other destinations such as Spain or Turkey. Athens, where about a dozen hotels have shut down, and other big cities have been hardest hit.

"The German-Greek relation problem is huge. Only time can fix what's broken," said Retsos.

Last month, TUI Germany advised Greece-bound customers to take more cash in euros after its travel agents reported a surge in questions from customers about what would happen if Greece were to exit the euro and reintroduce the drachma.

"My friends said I'm crazy to come to Greece," said 35-year old Robert Leoniuk from Poland, who was staying at the Olympia Riviera resort with his wife and three-year-old son, and said he had taken a wad of euros with him just in case.

FIGHT BACK

Only last year, Greece was celebrating a record 16.5 million tourists - after two difficult years - as cheaper fares and upheaval in Egypt and Tunisia made it a popular destination.

That had raised hopes that the sector was on the road to recovery and might even be able to save the sickly economy.

A rise in visitors from Eastern Europe, Russia and Israel may help make up for the loss of tourists from Germany and Britain, but industry officials fear it will not be enough.

Domestic tourism - which accounts for up to 25 percent of total tourism revenues - is unlikely to save the day. Greeks' incomes are being severely squeezed as they reel from salary and pension cuts, layoffs and tax rises,

In the heart of Monemvasia, a town on the southeastern Peloponnese peninsula with a medieval fortress and Venetian style homes, Anastassia Livieratou keeps the family tradition of making silver jewelry inspired by local history and life alive.

"We have no Greek clients anymore. They cannot afford to buy anything," said Livieratou gazing at a deserted street through the window of her empty shop. "It's a lost year for us."

(Writing by Renee Maltezou; Editing by Andrew Osborn and Mark Heinrich)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Louis Vuitton so last season for China's super chic

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Louis Vuitton so last season for China's super chic
Jun 7th 2012, 02:19

By Melanie Lee

SHANGHAI | Wed Jun 6, 2012 10:19pm EDT

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Daisy Liu epitomizes China's obsession with luxury brands: her shoes are Guiseppe Zanotti, her brooch Chanel, a floral Hermes scarf is stylishly knotted over one shoulder. She won't, however, tote a monogrammed Louis Vuitton handbag ever again.

Wealthy shoppers like Liu are increasingly turning up their noses at labels they believe have been tainted by the common touch, seeking out understated, and exclusive, merchandise from the likes of Chanel or Hermes instead. That is becoming a big challenges for designers hoping to cash in on the world's fastest growing luxury market.

"I have two Louis Vuitton handbags but I no longer carry them although they are still in fashion," said Liu, a 31-year-old employee at a multinational cosmetics firm.

"I don't think the brand fits me anymore."

More than a decade of strong economic growth has helped swell the disposable incomes of millions of Chinese, creating legions of men and women with a voracious appetite for status symbols regardless of the cost.

China's importance for firms such as Louis Vuitton's parent LVMH and Gucci's PPR SA is indisputable: last year, as Europe was mired in financial crisis and the U.S. economy faltered, mainland Chinese shoppers spent an estimated 111 billion yuan ($18 billion) on luxury goods, according to consultants Bain & Co.

China is the world's third biggest market for personal luxury goods, worth at least 160 billion yuan ($25 billion). In the next three years, it is expected to leapfrog over Japan and the United States to take the top spot, with the luxury segment expanding to 180 billion yuan ($28 billion).

As it grows, the market is also maturing, moving from so-called aspirational luxury, where bling is king, to what experts call absolute luxury: the desire to be seen as both wealthy and discerning.

"In the past, it was just a checklist. If you were one of the top five brands out of some magazine, you found that people in China just checked the checklist and bought according to the list," said Vincent Liu, partner at Boston Consulting Group.

"Going forward, people will be more selective. They know what and where and when to use what brands and products."

For sophisticated consumers like Liu, that means purchases such as a $2,000 Chanel mini bag and a Prada clutch. She's also eyeing a coral lambskin bag from Bottega Veneta, the Italian fashion house renowned for its signature woven leather goods.

"The truly wealthy, the real millionaires, they will not want to buy LV Louis Vuitton or Gucci because they are too commonplace," said Shaun Rein, managing director, China Market Research Group. "Rich people are getting richer and they want exclusiveness and more self-indulgence."

OVER EXPOSED

China's luxury market is poised to grow 18 to 20 percent this year, steeply outperforming the single-digit forecasts for Europe, the Americas and Japan, according to Bain, explaining the rapid expansion of larger luxury firms such as LVMH.

For years, LV's Monogram "Speedy" tote, a dome-shaped classic favored by Audrey Hepburn, was one of the most desirable bags for Chinese women because it was a clear signal of having made it: the handbag costs double the $400 an average Chinese worker earns a month.

The brand is LVMH's cash cow and revenues are almost double those of Gucci, widely considered its closest competitor.

But as LVMH grew in China - there are currently about 38 Louis Vuitton stores there, including in remote areas such as the southern Guangxi autonomous region, compared to the 57 or so in Japan - it lost some of its cachet.

"In China, Louis Vuitton is seen as the brand that even your ai-yi, or domestic helper, can afford," said a retail consultant who declined to be named in order to be candid.

When asked to comment, LVMH told Reuters via email it expected to "gain a brand new lead on the market" via a new store set to open next month in Shanghai's swanky Plaza 66 mall. "The Plaza 66 will confirm Vuitton as the trendsetting brand in China," the email said.

Gucci did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

LV remains one of China's most popular labels - a recent survey by a strategists Digital Luxury Group put it at the top of web searches by consumers.

But brands such as Chanel and Hermes are catching up fast.

A recent study by consultants Bain shows twice as many Chinese now covet Hermes, creators of the iconic Birkin and Kelly handbags, and the brand is the third most likely to be purchased after Gucci and Louis Vuitton.

"Some prefer Hermes because our products are more subtle and not over exposed," the brand's China president, Leo Liu, told Reuters in an emailed statement.

SOME LIKE IT HAUTE

For Gao Jie, 27, a public relations employee who routinely buys luxury goods, Hermes is the ultimate status symbol: their bags are handmade, come in limited quantities, cost anything between $9,000 to $150,000 and are generally not within the reach of the general public.

Gao says this year she aims to buy a brightly colored Kelly Candy handbag that costs at least four times her monthly salary of 20,000 yuan ($3,100).

"There are some things that are classic by design and widely recognized by the market. I really hope to one day be able to own all these classic designs," said Gao, who regularly sets aside some of her salary, and income from investing in stocks, to buy shoes and bags.

To attract shoppers like Gao, LVMH and other larger luxury brands are trying to strike the difficult balance between exclusivity and popularity to remain profitable.

LVMH is offering customers increasingly expensive and bespoke services to try to retain a mystique around the Louis Vuitton brand, whose monogrammed canvas creations are seen as being both too common and easily copied.

The company is also careful about rolling out new stores, aware that the brand would suffer from too much visibility.

Whether these strategies will convince savvy Chinese shoppers like Daisy Liu to carry their LV bags is unclear.

"Luxury, embedded in that, is this notion of exclusivity: that not everybody has it. It's always a fine line that the brands need to tread," said Torsten Stocker, partner at business strategists Monitor Group. ($1 = 6.3675 Chinese yuan)

(Additional reporting by Shanghai newsroom; Editing by Kaznouri Takada and Miral Fahmy)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: "Flying table" lifts gourmet dining to new heights

Reuters: Lifestyle
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"Flying table" lifts gourmet dining to new heights
Jun 6th 2012, 17:32

Guests enjoy a ''Dinner in the Sky'' on a platform hanging in front of the Royal Palace in Brussels June 4, 2012. ''Dinner in the Sky'' can accommodate 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 50 metres. REUTERS/Sebastien Pirlet

1 of 4. Guests enjoy a ''Dinner in the Sky'' on a platform hanging in front of the Royal Palace in Brussels June 4, 2012. ''Dinner in the Sky'' can accommodate 22 guests, seated at a table suspended from a crane at a height of 50 metres.

Credit: Reuters/Sebastien Pirlet

By Stephanie Ebbs

BRUSSELS | Wed Jun 6, 2012 1:32pm EDT

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - If someone drops a fork at Dinner in the Sky, a seven-ton platform may have to be lowered 50 meters (yards) to pick up a new one, so diners tend to keep a good grip on the cutlery.

Joining a growing trend for extreme dining - from supper in the dark to eating in the jungle - Dinner in the Sky takes the concept to, well, new heights, with a select group of guests sitting around a table suspended 160 feet in the air.

You could be eating above a forest, hovering above a beach or dangling in the midst of a European capital, floating above landmarks usually only seen from the ground. Whatever the location, the aim is to elevate dining out of the ordinary.

That's the case with the Brussels edition of Dinner in the Sky, which during June gives 22 diners at a time the chance to enjoy gourmet food and champagne while suspended near sites such as the Royal Palace, the famed Atomium or the Cambre forest.

"I just thought, wouldn't it be nice if we could eat up here?" Stefan Kerkhofs, one of the Belgian creators, explained as a group of guests was hoisted above Brussels this week.

Kerkhofs, who used to set up bungee-jumping and amusement part installations, partnered with marketing executive David Ghelys to develop Dinner in the Sky six years ago. The two now travel the world putting on dramatic dining shows.

Kerkhofs has designed and built 40 platforms and charges up to 250 euros ($310) a head for the experience, with Las Vegas, Barcelona, Paris, Monaco and Tokyo all popular destinations.

While the views from up above are spectacular, the aim is to ensure that the food is too, with some of the world's top chefs preparing the meals. One recent menu included foie gras, lobster with lemongrass and crispy veal sweetbreads followed by a chocolate, caramel and coconut concoction.

"I only do special events," said Kerkhofs with a grin. "If you asked me to do anything normal, I couldn't."

This month is the first time the event is open to the public in Brussels, where it forms part of Brusselicious 2012, a gastronomic fair featuring seven of the city's top chefs - a serious pull in a city known for its top-notch restaurants.

While great food and a funky experience are the goals, Kerkhofs has to think seriously about security too.

Diners are carefully strapped into seats not dissimilar to those on a rollercoaster and hoisted gently by crane to the dining altitude, which depends on wind and other weather conditions, but hits a maximum of 50 meters (165 feet).

From above, even some of Brussels' grandest monuments are reduced to miniature proportions, with the Royal Palace looking more like a fancy dollhouse and the lush green Cambre forest - site of an upcoming Dinner in the Sky event - looking more like a mountain of broccoli on the horizon.

Just don't drop your fork.

(Editing by Luke Baker and Paul Casciato)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: London hotels "pricing themselves out of market"

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London hotels "pricing themselves out of market"
Jun 6th 2012, 16:38

By Peter Myers

LONDON | Wed Jun 6, 2012 12:38pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Bookings at London hotels for the Olympic period are down by around a third on last summer, with travelers being put off by high prices, a British travel agent said on Wednesday, dampening hopes that the Games will help to revive Britain's economy.

Credit ratings agency Moody's said last month that the Olympics would provide only a temporary boost to corporate earnings but said hotels would be a clear beneficiary.

However, past Games have shown evidence of a displacement effect - with regular tourists put off by fears of overcrowding and high prices during an Olympics.

Hotel wholesaler JacTravel is forecasting visitor arrivals to London in July to be more than 35 percent down on 2011, and August to be almost 30 percent down.

JacTravel's chief executive Mario Bodini said that Olympics expectations had been overly optimistic.

"It's a great event; great publicity for the country, but what we need is sensible hotel pricing, and to make sure it goes back to normal very quickly," he told Reuters.

The travel agent said a four-star hotel room in central London is normally priced between 80 pounds and 120 pounds ($120-180) per night during in the peak summer season, but this year the range is 200 pounds to 415 pounds.

JacTravel's customer base includes travel agents, tour operators and online hotel booking engines, and therefore acts a useful barometer for the inbound tourism market.

JUBILEE PEAK?

Hotel prices in London were distorted when local organizers block-booked 40,000 of London's 100,000 rooms for Games athletes, officials, media and sponsors. In January 2012, 20 percent of these were released back onto the market.

"The demand is still there internationally for people to come to the UK," said Mary Rance, chief executive of trade association UK Inbound, which represents tour operators and hotels.

"There's plenty of availability in London, more than enough hotel rooms, but rates have to be commercially viable ... Hotels and tour operators have to work together better to maximize the opportunity and fill those beds."

Rance worries that many visitors to the UK this year may have already come. Britain has just celebrated the Queen's Diamond Jubilee, the other major event of the summer.

UK Inbound conducted a members' survey last week which found that between May and August 2012 almost half said their tourism bookings were "slightly lower" or "considerably lower" than the year before, (27 per cent and 21 per cent respectively).

Conversely, 52 percent responded that their bookings were either "considerably higher" or "slightly higher" year on year between January and April.

Tour operators' worries about a visitor shortfall contrast with available flight data. Research last week by travel reservations group Amadeus found a 13 percent rise in bookings for flights to London for the Olympic period compared with the same period a year ago.

These figures were based on global air reservations booked through travel agencies, not direct bookings, and do not take into account potential traffic on low-cost carriers.

A significant portion of the travelers who have already booked could be the 11,000 athletes staying in Olympic-village accommodation, and spectators staying in private residences.

UK agents say the spike in air bookings can also be accounted for by Games visitors making unusually early reservations whereas summer holidaymakers wait until nearer the time to book and it is these visitors which the UK hospitality industry fears will fail to turn up in sufficient numbers.

(Editing by Keith Weir and Greg Mahlich)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Israeli university cancels planned Wagner concert

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Israeli university cancels planned Wagner concert
Jun 6th 2012, 14:36

By Allyn Fisher-Ilan

JERUSALEM | Wed Jun 6, 2012 10:36am EDT

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - An Israeli university has cancelled plans to hold a concert featuring Richard Wagner's music after Holocaust survivors complained the performance would cause them "emotional torture".

Israeli ensembles rarely play Wagner, citing the 19th century German composer's anti-Semitism and Hitler's affinity for his work. Sporadic performances of his works in the Jewish state in the past have drawn controversy and condemnation.

Tel Aviv University said on Wednesday it had decided to cancel plans by a private group of Wagner aficionados to rent out an auditorium on campus this month after fielding "angry and difficult" complaints from Holocaust survivors.

Uri Chanoch, deputy head of a survivors' group, had protested against plans to hold the concert in a letter to the university's president with a copy to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

"This is emotional torture for Holocaust survivors and the wider public in the State of Israel," said the letter, which appeared in the Israeli media.

Yonathan Livni, founder of the Israel Wagner Society, had hired 100 musicians to circumvent what he saw as a policy of Israel's state-subsidized orchestras to shun Wagner's work.

An unofficial ban on Wagner, including a taboo in airing his music on state-owned media, predates Israel's creation in 1948. The Israel Philharmonic under its former name, the Palestine Orchestra, imposed it in 1938 after Nazi attacks on Jews in Germany.

Attempts over the years by some musicians in Israel to perform Wagner's music have caused audience members to walk out in protest and have triggered heated public debate.

The distaste for Wagner stems from Hitler having been a great admirer of his work, though the composer died half a century before the dictator's rise to power.

Hitler was also believed to have drawn on Wagner's writings in his own theories on Germanic racial purity, an ideology which stood behind the Nazis' genocidal slayings in World War Two when they killed six million Jews across Europe.

Aside from anti-Semitic overtones in some of his operas, Wagner also penned a number of polemics raging against the corruption of music and the "German spirit" by Jews.

Despite Israel's shunning of Wagner's music, some of his works have been performed through the years in the Jewish state, often drawing controversy.

In 2001, Zubin Mehta, conductor of the Israel Philharmonic, condemned a call by Israeli lawmakers to ban performances by maestro Daniel Barenboim over a performance of a work by Richard Wagner.

Barenboim, an Argentinean-born Israeli, told his audience at the July 2001 concert he would play a piece from Wagner's opera "Tristan and Isolde" and said those who objected should leave. Several dozen, some shouting "Fascist" and "Go home," slammed doors as they walked out of the concert by the visiting Berlin Staatskapelle in Jerusalem.

In 2000, Israel's Rishon Lezion orchestra broke the taboo against Wagner. The orchestra, conducted by Holocaust survivor Mendi Rodan, played Wagner's "Siegfried Idyll."

(Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Rosalind Russell)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Computers, sex trump mobile phones in global poll

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Computers, sex trump mobile phones in global poll
Jun 6th 2012, 14:21

By Chris Michaud

NEW YORK | Wed Jun 6, 2012 9:48am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - When given the choice, most people around the world would give up their cellphone rather than their computer and would prefer to live without social networking rather than television, according to a new global survey.

In an Ipsos poll for Reuters of 19,271 adults from 25 countries, the older, more traditional technologies and pastimes come out on top.

Two-thirds of those surveyed said they would hold on to the computer and forfeit their cellphone if forced to choose between the two, and 58 percent opted to give up social networking rather than television.

Sex fared even better in the matchup. Nearly 80 percent of people said they would rather live without their phone, rather give up sex.

"When people are forced to choose between two important things, a picture is drawn about values and priorities," said Keren Gottfried, research manager of independent market researcher Ipsos.

The poll revealed striking differences by both sex and age, with women, and people younger than 35 much less willing than men, or those over 35, to give up their cellphones.

Nearly 40 percent of women said they would give up their computers, while just over 31 percent of men did. Just over 40 percent of younger people were ready to ditch their computer in favor of their phone.

Noting that research has shown that younger people are more likely to have advanced-capability smartphones, Gottfried said it could be expected that young people prioritize the newer technologies in the survey.

"Frequency of use of social networking is considerably higher among the young demographic," Gottfried said.

The poll found similar variations in country-by-country results. Canadians chose computers over phones by 80 percent to 20 percent, but only 49 percent of Saudi Arabians did. South Africans were also divided, with 52 percent picking computers over phones.

People in Great Britain and France were most likely to choose television over social networking, while those in China and Turkey were least likely to do so.

When it came to choosing between giving up sex or phones, Gottfried noted it was "interesting that the results seem to perpetuate cultural stereotypes of sexual progressiveness and conservatism, with Latin America least likely to give up sex over their phones and Asia-Pacific most likely."

The poll had a margin of error from plus or minus 3.1 to 4.5 percentage points.

(Editing by Patricia Reaney and Maureen Bavdek)

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Reuters: Lifestyle: Pre-Globe Shakespeare theater unearthed in London

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Pre-Globe Shakespeare theater unearthed in London
Jun 6th 2012, 12:40

By Philip Baillie

LONDON | Wed Jun 6, 2012 8:32am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Archaeologists in London have discovered the remains of an early playhouse used by William Shakespeare's company where "Romeo and Juliet" and "Henry V" were first performed.

Pre-dating the riverside Globe, the Curtain theater, north of the river Thames in Shoreditch, was home to Shakespeare's company - the Lord Chamberlain's Men.

Remains of walls forming the gallery and the yard within the venue have been discovered by archaeologists from Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA).

"This is a fantastic site which gives us unique insight into early Shakespearean theatres," said Chris Thomas from MOLA, who is leading the archaeological work.

The theatre was immortalized as "this wooden O" in the prologue of Henry V with the lines: "Can this cock-pit hold within this wooden O, the very caskes that did affright the Ayre at Agincourt?"

The discovery will delight historians and Shakespeare fans as excavations offer a picture of where the writer's early productions were performed, although little further detail is known about the early playhouse.

"This is an outstanding site - and a fortuitous find in the year of the worldwide celebration of Shakespeare," said Kim Stabler, Archaeology Advisor at English Heritage.

London has been celebrating its cultural heritage with a world Shakespeare festival taking place at the Globe theatre and across the UK, as part of a festival to coincide with the Olympics this summer and will last to November.

"The find is another wonderful opportunity to further our understanding of Shakespeare's theatres," said Neil Constable, Chief Executive of Shakespeare's Globe.

The Curtain Theatre opened in 1577 close to London's first playhouse "The Theatre" and was one of a number of early theatres built outside the city's walls.

The venue took its name from nearby street Curtain Close.

It was the main arena for Shakespeare's plays between 1597 and 1599 until the Globe was completed in Southwark, but it is unclear what happened to the playhouse after that when it seemed to vanish from historic records after 1622.

Some experts say it may have remained in use until the Civil War in the 1640s.

Archaeologists stumbled upon the Curtain Theatre's remains on Hewett Street after work began on a regeneration project led by local developers last October.

Soon after the remains were found on an exploratory dig, architects began drawing up plans to preserve the remains while allowing the development to go ahead.

A spokesman for Plough Yard Developments, the company leading the regeneration project with the Estate Office Shoreditch, said the excavations could become a preserved centerpiece of a new housing and shopping area.

The plans are set to go on display on June 8 and 9 at the site.

"Although the Curtain was known to have been in the area, its exact location was a mystery," the Plough Yard spokesman said.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

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