Tag Archives: Amsterdam

11 of the best jazz clubs in the world

What makes a jazz club? The music, of course. The atmosphere. The cultural significance.

As an art form born in African-American communities of the 19th century and expanded in the urban melting pots of the 20th, jazz is the soundtrack of the concrete jungle.

Which makes the jazz club an essential element in any modern city’s ecosystem. Here are some of the best examples.

Village Vanguard, New York City

Village Vanguard, New York City

In a city often hailed as the jazz mecca of the world, Village Vanguard is its black stone, the ultimate place of worship, the quintessential jazz club. From the moment you descend the steep stairway to the small basement venue, you find yourself steeped in the history of jazz. From Bill Evans to Brad Mehldau, and from Sonny Rollins to Joe Lovano and Jason Moran, most of the jazz greats have performed in the same dimly lit subterranean space, adding to the aura of this place thatā€™s a point of reference for the global jazz community.

Continue reading 11 of the best jazz clubs in the world

Hunter S. Thompson Tried to Get Paid in Cocaine at My Tequila Bar

BYĀ TOMAS ESTES (Munchies)

As one of only two official tequila ambassadors for the Mexican government, 69-year-old Tomas Estes is credited with introducing Europe to agave spirits. Shaped by an adolescence spentĀ motorcycling shirtless and drinking with Beatniks in 60s California, he opened his first bar in Amsterdam and today has a tequila brand, award-winning book on the spirit, and bars in Paris and London to his name. If you cut this guy open, heā€™d probably bleed tequila.

It all began when I was a teenager growing up in Los Angeles. My friends and I used to hop on over to Tijuana in Mexico and hit the bars. I digged the vibe there. I could do things that I couldnā€™t do back in the States.

Thatā€™s where my love for tequila started. We drank a lot of it. I remember this one bar in Ensenada, it was called Hussongā€™s and itā€™d been there since the 1800s. It was full of charactersā€”sailors, rogues, adventurers. This was just after the Beat Generation in the 1960s and just before the hippy movement took off. They were exciting times, and it was a really great place to drinkā€”people used to rock up on donkeys.

Down in Mexico and around California, I explored. This was the 60s, sexual freedom and liberation was beginning. Tijuana was like Sin City. And yeah, we got high, we drank tequila, we went to strip clubs. I carried a switch blade. I learned a lot about life in these years.

I used to just ride my bike in a pair of Levi jeansā€”no shirtā€”in the sun. All this helped me forge a career in the bar tradeā€”uncovering the food, really understanding tequila and what it means to Mexico. And just life.

But also, I guess itā€™s fair to say that I went off the rails a bit and got into trouble back home. I ended up in jail five timesā€”car theft, usually, but a bunch of other things too. I didnā€™t even keep the cars, I just drove them around a bit and left them.

Tijuana was like Sin City. And yeah, we got high, we drank tequila, we went to strip clubs. I carried a switch blade. All this helped me forge a career in the bar trade.

I got myself together by teachingā€”I won a scholarship to a university in southern California. I was a wrestler. Afterwards, I taught for a few years and, I think, for awhile, I was good. It was fulfilling. Imparting knowledge, discussing the world, studying lifeā€”all these things are so important.

But after a while I got a bit edgy and missed the scene. I needed something moreā€”what is it that Yates said? ā€œEducation is not filling a bucket but lighting a fire.ā€ To begin with, I knew I was lighting a fire. A few years in I felt that fire was gone, so I took a sabbatical and went to Europe.

When I found Amsterdam, I knew thatā€™s where I wanted to live. It was so free, the culture was alive, and I saved up the money and opened my first bar there, Cafe Pacifico, in 1976. There wasnā€™t a Mexican restaurant in the city, there wasnā€™t tequila. I took it there and started a new fire.

It was a huge success. It was full of artists, musicians. There were drug dealers and characters. This was Amsterdam.

Cafe Pacifico was a very cool place. I remember Debbie Harry coming in. Everyone knew about it. One time, Queen picked up a platinum record award there. I met the Jacksons, Tina Turner and the Nike bosses used to sit at a table and drink tequila and eat (they probably did a few other things). Basically, it was inspiring to be thereā€”creativity appeared at every turn.

After that, I came to London and opened another Pacifico. Back then, Covent Garden was just a void. You either drank in West London or in Sohoā€”depending on how much money you hadā€”but it took off. A day before I opened, a magazine asked to interview Hunter S. Thompson [there]. We had a full bar but hadnā€™t served a single drink.

When I found Amsterdam, I knew thatā€™s where I wanted to live. I saved up the money and opened my first bar there in 1976. There wasnā€™t a Mexican restaurant in the city, there wasnā€™t tequila.

I remember him, he was everything you thought heā€™d beā€”petulant, temperamental. He seemed a bit violent but it was remarkable to meet the man, he had such presence. He also kept storming out of the roomā€”apparently he was trying to negotiate his fee for the article in cocaine.

In the years since, tequilaā€™s just grown and grown. Itā€™s come up with Londonā€”the culture has transformed, Covent Garden is nothing like it used to be. Just as weā€™re finding new bars, people, experiences, weā€™re finding new agaves all the time.

The most exciting thing in the drinks industry coming out of Mexico right now is finding these little communities making their own liquor. OK, sometimes they get ripped off, but usually people are true to the spirit and true to the people. And thatā€™s amazing.

These isolated villages are producing incredible tequila and mezcal, and every one of them is unique and extraordinary. And itā€™s great for the locals and strong for the economy.

Since opening Cafe Pacifico, Iā€™ve had around 17 restaurants in total. And Iā€™ve brought these odd and new drinks to each one.

Today, Iā€™ve just got one in Paris, and a few bars here [London]. London is incredibly diverse and thereā€™s a thirst for agave spirits right nowā€”at El Nivel, weā€™ve got variations like raicilla, which is more acidic, almost vinegar-like.

And thereā€™s sotal, which isnā€™t actually from the agave plant, but itā€™s medicinal in flavour and works well in cocktails. Each one has its own aroma and makeup.

This love for the drink isnā€™t just in the States and not just in Europeā€”itā€™s global. Weā€™re all drinking it. And weā€™ve all got so much more to learn.

Thereā€™ll always be slammers, limes, shooters, but sipping proper, authentic, lovingly made tequila is something special.

Most people are only beginning to drink it properly. Thereā€™ll always be slammers, limes, shooters, but sipping proper, authentic, lovingly made tequila is something special. Thereā€™s no taste like itā€”something to savour.

I love the fascination for agave right now, itā€™s the drink of 2015 and I think we havenā€™t peaked yet.Ā Thereā€™ll hopefully be another three or four years left of interest, this hype, before the world moves onto something else.

But agave spirits will always be here.

 

Top 10 family-friendly city apartments around Europe

Barcelona apartment
This Barcelona apartment comes with cartoon doodles on the walls, toy boxes and an indoor hammockYes, a city break with the kids can be enjoyable, if you stay in child-friendly pads like these ā€“ from a Barcelona apartment with toys galore to Budapest with babysitters

Barcelona

With a comic-strip-print sofa, cartoon doodles on the walls, toy boxes, and an indoor hammock, this small but sleek apartment has been designed with kids in mind. Thereā€™s no television, but the owner Mavi runsmammaproof.org, a blog about exploring Spain with children in tow, so sheā€™ll have plenty of ideas about how to keep the nippers entertained. Guests can even use a brand new Bugaboo Bee 3 during their stay, the perfect vehicle for transporting sleepy little ones to GaudĆ­ā€™s Park GĆ¼ell (15 minutesā€™ walk) or his Sagrada FamĆ­lia (20 minutes).

ā€¢ kidandcoe.com/destinations/gracia/the-torrent-de-les-flors-residence. From ā‚¬95 a night for up to five people

Berlin

Berlin apartment

Voted best for kids by i-escape last year, these two-bedroom apartments are in a 19th-century block in Berlinā€™s bohemian Prenzlauer Berg district, within walking distance of dozens of child-friendly cafes and twokindercafes (play cafes): Onkel Albert on Zionskirchstrasse, and Das Spielzimmer on Schliemannstrasse. The owner, Simon, lives in the block with his family and is on hand to share tips on Berlin, recently proclaimed Europeā€™s most family-friendly city by home rental website Housetrip.com. Simon recommends the childrenā€™s museum Machmit, a five-minute tram ride away, and the Moritzhof childrenā€™s farm at the Mauerpark, with pony riding and a petting zoo. English-speaking babysitting available.
ā€¢ i-escape.com/brilliant-apartments/kids. From ā‚¬132 a night for a family of four

Paris

Paris apartment

Close enough to the action but in a quieter residential area that is dotted with leafy parks and playgrounds, laid-back cafes and boulangeries, this two-bed apartment is a favourite with families. The number 76 bus takes you to the Louvre in 20 minutes and, if the kids behave themselves, afterwards to the Jardin de Tuileries next door. Here you can hire model boats to sail on the lake (ā‚¬1 for 30 minutes). Trains from the RER station (10 minutesā€™ walk away) take you to Disneyland Paris within an hour.
ā€¢ homeaway.co.uk/p89542. From Ā£400 a week for four people, minimum seven-night stay in peak season

Palma de Mallorca

Paris apartment

Next to its food market, Mercat de lā€™Olivar, in the buzzy pedestrianised old town, five minutesā€™ walk to a park and an indoor pool, youā€™d be hard-pressed to find a better-situated family apartment in Palma. Itā€™s only a 15-minute walk to the beach and thereā€™s an ice-cream shop on the corner too. There are two apartments ā€“ contemporary Lotus and Bougainvillea, more shabby chic ā€“ both with two bedrooms and sleeping up to six people. The owner, Zaretta, lives next door and is happy to share tips, let you borrow childrenā€™s books, DVDs, and a bucket and spade for beach days. The apartment is double-glazed and has a lift, although there are a few steps to climb first.
ā€¢ homeaway.co.uk/p438979. From ā‚¬120 a night for up to six people

Amsterdam

Amsterdam apartment

Parents of toddlers beware: most apartments in Amsterdam come with steep, narrow stairs. Many also come with balconies. Thatā€™s why this spacious stair-free, balcony-free two-bedroom apartment is such a find. Itā€™s ground floor but, thanks to the high ceilings, skylights and large windows, feels more like a loft apartment. It sleeps four comfortably but can accommodate six, or eight with the sofa bed. The location is great too ā€“ a short walk to the cityā€™s largest park, Vondelpark, where kids can clamber about at the old-school playground and sample child-pleasingpoffertjes (mini Dutch pancakes) at Groot Melkhuis cafe.
ā€¢ airbnb.co.uk. From Ā£148 a night for four people

Budapest

Budapest apartment

Kids will love rummaging around in the fancy dress cupboard in this large four-bedroom ground-floor apartment, with high ceilings, a large open-plan lounge and kitchen and access to a central courtyard garden. The apartment owners can arrange babysitting and an English-speaking kidsā€™ day camp. They also run a minibus business, so can do airport pick-ups, city tours and get you discounts on family attractions, including Aquaworld(17 pools, 11 slides) and the hire of a bringo hintĆ³, a four or six-man pedal-powered vehicle for exploring Margaret Island, a landscaped park in the middle of the Danube with a small zoo, playgrounds, and a musical fountain.
ā€¢ housetrip.com/en/rentals/5452. From ā‚¬98 a night for seven people (10 with sofa beds)

Vienna

Vienna apartment

Children aged five and under can stay for free at these two funky ground-floor apartments, which can be joined together via an interior hallway for larger families (nine maximum). Theyā€™re just a five-minute walk from the cityā€™s 3,200-acre Prater Park, home to one of the worldā€™s oldest amusement parks with rollercoasters, bumper cars, a ghost train, maze, go-carts, trampolines, mini-golf, and Viennaā€™s famous giant ferris wheel. Also nearby is the traffic-free campus of the University of Economics, perfect for letting little ones run wild ā€“ and it has a toddler-friendly cafe. Another smaller park is just across the road. If the kids still arenā€™t tired, back at the apartment thereā€™s a little front yard, lovely wooden toys, finger puppets and a rocking horse.
ā€¢ praterloft.at. ā‚¬100 a night for four people

Rome

Rome apartment

This pretty three-bedroom apartment is five minutes from the Vatican and the Piazza del Popole and is even closer to two beautiful parks and arguably Romeā€™s best ice-cream parlour, Gelateria dei Gracchi. Tech-crazy kids, meanwhile, will be begging to go to Vigamus, the video-game museum, which is nearby. The owner, Audrey, used to live in the apartment with her son and daughter and they have kindly left behind many of their favourite toys and games, tidied away in boxes in their bright and cheery bunk-bed room.
ā€¢ homeaway.co.uk/p1187828. From ā‚¬149 a night for up to six people

Lisbon

Lisbon apartment

Little ones will love catching the funicular to these small but charming hilltop apartments in Lisbonā€™s Pena district. Both have two bedrooms (one double, one twin) and spectacular views: across tiled rooftops and the river to the Rossio, Lisbonā€™s main square, or from Travessa to the ruins of Igreja do Carmo, Lisbonā€™s gothic monument to the cityā€™s 1755 earthquake. Both apartments are packed with local antiques, but also have wooden train sets, jigsaw puzzles, childrenā€™s books, DVDs, and beach toys. The family-friendly beach, Santo Amaro, is a 30-minute train ride away.
ā€¢ sawdays.co.uk. From ā‚¬85 a night, five-night minimum booking in peak season

Prague

Prague apartment

Even the children will appreciate the magical views from these elegant riverside apartments, looking across the Vltava to the Charles bridge and the cityā€™s famous castle. These spacious and well-equipped apartments are on the first and second floor, accessed by 600-year-old spiral sandstone steps, but donā€™t worry, thereā€™s also a private lift. Close by is the Kampa Park, which has a great playground for little ones and is home toHergetova Cihelna, a restaurant which does a lively Sunday family brunch with a kidsā€™ corner, toys, professional babysitters and children under 1 metre tall eat for free. Each week thereā€™s face-painting and entertainment, from magicians, pirates or Batman.
ā€¢ ownersdirect.co.uk. From ā‚¬114 a night for four people

Netherlands’ worst July storm kills one, causes transport chaos

Zomerstorm - The emergency services at work in Leiden. Photo: ANP

AMSTERDAM, July 25 (Reuters) – One person was killed as the most severe July storm ever recorded in the Netherlands swept across the country on Saturday, delaying flights and disrupting road and rail traffic.

Dozens of flights were delayed at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport and authorities warned travellers not to take to the road as gale-force winds and rain lashed the country, prompting the meteorological service to issue a “Code Red” warning.

No trains were running at Amsterdam Central Station, and trams were halted across the city. Roads were blocked by fallen trees in many places around the low-lying country.

A motorist was killed in the eastern province of Gelderland when a tree fell on his car, and there were reports of people being injured in several cities.

With gusts of up to 121 kmh in coastal regions, it was the most violent July storm in the Netherlands since records began in 1901.

In The Hague, seat of the country’s government, emergency services warned that response times could be slowed because of the flood of storm-related calls.

Winds were observed to be slowing in Amsterdam by 1600 GMT, though the severe weather warning remained in effect.

DJ John Digweed: eight of the best clubbing capitals

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The British DJ and record producer gives us his inside track into the worldā€™s coolest partying destinations

Miami

Miami is a year-round clubbing destination catering for everyone from super rich VIPs to underground clubbers looking for the cooler side of electronic music. I just played at Treehouseon South Beach, which has a real quirky feel to its layout and aĀ very relaxed vibe. Ā British Airways flies to Miami

Watch: John Digweed live at Treehouse, Miami

San Francisco

This is easily one of myĀ favourite cities in the world. San Fran is so beautiful during the day and very lively at night. Mighty is an old warehouse style venue with a state-of-the-art Avalon EAW sound system and super friendly and energetic crowd. I always have so much fun playing here.Ā British Airways flies to San Francisco

Bombay

India has recently been bitten by the electronic music bug. The last time I was in town I played at a new club called Blue Frog which has several venues throughout the country. The crowd seemed really enthusiastic ā€” thereā€™s a new generation of young people who are working, have disposable cash, and just want to go out and have a good time. Read more: DJ schools in Mumbai ā€ØĀ British Airways flies to Bombay

Las Vegas

People know Vegas for its mega hotels, casinos and clubs, but itā€™s also home to one of the worldā€™s biggest music festivals ā€” Electric Daisy Carnival runs over three days (19-21 June 2015) and leads the way in terms of out-of-this-world productions by some of the best DJs in the world. Ā British Airways flies to Las Vegas

ā€œIn Montreal, the crowds party right through to the afternoon on the following dayā€

Ibiza

For summer clubbing, it you canā€™t beat anywhere else on the planet. Ibiza has it allĀ ā€” great beaches, restaurants and nightlife. I have a residency at the legendary Pacha in Ibiza Town for its ā€˜Insaneā€™ Friday night party, running until the first week of October.

British Airways flies to Ibiza

New York

ā€ØNew York is special for me ā€” I was the resident DJ at club called Twilo from five years. The cityā€™s got a great vibe. Thereā€™s a club there called Output in Williamsburg, which not only has an amazing sound system, itā€™s got a no camera/no bottle service/no VIP policy, so it attracts a proper clubbing crowd, without any pretension. Iā€™d rather play for people who want to dance, not people who want to look at a DJ through a camera.Ā British Airways flies to New York

Montreal

Home of the famous after hours nightclubbing scene (the clubs donā€™t open until after midnight), Montreal has always been a top city for me to play in. They invest in the clubs there and make them better. Stereo has one of the best sound systems in the world ā€” not to mention a well-educated crowdĀ who sometimes party right through to the afternoon the following day.Ā British Airways flies to Montreal

Amsterdam

When it comes to electronic music, Amsterdam Dance Event is the place to be: the five-day conference and festival (14-18 October 2015) features over 2,000 DJs and act, so itā€™s a great time to network and party at the same time. There are parties on every night of the week across the city. I always host a Bedrock party at the Melkweg to a very up-for-it international crowd. Ā British Airways flies to Amsterdam

50 Places In Europe You Need To Visit In Your Lifetime Vol. I

Cliffs of Moher Ireland

Europe is home to historic cities, world-famous museums, and phenomenal restaurants. But there are also gorgeous hidden beaches, phenomenal ski resorts, and stunning natural formations like canyons, waterfalls, and gorges.

We’ve come up with the ultimate bucket list of travel destinations in Europe.

From biking along the canals of Amsterdam to tasting Chianti in Italy’s Tuscany region, here are 25Ā things you need to do in Europe in your lifetime.

Stroll along the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, in the south of France.

Stroll along the Promenade des Anglais in Nice, in the south of France.

Hit the slopes at Innsbruck, a breathtaking ski resort in the mountains of Austria.

Hit the slopes at Innsbruck, a breathtaking ski resort in the mountains of Austria.

Dance to house music at an underground nightclub in Berlin, like Tresor.

Dance to house music at an underground nightclub in Berlin, like Tresor.

Hug the cliffs while driving along the Amalfi Coast in Italy, and visit the charming towns of Positano, Ravello, and Salerno.

Hug the cliffs while driving along the Amalfi Coast in Italy, and visit the charming towns of Positano, Ravello, and Salerno.

Pass a day in the beautiful Tivoli gardens and amusement park in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Pass a day in the beautiful Tivoli gardens and amusement park in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Walk across the 612-year-old Charles Bridge in Prague, Czech Republic.

Walk across the 612-year-old Charles Bridge in Prague, Czech Republic.

Snap a photo at the Azure Window, a natural Limestone arch on the Maltese island of Gozo.

Snap a photo at the Azure Window, a natural Limestone arch on the Maltese island of Gozo.

Stay up all night partying on the Spanish island of Ibiza.

Stay up all night partying on the Spanish island of Ibiza.

Test your speed on Germany’s famous autobahn.

Test your speed on Germany's famous autobahn.

Take in the stunning views of the Mediterranean Sea from the Greek island of Santorini.

Take in the stunning views of the Mediterranean Sea from the Greek island of Santorini.

Play a hand of blackjack at the Casino de Monaco in Monte Carlo.

Play a hand of blackjack at the Casino de Monaco in Monte Carlo.

Hear the roar of JƤgala Fall in Estonia, called “the Niagara Falls of the Baltics.”

Hear the roar of JƤgala Fall in Estonia, called "the Niagara Falls of the Baltics."

Marvel at the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City.

Marvel at the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City.

Lounge on the stunning beaches of Lagos, Portugal.

Lounge on the stunning beaches of Lagos, Portugal.

Bike alongside the canals of Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Bike alongside the canals of Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Stroll the historic fortified city of Dubrovnik, Croatia.

Stroll the historic fortified city of Dubrovnik, Croatia.

Seek out Botticelli’s masterpieces, “The Birth of Venus” and “Primavera,” inside Florence’s Uffizi Gallery.

Seek out Botticelli's masterpieces, "The Birth of Venus" and "Primavera," inside Florence's Uffizi Gallery.

Play a round at Ballybunion, one of the most iconic golf courses in Ireland.

Play a round at Ballybunion, one of the most iconic golf courses in Ireland.

Marvel at the Moorish architecture and tranquil gardens of the Alhambra palace in Granada, Spain.

Marvel at the Moorish architecture and tranquil gardens of the Alhambra palace in Granada, Spain.

Smell the tulips at Keukenhof, a vast flower garden in Lisse, the Netherlands.

Smell the tulips at Keukenhof, a vast flower garden in Lisse, the Netherlands.

Catch a show at Scotland’s Edinburgh Fringe Festival, the world’s largest arts festival.

Catch a show at Scotland's Edinburgh Fringe Festival, the world's largest arts festival.

Test your limits and peer out from the edge of the Cliffs of Moher in Ireland.

Test your limits and peer out from the edge of the Cliffs of Moher in Ireland.

Drink a beer from a stein during Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany.

Drink a beer from a stein during Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany.

Explore the ruins of Rome’s stately Colosseum and imagine the gladiator fights that once packed the arena.

Explore the ruins of Rome's stately Colosseum and imagine the gladiator fights that once packed the arena.

Sip on a cocktail in a glass made entirely of ice at the ICEBAR, a bar inside Sweden’s ICEHOTEL JukkasjƤrvi.

Sip on a cocktail in a glass made entirely of ice at the ICEBAR, a bar inside Sweden's ICEHOTEL JukkasjƤrvi.

Why Amsterdam’s Prostitution Laws are Still Failing to Protect or Empower Women

Amsterdam may be heralded as a hub for liberalism and social progression following its legalisation of prostitution in 1988 and consumption of marijuana.

However, after a significant number of brothels have been closed due to suspected criminal activity in the best known Red Light district of De Wallen in Amsterdam, alongside the nature of displaying women in windows like pieces of meat, it shows that the system has not worked.

Women as Fast Food ‘Treat’

Visitors enter a peep-show theatre during the first-ever open day of Amsterdam’s red light districtReuters

Lumped into the same category as visiting a museum, the zoo or a gallery, the Red Light District is what people rave about it when visiting Holland’s capital city.

Lauding Amsterdam for its liberal-mindedness, observing (or visiting) the women in their ‘iconic’ window brothels in De Wallen, is a ‘must-see’.

Visitors enter a peep-show theatre during the first-ever open day of Amsterdam's red light district

For those that aren’t in the know ā€“ in Amsterdam, prostitution and the purchasing of sex is legal, and has been since 1988.

Walking through the Red Light District is supposedly a fun, unique experience ā€“ countless people had reassured me that I “had to visit it”, but I found the narrow, cobbled streets of De Wallen to be passively hostile, especially to women.

I couldn’t help but keep my head down and rush through, trying to avoid the gaze of the girls ā€“ many of whom looked younger than me ā€“ displayed in the glass windows like cuts of meat. Like the sweaty Febo snacks, couped up in their display cabinets.

In fact, the whole Red Light experience made me uncomfortable and sad.

These women ā€“ or rather, their bodies ā€“ were being reduced to nothing more than a tourist attraction. The fact that a girl in this city is presented in much the same way as a burger in a fast-food joint is somewhat disturbing to me.

Is the System Actually Working?

A visitor views the installation 'The Hoerengracht' ('Whore's Canal') by U.S. artists Ed Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz at the National Gallery in central London November 17, 2009.

A visitor views the installation ‘The Hoerengracht’ (‘Whore’s Canal’) by U.S. artists Ed Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz at the National Gallery in central London November 17, 2009.Reuters

Amsterdam City Council goes to great lengths to try and ensure the safety of the women working.

Police patrol the city; each room is equipped with a panic button; the women undergo regularly mandatory health checks and are encouraged to register their profession, to pay taxes.

The logic behind the legalisation of prostitution seems to be that by bringing the underworld into the light, the criminal aspect would surely dissolve.

In theory, women would be less likely to suffer abuse at the hands of pimps, less likely to be involved in human trafficking, and more likely to earn a decent wage.

And yet, the system hasn’t worked ā€“ it’s made things worse.

A prostitute in Amsterdam, a notoriously expensive city, will pay up to one hundred euro a night for the rent of a window.

She also has to pay a pimp, and pay taxes if she registers ā€“ though only 5% of prostitutes have actually registered for tax, perhaps for fear of the social stigma that comes with publicly announcing yourself as a prostitute.

Just in order to take some home for herself she’ll have to have sex with ten to fifteen people per day.Ā The vocal union for the sex workers, De Rode Draad, went bankrupt and closed down in 2009. In addition to this, 13 sex workers have been murdered in De Wallen since 1990.

After twenty years of legalised prostitution, the council ended up cutting down the Red Light district’s brothels from 482 to 243 after bouts of criminal activity.

Why Legalising Prostitution is Rotten to the Core

De Wallen, for all its beautiful architecture and friendly people, is rotten to the core, much like the concept of legalised prostitution.

As these bored-looking girls stand behind their red-lit glass doors, looking out as much as we look in, we are supposed to feel better in the knowledge that this profession is sanctioned by the government, which in turn means that the government itself will profit off the sex trade.

However, this doesn’t automatically mean that these women have a choice in their work. I’m told there are many women who do enjoy prostitution; I’ve yet to hear of one, though, and bear in mind that the average age of a woman entering the sex trade is fourteen.

The problem is that the legalising of prostitutes creates a higher demand for these women. That’s where human trafficking comes in, and Amsterdam ā€“ along with much of Eastern Europe ā€“ is one of the most heavily trafficked places in the world, according to United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

A Dutch prostitute sits behind her window in the red light district in Amsterdam, The Netherlands

A Dutch prostitute sits behind her window in the red light district in Amsterdam, The NetherlandsReuters

In 2008, six men were convicted of the “largest case of human trafficking ever brought to trial in the Netherlands.Ā 

According to the investigation: “some of the victims were compelled to have breast enlargement surgery, and one defendant was convicted of forcing at least one woman to have an abortion.

“Women were beaten and forced to sit in icy water to avoid bruising. They also were tattooed.”

In 2009, two men were jailed for forcing around 140 girls between the ages of 16 and 23 into prostitution in Europe ā€“ and by controlling them using voodoo.

A now famous campaign from Stop the Traffik showed several window girls breaking into a dance routine; following the routine a huge screen displayed the message “Every year,thousands of women are promised a dance careerĀ in Western Europe. Sadly, they end up here.”

Amsterdam’s human trafficking problem is out of control, and try as they might to maintain a facade of safety for sex-workers, the fact remains: it is one of the most dangerous professions in the world and there is no guarantee of safety.

Amsterdam’s attempt to legalise prostitution, ‘the oldest profession in the world’, has failed, resulting in the acceptance of selling under-age, trafficked women as a tourist attraction.

Traffickers are making a mint off slavery, thanks to this ‘liberal’ concept.

Before we can even begin to consider the successful legalising of sex work, we must find a way to end the exploitation rampant in the sex trade ā€“ for a start, those who pay to have sex with human beings are rapists and should be prosecuted as such. Having sex with someone just so you can pay your rent is not consent.

Despite its honourable intentions, Amsterdam’s legalisation of prostitution is not liberal or empowering – it perpetuates the notion that women are the oldest form of currency.

Jaw-Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

With meticulous determination and a steady hand, artistĀ Ben SackĀ picks up a black 0.05 Staedtler pigment liner pen and begins to draw the dense, intricate details of fictional cityscapes: buildings, roads, rivers and bridges.

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

He draws until the ink runs out and picks up another pen. And another. And another. Sapping the ink from dozens of writing utensils until several months later a canvas is complete.

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

His most recent piece, a vast circular drawing titledĀ A Single NoteĀ (top), has a 12.5 foot circumference. It staggers the mind.

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

The architecture found in Sackā€™s artwork spans centuries, from gothic cathedrals to towering skyscrapers, underpinned by patterns of urban sprawl reminiscent of European cities with a healthy dose of science fiction.

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

If you look carefully you might even recognize a familiar landmark here and there. He shares as his influence some thoughts on ā€œwestern antiquityā€:

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

Sack graduated from the Virginia Commonwealth University in 2011 and has since had work numerous solo a group exhibitions, most recently atĀ Ghostprint Gallery. And just this week he returned from a circumnavigation of the globe as part of a residence aboard the m/s Amsterdam. You can see more of his work on hisĀ website, and over onĀ Tumblr.Ā 

Jaw Dropping Pen and Ink Cityscapes That Seem to Sprawl into Infinity by Ben Sack drawing

These Are The World’s Safest Cities

Asian and European cities come out on top. At number 10, New York City is the safest in the United States.

In 1990, homicides in New York hit a record high of 2,245ā€”an average of six per day. In 2013, the city recorded only 335 murders for the entire year, despite adding 1 million more residents.

In other words: “the safety of cities can ebb and flow,” as a new report puts it. Meanwhile, the type of threats change too. Twenty-five years ago, nobody was worried about climate change, and the term “cyber-security” had barely been invented. Now they’re more serious challenges than some traditional crimes.

For a snapshot of current risks to cities and a ranking of which are the safest, see the Economist Intelligence Unit‘s Safe Cities Index 2015. Bringing together 40 data indicators, it offers a multifaceted view of 50 cities worldwide across four areas: digital security, health security, infrastructure safety, and personal safety.

It’s no surprise that, generally, richer cities are safer. Tokyo and Singapore top the list, while Jakarta, in Indonesia, comes out on the bottom. The top-10 is full of well-off comfortable cities like Stockholm (4th) and Zurich (7th). But the rich-safe link isn’t always there.

Some wealthy Middle Eastern places score low down, for instance. “Four of the five Middle Eastern cities in the Index are considered high income, but only one makes it into the top half of the Index: at 25 Abu Dhabi is 21 places above Riyadh at number 46,” the report says.

Tokyo, the world’s most populous city, scores well for digital security, personal safety, and infrastructure safety, despite the risk it faces from earthquakes.

Many European cities score relatively poorly for digital safety, but dominate the top-10 list for health security, with Zurich, Brussels, Barcelona and Frankfurt all appearing. Asia dominates the top-10 for personal safety with the very safe (and dull) Singapore coming out best of all.

Interestingly, the safety of cities isn’t necessarily reflected in how safe citizens feel. That’s particularly true of U.S. cities, where people often feel less safe than perhaps they should (Chicago has the widest divergence between safety perception and reality, according to the data).

That may be a hangover from the homicide highs of the ’70s and ’80s and perhaps a certain mythologizing of crime through TV and movies. Actually, many American cities are relatively safe these days, though New York is still only in 28th place for personal safety.

Jewish schools in Amsterdam, Belgium closed as precaution

Cheider Jewish school in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Only Orthodox school in Amsterdam, Jewish schools in Antwerp and Brussels temporarily closed after two terrorism suspects were killed in a raid in Verviers, Belgium.

The only Orthodox Jewish school in the Netherlands was closed on Friday as a precautionary measure after an anti-terrorism raid in Belgium left two suspects dead.

There was no concrete threat against the Cheider School in Amsterdam, Dutch national broadcaster NOS said, citing the school’s Rabbi Binyomin Jacobs. School phones went unanswered Friday morning.

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Jewish schools in Antwerp and Brussels are also temporarily closed after two terrorism suspects were killed in a raid in Verviers, Belgium, on Thursday.

Dutch Jewish schools and prominent Jewish monuments – including Amsterdam’s Anne Frank House and Jewish Historical Museum – have had extra security since June, on advice of the country’s national anti-terrorism office.

That followed a terrorism-related shooting at the Jewish Museum in Brussels, Belgium, in May that killed four.

Policemen work into a marked out perimeter in Colline street in Verviers, eastern Belgium

Daniel Radcliffe Gets Stoned in Amsterdam

Daniel Radcliffe likes the ganja! While at the Green House Cafe in Amsterdam on Wednesday he had a couple of tokes, then posed for a photo with a couple of employees, who then posted the pic to Instagram.Ā 

The Harry Potter star now joins the cafe’s other celeb clientele: Miley Cyrus, Rihanna and Woody Harrelson.
Hey Dan, consider this an invite to join us at one of Cannabis Cups! We promise you’ll have all the weed you can smoke.

Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 With 295 Passengers Aboard Crashes in Ukraine

Airport groundstaff walk past Malaysia Airlines planes parked on the tarmac at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on June 17, 2014.

A Malaysian passenger plane has reportedly crashed in Ukraine near the Russian border.

Russian news agency Interfax reported that Boeing 777 crashed in Ukraine’s restive eastern region, near where government forces are fighting pro-Russian insurgents.

Some 295 people were said to be on board the Boeing plane which was reportedly flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur.

Malaysian passenger plane crashes Ukraine,
A Malaysian passenger plane has reportedly crashed in the restive eastern Ukrainian region

Earlier a Ukrainian security spokesman has accused Russia’s air force of shooting down one of its fighter jets while it was on a mission over Ukrainian territory.

A spokesman for Malaysian Airlines has confirmed “an incident” on board one of its flights and is expected to release a statement shortly.

View image on Twitter

BBVH overhauls belgian barge into airy amsterdam houseboat

dutch firmĀ BBVH architectsĀ have transformed a belgian barge into a light-filled houseboat in amsterdam.the 40m long vessel, after just retiring from a long life of hauling freight over the european rivers, its owners;

artist laura and restaurant owner john, wanted the ship to remain navigable, so decided not to demolish or refurbish the steering hut, deckhouse or machine room.the architectsā€™ main concern was letting enough light through to the interior, while still maintaining the safety and certification aspects of the ship. to avoid a sense of gloominess,

often associated with traditional houseboats, a large patio and 18 over-sized bronze portholes were introduced. the enclosed courtyard consists of an outdoor bathtub and a pear tree ā€“ it is also a safe area for the kids to to play outside without the risk of them falling overboard.

Nightfall Brings a Dutch Urban Garden to Life (PHOTOS)

Amsterdam garden
Nighttime transforms the landscape. Though weā€™re drawn to it, dusk usually signals that itā€™s time to go inside for the night. But in this backyard retreat, itā€™s at night when the garden comes alive ā€” subtle movements are heard and seen, white blooms shine more brightly and garden scents linger.Landscape designer Arjan Boekel was hired to transform an unused back patio in Amsterdamā€™s historic Canal Ring area for a working couple.Ā TheyĀ wanted an outdoor space to sit and relax in after work and on weekends.Ā They needed a night garden, and in only two months of design and four days of construction,Ā Boekel created something magical.
The clients wanted a garden, not just an outdoor extension of the house. Though this would be an outdoor area where they would entertain friends, grill and relax, soft greenery was a priority.The existing outdoor space hardly resembled a yard, let alone a garden. A neighborā€™s mature maple tree provided plenty of leaf litter, and pervasive ivy clambered through and over the walls. Letā€™s just say they started from scratch.
contemporary patio by Boekel Tuinen
AFTER:Ā ā€œMaking an outside living room is one thing, but I wanted it to have a real garden feel,ā€ saysĀ Boekel. ā€œPlants are the only distinctive elements to make a room a garden.ā€ He planted half the available surface, creating two distinct areas: usable hardscape and lush greenery. ā€œIt creates a green buffer zone between the outside living room and the inside living room,ā€ he says.The homeowners also wanted more storage for garden tools and surfboards. Twining vines on the pergola and a green roof on the newly built garden shed augment the feeling of a garden, even in the built features.
contemporary patio by Boekel Tuinen
The hardscaping is subtle ā€” mostly wood and dark gray concrete tile. The built features of the garden frame and support the plants, without attracting too much attention to materials and design. Though the garden is relatively young, completed in the spring of 2012, we can already see where eager plantings will fill in and transform the space.Visitors enter the garden from above, using an outdoor staircase off the living room. Itā€™s from this angle that we see the charming new garden shed and its green roof. The garden is often enjoyed at night but also from inside and from above. The living roof is a welcome feature for the clients as well as for the neighbors.
contemporary landscape by Boekel Tuinen
A galvanized steel bridge floats over the plantings and small water feature to the covered seating area, traversing the green area without dividing it.

Buildings surround the yard on all sides. Boekel chose shade-friendly woodland plants, likeĀ ferns, anemones, hellebores, asters andĀ Aruncus, that would tolerate the shadowy site, and that would also suit inexperienced gardeners who donā€™t want to spend all their time tending to plants.A bright white anemone (AnemoneĀ Ć—Ā hybridaĀ ā€˜Honorine Jobertā€™)Ā projects through the surrounding foliage. White flowers prevail in this garden, brightening even the darkest corners.
Amsterdam garden
At just over 320 square feet, the garden features space-saving ideas, but perhaps not in the most literal sense. Composition is key. Everything fits together seamlessly, ā€œplaced and fitted together like pieces of a puzzle,ā€ says Boekel. Itā€™s more about getting the maximum use of the space by making sure the different elements of the garden work together and flow. A built-in table projects off the garden shed; the pergola is built into the shed on the other side.The pergola works hard, and its multiple uses exemplifyĀ Boekelā€™s design mantra for the garden. It shelters the outdoor sofa, supports the climbing star jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides) and holds the outdoor lighting.

Here’s What Happened When Wes Anderson Went to Amsterdam Last Week

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Director Wes Anderson has been busy travelling across Europe on what could be described as a modern day whistle-stop tour to promote his latest movie, The Grand Budapest Hotel. He’s not a fan of air travel so he’s been riding the rails, one of his preferred methods of transportation. Actor Tony Revolori, who plays a central character in the film named Zero Moustafa, has joined him on the trek.

The two of them were in Amsterdam on February 12th to screen Grand Budapest at PathĆ© Tuschinski, a theatre that could easily serve as a set for one of the director’s films. Anderson and Revolori participated in a Q&A before the film with journalist and editor Ronald Ockhuysen. Their conversation covered Austrian literature, what happens when you’re up for a role in a film against your own brother, and whether or not Dutch people know where Anaheim is located. Here it is:
Ockhuysen:Ā When we see one of your movies we can recognise who made it within seconds. There’s always a lot of nostalgia. Why is that? Why are you fascinated with the past?

Anderson:Ā Well, nobody knows really. I will say, as a general rule, I sort of like old things. It’s not uncommon and I fall into that category. With [The Grand Budapest Hotel], the biggest inspiration was the work of Stefan Zweig who I had never read until seven or eight years ago. I read a book of his called Beware of Pity and then I started reading all of his short fiction. I became a big fan. I thought about adapting one of his books but then I decided to try to make my own version of a Zweig story. I don’t know why. It’s acceptable that I can do my own Zweig. He’s in the public domain and no one can really stop me. [laughs] I also read his memoir, The World of Yesterday. The thing that struck me the most in this book was his nostalgia for Vienna and a Europe that sort of began to die very quickly in 1914. Art was at the centre of everything. I’ve spent a lot of time over the past fifteen years in Europe and, for me, it’s always an adventure. I don’t have the sadness of nostalgia. I think there are connections between that Europe and the Europe of now. I’ll leave it at that.

Ockhuysen:Ā You use a lot of sets and things that are clearly fake and they’re always really funny. You also have an eye for perfection. How do you combine these things?

Anderson:Ā In the case of this movie, we began basing it on a real person. We began writing the characters, and they’re all exaggerated, in a way, but I wanted to make them real in a way that felt authentic. At the same time, I wanted to make a world that they live in that’s not necessarily like any other world; a world that we can’t find if we walk out the door and outside. Making a movie like this involves accumulating all of these ingredients. We travelled around Europe and we gathered ideas while in Hungary and the Czech Republic and Austria and Poland, and Germany. All of these things went into the movie. For me, it’s more about sweeping it all together and trying to make something out of it, to bring it to life.

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Ockhuysen:Ā You tend to work with people you’ve been working with for years. Actors like Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, and the Wilson brothers. Same Director of Photography and other crew members. It’s like there’s a Wes Anderson family, in a way.

Anderson:Ā Well, I like all of these people. [For Budapest], we’ve got two posters, one with all of the actors on it. For the film, we all lived together in a little hotel. I’ve learned to do this over the years and this is how we always work. Everybody can go home when it’s finished and, believe me, everybody really wants to go home when it’s finished. While we’re working on it though, it’s more of a pleasure for us to live together like a little family. It’s much better for our working environment. They always come back so that’s a good sign.

Ockhuysen:Ā [To Revolori] What kind of a director is Wes Anderson? Is he nice on the set?

Revolori:Ā I won’t say that he had a whip but, no, he’s great. He’s always the same, even when he directs. Very nice and he has an air of comfortable-ness. It’s like you’re jumping in a river with all of his usual cast and crew members and you go along for the ride.

Ockhuysen:Ā [To Revolori] You’re pretty young. You’re 17 now and you were 16 during the filming. This made you the rookie on the set. The new kid on the block. How did that go? Did you sleep well?

Revolori:Ā Definitely. We had a good hotel. It was great. Everybody made me feel as comfortable as they possibly could and Ralph [Fiennes] was an amazing mentor. I had a lot of fun shooting this and I think it shows on the screen.

Ockhuysen:Ā [To Revolori] I heard that both you and your brother were up for the role of Zero. Is everything still OK with him?

Revolori:Ā No, he’s still suffering from the broken leg I gave him. I’m just kidding. He’s always giving me hugs and saying that he’s proud of me. It’s fantastic. I’m glad to have an amazing brother like that.

Ockhuysen:Ā Was it difficult to find an actor like him? It’s a very peculiar role.

Anderson:Ā For the part that Tony plays, I knew I wanted to find somebody that had never really been in anything before. Over the years, in different movies, I’ve had roles like that. It was the thing I did. After we finished the script, I said we need to hire a team of casting directors. We were looking mostly in the Middle East since his character is from the Middle East. We also looked in France and all over Europe. I didn’t expect to find someone in Anaheim. Do you guys know where that is? It’s where Disneyland is located.

[At this point, several people in the audience nodded their heads. Many of them knew that Anaheim, and Disneyland too, can be found in California.]

Ockhuysen:Ā So he came from right next door?

Anderson:Ā Yes, he came from Anaheim. We looked at over a thousand auditions and then the process ended pretty suddenly. When I saw Tony, I immediately fired casting directors all over the world just like that. [laughs] It can happen. There’s not always five contenders at the end. Many times you find that one person and then you begin shooting the movie.

Ockhuysen:Ā You guys were just at The Berlin Film Festival and you’ve been doing a press trip all across Europe by train. Are you afraid of flying, Wes, or is it because you’re a romantic guy?

Anderson:Ā I’m a romantic guy who doesn’t like to fly. [laughs] There’s a few trains in this film and there was a train in The Darjeeling Limited. If it weren’t for my phobia, I guess I wouldn’t be able to provide these moments cinematically. I have a lot of experience being in trains because I usually refuse to get on an airplane. We just came from Copenhagen by overnight train and I can recommend it. It was very nice and comfortable and lovely. Tomorrow we’re off to Paris. In a train.

Cloud startup DigitalOcean brings new Amsterdam data center online

Cloud startup DigitalOcean brings new Amsterdam data centerĀ onlineĀ (update)

DigitalOceanā€™s data center footprint is growing quickly.

The New York-based cloud hosting provider, which offers SSD-backed cloud servers targeted at developers, today opened its second data center in Amsterdam, with plans to open a facility in Singapore by the end of January.

The company also has data centers in New York and California.

DigitalOceanā€™s new Amsterdam data center brings an additional 500 physical servers online, with the capacity to add as many as 9,500 more should demand warrant it. And that extra space might prove essential: Demand has outstripped supply in Europe for the last several weeks, leading to capacity crunches in the first Amsterdam data center. The new facility should help stabilize the startupā€™s operations in Europe.

ā€œThe first [Amsterdam data center] was our initial deployment to test the waters there,ā€ saidĀ Moisey Uretsky, DigitalOceanā€™s chief product officer, in an interview with VentureBeat.Ā ā€Given the very positive uptake, we built out a second data center there ā€¦ that features a much more robust network layer and much more capacity.ā€

Amsterdam provides a host of benefits to the cloud computing startup, according toĀ Uretsky, from its close proximity to other European countries to the Netherlandā€™s strict privacy laws, which could help mollify customer concerns about providing data to a U.S.-based cloud company following the Edward Snowden PRISM revelations.Ā DigitalOcean is currently working to set up a separate legal entity in the Netherlands, butĀ Uretsky couldnā€™t specify when that process might be completed.

The cloud startup purchased around 100,000 IP addresses for its new Amsterdam data center, which enables customers to create virtual servers with both a public and private address. That means they can utilize the public infrastructure forĀ Internet-facing communicationsĀ while restricting more sensitive activities to a private network.

ā€œWe offer private networking inside of the data center, so itā€™s not a publicly visible IP, but itā€™s on our shared private network so droplets [company parlance for virtual servers] in other regions can talk to each other,ā€ explainedĀ Uretsky.

This private networking functionality is currently only available in the new Amsterdam facility and one of Digital Oceanā€™s New York data centers, but the company plans to offer it across all of its data centers soon.

DigitalOcean closedĀ a $3.2 million seed roundĀ in August with participation fromĀ IA Ventures, CrunchFund, and TechStars. The company differentiates itself from other infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) providers like Amazon Web Services with its low prices and ease of implementation. Itā€™s become a favorite among some developer circles, like the Ruby on Rails community.

ā€œThe main thing that we have is simplicity; everything else out there seems a bit too complicated,ā€ said Uretsky.Ā ā€When we initially surveyed the market two and a half years ago, we didnā€™t see anything that did a good enough job of letting you spin up your server and then get out of the way.ā€

The company just crossed the 100,000 customer mark, with a goal to double that figure by the end of next year. Beyond international expansion and customer growth, areas of focus going forward will be object storage and networking ā€” specifically, IPv6 support, private networking features, and load balancing.