Thursday, 29 April 2010

Our world going Gaga


It does not come as a surprise that Lady Gaga made the Time 100 list of the people that most affect our world. Between 2009 and 2010 she has been able to propel herself into stardom and create her whole image. I believe Gaga is truly a performer and the original meaning of a pop star. Her power to influence placed her on the list among ex american president Bill Clinton and Brazilian president Lula da Silva, even beating out Oprah. As some people are honored for leading powerful countries into economic succes or being an anti-poverty activist, it seems extravagant costumes and scultural head pieces can land you a spot.


"Some of the people you'll encounter on this list are influential in the traditional sense," Time managing editor Richard Stengel says. "But we also seek out people whose ideas and actions are revolutionizing their fields and transforming lives."


Lady Gaga has become a role model for many, as she claims to always remain true to herself and she preaches to never hide your true colors -- inspirational indeed.

Her little monsters must be very pround.

Hate them or love them, clogs are back!

1) Miu Miu Satin Daisy-Print Clog (£324)
2)No.6 Store T-Strap Clog (£150)
3. Stuart Weitzman Studclog (£225)
4. Jeffrey Campbell Charli Clog (£88)
5. Opening Ceremony W19 Ankle Boot Clog (£340)
6. Pedro Garcia Fiona Taffy Eden Calf Clog (£366)

Many trends return after various years, but I never expected to see clogs ever make a comeback. I am amazed they managed to breakthrough many other trends, and appear in such influential designer shows, such as: Chanel, Alexander Wang and Louis Vuitton. What is it that these fashion houses see in them, -noisy, uncomfortable and unflattering, clogs are just plain ugly! However not everyone seems to share this disatisfaction with the clog, it seems that this season we are switching from dainty and sexy high heels to clumping clogs. Maybe this is a youthful alternative which might match well with springs short feminine dresses and skirts. Clogs might be the preferred footware of chefs, nurses and dancing dutch milkmades, but they are certainly making a controversial trend alert!

Tuesday, 27 April 2010

Studio Link

This is a studio link I did with my friend Vanessa, hope you enjoy it. Its just a little exercise from our TV lecture.

Extra holiday? Yes please

Wednesday, 21 April 2010

Very angry with BA

A very nice view down on Barcelona
This is me, not very angry in Tibidabo :)

I was originally supposed to fly out from Barcelona to London on the 19th of April, however as everyone now knows my flight was cancelled. I then needed to booked another flight and the earliest one was on Saturday April 24th. Last night the flight ban was lifted from the UK airspace, therefore I decided to go on to BA website to change the date of my flight to an earlier one, before I had no other option since it said that all flights before Saturday were full. However, now that my flight is not cancelled, I tried to change it maybe to see if I were lucky and there was an available flight and ofcourse there were, like 7 options a days. But to get on one of these flights I would have to pay 405 pounds.

I find it unbelievable that when I was trying and trying to get an earlier flight it said they were all full, but now that we can get charge a ludicrous amount there magically is many options for me to arrive earlier to the UK - but with a cost!! I do not have 405 pounds to spare at the moment and I do not think my parents have either. British Airways has not even sent me one email explaining what is going on and they never answered their phones, as a man on the beach said: " BA washed their hands a long time ago."

Volcanic ash movement

Volcanic ash please go away! since I need to get back to England and my mom needs to fly back home to Mexico on Tuesday, I wonder how that will go.

Much needed help

Not received!!

definetely a not very helpful 24 hour helpline.

I decided last night to call the British Embassy in Spain, as maybe they could give me some advice on what was my best option to get back to the UK soon. The lady on the phone said go to a port, go to a port, go to a port ( she repeated it like three times ) me and sister then asked ok in Spain or France and she said any port would do. I had thought about the idea of going on a ferry so I check the website, and the only available ticket was on Thursday 29th of April from Santander. As I thought about what the lady suggested to me, is that millions of British citizens are probably calling and being advised to go to a port, therefore the only thing I would accomplish by going to a port was to be stranded in another city, paying for accomodation and being one in a sea of millions trying to get a ticket back home.

Probably best thing to do is to wait for my flight on Saturday.

Stranded in Spain

When I first heard of a volcanic eruption in Iceland affecting some flights, I actually started laughing, for some reason I found it quite amusing. Until, my flight and many millions of other peoples flights were all cancelled, it was defientely not funny anymore. After 6 days of closed airspace in the UK and most of Europe, over 95,000 flights have been cancelled, leaving over 7 million europeans of them 200,000 brits stranded and costing the airline industry over $1.3 billion dollars (1.1 billion pounds).

Many airlines now have the task of taking the passengers were they want to go, and work through the chaos and backlog. Many airlines are also affected by several members of their staff being stranded in other locations, as well as aircrafts. The volcanic ash came at the worst time for britons, as schools and universities reopened after the easter break on Monday, and thousands of pupils and teachers are left stranded around the globe. Cambridge University has had to cancel exams as many of their students and staff are stuck abroad.

I could think of many worst places to be stuck, I was not very lucky with the weather the two weeks I was oriniginally supposed to be here. But this extra week of forced holiday has been absolutely amazing here in Barcelona. The sunny days and hot weather do make the wait a bit more pleasurable, however the worry to get back to lectures and normality persists. I walked down to the beach yesterday, as I knew many tourists would chose the beach on such a beautiful day, I spoke to some stranded tourists about their experience:

1) Harper family, South London -
" We were supposed to leave on Saturday, so we have now been here for 2 extra days, we are flying with British Airways and they gave us no help, absolutely nothing. They said we might be leaving on Thursday but it is not for sure. We called our jobs and spoke to our bosses, everybody os very understanding. We are enjoying the extra time we have, coming down to the beach as a family, there is nothing else we can do."

2) Mary and Peter, London -
" We had a scheduled flight last Thursday so we have been here for quite a while now. We flew with Easyjet and they have been extremely helpful. They gave us assistance for the first 3 or 4 days and placed us in a small hotel outside Barcelona, and paid for all our meals. However after that they said we were on our own. We have both made many times to the airport and the staff has been very helpful and tried to answer all our questions and give us advice and what we should do next. My teenaged daughter went for a school trip to Italy, and she managed to leave right before this whole mess, but now she is back in London and we are stranded here. She has to stay with friends until we manage to get back. The airline told us we might be lucky and leave on Thursday, but the way things are going I don't know for sure when we would be leaving, and we are running out of money, that is why the only thing we can do is simply sunbathe on the beach."

3) Martin and Olaf, Sweden -
" We live here so we have not been directly affected by the volcanic ash, I think however people are enjoying the extra time here and what better place to be stuck in than sunny Barcelona, much better than a cold country. I have a friend though that travelled to Andalusia and she couldn't get back here, but when she finally could she had a buy a plane ticket for over 500 pounds since all the trains and busses were fully booked."

4) Stacey and Vanessa, students in Barcelona originally from Minnesota and Philadelphia, USA -
"We went for a weekend to Munich and could not get back to Barcelona, this week was our last week at university before the summer break, so we desperetely needed to get back for our exams and deadlines. We decided to look for ground transportation, getting a train ticket was impossible so we looked for buses. There were so many people in our situation, so we also struggled to get a bus ticket. First we found one that would get us in Barcelona on Wednesday ( April 21st) but we needed to get here before that, so we found a bus from Frankfurt to Paris that cost us 40 euros, but since we could not get to Frankfurt we never got to get that bus. Then we paid for a hostel that was 20 euros each, but magically we found a bus on Sunday night that brought us back to Barcelona, it was like a student bus. Therefore we did not stay at the hostel, the bus cost us 105 euros each. It was very hard to get a bus and we also lost many days of our holiday looking for means of transportation and spending much more money than planned."

These stories are just a few out of millions of people stuck around the world, and in these current situations there is not much you can do. The UK has been using Spain and France as a hub for british citizens to return to the UK either by land or sea.

Tourists have not been the only ones affected by this ban, the Minsitry of Defence said last night that hundreds of troops were stuck in Cyprus after completing a six-month deployment to Afghanistan and were now returning to the UK by ferry or coach. Supermarkets also worry as the flight ban meant no imported goods could enter the country, this meant prices could rise if the ban persisted and supermarkets would have to find alternative british providers for flown in goods. According to the National Farmers Union (NFU) one third of the food we import could be produced in the UK.

Banks are also lifting charges and limitations to help stranded brits, two banks -Nat West and RBS- said they would be giving refunds to charges made on foreign ATM withdrawls and would also increase the limit on credit cards, so stranded tourists could pay for accomodation and food abroad.

Who ever knew all this disruption and chaos could be caused by a cloud. Maybe next time we will all be better prepared.