“One Night in Bangkok” popup bar wins top prize from Chivas

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30349368

“One Night in Bangkok” popup bar wins top prize from Chivas

lifestyle July 05, 2018 12:20

By The Nation

Bangkok-based bartender Arron Grendon from trendy drinking hole Tropic City has been announced as the winner of the 2018 Chivas Regal Global Masterclass for showcasing Chivas’s core values of community, collaboration and generosity.

The fifth Chivas Masters Global Final required the 21 national winners to return to Chivas’ origins at the Strathisla distillery in Speyside before culminating at Oval Space in London.

Throughout the five days, Arron worked with a team of six bartenders in setting up a own sustainable popup bar and preparing communityinspired cocktail menus.

Arron and his team created the winning bar One Night in Bangkok at the Chivas Masters Global Final in London and all members were honoured their blend of exceptional individual skills and infectious sense of team spirit.

His team comprised Angel Solorzano Chumpitaz (Peru), Martin Suaya (Argentina), Kentaro Wada (Japan), Yuta Inagaki (Hong Kong), Rick Marson (Netherlands), and Louis Marcpherson (Australia).

As the newly crowned champion, he has won an allaccess trip to “Tales of the Cocktail 2018” in New Orleans and joins the exclusive, closeknit community of previous winners.

“We wanted to bring Bangkok to London for just one night with our bar and that’s why we created One Night in Bangkok. I love the community in Bangkok that brings together people from all around the world through food and drink – and that’s what I wanted to recreate. My team spent five days in the runup to the global final, so I got to know what everyone was good at and how we could work best together. When you have a good team and a good connection, you can achieve anything,” Arron said.

Arron started as a food and beverage trainee at a hotel in Phuket, where he fell in love with the hospitality industry. He joined a onemonth training session at the bar and became a talented bartender.

His signature drink is The Grind, inspired by his mother and the stories she used to tell about how hard the farmers in Thailand work in the rice fields to provide food for the people – just like John and James Chivas, who grew up on a farm themselves.

“It was another fantastic year for bartending talent at the Chivas Masters Global Final in London, with an unrivalled display of creativity and teamwork on a global stage. Arron demonstrated originality, skill, leadership and, most importantly, a real sense of community throughout the final week,” said Richard Black, global marketing director at Chivas Regal.

“This was the first time we made our consumers part of the competition by giving them a chance to try Chivas cocktails created by some of the world’s best bartenders and then cast their vote to help crown the winner.”

Turning seven with a Smile

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30349286

Turning seven with a Smile

lifestyle July 04, 2018 11:13

By The Nation

Thai Smile celebrates turning seven on the seventh day of the seventh month by offering travellers a special menu crafted by two partners, Starbucks and After You Dessert Cafe.

The new menu will be served to all passengers from Saturday (July 7) to July 13.

“During the past six years, Thai Smile made changes in its service strategies to meet the needs of travellers and continues to pursue its goal of being the leading full-service airline in the region. The service is excellent, it is good value for money and meets the needs of short-haul commuters while also providing maximum comfort for passengers who require excellent services,” says Chatchai Panyoo, acting chief executive of Thai Smile.

“As we step into our seventh year of operation, we have improved the existing service and even modified WE Smile magazine to allow passengers to get more involved. In making all modifications and improvements, Thai Smile will take into account the needs of passengers. We are also opening two new routes –Bangkok-Guangzhou to replace the existing Phuket-Guangzhou, and Bangkok-Kolkata.

“Thai Smile is moving into its seventh year with a plan to develop a service geared towards modifying the service details, without effect on costs, such as changing the way we serve and be more flexible while maintaining service standards or serving styles. No tray is used, but a box that can be served instead of a tray. Smile Bag Packaging has been adjusted. There is also a premium tinted seat cover in grey in the Smile PLUS class. A satisfaction survey is conducted every month, and we brainstorm on adjusting the plans or solutions. It is also necessary to go out to check the operations,” says Nednapang Teeravas, chief customer service officer of Thai Smile.

For its anniversary menu, Thai Smile is working with After You on a Trio Chocolate Fudge Cake, a Strawberry Cheese Cake Verrine and Mango Coconut Sago Pudding (blue pea tapioca pearl topped with coconut milk and mango sauce) and serving them with Starbucks VIA Italian roast, one of the latest innovations from Starbucks. These will be available for passengers in the premium economy class (Smile Plus) and economy class (Smile Class) in all seats for all domestic and international flights. Passengers in premium economy class (Smile Plus) will be surprised by a cup of freshly blended coffee “Muan Jai Blend” served by a Starbucks barista with “Toast on Board”, a signature dish from After You.

The Marshal heads out of town

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30349223

The Marshal heads out of town

lifestyle July 04, 2018 01:00

By The Nation

The Luxottica Group, one of the leading names in global eyewear, has once more tapped the creative instincts of renowned American photographer Steven Klein, for the second in a series of campaigns for iconic brand, Ray-Ban.

The campaign features four shots starring four singular characters. In one, The Ray-Ban Marshal leaves behind the city in his rearview mirror as he protagonist drives into a never-ending sunset and stripped of restraints, allows his skin to absorb the warm light of freedom.

Fit for a tug-of-war

Onitsuka Tiger has just releases the new version of its Tsunahiki shoe, which was based on a tug-of-war competition and first introduced in 1982. This first generation model was one of the first tug-of-war competition shoes ever made and features a wide, wrapped rubber outer sole with improved cushioning and he addition of an Ortholite mid-sole. The original piping, stretching from around the shoelace holes to the collar and eyelet design has been left the same. The new model is true to the original lava orange-and-oatmeal scheme and four more new colours are also available.

Firming up for day and night

French skincare brand Clarins introduces it new Extra-Firming Day and Night Cream. Suitable for all skin types, the wrinkle-control day cream has a fresh and silky texture that puts the spring back into the skin. The key ingredient, extract of kangaroo flower, helps plump and firm the skin for a smoother, radiant and visibly younger-looking complexion. The night cream, which boasts similar ingredients, uses Moonstone Hydrated Silica to maintain the skin’s youthful qualities, reduce wrinkles and rejuvenate the skin while you sleep.

UK to ban gay ‘conversion therapy’ after massive survey

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30349188

x

UK to ban gay ‘conversion therapy’ after massive survey

lifestyle July 03, 2018 08:44

By Agence France-Presse
London

2,396 Viewed

Britain on Tuesday unveiled its “action plan” to tackle discrimination against the gay community, which includes bringing forward legislation to ban the practice of conversion therapy.

The plan was drawn up using data from an online survey that received 108,000 responses, making it the largest ever national survey of LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) people anywhere in the world.

Around two percent of respondents said they had received some form of conversion therapy, while another five percent had had it offered to them but refused.

LGBT rights group Stonewall defines conversion therapy as “any form of treatment or psychotherapy which aims to reduce or stop same-sex attraction,” although the survey did not provide a definition.

“These activities are wrong, and we are not willing to let them continue,” said the government plan.

“We will fully consider all legislative and non-legislative options to prohibit promoting, offering or conducting conversion therapy.”

Just over a half of those receiving conversion therapy said it was conducted by a faith group, 19 percent by a healthcare professional and 16 percent by a parent or family member.

“We are not trying to prevent LGBT people from seeking legitimate medical support or spiritual support from their faith leader in the exploration of their sexual orientation or gender identity,” added the report.

‘Lasting change’ 

More than two thirds of LGBT respondents said they had avoided holding hands with a same-sex partner for fear of a negative reaction.

“I was struck by just how many respondents said they cannot be open about their sexual orientation or avoid holding hands with their partner in public for fear of a negative reaction,” said Prime Minister Theresa May.

“No one should ever have to hide who they are or who they love.

“This LGBT action plan will set out concrete steps to deliver real and lasting change across society,” she added.

Some 40 percent of respondents had experienced incidents such as verbal harassment or physical violence in the 12 months preceding the survey, but more than 90 percent of them went unreported, with respondents explaining “it happens all the time”.

The government plan includes appointing a national LGBT health adviser, extending an anti-homophobic bullying programme in schools and improving the recording and reporting of LGBT hate crimes.

It also establishes a £4.5 million ($5.9 million, 5 million euros) “LGBT Implementation Fund” to help deliver the plan.

Of the respondents, 61 percent identified as gay or lesbian and a quarter identified as bisexual. Four percent identified as pansexual.

Younger respondents identified in larger numbers as bisexual, asexual, pansexual, queer or ‘other’, and 13 percent of the respondents were transgender, with seven percent identifying as “non-binary” — having a gender that was neither exclusively that of a man nor a woman.

The Prancing Horse zooms into Thailand

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30349127

The Prancing Horse zooms into Thailand

lifestyle July 02, 2018 15:00

By The Nation

2,478 Viewed

Cavallino Motors, official dealer for Ferrari in Thailand, recently, unveiled the Ferrari Portofino, which debuted at the Frankfurt International Motor Show last year, to the press and clients.

The new model, which combines luxury, versatility and on-board comfort, was introduced at a party at House No. 1 Soi Charoen Krung 30.

“Ferrari has chosen a particularly evocative moniker for this exceptionally versatile coupe convertible car, referencing one of Italy’s most beautiful towns. Portofino is renowned for its charming tourist port and, over the years, has become internationally synonymous with elegance, sportiness and understated luxury,” noted Nandhamalee Bhirombhakdi, Cavallino Motors’ managing director.

Powered by the Ferrari V8 turbo, the new car boasts an ability to punch out 600cv and to sprint from 0-100km/h in just 3.5 seconds. Due to the adoption of new components and the calibration of the engine management software, the output power increased by 40cv from the California T power unit. Thanks to further tuning, the characteristic Ferrari V8 soundtrack can be fully appreciated in open-top driving.

The Ferrari Portofino is also an aggressively styled car with a two-box fastback configuration – unprecedented in a coupe-convertible with a retractable hard top. This successfully adds extra sleekness to its silhouette, highlighting a sportier character.

This Ferrari model is designed for enjoying daily driving and converts from an authentic Berlinetta into an open-top Spider in just 14 seconds even in low-speed driving. With a brilliant marriage of design, performance, and technology, and with various advantageous features – retractable hard top, spacious trunk, ample passenger space, and two rear seats suitable for a short trip – the new model is perfect for any occasion.

Its vehicle dynamic characteristics have been completely revised. For the first time on this type of Ferrari model, third-generation electronic rear differential (E-Diffs) has been integrated with the F1-Trac, improving both mechanical grip and the control of the car to the limit. The Ferrari Portofino is also the first GT in this range to be fitted with EPS (Electric Power Steering) The integration of the EPS and the E-Diff3 reduced the steering ratio by seven per cent for even more responsive steering without a trade-off in stability at high-speed driving. Thanks to the adoption of dual-coil technology, the magnetorheological damping system (SCM-E) has been upgraded, helping to reduce roll while contributing to improving absorption of road surface unevenness. The result is an even more dynamic, responsive car that also delivers superior ride comfort.

The new car also focuses on on-board comfort and this is achieved by a slew of new features – an infotainment system with a 10.2” touchscreen display, a new air-conditioning system that improves passenger comfort either with the top up or down, a new steering wheel, 18-way adjustable electric-powered seats with a new backrest design that boosts legroom for rear seat passengers, and the passenger display. All passengers will appreciate the new wind deflector that can cut air flow inside the cabin by 30 percent and reduces aerodynamic noise in open-top driving.

The price of the Ferrari Portofino is Bt20.9 million and aftersales service is provided free of charge with a three-year unlimited mileage warranty.

The Rhine River inspires the new Oris diver-friendly timepiece

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30349112

The Rhine River inspires the new Oris diver-friendly timepiece

lifestyle July 02, 2018 12:00

By The Nation

2,589 Viewed

Swiss watchmaker Oris underlines its commitment to environment with a limited edition of the Source of Life collection inspired by the River Rhine and highlighting the plight of the world’s water sources.

Based on the iconic Oris Aquis watch for divers, the new design focuses on the course of the River Rhine, which runs close to the village of Holstein, where Oris has been based since 1904.

The case back is embossed with a map of the River Rhine, which runs 1,233 km through six countries from its source at the Lai da Tuma, or Tomasee, a lake 2,343 metres up in the Swiss Alps.

Its 43.5mm stainless steel case is water-resistant to 300 metres and it has a uni-directional rotating bezel with a grey tungsten insert with a 60-minute timer scale for safely measuring dive times.

The automatic movement provides standout complication, an inventive circular date indicator shown by a scale running from 1 to 31 around the centre of the dial. Inside it is a channel with a white indicator that aligns with the scale and makes a full tour of the dial once a month to show the date.

The watch also has a sweeping seconds hand with a lollipop filled with luminescent Super-LumiNova. This is a significant detail – to qualify for diver’s watch status, a watch must have a display that shows the running of the watch to indicate to the wearer that their dive timing is accurate.

The watch comes on either a stainless steel metal bracelet or a grey rubber strap, both of which have stainless steel folding clasps that can be extended to be worn over a wetsuit. To reflect the height above sea level of the Lai da Tuma, 2,343 pieces will be made.

For more details, call (02) 163 0555 or visit http://www.TracaderoTime.com.

Lies and deception in the big white

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30348934

Climbers cross the Khumbu icefall of Mount Everest, as seen from the Everest base camp earlier this year. /AFP
Climbers cross the Khumbu icefall of Mount Everest, as seen from the Everest base camp earlier this year. /AFP

Lies and deception in the big white

lifestyle July 02, 2018 01:00

By Annabel Symington
Agence France-Presse
Lukla

“Unnecessary rescues” soar in Nepal on profits from insurance payouts

TOURISTS HIKING in Nepal’s Himalayan mountains are being pressured into costly helicopter evacuations at the first sight of trouble by guides linked to powerful brokers who are making a fortune on “unnecessary rescues”, industry insiders say.

Dodgy operators are scamming tens of thousands of dollars from insurance companies by making multiple claims for a single chopper ride or pushing trekkers to accept airlifts for minor illnesses, an investigation by AFP has revealed.

In other cases, trekking guides, promised commission if they get tourists to return by chopper, are offering helicopter rides to tired hikers as a quick way home, but billing them as rescues to insurance companies.

The practice is so rampant helicopter pilots are reporting “rescuing” tourists who appear in perfectly fine health.

“It’s a racket that’s tantamount to fraud, and it’s happening on a large scale throughout Nepal,” says Jonathan Bancroft of UK-based Traveller Assist, which carries out medical evacuations in Nepal on behalf of global travel insurance companies.

An unidentified injured person is carried by others at the Everest Base Camp near Namche Bazar. /AFP

Trekking outfits stand to make more in kickbacks from evacuating a hiker by helicopter than the cost of the trek itself, contributing to an alarming rise in rescues from Nepal’s biggest tourist attraction: the fabled Himalayas.

Traveller Assist said 2017 was the most expensive year on record for travel insurance companies covering tourists in Nepal due to a startling number of helicopter rescues – though this year is on track to beat it.

There is no centralised dispatch centre for helicopter flights in Nepal making it difficult to know precisely how many evacuations are carried out.

But over the past six years the skies of the Everest region have turned into a helicopter highway, with a six-fold increase in the number of choppers in the air, each logging over 1,000 flying hours per year, according to industry data.

“We used to see maybe one helicopter in two or three days. Now we are seeing 10 or so in a day,” says Thanishwar Bhandari, who works as a small clinic in the Everest region.

Meanwhile, one foreign pilot, who requested anonymity, says he rescued trekkers on a near daily basis in April and May this year, peak trekking season.

“I think I took three people the whole season who appeared genuinely ill,” he explains.

Australian trekker Jessica Reeves was urged by her guide to be evacuated by helicopter from near Everest base camp in October 2017 when she complained of a common cold.

“He kept telling me to get a helicopter,” Reeves recalls. “They said if I keep going it would be really risky so it was better to leave now instead of risking it.”

Climbers cross the Khumbu icefall of Mount Everest, as seen from the Everest base camp earlier this year. /AFP

Reeves said nine or 10 hikers in her group ended up returning to Kathmandu on three helicopters but were instructed to say they were alone on the flight back.

She alleged the company, Himalayan Social Journey, billed each of the tourists’ insurance providers for the whole flight – pocketing around $35,000 (Bt1.15 million) in the process.

“They told us all to lie to the insurance company and say there was only one person on the helicopter when there were three or four of us on each,” she says. Reeves’ insurance claim was in any case rejected because her policy had expired.

The company owner, Ram Sapkota, denies that the insurance companies were each billed for the full flight.

“(They) claimed insurance on a sharing basis and we received money from (the) insurance,” he stresses, dismissing allegations as “fake”.

Sapkota blamed the rise in helicopter rescues from the Himalayas on lazy hikers and hypochondriacs.

“When one client gets sick, then the group they say, ‘I feel unsafe and just want to go’,” he says.

Extensive interviews by AFP with players at every stage of the commission chain reveals that guides, trekking operators, lodge owners and charter companies are acting as brokers, playing helicopter companies off against each other to secure a cut of the rescue fees.

One manager of a Kathmandu-based helicopter company says they pay $500 to brokers for each rescue flight.

“If we don’t pay the commission, we can’t get the business,” the manager tells AFP on condition of anonymity.

Mount Everest, 8848-metreshigh, is some 140 kilometres northeast of the Nepali capital Kathmandu./AFP

The trekking industry in Nepal took a hit following a devastating earthquake in 2015.

But tourists are now returning: from March to May 2014, more than 20,000 foreigners visited the Sagarmatha National Park, home to Mount Everest, according to government figures.

Meanwhile, there are an estimated 2,000 trekking companies promising to whisk them off into the mountains, many of them operating from scruffy, cramped offices in the dusty back streets of Kathmandu.

The cost of the 14-day trek to Everest base camp varies wildly between the outfits, but many offer the tour for less than $1,000, below cost price according to multiple industry sources.

Guides working for the low-cost agencies are being told to make up the shortfall by getting trekkers rescued by helicopter: one guide told AFP on condition of anonymity that he was given a quota for the number of trekkers he should have “rescued”.

“The industry thrives on these unnecessary rescues,” adds Suraj Paudyal, who coordinates helicopter rescues for Mediciti Hospital in Kathmandu.

For doctors working in the high-altitude Everest region, the increased availability of helicopters does provide reassurance that critical patients can be airlifted from remote locations to better-equipped hospitals below.

“It is nice, as a doctor, to have the safety net of a helicopter,” says British doctor Helen Randfield, who mans a small clinic that caters to the influx of trekkers arriving with the good weather of spring and autumn.

But the decision as to who gets evacuations ends up in the hands of the guides, not the medical professionals.

“Trekkers or their guides are deciding themselves whether they need a rescue,” says Sonia Mariano, an American doctor who worked at the same clinic last year.

The majority of rescues are happening without prior approval of insurance companies – 80 per cent according to Alpine Rescue, which carries out evacuations for the International Assistance Group, an alliance of global insurers – leaving the system open to exploitation.

Some hospitals back in Kathmandu also have a stake in the rescue business. Company registration documents reviewed by AFP show that many large trekking outfits have financial ties to hospitals and helicopter providers, creating a conflict of interest.

Ram Sapkota of Himalayan Social Journey says his guides receive a commission from some hospitals if they take a tourist there, saying he allows it because his company needed to “maintain relations” with medical providers.

He also bought a 10 percent stake in helicopter firm Altitude Air last year.

A German trekker hiking in the Everest region in April recalls how a broker offered him a return helicopter flight to Kathmandu – with the cost billed to his insurance provider.

“He said he knew a doctor who would sign it off as a rescue,” the tourist, also requesting anonymity, says.

The majority of rescues in the Himalayas are related to “acute mountain sickness” caused by low oxygen levels at high altitude. The symptoms are vague – headaches, nausea, loss of appetite – and the only treatment is to descend.

But once the patient is at lower altitudes the symptoms disappear, making it impossible to tell if the evacuation was medically necessary.

“By the time the trekkers come down, they are fine,” says Dr Prativa Pandey, medical director of respected Kathmandu-based travel clinic Ciwec.

She adds that doctors cannot be made responsible for cleaning up the murky business: “You (as a doctor) have to give the benefit of doubt to the patient,” she stresses.

International insurance companies are beginning to wise up to the rampant fraud.

Multiple insurance companies linked to one major UK-based underwriter are considering no longer offering travel insurance for Nepal, an industry source said, requesting anonymity as the firms did not want to alarm customers.

Nepal’s tourism ministry launched an investigation into alleged insurance fraud in early June after receiving complaints from multiple sources, joint secretary Ghanashyam Upadhyaya reports.

“The investigation might take (another) month. When we began our work we did not realise the magnitude of the problem,” Upadhyaya explains.

However, Upadhyaya refuses to confirm the details of the ongoing investigation, but local media have reported that 500 trekking and helicopter companies are being probed, including Sapkota’s Himalayan Social Journey. Sapkota says he had not been contacted by the ministry and firmly denies any wrongdoing.

A bot by any other name

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

Launched in 2000, Asimo, which resembles a shrunken spaceman, has become Japan’s most famous robot, wheeled out to impress visiting politicians over the years. /AFP
Launched in 2000, Asimo, which resembles a shrunken spaceman, has become Japan’s most famous robot, wheeled out to impress visiting politicians over the years. /AFP

A bot by any other name

lifestyle July 01, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Tokyo

Is this the end of the line for Asimo, Japan’s famed robot?

IT HAS played football with former US president Barack Obama and danced for German leader Angela Merkel, but Honda’s Asimo robot may have reached the end of the line.

Launched in 2000, the humanoid machine resembling a shrunken spaceman has become arguably Japan’s most famous robot, wheeled out to impress visiting politicians over the years.

But Honda said Thursday it may scrap future generations of Asimo, now on its seventh iteration.

“We will still continue research into humanoid robots, but our future robots may not be named Asimo,” Honda spokesman Hajime Kaneko told AFP.

The comment came after Japan’s public broadcaster NHK reported that the Japanese carmaker had terminated Asimo and dissolved the team making one of the world’s most famous humanoid robots.

Honda says it may scrap future generations of humanoid robot Asimo and focus on humanoid robots that can help care for elderly and disabled people. /AFP

NHK suggested increasingly intense competition in the field as a reason, pointing to the example of US-based Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot, which can jump on to a high step and even do a backflip.

Honda denied that it had dissolved the team working on Asimo, but the brains behind the bot look likely to shift their expertise to developing robots with specific applications.

“We have obtained lots of technologies while developing Asimo, and how to utilise them is one issue,” Kaneko said.

The company is expected to focus on humanoid robots that can help care for elderly and disabled people, NHK said, citing unnamed company sources.

Though never sold commercially, Asimo attracted international attention, playing football with Obama in 2014, dancing for Merkel in 2015, and taking a selfie with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull the same year.

There have been no upgrades to the model since its seventh generation, which debuted in 2011 and can listen to and understand three people talking simultaneously.

Messing around with Marvel

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30348951

  • The Marvel Experience Thailand
  • New recruits join a laser gun battle in the Holoblaster Shooting Gallery.
  • Stark Mobile Lab showcases various Iron Man suit armours.
  • The 4D Motion Ride takes recruits on a smooth.
  • Ant Man, Spiderman, Captain America, Iron Man and Black Panther surprise the new recruits at the Secret Meet
  • The Training Centre is equipped with interactive gaming imported from the US.

Messing around with Marvel

lifestyle July 01, 2018 01:00

By Pattarawadee Saengmanee
The Sunday Nation

Hero Ventures brings the comic version of “The Avengers” to Bangkok

TWO MONTHS after their marathon clash against Thanos in “Infinity War”, the bunch of superheroes known collectively as the Avengers are back, and they’re on a new mission –saving Bangkok from the evil forces of Hydra.

Eight months in the making, Mega Bangna has been transformed into SHIELD headquarters with the Marvel Experience Thailand – Marvel’s first state-of-the-art themed entertainment attraction in Southeast Asia – calling on young residents to join its ranks.

The new theme park, which opened on Friday, combines immersive hyper reality, ultramodern interactive multimedia gaming and augmented and virtual reality simulation, offering one-of-a-kind experiences to both Avenger fans and non-fans alike.

Stark Mobile Lab showcases various Iron Man suit armours. 

In 2014, Hero Ventures teamed up with Marvel Entertainment to come up with the Marvel Experience mobile interactive attraction in the US. This travelled from San Diego to Philadelphia and Chicago before arriving in Busan, South Korea late last year.

Here in Thailand, it’s a collaboration between local entrepreneur Hero Experience and Los Angeles-based Hero Ventures, which have invested more than Bt1 billion in the construction of the groundbreaking attraction.

“Marvel’s story is about the adventures of superhero characters such as Spiderman, Captain America, the Hulk and others, who show off their spirit while encountering challenges. The Marvel Experience will give visitors of all ages the chance to become part of the Marvel Universe. We want our fans to feel like this story is theirs no matter whether they prefer the comic book, TV, film or video game version,” says Brian Crosby, creative director of Marvel Themed Entertainment.

“The Marvel Experience was a smash hit in the US. We received interesting proposals from many countries but we chose Thailand because Marvel has a major fanbase here,” adds Rick Licht, chief executive officer of Hero Ventures.

The various technologies, which are imported from Belgium, Australia, England, Turkey and the US, have been developed by local software designers to control the 4D Motion Ride, original 3D animated features and the 360-degree 4D stereoscopic projection.

The theme park adheres to the comic book version in illustrating a new hectic adventure of Iron Man, Captain America, Spiderman, Thor, Black Widow, Vision, Hulk, Black Panther and Wolverine. That means big fans of Marvel movie franchise might go home feeling slightly disappointed, especially if they come expecting to experience Hollywood-style special effects and to rub shoulders with superstars like Chris Hemsworth, Robert Downey Jr and Chris Evans in a thrilling laser gun battlefield.

Director Nick Fury holds a top secret meeting with The Avengers.

“We want The Marvel Experience to be a new tourist destination and iconic landmark among Thais and foreign tourists. This is a place where families and people of all ages can find enjoyment,” says Surakiat Thienthong, co-chief executive officer of Hero Experience.

Spread over 20,000 square metres, the attraction is divided into two main zones. I spent time in both as part of a media preview on Wednesday and marvelled – pun intended – at the amount of work and money that has gone into the attraction.

The black and white complex looks simple yet smart. As would-be agents, we stop first at the Reception Building, home to a lobby, Mavel Experience Super Store, Super Hero Snack Bar and Power Refreshment, and a 220-seat Avengers Cafe serving a selection of hero-themed dishes and beverages.

All new recruits have to complete a personal information form at the office and have a photo taken for their SHIELD Agent ID card. The 140 individuals allowed per round spend two hours exploring the superhero world though parents should note that kids measuring less than 100 centimetres are considered too small to join.

The Attraction Zone features seven extensive domes with 11 stations, with 90 per cent of the space designed as 3D and 4D theatres. Staff members act out the role of trainers and muster the new recruits in front of the Holding Zone Beta to learn the basic rules.

The Jocasta Introduction Room boasts the dramatic Prequel Comic walls.  

The Jocasta Introduction room serves as the gateway proper to the Marvel Universe and it is here that new recruits enjoy a short orientation, learning about the first Avengers team and the Marvel Experience Thailand through the dramatic Prequel Comic walls.

“Marvel Comics has written this special episode for the Marvel Experience Thailand. The story is about Marvel’s iconic superhero characters who are fighting the villains out to destroy Southeast Asia, starting with Thailand. Director Nick Fury decided to set up the SHIELD base in Bangkok and invite Bangkokians to join a mission to save their hometown,” Surachart Thienthong, chief marketing officer explains.

In the News Report room, Thai anchor Pitchayatan “Bright” Chanput is covering what happens to the town while in the Stark Mobile Lab, Iron Man has a direct line from Stark Industries in New York.

Billionaire genius Tony Stark is conducting a videoconference to showcase his latest innovation to the world in a room that features state-of-the-art Iron Man suit armour including Prime, Galaxy, Spartan, Fathom, Blaze and Waverider.

Over in the Mobile Command Centre, SHIELD director Nick Fury and the superhero agents are offering a briefing on the mission to fight Madam Hydra, MODOK and Red Skull.

The briefing over, the first training session is held in the Holoblaster Shooting Gallery where 3D multimedia gaming from America sets the scene for a sky-high battleground. The room is fitted out with six stadiums with huge 3D projectors, each providing 35 seats.

Slipping on the provided glasses, recruits can build up points by shooting Super-Adaptoid and his robotic troops. It’s not easy to find your gun number or your position when everyone is aiming at the same screen and this is definitely an area where the operators need to improve both accuracy and speed.

New recruits join a laser gun battle in the Holoblaster Shooting Gallery.

I particularly like the 360-degree, 3D Simularium, which is equipped with a state-of-the-art laser projector and run by a complex media server. This striking theatre dome resembles the recently revamped planetarium in Bangkok’s Science Centre for Education though here it shows Captain America, Black Panther, Vision and Wolverine attacking a den of Madam Hydra and her followers buried somewhere on the snowcapped mountain.

We’ve no sooner arrived at the Transport Corridor when the headquarters is hit by villains and a siren warns us to prepare for evacuation. Director Fury and the Avengers welcome us on board a transport shuttle, powered by 4D Motion Ride system.

Produced by a Turkish manufacturer, who has supplied attractions for world-class theme parks like Universal and Disneyland, this flight simulator is equipped with a 3D projector and moves softly forwards and backwards as we make good our escape from the villains.

The craft sets down at the Training Centre where the recruits take a fun class with the superhero masters. Equipped with imported interactive gaming from America, Black Panther teaches us how to jump across from roof to roof, Iron Man shares some tips on balance while flying through the sprawling cliffs and Hulk gives a punching lesson.

The Simularium dome is equipped with a state-of-the-art laser projector and powered by a complex media server.

I get to say goodbye to my heroes in the Secret Meet & Greet corner, which has five rooms with Black Widow, Black Panther, Iron Man, Captain America, Ant Man and Spiderman standing by to capture a memorable portrait with recruits.

Office worker and major Marvel fan Hongsucha Leenatam, 33, who joined the preview, was less than impressed.

“I love Marvel. With Marvel Experience, I expected to participate in several scenes or interactive gaming. I understand this park is based on the comic book and not the Hollywood version. But to me, the theme park is trying to put content in our heads through watching cartoons rather than giving us true experiences,” Hongsucha says.

“I like the Simularium. It has a pretty good 3D illustration. And my congratulations go to the staff, who stayed in character as senior trainers all along the journey. Tickets are very expensive for two hours and so few attractions. ”

Officer worker Gitdipong Sarathuthat, 34, had a similar reaction. He says he was excited when he heard the Marvel Experience would open in Thailand and came along in the expectation of joining forces with superheroes in a new mission.

The Marvel Experience Super Store offers all kinds of licensed merchandises from Marvel.

“I’m a big fan of Marvel and at first expected to experience what I saw in the Hollywood movie here. This park is based on a comic book version and so, yes, I understand the concept. However, the transport shuttle simulator is not exciting enough and very soft, though to be fair, I guess it’s designed for families rather than youngsters,” Gitipong says.

“I loved the Simularium and its animation production, while the shooting game was fun even though it was hard to find my gun number and position on the big screen. The content’s a bit weak too and I couldn’t find Bangkok or any of Thailand’s landmarks on the scenes. It looks like roaming around the SHIELD base and battlefield in the original comic and not a special episode, exclusively written for Thailand. I think the tickets aren’t reasonable for a two-hour flight compared to other theme parks with unlimited time.”

 

ROLL UP FOR THE RIDE

>> The Marvel Experience Thailand is in Mega Bangna shopping mall. It’s open daily from 9am to 10pm. Tickets are priced at Bt1,500 for adults and Bt1,350 for children.

>> The presentations come in Thai, English and Chinese.

>> Online booking can be made at http://www.TheMarvelExperienceThailand.com.

In the pink with Himalayan salt

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30348948

  • Guests can enjoy refreshments after their treatment in the relaxing lobby.
  • RarinJinda Wellness Spa Ploenchit’s Salt Cave

In the pink with Himalayan salt

lifestyle July 01, 2018 01:00

By Kupluthai Pungkanon
The Sunday Nation

Bangkok’s lovely RarinJinda Wellness Spa works healthful magic with minearls

BOASTING MORE than 84 minerals, Himalayan Salt is aid to promote pH balance and purify the breathing system and now it’s available as a new spa treatment programme that aims to help urbanistas escape the pollution of the city.

The treatment, which is dubbed the Siamese Himalayan Salt Therapy, is being offered at the luxurious RarinJinda Wellness Spa’s Ploenchit branch perched on the 30th floor of Grande Centre Point Ploenchit Hotel and involves a classic Thai massage in a specially heated Himalayan Salt Cave.

RarinJinda Wellness Spa Ploenchit’s Salt Cave

Here Infrared heat lamps draw out the pink Himalayan Salt from the walls as the skilled therapist kneads and applies a pressure point massage over the body for a full hour, gently stretching muscles and relieving tension. The salty air, meanwhile, administers natural healing with each deep-cleansing breath.

Inhaling the salt is said to promote a better breathing system while reducing inflammation and mucus in the lungs, improving respiratory conditions such as asthma, allergies, helping to regulate the body’s sleep cycle and cleansing negative energy from the body.

The room is furnished with four massage beds and, adding to the sense of peace, overhead the ceiling twinkles with stars.

The spa sanctuary treatment rooms 

Part of the Siam Wellness Group, RarinJinda Wellness Spa is one of Thailand’s leading wellness spas and is staffed only by expert therapists. The group also owns Let’s Relax, the Siam Wellness Lab, Siam Wellness Education, Deck 1, and Baan Suan Massage and the spa currently has two branches in Bangkok – the other is on Rajdamri – and the RarinJinda Resort in Chiang Mai. Facilities include a state-of-the-art heated hydrotherapy pool, Vichy shower, hydrotherapy tub, whirlpool with chromotherapy and a rainforest steam and sauna. Alternative medicine specialists and nurses are on hand to provide consultation and guidance.

The Traditional Herbal Hot Compress uses only fresh ingredients.

Despite the modern operation and lavish decorations, the spa remains rooted in Thai massage and healing traditions. Among these is the 90-minute Elements of Life programme, which uses the fire, air, water and earth to rebalance body and soul. This comprises the use of natural healing blended with Thai massage techniques and Tibetan sound therapy to release physical and emotional tensions.

The spa journey starts with the guest lying down on a Warm Sand Bed imported from Germany and enjoying a thoroughly relaxing scalp message. The heat from the warm sand represents the fire element”, while tiny quartz made from lava stone contained therein represent the earth element”. The bed is set at a surprisingly comfortable 37 degrees Celsius for the entire session and helps reduce muscle tension and increases blood flow to heal injured tissues and rehabilitate damaged muscles or joints.

The therapist then rings the Tibetan bowls around body producing a sound that synchronises with brain waves to create a perfect state of deep meditation. The Tibetan bowls are then placed on different parts of the body allowing the sound vibration to pamper from the inside. This represents the air element.

With the guest now in a state of deep relaxation, the therapist starts a 60-minute massage using either Royal Thai Massage or Himalayan Hot Salt Compress Massage techniques in line with the guest’s selection.

House-blend spa products are available to take home. 

 

A Royal Thai Massage sees the therapist using only her thumbs and palms to focus on pressure points and stretching muscles, and maintaining a distance from the guest at all times. The Himalayan Hot Salt Compress Massage involves the placing of a small clay pot filled with a warm Himalayan Salt compress all over your body to improve circulation and help rehabilitate injured tissues and muscles.

The treatment ends with the water element – a spray of Cold Rose Body Freshener that rejuvenates and reenergises, leaving the guest invigorated and determined to come back for more.

 

BREATHE A LITTLE EASIER

Siamese Himalayan Salt Therapy is available only at RarinJinda Wellness Spa Ploenchit and is priced at Bt1,800 for a |60-minute treatment.

The “Elements of Life” Treatment costs Bt2,800 for 90 minutes and an Aromatherapy Oil Massage with Herbal Hot Compress goes for Bt1,700 for 60 minutes.

Book a session at (02) 651 5225. |Open daily from 10am to midnight.

Day spa and facial treatments are also available. Check out http://www.SiamWellnessGroup.com