Following numerous delays, the EU’s planned Entry/Exit System (EES) for travellers outside the Schengen Area has been postponed once again.
14.10.2024 - 18:35 / insider.com / Jeff Bezos / Elon Musk
Michael Jordan appears to have purchased a $65 million Gulfstream G650ER— the same type of jet owned by billionaire business tycoons like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos.
According to a TikTok video posted Monday, the flashy new metal with a Jumpman logo was on the tarmac of Palm Beach International Airport. The jet's tail number, N236MJ, includes the basketball legend's initials.
Federal Aviation Administration data shows that the G650ER was registered on October 1 to MJ Air LLC, which is in the care of Jump Management, Jordan's family office.
The G650ER is among the world's longest-ranged and fastest purpose-built private jets in existence.
Following numerous delays, the EU’s planned Entry/Exit System (EES) for travellers outside the Schengen Area has been postponed once again.
This is an as-told-to essay based on a conversation with Helene Sula, an American travel blogger and author of "Two O'Clock on a Tuesday at Trevi Fountain: A Search for an Unconventional Life Abroad." It has been edited for length and clarity.
Oct 10, 2024 • 8 min read
Tucked into a small pocket in Amsterdam’s city center, the historic house at Oudezijds Voorburgwal 249 is a favorite among tourists and photographers. The building is a showstopper, with majestic step-gabled facades and an enviable location at the intersection of three canals where Amsterdam’s original defense walls once protected against invaders centuries ago.
Travelers searching for America's safest cities may want to head to New England this holiday season.
One of the great hassles in surf travel is schlepping around a board. Long boards can be the size of a small airplane wing, and airport personnel, upon seeing a shortboard, sometimes hurl them, as if testing them for flight. Surfers know that it’s not uncommon to pay the oversized luggage fee, which is often north of $150 for one-way travel, arrive in some surfer’s paradise, and unzip their well-padded bag to find their board dinged badly or fully smashed.
On October 7, it will have been one year since Hamas attacked Israel. Egypt and Jordan, two of the countries neighboring the conflict, are still far from a full tourism recovery from American and European source markets.
Choice Hotels began to push upmarket when it debuted the Cambria brand in 2005. The hotel franchisor lacked upscale expertise, as it had been best known for midscale brands, such as Quality Inn and Comfort Inn, and economy brands, like Rodeway Inn.
It’s been almost a year since the war between Israel and Hamas began, and it’s been spreading wider.
During my last hours at the beloved Blackberry Farm in eastern Tennessee, honored in this year's Readers' Choice Awards as the number six hotel in the South, I piloted my golf cart past a grassy hillock with a little white dollhouse of a church peeking over the top until I reached a trailhead. From there I plunged into the latticework of hiking paths that crisscross the southern swath of the property. I huffed and puffed up Horse Slide Trail, which is called that for a reason, until I reached Blackberry's boundary with Great Smoky Mountains National Park. There was not a soul in sight—just sun-dappled forest, the whir of insects, and me alone with my footsteps and my thoughts.
This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Tobi Oluwole, a 30-year-old former sales manager at a Big Tech firm who recently relocated to France. His former employer is known to Business Insider but is not named for confidentiality. The following has been edited for length and clarity.
The global economic juggernaut that is Taylor Swift's "The Eras Tour" is finally coming to an end later this year after a final leg that features stops in Miami, New Orleans and Indianapolis before concluding in Canada with performances in Toronto and, finally, Vancouver, British Columbia.