Рубрики

paintingpainting sunset

Basic sunset painting ideas for beginners

With Luminar AI we made the activation process easier and faster for you. There’s no need to remember your license number in order to use Luminar AI . Now you may activate Luminar AI directly from your account.


Explore the power of AI in one innovative AI photo editor

Luminar Neo, your simple AI-powered photo editing
software for macOS and Windows. Standalone and plugin.

–> –> –> –> –> –> –> –> –> –> –> Achieve naturally beautiful results with Accent AI , an intelligent tool that substitutes more than a dozen controls including Shadows, Highlights, Contrast, Tone, Saturation, Exposure, and Details

Accent AI

Effortlessly add a unique mood

Place fog, mist, or haze in your image with
Atmosphere AI , which uses content-aware
masking for maximum realism. Forget manual
masking. It’s all automatic in Luminar Neo.

Before After
© Wirestock
AI photo editing - original photo before using Relight AI

AI Photo Editor - Transform Your Photos with AI-Powered Editing | Skylum(9)

AI Photo Editor - Transform Your Photos with AI-Powered Editing | Skylum(10)

Before After

Smoothen skin in an instant

Automatically retouch your subject’s skin and remove imperfections with Skin AI . No masking skills required.

Original
Apply effects

AI photo editing - original photo before using Skin AI

AI Photo Editor - Transform Your Photos with AI-Powered Editing | Skylum(12)

An application & plugin. For macOS & Windows

‘I had no idea it would be so painful!’ Could you survive the real-life Squid Game?

‘I am the chosen one’ … Squid Game: The Challenge.

M y feet are numb. I’ve been trapped in an awkward squat for several minutes, lactic acid eating through my thighs. The 20ft-tall mechanical doll stares mercilessly, her dress orange, her head full of motion sensors, laser precise. At the edge of my vision, a competitor falls with a scream. I’m wondering how it feels for a squib-rigged vest to explode on your chest. I’d seen Red Light, Green Light (a twisted version of Grandmother’s Footsteps) in the Korean TV phenomenon Squid Game. I had no idea the real-life version would be so painful.

Yesterday, hundreds of competitors in this freezing aircraft hangar held poses for nearly 30 minutes at a time. I hear that some, against all advice, dived dangerously over the finish line. Variety reported that many collapsed on set, requiring medical attention. The day after I brave these conditions, the Sun’s front page will read “Squid Game Horror in the UK!” The drama has turned real in more ways than one.

Based on Netflix’s most-watched show, Squid Game: The Challenge (conceived as the most ambitious reality competition ever made) sees a staggering 456 players from around the world compete for $4.56m. I’m having a go at some of the games with fellow journalists and no chance of winning even £20 – or so I think. We do get some natty green tracksuits, though.

Rhik pits himself against the honeycomb challenge.

The candy-coloured set is more disorienting for the presence of Anupam Tripathi, one of the original cast members. Why is he here? He catches my eye as I’m ready to fall. “Don’t just look – listen,” he hisses. What? Then I get it. I train my attention on the doll’s head. Just before it spins round again, Exorcist-style, I hear the sound of internal parts moving. The tell buys me an extra second, enough to carry me over the finish line. Perhaps Tripathi is my Guardian angel.

“The biggest surprise was that we ended up with a show where you care about the people,” reflects producer Stephen Lambert. Conventional TV wisdom dictates that viewers will not connect to a cast of 20. Having 456 players doesn’t just break the rule, but explodes it. Tens of thousands applied, attracted to the opportunity for self-discovery, not to mention 16 days living off Netflix’s expense account.

The streamer has ploughed some of the estimated $900m profit the original made into this, so I’m expecting lobster rolls. As the masked guards roll a trolley full of lunch boxes on to the dormitory floor, I utter quiet thanks. I utter something else when I uncover a hard-boiled egg, and nothing else. “I have a degree in journalism!” wails Ash, an Entertainment Tonight writer. “Now I’m asking if I can keep my sweatpants and have another egg.”

The original drama, of desperate adults playing children’s games with lethal consequences, was a satire of exploitative reality TV. What does it say that The Challenge has recreated Squid Game without the critique? “That’s one dimension of the drama. But drama is about a lot of things,” reasons producer John Hay. “Millions of us watched thinking: ‘What would I do?’ That test of human character under pressure, that’s what we seized on.”

Ready, steady, go … Red Light, Green Light in Squid Games: The Challenge.

Squid Game creator Hwang Dong-hyuk has visited the set and given the show his blessing. The team have nimbly brought his vision to life, without taking on his anti-capitalist message. They’ve flipped the focus, from need to opportunity – the opportunity to win millions, to step through the screen into your favourite show. “It’s not as if our cast are destitute people, like in the show. Some of them are entrepreneurs, and quite wealthy,” says Lambert.

In a John Waters-pink bathroom cubicle, I’m shocked to see a camera pointed at me. But I still have to go. I check my hair in mirrored windows I know hide producer’s desks. Shaken by the drama of Red Light, Green Light, Ash sits down with a coffee and her vest randomly detonates, showering her in a fountain of blue ink. “Where the hell did she get a coffee?” I’m thinking. A rumour has started that we are playing for real money today. A harsh buzzer interrupts my thoughts: time for the next game.

We are marched to an old west ghost town, sunset-coloured, floor entirely sand. The guards tell us to pick a partner. Jake works for LadBible, yet I’ve been enjoying hanging out with him. He’s an obvious choice, so we buddy up. But tragedy! We are told to devise our own two-player game involving marbles, of which the loser will be eliminated. Gutting.

“Oh lad. Shall we take turns chucking marbles into a crate?” offers Jake, guilelessly. Only after we step to our improvised oche does he cockily reveal there’s a sand pit in his garden. This is his favourite game. I’ve been shafted.

I fail to bullseye. When I do, it bounces out. Jake cackles as he gathers my balls. I’m not going down like this, I decide. Also, who has a sand pit at home? Adopting a deeply uncool, between-the-legs lob, I start to gain consistency. There’s a spot of deeper sand in one corner of the crate, I notice, which deadens a marble’s fall. I hit it again and again. Jake’s losing his head. On the final round, he hits the rim of the crate, and swears. He overshoots his final marble. Eliminated. I can’t believe it.

A scene from Squid Game: The Challenge.

Strategy, alliances and pragmatism are crucial to this show. (You could say the games demand a certain squid pro quo.) This is no accident, given it comes from the teams behind The Traitors and 24 Hours in A&E. Backstories are explored in player interviews that intercut the action. Watching one storyline, in which a shrewd older woman cosies up to an unpopular alpha male athlete, is as insidiously gripping as a novel. One player uses her cutesiness to hide a penchant for ruthless double-crossing. Another experiences religious doubt and breaks down.

Failure = death etc … Rhik in the Squid Game dormitory.

Suddenly I remember the scene in which Squid Game players soften their candies with spit. That’s the trick! I pop off the tin lid. As long as I get a circle, triangle, even a star, this should be OK.

I stare at the ornate umbrella shape scored in my candy: bat wing upper, thin, curved handle below. Why me? The clock starts its five-minute countdown, as I start gobbing tearfully on the brittle disc. Two minutes gone. This is so unfair. I have to start scoring with the needle. Three minutes. There’s sand in my mouth, needle slipping in my sticky hand. Four. Maybe there’s hope? I scratch frantic. Then the inevitable happens – a section of the canopy snaps off. No, no. A jump-suited guard stares, and retreats.

Pffffst. Pressurised ink explodes up my neck, coating my face. “Player 456 … eliminated.” So that’s how it feels. Blue faces litter the beach around me – including Tripathi, who also got an umbrella. Go gentle, brother. “The games become more morally complex as the series goes on, with storylines of trust and betrayal,” says Hay proudly. “It delivers on the mantra ‘How you play is who you are’.”

Fat load of good that did me. “I broke mine a bit, but covered it up with sand and they didn’t notice,” laughs Jake outside. The huge piggy bank descends from the ceiling, fluttering with banknotes like a mocking piñata. None of us passed all three games, so none of us are taking any of it home. If how you play is who you are, then colour me a bitter, blue loser.

Squid Game: The Challenge is on Netflix from 22 November



The underrated Greek Island that’s being called a Santorini dupe

Naoussa on Paros

With its world-famous good looks and some of the best hotels in Greece, Santorini has long reigned supreme as the most visited Greek Island – around two million visitors each year. But with increasing crowds to compete with and sky-high prices on the island, particularly in the height of summer, the friendly and more affordable island of Paros is becoming a trending alternative, or as TikTok would call it, a ‘destination dupe.’

According to Expedia Group, which recently released its Unpack ’24 travel trends guide, flight searches to Paros in 2023 increased by 193 per cent compared to last year. Other trending destination dupes in the report include Liverpool as an alternative to London and Memphis as an alternative to Nashville.

Naousa village, Paros island Getty Images

Located in the Aegean Sea north of Santorini, flights from Athens to Paros are ten minutes shorter than flights to Santorini, with direct flights also available from London. While Paros is without the defining grandeur of Santorini’s caldera, it does possess many of the main elements that have long drawn visitors to the region – cubist villages, long beaches and coves, wandering goats, old monasteries: a mixture of hospitality, informal ease and wildness.

In short, for travellers willing to part with the familiar streets of Santorini or the mecca of the masses, Mykonos, the rewards are sweet, the beaches golden, and the hospitality second to none.

Where to stay in Paros

  • Mythic (pictured): Built into the hillside itself, the elevated location offers some of the best views in Paros. All rooms here face the sea, many with their own plunge pools, plus two sprawling infinity pools outside, clad by double sun loungers.
  • Cosme: This is the island’s newest address, set in a quiet bay beside the soulful village of Naoussa and designed to mimic the white-washed villages that dot the pear-shaped island.
  • Parocks: Just a short walk to the beach, this luxe spa and hotel offers all its guests private pools or jacuzzis, endless views over the Paronaxia strait from every room or suit and a space of solace, clad in earthy tones.
  • Go surfing: Sparkling Santa Maria beach is a surfing hotspot, with beach bars and sun loungers for those who prefer their holidays horizontal.
  • Visit the villages: Take a trip to one of the island’s medieval villages like Marpissa, Prodromos and Lefkes. Poised on a pine-studded hilltop, Lefkes is a particular favourite, a dazzling white-washed and blue-doored Cycladic cliché, in the best possible sense.
  • Island hop to Antiparos: From Pounta it’s only a 10-minute ferry ride to reach Antiparos, a little island that’s a big hit with A-listers and beau-monde sun seekers.

Mr. E Parilio

Where to eat in Paros

  • Mr E at Parilio (pictured): This airy eatery serves locally inspired Mediterranean fare in a peaceful, laid-back atmosphere, where large, statement windows frame the undulating hillside beyond.
  • Soso: Tucked away down a quiet bougainvillaea-clad alley, tables are limited at this Naousa restaurant, which offers a refined take on homely food.
  • Sigi Ikthios: In prime position on the cobblestone promenade of Nauosa, this harbourside restaurant brings the abundant delights of Paros and beyond to the table with an extensive menu of classic and modern dishes.

Topics Islands
Dubai sunset spots: 11 of the best places for a sundowner
By Sophie Prideaux
The best rooftop bars in Istanbul
By Amelia Dhuga
The best beachfront restaurants in Dubai
By Courtney Brandt
The best neighbourhoods to stay in Paris: where to find the cutest areas
By Sarah James
The best restaurants in Istanbul for breakfast, lunch and dinner
By Caroline Eden
The 8 best cafes and coffee shops in Istanbul
By Amelia Dhuga
Facebook
Instagram
Pinterest
Tiktok
LinkedIn

Our website, cntravellerme.com aims to inspire and inform readers about the world around us, with trusted and original coverage of regional and international destinations, hotels, food, art, history, architecture, shopping and more. Travel-related tips and advice are complemented by in-depth destination-specific stories, as well as features and original photography drawn from Conde Nast Traveller Middle East magazine.

© 2023 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement and Your California Privacy Rights. Condé Nast Traveller Middle East may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

Leave a Reply