Back in October 2014, Alain St.Ange, the Seychelles Minister responsible for Tourism and Culture, wrote to Serge Dassault, the President of Le Figaro Magazine, to establish that their published photo
Back in October 2014, Alain St.Ange, the Seychelles Minister responsible for Tourism and Culture, wrote to Serge Dassault, the President of Le Figaro Magazine, to establish that their published photo had firstly nothing to do with the Seychelles and to state that Le Figaro had acted in a malicious manner with the aim of destroying the Seychelles tourism industry.
It was on October 11, 2014 that Le Figaro Magazine published a photo of Trash Island of the Maldives (taken from a report, “Welcome to Trash Island or Thilafushi. An island landfill island landfill made entirely of waste”) on a double-page spread (Pages 18 & 19) and labeled it as Seychelles. The publishing of this photo labeled as Seychelles caused an outcry from the visitors who enjoy a Seychelles holiday and who took ex
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100 Best Sci-Fi Movies of All Time
By Jacob Osborn, Stacker News
On 4/11/21 at 8:00 AM EDT
Like most movie genres, science fiction goes back almost as far as the medium itself, all the way to 1902 to be exact. That was when Georges Méliès an innovative genius of many talents unleashed his 14-minute masterwork: Le voyage dans la lune, better known to American audiences as A Trip to the Moon. Inspired by the written works of Jules Verne, among other things, and laced with satirical jabs toward the scientific community, the surrealist short follows a group of astronomers as they embark on a trip to the moon. While not scientifically accurate by any means the astronomers do travel by way of cannon shot, after all the film did kick off a cinematic trend of depicting hypothetical ideas in anticipation of future realities.