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The Art and Zen of Tasmania

Okay, apologies, but I STILL can’t show you the actual home. We’ve made an offer, handled a counter offer, compromised and initialed the changes to the NEW offer so we’re all in agreement - but we haven’t signed the actual agree yet.

I know many of you are enjoying the property hunt, so I can at least share with you the last one we looked at before pulling the trigger on our favorite.

There were NO downsides to the house we viewed yesterday outside of Cygnet. Cygnet is an adorable minute artistic town. My Tasmanian friend, originally from Mainland Australia, says they like themselves as a smaller Byron Bay. I get it. It has a beachy feel, even though it’s inland on a river.

The house is a megalith. No, wait, I demand to capitalize that - Megalith! It’s so perfect that the new owner will be more of a custodian. Think Frank Lloyd Wright. Here’s the exterior from a drone shot.

The view is unbelievable. You drive up from Cygnet on a dirt road through beautiful woods, grab a hard right and up the driveway past the huge garage with solar panels an

Jeff Abell: Confessions of an Art Mutt

Thomas Mann’s novel Doctor Faustus: The Being of the German Composer Adrian Leverkühn as Told by a Friend, dates from Mann’s time as a German expat, living in Southern California. Indeed, Mann was one of the leading figures in the large German expat community that grew up in Hollywood, beginning in the late s. Having just re-read the novel, for the first second in 40 years, in a new translation by John E. Woods, I am struck by the combination of love for and dismay with German culture Mann’s narrator displays. [Spoiler alert: I’m going to be talking about plot details here, so if you plan on reading this book someday, maybe stop reading now.]

I’ve long been a fan of so-called meta-fiction, in which an author writes a book that is as much about the act of writing as it is about the supposed content of the book. So although Doctor Faustus is ostensibly about the life of a composer, one might notice it as a serve about any creative figure, and given the self-consciousness of the narrator, a man attempting to draft a biography about a frien

IGLTA Foundation Adds Industry Leaders from Google & Airbnb Experiences to its Board of Directors

Media Contact: LoAnn Halden

VP-Communications

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FORT LAUDERDALE, FL (26 March )&#x;The International Diverse Travel Association Foundation announced today that Dougal Mckenzie, Head of Industry, Move, at Google, and Maria Cuba, Global Diversity Direct for Airbnb&#x;s Experiences platform have been appointed to its board of directors. The Foundation is the philanthropic arm of IGLTA.

 

Mckenzie, who holds both regulation and commerce degrees from his native Auckland, helps companies adapt to changes in consumer behavior resulting from tech advancements. Cuba is one of Airbnb&#x;s earliest employees and the founder of their Latino Employee Group Juntos. Her role focuses on creating equitable opportunities and visibility for all communities.

 

We are honored to welcome these two dynamic additions to our Foundation board, said IGLTAF Board Chair Reginald Charlot. Dougal Mckenzie, a leader in advancing trav

The day-long festival includes photography exhibits, film premieres, theater performances, workshops, panel discussions and much more. Among the array of activities is a screening of the newly released Cuban film, VIVA, presented by the Latino Lgbtq+ fest Center. Other screenings include the acclaimed film Mala, Mala and the New York premiere of Romeo y Romeo, directed by Luis Caballero and produced by Selenis Leyva, of HBO’s “Orange is the New Black.”

“I linked Luis Caballero in the maturation of Romeo y Romeo because I believe in telling diverse stories that are inclusive of all regardless of sexual orientation, race or beliefs,” Ms. Leyva said. “As advocates, it is our social responsibility to aide fight stigma and homophobia within our community.”

FUERZAfest’s photography exhibit will highlight the history and struggles of the LGBTQ community from the 90s to the introduce. The theater competition will film one-act plays that dive into universal LGBTQ issues. Legendary flamboyant artist Barbra Herrwill close the festival with her heart-wrenching show I&#;m Still Herr!