Kanye West svela il titolo del suo nuovo album su Twitter

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Kanye West

Il rapper e produttore discografico Kanye West ha usato Twitter per svelare in anteprima assoluta il titolo del suo nuovo album, in uscita il 22 novembre.

Kanye West è sempre stato piuttosto riluttante nei confronti dei social network. La scorsa estate ha aperto un profilo sul social network ed ha scoperto la gioia di poter avere un contatto diretto con fan, ammiratori e sostenitori.

Il titolo del disco è My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, se non è il disco con il titolo più lungo e contorto di tutti i tempi, poco ci manca. Non vediamo l’ora di sentire le nuove canzoni del Re Mida del rap.

113.940 commenti su “Kanye West svela il titolo del suo nuovo album su Twitter”

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  5. Joe Aston got the kind of book launch every first time author dreams of – massive amounts of
    free publicity online, in newspapers and on TV and radio. 

    And it was all thanks to Anthony Albanese’s ill-informed attack on Aston over what was written in his book, The Chairman’s Lounge
    – The Inside Story of how Qantas sold us out.

    Despite the resultant terrible publicity – which has led to him being called ‘upgrade
    Albo’ – and calls for an inquiry, Aston told Daily Mail Australia his book is
    ‘not a hit job on Anthony Albanese’.

    Aston insisted he’s ‘not trying to get a scalp’, but reiterated that the Prime Minister ‘had a direct line to Alan Joyce’.

    The book claims Mr Albanese got 22 upgrades from economy on Qantas flights by personally
    requesting them from the airline’s then CEO Mr Joyce – which the Prime Minister
    has categorically denied.

    According to unnamed Qantas ‘insiders’, 11 of the 22 flights Mr Albanese got upgrades for were ‘privately
    funded’ and included overseas trips to Rome, London,
    Los Angeles and Honolulu. 

    But instead of addressing the claim, Mr Albanese chose to
    shoot the messenger and, in turn, shot himself in the foot. 

    He said Aston was using the accusations to sell books and said he was hiding his employment history. 

    ‘I don’t see declarations that he’s a former Liberal Party staffer… I don’t see declarations he’s a former Qantas employee,
    ‘ the Prime Minister said. 

    But before the book even gets to the contents page there is a photo of Aston that
    refers to him as the then-Qantas corporate communications senior adviser. 

    Joe Aston (pictured) got the kind of book launch every first time
    author dreams of – massive amounts of free publicity online,
    in newspapers and on TV and radio

    Anthony Albanese (right) is pictured with his fiance
    Jodie Haydon (left) and then Qantas CEO Alan Joyce on March 31, 2023 in Sydney, Australia

    And the first chapter of the book reveals that he worked
    for then-Liberal MP Bruce Baird, who held the southern Sydney seat
    of Cook before Scott Morrison. 

    ‘My professional history is not a secret or
    not disclosed, it’s in the first line of the first page of the
    book,’ Aston said on Tuesday night, just before his book launch. 

    Though he was grateful for the free publicity Mr Albanese’s response gave the book,
    Aston was still ‘staggered’ at the untrue claims about him the Prime
    Minister made. 

    ‘He’s under enormous pressure and I know, I’ve seen this many times with public figures and leaders who struggle to
    see their own part in it, the terrible circumstances that they
    create,’ he said.

    Read More

    Extravagant Qantas perk Anthony Albanese FAILED to declare is revealed…
    after two days of denials

    Asked if Mr Albanese had been poorly advised
    in his attack, Aston, who is a former Australian Financial Review columnist, wonders
    if the Prime Minister ‘even listens to advice at this point’.

    ‘All he’s doing is talking around the issue and he’s blaming me and
    he’s blaming other MP’s for also taking upgrades (on Qantas flights).

    ‘He’s avoiding the only thing that he can’t talk about, which
    is, did you ask Qantas for confirmed upgrades
    on your private holidays when you were the Transport Minister?
    The answer is “yes” and he’s desperately trying to avoid saying it.’

    Smelling blood, Opposition leader Peter Dutton said the Prime Minister should refer himself to the anti-corruption commission over the flight upgrades.

    Coming on top of Mr Albanese’s tone deaf purchase of a $4.3million clifftop mansion while so many people are struggling to pay their mortgage or rent, the latest blow to his credibility has led to calls for him to
    resign.

    Aston refuses to be drawn on this, though. 

    ‘I never expected this (part of the book) to even this
    part to get this far. I really am shocked at how it’s blown up.

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is pictured with the then Qantas CEO Alan Joyce

    Anthony Albanese is pictured on August 14, 2023 as Qantas unveiled its Yes23 livery in support of a
    Yes vote in the Indigenous Voice to Parliament
    referendum 

    Among the movers and shakers at Joe Aston’s book launch in the ritzy Hemmesphere club in Sydney was Tabcorp director David Gallop
    (pictured)

    Paul Barry (pictured in blue shirt), the host of the ABC’s Media Watch show, was also at
    the launch

    ‘So to the extent that it has, I would say …
    anyone who reads the book will learn that this book is not a hit job on Anthony Albanese.

    This book is about Qantas. 

    ‘Anthony Albanese is an example of how Qantas influences politicians on both sides
    of the aisle, Labor, Liberal, National, you name it. They’ve
    been doing it for more than a generation.

    ‘They’re the best influence peddler in Australia.
    I’m not here trying to get a scalp. That’s not what this book is about
    and it never was.’

    But the conversation Daily Mail Australia had with Aston mirrors the conversations being
    had across Australia and eventually winds up back on Mr Albanese. 

    ‘Even I’ve underestimated how fed up the public is with the freebie mindset of politicians,’ he said.

    Guests at Joe Aston’s book launch on Tuesday night are pictured pointing for emphasis
    or to someone they recognise

    There was no shortage of free alcohol (pictured)
    available at the launch of Joe Aston’s book 

    Joe Aston is pictured in the exclusive Hemmesphere club in Sydney, where
    his book The Chairman’s Lounge was launched

    ‘And unfortunately for Albanese, he’s been in politics a long time and that kind of behaviour is quite normalised to him,
    is what I’ve seen. 

    ‘I mean, he loves the free concert tickets and sitting at the front row of the
    Australian Open Tennis. 

    ‘I went to the Australian Open Tennis as a journalist almost every year for 12 years and he was the only Prime Minister (I saw there).

    ‘Those tickets are worth thousands of dollars to sit in the front row of the International Grand Slam.

    He’s the first Prime Minister who I’ve ever seen do that.

    ‘That to me is a sign that he doesn’t quite get what it looks like to others when he’s on the gravy train. And I think
    (the claims in the book are) just another example of that.’

    In Australian politics it’s regular practise for an MP’s
    travel to be booked in economy, then someone in their office
    phones the airline and asks if their flight can be upgraded. 

    The difference with the Prime Minister is that ‘he had a very direct line to Alan Joyce,’ Aston said.

    ‘The other thing is there’s a difference between an upgrade where it’s in the booking
    and if the seat’s empty when the flight closes, you’ll get upgraded.

    ‘This is different. This is a confirmed upgrade where the ticket is
    converted and you are guaranteed. You’re not going to the airport crossing your fingers going “Geez, I hope there is a spare seat”.

    ‘You’re guaranteed. You turn up knowing you’re getting a seat and the only person at Qantas who can issue those types of
    upgrades is the CEO. No other executive can do that.

    ‘So it is beyond question that Alan joints authorised
    these upgrades (for Anthony Albanese).’

    Aston enjoyed many upgrades to the pointy end of planes during his time as a travel journalist,
    and understands the attraction for politicians to
    get up there. 

    ‘These things are tempting and it’s human nature too.
    Once you’ve experienced the front of the
    plane, it’s very hard to go back.

    ‘For politicians, they run around with all these
    staff and they’ve got chauffeured cars and they fly in business,
    but they don’t get paid like CEOs …

    ‘They’re not in a situation where they can afford to go flying around in the front of the plane on personal travel. 

    ‘A normal person would say “Therefore I won’t (fly business class). But (for politicians) it’s a culture of entitlement.’

    Aston is careful to point out that most people would say politicians are ‘very well paid compared to the average worker’.

    But that doesn’t stop some MPs from desperately seeking a free ride, whether it’s a flight upgrade, concert tickets or the executive box at sporting events. 

    Late on Wednesday night, a spokeswoman Mr Albanese said ‘The Prime Minister did not ever call Alan Joyce seeking an upgrade’.

    ‘All travel has been appropriately declared and is a matter of public record.’

    Daily Mail Australia has contacted Qantas for comment.  

    The Chairman’s Lounge – The Inside Story of how Qantas sold us out, by Joe Aston, is available now in bookshops and from online retailers

    WHAT IS THE QANTAS CHAIRMAN’S LOUNGE?

    The Qantas Chairman’s Lounge is an invitation-only club approved by the company chairman, with the guest list a closely-guarded secret.

    It has been dubbed ‘the most exclusive club in the country’ and comes with a distinct black card.

    Members include senior-ranking MPs such as ministers, state premiers and the Prime Minister, leaders of major unions and sporting groups, Qantas ambassadors, selected A-list celebrities, major corporate figures and high-profile media personalities.

    The clubs can be found in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide airports but are not signposted – you have to know where to look.

    Inside you will find expensive wood and brass furnishings, wool carpet and marble flooring, all bathed in natural light. 

    Members enjoy fine à la carte dining with a complimentary premium array of beers, spirits and Australian wines. Wine bottles are often given as departing gifts.

    Facilities may also include spas, showers and an assortment of books and magazines.

    Members may bring in two guests at a time. 

    Lounge attendants personally alert you when your flight is ready to board, and your personal preferences are logged for each flight. 

    Membership also entitles you to first-class facilities at Qantas partner airlines.

    Source: Executive Traveller

    Anthony Albanese

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  6. An invitation to lunch at Caviar Kaspia was, once upon a
    time, an offer you simply didn’t refuse. Providing, of course, that the
    bill was on someone else. Because caviar, smeared on blinis or piled high on baked potatoes, sure didn’t come cheap.
    There may have been other things on the menu, but no one paid
    them much heed. This was all about lashings of the black stuff.

    Caviar Kaspia’s signature baked potato and caviar: ‘there are few
    better dishes on earth…only the price, at just under
    £150, is ridiculous’

    Caviar Kaspia popped her final tin about two decades back.
    And that site, hidden down a smart Mayfair mews, was taken over by Gavin Rankin (who
    used to be the boss), and transformed into the brilliant Bellamy’s.
    It prospers to this day. Kaspia, on the other
    hand, went quiet. Until last year, when she reopened as a members’ club in another Mayfair backstreet.
    But a £2,000 a year membership fee proved hard to swallow, meaning
    the doors were opened to the great unwashed.

    Which is how we find ourselves sitting in a rather handsome – albeit near empty – dining room,
    lusciously lavish, under the stern gaze of a stern painting of a very stern man. The soft, crepuscular gloom is broken up by the glare of table lamps, indecorously bright,
    while a loud soundtrack of indolent, indeterminate beats throbs in the background.
    The whole place is scented with gilded ennui.

    Our fellow diners are two young South Korean women of pale, luminescent beauty, clad
    in diaphanous couture. They don’t speak, rather communicate entirely
    via camera phone. Pose, click, check, filter, post.
    Immaculate waiters hover in the shadows.

    We sip ice-cold vodka, and eat a £77 caviar and smoked-salmon Kaspia
    croque monsieur that tastes far better than it ought to.
    Next door, a large table fills with a glut of the noisily, glossily confident.

    We’re looked after by a wonderful French lady of such effervescent charm and charisma that
    had she burst into an impromptu performance of ‘Willkommen’, we would have barely blinked.
    Baked potatoes, skin as crisp as parchment, insides whipped savagely hard with butter and sour cream, are a
    study in tuber art. A cool jet-black splodge of oscietra caviar, gently saline,
    raises them to the sublime. Only the price, at just under £150 each, is ridiculous.
    But there are few better dishes on earth. I’d eat this every day if
    I could. But I can’t. Obviously. That’s the problem with caviar.
    One taste is never enough.

    About £200 per head. Caviar Kaspia, 1a Chesterfield Street, London W1; caviarkaspialondon.com

    ★★★★✩

     

    My favourite luxury dishes
    Tom’s pick of the best places to splash the culinary cash in LondonTom’s pick of the best places to splash the culinary cash in London

    The Ritz

    Beef wellington sliced and sauced at the table (£150) and crêpes suzette flambéed with aplomb (£62): Arts de la Table
    is edible theatre at its most delectable.

    theritzlondon.com

    Otto’s

    Come to this classic French restaurant for the canard
    or homard à la presse (£150-£220 per person);
    stay for beef tartare (£42), foie gras (£22) and poulet de
    bresse rôti (£190, two courses).

    ottos-restaurant.com

    Sushi Kanesaka

    Piscine perfection comes at an eye-watering £420 per person, sans booze.

    But this 13-seat sushi bar shows omakase dining at its very finest.

    dorchestercollection.com

    Min Jiang

    The dim sum is some of the best in town. But don’t miss the wood-fired Beijing duck (£98) – crisp skin first, then two servings of the meat.
    Superb.

    minjiang.co.uk

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