Abu Dhabi (Etihad)
Aquaventure Waterpark at Atlantis, The Palm Dubai has announced that it has entered the Guinness Book of Records, as it has recorded the largest number of water slides, officially making it the largest water park in the world.
This achievement comes in the context of Dubai’s march, which has achieved the largest number of records in the Guinness Book of World Records, confirming the continuity of Aquaventure Water City in attracting millions of lovers of water adventures annually.
Verification of the record is carried out by photographing a clip documenting the experience of each waterslide and sending it to the Guinness World Records team of judges. Aquaventure Waterpark set a new world record with 50 water slides, beating the previous 41 slides.
This record is the latest achievement for Aquaventure Water City in its distinctive transformation journey to become the largest water park in the world, in addition to being an independent and exceptional destination in the region, providing its guests with unparalleled entertainment experiences. The destination’s three parks, filled with excitement, offer an integrated package of entertaining experiences and activities for visitors through a kilometer beach and 105 recreational facilities spread over an area of 22.5 hectares, including a record number of water slides.
The city offers thrill-seekers the most exciting adventures on several leading slides in the region that hold records, such as the Odyssey of Terror, the world’s longest waterslide with double-curve TornadoWAVE, in addition to Shockwave, the longest family water rollercoaster in the world, and Medusa Layer, The region’s first roller coaster with PIPElineBLAST double curves, as well as Immortal Falls, the region’s first cliff-jumping game.
In a new partnership, Aquaventure Waterpark and Hydrosports have launched a range of water sports products. It includes a range of water vehicles, such as hydrofoil surfboards, hoverboards, and jet-skis.
Atlantis, The Palm, offers its guests staying at the hotel an exceptional tour in the waters of the Arabian Gulf on board the luxury Italian yacht Azimut 50, exclusively offered to the resort.
Sasha Trimmer, Vice President of Facilities and Water Activities at Atlantis, The Palm in Dubai, chose 10 of the most important lifeguards to receive the new record certificate at the Guinness World Records ceremony. This extraordinary moment will be shared in front of the Leap of Faith slide, the most exclusive area of Aquaventure Waterpark.
Timothy Kelly, Executive Vice President and Managing Director, Atlantis Resorts and Residences, said: “Today, as we celebrate this great achievement at Aquaventure Waterpark, we would like to express our gratitude for the efforts of those who contributed to the realization and operation of the largest water park in the world. Featuring more than 500 dedicated lifeguards, ensuring guests are protected, kept safe and enjoy new and exceptional water experiences.
Al-Waleed Othman, the official judge in the Guinness Book of World Records, said: “Visitors can purchase a seasonal pass, valid for 90 days, that allows them to experience all the waterslides at the Atlantis Aquaventure resort at an attractive price.
October 5, 2022
Online TV network rips apart after classic Sega Indie game recall
British media conglomerate, Sky, You just got a full ass on Twitter, following trying to disrupt wiv da cool kidz while promoting her new partnership with David Beckham’s Guild’s eSports company. Ask followers [checks notes] Technical support account Loudspeaker Screenshot of their ‘childhood favorite #IndieGame’, they offered to start with a photo of…monster changed. This infamous indie game published by Sega 19988.
Murdoch’s broadband and television network is now in Comcast hands, and this corporate context appears to have skewed their view of independence somewhat. We’re happy to reply to Tweet to suggest alternative independent favorites from childhood, like helloAnd Super Mario 64And Skyrim.
Helpfully suggested by others Dune IIAnd Call of Duty Part 4 Modern WarfareAnd someone dug up a mysterious address called Tetris.
The support account, in the last few minutes (regarding three hours following tweeting) began responding to sarcastic responses with protests that they meant “#RETROGAMES”. But it’s too late for that.
I also dared to suggest.
It’s unclear why the support account was the source of this nonsense, but now they are frantically trying to figure out what’s wrong between explaining why the internet is down to customers. It’s a very special case they found themselves in. And now we’re making it worse for them by posting their mistake on a widely read global site.
Don’t feel bad regarding them. You should see how much they charge for bad quality TV and internet. Well, imagine Comcast’s fee and serviceAnd you are mostly there.
To their credit, they haven’t deleted the tweet yet. And you know, now I heard regarding Guild for the first time, so maybe something works?

“A social media addict. Zombie fanatic. Likes to travel. obsessed with music. Bacon expert.
Human rights activist Charles recalls a time when civil society was flourishing in China and he was able to devote his time to helping improve the lives of working-class people.
Now following 10 years President Xi Jinping’s power grab, community organizations like his have been dismantled, with no hope of being reborn.
Charles fled China and several of his activist friends are in jail.
“After 2015, the whole of civil society began to collapse and fragment,” he tells AFP, using a pseudonym for security reasons.
Xi, regarding to seal a third term in the world’s most populous country, has led a decade of destruction of civic movements, emerging independent media and academic freedoms.
As Xi tried to remove threats to the Communist Party, many NGO workers, rights lawyers, and activists were threatened, jailed, or exiled.
AFP interviewed eight Chinese activists and intellectuals, some still active, who describe this process. Some are harassed by security officers and others are not allowed to post using their names.
“My colleagues and I have frequently experienced 24-hour interrogations,” an employee of an LGBTIQ+ rights NGO tells AFP on condition of anonymity, who suffers psychological trauma from these events.
“We have become increasingly incapable, whether from a financial, operational or personal perspective,” he adds.
Road to dismantling
The process has been long and difficult for activists.
In 2015, some 300 lawyers and human rights defenders were arrested in a wide-ranging campaign known as the “709 crackdown” because it began on July 9.
Many lawyers were jailed or under surveillance for years and others were disbarred, according to rights groups.
Another key moment was the adoption in 2016 of the so-called foreign NGO law, which imposed restrictions and gave the police extensive powers over these organizations in the country.
“In 2014 we might display protest banners, carry out scientific fieldwork and collaborate with Chinese media to expose environmental abuses,” a worker at an environmental organization told AFP on condition of anonymity.
“Now we have to inform the police before we do anything. Each project must be in collaboration with a government department that acts more like a supervisory committee », he assures.
The situation is very different in the early 2010s, when civilian groups might act under the relatively permissive climate of former President Hu Jintao.
“Several LGBTIQ+ and gender groups sprang up on campus in 2015,” recalls Carl, a member of an LGBTIQ+ group.
But in 2018, the intolerance towards activism took shape with the suppression of the #MeToo feminist movement and the arrest of dozens of student activists.
“Activities quietly permitted before were banned while ideological work like political education classes intensified,” says Carl.
In July 2022, the prestigious Beijing Tsinghua University warned two students for distributing rainbow flags and dozens of LGBTIQ+ pages of student groups were blocked.
“Unwinnable War”
Another bad omen was an internal Communist Party communique in 2013 that forbade defending what it described as Western liberal values, such as constitutional democracy or freedom of the press.
“He treated these ideologies as hostile, even though in the 1980s we might discuss them and publish books regarding them,” says Gao Yu, a freelance journalist in Beijing who was jailed between 2014 and 2019 for allegedly leaking this document.
“In a normal society, intellectuals can question the mistakes of the government. If not, (…) isn’t it the same as in the Mao era?” he asks, referring to the founder of communist China, Mao Zedong.
Gao, 78, is under surveillance, has no income and is unable to receive calls from abroad or meet friends. “We are all like grains of corn ground by the village mill,” he says.
In the place of Gao and his colleagues there are now famous academics who repeat the nationalist ideology of the leaders. Others have been forced out of office or watched by their own students.
“A culture of whistleblowing has flourished in the Chinese intellectual realm in the past decade,” says Wu Qiang, a former political science professor at Tsinghua and a critic of the Party.
“Students have become censors who review every sentence of the teacher, instead of learning through mutual discussion.”
Faced with this climate, many activists have left the country or suspended their militancy. Only a handful persevere despite growing hostility like online bullying.
“Maybe we’re at the bottom of the valley now … but people still talk endlessly,” says Feng Yuan, founder of the gender rights group Equity.
For others, like the environmental activist, it is an “unwinnable war” once morest nationalist trolls for whom NGO workers are “anti-China and brainwashed by the West.”
“It makes me feel like all my efforts were in vain,” he says.
Charles’s friends, #MeToo activist Huan Xueqing and labor rights advocate Wang Jianbing, were detained for a year without trial on charges of subversion.
In his opinion, the authorities saw his gatherings of young activists as a threat. And the bar is getting lower and lower.
“The government is now targeting individuals who do subtle, low-profile, small-scale activism,” he says. “They have made sure that there is not a new generation of activists.”
Worse might not have happened to him at a worse time. Seven months only following the death of Jean-Pierre, while Nathalie Pernaut is still in full mourning and seems difficult to overcome the void left by her husband, she was the victim of a violent attack.
It will undoubtedly leave significant psychological scars, because the suddenness of the attack deeply shocked Nathalie. By her character and the words she uttered, she also tarnished the memory of the king of the JT. The curtain has fallen. After the many tributes paid to his disappearance, an old grudge suddenly rebounded. Everything started from there and led to an irreparable act.
The suffering he caused will probably never be forgiven by JPP’s widow. Verbal attacks are sometimes more difficult to overcome than physical attacks, and the one that affected Nathalie Pernaut was devastating because it came from a man who was close to her husband: Jacques Legros.
A very sudden attack
He and Jean-Pierre dated for nearly twenty-five years. It was thought that friendly ties had been woven over the years. It was nothing. In his book Behind the screen, 40 years at the heart of the media, published by Editions du Rocher, the journalist coldly decides regarding his late colleague: “We were not friends. “He even goes further and severely tackles the one he replaced since 1998: “Having been his joker for twenty-four years without an editorial clash is a source of pride. But I know he was itching to comment on my diary.
He never spoke to me directly, ”he says in sentences full of innuendo. “He wanted to keep the leading role and solicited the team more than necessary, says Jacques Legros once more. He wanted more and more to take control of the whole newspaper. I was starting to boil inside, until one day I burst out, gathered my stuff and started back to the parking lot and my car. Since he wanted to do the newspaper for me, let him come and do it! Upon discovering these words, Nathalie was outraged. In the name of her love, she wanted to react to this posthumous attack and decided to put things right on the show The Morning without filter on Virgin Radio: “I completely hallucinated and above all, Mr. Jacques Legros forgets that he was only his joker.
With courage, she wanted to react
(…) Who, for more than thirty years, has set the tone for 1 p.m. and who has been attributed the audience results? “Wounded, she continues and reveals that the joker was not shy regarding doing “bitch blows” to the king of the JT: “During confinement, Jean-Pierre had to have fifteen minutes on the air. And each time, Jacques Legros did longer and longer subjects. Towards the end, he only had six minutes left on the air! »
Disgusted, disappointed and saddened by this violent attack on her late husband, Nathalie notes the inelegance of the process, what it hides according to her, and its repercussions: “It looks like post-mortem jealousy. What a lack of respect for our grieving family! Me, I really ask myself the question: why this unpacking? To sell this book? Fortunately, JP is no longer there. And frankly, it is better, because we would have had a shock. Indeed, they were not friends, but JP respected him a lot as a colleague, and he often defended him with TF1. “She therefore concludes regarding this unpacking that the journalist would have knowingly wanted to create the buzz by swinging crisp information on the favorite presenter of the French “so that his book sells”.
Undoubtedly significant psychological sequelae
Unfortunately, it is indeed a frequent technique to “reveal” a private or surprising fact to ensure good audiences for a book, a film or a show. In the light of Jacques Legros’s book, we then listen to his tribute during the disappearance of Jean-Pierre Pernaut and we finally realize that he had only evoked their “same vision of France”, but that at no time had the joker spoken of friendship. And some, in the corridors of TF1, admit that they are not surprised by this attack and do not hesitate to suggest that Jacques Legros would have hoped for twenty-four years to be able to sit down one day in his colleague’s chair…
Jean Marc
