crazy base jumpers
wingsuit base jumping from Ali on Vimeo.
we had a speech last year at DLD about a girl who broke literally every bone of her body practicing this sport... still, stunning to look at.
we had a speech last year at DLD about a girl who broke literally every bone of her body practicing this sport... still, stunning to look at.
(source: The Sun)
Tomorrow, 9pm, France plays England. Don't expect any noise on the streets during the game...
Totally amazing game. Not one thought France could win, not even I. Shame on me, as the "bleus" did a great job last night.
We watched the game in a sports bar downtown Budapest, on the eve of the ETRE 07 conference. Amazing mood & spirit.
For once, the Marseillaise made sense "allons enfants de la Patrie, le jour de Gloire est arrivé..."
the Rugby world cup is going strong in France at the moment. Nice to see traditional / national costumes in the metro.
The NZ / Scotland game tonight reminded me I had to publish this pix taken earlier last week.
I mentionned this loosely on this blog earlier: the "Salon du Cheval" is a new customer of vpod.tv: they have been actively shooting the horse fair in Paris, and putting all of that footage on their homepage at www.salon-cheval.com.
The organizers were kind enough to give us a number of FREE invitations to the exhibition: we have been giving them to French bloggers who are wiling to go and shoot some video there and publish it with vpod.tv. The idea here is to help share the experience and the emotions of the fair with Internet visitors. So far so good.
The fair ends in 3 days on Sunday evening. So if you are in Paris, or are planning to attend, why don't you come by our offices this Friday (near St-Lazare / St-Augustin) and pick up an invitation to the fair for this weekend? Your kids would be delighted.
We only required you to be honest and promise to shoot some video that you will share with everyone else. And who knows ? Your video might make it to the homepage of the event !
For more information or to book your free ticket, email us at info at vpod.tv.
A big thanks to Orange, and particularly to Edouard for inviting me today to join a big crowd at the Stade de France for a rugby game between France and Argentina. My first time for a sports game at the stadium (I had been there for a few other occasions including a U2 concert), and also my first real rugby game.
Thanks to Mat yesterday who spent some time with me to explain the basic rules of the games. Indeed unless you understand some basic tactics, there's not much you can understand from these "bouncers" running into each other at full speed. But I got part of it, and it was great. Dimitri Yachvili from the French team had a few great runs. And it's rather amazing how the game changes in a few seconds with fantastic runs.
I thought the game was all about fairplay like in golf, but you could hear the French temper every now and then, whistling and booing. The Argentian team members looked huge to me: meatpackers or dockers :) very impressive.
A small crowd of well known faces from the French Internet were also there: Gilles and Franck from Eyeka, Thomas Blard, Edouard + Gerard + David + Hervé + etc. from Orange, Patrick from the MEF...
I'll be updating more videos to vpod.tv and pix to Flickr. Enjoy the French hymn on this clip above. Other video clips are here:
update: my pix are on Flickr.
-- sent from a Nokia N70 phone with vpod.tv mobile
France-Argentina rugby match
Zoé is the Director of the Salon du Cheval to be held in Paris in early December 2006. I have 20 FREE tickets for videobloggers willing to go and film the event and report live on the www.salon-cheval.com site using vpod.tv's platform (tag: 'saloncheval06') If you love horses, this is a must!

I don’t understand modern sports: players (in this case last night’s football match) play foul, hit each other, stand on each other’s foot (literally), pretend they are hurt when they are not… we see it all live on TV. Non-play. Brutality.
And then one team wins. As if everything was normal, as if foul play was part of the game. And they are celebrated as champions. As examples for the rest. Only the result counts. No serious banning. Machiavelli must laugh.
(check for instance this comment thread here for more visual examples). I had already written similar thoughts here.
In a different space, the same thing happened last week: play foul, and you will get results that everyone else will cheer, not looking back at how you got there. Play by the rules, and be recognised as a laggard. Some people will recognize themselves here.
Which way have you chosen to lead your life ?




