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Friday, 19 November 2021 11:55
Celebrate Thanksgiving At Hard Rock Café Athens
Hard Rock Cafe® Athens is ringing in the season of giving by inviting guests to come together over its limited-time Thanksgiving plate available from Thursday, November 25 to Sunday, November 28.
From mouthwatering, slow-roasted turkey breast, to traditional home-style sides including classic stuffing and beyond, friends and families will want to give thanks together at Hard Rock Café Athens.
Important Correction Notice: In our newsletter of November 19th, 2021, we incorrectly advertised a 20% off VIP card discount offered by the Hard Rock Cafe Athens. Although HRC Athens does offer a 20% discount to our readers, this discount is NOT APPLICABLE for special menus like the one outlined here for Thanksgiving.
The limited-time Thanksgiving menu is available for four days only, so diners are encouraged to feast while they can!
Delight Tastebuds with these Thanksgiving Classics:
- Slow-roasted Turkey Breast with Traditional Turkey Gravy
- Roasted Fresh Vegetables
- Home-Style Classic Stuffing
- Creamy Sweet Potato Mash
- Cranberry Sauce
Desserts and Drinks to Satisfy a Sweet Tooth:
- Pumpkin Pie
- Chilled Espresso Martini
From mouthwatering, slow-roasted turkey breast, to traditional home-style sides including classic stuffing and beyond, friends and families will want to give thanks together at Hard Rock Café Athens.
Important Correction Notice: In our newsletter of November 19th, 2021, we incorrectly advertised a 20% off VIP card discount offered by the Hard Rock Cafe Athens. Although HRC Athens does offer a 20% discount to our readers, this discount is NOT APPLICABLE for special menus like the one outlined here for Thanksgiving.
The limited-time Thanksgiving menu is available for four days only, so diners are encouraged to feast while they can!
Delight Tastebuds with these Thanksgiving Classics:
- Slow-roasted Turkey Breast with Traditional Turkey Gravy
- Roasted Fresh Vegetables
- Home-Style Classic Stuffing
- Creamy Sweet Potato Mash
- Cranberry Sauce
Desserts and Drinks to Satisfy a Sweet Tooth:
- Pumpkin Pie
- Chilled Espresso Martini
Published in
Food & Drink
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Thursday, 18 November 2021 11:38
7th Athens Biennale Eclipse
ECLIPSE, designed to reveal the diverse aspects of the transition we are experiencing now, aims to awaken the audiences’ imagination on the possible parallel worlds and different versions of the future. ECLIPSE features more than 80 artists, both up-and-coming and renowned, from North and South America, the Caribbean, Africa, and Europe, with 32 new productions and premieres, in iconic buildings at the heart of Athens.
The 7th Athens Biennale offers an arena to interrogate many of the ideas, queries, concerns, and desires that are frequently not platformed within a Biennial format. In an effort to activate a dynamic cross-cultural discourse, ECLIPSE will highlight the works of artists from the African Diaspora in addition to other artistic voices that have historically been pushed to the periphery. This engagement will be articulated through the use of a “Black Lens” as one of the frameworks. This approach seeks to engage the varying perspectives and artistic practices percolating within the African diaspora. This dialogue will be situated alongside a complimentary framework of artistic interventions that use dynamic manifestations to compose unique practical narratives. Their aim is to strategically address the viewers imagination of potential parallel worlds and futures. Composing a set of spaces that platform ideas such as radical care, interspecies friendship and sonic viewing strategies, ECLIPSE presents a translocal chapter of contemporary thought on how to co-exist within a world differently.
Venues:
Former Department Store
FOKAS, 41 Stadiou Str.
Former Santaroza Courthouse
48 Stadiou & Arsaki Str.
Justice Square
Arsaki & Panepistimiou Str.
Schliemann-Mela Hall
46 Panepistimiou Str.
Onassis Stegi
107-109 Syngrou Avenue
Venues:
Former Department Store
FOKAS, 41 Stadiou Str.
Former Santaroza Courthouse
48 Stadiou & Arsaki Str.
Justice Square
Arsaki & Panepistimiou Str.
Schliemann-Mela Hall
46 Panepistimiou Str.
Onassis Stegi
107-109 Syngrou Avenue
Published in
Art
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Thursday, 18 November 2021 07:00
Episkyros: An Ancient Greek Form Of Football
A long, long time ago, before there was football, there was episkyros, an ancient Greek ball game. Highly team-work oriented, the game was played with one ball, between two teams each consisting of around 12 to 14 players.
The field was marked with a central white line called the ‘skyros’ dividing the two teams, and another white line behind each team to mark the ends of the field. In the game, which was often quite violent, particularly in Sparta, each team would attempt to throw the ball over the heads of the opposing team. The objective of the game was to play until one team was forced behind the line at their end, with agility and speed being a player’s most useful skills.
However, it wasn’t easy as it sounds as players had to pass within their own team several times whilst also evading the defenders from the other team before they were able to toss the ball over the opponent’s line. If a team had possession of the ball on their own line, defenders could gang tackle him back over the line for a point.
A very similar game to episkyros was phaininda, which takes its name from Phaenides, who first invented it, or derived from the Greek word ‘phenakiein’ (to deceive) because the players would show the ball to one man but then throw it to another, contrary to expectation.
These Greek games of episkyros and phaininda were later adopted by the Romans.
FIFA has acknowledged the ancient Greek game of episkyros as an ancient version of modern-day rugby league.
“ The Greek Episkyros – of which few concrete details survive – was much livelier, as was the Roman Harpastum. ” FIFA.com explains.
A vase on display at the National Archaeological Museum, Athens shows a depiction of a young Greek athlete, balancing a ball on his thigh. It is this same vase that inspired the design of today’s European Cup football trophy.
To read this article in full, please visit: greekcitytimes.com
To read this article in full, please visit: greekcitytimes.com
Published in
Greek Philosophy & History
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Thursday, 18 November 2021 08:00
The First-Ever Japanese Garden In Athens
The Municipality of Athens created the first-ever Japanese garden in Greece, located in Nereidon Park, in Pangrati, just behind the National Gallery.
With a total area of 3,500 sq.m, the new thematic park is fast becoming one of the most important recreational areas in the Greek capital. Part of Athens' "Adopt Your City" program, this project was realized with the support of JT International Hellas, under the auspices of the Embassy of Japan in Greece. The idea behind the design of such a special meeting point between Greek and Japanese culture was inspired by the President of the Greek - Japanese Association, Demosthenes Vratsanou.
Based on the “biophilic design”, an architectural concept aiming to increase connectivity between people and the natural environment, the garden includes various elements from different eras of the Japanese tradition, featuring spots with lush vegetation and water, set in accordance with the principles of Japanese culture for a balanced shift between earth, water, and fire.
The selection of plants has been based on the local climate. The garden includes both Japanese and Mediterranean plants. Japanese maples, cherry blossoms, and bamboos coexist in harmony with laurels, myrtle trees, and daphnes. The garden also features shrubs, rocks, and pebbles forming beautiful paths, as well as charming relaxation areas made from granite.
A ceremony to lay the foundation stone for the project was held last week in the presence of the Mayor of Athens, Costas Bakoyannis, the Ambassador of Japan, Yasunori Nakayama, and other officials.
“Athens is dynamically evolving into a metropolis that looks forward. The newly upgraded park of the city, covering an area of 3.5 acres, creates a green "oasis" in the dense urbanscape of Athens, radically changing its appearance. We invite Athenians to visit the park, walk along its paths, and discover the feeling of peace that this special place offers. Big projects for the city are ahead. Athens will continue to become greener, more beautiful, and more sustainable.", Costas Bakoyannis stated.
XpatAthens extends a warm thank you to the City Of Athens for sharing news and inspiring stories about how Athens aspires to be a clean, friendly, and welcoming city to live in.
XpatAthens extends a warm thank you to the City Of Athens for sharing news and inspiring stories about how Athens aspires to be a clean, friendly, and welcoming city to live in.
Published in
Local News
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Thursday, 11 November 2021 19:21
Group Show “Travel App” - FokiaNou Art Space
Prior to the lockdown, travel had become so affordable and easy that distances seemed to have disappeared. The pandemic dramatically changed the way we travel, making it almost prohibitive. At this point in time, as people begin to travel again, albeit with restrictions, FokiaNou Art Space has invited artists to contemplate anew the whole idea of travel. In various media including painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, photography, collage and video, 23 artists have ruminated on travel and how it has been affected by the pandemic, the internet, Google Earth, climate change, and nostalgia.
Participating artists: Clemence B.T.D. Barret, John Bicknell, Clancy Cavnar, Mary Cox, Sarah Anne Cox, Susan Daboll, Jane Grover, Chris Hawtin, Werner Hermann, Maria Karachristou, Nina Kotamanidou, Kathryn Laing and Iliana Theodoropoulou, Loula Leventi, Dimitra Maltabe, Lea Petrou, Eleftheria Rapanaki, Stella Sevastopoulos, Maaike Stutterheim, Angel Torticollis, Georgia Touliatou, Alina Tsompanelli, Kiveli Zachariou. Curated by Mary Cox and Panagiotis Voulgaris.
FokiaNou Art Space is an artist-run project space in the intimacy of a small apartment in an old building in the center of Athens. The space encourages collaborative creative efforts between Greek and foreign artists, thereby promoting and supporting the local art community. The space hosts exhibitions, workshops and projects under the direction of two artists, Mary Cox and Panagiotis Voulgaris.
Opening: Saturday 20 November, 18.00
Duration: 20 November - 18 December 2021
Hours: Thursday – Saturday 17.00-20.00
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Art
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Monday, 15 November 2021 07:00
CNN Travel Includes Nafplio Among Europe’s Most Beautiful Towns
CNN Travel has included Greece’s Nafplio on its list of Europe’s most beautiful towns.
The online magazine’s list includes some of the most attractive small towns across Europe, from humble fishing towns to hilltop medieval power bases.
A town in the area of Argolis in eastern Peloponnese, Nafplio was selected for its history, castles and impressive old town.
“Gorgeous Nafplio straddles the Aegean Sea in the Peloponnese, with its Venetian-built castle thrusting into the water (there are three castles to visit there) and a pretty Old Town spooling out behind the old walls,” the article says.
CNN Travel also refers to the town’s long history: Nafplio was the first capital of modern Greece. Furthermore, it suggests that travelers visit the archaeological museum which contains items dating back to the Mycenean age.
Other European towns included on CNN Travel’s list are Giethoorn, Netherlands; Guimarães, Portugal; Roscoff, France; Anghiari, Italy; Mostar, Bosnia and Herzigovina; Mazara del Vallo, Sicily; Clovelly, UK; Dinkelsbühl, Germany; Korčula, Croatia; Kenmare, Ireland; Piran, Slovenia; Reine, Norway; Regencos, Spain and Tarnów, Poland.
Originally published on: news.gtp.gr
Originally published on: news.gtp.gr
Published in
Greece In The News
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Monday, 15 November 2021 07:00
Greece Moves Up 10 Spots In The Climate Change Performance Index
Greece has moved up 10 spots in the Climate Change Performance Index’s 2022 ranking released last week.
Greece went from the 24th to 34th place in the CCPI’s 2022 report. The authors note that Greece was able to rise the ranks of the index partially because of its plan to eliminate lignite, a form of coal that is less carbon-dense.
The improvement was also attributed to Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis’ climate law presented at the COP26 summit, as well as the latest edition of the country’s National Plan for Energy and Climate, which aims to hit the European Union’s emissions goals for the end of the decade.
The Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI) analyzes the impact 64 countries and the European Union (counted as a whole) have made on the world in their response to the issue of climate change, ranking them based on their positive engagement with the environment.
Greece lands in the “yellow” zone of this year’s Climate Change Performance Index
The team behind the index stated that none of the countries evaluated met their standard for the top three spots in the index this year which qualify a country’s positive effect on climate change as “very high.”
Leading the group at number four, however, is Denmark, with an overall index rating of 76.92. The country was joined at the top by fellow Northern European countries Sweden and Norway — which ranked fifth and sixth, respectively – -all meeting the standards of “high” performance in working atop ameliorate the climate crisis.
The team behind the index stated that none of the countries evaluated met their standard for the top three spots in the index this year which qualify a country’s positive effect on climate change as “very high.”
Leading the group at number four, however, is Denmark, with an overall index rating of 76.92. The country was joined at the top by fellow Northern European countries Sweden and Norway — which ranked fifth and sixth, respectively – -all meeting the standards of “high” performance in working atop ameliorate the climate crisis.
Of the countries so evaluated, Greece landed somewhere in the middle, coming in at number 24 on the index, a yellow coded ranking that denotes a “medium” amount of engagement with climate change.
To read this article in full, please visit: greerkreporter.com
Published in
Local Environment
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Friday, 12 November 2021 07:00
Digitally Preserving & Restoring Ancient Olympia Via New App
Stunning digital reconstruction of the site of the ancient Olympic Games by Microsoft’s Augmented Reality app “Ancient Olympia: Common Grounds.” the project allows visitors to travel back in time, to the site of the Ancient Olympic Games and find Common Ground in values inspired by Ancient Olympia.
The digital revival project allows viewers around the world to explore the site of the Ancient Olympia as it was more than 2,000 years ago. It is an exciting experience through an interactive mobile app, the PC, and the exhibition of Microsoft HoloLens 2 housed in the Olympic Museum of Athens.
The project restores digitally and in 3D a total of 27 monuments in the area, among them, a Gymnasium where athletes trained and a Stadium that was home to the Olympic Games in honor of Zeus, the Temples of Zeus and Hera, the workshop of Pheidias.
To download the Microsoft Augmented Reality app “Ancient Olympics" please visit the Microsoft website or olympiacommongorunds.gr
Digitally recording and accurately representing all the details of everyday life in Ancient Olympia was no small task. In the 3D experience, buildings are recreated in lifelike detail, painstakingly researched by the Hellenic Ministry’s expert archaeologists to be as true as possible to their original forms. This includes historical timelines of the site’s changes over time and depictions of artifacts from each period, the Microsoft notes.
Through its AI for Cultural Heritage initiative, Microsoft partnered with technology company Iconem, which specializes in digitizing historic sites in 3D, to create the foundational model of Ancient Olympia. Using both on-the-ground cameras and drones to take hundreds of thousands of images of the site, Microsoft AI then processed the pictures to create models so precise, they render as photo-realistic, the company said.
To read this article in full, please visit: keeptalkinggreece.com
Published in
Local News
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Friday, 12 November 2021 07:00
Self-Acceptance: How Hard Can It Be?
These days I’m contemplating with the meaning of two small words that when put together they have the power to create miracles: “accept yourself.” I’m sure you hear and read about it all the time. But what does it really mean for you though?
One of my clients just got a new job. She’s a young woman, climbing the corporate ladder. She’s also the person that will wholeheartedly give a hand when needed. Another is a supermom of two who tries to keep the family balance while at the same time teaching part-time and volunteering in a children’s center. Both are kind and sweet and smart and good-looking. Both are amazing women. But when you ask them “what does accepting yourself mean?” and “do you really accept yourself?” you won’t get quite the positive response you’d expect.
And they’re not the only ones dealing with issues of self-acceptance. “Why?” you may ask.
Because one may have dark spots on her skin and believe no one wants to be with her; or because she cannot accept her curly hair and is constantly trying to make them straight; or because she doesn’t have the super career her sister does; or because she doesn’t have a university degree; or because her boyfriend/husband left her; or because her mother doesn’t approve of her way of raising her children; or because she’s not as slim as that model on TV. Any reason will do.
Does this sound familiar to you? Have you or any of your close friends been in this position? I know I have and it’s taken me a while to get out of there and into greener fields. I’d like to share with you what I’ve learned and am still learning.
Accept yourself as you are. Accept yourself with pride, not self-pity. Accept yourself when you’re happy and when you’re moody. Accept yourself when you have a fabulous day and when your day is ruined. Accept yourself without any criticism or self-judgment only with the will to become better, do better. Because when you accept yourself as you are a brand new world of opportunities opens up. Your horizons broaden and new choices make themselves visible. And that, my dear friend, is the first step of a new chapter in your new life.
Originally published on: itsmylife.gr
Originally published on: itsmylife.gr
Published in
Mind
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Tuesday, 31 May 2022 11:58
Athens English Comedy Club
The Athens English Comedy Club is back!
Is the Athens comedy scene “all Greek” to you? Are you on the lookout for English language events which do not require you to read surtitles? Do you want to try your hand at stand up in English? We are here for YOU!
Founded in 2019, the Athens English Comedy Club is the first, and only, purely English comedy club in Greece, presenting local and international comedians, right in the heart of Athens.
Sunday, June 5th - LINEUP SHOWJoins us for a lineup show with 6 of the finest comedians in town!
MC: Dimitris Dimopoulos
* PLEASE NOTE THAT PART OF THIS PERFORMANCE WILL BE FILMED *
Time: 21:45pm (Doors open 21:30)
Tickets: 14 euros
Duration: 1h15
Reservations: 6987994689 // athensenglishcomedyclub@gmail.com
Who knows, it'll be fun!
Keen to get involved and join us on stage? Follow us on Instagram and Facebook to stay up-to-date with open mic registrations!
Come and laugh! Nay! Come and chortle. Or better yet, guffaw!
We also offer 3 free tickets per show to persons with disabilities or unemployed persons (phone reservation required, and the relevant card/proof will be checked at the box office).
The theatre is wheelchair accessible.
Upon entry you will need to provide a vaccination certificate OR negative rapid test from within 48 hours prior to the show, OR a valid proof of recovery/antigen test.
Published in
Community
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