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Tag: Bigger

  • Bigger and more muscular: All-new BMW X3 now available in Singapore, Lifestyle News

    Bigger and more muscular: All-new BMW X3 now available in Singapore, Lifestyle News

    The all-new BMW X3 is now available for sale in Singapore. The fourth-generation version of BMW’s best-selling SUV was previewed to the media on Nov 20, and will be on display at the Singapore Motorshow in January.

    The new X3 will be offered with three variants at launch, namely the X3 20 xDrive, the X3 20 xDrive M Sport, and the high performance X3 M50 xDrive. Other variants may join the lineup at a later date, but BMW did not disclose further details on future product availability.

    What’s new about the X3?

    The latest version of the X3 has been completely redesigned, and is now bigger than its predecessor. The car now measures 4,755mm long and 1,920mm wide, an increase of 34mm and 29mm respectively. The height of the car has been reduced by 25mm to 1,660mm though, giving it a sportier and more aggressive stance.

    The overall look is now muscular than before, with the prominently flared wheel arches complementing the wider track to create a rugged impression. The slim headlights and T-shaped rear taillights further sets the car apart from its predecessor, while the trademark BMW Kidney Grille has also been given a major reworking, and now features a combination of vertical and diagonal bars for the X3 20 xDrive variants.

    The interior of the X3 has been given an extensive revamp, and features the BMW Curved Display and Interaction Bar functions that have been seen in recent new BMW models. A key highlight is the lighting element that forms a border around the controls on the door, surrounding the door opener and air vent adjusters.

    Power for the X3 xDrive 20 models comes from a 2.0-litre four-cylinder petrol engine that produces 190hp and 310Nm of torque, allowing it to go from 0-100km/h in 8.5 seconds.

    The X3 M50 xDrive meanwhile has a 3.0-litre twin-turbo petrol engine that develops 398hp and 540Nm of torque, giving it a 0-100km/h acceleration of 4.6 seconds. It also comes with performance enhancements such as Adaptive M suspension with electronically controlled dampers, variable sport steering, M Sport brakes, 21-inch alloy wheels and an M Sport differential integrated into the rear axle.

    The new BMW X3 is now available on sale in Singapore, with pricing starting at $336,888 with COE (as of December 2024) for the X3 20 xDrive. The M Sport version meanwhile retails for $348,888 with COE, while the top-spec X3 M50 xDrive will cost you $439,888 with COE.

    [[nid:697212]]

    benjamin.chia@asiaone.com

    No part of this article can be reproduced without permission from AsiaOne.

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  • Rose Cafe Has A New Address, And It Has Everything You Loved – But Bigger

    Rose Cafe Has A New Address, And It Has Everything You Loved – But Bigger

    Walking into Rose Cafe’s new location at Eldeco Centre, Malviya Nagar, feels like bumping into an old friend who hasn’t changed much – except for a fresh haircut and a few new quirks. The cafe, which has been a quiet favourite for many since its Saidulajab days, has carried its charm to a bigger, airier space, while still keeping its heart firmly rooted in the cosy, homely vibe that made it a crowd-pleaser in the first place.

    Latest and Breaking News on NDTV

    Founded by the mother-daughter duo Sarita and Tarini Ahuja, Rose Cafe was built to be a sanctuary from the city’s constant buzz. In Saidulajab, it became a go-to for those seeking a slow meal or an afternoon of quiet over homemade desserts. Now, in its Malviya Nagar avatar, the cafe retains the same ethos but offers a little more breathing room – quite literally – with floor-to-ceiling windows that flood the space with light and airy high ceilings that give it a more open feel.

    Latest and Breaking News on NDTV

    As you step in, it’s hard to miss the details: distressed furniture, vintage chandeliers, and shelves dotted with knick-knacks that look like they’ve been plucked straight from a beloved grandma’s attic. And just when you think it couldn’t get more comforting, the cafe’s pet-friendly policy makes it feel like the kind of place where even your dog might leave a happy customer.

    Latest and Breaking News on NDTV

    But it’s not just the setting that tells a story – Rose Cafe’s new menu has some tales to share, too. Their longtime fans will find comfort in familiar dishes like spaghetti and meatballs, skinny pizzas, and the signature lemon cake. But for those looking for a little adventure, the cafe’s new offerings are worth a try. The savoury churros, dusted with parmesan and truffle, are a curious mix of crunchy and umami. The French toast with berry compote and cream cheese is like breakfast meeting dessert at its sweetest. And the sun-dried tomato and pesto cream ravioli? That’s the dish you’ll think about long after your visit.
    For couples who always thought this spot was too “brunchy” for a date night, the dinner menu and softly lit interiors are a game-changer. And the all-day breakfast? Still here, still comforting, still worth waking up late for.

    Latest and Breaking News on NDTV

    At its core, Rose Cafe’s move feels less like a reinvention and more like an evolution. It’s a little brighter, and a little more polished, but it still carries the soul of the Saidulajab original. Whether you’re a loyal fan or a curious newcomer, this is a cafe that feels like a warm embrace – a place to pause, savour, and maybe even make a few new memories.
    Where: Ground Floor, Eldeco Centre, Malviya Nagar, New Delhi.
    Cost for two: Rs 1,700 for two

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  • Three takeaways from Thanksgiving Eve football, including big margins and bigger plays

    Three takeaways from Thanksgiving Eve football, including big margins and bigger plays

    As we nestle snug in our beds tonight, visions of candied yams dancing in our heads, as we await the best morning of high school football found anywhere in the country, let’s not forget those who celebrate on Thanksgiving Eve.

    With wet weather forecast for Thursday morning, 26 rivalry games were played Wednesday night, and for the most part the theme was blowouts. Let’s dive into three takeaways from a wild Wednesday of high school football.

    The 2024 season ended for every team that played Wednesday night except Whittier and Tri-County, who will play in the MVADA championship games next week. But several players went out with a bang.

    • East Bridgewater’s Ethan Pohl connected with Logan Williams for a 97-yard touchdown pass in a 36-14 win over West Bridgewater that also featured a 93-yard scoop-and-score from Mark Lee.
    • Junior Jason Stokes had an 88-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the first quarter in Milford’s 42-41 win over Taunton, which got a 94-yard fourth-quarter kickoff return for a TD from Carlos Cruz.
    • North Andover senior Ben Iglesias broke off a 71-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, then added an 84-yard run to pay dirt in the second quarter to power a 20-16 win over Andover.
    • O’Bryant senior quarterback Keyson Wright threw an 80-yard TD pass to Gementri Wiliams in a 20-14 loss to Latin Academy.

    2. Lopsided scores at Fenway

    While there were certainly some highlights during the four games at Fenway Park — including yours truly being rescued from an elevator by the fire department — three of the four games were decided in the first half.

    Things started promisingly with a thrilling Island Cup that saw Nantucket defeat Martha’s Vineyard in overtime. But the rest of the results from the friendly confines were laughers, with Stoneham’s 42-14 shellacking of Reading on Tuesday and continued with Central Catholic’s 34-12 beatdown of Lawrence (in which the Raiders led 34-0 at halftime before easing off the gas pedal), and concluding with Marblehead’s 42-6 demolition of Swampscott.

    The blowout trend extended beyond Lansdowne Street, with TechBoston beating Brighton 50-14 to capture the Boston City League crown, Malden Catholic topping St. John’s (Shrewsbury) 30-7, Greater Lowell crushing Lowell Catholic 40-6, Old Colony thrashing Tri-County 40-0, Bishop Feehan handling Bishop Stang 27-7, and East Bridgewater dispensing with West Bridgewater 36-14 in a rivalry renewed after decades of dormancy.

    3. Let’s hope the weather holds out

    Bundle up and pull out your galoshes, it’s predicted to be a wet, stormy morning that could see a wintry mix of snow, according to Globe meteorologist Ken Mahan.

    The rain is expected to begin between 6-7 a.m., then picking up between 9 a.m. and noon. It could turn to freezing rain east of I-190 and south of Route 2 in Worcester County and winds could gust as high as 20 miles per hour near the coast.

    The rain is expected to taper off around 3 p.m., when hundreds of wet, muddy football players will be settling in for a Thanksgiving feast.


    Brendan Kurie can be reached at brendan.kurie@globe.com. Follow him on X @BrendanKurie.



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  • Barca’s new Nike deal explained: Is it really worth €1.7billion? And is it bigger than Real Madrid’s?

    Barca’s new Nike deal explained: Is it really worth €1.7billion? And is it bigger than Real Madrid’s?

    Barcelona announced last weekend a new multi-year partnership with kit supplier Nike, extending and updating a deal which had been set to end in 2028.

    In recent months Barca president Joan Laporta has regularly boasted that he would secure a deal which would be “the biggest in all of world football”, and the extended contract could now be worth €1.7billion (£1.4bn;$1.8bn) over the next 14 seasons to 2038, bringing a major boost to the club’s troubled and complex financial situation.

    Confirmation of the new arrangement ends a year-long saga which hurt relations between the Catalan club and the American sportswear giant. Yet it remains to be seen whether the deal will bring immediate relief to the team’s issues with La Liga’s salary limits — including most pressingly whether last summer’s signings Dani Olmo and Pau Victor can be registered to play for the team over the second half of this season.

    The Athletic spoke to figures inside and outside Camp Nou, all of whom wished to remain anonymous to protect relationships, about whether this is a good deal for Barcelona.


    What did Barcelona say?

    Announcing the contract on Saturday, Barca said in a statement: “This new partnership consolidates Nike as a main partner of the club and official technical partner across all professional and amateur teams, bringing a unique model that strengthens the brand association and fuels the global retail and licensing business growth.”

    What are the financial details?

    Barca officially told The Athletic that the details of the deal were confidential, but club sources stated a total figure of €1.7bn over the next 14 years.

    The new contract will have two phases. The first is from 2024 to 2028, the latter year being when the previous agreement was to expire. Club sources say that for each of the next four years, the income will now be around €108million (£90m;$115m), close to doubling what the club had been earning in recent seasons.

    From 2028, that figure will increase to around €120m each campaign over the following decade, according to the club sources.


    Barcelona president Joan Laporta (Eric Alonso/Getty Images)

    These sources said that Barcelona would also receive a ‘signing bonus’ of €158m which will be divided over the 14 years of the deal, including the current season’s accounts.

    Barca consider it to be a big victory for Barca following tough negotiations, guaranteeing that most of the promised annual income will be received, regardless of the team’s performances on the pitch.

    When previous president Josep Maria Bartomeu’s board signed the previous deal in 2016, a headline figure of €105m a year was trumpeted. However, under that deal, when the team were not as successful as hoped, for instance dropping out of the Champions League early, the club actually received only €50-60m from Nike.


    chart visualization

    What are Nike saying?

    Nike and Barca have worked together closely since their first deal was signed in 1998. When asked by The Athletic to comment on the new deal extension, Nike said it was delighted to continue this deep and meaningful relationship.

    A Nike spokesperson said: “We are excited to progress our work together at all levels, from grassroots football initiatives that inspire and empower young players, to elevating FC Barcelona as a global icon of style and culture. Together, we are particularly passionate about advancing the growth of the women’s game, and our partnership with FC Barcelona’s women’s team is a testament to our shared dedication to equality and inclusivity in sport.”

    Nike said they could not confirm details of the financial or business sides of the agreement.

    What’s the optimistic view?

    The €1.7bn headline figure is huge, even by the standards of multi-million kit deals at the elite level in club football. It would be a huge improvement on Barca’s previous earnings from Nike, a significant boost in revenues which would help improve the club’s financial situation over the coming years.

    Importantly for many around Camp Nou, with the signing bonus included it would also mean that Barca have achieved Laporta’s often-stated ambition to top Real Madrid’s €120m-a-year agreement with Adidas, currently accepted as the most lucrative in world football.

    This would back the current board’s case that they are working successfully to fix the financial problems they inherited from their predecessors.


    Barca need cash to be able to play Dani Olmo in the second half of the season (Alex Caparros/Getty Images)

    What’s the reality of the situation?

    It is not typical in football for a club to renegotiate a kit deal with four years still to run. But the agreement with Nike was identified by Barca’s board as a potential way to increase their revenues by ‘levering’ more money into their annual accounts.

    Nike were only going to agree to a new deal if it suited them, and there had been anger within the U.S. multinational at how they had been treated through the whole negotiation process, including the Catalan club trying (unsuccessfully) to find a legal way to exit their previous agreement.

    Laporta and his closest executives took charge of the negotiations which finally led to the weekend’s announcement. Full details of the agreement were not even shared with the board before last Friday’s vote to accept.

    Some industry sources consulted by The Athletic were sceptical about the figures being claimed, with doubt from some in the Spanish capital about whether Barca’s deal really was going to be bigger than Madrid’s.

    There were also concerns voiced about the effect of the new arrangement on the Catalan club’s Barca Licensing and Merchandising (BLM) arm, with the statement announcing the deal appearing to suggest a deeper role for Nike in this area of Barca’s business.

    Since its launch by Bartomeu in 2018, BLM has been a big success. The €179m that Barca earned from kit and merchandising revenues was the most of any European club according to UEFA.

    There are concerns that Nike playing a greater role in the many ‘casual’ ranges of clothing and other merchandise sold in official club shops will mean less of the profits end up in its coffers. Club sources have denied that this will be the case.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Barcelona and Nike’s breakdown in relations reveals deeper problems at Catalan club

    What’s the latest on Barca’s salary limit?

    As so often in recent years, Barca had to work hard this summer to be able to register all their current squad members with La Liga, including Spain international playmaker Olmo, a €60m arrival from RB Leipzig, and young striker Victor, a €2.7m signing from Girona.

    Both were only registered at the last minute, using La Liga’s financial rule 77, which allows for the temporary replacement of injured players (in this case Andreas Christensen). That meant they were only registered with La Liga until December 31. For either or both to feature after the winter break, the club must find more money from somewhere.


    Victor is another player experiencing uncertainty at Barcelona (Alex Caparros/Getty Images)

    During a press conference in early September, Laporta said that Barca were “€60million away” from returning to a situation where La Liga would let them sign and register players as normal.

    A few weeks later it emerged that Barca’s auditors had required a write-down in its 2023-24 accounts of the value of the club’s troubled ‘Barca Vision’ subsidiary, which holds its current and future media rights and activities.

    This meant that Barca now needed to raise an estimated €120m to get back within its allowed salary limit for the current campaign.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Reading Barca’s accounts – and why a ‘€12m profit’ is actually a €91m loss

    How could the new Nike deal affect the situation?

    When Laporta has been asked about the Barca Vision problem, he would often mention the bumper benefits of a new kit deal as at least part of the solution.

    One hope was that a ‘bonus’ of €100m-plus could fill most or all of the immediate holes in the club’s accounts caused by the failure of the Barca Studios lever. The agreed deal now divides this bonus over its 14-year term — meaning only an estimated €9m extra in 2024-25 (plus the extra €40m in normal revenues over the course of the season).

    Club sources have told The Athletic that the new Nike deal helps but does not resolve the Barca Vision issue. So the search continues for more investors in that project. There is confidence at the highest level at Camp Nou that this will be successful, and player sales will not be required in the winter transfer window. However, as so often under the current regime, it looks likely to go right down the wire.

    And over the longer term?

    The general impression is that this new Nike deal fits well with Laporta’s policies during his second presidency. The club is gaining upfront money which it can use to fix holes in the accounts and continue to spend on the squad.

    A longer-term issue with the new Nike contract flagged in multiple conversations with industry sources is that Barca are now locked into this deal for another 14 years. Given the inflation in the market, €127m a year may not look so good by 2034. “This deal could tie the hands and feet of the next president,” an ex-Blaugrana board member told The Athletic.

    However, there is also an understanding that Barca are where they are, and the numbers coming from the club are impressive and necessary. “Financially this new Nike deal is a tremendous boost of oxygen,” said one influential figure in the club’s ‘entorno’ who has not always backed Laporta’s lever policies.

    (Additional reporting: Pol Ballús)

    (Top photo: Alvaro Medranda/Quality Sport Images/Getty Images)

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  • For many investors and intellectuals leaving China, it’s Japan — not the US — that’s the bigger draw

    For many investors and intellectuals leaving China, it’s Japan — not the US — that’s the bigger draw

    TOKYO — One by one, the students, lawyers and others filed into a classroom in a central Tokyo university for a lecture by a Chinese journalist on Taiwan and democracy — taboo topics that can’t be discussed publicly back home in China.

    “Taiwan’s modern-day democracy took struggle and bloodshed, there’s no question about that,” said Jia Jia, a columnist and guest lecturer at the University of Tokyo who was briefly detained in China eight years ago on suspicion of penning a call for China’s top leader to resign.

    He is one of tens of thousands of intellectuals, investors and other Chinese who have relocated to Japan in recent years, part of a larger exodus of people from China.

    Their backgrounds vary widely, and they’re leaving for all sorts of reasons. Some are very poor, others are very rich. Some leave for economic reasons, as opportunities dry up with the end of China’s boom. Some flee for personal reasons, as even limited freedoms are eroded.

    ——

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This story is part of the China’s New Migrants package, a look by The Associated Press at the lives of the latest wave of Chinese emigrants to settle overseas.

    ——

    Chinese migrants are flowing to all corners of the world, from workers seeking to start businesses of their own in Mexico to burned-out students heading to Thailand. Those choosing Japan tend to be well-off or highly educated, drawn to the country’s ease of living, rich culture and immigration policies that favor highly skilled professionals, with less of the sharp anti-immigrant backlash sometimes seen in Western countries.

    Jia initially intended to move to the U.S., not Japan. But after experiencing the coronavirus outbreak in China, he was anxious to leave and his American visa application was stuck in processing. So he chose Japan instead.

    “In the United States, illegal immigration is particularly controversial. When I went to Japan, I was a little surprised. I found that their immigration policy is actually more relaxed than I thought,” Jia told The Associated Press. “I found that Japan is better than the U.S.”

    It’s tough to enter the U.S. these days. Tens of thousands of Chinese were arrested at the U.S.-Mexico border over the past year, and Chinese students have been grilled at customs as trade frictions fan suspicions of possible industrial espionage. Some U.S. states passed legislation that restricts Chinese citizens from owning property.

    “The U.S. is shutting out those Chinese that are friendliest to them, that most share its values,” said Li Jinxing, a Christian human rights lawyer who moved to Japan in 2022.

    Li sees parallels to about a century ago, when Chinese intellectuals such as Sun Yat-sen, the founding father of modern China, moved to Japan to study how the country modernized so quickly.

    “On one hand, we hope to find inspiration and direction in history,” Li said of himself and like-minded Chinese in Japan. “On the other hand, we also want to observe what a democratic country with rule of law is like. We’re studying Japan. How does its economy work, its government work?”

    Over the past decade, Tokyo has softened its once-rigid stance against immigration, driven by low birthrates and an aging population. Foreigners now make up about 2% of its population of 125 million. That’s expected to jump to 12% by 2070, according to the Tokyo-based National Institute of Population and Social Security Research.

    Chinese are the most numerous newcomers, at 822,000 last year among more than 3 million foreigners living in Japan, according to government data. That’s up from 762,000 a year ago and 649,000 a decade ago.

    In 2022, the lockdowns under China’s “zero COVID” policies led many of the country’s youth or most affluent citizens to hit the exits. There’s even a buzzword for that: “runxue,” using the English word “run” to evoke “running away” to places seen as safer and more prosperous.

    For intellectuals like Li and Jia, Japan offers greater freedoms than under Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s increasingly repressive rule. But for others, such as wealthy investors and business people, Japan offers something else: property protections.

    A report by investment migration firm Henley & Partners says nearly 14,000 millionaires left China last year, the most of any country in the world, with Japan a popular destination. A major driver is worries about the security of their wealth in China or Hong Kong, said Q. Edward Wang, a professor of Asian studies at Rowan University in Glassboro, New Jersey.

    “Protection of private property, which is the cornerstone of a capitalist society, that piece is missing in China,” Wang said.

    The weakening yen makes buying property and other local assets in Japan a bargain.

    And while the Japanese economy has stagnated, China’s once-sizzling economy is also in a rut, with the property sector in crisis and stock prices stuck at the level they were in the late 2000s.

    “If you are just going to Japan to preserve your money,” Wang said, “then definitely you will enjoy your time in Japan.”

    Dot.com entrepreneurs are among those leaving China after Communist Party crackdowns on the technology industry, including billionaire Jack Ma, a founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, who took a professorship at Tokyo College, part of the prestigious University of Tokyo.

    So many wealthy Chinese have bought apartments in Tokyo’s luxury high-rises that some areas have been dubbed “Chinatowns,” or “Digital Chinatowns” — a nod to the many owners’ work in high-tech industries.

    “Life in Japan is good,” said Guo Yu, an engineer who retired early after working at ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok.

    Guo doesn’t concern himself with politics. He’s keen on Japan’s powdery snow in the winter and is a “superfan” of its beautiful hot springs. He owns homes in Tokyo, as well as near a ski resort and a hot spring. He owns several cars, including a Porsche, a Mercedes, a Tesla and a Toyota.

    Guo keeps busy with a new social media startup in Tokyo and a travel agency specializing in “onsen,” Japan’s hot springs. Most of his employees are Chinese, he said.

    Like Guo, many Chinese moving to Japan are wealthy and educated. That’s for good reason: Japan remains unwelcoming to refugees and many other types of foreigners. The government has been strategic about who it allows to stay, generally focusing on people to fill labor shortages for factories, construction and elder care.

    “It is crucial that Japan becomes an attractive country for foreign talent so they will choose to work here,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said earlier this year, announcing efforts to relax Japan’s stringent immigration restrictions.

    That kind of opportunity is exactly what Chinese ballet dancer Du Hai said he has found. Leading a class of a dozen Japanese students in a suburban Tokyo studio one recent weekend, Du demonstrated positions and spins to the women dressed in leotards and toe shoes.

    Du was drawn to Japan’s huge ballet scene, filled with professional troupes and talented dancers, he said, but worried about warnings he got about unfriendly Japanese.

    That turned out to be false, he said with a laugh. Now, Du is considering getting Japanese citizenship.

    “Of course, I enjoy living in Japan very much now,” he said.

    ___

    Kang reported from Beijing.

    ___

    Yuri Kageyama is on X: https://twitter.com/yurikageyama



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