Showing posts with label world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

The World's Biggest Stuff

The World's Biggest Stuff

Castle

The largest ancient castle in the world is Prague Castle in Prague. Built in the ninth century, it is an oblong irregular polygon with an average diameter of 420 feet and a total surface area of 18 acres. At times, it has housed the kings of Bohemia as well as Holy Roman emperors and presidents of Czechoslovakia. After Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, the castle became the seat of the head of state of the new Czech Republic.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Zagat's Top 20 forever Movies

Sure, you know that Zagat is known for rating and reviewing fine cuisine. But did you know it also offers insight on movies? Here's the countdown of the Top 20. Some critics may disagree. Will you?

'Dr. Strangelove'
Zagat's ranking: No. 20

Year released: 1964
Genre: Comedy
Premise: A general who has gone mad orders a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union.

'Finding Nemo'
Zagat's ranking: No. 19

Year released: 2003
Premise: A cute little fish goes missing, and his father goes on an underwater adventure to find him.
Genre: Family

'The Third Man'
Zagat's ranking: No. 18 

Year released: 1949
Premise: A man arrives in Vienna only to find out that the friend who invited him has died.
Genre: Mystery

'The African Queen'
Zagat's ranking: No. 17

Year released: 1951
Premise: A missionary persuades a riverboat owner to use his boat for warfare.
Genre: Adventure

'The Pianist'
Zagat's ranking: No. 16

Year released: 2002
Premise: A Jewish musician's plight in the Warsaw ghetto during World War II.
Genre: Drama

'All About Eve'
Zagat's ranking: No. 15 

Year released: 1950
Premise: An aspiring actress weaves her way into a Broadway star's life.
Genre: Drama

'The Shawshank Redemption'
Zagat's ranking: No. 14 

Year released: 1994
Premise: Two prisoners find friendship and deliverance.
Genre: Drama

'Citizen Kane'
Zagat's ranking: No. 13  

Year released: 1941
Premise: A group of reporters tries to get the scoop on the last words of a tycoon.
Genre: Drama

' It Happened One Night'
Zagat's ranking: No. 12   

Year released: 1934
Premise: A spoiled heiress runs away from home and finds romance.
Genre: Comedy

'Rear Window'
Zagat's ranking: No. 11  

Year released: 1954
Premise: A disabled photographer sees too much from his apartment window.
Genre: Thriller

'Singin' in the Rain'
Zagat's ranking: No. 10   

Year released: 1952
Premise: A silent film company makes a noisy transition to sound.
Genre: Musical

'The Lady Eve'
Zagat's ranking: No. 9    

Year released: 1941
Premise: Two wacky singles fall in love on a luxury liner.
Genre: Comedy

'The Wizard of Oz'
Zagat's ranking: No. 8    

Year released: 1939
Premise: A Kansas girl finds herself far, far away from home.
Genre: Musical

'Star Wars'
Zagat's ranking: No. 7     

Year released: 1977
Premise: Luke Skywalker tries to save Princess Leia from an evil force.
Genre: Sci-fi

'To Kill a Mockingbird'
Zagat's ranking: No. 6     

Year released: 1962
Premise: A lawyer defends a black man accused of rape in the Depression-era South.
Genre: Crime drama

'Lawrence of Arabia'
Zagat's ranking: No. 5      

Year released: 1962
Premise: The tale of a controversial British officer.
Genre: Adventure

'Schindler's List'
Zagat's ranking: No. 4     

Year released: 1993
Premise: A German businessman comes to the rescue of Jews in Nazi Germany.
Genre: Drama

'Casablanca'
Zagat's ranking: No. 3

Year released: 1942
Premise: Old lovers reunite during World War II.
Genre: Drama

'The Godfather Part II'
Zagat's ranking: No. 2
 

Year released: 1974
Premise: The saga of the Corleone crime family continues.
Genre: Crime drama

'The Godfather'
Zagat's ranking: No. 1

Year released: 1972
Premise: A look into the life of crime boss Vito Corleone.
Genre: Crime Drama

America's Top 10 Shrinking Cities

The Great Recession of the past several years spared few cities. But in these 10 major metros, the meltdown often capped decades of economic decline, ushered in by the loss of industry and a fleeing younger population.Most of these shrinking cities, from the Midwest to the Deep South to the upper Northeast, never enjoyed the economic boom before the crash. Instead, they've watched their manufacturing base slowly erode and their residents move to greener pastures in recent decades.

1. New Orleans

  • Percent decline since 2000: 26.6
  • Population decline: 128,813
  • Population 2009: 354,850
More than 307,000 families were forced to move from their homes when Hurricane Katrina struck five years ago, breaching levees and leaving huge sections of the city flooded for weeks. Many have not returned, leaving some neighborhoods half-empty.
At least 80% of the families in the New Orleans region had to move because of the disaster, and 12% still consider their situation to be "in flux" as they look for a permanent home, according to a recent survey by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
That survey found the area to have 13% fewer housing units than it did before the flood. This decline has pushed housing costs up 33%, forcing a much larger portion of the population to spend more than a third of their paychecks on housing.

 

2. Flint, Mich.

  • Percent decline since 2000: 10.6
  • Population decline: 13,266
  • Population 2009: 111,475
In the past two decades, Flint has become the symbol of the death of the American industrial city and the decline of the U.S auto industry.
The city, 66 miles northwest of Detroit, first captured the public’s attention in 1989 when documentary filmmaker Michael Moore chronicled the devastating effect that the closure of several General Motors plants in the 1980s had on the city in his documentary "Roger and Me."
The car giant once employed 79,000 local residents, but that figure has since shrunk to about 8,000. Now city officials have begun buying and razing abandoned homes in outlying areas to concentrate the population and services closer to the city’s center.

3. Cleveland

  • Percent decline since 2000: 9.5
  • Population decline: 45,211
  • Population 2009: 431,363
The loss of steel and heavy manufacturing jobs in the past several decades has drained this city: It now has 45% of the population it had in the 1950s.
Some of the population loss came from the 42% decline in manufacturing employment between 1992 and 2002. And some of this decline can be attributed to sprawl, as people moved out of the city, taking businesses with them.
Cleveland's inner ring of neighborhoods suffered even more in the foreclosure crisis, leaving one in every five houses in Cleveland vacant in 2008. Now the city has developed a plan to deal with this blight, and urban farms, parks and other green spaces are starting to bloom.

4. Buffalo, N.Y.

  • Percent decline since 2000: 7.5
  • Population decline: 21,970
  • Population 2009: 270,240
Buffalo was once a center of industry: It was America's eighth-largest city in 1900 and was a center of railroad commerce, steel production and automobile manufacturing.
But as those industries waned, so did Buffalo. And that decline continued in recent decades as more manufacturing jobs were lost. Now the city is just beginning to lure some people back with jobs in health services, finance and alternative energy — including a wind farm outside the city on the site of an old steel plant.

5. Dayton, Ohio

  • Percent decline since 2000: 7.2
  • Population decline: 11,947
  • Population 2009: 153,857
Dayton also was decimated by the decline in the auto industry as supply companies here went belly up. It suffered a further blow last year when cash register and ATM manufacturer NCR Corp. announced it was moving its headquarters to Georgia, taking more than 1,200 jobs with it.
Most of the growth that has occurred in recent decades has been at the fringes of the city at the expense of its inner core. Indeed, regional planners expect the sprawling metro areas of Cincinnati/northern Kentucky and Dayton/Springfield, Ohio, to grow together into a single giant "megaplex" for census and marketing purposes as early as 2020.

6. Pittsburgh

  • Percent decline since 2000: 6.6
  • Population decline: 22,056
  • Population 2009: 311,647
Pittsburgh's steel industry lost its luster in the 1980s, forcing many to leave the city. That population decline is still happening today.
The good news is that the rate of population loss is starting to slow for the first time, city officials say, as the city has diversified its employment base to include a wider range of fields including health care, robotics and technology. Some of its historic neighborhoods are starting to grow again.

7. Rochester, N.Y.

  • Percent decline since 2000: 5.5
  • Population decline: 12,180
  • Population 2009: 207,294
The Flower City, New York's third-largest city, has been slowly wilting for the past 50 years.
Although it regularly receives kudos for its livability and quality of life, it has been losing jobs and population since its peak in the 1950s.
Once the flour-producing capital of the U.S., then a center for plant nurseries — hence the Flower City tag — it became known in the past century as an imaging and optical hub for companies such as Bausch & Lomb and Eastman Kodak. But these companies haven't been the employment powerhouses they once were.  In 2006, the esteemed University of Rochester became the city’s largest employer, surpassing Kodak.

8. Jackson, Miss.

  • Percent decline since 2000: 5.5
  • Population decline: 10,239
  • Population 2009: 175,021
Jackson, Mississippi’s largest city, has seen its population decline substantially in the past two decades as people have moved out of the central city to the suburban fringe, just as they did in other sprawl centers such as Atlanta.
Although unemployment is close to the national average, its job prospects in the service and professional sectors appear strong. Still, incomes here are much lower than in other parts of the country.
One in five Mississippians lives below the poverty line, the highest rate of any state, according to census data. The central part of the city is emerging as a hub for recent immigrants.

9. Syracuse, N.Y.

  • Percent decline since 2000: 5.1
  • Population decline: 7,510
  • Population 2009: 138,560
Syracuse, with its high number of union jobs, lost its manufacturing base faster than many other major cities in the past century.
About 37% of Syracuse’s jobs were in manufacturing in 1958; in 2002, the share was only 12%, according to a 2003 Brookings Institution report. That number continued to decline dramatically this decade.
Some of the lost automobile, television and air-conditioning systems manufacturing jobs were replaced by computer manufacturing jobs, but not of the higher-wage variety that most cities are seeking.

10. Birmingham, Ala.

  • Percent decline since 2000: 4.9
  • Population decline: 11,291
  • Population 2009: 230,130
Another former steel town, Birmingham has seen its industrial base dwindle and a large percentage of its population move outside the city limits in classic "white flight."
This combination of factors helped drive down its population to an estimated 230,130 from a peak of 340,000 in 1960.
But that doesn't mean it's on the skids. Birmingham is still a regional banking hub and center to several large insurers, construction and engineering firms and telecommunications companies.
The University of Alabama at Birmingham has started a small-business incubator at the university to encourage biomedical business growth. It is consistently rated as one of America's best places to work and earn a living, based on its competitive salary rates and relatively low living expenses.