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Michael Jordan appears to have taken delivery of a Gulfstream G650ER. AdvertisementMichael Jordan appears to have taken delivery of a new private jet worth around $65 million. A Gulfstream G650ER with a flamboyant custom paint job, including the Jumpman logo, was filmed on the tarmac at Palm Beach International Airport in a video uploaded to TikTok on Monday. It also has space for its own bedroom, but it's unclear exactly how the interior of Jordan's jet is configured. According to JetSpy data, Jordan's G650ER has flown 13 times in the past two weeks, most of which appear to be related to the delivery process.
Persons: Michael Jordan, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, , TikTok, Jeff Bezos, Jordan —, Jordan, G650ER Organizations: Gulfstream, Palm Beach International, Service, Federal Aviation, Elon, Nike, Chicago Bulls, Charlotte Hornets, Gulfstream G550 Locations: Tokyo, Florida
In the long list of issues with in-flight entertainment, passengers on a recent flight from Sydney to Tokyo may have been exposed to a new one: A sexually explicit movie playing on every screen. Australian airline Qantas has now apologized after the incident during a flight last week. Technical issues made individual movie selection unavailable, so a movie was selected out of a limited list for the entire flight based on a request from some passengers, the airline said. "The movie they played was extremely inappropriate," a passenger who said they were on the flight from Sydney to Tokyo's Haneda Airport, wrote on Reddit. “All screens were changed to a family friendly movie for the rest of the flight, which is our standard practice for the rare cases where individual movie selection isn’t possible," it added.
Persons: James D, Morgan, , Organizations: Qantas, Qantas Boeing, Kingsford Smith International Airport Locations: Sydney, Tokyo
Airlines, including Iberia, Wizz Air, and Aer Lingus, have announced their first A321XLR routes. Irish carrier Aer Lingus said in October that it will launch its first A321XLR flight between Dublin and Nashville in April. The eight-and-a-half-hour route is a niche nonstop for the industry, with Aer Lingus as the only operator. Related storiesOther potential A321XLR routesWhile only a handful of A321XLR routes are officially on the books, many previously unserved city pairs could fit the bill, airlines have said. Qantas' list of potential A321XLR routes includes routes like Brisbane to Tokyo, Perth to the Maldives, and Melbourne to Bangkok.
Persons: , Wizz's, Thomas Pallini, America — Organizations: Airbus, Airlines, Aer Lingus, Service, Airbus A321XLR, Spanish, Iberia, Boston, Washington Dulles, Wizz, London, United, Irish, Nashville, Saudia, Business, JetBlue Airways, JetBlue Airways Airbus, Australia —, Qantas, Jetstar, JetSMART Locations: Iberia, Wizz, Madrid, Washington, London Gatwick, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, Milan, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Dublin, Barcelona, Rome, Brussels, Maldives, Dakar, Senegal, New York, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Europe, Aer, United, Las Vegas , Houston, Australia, Asia, Brisbane, Tokyo, Perth, Melbourne, Bangkok, South, America, Chile, Miami
Nintendo has kept players interested in its ageing Switch console series through key games with characters such as Super Mario and Zelda. Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) trimmed its holding in Nintendo Co., a day after reports that a senior executive at the kingdom's mammoth sovereign wealth fund said it was considering upping its stake. The PIF reduced its stakehold in the Japanese video game giant to 7.54% from 8.58% previously, according to a Japanese regulatory filing. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is also the chairman of Savvy Games Group. Nintendo has been grappling with a slowing console gaming market and an aging product by way of its flagship Switch hybrid console — its best-selling gear ever, which sold 143.4 million units worldwide.
Persons: Mario, Zelda, Prince Faisal bin Bandar, Saud —, , Prince Faisal, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, it's Organizations: Nintendo, Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, Nintendo Co, Games, Tokyo, Kyodo, Games Group, Microsoft, Sony Locations: Sultan, Saudi Arabia, Saudi
A customer places a Japanese 10,000 yen banknote on a checkout counter while making a purchase at an Akidai YK supermarket in Tokyo, Japan, on Monday, June 27, 2022. SINGAPORE — Asia-Pacific markets mostly fell on Tuesday, with investors watching August pay and spending data out from Japan and as mainland Chinese markets return to trade. Household spending in Japan fell 1.9% year-on-year in August in real terms, a softer fall compared to the 2.6% decline expected by a Reuters poll of economists. That decline also came before spring wage negotiations delivered the largest pay hikes to unionized Japanese workers in 33 years. However, real wages rose in August, with data from the country's statistics bureau indicating that wages climbed 2% to an average of 574,334 yen ($3,877.44).
Locations: Tokyo, Japan, SINGAPORE — Asia, Pacific
TOKYO — It may not receive the same scrutiny as Britain's royal family, but the Japanese government was nonetheless forced to admit Monday that it had doctored photos of its new cabinet following online mockery of their unkempt attire. Eagle-eyed social media users had spotted the editing over the untidy suits of the country’s top officials. The pictures, released by prime minister Shigeru Ishiba’s office on his X page and taken by local media last week, show his and defense minister Gen Nakatani’s white shirts visibly poking out from under their suits in different angles. But no shirt was visible in a frontal image later posted on Ishiba’s website, which caught the eye of some who blasted the cabinet's unkempt attire. “And therefore my understanding is that slight edits have been conducted in the past, not just for this photo you inquired about.”
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba’s, Gen, Yoshimasa Hayashi, Locations: TOKYO
CNN —Things got unexpectedly racy onboard a recent Qantas flight when an R-rated film was played on all the aircraft’s screens. In its statement, Qantas said crew initially attempted to fix the screens for customers who did not want to watch the movie. The airline said cabin crew apologized to passengers, “particularly those who had complained about the content” and will follow up with them. “The movie was clearly not suitable to play for the whole flight and we sincerely apologize to customers for this experience,” said a Qantas spokesperson. We are reviewing how the movie was selected.”CORRECTION: An earlier version of this report misidentified the movie’s star.
Persons: , Dakota Johnson, Sean Penn Organizations: CNN, Qantas, US Motion Pictures Locations: Sydney
People stand outside a money changer looking at the rates of the Japanese yen against foreign currencies, along a street in central Tokyo on April 29, 2024. Japan's top currency diplomat, Atsushi Mimura, issued on Monday a warning against speculative moves on the foreign exchange market as the yen fell below 149 per dollar. "We will monitor currency market moves including speculative trading with a sense of urgency," Mimura told reporters, reviving a verbal warning tactic that his predecessor, Masato Kanda, frequently used. Mimura declined to comment on the specifics of the current market situation.
Persons: Atsushi Mimura, Mimura, Masato Kanda Locations: Tokyo
Qantas has apologized for playing an R-rated movie on a Sydney to Tokyo flight. Technical issues with the in-flight system meant passengers couldn't select their own movies. Qantas switched to a family-friendly movie after passengers complained. AdvertisementAustralian flag carrier Qantas has apologized after an R-rated movie was played on every screen during a flight. Technical issues with the Airbus A330's in-flight entertainment system meant passengers couldn't select their own movies.
Persons: , Dakota Johnson, Sean Penn Organizations: Qantas, Service, Haneda Airport, Airbus, Guardian, Business, Virgin, Australian Aviation Locations: Sydney, Tokyo, Haneda, Virgin Australia
Tokyo CNN —Japanese toymaker MegaHouse has unveiled a miniature Rubik’s Cube — one so tiny that you might need a pair of tweezers to solve it. Each face of the cube, which is made from aluminum, measures about five millimeters (around 0.2 inches) across. “The 5-milimeter Rubik’s Cube is the result of the trinity of machines, cutting tools, and players’ passion,” said Kiyokazu Saito, president of Iriso Precision, the company brought in for the precision cutting, in a promotional video on the toymaker’s website. Guinness World Record confirmed the micro-cube as the world’s smallest rotating puzzle cube in August. The miniature cube in comparison to a standard one.
Persons: MegaHouse, , , Kiyokazu Saito, Tony Fisher, Ernő Rubik, Max Park, Wang Yiheng, Luke Garrett, Aaron Huynh, China’s Du Yusheng Organizations: Tokyo CNN, Iriso, CNN, Guinness Locations: British, Long Beach , California, China
TOKYO, JAPAN - OCTOBER 1: Japan's new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba attends a press conference at the prime minister's office on October 1, 2024 in Tokyo, Japan. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said he has asked ministers to formulate an economic relief package to ease the bite of inflation. The support measures would include subsidies to low-income households and significantly larger grants to local governments, Ishiba said in the speech. On Monday, just three days after being elected as head of Japan's ruling party, the new prime minister set the date for the snap election. During his speech, gains in Japan's Nikkei 225 narrowed to 0.09% while the broad-based Topix was up 0.36%.
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Ishiba, Topix Organizations: Reuters, Local, Japan's Nikkei, U.S . Locations: TOKYO, JAPAN, Tokyo, Japan, Japanese, Japan's
Japan's Nikkei 225 jumps 2.5% as yen weakens
  + stars: | 2024-10-03 | by ( Anniek Bao | In | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Pedestrians cross a road in front of the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE), operated by Japan Exchange Group Inc. (JPX), in Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday, Oct. 29, 2020. Japan stocks led Asian markets higher Thursday, after Wall Street inched higher amid rising tensions in the Middle East. Japan's Nikkei 225 opened 2.57% higher while the broad-based Topix added 2%. Australia's seasonally adjusted Judo Bank Composite PMI data came in at 49.6 in September, lower from the 51.7 in August, falling past the 50 neutral mark. Other data on tap include Japan's PMI data for September and August retail sales from Hong Kong.
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Ishiba, Kazuo Ueda Organizations: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Exchange Group Inc, Nikkei, U.S, Bank of Japan, PMI, Australian Bureau, Statistics, Economists Locations: Tokyo, Japan, Asia, Hong Kong
Masamitsu Yoshioka, the last known survivor among some 770 crew members who manned the Japanese airborne armada that attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, has died. He was 106. His death was announced on social media on Aug. 28 by the Japanese journalist and author Takashi Hayasaki, who spoke with Mr. Yoshioka last year. “When I met him last year, he spoke many valuable words with a dignified presence,” Mr. Hayasaki wrote. “Have Japanese people forgotten something important since the end of the war?
Persons: Masamitsu Yoshioka, Takashi Hayasaki, Yoshioka, ” Mr, Hayasaki, , Locations: Pearl, Adachi, Tokyo, Yasukuni, Hawaii, Japan
The Tokyo Tower, left, and commercial and residential buildings in Minato district of Tokyo, Japan, on Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022. Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesSINGAPORE — Asia-Pacific markets traded mixed on Friday following losses on Wall Street, with concerns over Middle East tensions keeping investors on edge in the run up to September's U.S. payrolls report. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index futures were at 22,091, lower than the HSI's last close of 22,113.51. Markets in mainland China will reopen on Oct. 8. Chinese stocks had been on a tear after authorities announced a slew of support measures last week.
Persons: Akio Kon, Australia's Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty Images, Nikkei Locations: Tokyo, Minato district, Japan, Getty Images SINGAPORE, Asia, Pacific, China
TOKYO — A regional airport in southwest Japan was closed on Wednesday after a U.S. bombshell, most likely dropped during World War II to stem “kamikaze” attacks, exploded near its runway, causing nearly 90 flight cancellations. Miyazaki Airport shut its runway after the explosion caused a crater 23 feet wide and nearly 3 feet deep in the middle of the taxiway next to the runway, according to a Japanese transport ministry official. No injuries were reported, but live cam footage showed an airplane had been taxiing nearby just two minutes before the explosion, according to local broadcaster MRT. Multiple unexploded bombs have previously been found at Miyazaki airport, the transport ministry official said. More than 79 years since the end of the war, unexploded bombs from the intense airstrikes are still found across Japan today.
Persons: Yoshimasa Hayashi Organizations: Miyazaki, Defense Force, JAL, ANA, Self - Defense Forces Locations: TOKYO, Japan, U.S, American, Miyazaki, Tokyo, Osaka, Fukuoka, Kyushu
It will also end the week with another reputation: a new piece in the grand puzzle being solved by Masayoshi Son. Related storiesMasayoshi Son's AI vision is ambitiousOpenAI CEO Sam Altman will form just one part of Masayoshi Son's AI plans. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty ImagesTo understand Son's grand AI ambitions, it's worth first zooming out to see how SoftBank currently maps out AI investment opportunities. As of June, Vision Fund 1's gains were $21.7 billion, while Vision Fund 2 losses totaled $22.9 billion. AdvertisementSo it's become clear that Son's focus has fallen on the other part of his AI investment stack.
Persons: , Masayoshi Son, Sam, Sam Altman's, ChatGPT, Sam Altman, Andrew Caballero, Reynolds, SoftBank, it'll, Son's, it's, Son, Michael M, Graphcore, Nigel Toon, OpenAI's Altman, Lionel Barber, Barber Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Getty, Business, Microsoft, Vision, Vision Fund, Nvidia, Nikkei, Wall Street, Financial Times Locations: Tokyo, AFP
Tokyo AP —An unexploded American bomb from World War II that had been buried at a Japanese airport exploded Wednesday, causing a large crater in a taxiway and the cancellation of more than 80 flights but no injuries, Japanese officials said. Land and Transport Ministry officials said there were no aircraft nearby when the bomb exploded at Miyazaki Airport in southwestern Japan. Videos broadcast on Japanese television showed a crater in the taxiway reportedly about 7 meters (23 feet) in diameter and 1 meter (3 feet) deep. A number of unexploded bombs dropped by the US military during World War II have been unearthed in the area, Defense Ministry officials said. Hundreds of tons of unexploded bombs from the war remain buried around Japan and are sometimes dug up at construction sites.
Persons: Yoshimasa Hayashi Organizations: Tokyo AP, Transport Ministry, Miyazaki, Officials, Self - Defense Forces, Imperial Japanese Navy, Defense Locations: Tokyo, Japan, Miyazaki
OpenAI's $6.6 billion funding raise attracted some big names across the industry. The $6.6 billion round gave OpenAI a $157 billion post-money valuation and minted it into one of the most valuable startups in the world. MicrosoftMicrosoft invested a little under $1 billion into OpenAI's latest funding round, according to The Wall Street Journal report. FidelityFidelity also participated in OpenAI's latest funding round. AdvertisementAltimeter Capital ManagementAltimeter Capital Management also contributed to OpenAI's latest funding round, according to reports.
Persons: , Sam Altman, OpenAI, Here's, Anderson Cooper, Josh Kushner, Instagram, Kushner, Altman, josh, SoftBank, Masayoshi Son, Son, Marco Bello, Wood, Morningstar, Bing, Jensen Huang, Sam Yeh, Elon Musk's, Brad Gerstner, Gerstner, Vinod Khosla, Vaughn Ridley, Khosla, MGX Organizations: Service, Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference, Getty, Capital, Business, VC, Wall Street, Reuters, Vision Fund, Venture, ARK Invest, ARK Venture Fund, SpaceX, Microsoft Microsoft, Wall, Rival Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia Nvidia, Nvidia, Tiger Global Management, Fidelity Fidelity, Elon, Elon Musk's xAI, Fidelity, Capital Management, . Khosla, Getty Khosla Ventures, Sun Microsystems, United Arab, Bloomberg Locations: OpenAI, Silicon Valley, OpenAI ., Tokyo, Saudi, ARK, AFP, IPOs, America, United Arab Emirates
I worry they're in for a rude awakening once they grow up and have less access to luxurious trips. I didn't know anything about luxury travel until even later when my career started to take the form of freelance travel writing. This happened to be around the time my twins were born — so, unlike their parents, they've known nothing but over-the-top luxury travel their whole lives. But luxury travel is all my kids have ever known. AdvertisementBut has their access to luxury travel from a young age skewed their expectations forever?
Persons: , Alesandra Dubin, they've Organizations: Service Locations: Tokyo, Sol, San Lucas coast, Los Angeles, Canouan, Caribbean
TOKYO — Japan’s new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Tuesday unveiled his cabinet as he seeks to heal party divisions and secure a national mandate with an Oct. 27 snap election. The 67-year-old former defense minister, who last week won a close-fought contest to lead the governing Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), was confirmed earlier in the day as prime minister by parliament. In his victory speech on Friday, Ishiba spoke about the need to beef up Japan’s security after recent territorial incursions by Chinese and Russian military vessels. Five of the lawmakers who contested the leadership race with him have not been included in his government nor given key party jobs. But despite its troubles, the LDP, which has ruled Japan for most of the post-war era, remains likely to hold on to power in the upcoming election given Japan’s weak opposition.
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Katsunobu Kato, Yoshimasa Hayashi, Shinzo, Sanae, Takeshi Iwaya, Gen Nakatani, Yoji, Ishiba, Yoshihiko Noda, , ” Noda Organizations: Liberal Democratic Party, Washington, NATO, Nikkei, Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, NHK, LDP, Mainichi, Constitutional Locations: TOKYO, Tokyo, United States, China, Beijing, U.S, East Asia, North Korea, Russian, Japan
This was the dawn of Japan’s “bullet train” era, widely regarded as the defining symbol of the country’s astonishing recovery from the trauma of World War II. A map of Japan's high-speed rail lines. Japan’s high-speed rail revolutionFast train: Japan's distinctive Shinkansen "bullet trains" have been plying the country's high-speed railways since 1964. Toru Yamanaka/AFP/Getty Image TGV: France's answer to the Bullet Train, the Train à Grand Vitesse, began operating between Paris and Lyon in 1981. Mehdi Fedouach/AFP/Getty Images China's rail expansion: China has now eclipsed the rest of the world when it comes to high-speed rail.
Persons: Yoshikazu Tsuno, Jiji Press, Toru Yamanaka, Mehdi Fedouach, Wang He, , Christopher P, Hood Organizations: CNN, Olympic Games, Hitachi, Toshiba, Mount, Getty, Mount Fuji, Tokyo, Lions, Hulton, Keystone, Jiji, West Japan Railway, Ltd, Fuji, Vitesse, Lyon, JR EAST, Eurostar, JR EAST Japan, Locations: Tokyo, Osaka, Japan, Shin, Kobe, Kyoto, Hiroshima, Nagano, AFP, North America, Europe, Korea, Russia, Honshu, Kyushu, Hokkaido, Sanrio, Paris, China, France, Spain, Belgium, South Korea, United Kingdom, Morocco, France’s, Bordeaux, Italy, Germany, Netherlands, Taiwan, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, London, Brussels, Amsterdam, India, Thailand, Wuhan, Western Europe, Nagoya, British
Shigeru Ishiba, the man set to become the next leader of Japan, has made a career as a political outsider and opponent of party orthodoxy. However, some experts doubt that the former defense minister will manage to govern as such. The election ultimately came down to a runoff in which Ishiba defeated economic security minister Sanae Takaichi, who presented herself as the more Abenomics-aligned candidate. Japan's parliament is expected to formally vote Ishiba into the role Tuesday. He also reportedly suggested he would follow Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's approach of trying to pull Japan out of years of deflationary pressures.
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Shinzo Abe, Abe, Tobias Harris, Ishiba, Sanae Takaichi, he's, Sayuri Shirai, Takaichi, there's, Fumio, Shirai Organizations: Liberal Democratic Party, Bank of, LDP, Japan Foresight, Keio University Locations: Tokyo, Japan, Abenomics
China is at risk of falling into a prolonged period of deflation, Yale economist Stephen Roach says. The country's monetary stimulus blitz was a move in the right direction, Roach said in an FT op-ed. The two missing pieces are fiscal support and structural reform, Roach wrote in a new op-ed for the Financial Times. AdvertisementAccording to Roach, China's projected GDP rate of 4% over the next five years virtually mirrors Tokyo's situation 30 years ago. China now needs to do the same with fiscal stimulus.
Persons: Stephen Roach, Roach, , China's, Beijing's hesitancy, Paul Krugman, Krugman Organizations: Yale, Service, Financial Times, Communist Party's Locations: China, Beijing, Japan
TOKYO, JAPAN - SEPTEMBER 06: Japanese former Defense Minister Shigeru Ishiba speaks during a press conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan on September 06, 2024 in Tokyo, Japan. Ishiba and former Environment Minister Shinjiro Koizumi are the front runners in the race of the upcoming presidential election for the ruling Liberal Democratic party of Japan (LDP) according to recent polling. (Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images)Japan's new Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Tuesday unveiled his cabinet as he seeks to heal party divisions and secure a national mandate with an Oct. 27 snap election. The 67-year-old former defence minister, who last week won a close-fought contest to lead the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), was confirmed earlier in the day as prime minister by parliament. Yoji Muto, a former junior minister, will take charge at the economy, trade and industry ministry.
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Ishiba, Shinjiro Koizumi, Tomohiro Ohsumi, Katsunobu Kato, Yoshimasa Hayashi, Kato, Sanae, Takeshi Iwaya, Gen Nakatani, Yoji Organizations: Defense, Foreign, Club of Japan, Liberal Democratic, Liberal Democratic Party, Washington, NATO, Nikkei Locations: TOKYO, JAPAN, Tokyo, Japan, United States, China, Beijing, U.S, East Asia, North Korea, Russian
TOKYO — Japan’s incoming prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, said Monday that he will call a general election for Oct. 27 following his victory in one of the closest-ever leadership races for the governing Liberal Democratic Party. Lawmakers there will meet on Tuesday to confirm Ishiba as the country’s next prime minister. Ishiba on Monday began picking government and party officials who will contest the upcoming general election with him. Ishiba, 67, won the LDP leadership race on his fifth attempt with strong backing from rank-and-file members. Before his runoff election against Takaichi on Friday, Ishiba apologized to LDP lawmakers for his “shortcomings.”
Persons: Shigeru Ishiba, Ishiba, ” Ishiba, Katsunobu Kato, Yoshimasa Hayashi, Takeshi Iwaya, Gen Nakatani, Yoji, Takaichi, , Hiroshi Shiratori, Shinjiro Koizumi, Yoshihide Suga, Koizumi Organizations: Liberal Democratic Party, U.S, Reuters, Media, Hosei University, Takaichi Locations: TOKYO, Tokyo
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