Friday, 28 November 2008

Sir Michael Caine wins London's Favourite Londoner

The highlights of the 2008 Visit London tourism awards included being in the presence of greatness. Sir Michael Caine was voted London's Favourite Londoner. He was on hand to pick up the award. Check out his acceptance speech below.

The Royal Albert Hall looked amazing and really impressed as an awards ceremony venue. As did hosts Johnny Vaughan and Lisa Snowdon, who formed a great presenter double-act.

From my box at the ceremony, I was able to snap some photos,which today have been published by Conference & Incentive Travel magazine. To see the snaps of the venue, entertainment including Right Said Fred, plus the presenters and party Click Here

For a full-list of the winners, as published on the Visit London Website, Click Here

Sunday, 23 November 2008

Euro event award winners

As promised back in October, I can now reveal the results of the European Best Event Awards. I headed back to Turin last week for the ceremony and to chair two sessions of the adjoining conference. After speaking to a mainly Italian audience on the impact the economic recession will have on the UK events industry and then discussing the options for European event associations to work together, it was time for the awards.

So, in third place: Portuguese agency Desafio Global Ativism claimed the bronze for reinventing the Cinderalla story in Lisbon's coach museum on behalf of Dior for the launch of its perfume Poison.

The runner-up: The Most Majestic Espresso Experience by Italian agency Promoconvention.

And the winner: Congratulations to German agency insglück Gesellschaft für Markeninszenierung for the opening ceremony of the 2008 CeBit exhibition in Hanover.

The Italian publishing company, ADC will shortly be uploading to its website, articles I wrote for them on the winning entries and the awards. So for more details, keep an eye on the Mike in the Media links on my blog homepage.

Monday, 10 November 2008

A Hard Days Night in Liverpool

A stay at the Hard Days Night Hotel in Liverpool guarantees three things - The Beatles immortalised on every wall, the sounds of John, Paul, George and Ringo always playing on the lobby's Yellow Submarine juke box and great guest service.

A hotel concierge working anywhere in the world with more than a five-year exemplary service record, can be recommended and then put through the rigors of a tough interview to join a little-known society called Les Clefs D'Or. This organisation, referred to as The Golden Keys, derives from the hotels of Paris in the 1920s.

Spotting a concierge today who has gained membership is easy - they wear golden keys, one on each lapel of their uniform jackets. The UK only has 280 members, many of whom work for London's Park Lane brands such as Hilton, Dorchester or Mariott. The independent boutique Hard Days Night Hotel, which opened in Liverpool's Cavern quarter in February 2008, has three Golden Keys concierges.

Our concierge gave me and my nosey party the full hotel tour, stole bathroom products off the housekeeping trolley for Charlee and fellow Aussie Trish to take back to Melbourne and even retrieved Ian's lost Liverpool FC season ticket - tracing it back to my bar entourage after it had fallen out of his pocket.

The hotel itself is housed within a Grade II listed building with a frontage of imposing marble columns, on top of which perch statues of the 'Fab Four'.

Inside, a spiral staircase provides gallery space for black and white Beatles photography whilst a glass elevator provides the viewing platform as it transports guests to five floors of chic designed rooms. Behind each door a painting of either John, Paul, George or Ringo dominates the room from above the bed (Mine was George Harrison).

Liverpool has changed dramatically since I lived there. Its status as the 2008 European Capital of Culture coincided with more than a £1billon of investment. Back-street warehouses and churches have been converted into bars and restaurants. The city centre now connects to the Albert Dock's galleries and boutiques via a new shopping mall, (it apparently held the title of the UK's largest until Westfield opened in West London earlier this month). A conference centre and arena have been added to the waterfront whilst a museum of Liverpool is under construction. And everywhere you look, buildings have been sand-blasted back to their original splendour.

Last Thursday's MTV Europe Music Awards capped 12 months of cultural, artistic and performance based events that have attracted acclaim from locals and outside observers alike. On Saturday, the finale of the city's year-long Homotopia festival saw the 'Liverpool is Burning' vogue ball held in the ballroom of the Aldephi hotel. Performing arts students shared the catwalk with drag queens as a bemused army of Eastern European boxers, staying at the hotel after their fight tournament and who'd wandered into the bar for a drink, could only look on aghast. Only in Liverpool! The city may change but it's good to be reminded that the Scouse craziness never will.