黑料社区

Inside Red Sea Global鈥檚 newly opened Desert Rock Resort聽

 Inside Red Sea Global鈥檚 newly opened Desert Rock Resort聽
Desert Rock Resort. (Supplied)
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Updated 07 February 2025

Inside Red Sea Global鈥檚 newly opened Desert Rock Resort聽

 Inside Red Sea Global鈥檚 newly opened Desert Rock Resort聽

RED SEA: As 黑料社区 expands its portfolio of luxury hotel offerings, the newly opened Desert Rock Resort stands out for its otherworldly terrain and exceptional service.聽

There will be no quibbling about the benefits of 黑料社区 versus the Maldives here 鈥 an issue that has crept up when potential visitors discuss Red Sea Global鈥檚 other outposts, such as the futuristic overwater resort Shebara. When it comes to Desert Rock there is simply nowhere else like it and the resort has leaned in heavily to make use of the spectacular landscape.聽

Set amid humbling mountains pockmarked with caves, the resort is a 20-minute drive from Red Sea International airport.聽




Desert Rock Resort. (Supplied)

Home to 32 Wadi Villas on the valley floor, 17 Cliff Hanging Villas, four Mountain Crevice Villas, one Royal Villa and 10鈥疢ountain Cave Suites carved into the rockface itself 鈥 yes, it鈥檚 as mind-boggling as it sounds 鈥 the hotel boasts private, temperature-controlled pools in every room and amenities that go a long way to helping guests understand the eye-watering price tag 鈥 Dyson hairdryers, Frette sheets and an array of luxe poolside accessories 鈥 while an assigned 鈥淰illa Host鈥 takes care of your every need via WhatsApp.聽

While the mountain-top Cave Suites and their views of endless rolling deserts and soaring rust-colored mountains are an influencer鈥檚 ticket to viral fame, the two-bedroom Mountain Crevice Skyline Villa is ideal for a larger group 鈥 with a conversation-starting bathtub (it fit at least five giddy, fully-clothed adults on our press tour) and glass-ringed fire pit.聽




Desert Rock Resort. (Supplied)

Descend to the valley floor and Oppenheim Architecture鈥檚 bunker-like structures melt into the Martian landscape. Use your chic wooden key card 鈥 the details are everything at Desert Rock 鈥 and you鈥檒l be met by cozy interiors by Toronto鈥檚 Studio Paolo Ferrari. Earthy tones, a focus on luxury stone and bronze-brown accents make the large villas and suites opulent without losing the warmth of the desert.聽

A pool, kids鈥 club and star-gazing evenings are complemented by the Akun adventure hub, which offers thrilling ziplining, via ferrata, abseiling, rock鈥痗limbing鈥痑nd archery, with more activities planned for 2025.聽




Desert Rock Resort. (Supplied)

A team is on hand to keep visitors safe, but this is no easy experience 鈥 we climbed up to the ziplining jump off point on the bare mountain face, at some points resorting to all fours as we followed a rough path hewn into the rock that often became no path at all.聽

That refusal to bend to lazy luxury is also shown in the 622 steps one can climb to the highest point of the hotel, an observatory reached by crossing a rope bridge at a dizzying height. The lack of a lift was a wise choice 鈥撯 it may not be easily accessible but that is exactly what makes the astounding view once there so worth it.聽




Desert Rock Resort. (Supplied)

The flipside, of course, is that certain areas of the resort are not accessible for guests with physical disabilities. It鈥檚 also important to note that 鈥 due to the space this hotel takes up 鈥 travel between rooms, restaurants and the spa is usually by buggy.聽




Desert Rock Resort. (Supplied)

The four main eateries 鈥 NYRA, helmed by Turkish chef Osman Sezener whose restaurant in Bodrum has one Michelin star; MICA, a buzzy mocktail bar that also offers small plates; breakfast spot Basalt, which transforms into an Indian eatery at night; and the poolside Wadi that offers Peruvian cuisine 鈥 rival the brightest stars in the Gulf鈥檚 major cities, with NYRA and Wadi standing out for their fresh, colorful dishes including tender beef tongue and artfully presented seafood plates. Many of the courses were presented with specific beverage pairings that drew out the flavors of their accompanying dish and pushed experimental mocktails to heights not before experienced by this writer.聽

Round that all off with a spa that boasts views of soaring, craggy cliffs, as well as indoor and outdoor treatment rooms, a water therapy room and a couple鈥檚 hammam room, and you鈥檝e got the ideal recipe for a serene sojourn in the Saudi desert.聽


US actress Lana Parrilla shines in Jacquie Aiche jewelry

US actress Lana Parrilla shines in Jacquie Aiche jewelry
Updated 13 August 2025

US actress Lana Parrilla shines in Jacquie Aiche jewelry

US actress Lana Parrilla shines in Jacquie Aiche jewelry
  • US actress at premiere of 鈥楾he Rainmaker鈥 in which she stars
  • Egyptian US designer Jacquie Aiche has top celebrity clients

DUBAI: American actress Lana Parrilla attended the premiere of 鈥淭he Rainmaker鈥 this week in New York, turning heads in a black ensemble paired with jewelry by US-Egyptian brand Jacquie Aiche.

Parrilla accessorized her look with gold bracelets, rings and drop earrings from the Los Angeles-based label, known for its fusion of bohemian and Middle Eastern-inspired fine jewelry.

Her high-neck, sleeveless black gown featured a belted waist and sheer pleated skirt.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The actress, who is best known for her role as Regina Mills, also known as the Evil Queen, in the long-running ABC series 鈥淥nce Upon a Time,鈥 stars in the new legal drama series 鈥淭he Rainmaker,鈥 a television adaptation of John Grisham鈥檚 1995 novel.

Parrilla plays Jocelyn 鈥淏ruiser鈥 Stone, a seasoned and unconventional lawyer who guides a young attorney through the complexities of the legal world.

The series focuses on Rudy Baylor, played by Milo Callaghan, a newly graduated law student who teams up with Bruiser and her paralegal Deck Shifflet (P. J. Byrne) after being dismissed from his firm.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Together, they pursue a high-stakes case against a powerful insurance company, led by attorney Leo F. Drummond, played by 鈥淢ad Men鈥 actor John Slattery.

The series also features performances by Madison Iseman, Dan Fogler, Robyn Cara, and Wade Briggs.

During the premiere Cara wore a black gown by Lebanese designer Elie Saab. The British actress鈥 dress featured a sheer flowing train and a plunging neckline. The dress combined a delicate lace bodice with a fitted waist and a semi-sheer skirt.

The 10-episode drama will premiere on USA Network on Aug. 15 and will also be available to stream on Peacock starting Aug.16.

Aiche launched her eponymous label from her garage in 2008. She now has an impressive celebrity client list that includes Rihanna, Selena Gomez, Katy Perry and Shanina Shaik.

The stylists of these celebrities flock to Aiche鈥檚 Beverly Hills showroom to adorn their clients in her signature delicate earrings, finger bracelets and chokers ahead of red-carpet events.

The jeweler is also the brainchild behind Chrissy Teigen鈥檚 bespoke engagement ring from John Legend.

Her pieces often feature Arab influences such as hammered gold, amulets and the evil eye talisman. And natural elements including turquoise, fossils and precious gemstones, which are a nod to her indigenous American ancestors.


Maya Waked on music, identity, and her upcoming Dubai show

Maya Waked on music, identity, and her upcoming Dubai show
Updated 13 August 2025

Maya Waked on music, identity, and her upcoming Dubai show

Maya Waked on music, identity, and her upcoming Dubai show

RIYADH: Lebanese-Canadian singer, songwriter, and genre-defying performer Maya Waked is celebrated for her evocative reinterpretations of classic songs and emotionally rich originals, blending nostalgia with modernity in a voice shaped by her multicultural heritage. Ahead of her anticipated performance at Dubai鈥檚 Zabeel Theatre this November, she spoke to Arab News about her creative journey and cultural identity.

鈥淚 take pride in taking the road less travelled by. I鈥檝e always taken an unconventional approach within my art and like to challenge social boundaries,鈥 Waked said, noting that genre-defying music allows her to explore sounds and themes without limits.

Her songs capture the joie de vivre 鈥 the joy of life 鈥 even when tinged with nostalgia. 鈥淚 express love, longing, and hope, especially from the perspective of someone living in a multicultural city like Dubai.鈥 She envisions her upcoming show as 鈥渁 warm, emotional celebration,鈥 adding: 鈥淚 hope the audience laughs, cries, sings, and dances, just like we do at any Lebanese gathering.鈥

Being trilingual shapes her music deeply. 鈥淎rabic adds depth and poetry, French lends romance, and English gives a modern edge.鈥

She began her career by reinterpreting 1980s Lebanese songs she loved, aiming to give them fresh life. 鈥淚鈥檓 also drawn to timeless melodies 鈥 anything that people hum as soon as the first note plays.鈥

Her audience is primarily aged 30 to 50, often Lebanese and Middle Eastern expats, although her music also resonates with non-Arabic speakers. 鈥淒espite the challenges of balancing my personal and artistic life, I鈥檝e learned that adversity often fuels meaningful art.鈥

Looking ahead, Waked hopes to keep performing and producing, and dreams of singing in Beirut 鈥 the heart of her song 鈥淗elmi Ghanilak Bi Beirut.鈥


 


Media Majlis: How a museum in Qatar is rethinking media

Media Majlis: How a museum in Qatar is rethinking media
Updated 13 August 2025

Media Majlis: How a museum in Qatar is rethinking media

Media Majlis: How a museum in Qatar is rethinking media

BEIRUT: When you consider all the ways humans communicate 鈥 from memes to smoke signals to shared glances 鈥 the task of categorizing them becomes overwhelming.

To explore how truth is constructed through communication, Alfredo Cramerotti, director of the Media Majlis at Northwestern Qatar, the Middle East鈥檚 first museum dedicated to media, reflects on the challenges and privileges of leading such an institution.

鈥淒irecting the Media Majlis Museum is an immersive commitment 鈥 not a job that neatly divides into categories,鈥 Cramerotti told Arab News.

Unlike traditional museums that present information and leave visitors to draw their own conclusions, the Media Majlis delves into the mechanics of how truth itself is shaped 鈥 and sometimes manipulated.

鈥淲e are not adjudicating truth but rather unpacking the means through which truth is constructed, circulated, and challenged,鈥 Cramerotti explained.

Truth, as he sees it, is endlessly complex and often travels through unexpected, even mundane, vehicles. One such vehicle? Memes.

鈥淢emes operate as a currency of commentary, at once ephemeral and enduring, local and global,鈥 he said, discussing the museum鈥檚 upcoming exhibition 鈥淢emememememe,鈥 opening Sept. 1.

As Cramerotti points out, the meme鈥檚 clickability 鈥 its blend of humor and urgency 鈥 has made it one of today鈥檚 most powerful tools of communication. It鈥檚 exactly the kind of cultural artifact worthy of deeper study.

鈥淭hat kind of recognition, both reflective and disruptive, is what museums should be capable of generating,鈥 he said.

While humor certainly infuses much of today鈥檚 communication, there is also a decisive political backdrop that sets the scene for a media-dedicated museum in the Arab world 鈥 namely, the silencing of Arab journalists across the Middle East.

鈥淩ather than speak on behalf of others, we work to create conditions where their words, images, and decisions speak for themselves,鈥 Cramerotti noted.


Madonna urges the pope to visit Gaza 鈥榖efore it鈥檚 too late鈥

Madonna urges the pope to visit Gaza 鈥榖efore it鈥檚 too late鈥
Updated 12 August 2025

Madonna urges the pope to visit Gaza 鈥榖efore it鈥檚 too late鈥

Madonna urges the pope to visit Gaza 鈥榖efore it鈥檚 too late鈥

LONDON: Madonna has urged the pope to travel to Gaza and 鈥渂ring your light to the children before it鈥檚 too late.鈥

The superstar posted her appeal to the pontiff on social media Monday, saying her son Rocco鈥檚 birthday prompted her to make the post. Rocco turned 25 Monday.

Addressing Pope Leo XIV, she wrote: 鈥淢ost Holy Father. Please go to Gaza and bring your light to the children before it鈥檚 too late. As a mother, I cannot bear to watch their suffering.

鈥淭he children of the world belong to everyone. You are the only one of us who cannot be denied entry," she added. "We need the humanitarian gates to be fully opened to save these innocent children. There is no more time. Please say you will go. Love, Madonna.鈥

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The singer added that she wasn鈥檛 taking sides in the war. 鈥淚 am not pointing fingers, placing blame or taking sides. Everyone is suffering. Including the mothers of the hostages,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淚 pray that they are released as well. I am merely trying to do what I can to keep these children from dying of starvation.鈥

The pope recently renewed his call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, asking the international community to respect humanitarian laws and the obligation to protect civilians.

鈥淚 once again call for an immediate end to the barbarity of this war and for a peaceful resolution to the conflict,鈥 the pontiff said last month. 

Aid workers and doctors have said that after months of Israeli blockade and turmoil in the distribution of supplies, children in Gaza with no previous conditions are starting to die from malnutrition.

The United Nations said that across Gaza, more than 5,000 children were diagnosed with malnutrition in May, though that is likely an undercount. Malnutrition was virtually nonexistent before the war. Doctors struggle to treat the children because many supplies have run out, the UN says.

Israel denies a famine is taking place or that children are starving. It says it has supplied enough food throughout the war and accuses Hamas of causing shortages by stealing aid and trying to control food distribution.


Arva Ahmed takes Dubai鈥檚 food stories from streets to screens with OSN and 鈥楧itch the Silver鈥

Arva Ahmed takes Dubai鈥檚 food stories from streets to screens with OSN and 鈥楧itch the Silver鈥
Updated 12 August 2025

Arva Ahmed takes Dubai鈥檚 food stories from streets to screens with OSN and 鈥楧itch the Silver鈥

Arva Ahmed takes Dubai鈥檚 food stories from streets to screens with OSN and 鈥楧itch the Silver鈥

DUBAI: For more than a decade, Arva Ahmed has led curious diners through Dubai鈥檚 backstreets with her company Frying Pan Adventures. Now, she is taking those stories to a new audience with 鈥淒itch the Silver,鈥 a YouTube series that has grown into a 10-part exclusive docuseries for OSN and OSN+.

Launched in late 2023 in collaboration with Ti22 Films, 鈥淒itch the Silver鈥 shines a light on food cultures that thrive away from the city鈥檚 fine-dining glare.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to go viral, but we鈥檙e just trying to document the food stories the way they are,鈥 said Ahmed in an interview with Arab News. These stories range from Ethiopian vegan fasting platters to why Dubai is a contender for the world鈥檚 number one bread city.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The OSN series, filmed over an intense three weeks, dives deeper into those narratives. In the process, Ahmed has witnessed a shift in Dubai鈥檚 dining scene: High-powered chefs leaving corporate hotel kitchens to open intimate, accessible eateries. She points to a former Cantonese hotel chef now serving an expanded menu in Oud Metha, an Italian chef experimenting with fermented date fiber and a Moroccan cook inspired by his grandmother. 鈥淟uxury food is becoming accessible without losing authenticity,鈥 she said.

Ahmed鈥檚 route to the screen was not straightforward. The daughter of Indian immigrants, she grew up in Deira with humble, frugal parents who valued simplicity over show. After an MBA in the US and a career as a strategy consultant, she returned to Dubai to join her father鈥檚 business 鈥 but a growing love for food, nurtured during her student years abroad, kept pulling her away.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Raised on her nutritionist mother鈥檚 home-cooked Indian meals, Ahmed only began to think seriously about food when she moved overseas. She learned to cook with a roommate, ran a small Indian takeout service and discovered that feeding people helped her connect beyond her usual circles. That curiosity deepened in New York City and Houston, where she sought out small, authentic eateries over flashy venues.

In 2012, unable to ignore her passion, Ahmed launched Frying Pan Adventures, offering walking food tours through Dubai鈥檚 lesser-known neighborhoods. But by 2023, she felt she had plateaued. An invitation from Ti22 Films鈥 founder Reem Al-Marzouqi to join an on-air presenters鈥 boot camp changed her perspective.
鈥淚鈥檇 always dreamed of a TV food show, but I was waiting for someone to hand it to me on a silver platter,鈥 said Ahmed. 鈥淭he boot camp made me realize that dream wasn鈥檛 relevant anymore 鈥 YouTube had democratised content, and I had to take ownership.鈥

The answer was 鈥淒itch the Silver鈥: A weekly video series built like a miniature food tour, each episode tying together multiple restaurants with a thematic thread. It has taken Ahmed beyond the set routes of her walking tours, forcing her to explore new corners of the country and uncover under-told stories.

Her recommendations for GCC visitors reflect that ethos. She points to Laki, a small Safa eatery run by Chef Mary and Chef Mae (鈥渢he food鈥檚 full of love 鈥 just be patient with the air conditioning鈥); Yin Kigi, the Cantonese gem in Oud Metha; and Moto Moto, an Omani-inspired food truck in Al-Khawaneej serving mishkak skewers and slow-cooked shuwa from the owners鈥 home garden.

For Ahmed, whether she is guiding a tour group or presenting to camera, the mission is the same: To celebrate the many food cultures that call Dubai home. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an incredible time where some of these stories are popping off, and you need to kind of celebrate them, because it鈥檚 really hard right now to get your voice heard in a market that鈥檚 so saturated,鈥 she said.