Monday 3 November 2014

Inside Spain's culinary capital






Run by father-daughter team Elena and Juan Mari, Arzak has cemented San Sebastian's reputation as a foodie destination. The restaurant's spice room holds more than 1,500 different spices.Run by father-daughter team Elena and Juan Mari, Arzak has cemented San Sebastian's reputation as a foodie destination. The restaurant's spice room holds more than 1,500 different spices.

At Arzak, entrees are served on a translucent plate over an iPad. The lobster is accompanied by a video of waves crashing into shore, while burgers are served over a video of a flickering grill.At Arzak, entrees are served on a translucent plate over an iPad. The lobster is accompanied by a video of waves crashing into shore, while burgers are served over a video of a flickering grill.

Arzak's deceptively simple potato, egg yolk and white truffle dish.Arzak's deceptively simple potato, egg yolk and white truffle dish.

Arzak was established when current owner Juan Mari's grandparents built the property as a wine cellar and tavern in 1897. Arzak was established when current owner Juan Mari's grandparents built the property as a wine cellar and tavern in 1897.


San Sebastian has a tapas culture of its own. In this town, tapas are called "pintxos," loosely translated as "spikes" in the region's Basque language.

San Sebastian has a tapas culture of its own. In this town, tapas are called "pintxos," loosely translated as "spikes" in the region's Basque language.

The rare delicacy of percebes (goose barnacles) at Goiz Barci are worth seeking out.The rare delicacy of percebes (goose barnacles) at Goiz Barci are worth seeking out.

San Sebastian Food offers tours of bars, local producers and vineyards of the Basque country. Between meals, visitors can hit the beach. San Sebastian Food offers tours of bars, local producers and vineyards of the Basque country. Between meals, visitors can hit the beach.









  • Visiting Arzak restaurant is one of the highlights of a San Sebastian culinary tour

  • Arzak is run by 71-year-old Juan Mari Arzak, who has had a Michelin star for 40 years, and his daughter

  • Bar Nestor sells a tortilla so popular it's usually sold out within 15 minutes




(CNN) -- San Sebastian has what you could call food form.


Three restaurants in the town of 200,000 on Spain's northeastern Atlantic coast hold the gastronomic holy grail of three Michelin stars -- only Kyoto has more Michelin-starred eateries per square meter.


It's already pretty obvious why global gourmets frequently place it atop their must-eat list.


And then you add the pintxos.


Pintxos, or spikes in the Basque language that's proudly heard throughout the region, are tapas taken to a whole new level.


No sweaty chorizo or clammy calamari on cocktail sticks here.


San Sebastian's pintxos bars are culinary tours de force in their own right, delivering dishes that wouldn't look out of place in their Michelin-starred neighbors.


The only challenge facing visitors to this gastronomic wonderland is not what, but where, to eat.


I took the route of long, slow restaurant lunches, followed by late night hopping between the pintxos bars.


MORE: In photos: The magical culinary world of Albert Adria


Foie gras ice cream


My food quest kicked off with lunch at the venerable institution, Arzak.


It's here that 71-year-old Juan-Mari Arzak has held a Michelin star for 40 years and three stars for a quarter of a century.


Twenty-five years at the absolute pinnacle of any profession is remarkable, but in the uber-competitive world of fine dining, it's unprecedented.




Potato, egg yolk and white truffle from Arzak.

Potato, egg yolk and white truffle from Arzak.



Arzak the restaurant is the story of the Arzak family.


Juan-Mari's grandparents built the property as a wine cellar and tavern in 1897, while he started working there in 1966.


The unassuming exterior on a suburban street leads into a modernist dining room where the same menu is served at lunch and in the evening.


Calling it a meal, however, doesn't really do it justice.


It's a culinary joyride of beauty, complexity and even wit.


Foie gras is served as an ice cream, featuring caramelized onions and green tea, in an inverted yucca cone dusted with shellfish powder.


READ: World's 50 best restaurants announced


Fine dining laboratory


A deceptively simple but sublime dish features cubes of potato, egg yolk and white truffle.


For an overload of smells, tastes, sights and sounds, grilled lobster with charcoal-roasted zucchini is served on a translucent plate above an iPad playing a video of waves crashing in to shore.


Seriously.


Arzak's post-dessert petits fours feature a candy shop and workshop mash-up called Ferreteria Arzak, or Arzak Ironmongers, with silver sugar keys, cola bottle tops, chocolate nuts and screws.


As would be expected from one of the world's top restaurants, the wine cellar features terrifyingly rare and expensive vintages.


A back-of-house look reveals a laboratory where new dishes are created and a room featuring 1,500 different spices.


World's most popular tortillas?


The Arzak family have defined and owned Michelin-starred cuisine in San Sebastian and cemented the town's reputation.


Today that reputation is as much focused on pintxos bars as Michelin stars and, having gradually recovered from an epic lunch, it's time to consider evening options.


While it's possible to be led by your eyes into one of scores of pintxos bars, a small group tour is an excellent introduction and allows you to get to know some of the very best dishes and venues.


Englishman Jon Warren ditched a career in finance to follow his passion, setting up San Sebastian Food to offer tours of the bars, local producers and vineyards that give the Basque region such an enviable reputation.


MORE: 10 of Madrid's best tapas bars


He explains that the pintxos bars "are the cool, young siblings to the Michelin stars and offer ultimate flexibility; informal dining, bite-sized portions, low prices and the chance to switch at the turn of a heel from traditional to modern cuisine."


An evening tour led by a donostiarra (a San Sebastian local) takes visitors from one to the next for small bites and pours of local ciders and wines, especially txakoli, a slightly sparkling young white wine.


Countless bars, some traditional, others more cutting edge in cuisine and atmosphere, try to outdo one another with heaving displays or specialties.




Pintxos at Zeruko.



Bar Nestor serves a famous tortilla, but only in limited numbers, at 1 p.m. and 8 p.m. precisely. Turn up 15 minutes late and prepare to leave disappointed.


Legendary anchovies


The rare delicacy of percebes or goose barnacles at Goiz Barci are less punctual, but worth spending time on.


The boquerones (fresh anchovies) at Txepetxa are legendary.


Warren nails pintxos culture when he says it's all about the social context.


"Lining the streets of the old town, everyone is there to have fun, between the barmen, the locals and visitors, creating a lively camaraderie filled with wine, food and chattering."


As if the culinary gods hadn't blessed San Sebastian enough with Michelin stars and pintxos bars, there are also scores of artisanal producers dotted throughout the historic town.


The central food market is a treasure trove of local produce, in particular the rightly famous jamon iberico de bellota (ham from acorn-fed pigs).


In those brief pauses between eating some of the world's greatest food, it's worth taking a walk on the beautiful beaches or promenade, drinking in the sea air and stunning vistas and dreaming of being a donostiarra.


Arzak , Avda. Alcalde Elósegui, 273, Donostia, San Sebastian, Spain; +34 943 278 465


San Sebastian Food , Hotel Maria Cristina, Republica Argentina Kalea, 4; +34 943 42 11 43



Small town America ... romantic?






The B&Bs and vineyards in Fredericksburg, Texas, help get people in the mood. "A lot of people have gotten engaged here," says Nicole Bendele of Becker Vineyards.The B&Bs and vineyards in Fredericksburg, Texas, help get people in the mood. "A lot of people have gotten engaged here," says Nicole Bendele of Becker Vineyards.

Not everyone's idea of romance is a melted-chocolate massage. For "We're in this together!" pics in front of kayaks, Friday Harbor, Washington, is pretty much perfect.Not everyone's idea of romance is a melted-chocolate massage. For "We're in this together!" pics in front of kayaks, Friday Harbor, Washington, is pretty much perfect.

Ephraim, Wisconsin, is a quaint town on Lake Michigan. To ensure it remains that way, "zoning is strict and continually refined to preserve the distinctive atmosphere and character of the Village," according to the town's website.Ephraim, Wisconsin, is a quaint town on Lake Michigan. To ensure it remains that way, "zoning is strict and continually refined to preserve the distinctive atmosphere and character of the Village," according to the town's website.

You don't need to be a skier to appreciate how quickly things can get cozy by a fireplace after the lifts close in Aspen, Colorado.You don't need to be a skier to appreciate how quickly things can get cozy by a fireplace after the lifts close in Aspen, Colorado.

Nothing says love like eating chocolate-covered bacon on Rosemary Beach's Main Street. The Florida town also has sidewalk cafes with Gulf-caught seafood.Nothing says love like eating chocolate-covered bacon on Rosemary Beach's Main Street. The Florida town also has sidewalk cafes with Gulf-caught seafood.

Diversions in Healdsburg, California, are obvious. The picturesque town square is lined with restaurants, wine-tasting rooms and boutiques. Diversions in Healdsburg, California, are obvious. The picturesque town square is lined with restaurants, wine-tasting rooms and boutiques.









  • From California to Texas, wine countries mean romance for many couples

  • You don't have to be a skier to appreciate Aspen. It's a couples haven, too

  • Not everyone equates pampering with romance. Friday Harbor is built for active types




(CNN) -- For an otherwise entertaining movie, "Gone Girl" had kind of a downer message.


Happy loving couple heads to small town and immediately finds a viper's nest of dysfunction, deceit and revenge?


Thanks rural America!


To the rescue are these six real American small towns, where cobblestone streets, adorable cafes, couples spa treatments and distance from big city hyper-ambition don't ruin relationships, they strengthen them.


Ephraim, Wisconsin


Midway up the Door County peninsula there's a place where small boats cruise in and out of a small harbor just across the street from Wilson's, a century-old ice-cream parlor that scoops up cones while hand-holders plot second desserts and nighttime walks.


That place is Ephraim, Wisconsin, an historic town with Moravian and Norwegian roots dating to 1853 that's now home to fewer than 300 full-time residents.


"To ensure that Ephraim remains a historic and beautiful location, Ephraim's zoning is admittedly strict and is continually refined to preserve the distinctive atmosphere and character of the Village," reads the town's official website.


"The village offers incredibly intimate spaces," says Natalie Nedderson, co-owner of Eagle Harbor Inn, a bed-and-breakfast with whirlpool suites. "Hardy Gallery (which exhibits works from local and regional artists) begs you to paint your names on its red clapboard exterior, joining generations of couples ... establishing that you have staked your claim in graffiti."


Professions of love in graffiti?


Not exactly what we'd expect from the sons and daughters of devout Moravians, but it proves that even quaint villages have the power to surprise you.


Eagle Harbor Inn , 9914 Water St., Ephraim, Wisconsin; +1 920 854 2121; from $175 per night


Hardy Gallery , 3083 Anderson Lane, Ephraim, Wisconsin; +1 920 854 5355 (phone number is active seasonally)


Fredericksburg, Texas


With its frontier fields and world-class wines, Becker Vineyards attracts would-be suitors and those who might not even know they're that serious yet.


"A lot of people have gotten engaged here," says tasting room coordinator Nicole Bendele. "Some impromptu. Somebody might be out on the veranda overlooking the lavender field and pop the question."


Good wine has a way of making even a hardened soul misty, and so do the views in Texas Hill Country.


A quick drive from area wineries, Fredericksburg has those pretty views, as well as a "y'all come on in" Main Street vibe and superb restaurants, like the Cabernet Grill Texas Wine Country Restaurant, which unequivocally states it has "the largest Texas wine list just about anywhere!"


"The town lends itself to romance," says Donna Mittel of Gastehaus Schmidt Reservation Service, which books Texas Hill Country hotels, bed and breakfasts and country inns. "With romantic B&Bs, fine restaurants and the vineyards, people come for the quiet time away from the kids, or the dogs."


Becker Vineyards , 464 Becker Farms Road, Stonewall, Texas; +1 830 644 2681


Cabernet Grill Texas Wine Country Restaurant , Cotton Gin Village, Fredericksburg, Texas; +1 830 990 5734


Gastehaus Schmidt Reservation Service , 231 W. Main, Fredericksburg, Texas; +1 866 427 8374


Friday Harbor, Washington




San Juan Island: Not a bad first-date spot.

San Juan Island: Not a bad first-date spot.



Not everyone's idea of "romance" is sifting through a hotel's pillow menu while awaiting the afternoon's melted-chocolate massage (not that there's anything wrong with that).


For some, posing for precious pics in front of the hulls of water-beaded kayaks says, "We're in this together!"


For these couples, Washington state's San Juan Islands are pretty much perfect.


The area's outdoor opportunities are legendary, but after the paddling and hiking and orca spotting are over, Friday Harbor on San Juan Island has a rustic "no stoplights, no strip malls, pretty much no nothing" vibe that lends itself to tranquil reflection and "I wouldn't want to be here with anyone else" conversation.


Once that's out of the way (guys, that's a joke), it's off to sophisticated restaurants like Tops'l Sushi Bar, or plates of comfort food such as chicken breast with a tart-apple waffle at the Duck Soup Inn, a small cabin dedicated to local ingredients (some foraged) that sits snugly on Dream Lake surrounded by tall conifers.


Of course, you can always stay in town.


"The Inn is right in the middle of Friday Harbor, so couples can stroll sidewalks hand in hand as they window shop, head for dinner, look for a cafe to disappear into or a cozy bench to watch the world roll by," says Scott Hale, manager of the Island Inn at 123 West, which has 360-degree water views and a special "INN Love" package for couples, with a cheese board, fresh flowers and bottle of sparkling wine.


Tops'l Sushi Bar , 1B Front St. N., Friday Harbor, Washington; +1 360 370 7191


Duck Soup Inn , located halfway between Friday Harbor and Roche Harbor; +1 360 378 4878


Islands Inn at 123 West ; +1 360 378 4400


Healdsburg, California


The square in Sonoma County's Healdsburg is lined with high-end restaurants, tasting rooms, boutiques and indie bookstores.


Hotel Healdsburg caters to couples with its "Romance in Bloom" package, folding in perks like a soaking tub stocked with salts and oils, sparkling wine, house-made truffles and a couples massage.


Dinner downstairs at Dry Creek Kitchen is a seven-course experience.


"So many of my clients are true romantics that come to this town celebrating a special occasion: an engagement, anniversary or birthday," says Ann Marie Montecuollo, owner of Ann Marie Fine Jewelry, just off the town square.


For vacationing couples, she specializes in custom-designed jewelry to commemorate their trip.


Dry Creek Kitchen , Hotel Healdsburg, 317 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg, California; +1 707 431 0330


Ann Marie Fine Jewelry , 122 Matheson St., Healdsburg, California; +1 707 433 5053


Rosemary Beach, Florida




Rosemary Beach: Florida fling since 1995.

Rosemary Beach: Florida fling since 1995.



Founded in 1995, Rosemary Beach has evolved into a romantic destination, attracting celebs such as country singer Kellie Pickler -- it was the site of her proposal.


A winding cobblestone Main Street is filled with sidewalk cafes serving sushi, Gulf-caught seafood and chocolate-covered bacon. (That's romantic, right?)


The Gulf of Mexico's emerald-green beauty is just a block away.


Although their website tagline makes us cringe a little ("Welcome to the delicious moments of your life"), The Pearl is a year-old marvel of a super-luxe beach hotel with romance built into its DNA.


There are also plenty of luxury homes for rent through Rosemary Beach Cottage Rental Co.


Strict design codes keep lodgings awash in nature-inspired hues and high-end appliances.


Bicycles built for two? Um, maybe in 1914.


These days you can each rent a beach-cruiser bicycle from Bamboo Bicycle Company (which does actually have adult tandem bikes if that's your thing).


The Pearl , 63 Main St., Rosemary Beach, Florida; +1 850 588 2881; from $179 per night


Rosemary Beach Cottage Rental Co. ; +1 866 348 8952


Bamboo Bicycle Company , 50 North Barrett Square, Rosemary Beach, Florida; +1 850 231 0770


Aspen, Colorado




Cozy now? Just wait til they\'re in front of a fire.

Cozy now? Just wait til they're in front of a fire.



The Aspen secret?


It doesn't matter if you ski or not.


Downtown streets are lined with art galleries and shops worth spending hours and hundreds (if not thousands) of spare change on.


The bars, hotels and resorts don't just conjure images of roaring fires and designer boot fashion, they deliver them.


The Hotel Jerome is a pretty example.


The property's throwback couture is a plus, but so are the dramatic mountain views from its suites and cozy fun at its renowned J-Bar.


"Whether your idea of romance is running up a mountain or wrapping up in a blanket in front of a wood fire, Aspen has it all," says St. Regis Aspen Resort spa director Julie Oliff. "The trouble is, you won't just fall more in love when you're here, you'll fall in love with everything here."


The spa's Great Bath is a guaranteed pleaser -- it features berries, chocolate and champagne in an aromatherapy bath followed by a massage.


Hotel Jerome , 330 E. Main St., Aspen, Colorado; +1 855 331 7213; from $225 per night


St. Regis Aspen Resort , 315 E. Dean St., Aspen, Colorado; +1 970 920 3300


Milwaukee-based Kristine Hansen writes about food, wine and travel for publications including TIME, Destination Weddings & Honeymoons and Fodor's Travel.



Couple marries on U.S. flight






Frequent travelers Keith Stewart and Dottie Coven got married onboard a nonstop flight from Nashville to Dallas Love Field on Sunday, November 1. Frequent travelers Keith Stewart and Dottie Coven got married onboard a nonstop flight from Nashville to Dallas Love Field on Sunday, November 1.

They used their frequent flier miles to include their friends and family on the flight. They used their frequent flier miles to include their friends and family on the flight.

About 100 unsuspecting fellow passengers were invited to join the midair celebration. About 100 unsuspecting fellow passengers were invited to join the midair celebration.

Southwest Airline was happy to highlight its new nonstop service from Nashville to Dallas.Southwest Airline was happy to highlight its new nonstop service from Nashville to Dallas.









  • Dottie Coven and Keith Stewart say "I do" in the air

  • About 100 unsuspecting fliers attended the wedding

  • Anyone objecting to the wedding could press their flight attendant call button




(CNN) -- Love was in the air on Sunday for Dottie Coven and Keith Stewart.


Business travelers and frequent fliers on Southwest Airlines, the couple from Corydon, Indiana, decided there was no place they'd rather marry than while flying.


And why not land at the airport known for love -- Dallas Love Field -- after the happy occasion?





Couple have one-of-a-kind wedding in air

That's why they approached Southwest with their idea of being married in the air. The airline was game. After all, it's famous for its fun, including flight attendants who entertain, wedding proposals and even rewarding flight attendants who are especially good to customers (After a customer praised one flight attendant on Twitter midflight, the airline publicly honored her with a giant cookie).


But this was the Southwest's first wedding where the airline joined the wedding planning team from departure gate to arrival gate. (Follow the fun using Southwest's hashtag #nonstoplove.)


With a band playing and balloons decorating the jetway, the happy couple and about 30 friends and family boarded Southwest Flight 4058 in Nashville for the ceremony. About 100 unsuspecting fellow passengers received an extra boarding pass inviting them to celebrate.


A flower girl walking down the aisle handed out peanuts to start the ceremony, followed by an officiant using the loudspeaker to perform the marriage of Coven and Stewart.







There were modifications for the unique location: "If anyone can show just cause why they might not be lawfully joined together, let them push their flight attendant call button now or forever hold your peace."


The airline had a reason for highlighting this particular route: The wedding took place on Southwest's first nonstop flight from Nashville to Dallas Love Field.


The airline had been prevented from offering that particular route under the Wright Amendment, which Congress passed in 1979 to allow only flights from Love Field to neighboring states (with a few exceptions). Congress repealed the law in 2006, and it expired in October.


The Stewarts were heading to their honeymoon in Puerto Rico on Monday morning, a gift of the airline. Puerto Rico is another relatively new destination for Southwest Airlines, which moved into the international market after its 2010 purchase of AirTran (and its international routes).



Women found dead in luxury apartment





  • The suspect, Rurik Jutting, appears before a Hong Kong court but doesn't enter a plea

  • The 29-year-old Briton, who recently left his job at Bank of America, faces two murder charges

  • Both victims were Indonesian; one body was found inside a suitcase

  • Police describe a violent and bloody scene inside a luxury highrise building




Hong Kong (CNN) -- A British investment banker has been charged with murder in Hong Kong over the killings of two young Indonesian women at a high-rise apartment in the heart of the densely populated city.


One of the victims was discovered stuffed inside a suitcase on the balcony of the 31st-floor apartment. The other was found lying inside with cuts on her body.


The suspect, a 29-year-old man named Rurik Jutting, appeared before a magistrates' court in Hong Kong on Monday on two charges of murder.




Rurik Jutting.



Wearing black-rimmed glasses, a black T-shirt, and dark jeans, Jutting was not handcuffed. He responded "I do" when asked by the court clerk if he understood the charges against him but didn't enter a plea.


Police called in early hours


Police said they were called to the upmarket apartment in the popular nightlife district of Wan Chai early Saturday morning by Jutting, a former Bank of America employee.


They first discovered a woman lying inside the one-bedroom residence, identified by local media as a disc jockey at a neighborhood pub.





Bodies found in Hong Kong apartment

The woman, aged 25 to 30, had cuts on her neck and buttock, according to a police statement. She was pronounced dead at the scene.


Court documents described her as an "unknown female," and said she'd been killed Saturday.


Officers later discovered the body of another woman, with wounds on her neck, inside a suitcase on the apartment's balcony.


Victims said to be killed days apart


The second victim was identified as Sumarti Ningsih, according to court documents, which said she had been killed on October 27, five days before her body was found.


Both women were Indonesian citizens, said Pangky Saputra, vice consul at the Indonesian Consulate in Hong Kong.


Sumarti was a 25-year-old who entered Hong Kong last month on a tourist visa, according to a report in the South China Morning Post.


When they arrived at the apartment, police discovered a grisly scene, with the residence covered in blood, the newspaper reported. The throat of the unidentified victim had been slashed, it said.


Police said they arrested the suspect after finding a knife at the scene. Autopsies will be performed on the victims to determine the cause of death, authorities said.


Career in investment banking


Court documents gave his occupation as a "banker" for Bank of America in Hong Kong.


Paul Scanlon, a spokesman for Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, said that a person named Rurik Jutting had worked there but left the bank recently. He declined to comment further on the case.


The social network LinkedIn lists a profile for Jutting that says he had worked in structured equity finance and trading for the bank in Hong Kong since July 2013. Before that, he worked in the same division in London for three years.


According to the profile, he previously worked in capital markets for the British bank Barclays from 2008 to 2010 and studied history and law at the prestigious University of Cambridge between 2004 and 2008.


The British Foreign Office confirmed Sunday that a British citizen was arrested in Hong Kong on suspicion of murder, but did not release the name, citing regulations.


Luxurious apartment building


Jutting didn't apply for bail on Monday. He will remain in jail until his next court appearance on November 10.


J Residence, the upscale apartment building where the bodies were found, is described by real estate websites as popular with expatriates for its luxurious facilities, including a heated rooftop swimming pool.


The site squarefoot.com lists similar apartments to the one Jutting was staying in as available at monthly rents of 21,000 Hong Kong dollars to 29,000 Hong Kong dollars ($2,700 to $3,700).


The Wan Chai district, a commercial and residential area on Hong Kong Island, is known for its high number of restaurants, bars and nightclubs -- as well as its long-established red-light district.


The case has shocked many residents of Hong Kong, which is often described as one of the safest big cities in the world.


Reports of the deaths stirred memories of the case of Nancy Kissel, an American woman who was convicted of the 2003 killing of her banker husband, whose body was found in the storeroom of the couple's luxury apartment four days after his death.


CNN's Elizabeth Joseph, Hilary Whiteman, Shelby Lynn Erdman, Phillip Taylor and Anna-Maja Rappard contributed to the this report



Today's Internet star: Alex from Target







  • #AlexfromTarget became a trending topic after a photo was posted on Instagram

  • He appears to be a young man from Texas

  • The Internet had fun with the #AlexfromTarget trend




(CNN) -- If you woke up this morning, looked at Twitter and wondered, "Who the hell is Alex from Target?" you're not alone.


If you've been awake for a couple hours and are still wondering why #AlexFromTarget is trending ...


Please don't ask us to explain the Internet.


According to Urban Dictionary, Alex from Target is "a hardcore pimp who recently gained fame as an Instagram sensation for reasons beyond the comprehension of any sane person."


For the record, we don't think Alex is actually a pimp.


He seems to be a nice kid who works at Target who became famous after Twitter user @brooklynjreiff posted a photo of him in his uniform on October 26.







It was re-posted several times over the next few days, and then suddenly, as these things go, the Internet was hooked.







There's now an Alex from Target Tumblr.


And many pieces of disturbing fan fiction.


Several people have noted Alex from Target's resemblance to Jake from State Farm (which, by the way, was a very popular Halloween costume this year).







The real Alex from Target, at least according to his Twitter bio, is Twitter user @acl163.







If the sweatshirt in his profile photo is any indication, he's from Texas. And that's about all we know about him. We'd love to know what his girlfriend -- or his mom, for that matter -- thinks of all this. (If you're reading this, contact me @jdwilson2.)


We imagine the executives at Target are already dreaming up ways to cash in on this little meme.












But if they know anything about the teenage attention span, they know they have to work fast.







Let's get back to work, shall we?



Brittany Maynard was courageous






Brittany Maynard with her dog Charley in San Francisco. Maynard, a 29-year-old with terminal brain cancer, has died, advocacy group Compassion and Choices said in a Facebook post on Sunday. Click through to see more photos of Maynard's life.Brittany Maynard with her dog Charley in San Francisco. Maynard, a 29-year-old with terminal brain cancer, has died, advocacy group Compassion and Choices said in a Facebook post on Sunday. Click through to see more photos of Maynard's life.

Maynard, second from right, visits the Grand Canyon with her family in October. She had said the Grand Canyon was the last item on her bucket list.Maynard, second from right, visits the Grand Canyon with her family in October. She had said the Grand Canyon was the last item on her bucket list.

Maynard at age 4 with her mom, Debbie.Maynard at age 4 with her mom, Debbie.

Maynard with her mom during a trip.Maynard with her mom during a trip.

Maynard, right, poses for a photo during her travels.Maynard, right, poses for a photo during her travels.

Maynard and her husband, Dan Diaz, on their wedding day. They had been married a little more than a year when she was diagnosed with brain cancer.Maynard and her husband, Dan Diaz, on their wedding day. They had been married a little more than a year when she was diagnosed with brain cancer.

Maynard shares a moment with her bridesmaids on her wedding day.Maynard shares a moment with her bridesmaids on her wedding day.









  • Brittany Maynard, 29, who had cancer, ended her life under Oregon's Death With Dignity Act

  • Ronald Green supports efforts to expand access to physician-assisted suicide

  • He says it's an expression of respect for human freedom, autonomy and dignity

  • Green: Why not allow people who believe differently to end their lives in way they see fit?




Editor's note: Ronald M. Green is a professor for the study of ethics and human values at Dartmouth College. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.


(CNN) -- I strongly support Brittany Maynard's impassioned efforts to expand everyone's access to physician-assisted suicide. It is tragic that she died so young, but her life has made an important contribution to us all.


I am an adamant opponent of physicians ever becoming agents of death. The lessons of the Holocaust, which began with a euthanasia program, are that once medical professionals become accustomed to administering death, we have created a frightening corps of people whose very "medical" prestige facilitates mass killing of the vulnerable. Hence I oppose physician involvement in capital punishment (via lethal injection) and all forms of euthanasia in which physicians are actively involved.



Ronald M. Green


But physicians are not actively involved in physician-assisted suicide. In jurisdictions where physician-assisted suicide is permitted and where proper safeguards are in place to prevent depressed or otherwise ineligible people from access to lethal drugs, physicians play a standard medical role of ascertaining applicants' eligibility for the appropriate medications. Then the physicians get out of the way.


It may seem strange to say this, but the reason that you and I as free individuals cannot access life-ending drugs is because governments have imposed rules that require prescription approval by physicians for such drugs. Hence, it is governments, and doctors acting on their behalf, who normally -- and wisely -- block our access to dangerous medications.


Maynard's mourners grieve on social media





Maynard's choice, in her own words




Death With Dignity advocate dies

Where physician-assisted suicide is allowed, physicians withdraw from this role -- they stop blocking our free access to the drugs we need to end our life. They are not administering death by writing a prescription.


Just the opposite, they get out of our way as free people and allow us to do what we want to do. Physicians cease their active blocking role and literally do nothing. We are the ones who act to end our lives.



I feel this is appropriate. In addition, I believe that people who are facing the end of life -- terminally ill patients such as Maynard -- and those suffering grievous and irreversible pain should be free to end their life. This is a simple expression of respect for human freedom, autonomy and dignity, and it is also an expression of compassion to allow them to do it.


Experience with physician-assisted suicide has shown that many people who go through the process of applying for it do not finally avail themselves of the right to do so. This tells us that physician-assisted suicide plays an important role in providing comfort and assurance that one will not be forced to suffer beyond what one can bear.


There are many who, on religious or other grounds, oppose suicide in any form. I respect their beliefs, and I would defend their right to refuse to end their lives by their own hand. But mutual respect here also requires that we allow others who believe differently to end their lives in the way they see fit, as Brittany Maynard has now courageously done.


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Wallenda's blindfolded tightrope walk





  • NEW: The seventh-generation aerialist's walk was broadcast on Discovery

  • NEW: Nik Wallenda was blindfolded for part of the walk between two skyscrapers

  • Wallenda is a member of the Flying Wallendas, founded by his grandfather in the 1920s




(CNN) -- Record-breaking daredevil Nik Wallenda completed Sunday what he called his most challenging feat to date: a tightrope walk between two skyscrapers 600 feet above downtown Chicago, partly blindfolded.


Crowds below cheered on the seventh-generation aerialist, who wore a microphone during his untethered walk. The "Skyscraper Live" walk was broadcast on Discovery.


"I love Chicago, and Chicago definitely loves me. What an amazing roar," the 35-year-old said as he crossed above the Chicago River.


The walk consisted of two parts, starting from Marina City's West Tower, about 588 feet high. He crossed above the Chicago River to the Leo Burnett Building in just under seven minutes, finishing 671 feet above the street, according to Skyscraper Live's website.





Daredevil tightrope walker does it again








Aerialist Nik Wallenda traversed this wire Sunday above downtown Chicago. Click through the gallery for other Wallenda stunts through the years.Aerialist Nik Wallenda traversed this wire Sunday above downtown Chicago. Click through the gallery for other Wallenda stunts through the years.



Wallenda walks on a tightrope 1,500 feet above a river near the Grand Canyon in Arizona on Sunday, June 23. The quarter-mile trek over the Little Colorado River Gorge took 22 minutes and 54 seconds.Wallenda walks on a tightrope 1,500 feet above a river near the Grand Canyon in Arizona on Sunday, June 23. The quarter-mile trek over the Little Colorado River Gorge took 22 minutes and 54 seconds.



Wallenda with his sister Lijana, left, and his wife, Erendira, at Circus Sarasota in February in Florida. Nik and Lijana are members of the famous Flying Wallendas, founded by great-grandfather Karl in the 1920s. See the Wallenda family through the years.Wallenda with his sister Lijana, left, and his wife, Erendira, at Circus Sarasota in February in Florida. Nik and Lijana are members of the famous Flying Wallendas, founded by great-grandfather Karl in the 1920s. See the Wallenda family through the years.



Wallenda tighropes over the Niagara Falls in June 2012, becoming the first person to cross directly over the falls from the United States into Canada. Wallenda tighropes over the Niagara Falls in June 2012, becoming the first person to cross directly over the falls from the United States into Canada.



The seventh-generation aerialist crosses Niagara Falls in June 2012. The tense 1,800-foot journey took 25 minutes, a CNN affiliate reported.The seventh-generation aerialist crosses Niagara Falls in June 2012. The tense 1,800-foot journey took 25 minutes, a CNN affiliate reported.



Crowds watch the daredevil during a 1,500-foot tightrope walk 100 feet above the beach in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in August 2012. Crowds watch the daredevil during a 1,500-foot tightrope walk 100 feet above the beach in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in August 2012.



Wallenda wows beachgoers in Atlantic City in August 2012.Wallenda wows beachgoers in Atlantic City in August 2012.



Wallenda performs during prerace ceremonies for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series: Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, in October 2012.Wallenda performs during prerace ceremonies for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series: Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, in October 2012.



Wallenda walks one of the Sky Ride cables at the Cedar Point amusement park in Sandusky, Ohio, in July 2009.Wallenda walks one of the Sky Ride cables at the Cedar Point amusement park in Sandusky, Ohio, in July 2009.



Wallenda performs a "Wheel of Death" stunt at the Tropicana Casino and Resort in Atlantic City in April 2011. Wallenda performs a "Wheel of Death" stunt at the Tropicana Casino and Resort in Atlantic City in April 2011.



Wallenda crosses the Fiesta Plaza in The Quarter at the Tropicana Casino and Resort in Atlantic City in April 2011. Wallenda crosses the Fiesta Plaza in The Quarter at the Tropicana Casino and Resort in Atlantic City in April 2011.



Wallenda wipes sweat from his forehead as he maneuvers across a 300-foot-long wire suspended 100 feet in the air between two towers of Puerto Rico's Conrad San Juan Condado Plaza Hotel in June 2011.Wallenda wipes sweat from his forehead as he maneuvers across a 300-foot-long wire suspended 100 feet in the air between two towers of Puerto Rico's Conrad San Juan Condado Plaza Hotel in June 2011.



Wallenda walks a 1,000-foot-long high-wire suspended 200 feet over the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh in July 2009. Wallenda walks a 1,000-foot-long high-wire suspended 200 feet over the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh in July 2009.



Wallenda kisses his wife, Erendira, after the stunt above the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh in July 2009. Wallenda kisses his wife, Erendira, after the stunt above the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh in July 2009.



Wallenda pedals to the end of a wire 12 stories above a Newark, New Jersey, street in October 2008. He earned the Guiness World Record for the longest distance and greatest height traveled by bicycle on a high wire when he traveled 235 feet at a height of 135 feet.Wallenda pedals to the end of a wire 12 stories above a Newark, New Jersey, street in October 2008. He earned the Guiness World Record for the longest distance and greatest height traveled by bicycle on a high wire when he traveled 235 feet at a height of 135 feet.




Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire

Nik Wallenda on the high wire






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Photos: Nik Wallenda on the high wirePhotos: Nik Wallenda on the high wire



After he returned to the West Tower, he crossed to the East Tower blindfolded in one minute and 20 seconds.


As a member of the famous Flying Wallendas, founded by his grandfather Karl Wallenda in the 1920s, Wallenda is no stranger to death-defying stunts. He walked across a wire 1,500 feet above a river in Arizona in June 2013, becoming the first person to traverse the gorge near Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Before that, he made a record journey across Niagara Falls in 2012.


Peril also runs in the Wallenda family. Great-grandfather Karl Wallenda was killed at 73 while attempting to walk between two buildings in Puerto Rico in 1978.


But on Sunday, Wallenda made it look easy.


"I'm so blessed for these opportunities," he said during his walk. "You guys watching think I'm crazy, but this is what I was made for."







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