Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Retailers enjoy another day of bumper trade in Belfast

Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Retailers in Belfast have enjoyed another busy day as thousands of bargain hunters flocked to the city centre to take advantage of the post-Christmas sales.

The annual event has been so successful some department stores reported an increase in sales from last year.

There were concerns last week that below-freezing temperatures which left Northern Ireland covered in snow and ice would have a detrimental effect on trade right over the festive period.

Generally the week before Christmas is the busiest period for stores, however in the lead-up to the big day many shoppers stayed away as they avoided any unnecessary journeys along treacherous roads.

But as the thaw set in the bargain hunters came out, keen to get their hands on heavily discounted items before the VAT increase comes in at the end of the year.

One retailer recording an increase in trade was House of Fraser. The department store inside Victoria Square had begun its annual sale early and dozens of shoppers queued outside the Belfast premises on Boxing Day eager to get their hands on a bargain.

Store manager Michelle Jackson said there were even more customers yesterday.

She attributed this to a combination of increased trading hours and the thaw.

“Today was definitely busier than Sunday, although that is because of the trading hours. But I would still say today has had higher footfall,” she said.

“Overall the sale has been very positive for us so far.

“Last week we finished third in the company for our sale. And even though there was bad weather, it certainly didn’t impact on us.

“We had a much stronger performance than we have ever seen and we always do well at Christmas. And coming into the sale yesterday, footfall has been huge and we showed significant increase on last year.”

CastleCourt duty manager Binder Tohani said the Royal Avenue shopping complex has also fared very well in the sales.

On Sunday there were queues of customers waiting for the centre to open.

And yesterday its car park was full by 12pm.

“I haven’t got like-for-like figures but we have been extremely pleased with footfall. But certainly, it seems the numbers have been as we have expected,” she said.

“There were queues outside retailers’ doors. Our car park was full from 12pm so it’s been very busy.

“The weather hasn’t deterred people from coming in — in fact it has helped. The thaw has been better for people coming into the centre.

“Debenhams is one of our anchor stores and whenever they have their big sales it’s always a big positive for the centre.

“I would say a lot of the retailers are wanting to pull in as much trade as possible, that is why there is 50% off in a lot of stores.

“I would say both days are on par.

“Boxing Day there were queues outside the shops but today we were open for longer.

“It has been very positive and we are looking forward to the rest of the week.”

Family’s gun attack horror

House shooting and gang assault outrages condemned

Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Politicians have condemned those responsible for two separate attacks in Co Antrim over the Christmas break.

Shots were fired at one house in the Dunfane Park area of Ballymena during the early hours of Monday, while a gang armed with baseball bats attacked another home in the nearby Ballykeel estate on Boxing Day.

Police are investigating motives for both attacks.

North Antrim Sinn Fein MLA Daithi McKay described the |incidents as shocking.

He said: “Obviously both these attacks have to be condemned outright. Both have used bully-boy tactics of intimidation.

“Local residents in both areas do not want to see this type of |behaviour being used in their communities.”

On Boxing Day four men armed with baseball bats and other weapons burst into a house in the Lewis Park area of Ballykeel at around 6.30am.

Two windows were broken during the incident.

A short time later four men, two aged 38 and 35 and another

two both aged 32, were arrested and later released on bail.

And yesterday a man and woman were terrified when shots were fired at their Dunfane Park home just after 3am.

While no-one was injured during the incident, the front windows of the house were damaged.

Mr McKay said the attack on the home was “abhorrent”.

“An attack on a family home at any time of year is terrible but it is particularly abhorrent that this should take place at Christmas,” he said.

“It is to be condemned outright and I would urge anyone who saw anything suspicious in the Dunfane area in the early hours |of this morning to bring that |information forward.

“This is a relatively quiet estate and people here are shocked that this shotgun attack has taken place.”

North Antrim SDLP MLA Declan O'Loan expressed his |shock at the attack.

“Dunfane Park is a quiet, residential development of owner occupied houses and it is not something that you would expect to be happening there,” he said.

Police have appealed for information on both attacks.

Britain's banks attempt to suppress student's exposé of chip and pin security

By Richard Garner,
Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Computer scientists have become embroiled in angry exchanges with Britain's banks and credit card lenders, accusing them of bullying and trying to "censor" a PhD student who was exposing flaws in chip-and-pin machines.

A leading Cambridge academic has now written to bankers' representatives demanding that they stop pressing for the removal of a student's doctorate work from the web.

Professor Ross Anderson, from Cambridge University's Computer Laboratory, has previously researched glitches in chip-and-pin banking that allow withdrawals to be made from accounts without needing to know the holder's PIN. As part of his thesis work, one of his students, Omar Choudary, exposed how easy it was to make such a withdrawal.

Then the UK Cards Association, a trade body representing leading banking organisations, approached the university asking it to remove the thesis from his website, which is accessible through a university site.

Melanie Johnson, who chairs UKCA, argued that the web publication "oversteps the boundaries of what constitutes reasonable disclosure" by giving too much detail on how the chip-and-pin system could be breached.

Professor Anderson said her request "showed a misconception of what universities are and how we work... You seem to think that we might censor a student's thesis – which is lawful and already in the public domain – simply because a powerful interest group finds it inconvenient," he said.

"Cambridge is the university of Erasmus, of Newton and of Darwin. Censoring writings that offend the powerful is offensive to our deepest values."

He added: "I have authorised the thesis to be issued as a computer laboratory technical report. This will make it easier for people to find and to cite, and will ensure that its presence on our website is permanent." He rejected her allegation that the student was encouraging fraud by giving details of a blueprint for a device which is alleged to exploit a loophole in the security of chip-and-pin technology.

In her letter, which was sent to the university's head of communications, Ms Johnson also claimed that the police had expressed concern that the student was "allowed to falsify a transaction ... without first warning the merchant".

Professor Anderson said the transaction had been carried out with the consent of the card owner, adding: "At no time was there any intent to commit fraud; the [card owner's] account was debited in due course ... and the merchant [from whom he had purchased goods] was paid."

He added: "You complain that the work may undermine public confidence in the payments system. What will support confidence in the payments system is evidence that the banks are frank and honest in admitting weaknesses when they are exposed, and diligent in affecting the necessary remedies.

"Your letter shows that ... your member banks do their lamentable best to deprecate the work of those outside their cosy club and indeed to censor it."

Professor Anderson told The Independent: "Everyone in the university is behind us on this one. The thesis was on Omar Choudary's website and there is no way we can allow this to be censored."

He added that only Barclays had taken action to rectify the problem since the potential for abuse was exposed by researchers on a BBC Newsnight programme several months ago.

No one was available for comment at the UK Cards Association yesterday. The organisation allows membership to anyone responsible for at least 5 per cent of credit transactions.

Fears for petrol prices as oil hits two-year high

By James Thompson
Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Hard-pressed UK consumers look set to be hit by further increases in fuel costs in 2011 after the price of crude oil touched its highest level for more than two years on London's futures market yesterday.

Hard-pressed UK consumers look set to be hit by further increases in fuel costs in 2011 after the price of crude oil touched its highest level for more than two years on London's futures market yesterday.

The rise in the price of crude oil is being driven in part by comments over the weekend by the Arab group within the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which said that all its members were unlikely to meet until June to discuss quotas.

In London, Brent crude oil futures jumped by 44 cents to $94.21 (£61.25) a barrel – a 26-month high – on the futures exchange in early trading. While it eased back later to $93.98 following further reaction to China raising interest rates on Christmas Day, the pressure on oil prices appears to be heading in only one direction.

On the prospects of this upward movement pushing UK petrol prices higher, an AA spokesman said: "It is absolutely blinking horrible news for motorists." He added that even without any increase driven by world markets, UK motorists face a 0.76p rise in fuel duty – upon which they also pay VAT – on 1 January. Three days later, petrol prices will rise higher when the actual rate of VAT goes up from 17.5 per cent to 20 per cent. Oil prices are up by almost 30 per cent since September, pushing up both pump prices and wholesale gas costs, having hit a low of around $40 a barrel at the end of 2008.

The worry among economists is that higher oil prices – which hit both the fuel industry and the household gas and electricity sectors – will further drive up inflation and hamper the global economic recovery. According to the AA, the cost of unleaded petrol is now at a new record high of 123.26p a litre, up 14 per cent on a year ago.

The price of a litre of diesel is 127.47p, but this is still below a high of 135p in 2008. The AA spokesman said it was unclear whether the recent spike in oil prices was a long-term trend or if it was being driven by "short-term speculators in the market". The futures price of light sweet crude for delivery in February fell by 59 cents to $90.92 a barrel in early trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange yesterday, reflecting concerns over a dip in demand for fuel in China after the country's interest rate rise at the weekend.

Soaring petrol prices come at a bad time for UK consumers, who are battling inflation of 3.3 per cent. Three weeks ago, Npower became the latest of the "big six" energy providers to increase its prices – taking electricity and gas tariffs up by an average of 5 per cent in the new year – following similar increases from British Gas, ScottishPower, and Scottish and Southern Energy in recent weeks. According to Asda Income Tracker, transport is the "main contributing factor putting downward pressure on family spending power", giving families £174 per week to spend in November, down £6 on last year.

Northeast visitors, residents struggle to return to normal after storm

By the CNN Wire Staff
December 28, 2010 -- Updated 0345 GMT (1145 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: New Jersey lifts its state of emergency, one of many imposed for the blizzard
  • NEW: AirTran will run additional flights in the Northeast on Tuesday, a spokesman says
  • Over 4,155 flights were cancelled Monday because of the holiday-week storm
  • As much as 32 inches of snow fell in spots, while winds gusted as high as 80 mph

New York (CNN) -- Residents of and visitors to the Northeast struggled to return to normal Monday night, with the worst of a brutal holiday-week blizzard having passed but with the headaches remaining for tens of thousands of stranded airline passengers and for millions of people still digging out.

The storm produced blinding snow and wreaked havoc from the Carolinas to Maine. When all was said and done Monday, over 4,155 flights had been cancelled, up to 32 inches of snow piled up in spots, and wind gusts blew as strong as 80 mph.

"This storm was one of the most challenging storms we've had in a decade or two," New York's LaGuardia Airport General Manager Thomas Bosco said. "We had 25 inches several years ago, but the snow stayed in place. Today the snow piles are drifting."

The New York metropolitan area's three airports began a slow process to get things back on track after being closed for nearly 24 hours, while airlines worked to get passengers to their final destinations.

New York airport opens runway
Bloomberg urges New Yorkers to stay put
Wintery White Christmas
Travelocity editor offers tips on delays

One runway at LaGuardia opened by 5:45 p.m., said Bosco, though only ten planes were expected to touch down tonight -- and not until 7:30 p.m. Two departures were scheduled.

John F. Kennedy Airport, further south in the same New York City borough of Queens, and Newark Liberty International, in northern New Jersey, opened to incoming and departing traffic at 6 p.m., said Port Authority spokeswoman Sara Joren.

AirTran spokesman Christopher White noted that his airline didn't plan any more cancellations Tuesday, after dropping 81 on Monday). He said that AirTran, instead, planned to operate additional flights out of LaGuardia, Boston's Logan Airport and White Plains Westchester County Airport to get people home.

And in another move back toward normalcy, New Jersey's Senate President Stephen Sweeney -- stepping in as acting governor -- rescinded the state of emergency in that state shortly after 10 p.m. That was one of several such orders issued in states and cities as the storm barrelled up the East Coast, as officials executed emergency plans to tried to expedite assistance.

Earlier in the day, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg urged residents not to dial 911 unless calling about a life-saving emergency, as edgy travelers continue to face difficult weather conditions stemming from the fifth-largest storm in the city's history.

Parts of Brooklyn had 24 inches of snow, according to the National Weather Service -- shy of the 32 inches reported in Rahway, New Jersey. High winds were also a problem, including gusts as strong as 80 mph in Wellfleet on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

The federal Transportation Security Administration was coordinating with airports and airlines to bolster staffing as necessary when flights resumed, according to spokeswoman Sterling Payne.

Travelers were seen sleeping on cots and atop luggage carousels overnight, while less fortunate people bedded down on airport floors.

"It looked like everybody was camping inside," said Jacob Chmielecki, who was stranded with his family at New York's LaGuardia airport.

His father, Mike, said he "thought we were going to be on the floor."

"The cots were an upgrade," he said.

Antonio Christopher, who said he spent two nights sleeping at Heathrow Airport in London, England, where snow caused major delays earlier this month, found himself in a similar situation across the pond on Monday.

"It's one of those things," he said. "You have to keep up about these things. It was a blizzard. There's nothing you can do about it."

Amtrak, which had canceled service between Boston and New York on Sunday, said Monday that it had resumed limited service between the two cities. But spokesman Cliff Cole warned that many trains may already be sold out.

The passenger-train service's decision to cancel service on Sunday affected some 10,000 passengers.

In New York, some 400 passengers were trapped overnight aboard a Manhattan-bound subway as a result of weather conditions, according to Metropolitan Transportation Authority spokesman Charles Seaton.

Stranded on the tarmac for hours
New York blanketed in snow
Stranded by the snow at Heathrow

The train was stopped between 1 a.m.ET and 8 a.m.ET during the above-ground portion of its trip from Queens, New York, he said. Once the train was able to move on, it arrived in Manhattan and there were no reports of injuries to any of the passengers.

"It was a big storm and it hit us hard," said New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Jay Walder, who said Long Island Railroad cancellations also left hundreds stranded at the city's Pennsylvania railroad station.

By early Monday evening, Amtrak trains to and from Penn Station were subject to 30-minute delays due to signal problems.

"Because of cancellations, some trains are being consolidated and some passengers may find themselves without a seat," said Amtrak spokesman Steve Kulm.

Some regional trains also were making extra stops in an effort to accommodate passengers, he said.

There also were delays on Washington- and Boston-bound trains, as well as on routes from Philadelphia to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, because of weather related problems with switches, Kulm added.

"Everybody is kind of anxious and I'm not sure whether we're going to get out," said John Tsatogas, a program officer at the National Science Foundation in Washington, who had been visiting friends in New York. "They've been asking me for 20 years to come and visit," he said. "It was the wrong year."

New Jersey transit service also was suspended due to signal issues, according to transit spokesperson Dan Stessel.

"Real big gusts, very very cold, and the train stuck on the tracks in Secaucus Junction with no electricity (and) doors open," said CNN Correspondent Christine Romans, who waited alongside other passengers aboard a New Jersey train. "Everone's very, very discouraged but they're trying figure out what is the next train they can get on."

Midtown direct trains that normally operate off the Morris-Essex line into New York were being rerouted to Hoboken, New Jersey, until signal problems were resolved, Stessel said.

Travel by road was also difficult. Emergency declarations were in place Monday in Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey and Massachusetts, among other places.

Some 50 people aboard two tour buses traveling from Atlantic City, New Jersey, to New York became stranded around midnight Monday on the Garden State Parkway near West Trenton, according to New Jersey State Police spokesman Stephen Jones.

Police had freed one bus from the snow, but were still struggling to free the second one on Monday, Jones said.

"It's a matter of trying to get tow trucks out there," he said. "The bus is actually off the road and has to be pulled out from where it is. And there are no tow trucks with heavy-duty tows available."

Up to 50 cars also were trapped near the bus, said state police spokesman Rick Fuentes. Half of those cars were abandoned as 5-foot snow drifts rendered sections of the road virtually impassable, Fuentes said.

Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell has asked people to stay off the state's roads unless absolutely necessary, said Peter Boynton, the commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Emergency Management.

"If you have to be on the road, of course, the rule of the day is take it slow," he said.

Many residents were seen stocking up on food and supplies at local markets in anticipation of the weather.

"The lines went out the door and around the store," said CNN Producer Katy Byron in Weston, Connecticut. "You could hear plows working throughout the night and today we haven't even started shoveling because the wind has been gusting so much."

In New Jersey, acting Gov. Stephen Sweeney ordered state offices closed and urged motorists to stay off roadways.

In Massachusetts coastal flooding was an issue. Fire crews in Scituate, Massachusetts, had to use inflatable boats to rescue a family of four from a beachfront home after a vacant summer home next door caught fire, WCVB-TV reported. Three other people were rescued from another home, according to the station.

Gov. Deval Patrick said the state was handling the storm well despite the tremendous snow totals, high winds and flooding.

"We are used to severe weather this time of year and everybody seems to be coping," he said.

Airports that normally would have been flush with activity after Christmas were largely quiet Monday as many would-be travelers stayed away, thanks in part to many airlines' pre-emptive cancellations.

But not all. Shabaz Motan came to LaGuardia on Sunday afternoon even though he knew his flight to Chicago had been canceled. He was hoping to get a free hotel room or flight voucher from the airline, but he ended up sleeping on a cot because airline officials told him it wasn't their fault he couldn't fly.

"It's been tough," he said.

Julie Stratton also spent the night at LaGuardia. She was scheduled to fly to Indianapolis, Indiana, on Sunday, but said Monday she is now being told she may not be able to fly out until Thursday.

"It's not the best of scenarios, no," she said. "But you just have to make the best of it. There's nothing else you can do."

At JFK, travel writer Jason Cochran said airport restaurants were running out of food, the latest blow for fellow passengers who suffered through an uncomfortable night.

"I guess the best word is dejected," he said.

Most carriers were waiving penalties for passengers traveling Sunday and Monday to airports from North Carolina to Boston and beyond. Affected customers were being urged to contact the relevant airline either by phone or online.

In North Carolina, icy road conditions were blamed for three deaths. Still, the most pervasive impact was in the Northeast, with high winds as much as the snows leaving many without electricity Monday.

According to Connecticut Light & Power's website, the number of its customers affected by the storm rose dramatically to 33,712 by Monday afternoon -- up from 13,000 Monday morning. CL&P services 1.2 million Connecticut residents so only about 2% of customers state-wide had been affected.

"We are actually down from about 9,000 customers without power over the weekend," said Con Edison spokeswoman D. Joy Faber. "We also have a number of trees and power lines that were knocked down, so we're advising all of our customers to stay away from the downed lines."

Meanwhile, the NFL announced that a game between the Minnesota Vikings and the Philadelphia Eagles -- originally scheduled for Sunday night -- had been postponed until 8:20 p.m. Tuesday.

Still, the storm's timing, coming over a holiday weekend, was fortuitous for some and disastrous for others. City and state officials predicted that the blizzard's impact on the economy and businesses might be muted, because many people had the holiday weekend off and fewer were expected to be commuting into work than normal on Monday.

"With the people who are staying home for the holidays, it's great, but we know a lot of people who are trying to get home," said Brett Martin, claiming his hometown of Virginia Beach, Virginia, had received almost a foot of snow. "We're just playing games and hanging out by the fire."

CNN's Allan Chernoff, Jason Kessler, Allan Chernoff, Greg Botelho, Georgette Knuckles, Holly Yan, Nick Valencia, Chuck Johnston, Nina Golgowski, Katy Byron, David Ariosto and Susan Candiotti contributed to this report.

Tokyo's best and worst of 2010

Electric cars, virtual celebs and a 'Monster' video game launch -- the leaders and losers of Neonland gave us another year of superlatives

Best movie launch

Boasting a heady mix of nostalgia and sex appeal, the new movie version of Space Battleship Yamato, an anime series that began in 1974, sent the Japanese media hype machine into overdrive.

The most surreal moment? Seeing star Takuya Kimura -- the man regularly voted Japan’s sexiest male celeb -- distract the crew of a working warship with a vague, “Keep up the good work” speech, as baffled seamen stood to attention.

best worst japan 2010 utada
Utada's farewell sparked a storm of tears.

Best goodbye

When Japan’s biggest-selling artist said goodbye, the world paid attention.

The first of Utada Hikaru’s two-night farewell concerts, Wild Life, was simulcast to 64 theaters around Japan and to viewers worldwide via Ustream.

The second show, on December 9, was the big goodbye. The relatively cozy Yokohama Arena (“only” 20,000 seats) featured a round stage in the center of the arena, allowing Utada to bid fans adieu from close range.

Since Utada has hinted that she’ll come back with a new sound after a well-earned sabbatical, for now we'll just say, “See you later."

Worst controversy with a neighbor

On September 7, a Chinese fishing trawler collided with two Japanese Coast Guard ships in the waters surrounding the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea. Both Japan and China lay claim to the islands, and the issue quickly became a diplomatic nightmare.

In November, as the Japanese public bayed for answers, a Kobe-based Coast Guard officer uploaded a video of the incident on YouTube.

The footage and report were removed within 10 hours, and the Supreme Public Prosecutor’s Office of Japan launched an investigation against YouTube operator Google.

The controversy passed and no one was prosecuted, but relations between Japan and China suffered severe damage.

best worst japan 2010 wikileaks
Japan got off lightly ... so far.

Worst headache for Japanese bureaucrats

Although the contents of nearly 6,000 classified documents sent from the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo have been released by WikiLeaks, Japanese bureaucrats have so far gotten off lightly.

Except for Amano Yukiya, Japanese head of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Amano was found to be “solidly in the U.S. court on every key strategic decision, from high-level personnel appointments to the handling of Iran’s alleged nuclear weapons program.”

So much for improving relations with Iran anytime soon.

But the biggest headache for Japanese government workers is that now they reportedly must search WikiLeaks daily for potentially damaging material.

best worst japan 2010 leaf
Nissan is leading the way for eco-cars.

Best ecological export

Despite Japan’s love of waste (Who needs a croissant wrapped in three plastic bags?), Nissan became the world’s first company to introduce a mass-market electric vehicle.

Introduced in December in the U.S., the Leaf, a compact five-door hatchback, quickly racked up more than 20,000 orders. The Japanese launch followed a week later.

Best cultural invasion

While South Korea may have a more serious invasion to worry about, its entertainers continued their assault on Japan’s pop music market in 2010.

In June, Xiah Junsu of boy band Tohoshinki scooped the year’s biggest first-week sales for a solo artist, shifting 195,000 copies of his single “Xiah.” Meanwhile, Girls Generation seemed to be everywhere -- including the coveted advertising space above Shibuya’s 109 department store.

Korean acts such as Bigbang and Kara placed highly in the Oricon charts, leaving the J-pop industry pondering its defense strategy. Coincidence, then, that no Korean acts were invited to perform on annual year-end music show, “Kohaku Uta Gassen”?

best worst japan 2010 summer
Warm summer, warm winter in Japan.

Worst side effect of climate change

Summer 2010 was Japan’s hottest since record-keeping began, with temperatures in the 30s for weeks on end.

It was excellent! Or was it? The heatwave reportedly led to more than 130 deaths and 30,000 hospitalizations across Japan, and made plain the encroaching effects of climate change.

So far, winter 2010 has been unusually warm, leading to short sleeves in November and ice cream cake for Christmas.

Worst shopping experience

The Shibuya branch of Loft is one of our favorite spots for gift shopping.

In the run-up to Christmas, however, the department store's decision to play one particularly kitsch Christmas song over and over and over and over and over on a loop on every floor of the store stretched our patience worryingly thin.

Here’s hoping the poor saps who work there get issued industrial-grade earplugs.

Best new way in and out of Tokyo

On October 21, Haneda Airport opened a new terminal and runway to accommodate international flights for the first time since 2002, linking it with 17 cities around the world.

The revamped airport could make Tokyo a 24-hour international air hub, but what the news means for most of us is a much shorter journey to and from the airport: Haneda is just 15 kilometers from the heart of Tokyo, a quarter of the distance to Narita International Airport.

Airport enhancements include a full-size Edo-style shopping street, and a planetarium cafe, where star-crossed lovers can dream of destinations celestial.

best worst japan 2010 monster
A monster hit of a game.

Best video game launch

Almost single-handedly reviving Sony’s once-mocked PlayStation Portable handheld console, “Monster Hunter” is a big deal here, if not so much overseas.

Lines for the latest iteration, “Portable 3rd," stretched to the thousands at stores on its December 1 release date. Two million copies of the game shipped in its first five days on the market.

PSP versions of the game are best played in a linked group of four, and “Monster Hunter” parties quickly sprung up at cafes, fast food joints and even convenience stores, putting paid to the notion that video games make you anti-social. Now, where did we put our Hunting Horn?

Best frosty snack

Gelato shops continued to spring up throughout Tokyo in 2010. While few served anything an actual Italian would recognize, Grom opened a branch in August at the mouth of Shibuya’s Center-gai that put authentic gelato into shoppers’ sticky hands.

With branches in 31 Italian cities, plus France and the U.S., Grom makes its gelato on the premises and with no chemical agents. It’s lower in fat than most gelato, one reason fashionistas have been happy to join lengthy queues at the elegant icery.

Best unexpected sporting achievement

Japan was stricken with football fever when the national team advanced to the second round of the FIFA World Cup in June.

Japan’s was the first team to qualify for this year’s tournament and ranked ninth overall -- highest among Asian teams.

Since games were played in South Africa, local revelers held dusk-till-dawn soccer parties, even after Japan’s defeat.

But it was the Samurai Blue’s two wins and one draw that triggered the true celebrations -- and the rare sight of Tokyoites hugging strangers in the street.

Shanghai's best and worst of 2010

From dining triumphs and fashion missteps to the hottest creatives and biggest celebrity scandals, here are the winners, and losers, of Shanghai's last year
Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - Sinan Mansions
Bartender Ryan Noreiks is mixing things up at one of the hottest new places in Sinan Mansions: Kelley Lee's The Alchemist.

Best new eat and drink destination: Sinan Mansions

This faux-historic Xintiandi look-alike is the latest nightlife spot in the French Concession.

An impressive proportion of Shanghai’s restaurateurs are here, from Kelley Lee’s The Alchemist and The Boxing Cat to Eduardo Vargas’ ChiCha pisco bar. Plus, David Laris’ four-in-one building housing his takeaway brand The Funky Chicken downstairs, and Yucca, The Fat Olive and his exclusive private chef’s table 12 Chairs on the upper levels.

For Chinese cuisine, Shanghai veteran chain restaurant Xiao Nanguo has launched new upscale restaurant Maison de le’Hui.

Best new creatives: Shuangfei Art Collective

This Hangzhou-based group made their mark on the Shanghai scene this year, with multiple exhibitions at the Cool Docks and at Get It Louder’s Sharism event.

Made up of six graduates of the prestigious China Academy of Art, Shuangfei specializes in subversive performance art, parody videos and pranks. Think: pretending to rob a bank. Although they’re based in Hangzhou -- which is now a mere bullet train ride away -- they still get our vote for Shanghai creatives of the year.

“In my opinion, there are no emerging Shanghainese artists as strong as Shuangfei,” says Leo Xu, associate director of Shanghai's James Cohan Gallery.

Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - shanghai soccer scandal
Shanghai player Shen Si at the top of his game, years before the 2010 soccer sandal.

Worst sports achievement: Shanghai football scandal

China’s football scandal hit Shanghai worse than most cities: two of our football heroes, the 37-year-old Shen Si and 34-year-old Qi Hong, were taken in by police in October to “give assistance” in the investigation of Chinese football corruption.

Although no official announcement has been made so far about the two players’ current situation, many suspect that the two have been arrested.

The investigation started with allegations of game-fixing in a 2003 match between Shanghai Guoji and Tianjin Taida.

Oriental Morning Post reports that Tianjin Taida spent RMB 12 million to buy off Shen and Qi, the two most important players in Shanghai Guoji at the time.

Best fast food revival: America’s finest open in Shanghai

For years, the image of U.S. fast food in Shanghai has been defined by McDonald’s, Pizza Hut and KFC. This year, we finally got some good greasy grub representation: a big fat welcome to Krispy Kreme and Carl’s Jr. Sure, these greasy donuts and burgers are far from gourmet and perhaps it’s a dubious honor, but it’s top of the lot for fast food, U.S.-style.

Best Chinese fashion icon: Fan Bingbing

Appearing in no less than seven feature films in 2010, this Mandopop singer and starlet has been ubiquitous on the silver screen, in cosmetics ads and on the red carpet.

“Off the red carpet, she looks impeccably chic, incorporating her personal style into the current season’s fashion trends,” says Shanghai style guru Tiffany Wu, co-founder of local boutique Heirloom Handbags what makes Fan a true fashion icon. “On screen, her dainty pale figure portrays a healthy body image, and most importantly, confidence.”

Worst stage style: Shang Wenjie, aka the Chinese Lady Gaga

The phrase “Oh My Lady Gaga” might have taken Chinese Internet chat rooms by storm, but 2010 was also the year of local imitations of the singer and her fabulous style.

Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - Shang Wenjie
Shang Wenjie's choice of a tie and suspenders are just the beginning of her questionable wardrobe choices.

Regarded as the Chinese Lady Gaga, 28-year-old Shanghainese singer Laura Shang (尚雯婕) was at the head of the pack as the winner of a singing talent show “Super Girl” in 2006, but this year she announced her temporary withdrawal from the entertainment industry.

It's widely assumed by the press that her hiatus is due to her unsuccessful PR strategy, including her controversial Lady Gaga-inspired stage style.

The Fudan University graduate initially started her career with a girl-next-door image, doing a 180-degree image shift into a shocking and alternative pop idol in more recent appearances.

“Styling is a very good stepping stone to success. My company collects the statistics for me. After my image shift, the outside world has shown 200 percent, or even 300 percent, more interest in me,” Shang told the press.

Shang’s more exaggerated outfits include a metallic hat and costume with a texture somewhere between a frog’s skin and a plastic armor.

Best side-effect of the 2010 Expo: Spacious, clean taxis

Roughly seven percent of Shanghai’s taxis are now of the big pimpin’ Volkswagen Touran sedan variety, known colloquially as “Expo Taxis.” The easily excitable among us tend to get a bit light-headed when they manage to flag down one of these bad boys.

Lest you think that these vehicles are pretty much the same as “regular” taxis, we’d like to remind you that they are leading the PVC seating revolution.

Worst celebrity scandal: Zhou Libo's weibo incident

Fans of Shanghainese stand up Comedian Zhou Libo were disappointed in the star in 2010 when he deviated from his signature clean routine, posting insulting comments on his weibo account. Although commenting on a range of people and issues, some of the most offensive included saying Chinese netizens are "sh*t," accusing the Internet of being "a public toliet" and calling the soul of Fang Zhouzi, who came into the spotlight in 2010 for helping expose high-level academic misconduct in China, "as abnormal as his voice."

Zhou reportedly lost over 200,000 followers over his comments.

Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - Jiaozhou Lu fire
Flowers and people lined the streets for days after the Jiaozhou Lu fire.

Best demonstration of Shanghai morale: The flower power on Jiaozhou Lu after the fire

Banquets, baskets and wreaths. Meters of flowers covered Jiaozhou Lu where over 50 victims died in a building fire on November 15.

White and yellow chrysanthemum, sent by thousands of people across the city, attested to the tragedy that happened there and the city's united, courageous response to it.

Best fashion trend: Boyish bowl cuts for girls

Some of the most fashionable Shanghai ladies we know have been rockin’ the bowl-cut in 2010, either bleached blonde or au naturel. It takes panache to pull off a haircut commonly associated with geeky eight-year-old boys, but fortunately the women of Shanghai have got that swagger in spades.

Best - Worst -- Barbie Hsu
Wang Xiaofei and Barbie Hsu (above) are the new faces of the Chinese flash marriage.

Best celebrity gossip: Wang Xiaofei and Barbie Hsu’s flash marriage

Barbie Hsu exemplifies the Chinese saying, “It's more important to marry well than for a marriage to work well."

This year the Taiwanese actress announced her marriage to Wang Xiaofei, director of restaurant group South Beauty, who controls a reported RMB 300 million fortune.

Thirty-four-year-old Hsu and 29-year-old Wang met on Taiwanese actress An Yixuan’s birthday party in late September and quickly fell in love.

Forty-nine days later Hsu posted their marriage registration photo on her weibo.

This flash marriage between the rich and the beautiful has secured Barbie Hsu, Wang Xiaofei and Wang’s mother Zhang Lan a headlining place on the entertainment press throughout mainland China and Taiwan for the past two months.

Although some suspected that the marriage was a stepping stone for South Beauty to enter the Taiwanese market, the group’s founder Zhang Lan denied the rumor in an exclusive interview with Taiwan’s Now News. She told the reporter that “South Beauty doesn’t need promotion in Taiwan because it’s already well known.”

Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - Strip
Although Shanghai is not historically a waxing-friendly city to say the least, with three new locations in 2010, Strip’s managers think that the city is ready to bare a bit more skin.

Best addition to the grooming scene: Strip: Ministry of Waxing

After opening their first Shanghai location in late 2009, this world-class waxing chain continued its expansion throughout our fair city this year.

To date, there are four Strip locations in Shanghai, staffed by battalions of smiley Striperellas armed with Lavender and Wild Berry Chocolate wax. Waging war on follicles is never going to be a day in the park, but Strip makes it almost pleasant. No small feat.

Worst food trend: Street food's disappearance

In 2010 we lost the wild and wonderful adventurous eats of Wujiang Lu’s street food market. We lost the breakfast street food of Tianping Lu.

We lost most of the street food in the Dongjiadu area, under the crane of development for a new mall. Much of the street food has been winnowed along with disappeared alleyways near the Old City. We mourn the loss of so much delicious, traditional street food and the livelihoods of all those skilled cooks who prepared it.

Best place we loved that's now overrun with tourists: Taikang Lu

Although once a quiet place to wander, shop and munch the day away, Taikang Lu is now overrun with people, almost to the levels of the crowded Nanjing Xi/Dong Lu.

When you stepped into this small street today, chances are that over 90 percent of the people you'll bump into are tourists. As the lane continues to value expansion over quality stores, the once chic and unique Taikang Lu is losing its appeal to Shanghaining.

Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - China
Gao Xiaosong is considered by many to be the godfather of Chinese contemporary folk music as well as the most 'honest' judge in "China’s Got Talent."

Best local TV show: 'China's Got Talent'

Since its launch on July 25, 2010, the Shanghai-based "China’s Got Talent" -- the newest member of the Got Talent franchise -- has been making waves across China for its contestants as well is its celebrity panel of judges. The top of the list? Winner Liu Wei, a young armless pianist, who plays with his feet. With a first year of hugely talented contestants and big-name celebrity judges, the 2011 season will have major rating to fill.

Best new fashion face: Ming Xi

Runway model Xi Mengyao is the biggest fashion icon to come out of Shanghai since model Du Juan.

Better known as Ming Xi to international audiences, the 21-year-old Shanghai native first caught people’s attention through a Shanghai-based talent show “Angel” in 2009.

Best and worst of Shanghai 2010 - Ming Xi
If this face is familiar, it might be because you've seen Ming Xi on catwalks around the world this year.
After making it to the Top 15 in the Elite Model Look World Final, Ming Xi rose to international fame by walking for Givenchy Haute Couture in Paris in January 2010.

The past September, Xi landed the cover of Vogue China’s fifth anniversary issue and successfully broke into the North American market during New York fashion week when she walked for designers including Alexander Wang, Tommy Hilfiger, Burberry and Lanvin.

When Ming Xi told Italian Vogue in an interview, “I believe that will be one day I do [modeling] perfectly,” you know you’re looking at the face of the next Chinese super model.

Worst line: China Pavilion

Under the "giant red Mahjong table" -- also known as the China Pavilion at the 2010 Shanghai Expo -- was the best place to verify just how many people China has, the area consistently hosting the longest lines at the Expo.

Lining up here was a feat of indurence, with many people waiting over six hours to get in -- and that's with reservations.

For those who couldn't stand the wait, their patience was rewarded as the China Pavilion annouced it would stay open an addiitonal six months post-Expo.

Best film about Shanghai: Jia Zhangke's 'I Wish I Knew'

"I Wish I Knew" by China's young master film director Jiang Zhangke is a documentary-film hybrid featuring Shanghai's tumultuous 20th-century history through the accounts of 18 interviewees who each have a deep connection with the city.

"I particularly hope this film could offer the background color to Shanghai, not the strange part," says Jia of the film.