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Fans weep as GFL officially books Tony Ferguson vs. Dillon Danis in ‘legendary Lightweight match up’

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Welcome to Midnight Mania!

Global Fight League (GFL) is dedicated to booking the match ups fans want to see.

Or, at least, the ones they think fans want to see? Earlier on Friday, the upstart promotion announced another match up featuring a decorated former UFC fighter in Tony Ferguson. Per the GFL, Ferguson will face controversial ex-Bellator fighter and Logan Paul opponent Dillon Danis, who still remains just 2-0 in his professional career. Apparently, that’s enough to qualify him for legend status, and GFL claims that match up was highly demanded.

The immediate reactions aren’t so positive despite the alleged desire from the fighting community. UFC Lightweight Terrance McKinney, for example, quickly responded that “Nobody asked for this.”

Take a gander at more of the responses on social media below:

“This one hurts”

“Quite possibly the worst poster ive ever seen”

“Dillon’s going to make 165? He’s fighting at 185 on March 29.”

“Dillion Danis is a country mile far from anything legendary positive”

“Wait Tony can actually win this”

“I’ll believe it when I see Danis in the cage. This dude’s flakier than a whole box of corn flakes.”

“Bumfights are making a comeback?”

For those who don’t remember, Ferguson was once one of the best Lightweights around, a genuine rival to Khabib Nurmagomedov and owner of one of the best 155-pound win streaks in UFC history. Alas, “El Cucuy” began to fall apart after a five-round shellacking at the hands of Justin Gaethje. As soon as his win streak ended, Ferguson began the longest losing streak in UFC history.

Maybe he rebounds in GFL? There’s still no debut date for the controversial legends promotion, but theoretically it should happen at some point in Q2 2025.

Insomnia

Is it not time to give Montel Jackson a high-profile fight? Guy has won five in a row in consistently impressive fashion.

Yuki Yoza has perhaps the coolest close quarters punch-and-kick combinations I’ve ever seen.

I’ll confess that seeing several of my friends in their early-to-mid 20s “live the dream” of getting signed to the UFC via Contenders Series and then end up released with little to show for it within a few years was rather demoralizing. A tough industry has gotten tougher …

It can be easy to accidentally be disrespectful of a cutting fighter. Ilia Topuria was ready to throw it all away!

#ApexSlopStats

The UFC roster bloodletting continues …

If you weren’t around back in 2013 or so, there was a brief period where old man Vitor Belfort was the scariest fighter alive. He will ALWAYS be the face of TRT to those who remember!

Slips, rips, and KO clips

Karate Combat and spinning backfists are a match made in heaven.

Ex-UFC Welterweight Dwight Grant falls victim to the parry across the body-left hook counter shot.

Fatigued and on the fence is another bad spot to be … note the standing hammerfist!

Random Land

Biblical.

Midnight Music: Hip-hop, 2024

Sleep well Maniacs! More martial arts madness is always on the way.




This story originally appeared on MMA Mania

Classic symptoms of condition affecting women that many don’t know

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Half of young adults do now know what endometriosis is, despite the condition affecting one in 10 women, a survey of 2,000 people suggests.

As Endometriosis Action Month begins on Saturday, a charity has warned that many health practitioners including GPs and A&E doctors do not recognise the symptoms, resulting in missed opportunities to stop the disease progressing.

Endometriosis UK is calling on UK governments to to ensure menstrual wellbeing education is implemented in all schools and improve education for all healthcare practitioners.

Emma Cox, the charity’s chief executive, said: “The simple fact is that not enough people know what endometriosis is.

“Such a common and often debilitating disease deserves the same level of recognition as conditions like diabetes and asthma.”

What is endometriosis?

Endometriosis occurs when cells similar to the ones in the lining of the womb (uterus) are found elsewhere in the body.

It is often found in areas around the womb, such as the ovaries, fallopian tubes and lining of the pelvis. It also sometimes affects organs, such as the bladder and bowel.

The condition can also lead to difficult getting pregnant, low mood and anxiety.

The exact cause of endometriosis is unknown. It is one of the most common gynaecological conditions, affecting an estimated 1.5 million women in the UK.

What happens when people are diagnosed late?

Sufferers wait an average of almost nine years for a diagnosis, according to Endometriosis UK.

The condition can have a serious impact on their ability to work, and physical and mental health.

A survey for the charity last year found that 78% of respondents who later went on to receive a diagnosis had experienced one or more doctor telling them they were making a “fuss about nothing” or similar comments.

Tests used to diagnose endometriosis include an ultrasound scan and a procedure called a laparoscopy, where a camera is passed through an incision in the abdomen.

How is endometriosis treated?

There are no treatments that can cure endometriosis, but symptoms including pain can be managed.

Patients may be offered painkillers or hormones, such as the combined contraceptive pill.

Some may also be offered surgery to remove affected tissue, the womb, ovaries of parts of the bladder or bowel that are affected.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

HP Is Laying Off Up to 2,000 Employees By October

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HP is laying off up to 2,000 people of its 58,000-person global workforce. The computer and printer giant disclosed the news in an SEC filing on Thursday.

“HP expects incremental gross workforce reductions of approximately 1,000 to 2,000 employees,” the filing reads. “The changes to the workforce will vary by country, based on local legal requirements and consultations with employee works councils and other employee representatives, as appropriate.”

The layoffs are expected to occur before the close of HP’s fiscal year 2025, which ends in October. The cuts could help HP save up to $300 million, per the filing.

HP has not specified the departments set to be affected by the cuts or the roles that will be impacted. CEO Enrique Lores told Bloomberg on Friday that the latest round of layoffs will occur “all over the company” and that HP has been “very selective and very strategic” about where to make cuts.

Related: HP Wants You to ‘Never Own A Printer Again,’ Launches Rental Subscription

“It’s not only cuts, we are also doing rebalancing,” Lores said. “At the same time, we’re investing in other areas.”

Lores specified that HP’s high-priority investment areas include AI and customer experience.

HP CEO Enrique Lores. Photographer: Annabelle Chih/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The layoffs are part of HP’s cost-cutting initiative “Future Now,” which the company introduced in November 2022, per The Wall Street Journal.

The initiative originally aimed to lay off 7,000 employees. With the new round of cuts, the total number of laid-off workers could tick up to 9,000 employees, with overall savings reaching $1.9 billion.

The layoff news arrived as HP posted its fiscal first quarter 2025 earnings on Thursday. Net revenue for the company was up 2.4% year-over-year, reaching $13.5 billion.

Related: Humane’s ‘Ai Pin’ Wanted to Be the Next Smartphone. Now the Company Is Being Sold to HP For Parts.



This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

Soaring egg prices cost restaurant owner $20K more each week

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A rampant bird flu outbreak has sent egg prices soaring and the dining industry scrambling to catch up – with one Washington, DC-based restaurateur claiming he shells out an extra $20,000 each week.

Steve Salis, founder and chief executive of Catalogue, a restaurant holding company that owns more than a dozen locations across the Delaware-Maryland-Virginia area, said he started to notice his egg costs were piling up in the second week of January. 

“I let it go for about two or three weeks,” Salis told The Post, “but then I started saying to myself, ‘Oh my goodness’…I was on track to eat north of a million dollars [this year] and then some.”

Ted’s Bulletin restaurants offer a breakfast menu all day long. Catalogue

The avian flu has forced farmers to cull their flocks across the country, causing shortages that sent egg prices soaring 15.2% in January – the largest monthly increase since 2015, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Shortages have left customers fighting over a few cartons at the grocery store and restaurant owners struggling to contend with higher costs – especially breakfast chains that specialize in egg dishes, like Salis’ Ted’s Bulletin. 

In just a few weeks, Salis said he went from paying $32 for a case of eggs to more than $70.

And Ted’s Bulletin, which offers its breakfast menu all day long, serves up at least 25 dishes that contain eggs – requiring up to 500 fresh cases each week.

“When I started seeing in grocery stores that you couldn’t go and buy eggs, and if you did, you were so fortunate like it was like liquid gold…it told me everything I needed to know,” he told The Post.

Salis was born and raised in New Hampshire and started his career in the restaurant industry at 20, when he dropped out of college, moved to New York and worked as a caterer. 

Steve Salis, founder and chief executive of Catalogue, a restaurant holding company that owns more than a dozen locations in the DMV area. Catalogue

With 15 years in the industry under his belt, he decided this year to add a surcharge on his menu for the first time – a 75-cent fee on each menu item that includes eggs. 

“You don’t want to start slashing things that make your business important. You don’t want to reduce staff,” Salis said. 

Egg costs went from accounting for about 30% of his overall food purchases for Ted’s restaurants to as much as 45% now, Salis said.

Ted’s Bulletin – one of Catalogue’s five restaurant brands – is not the first to resort to an egg surcharge.

Salis said soaring egg prices are costing him an extra $20,000 a week for Ted’s Bulletin locations alone. Catalogue

Waffle House made headlines earlier this month when it added a 50-cent surcharge per egg to its menus. Denny’s, another large chain that specializes in breakfast dishes, quickly followed suit.

“It’s a bit of a balancing act,” Salis told The Post. “We’ve been juggling a lot for a long time.”

The jump in egg prices is a double whammy for breakfast chains, some of which are still recovering from pandemic-induced inflation, which forced many restaurants to shutter.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Zelensky must get peace back on track — and Trump needs to accept the abject apology

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Friday’s Oval Office blowup does no one any good, maybe not even Vladimir Putin. It’s up to, first, Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky and then President Trump to get the peace plan back on track.

Zelensky must swallow his pride, apologize, say he’s grateful for the American people and Trump’s desire to end the slaughter. Then say it again and again, as many times as necessary.

Trump needs to accept the apology and get the minerals deal signed, then proceed to foster a Kyiv-Moscow accord that serves both sides’ interests going forward, as well as those of the United States and the larger West.

At this point, the only real winner if the Ukraine war continues is China’s Xi Jinping — who gets to have Russia grow even more dependent on him while the West burns resources holding off the Kremlin’s forces.

By the way, US Democrats and European leaders have a duty here, too: Shut up.

Don’t try to exploit this mess to serve domestic US political ends, nor to shine the Eurocrats’ self-regarding contempt for Trump: Remember, they laughed off his public first-term warning against becoming more dependent on the Kremlin’s energy exports.

 Without diving into pointless blame games, we’ll note that the blowup was a two-sided production.

Somebody at the White House decided it was smart to have Trump, Zelensky and Veep JD Vance chatting publicly in advance of signing the deal.

Trump raised the reality of the hatred Zelensky has for Putin, then seemed to equate it with how “the other side” sees him.

He was talking about how hard that made it to reach any peace deal, but the Ukrainian couldn’t stop himself from starting to outline the very real reasons Putin can’t be trusted, etc.

The Russian autocrat, after all, has kidnapped thousands of children and killed tens of thousands of Ukrainians in a war he started.

Vance didn’t help by suggesting that the problem was people were more interested in “chest thumping” than diplomacy.

 And it snowballed from there.

But here’s the thing about diplomacy: You don’t need to like someone to make a deal. That not only goes for Putin and Zelensky, but for Trump and Zelensky.

You do what’s best for your country, not your personal pride; get it done, gentlemen. 



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Could buying FTSE 100 stocks lead to an early retirement?

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Image source: Getty Images

Since February 2020, the FTSE 100‘s grown (with dividends reinvested) by an average annual rate of 7.4%. I’m one of those people who’s benefitted from this increase. For several years now, I’ve been buying ‘blue-chip’ stocks to help fund my retirement.

But to my surprise it’s estimated that only 10% of Footsie shares are owned by pension funds. Despite this, I still believe the UK stock market offers excellent value for money.

FIRE

In 1992, a book was published, Your Money or Your Life, which claimed that — by making a number of sacrifices — it was possible for people to leave the workforce in their 30s or 40s. This doesn’t necessarily mean retiring. It’s all about giving people the choice of whether to work or not.

One of the ideas put forward is known as FIRE (financial independence, retire early). This involves saving or investing at least 50% of annual income. Apparently, it’s now gaining popularity via TikTok.

Good in theory

I’m going to test this concept by looking at the FTSE 100 and considering a ‘typical’ person.

According to Finder, the average UK adult, living in a city, has £11,268 of annual disposable income. Investing half of this each year (£5,634) for 20 years — at an annual growth rate of 7.4% — would generate an investment pot of £259,168.

Although impressive, I don’t think it’s enough to retire early.   

However, in my opinion, this doesn’t mean we should reject the idea of saving and investing. Instead, I think it’d be better to invest less for longer. That way it’s possible to get a more sustainable balance between living and saving to invest. This might not lead to an early retirement but it’d be a comfortable one.

Of course, buying shares carries some risks. There’s no guarantee that past growth rates will be repeated. However, history suggests that it’s possible to generate wealth by buying UK equities and taking a long-term view.

One idea

Those looking for a FTSE 100 stock to include in a well-balanced portfolio could consider buying shares in International Consolidated Airlines Group (LSE:IAG).

The group owns five airlines, including British Airways and Iberia, and is well positioned to benefit from the anticipated growth in air travel over the coming decades. The International Air Transport Association is predicting 4.1bn more passengers each year by 2043.

Its brands span the premium and low-cost markets, helping it to avoid overexposure to one particular segment.

At the moment, British Airways has approximately 50% of the slots at Heathrow. The government’s recent decision to allow further expansion at the airport has been welcomed by International Consolidated Airlines’ directors.

However, airline stocks can be risky. The group’s last annual report identified 58 risk factors covering everything from non-compliance with laws and regulations to strikes and an IT meltdown.   

Airline stocks are particularly vulnerable to rising fuel and staff costs. In the US alone, over the past four decades, 84 airlines have either gone bust or applied for bankruptcy protection.

But International Consolidated Airlines’ balance sheet remains robust. And its shares have a lower price-to-earnings ratio than the average of the world’s other listed airlines. Also, its 2024 results showed that its post-pandemic recovery is continuing. Its earnings comfortably beat analysts’ expectations.

For these reasons, those looking to build a decent retirement portfolio could consider International Consolidated Airlines shares.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Two AI developer strategies: Hire engineers or let AI do the work

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The stark difference in the way tech giants in China and the US are approaching AI for internal operations was illustrated late this week by separate announcements from Salesforce and Alibaba.

During an earnings call on Thursday, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff indicated that, as a result of AI, the company would not be hiring human engineers this year.

“I think that the big message I have for a lot of CEOs that I meet with is, ‘hey, we’re the last generation of CEOs to only manage humans’,” he said. “I think every CEO going forward is going to manage humans and agents together.”

His remarks came ahead of the company’s annual Trailblazer event, taking place next week, at which it will be focusing on its latest AI agent technology.

Alibaba Group Holding is taking the opposite tack. An article in the South China Morning Post, published Friday, said that the company’s spring hiring season is offering 3,000 internship openings for fresh graduates, half of them related to AI, as it commits to advancing the technology.

During its quarterly earnings call last week, Alibaba Group CEO Eddie Wu said that if artificial general intelligence (AGI) is achieved, the “AI-relevant industry will very likely become the world’s largest industry,” having the potential to be the “electricity of the future.”

Vested interest in AI

Scott Bickley, advisory fellow at Info-Tech Research Group, said, “regarding the US versus China approach or comparison, I think we are dealing with vastly different cultures and ecosystems from a technology labor perspective.”

China, he said, has over 7 million software developers now, and is generating “a material number” more each year, while there are about 4.4 million in the US. China’s cost of labor is also lower than in the US. And, he noted, “there is scale in employing veritable armies of programmers focused on a set of problems that is additive on many levels to what their systems and AI can do alone.”

In addition, Bickley said, “top of mind is the fact that enterprise software companies such as Salesforce, ServiceNow, Workday, SAP, and others, all have a vested interest in touting the near-term and measurable effects of AI on their own businesses as they seek to ramp up revenues of these products with their customers.”

Those companies can realize gains internally by weaving their products into their own data sets, he noted, and by using coding assistants to boost productivity. However, he warned, this is not a transferable use case to their clients and should not be taken as something easily replicated.

“Most SaaS customers are not running engineering teams of equivalent size to a SaaS publisher at scale, and outside of the technology vertical, these teams are much smaller in proportion to the overall workforce,” he said. “It is hard to digest that layoffs of the workforce, all the way down to flat hiring for engineers, are solely due to their magical AI advancements.”

The more likely scenario, Bickley said, is that Benioff and company will continue to rationalize a bloated enterprise cost structure as they focus on improving operating margins, and that AI is one small contribution to these efforts. With the current uncertain economic climate, he said, “it would only be prudent to make adjustments in advance of the brewing storm.”

AI more likely to expand the need for engineers

Philip Walsh, director analyst in Gartner’s software engineering practice, said that from his vantage point he sees “two contrasting signals: some leaders, like Marc Benioff at Salesforce, suggest they may not need as many engineers due to AI’s impact, while others — Alibaba being a prime example — are actively scaling their technical teams and specifically hiring for AI-oriented roles.”

In practice, he said, Gartner believes AI is far more likely to expand the need for software engineering talent. “AI adoption in software development is early and uneven,” he said, “and most large enterprises are still early in deploying AI for software development — especially beyond pilots or small-scale trials.”

Walsh noted that, while there is a lot of interest in AI-based coding assistants (Gartner sees roughly 80% of large enterprises piloting or deploying them), actual active usage among developers is often much lower. “Many organizations report usage rates of 30% or less among those who have access to these tools,” he said, adding that the most common tools are not yet generating sufficient productivity gains to generate cost savings or headcount reductions.

He said, “current solutions often require strong human supervision to avoid errors or endless loops. Even as these technologies mature over the next two to three years, human expertise will remain critical.”

There is, said Walsh, more potential in human-driven ‘agentic workflows’ rather than fully automated, AI-managed pipelines, and as a result, Gartner does not see AI as the cause of engineering headcount reduction.

 “Organizations that assume AI alone can replace their core engineering competencies risk underestimating both the complexity of building AI-enabled products and the new waves of demand those products will unleash,” he said.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

Flashes, an Instagram alternative based on Bluesky, is available for iPhones now

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Anyone looking for an alternative to Instagram might have a suitable candidate in Flashes, a recently launched app built on Bluesky that seems to get all the important basics right. Flashes technically launched on the App Store on February 24, but a series of updates released in the days after launch have made the app much easier to recommend.

If you remember an Instagram before Meta turned it into its Facebook replacement, you have the basic gist of what Flashes is. It’s an app for sharing photos and videos, with some Bluesky-flavored wrinkles, like multiple custom feeds to choose from instead of Meta’s algorithm-driven default option.

The feeds, profile and search pages in Flashes.

Ian Carlos Campbell for Engadget

When you first open Flashes you’ll be prompted to login with a Bluesky account or create a new one to use exclusively with Flashes. If you use your existing account, the app essentially repackages image and video posts from whoever you’re currently following into an Instagram-style feed. This setup also works in reverse: Any post you put on Flashes will also show up in your normal text-focused Bluesky feed.

The app itself features multiple tabs, with a home tab for your feeds, a search tab where you can search for posts and view trending topics, a dedicated tab for creating new posts, a notifications tab that features all of your Bluesky notifications and a profile tab. Flashes includes some filters to apply to your photos, along with some custom feeds that you can use if you want, but otherwise customizations are minimal. It’s really an image and video-focused version of Bluesky. That comes with some annoying drawbacks, though. If you get a lot of Bluesky notifications, you’ll now get them twice, once in the Bluesky app and once in Flashes. If you delete your account from one app, it will also be deleted from the other.

Creating a post in Flashes.Creating a post in Flashes.

Ian Carlos Campbell for Engadget

Building a more customizable, portable version of social media that doesn’t lock you to one platform is a big part of Bluesky’s goal with the AT Protocol and what apps like Mastodon and Threads are trying to do with ActivityPub. It’s not clear if one standard is going to become the default, but Bluesky has been picking up momentum. The app hit 20 million users in November 2024, prompting a dramatic expansion to its moderation efforts, and then passed 30 million users in January 2025. Flashes design means all of those new Bluesky accounts are potential Flashes users, too.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

When Will the Files Become Public? – Hollywood Life

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Image Credit: Patrick McMullan via Getty Image

Jeffrey Epstein is making headlines once again now that United States Attorney General Pam Bondi announced her plan to release his files, which includes his alleged “client list,” according to multiple outlets. During a recent interview with Fox News, Bondi noted that the files were “sitting on [her] desk … to review” and that releasing the list was a “directive by President [Donald] Trump.

“I think tomorrow … you’re going to see some Epstein information being released by my office,” Bondi told Fox News’ Jesse Watters on February 26, 2025. “There are well over — this will make you sick — 200 victims … over 250, actually. … So, we have to make sure that their identity is protected and their personal information, but other than that, I think tomorrow — you know, the personal information of victims — other than that, I think tomorrow, Jesse, breaking news, right now, you’re going to see some Epstein information being released by my office.”

The day after Bondi confirmed she’d release the files, she and conservative influencers were seen walking out of the White House carrying binders that read, “The Epstein Files: Phase I,” according to TIME. Below, get updates on the files and learn more about Epstein’s controversies.

Who Is Jeffrey Epstein?

Epstein is a disgraced and deceased sexual offender and former financier. Throughout his finance career, the New York City native expanded his social circle to include socialites, including Trump. However, in 2005, Florida police started investigating Epstein after he was accused of sexually abusing dozens of underage girls. In a plea deal, Epstein was convicted of procuring a child for prostitution and of soliciting a prostitute. He served about one year behind bars.

Over time, Epstein was involved in a slew of lawsuits, mostly related to sexual assault and abuse. In 2019, Epstein was arrested again on federal charges regarding the sex trafficking of minors in the states of Florida and New York. That year, he died by suicide in his jail cell. His decades-long associate Ghislaine Maxwell was also convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking and conspiracy for helping Epstein procure underage girls for sexual abuse and prostitution. Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years behind bars.

What Are the Epstein Files?

The files are a series of documents that will unveil Epstein’s 200+ victims, and their names are expected to be redacted for privacy purposes, which Bondi pointed out in her February 26, 2025, Fox News interview. Moreover, the files will reportedly include the flight logs of the pedophile’s private jet.

In 2024, a federal court unsealed records related to Epstein and his famous relationships. The docs included around 200 names, including Trump and former President Bill Clinton. However, the records only exposed some details about the nature of the politicians’ connections to Epstein, and neither Clinton nor Trump has been accused of wrongdoing in the formal investigation, according to Politico.

When Will the Epstein List Be Released?

According to TIME, the Epstein files were released. Bondi and conservative influencers were photographed leaving the White House on February 27, 2025, carrying binders that read, “The Epstein Files: Phase I,” possibly indicating that there was more information to come.

Per multiple outlets, the U.S. Attorney General has asked newly confirmed FBI Director Kash Patel to hand over all files by Friday, February 28, 2025, accusing the FBI of withholding additional information.

If you or someone you know is in emotional distress or considering suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

If you or anyone you know has been sexually abused, call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673). A trained staff member will provide confidential, judgment-free support as well as local resources to assist in healing, recovering and more.




This story originally appeared on Hollywoodlife

The double-decker train linking two stunning European cities in a 90-minute journey | Travel News | Travel

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A rail journey hailed one of the most scenic in the world links two gorgeous European cities with endless views of the Mediterranean

The winding railway takes you from glitzy Cannes, in France, to the Italian border town of Ventimiglia, ticking off a rapid-fire French Riviera bucket list in the process. 

Don’t let the short journey time fool you – in just one hour and a half you pass by all the big hitters of Monaco, Nice and Antibes to decide where you fancy stopping at on your return (spoiler – all of them). 

What makes it unique is that it’s a commuter train, so the pastel hues of the French Riviera and the glistening blue waters of the Med don’t come with the inflated price tag. 

Instead, you get to gaze out the panoramic windows for around £30, with front-row seats over the Mediterranean and Ligurian sea sitting among locals travelling for work or pleasure. 

The 43 mile journey is punctuated by 18 stops like Nice and Monaco, but you also get a whistlestop tour of laid-back towns like Villefranche-Sur-Mer and Menton. 

Before leaving Cannes, make sure to stroll around the Roman settlement of Le Suquet, wander through traditional French outdoor market Marché Forville, or even visit the Palais des Festivals et des Congrès, where the famous film festival is held every year.

When you reach Ventimiglia, kick back on its beautiful beaches, visit the Roman ruins of Albintimilium, and taste delicious Ligurian cuisine, like stuffed focaccia or tangy seafood salads. 

The average train time between Cannes and Ventimiglia is one hour 43 minutes, but there is a shorter route which takes one hour and 25 minutes.

The earliest departure starts at around 06:10am running right through with about 34 departures a day until 23:39pm. 

France’s national rail service SNCF runs the regional TER train (Transport Express Régional).  



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk