Oct 6, 2008

Your appearence is very important to get a promotion!

Even though I am a traveler and I always do my best to get some free time to dedicate to travels, the truth is that I am a business man just like the most of you, fellow readers. In fact, just as we have been discussing lately, it’s extremely important that we get a very good job so that we can get the financial stability to allow us to travel to anywhere in the world, anytime we want!

Keeping this in mind, I personally think that one of the most important things when you want to become a very successful businessman or if you simply want to get a promotion in the company it’s definitely the way you dress and your general physical appearance. I mean, if your suit gives you the Italian class, then it’s much easier to impress both the people that interact with you and the customers in general… And who will be extremely happy with that? It would be your boss! So, next time you decide to get a new suit then you should definitely get yourself a Made to Measure suit available at mysuitny.com allowing you to impress everyone else with your brand new suit that is just stunning and classic! In fact, prices start at only $495 and you can completely customize and design it online with the amazing tool provided by this company with over 40 years experience providing us with the best made to measure suits!


So, why don’t you impress your boss just like I used to do in the past when I worked as an economist in NY?

Wine destinations in the USA...


At a long table in the redwood grove at MacMurray Ranch Vineyards, Sonoma-based film producers Marc and Brenda Lhormer regaled dinner companions with reflections on their recently released movie “Bottle Shock.” The film lends Hollywood treatment to the 1976 blind tasting in Paris that shook the very foundation of the wine establishment when French judges scored California wines higher than their countrymen’s.

Although the story takes place entirely in Napa Valley and France, the Lhormers filmed primarily in California’s Sonoma County. Three-quarters of the outdoor scenes, including helicopter aerials, were shot on Kunde Estate Winery & Vineyards’ whopping 1,850 acres. (Kunde, in fact, has kept a boxing ring built for the film on a knoll overlooking much of the property.)

“Brenda gave our director Randy Miller a comprehensive tour of possible shooting locations in both Napa and Sonoma valleys,” Marc Lhormer says. “Ultimately, we all decided that Kunde’s property and Buena Vista property offered more of the sweeping and untrafficked beauty to portray 1976 Napa.”