What to watch: Will Santa be nice to investors?


(Photo: Ben Hider, AP)

NEW YORK -- It's part lore, part statistical sensation. We're talking about stocks rising around Christmas, a late-year seasonal surge that Wall Street dubs the "Santa Claus Rally."
The Stock Trader's Almanac claims it discovered the phenomenon more than 40 years ago. The definition of the Santa Claus Rally differs depending on to whom you talk. From the Almanac's perspective, it encompasses the last five trading days of the year and the first two trading days in January.
Since 1969, the Standard & Poor's 500 index has increased 77% of the time during this seven-session trading stretch and posted average gains of 1.6%, theAlmanac says.
Bespoke Investment Group defines the Santa rally as the 10 calendar days from Dec. 21 through Dec. 31.
"After (Dec. 20), the fabled Santa Claus Rally kicks into high gear," notes Bespoke co-founder Paul Hickey. Stocks have averaged gains on nine of the 10 days, with a total average gain of 1.8%, Bespoke data since 1928 show. The S&P has posted gains during this stretch the past five years.
So how should investors play it? A Bespoke analysis of industry groups that have performed better than the market's 1.3% average gain in this 10-day span since 1990 include: materials, diversified financials, food and staples retailers, autos and auto parts, media, transportation, consumer durables, and retailing.
A word of warning: When the Santa Claus Rally doesn't occur, it often means a bear market is coming or a better time to buy will come later in the new year, the Almanacsays.

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/markets/2012/12/20/will-santa-deliver-gains-to-wall-street/1783079/

Hotel websites embrace TripAdvisor, bad reviews and all


(Photo: Red Roof Inn)

It's getting harder to avoid reading TripAdvisor hotel reviews on hotel chain websites.
Last week, the 350-location budget hotel chain Red Roof Inn announced it will incorporate TripAdvisor reviews - whether good, bad or ugly - on its redroof.com website. The average customer pays about $60 a night to sleep in a Red Roof Inn property.

The chain joins a group of about 50 hotel chains that now publish or promote TripAdvisor reviews on their individual hotel websites, believing that they can gain more bookings.
Andy Alexander, Red Roof's president, says that most consumers look for TripAdvisor reviews while shopping for a hotel, so it just makes sense to provide them so they won't be tempted to consider a rival's hotel.
When considering a Red Roof hotel, an online shopper will see a pop-up screen that shows the five most recent TripAdvisor reviews, Alexander says. There's no need to click through to TripAdvisor's website.
"We don't want people to leave our site," he tells USA TODAY's Hotel Check-In. "The worst thing that can happen is they click out to TripAdvisor and see a different property that they'd rather stay at."
Hotel chains help TripAdvisor grow
Red Roof is only the latest hotel chain to decide it's worth the risk of publishing TripAdvisor reviews on its website alongside its own content. Today, about 50 hotel chains have joined the club, according to TripAdvisor.
In the past year, chains as diverse as Wyndham, Best Western and Four Seasons have taken this direction. Starwood, on the other hand, opted to solicit frequent guests to write reviews on its own website; in about a 12-month period ending last October, customers submitted some 42,000 reviews.
Hotel partnerships are helping fuel growth for the No. 1 online review site, which for the July-September period posted revenue of about $213 million.
On TripAdvisor's third-quarter earnings call earlier this month, CEO Stephen Kaufer told Wall Street analysts that TripAdvisor's total traffic grew by around 35% in the most recent quarter.
"Including these latest wins," he told analysts referring to Best Western and Wyndham, "we now syndicate our traveler reviews to more than 500 major travel partners, including more than 50 hotel chains, reinforcing and enhancing the visibility of the TripAdvisor brand as the de facto standard for travel research."
Earlier this month, TripAdvisor revealed that the number of people who view TripAdvisor content on sites other than TripAdvisor has doubled since 2011 to over 300 million per month, thanks to the hotel chains as well as sites such as Kayak.com.
While some individual hotels have more than 8,000 reviews, most have far fewer - but the number is growing, Kaufer told analysts.
"It's getting to the point where it's tough to find a hotel with less than 50 reviews. And that's what we're getting pretty excited about," he said.
More reviews can prompt hotels to improve
For lower-priced chains such as Red Roof, giving TripAdvisor reviews prominence to consumers as well as individual hotel property's management has another potential benefit: incentive to improve.
Promoting TripAdvisor reviews on redroof.com, Alexander says, "gives a little push to those properties who are not rates as high on TripAdvisor to increase their quality and service levels because it's right there in front of the guest."
Hotels with higher TripAdvisor scores tend to get more business than lower-ranked hotels, he says.
Is Alexander afraid of bad reviews? Yes and no.
"Overall, yes, there are risks of a having bad review, but the risk is pretty low if you run a quality property," he says. Consumers, he says, don't expect to read reviews that are positive 100% of the time.
Besides, he says, Red Roof has a program in place where managers of individual properties respond to reviews - including negative ones - regularly. Consumers see those replies as a positive sign that the hotel cares and is listening to them, he says.
The TripAdvisor move comes as the Red Roof chain moves forward with an image update.
The chain, which includes free Wi-Fi in its rates, has next-generation locations that today can be found in downtown Chicago, downtown San Antonio, Texas, and at both San Francisco and Miami's airport. By the end of March 2013, Red Roof will have about 125 renovated locations.

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/hotelcheckin/2012/12/20/tripadvisor-red-roof-latest-hotel-chain-wyndham-best-western/1782313/

Ex-Olympian says escort work related to depression


Three-time Olympian Suzy Favor Hamilton sent shock waves through the running community Thursday by admitting she led a double life, secretly working as a call girl who earned $600 an hour for a Las Vegas escort service.
In a story first reported by The Smoking Gun, the 44-year-old wife and mother from Wisconsin described her call girl work as "exciting." She used an alias but revealed her identity to several clients, The Smoking Gun wrote. She said her husband, Mark Hamilton, knew of her work as a call girl in the last year but didn't support it.
After news of the story spread, Favor Hamilton wrote on Twitter that she made "highly irrational choices and I take full responsibility."
"I am not a victim here and knew what I was doing," she wrote, adding the escort business provided coping mechanisms during a challenging time in her marriage. "I do not expect people to understand, but the reasons for doing this made sense to me at the time and were very much related to depression."
PHOTOS: Suzy Favor Hamilton through the years
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton is all smiles while running a victory lap after the women's 1,500 meters at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trails in 2000.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton reacts after winning the women's 1,500-meter run with a time of 4:13.96 at the 1999 USA Track and Field Championships in Atlanta.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton of the U.S. wins the women's 1500-meter run at the Prefontaine Classic in May of 2001 in Eugene, Ore.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton is shown competing for the U.S. in the women's 1,500-meter final in the 2000 Olympic Games. Hamilton finished 12th with a time of 4:23.05.
  • Marla Runyan assists Suzy Favor Hamilton after she collapsed at the conclusion of the women's 1500-meter final of the 2000 Olympics.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton of the U.S. takes a fall in the final 100 meters of  the women's 1500-meter final at the 2000 Olympic Games. Hamilton finished 12th with a time of 4:23.05.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton is shown during a Nike commercial appearing during the Olympics.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton is shown here in 2001 winning her heat in time of 4:23.51 in the women's 1500-meter prelim at the U.S. Track and Field Championships at the University of Oregon.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton competes in the women's 1500-meter prelims at the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in 2003 at Cobb Track and Angell Field at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton competes in the preliminaries of the women's 1500-meters at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Team Trials in 2004.
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton, second from right, dances on the stage at the finish line after competing in the Rock 'n' Roll Half Marathon in November of 2012 in Savannah, Ga.

















Sports officials expressed shock. "There's an old expression, 'You're as sick as your secrets.' This is a big one," said Nancy Hogshead-Makar, senior director of advocacy for the Women's Sports Foundation, while offering her condolences to Favor Hamilton. The foundation studies how sports influences girls' lives, including sexual behavior. "It is the exact opposite of this behavior," Hogshead-Makar said.
USA Track and Field and the U.S. Olympic Committee had no comment. Calls to Favor Hamilton's real estate agency in Madison were not returned.
One of the most decorated middle-distance runners in NCAA history, she won nine national titles for Wisconsin. After being Big Ten female athlete of the year three times, the conference named the award after her. The Big Ten declined to comment.
Favor Hamilton went on to make the U.S. Olympic team in the 1,500 in 1992 and 2000 and in the 800 in 1996.
Considered a medal contender in the 1,500 final at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Favor Hamilton collapsed on the last lap. She later told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that she fell on purpose because she wasn't going to win a medal in honor of her brother, who had committed suicide.
Favor Hamilton was paid to make appearances at Rock 'n Roll Marathon events to teach runners as part of its legends program. Tracy Sundlun, senior vice president of Competitor Group, said it had not been discussed whether she would continue. "My guess is no," said Sundlun, who has known Favor Hamilton for almost 30 years.
She also was a special guest at a couple of Disney running events, said Andrea Finger, a spokesperson for Walt Disney World Resort. Finger confirmed that Disney had canceled a scheduled appearance by Favor Hamilton for a running expo next August.
Sundlun said he met Favor Hamilton when she was a teen competing at the national scholastic indoor championships. He said she was "inspirational" to marathon runners who came out to hear her story.
Said Sundlun: "Other than this one step off the pier, this is a truly classy person."

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2012/12/20/suzy-favor-hamilton-worked-escort-las-vegas/1783279/

Russia pushes Facebook to open research center



  • Medvedev Zuckerberg 3.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg looks on while waiting for a meeting with Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev at the Gorki residence outside Moscow. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
  • Medvedev Zuckerberg 4.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, left, speaks to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg during their meeting at the Gorki residence outside Moscow. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
  • Medvedev Zuckerberg 5.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, left, shakes hands with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg at the Gorki residence outside Moscow. Zuckerberg presented Medvedev with a T-shirt bearing his Facebook address. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
  • Medvedev Zuckerberg 2.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev greets Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, left, at the Gorki residence outside Moscow. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
  • Medvedev Zuckerberg.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev shakes hands with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, left, at the Gorki residence outside Moscow. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
Facebook head Mark Zuckerberg was in Moscow on Monday, where officials were pressing him to expand the company's operations in Russia.
Russia's communications minister tweeted that Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev urged the social media giant's founder to abandon plans to lure away Russian programmers and instead open a research center in Moscow.
A Facebook spokeswoman, who refused to be named because she wasn't authorized to discuss the matter with the media, said the company has no immediate expansion plans for Russia.
Zuckerberg, who ditched his trademark hoodie and jeans for a suit and tie for his meeting with Medvedev, was visiting Russia on a world tour of programming contests to identify new talent.
Russian Web companies often command larger shares of the domestic market than their U.S. counterparts. Facebook has roughly 9 million users in Russia, while domestic clone VK has around 34 million.
Medvedev has cultivated a tech-friendly image since launching his modernization program while president of Russia from 2008 until this May, when Vladimir Putin returned for his third term as president.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/10/01/russia-pushes-facebook-to-open-research-center/#ixzz28BooqsIb

YouTube to stream 2012 presidential debate



  • Presidential Debate on YouTube.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: A stagehand positions a backdrop in the Magness Arena at the Daniel L. Ritchie Center for Sports and Wellness, site of Wednesday's presidential debate, on the campus of the University of Denver. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)
  • Presidential Debate on YouTube 1.jpg
    Oct. 1, 2012: Debate moderator Jim Lehrer stands outside the Magness Arena at the Daniel L. Ritchie Center for Sports and Wellness, site of Wednesday's presidential debate, on the campus of the University of Denver. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
  • Presidential Debate on YouTube 2.jpg
    Sept. 26, 2012: President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney both campaign in the battleground state of Ohio. Fierce and determined competitors, Obama and Romney each have a specific mission for the string of three debates that starts Wednesday night, Oct. 3, 2012. (AP Photos)
The first of three 2012 presidential debates will be aired live this Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 9 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. ET on the major networks and news channels. Unlike four years ago, you'll also have the option to stream the broadcast live on your computer, phone or tablet.
YouTube will stream the all three presidential debates, and the vice presidential debate, on its Elections Hub. Commentary before and after the debate at the University of Denver will be hosted on all YouTube election partner channels such as ABC, Al JazeeraEnglish, BuzzFeed, Univision and the Wall Street Journal.
However, streaming YouTube won't be quite as convenient for iPhone users who upgraded to iOS 6 , since Apple has removed the YouTube app. But you can download Google's YouTube iPhone app for free from the App Store. Apple iPad users will have to be content with enlarging the iPhone display for their devices or by going to YouTube through the Safari browser, which offers a better user interface for pre- and post-debate videos.
For instance, YouTube Election Hub today is featuring a look back at key points in past debates, including President Reagan's "there you go again" and Sen. Lloyd Bentsen's "you're no Jack Kennedy" zingers. That and many other videos appear on the mobile browser YouTube version, but can't be found on the iPhone version without a search.
Those who have mastered double-screen viewing and tweeting may want to use the hashtag #debatedenver that school officials, students and the media are using to report on campus preparations. Only about 200 students were lucky enough to score tickets for Wednesday's event, but DebateFest student organizers say their interactive meeting ground on campus will show the debate on big screens, host "rally alley" where students will set up information stations in support of candidates and offer issue-related material and feed the crowd with a dozen Denver food trucks in Oval Eatery. Still, attendance has been limited to 5,000.
The biggest audience for the debate will be viewers at home or on the road, which could reach 80 million, University of Denver's vice chancellor David Greenberg has said. Just how many will be watching on smartphones and tablets compared to TVs won't be known until the viewing audience is tabulated.
Copyright 2012 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/10/02/youtube-to-stream-presidential-debate/#ixzz28BobWbOe

Microsoft co-founders praise Windows 8



  • bill gates paul allen 1981.jpg
    Microsoft founders Bill Gates, left, and Paul Allen pictured in 1981. (AP Photo)
  • Microsoft Windows 8 Homescreen
    Microsoft
  • Microsoft Windows 8 Lock Screen
    Microsoft
They’re the original fanboys.
Bill Gates and Paul Allen, who co-founded Microsoft Corp. on a snowy day in Dec. 1974 at the tender age of 21, both left the company they created for other pursuits. But both have stayed in the loop on technology -- and recently weighed in on Windows 8.
“It’s a very big deal for Microsoft,” Gates said last week during an interview with the Associated Press. “I’ve been using it and I’m very pleased with it.”
“The hardware partners are doing great things to take advantage of the product,” Gates added.
Not to be outdone, Allen, who left the company in 1982 after becoming seriously ill with Hodgkin's lymphoma, published a full review of Windows 8 later that day.
'The new tablet features are particularly bold and innovative. '
- Paul Allen
“The new tablet features in Windows 8 are particularly bold and innovative. A few minor issues aside, I'm impressed,” Allen wrote on his website.
Allen admitted that the new operating system may prove confusing at first. Windows 8 is heavily slanted towards tablets and other new computing platforms, and adds a new interface mode with colorful tiles that launch into full-screen apps.
“There are a number of things introduced to Windows by the tablet aspect of the bimodal user experience that I found puzzling, especially for a traditional desktop user like myself,” he said.
Allen’s not alone. A recent poll by Computerworld found that fewer early adopters have taken to the new OS than installed Windows 7 in 2009 in the weeks before it launched.
Just 0.3 percent of computers running Windows used Windows 8 in Sept., the tech news site reported, while at the end of Sept 2009, Windows 7 accounted for 1.64 percent of all Windows PCs -- that's five times as many influential, early-adopter types.
And in the past week, one analyst slashed sales expectations for Windows 8 powered ultrabooks while another said the company was taking a “big gamble” with the new OS.
Still, despite a few complaints about the interface, co-founder Allen was optimistic.
"I'm confident that Windows 8 offers the best of legacy Windows features with an eye toward a very promising future," he wrote.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/10/02/microsoft-co-founders-praise-windows-8/#ixzz28BoLRsjm

Forget golf or a massage, the latest trend at big resorts is guided grounds tours on Segways



  • HotelSegway.jpg
    Kingsmill Resorts director of sports, Kevin Dry, leads a Segway tour on the resorts grounds in Williamsburg, Va. (AP/Kingsmill Resort)
Some couples celebrate their anniversary with a horse-drawn carriage ride. Others rent a romantic cabin in the woods. A few even jet off to Las Vegas and renew their vows in front of Elvis.
Lori Kelly and her husband Gene recently marked their second anniversary by touring the woods of the Omni Bedford Springs Resort & Spa on a Segway.
"It was absolutely fantastic. It is really the ultimately unique experience especially for people my age," said Kelly, 59. Her husband is 64. "It gives you the flavor of adventure with very little threat of injury."
The Segway, first introduced a decade ago as an alternative mode of personal transportation, is getting a new life at a growing number of resorts around the world. For those not familiar with the two-wheeled electric vehicle, it works like this: Lean forward to move forward. Lean backward to go in reverse. Move the handlebars, and it turns left or right. Pretty simple.
The device never quite took off as an everyday way to get around, but it has found a niche replacing city walking tours and helping security guards patrol local shopping malls. And now hotels with sprawling grounds are finding the Segway to be a great way to show guests around their properties. Plus, the devices are still quirky enough to be an attraction in their own right.
"You don't need any special skills to navigate around on it," said Kelly, the executive director of the American Red Cross in West Virginia.
She and her husband traveled in mid-September from their home in Shepherdstown, W.Va. to Pennsylvania resort for a two-night getaway. They shopped, sat by the hotel's fire pits, played horseshoes and had a romantic anniversary dinner.
But what really made the trip unique was the 90-minute, off-road Segway tour for $90.
"Once you mastered it, you felt very, very comfortable about it," she said.
Lois Crosby, 62, recently hopped on a Segway at the Kingsmill Resort in Williamsburg, Va. She was there, joining her husband on a business trip.
"All the other people in my group went golfing and I'm not a golfer," said Crosby, of Germantown, Tenn. So she spent $65 for the 90-minute tour. "It's a lot of fun. It's really a lot of fun."
Part of the excitement is just the novelty of the Segway.
"Neither of us had been on a Segway before but they looked fun," said John Wilson, 50, who recently did a tour with his wife Melisa at The Homestead Resort in Hot Springs, Va.
The 90-minute tour, which started on Memorial Day, travels on meandering trails through the resort's woods. Guest get mountain views and often spot wildlife including bear, deer and red-tailed hawks. The tour costs $70 a person.
"I said to my wife, I feel like the laziest hiker ever," said Wilson, of Alexandria, Va., who oversees national programing for PBS. "Once you start, it's sort of intuitive as to how it is to go."
Prices generally range from $60 to $125 per person. But there are some deals to be found. The Paradisus Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic offers a 45-minute tour for $35 and the Shangri-La Golden Sands Resort in Malaysia offers 15-minute rides around the resort for about $10. Several resorts have minimum age requirements and only allow guests between a certain weight to participate, generally 100 to 260 pounds (45 to 118 kilos).
Some hotels offer tours on paved paths while others go through more-adventurous off-road terrain. Some properties offer both options or custom-tailor a tour based on how comfortable the group feels after the initial training. A driver's license isn't needed and most resorts offer guests helmets. The Segway can go up to 12 mph (about 19 kilometers) but tours often go slower and stop to point out the sights, covering just four or five miles (six to eight kilometers) during the 90 minutes.
Most hotels start their tours with a practice session in an empty parking lot or in the middle of a field. Once guests have mastered the Segway, they head out to explore the grounds.
At The Ritz-Carlton Half Moon Bay, visitors travel on a trail that hugs the bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean, offering seemingly-endless views of the California coast. At the Turtle Bay Resort in Hawaii, guests on Segways can see sea turtles and Hawaiian Monk Seals basking in the sun. At O'Reilly, a hotel at Australia's Lamington National Park, guests explore the surrounding rainforest and cross creeks on the Segways.
None of this is exactly roughing in it. But after all it, it is a vacation.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/travel/2012/10/02/forget-golf-or-massage-latest-trend-at-big-resorts-is-guided-grounds-tours-on/#ixzz28BnruYqD

Da Nang, Vietnam's Surf City



la-viet
Vietnam ex-pat Tim Holland surfs rides a wave with the towering 220-foot-tall Linh Ung Buddha statue in the distance. (Bailey Seybolt)

The long surfing season, bustling downtown and inexpensive lifestyle have made it increasingly popular with the global board brigade.


Three years ago, Quentin Derrick was eating clams at a beach-side restaurant in Da Nang. As he gazed east at the South China Sea, he couldn't believe what was rolling in.

Derrick has lived in Vietnam for eight years and surfed a good part of the Vietnamese coastline. But he didn't think it compared — surfing-wise — with the coastlines of Spain, France, Scotland, Morocco, Indonesia or his native Australia.

He hadn't expected to find good waves in Da Nang, Vietnam's fourth-largest city, but the ones breaking off Non Nuoc Beach looked eminently carve-able. "I've got to do something about this," he said.

These days Derrick, 39, belongs to a loose crew of surfers who flock to Non Nuoc during the area's September-to-March surf season. Last year his wife, Tran Huynh Chau, opened Da Boys Surf Shop, Da Nang's first Western-style surfing emporium.

"Since I've been here I've seen a massive increase in the amount of surfing," Derrick said. "I imagine that more surfers will come because we have fairly decent waves, and they're pretty consistent."

Because of oceanic and climatic factors, Da Nang will never have the great waves that make Indonesia, Bali and Hawaii world-renowned surf meccas. But Da Nang's surf season is relatively long, surfers say, and the central Vietnamese city is a lovely place to chill.

Indeed, when my friend Ashley and I spent six days in Da Nang last November, we felt like hanging around for six more months.

We started our days at Non Nuoc Beach, which U.S. and Australian military personnel called China Beach during the Vietnam War. The skies were mostly sunny, and the water was chilly but tolerable. Upscale hotels were going up everywhere we looked, but the beach was never crowded.

Some Vietnam-based expats say Da Nang is a great place for beginning surfers. I'm skeptical. Non Nuoc has a "longshore drift" — a riptide that moves parallel to shore — which, according to Derrick, makes it dangerous for swimming. I survived, but persnickety currents sapped my energy as I tried to paddle toward surfable swells.

When I came ashore to rest, Ashley read me excerpts from her dog-eared copy of "Moby-Dick." I began to think of Non Nuoc's sloshing white water as a white whale I was trying to master.

The whale won handily, but who cared? On this particular surfing vacation, chilling was top priority.

Da Nang offers a delightful fusion of beachy and urban vibes. After surfing for an hour or so each morning, Ashley and I read books at sunny cafes until lunchtime. In the afternoons we browsed fish markets and chatted with locals.

One afternoon we stumbled upon a lively sidewalk party. The hosts invited us to sit down and promptly stuffed us with squid.

"Why did you come here?" they asked me in Vietnamese, refilling our beer glasses. "We don't see many foreigners in this neighborhood."

"To surf," I said.

"To what?"

Some Americans equate "surfing" and "Vietnam" with the 1979 Francis Ford Coppola film "Apocalypse Now,"in which Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore (Robert Duvall) orders a napalm attack on the Vietnamese coastline so his soldiers can surf a point break. Told that the beach is guarded by "Charlie," military slang for the Viet Cong, Kilgore famously says, "Charlie don't surf!"

The scene is grotesque fantasy, but American and Australian troops did surf Non Nuoc and other Vietnamese beaches during the war. According to the Encyclopedia of Surfing, some soldiers offered daylight cease-fires to North Vietnamese soldiers in exchange for surfing privileges.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/asia/la-tr-surfvietnam-20111030,0,3744914.story

 

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