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Jakarta, Indonesia |
Armed with crowbars and wearing protective gear, three women assembled at a Jakarta stress clinic survey the cluster of bottles they're about to smash to pieces.
"I feel relieved. It's like something I have been holding inside is finally released when I smashed those bottles," Genta Kalbu Tanjung, a 20-year-old university student, told AFP as blaring rock music pulsated in the background.
Tanjung and her two friends paid 125,000 rupiah ($8.85) each to unleash their pent-up rage at the Temper Clinic, which also lets clients bust up old televisions and printers for a slightly higher price.
Inside a bare smash room, one wall is covered with a written reminder: "Holding on to anger is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die."
Aliya Dewayanti Senoajie wanted to use the students' half-hour session to channel her frustrations as a school holiday quickly comes to an end.
"The break is over -- it was too short and I'm not ready to go back to school," Senoajie said, declaring her bust-it-up session a success.
"It was really fun. My adrenaline was pumping."
The clinic opened last summer in a posh Jakarta neighbourhood after co-owner Masagus Yusuf Albar returned from an overseas holiday where he saw similar businesses sprouting up.
The first dedicated space for such destruction therapy opened in Japan in 2008, with a view to helping stressed salarymen relieve their pent up frustrations.
It has spread in popularity and temper clinics, also known as rage rooms, can be found in most key US and European cities.
The trend has taken off in Asia in the past two years with similar ventures opening in China, Singapore, and Hong Kong.
But the service might not immediately make sense for a place like Indonesia -- its citizens regularly rank high among the world's least-stressed people.
That wasn't lost on Albar, who conceded that life in places like Bali or jungle-clad Sumatra was pretty relaxed.
But not so in Jakarta, a city of 10 million plus with hours-long traffic jams that can drive the most patient mad and where school and work are becoming increasingly competitive.
A 2017 survey done by dry cleaning firm Zipjet found Jakarta was one of the world's most stressful cities based on criteria including traffic, air and noise pollution and unemployment.
"Try to go anywhere on Friday night and it's very annoying. My friend once got caught in the traffic and she ended up crying. That's how bad it was," Albar told AFP.
"Customers find this cathartic," he said.
But smashing things up to let off steam is not necessarily risk free, warned Jakarta-based psychologist Liza Marielly Djaprie.
She suggested that regularly using such rooms could simply condition the body to need an aggressive release whenever tensions rise.
Djaprie explained: "I don't usually encourage patients to destroy things just so it won't become a habit. We need to learn about our anger -- and anger management."
El Paso, United States Anyone who doubts that some seconds last a lot longer than others should try riding a bull at the Tuff Hedeman Bull Riding Tour in El Paso.
As in all great rodeo classics, the rider has to hang on with just one hand as the bull bucks and kicks.
Some 25 contestants tried their luck and skill Saturday night in El Paso: the challenge was to ride a bull for at least eight seconds without getting thrown and without touching it with their free hand.
The Tuff Hedeman Bull Riding Tour is named after a four time world bull riding champion, who today is retired.
The competition carries a $30,000 prize and cowboys come from far and wide to participate.
For instance, Ben Jones, who injured his face during the event, is originally from Australia.
- Inseparable from the American West -
Juan Alonzo, a Texan, can also testify to the dangers of rodeo. He served in the US army for five years, and while on a tour of duty in Iraq, he trained on a wooden barrel.
The rider grips a leather handle attached to a flat braided rope cinched around the bull. The bulls can weigh a ton.
Inseparable from the American West and the myth of the cowboy, but in reality owing much to Spanish and Mexican vaqueros, rodeo celebrates balance and resistance to pain.
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Frankfurt am Main, Germany | German high-end car giants BMW and Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler are banding together to catch up with American and Chinese competitors, with new cooperation on multiple fronts including electric cars and self-driving technology.
Munich-based BMW and Stuttgart's Daimler have been locked for years in a near neck-and-neck race to top sales charts in the global luxury car market.
But on Thursday the latest building block of a structure of collaboration fell into place, as the groups said they would work together to develop automated driving and driver assistance systems.
The plan is first to focus on so-called level three and four systems on an internationally-recognised scale for automated driving.
They will for now stop short of targeting level five -- which would see the on-board computer take over completely from the human driver under all circumstances.
Rather, the hoped-for technology will at first offer driving and parking assistance and limited autonomy on motorways.
"Instead of individual, stand-alone solutions, we want to develop a reliable overall system," said Daimler board member Ola Kallenius, who is set to take over from departing chief executive Dieter Zetsche in May.
Only a week before, the groups announced a one-billion-euro ($1.1 billion) investment in combining their carsharing and other apps into a joint scheme.
Some 60 million users of 14 separate apps will in future be able to book short-term rentals, parking spots and electric charging points, taxi and chauffeur hailing and journey planning via the joint suite of services.
- Ecosystem future -
Such unprecedented partnerships "shows how even one-time rivals see a pressing problem" in amassing the mammoth investments and precious expertise needed to meet future challenges in the car industry, expert Stefan Bratzel of Germany's Center for Automotive Management told AFP.
"Different universes" are meeting as traditional carmakers find high-tech firms like Google or Alibaba, mobility services firms like Uber and Didi and even telecoms firms racing to set industry-wide standards.
In the new environment, companies "are forced to cooperate," Bratzel said.
"Otherwise you just can't tackle certain questions, networking, building up ecosystems" that bind together different technologies, he added.
BMW already works with Intel and Fiat on self-driving cars, while Daimler has linked up with components supplier Bosch, aiming to test highly autonomous vehicles this year in the US.
"Being open to alliances to share the burden of investments is an economic necessity," said Bosch chief executive Volkmar Denner last month.
On Thursday, BMW and Daimler said "other technology companies and automotive manufacturers" could be invited aboard their self-driving scheme in future, while existing schemes would not be affected.
- International competition -
Germany's biggest carmaker Volkswagen has been notable by its absence from the flurry of alliances on new technology within the country's car industry.
Rumours of a far broader partnership taking in VW, BMW, Daimler, Bosch and components builder Continental have yet to materialise.
And this week, the Wall Street Journal reported Wolfsburg-based Volkswagen was close to a deal on autonomous driving with Ford, after the two groups agreed in January to build vans together.
For now the Wolfsburg-based behemoth has partnered with Aurora, a startup manned by former Google, Tesla and Uber executives which has also secured financing from Amazon.
The names of Silicon Valley tech titans are tied closely to autonomous driving as they look to challenge historic incumbents on their own turf.
Google subsidiary Waymo -- seen as one of the most advanced projects -- is working with Fiat Chrysler and Jaguar Land Rover, while Tesla, Uber and Apple as well as China's Baidu is each pursuing the technology.
The newcomers are also treading on established manufacturers' toes with their offerings in areas like carsharing or electric mobility -- although alliances are possible, as in Volkswagen's development of an "automotive cloud" digital platform.
Meanwhile the French and German governments are looking to strengthen the car industry and others by encouraging the emergence of European "champions", with a homegrown battery manufacturer for electric cars first on Paris and Berlin's wishlist.
Rawalpindi, Pakistan | A Pakistani waiter Rozi Khan had never heard of the Game of Thrones -- or its hugely popular character Tyrion Lannister -- until his striking resemblance to the dwarf anti-hero got heads turning at home.
The 25-year-old so resembles actor Peter Dinklage -- who has played the witty and wily nobleman since the hit series' first season in 2010 -- that he gets regularly stopped by strangers desperate for a picture.
"I don't mind. A lot of my pictures have been taken, that's why I have become very famous everywhere," he said.
Not only are Khan and Dinklage's faces strikingly similar, they are also the same height at around 135 cms (4 ft 5in).
Photographs of the pair have unsurprisingly made their way onto social media showing the doppelgangers side-by-side.
"Wherever I go, someone says to me: 'Sir, who is this man with you on Facebook', I say that he is my friend. 'He looks like you'. I tell them he is my brother. It's not a bad thing," said Khan.
The television series has won 47 Emmys -- more than any other fictional show in history -- along with a Golden Globe for Dinklage, 49, for best supporting actor in 2012.
A much anticipated final series is set to premiere on April 17.
Khan works at a small Kashmiri restaurant down a narrow line in Rawalpindi, serving customers hearty dishes such as mutton and spinach curries.
Owner Malik Aslam Pervez described him as a hard-worker -- and also a drawcard for the eatery.
"When he takes a day off or gets sick, people look for him and ask where did he go? They get upset. They love him. There is always a crowd here but it has boomed because of him," he said.
Born in Mansehra in northern Pakistan, Khan says he would love to meet Dinklage, describing him as a friend and brother.
"I love him very much, he is my friend... he is my height so I like him a lot," said Khan.
For customers, seeing Tyrion Lannister in the flesh is also a thrill.
"When I saw him, I'm happy, I feel that I met with Lannister in real [life]," said Zain Hadri, 20.
"Game of Thrones" tells the story of noble families vying for control of the Iron Throne, all the while keeping one eye on the "White Walkers" leading hordes of the undead toward an invasion from the North.