• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

RealTime Images

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Video
  • Blog
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
{ 145 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • September 7, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - Jews and Arabs meet at the Israel Museum to crack sunflower seeds and spit the shells as part of Seeds of Bliss, a project by artist Noam Edry. Inspired by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei's 2010 installation at London's Tate Museum with hundreds of tons of sculptured porcelain hand painted sunflower seeds, Edry aims to connect the people of the Middle East in cracking and eating 10 tons of real sunflower seeds and to return a mountain of shells for display in the Tate Museum. Events have already taken place in Aqaba, Eilat, Nablus, Haifa, Bethlehem, Umm El Fahm, Jenin and Afula. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170907_zap_a126_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Childhood pictures of Rihanna before she was famous. Robyn Rihanna Fenty, better known by her stage name Rihanna, was born in Barbados in 1988, to Ronald Fenty, who ran a garment warehouse, and Monica Braithwaite, an accountant. Along with her younger brother, Rihanna grew up in a troubled home. Her father was an alcoholic and a crack addict. Her childhood was deeply affected by her parents' marital problems and her dad's battle with drug and alcohol addictions, which eventually led to their divorce when she was 14. After his recovery, father and daughter grew close again and Rihanna still refers to him as the "coolest person on the planet". As a teenager Rihanna turned to music to escape her home troubles and formed a musical trio with two of her classmates. Her big break came in 2003 when friends introduced her and fellow bandmates to record producer Evan Rogers, who was on holiday in Barnados with his wife. When the group auditioned for Evan, he later said that "the minute Rihanna walked into the room, it was like the other two girls didn't exist." Over the course of the next year, Rihanna travelled to Rogers' home in Connecticut to work on her demo album. With the help of songwriter Carl Sturken she made a four-song demo that included "Pon de Replay" which would become her first hit single. Rihanna officially relocated when she was 16. "When I left Barbados, I didn't look back," she said. "I wanted to do what I had to do, even if it meant moving to America." Soon after, her demo fell into the hands of recording company Def Jam. She auditioned for them and legendary rapper Jay-Z, who was so impressed he signed her almost immediately. Eight months later Rihanna released her debut album, Music of the Sun, which went platinum despite less-than-rave reviews from Rolling Stone magazine who deemed it "lacking of ingenuity and rhythm." Date of pictures unknown but it's believed Rihanna was about 12 years old. 18 Oct 2017 Pictured: Rihanna. Photo credit: MEGA
    MEGA101828_002.jpg
  • November 17, 2018 - Azerbaijan - Activists of the Popular Front Party and members of the National Council assembled in front of the Sabail police building, were put on the bus by the police and taken away in an unknown direction. Nov., 17. 2018.  On Saturday at around 3 p.m., several activists of the Popular Front Party and members of the National Council of Democratic Forces were detained by police in the Martyr Alley area. The detainees led by the leader of the Popular Front Party Ali Kerimli and the head of the National Council, Jamil Hasanli, were taken to the police station of the Sabail district. The reason for the detention was an attempt by the opposition to march through the streets of the city and repeat the route of students of Baku State University, which they passed on November 17, 1988. Then hundreds of students and employees of enterprises went to the streets demanding to protect the rights of Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. (Credit Image: © Aziz Karimov/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20181117_zaa_p133_250.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Lamar Odom was spotted grocery shopping with a Khloe Kardashian lookalike mystery girl in Los Angeles, CA. The two dressed down and wore comfortable clothes and were seen taking a walk back home to their apartment complex. Earlier reports indicate that the basketball player was spotted out with this mystery girl before and he claims that she is his assistant. 24 Aug 2017 Pictured: Lamar Odom was spotted grocery shopping with a Khloe Kardashian lookalike mystery girl in Los Angeles, CA. The two were dressed down and wore comfortable clothes and were seen taking a walk back home to their apartment complex. Earlier reports indicate that the basketball player was spotted out with this mystery girl before and he claims that she is his assistant. Photo credit: Marksman / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA71891_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Last photos of Whitney Houston just two days before her death on 11th February 2012 at the Beverly Hills Hotel in California. Houston could be seen leaving 'Tru' nightclub in Hollywood looking rather worse for wear, with red drips on her legs and a rather protruding belly. She can also be seen with what looks like a cut scar on her wrist. Houston was accompanied with her then 19-year-old daughter Bobbi Kristina Brown, on-off boyfriend Ray J and sister-in-law and manager Patricia Houston. 09 Feb 2012 Pictured: Whitney Houston, Patricia Houston, Pat Houston. Photo credit: Benjamin Dome/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA356849_021.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Limestone In Burren, County Clare, Ireland (Credit Image: © Peter Zoeller/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_272.jpg
  • Dec. 05, 2012 - Broken heart drawn on a tree trunk (Credit Image: © Image Source/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20121205_baf_i19_2991.jpg
  • July 27, 2017 - Kolkata, West Bengal, India - Supporter set off fire cracker during the celebration in Kolkata. Bengal Bharatiya Janta Party leaders and supporter celebrating after the Nitish Kumar took over as the Chief Minister of Bihar with the help of Bharatiya Janta Party support on July 27, 2017 in Kolkata. (Credit Image: © Saikat Paul/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170727_zaa_p133_051.jpg
  • June 20, 2017 - Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand - A schoolgirl walks home in a community along the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment. The Thai government is also cracking down on homes built over the river, such homes are said to be in violation of the ''Navigation in Thai Waters Act.'' Owners face fines and the possibility that their homes will be torn down. (Credit Image: © Jack Kurtz via ZUMA Wire)
    20170620_zaf_k94_001.jpg
  • Nicki Minaj releases a photo on Instagram with the following caption: "If you don\u2019t know what movie this is you can never EVER sit w|us. What intrigued me is that he saw it for the 1st time last night (yes I made him but he loved it) \u0026 rlly embodied the character in this scene (in my opinion) \ud83d\ude02\ud83d\ude02\ud83d\ude02\ud83d\ude02 I kept breaking character cracking up laughin. How do ppl act in a movie with a person they like? \ud83e\udd23 #WhenYallMadBoredOnABusToBudapest \ud83d\ude43 #ImTheCaptainNow \ud83d\udea2 #CaptainPhillips". Photo Credit: Instagram *** No USA Distribution *** For Editorial Use Only *** Not to be Published in Books or Photo Books ***  Please note: Fees charged by the agency are for the agency’s services only, and do not, nor are they intended to, convey to the user any ownership of Copyright or License in the material. The agency does not claim any ownership including but not limited to Copyright or License in the attached material. By publishing this material you expressly agree to indemnify and to hold the agency and its directors, shareholders and employees harmless from any loss, claims, damages, demands, expenses (including legal fees), or any causes of action or allegation against the agency arising out of or connected in any way with publication of the material.
    25693120.jpg
  • Tiger Woods’ smashed up car is seen here in images released by police from the golfer’s DUI arrest earlier this week. The photos, released on May 31, show the sportsman’s 2015 Mercedes Benz in a bad state - with two flat tires and cracking around the front bumper on the driver’s side. According to the report by Jupiter Police, Woods was found asleep at the wheel of his car and was on four prescription drugs when he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in the early hours of May 29 in Jupiter, Florida. He tested negative for alcohol. Elsewhere in the report it notes that Woods had 'extremely slow and slurred speech’ and did not know where he was before taking the field tests. The golfer undertook four sobriety tests. After being asked to recite the alphabet backwards, he instead offered to recite the National Anthem backwards instead. During the Walk & Turn test the sportsman “could not maintain starting position… missed heel to toe each time… stepped off the line several times… used arms for balance,” according to the arresting officer’s report. He was also unable to perform the One Leg Stand, requiring him to lift one leg off the ground six inches, placing his foot down “several times” while trying to complete the task. Woods was also seemingly confused by the Finger To Nose test, and was unable to complete the task as asked, the report notes. Woods released a statement later on May 29 in which he apologized. He insisted he hadn’t taken alcohol but had suffered a reaction to prescription medication. 31 May 2017 Pictured: Tiger Woods 2015 Mercedes Benz - damage to car photographed after DUI arrest. Photo credit: Jupiter Police/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA39603_003.jpg
  • Jamie Oliver releases a photo on Instagram with the following caption: "This cracking dish is packed full of flavour and only uses 5 ingredients.". Photo Credit: Instagram *** No USA Distribution *** For Editorial Use Only *** Not to be Published in Books or Photo Books ***  Please note: Fees charged by the agency are for the agency’s services only, and do not, nor are they intended to, convey to the user any ownership of Copyright or License in the material. The agency does not claim any ownership including but not limited to Copyright or License in the attached material. By publishing this material you expressly agree to indemnify and to hold the agency and its directors, shareholders and employees harmless from any loss, claims, damages, demands, expenses (including legal fees), or any causes of action or allegation against the agency arising out of or connected in any way with publication of the material.
    25995351.jpg
  • Rita Ora releases a photo on Instagram with the following caption: "Cracking jokes on the news this morning \ud83d\ude0aAlso talking about YOUR SONG!! Out now!!! Thank you for having me @bbcnews \u2764\ufe0f\ud83d\ude4f\ud83c\udffc\ud83d\udc81\ud83c\udffc". Photo Credit: Instagram *** No USA Distribution *** For Editorial Use Only *** Not to be Published in Books or Photo Books ***  Please note: Fees charged by the agency are for the agency’s services only, and do not, nor are they intended to, convey to the user any ownership of Copyright or License in the material. The agency does not claim any ownership including but not limited to Copyright or License in the attached material. By publishing this material you expressly agree to indemnify and to hold the agency and its directors, shareholders and employees harmless from any loss, claims, damages, demands, expenses (including legal fees), or any causes of action or allegation against the agency arising out of or connected in any way with publication of the material.
    rti20558703.jpg
  • Tiger Woods’ smashed up car is seen here in images released by police from the golfer’s DUI arrest earlier this week. The photos, released on May 31, show the sportsman’s 2015 Mercedes Benz in a bad state - with two flat tires and cracking around the front bumper on the driver’s side. According to the report by Jupiter Police, Woods was found asleep at the wheel of his car and was on four prescription drugs when he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in the early hours of May 29 in Jupiter, Florida. He tested negative for alcohol. Elsewhere in the report it notes that Woods had 'extremely slow and slurred speech’ and did not know where he was before taking the field tests. The golfer undertook four sobriety tests. After being asked to recite the alphabet backwards, he instead offered to recite the National Anthem backwards instead. During the Walk & Turn test the sportsman “could not maintain starting position… missed heel to toe each time… stepped off the line several times… used arms for balance,” according to the arresting officer’s report. He was also unable to perform the One Leg Stand, requiring him to lift one leg off the ground six inches, placing his foot down “several times” while trying to complete the task. Woods was also seemingly confused by the Finger To Nose test, and was unable to complete the task as asked, the report notes. Woods released a statement later on May 29 in which he apologized. He insisted he hadn’t taken alcohol but had suffered a reaction to prescription medication. 31 May 2017 Pictured: Tiger Woods 2015 Mercedes Benz - damage to car photographed after DUI arrest. Photo credit: Jupiter Police/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA39603_006.jpg
  • Tiger Woods’ smashed up car is seen here in images released by police from the golfer’s DUI arrest earlier this week. The photos, released on May 31, show the sportsman’s 2015 Mercedes Benz in a bad state - with two flat tires and cracking around the front bumper on the driver’s side. According to the report by Jupiter Police, Woods was found asleep at the wheel of his car and was on four prescription drugs when he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in the early hours of May 29 in Jupiter, Florida. He tested negative for alcohol. Elsewhere in the report it notes that Woods had 'extremely slow and slurred speech’ and did not know where he was before taking the field tests. The golfer undertook four sobriety tests. After being asked to recite the alphabet backwards, he instead offered to recite the National Anthem backwards instead. During the Walk & Turn test the sportsman “could not maintain starting position… missed heel to toe each time… stepped off the line several times… used arms for balance,” according to the arresting officer’s report. He was also unable to perform the One Leg Stand, requiring him to lift one leg off the ground six inches, placing his foot down “several times” while trying to complete the task. Woods was also seemingly confused by the Finger To Nose test, and was unable to complete the task as asked, the report notes. Woods released a statement later on May 29 in which he apologized. He insisted he hadn’t taken alcohol but had suffered a reaction to prescription medication. 31 May 2017 Pictured: Tiger Woods 2015 Mercedes Benz - damage to car photographed after DUI arrest. Photo credit: Jupiter Police/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA39603_010.jpg
  • Tiger Woods’ smashed up car is seen here in images released by police from the golfer’s DUI arrest earlier this week. The photos, released on May 31, show the sportsman’s 2015 Mercedes Benz in a bad state - with two flat tires and cracking around the front bumper on the driver’s side. According to the report by Jupiter Police, Woods was found asleep at the wheel of his car and was on four prescription drugs when he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in the early hours of May 29 in Jupiter, Florida. He tested negative for alcohol. Elsewhere in the report it notes that Woods had 'extremely slow and slurred speech’ and did not know where he was before taking the field tests. The golfer undertook four sobriety tests. After being asked to recite the alphabet backwards, he instead offered to recite the National Anthem backwards instead. During the Walk & Turn test the sportsman “could not maintain starting position… missed heel to toe each time… stepped off the line several times… used arms for balance,” according to the arresting officer’s report. He was also unable to perform the One Leg Stand, requiring him to lift one leg off the ground six inches, placing his foot down “several times” while trying to complete the task. Woods was also seemingly confused by the Finger To Nose test, and was unable to complete the task as asked, the report notes. Woods released a statement later on May 29 in which he apologized. He insisted he hadn’t taken alcohol but had suffered a reaction to prescription medication. 31 May 2017 Pictured: Tiger Woods 2015 Mercedes Benz - damage to car photographed after DUI arrest. Photo credit: Jupiter Police/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA39603_005.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Toronto, Canada - TORONTO, - APRIL 27  -  Madonna Broderick, 60, who lives on Ontario Disability Support Program benefits and suffers from numerous health problems from when she was young and homeless and addicted to crack. She waits to see what the provincial budget might have in store for her.   in Toronto. April 27, 2017. . Steve Russell/Toronto Star (Credit Image: © Steve Russell/The Toronto Star via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zan_t14_004.jpg
  • November 21, 2018 - Osasco, Brazil - OSASCO, SP - 21.11.2018: FENDA EM PONTE DE OSASCO ASSUSTA MORADORES - A crack of about 24 centimeters in a bridge connecting the central region to the northern part of the city of Osasco leaves worried residents. According to Mayor Rogério Lins, the fissure in the overpass was caused by natural rubber wear on the expansion joint and there is no risk of the bridge falling. In the photo, the mayor of the city of Osasco, Rogério Lins, puts his hands inside the crack, to show that the opening is natural. (Credit Image: © Aloisio Mauricio/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
    20181121_zaa_f109_052.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by jockey Adam Kirby (far right) wins the Porsche Handicap during King George Day at Ascot Racecourse.
    37777683.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by jockey Adam Kirby wins the Porsche Handicap during King George Day at Ascot Racecourse.
    37777690.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by jockey Adam Kirby (far right) wins the Porsche Handicap during King George Day at Ascot Racecourse.
    37777687.jpg
  • Handout photo taken on May 17, 2018 of KÄ«lauea Volcano — Aerial View of Ground Crack. Ground cracks on Pohoiki Road during an overflight of the eruptive fissurearea at about 7 a.m. HST. Cracks continued to open and widen, some with horizontal and vertical offsets, in the area during the past 24 hours. These cracks are caused by the underlying intrusion of magma into the lower East Rift Zone. Photo by usgs via ABACAPRESS.COM
    637990_006.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by David Probert (centre left) wins the Amix Silver Bowl Handicap Stakes (Class 2) at Haydock Park Racecourse.
    36702568.jpg
  • November 15, 2018 - Paradise, California, U.S.: Arrested for trying going home! Paradise resident, CHARLIE MILES, 27, was sitting cross legged on the ground in handcuffs, with state rangers around him, after being arrested for trying to go home, Thursday. Miles, was on a desolate stretch of Skyway Road about halfway between his family's home, in the devastated town of Paradise and the church shelter in Chico, where he has been sleeping on a cot. His crime was trying to go back home. Miles was trying to see if anything was left of his and his parents trailers. Miles rose on the morning of Nov. 8 at 5:45 am. “I had coffee with my parents like I always do,” he said. “Then I was brushing my teeth and I looked up at the sky and it was gray. At that point, I started packing their stuff.” The flames soon chased them. “I was forced to drag everyone off the property,” he said. “My dad was helping my mom and I was carrying their belongings. There were trees exploding. People were trying to drive their cars out but they couldn’t. We have lost absolutely everything we owned,” The officers drove him back to the Chico City limits and set him free. “They didn’t give me a ticket or anything,” Miles said. He said a friend was able to return to their street and told him, everything is gone. Miles and his parents are but one of scores of victims of the deadliest wildfire in California history, the Camp Fire started Nov. 8th at crack of dawn, its death toll grew today to 77, while the number of people unaccounted is over thousand people. The blaze is now, two-thirds contained, after consuming some 150,000 acres. (Credit Image: © Renee C. Byer/Sacramento Bee via ZUMA Wire)
    20181115_zaf_s76_017.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by David Probert (centre right) goes on to win the Amix Silver Bowl Handicap Stakes (Class 2) at Haydock Park Racecourse.
    36702582.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: SHOCKING IMAGES OF CAPE TOWN’S BONE-DRY DAM WHERE ONCE LOCALS USED TO GO BOATING AND WATER SKIING WITH PIX By Magnus News Agency Shocking images show a bone-dry desert where once boats used to sail on a reservoir as drought continues to ravage South Africa. Theewaterskloof Dam once hosted yacht clubs and water skiing but today not even one vessel could be launched on the parched space. Photographer Dirk Theron visited the starved body of water last week and took these frightening images of the dried-up lake which should supply 40 percent of the water to Cape Town’s four million residents. As Dirk’s pictures show, skeletons of fish and muddy pools are much of what remains of the former 480 million cubic metre capacity site. Last week billionaire former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg toured Theewaterskloof as part of his role as UN special Envoy for Climate Action. He warned the reservoir and draught across the Western Cape should act as a wake-up call for the international community on climate change. Despite the drought, which has struck the area for the past few years, government officials in South Africa have been criticised for their handling of the crisis. A ‘Day Zero’ when municipal taps would be turned off has been pushed back from June 4 to July 9 despite chronic shortages continuing. South African Dirk lives just 30 minutes from Theewaterskloof, but said he was stunned by what he found there. He said: “Theewaterskloof dam is one of those places where everybody has a boat and people would go there for the weekend. “A friend of mine used to be a member of the Theewaters sports club, we used to go there all the time water skiing and playing on the water in his boat. “This was a massive, massive body of water. It’s been a few years since last I’ve been there but when I saw it I was shocked to my core. “We all know about the water crisis but standing there and seeing it with your own eyes is so surreal. “I stood on dry ground
    MEGA180787_007.jpg
  • June 14, 2017 - Agentes da Guarda Civil Metropolitana isolam usuários de crack na Praça Princesa Isabel para facilitar a identificação de traficantes e para que a limpeza da praça continue a ser efetuada. Na manhã desta quarta-feira  (Credit Image: © Bruno Rocha/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
    20170614_zaa_f109_012.jpg
  • June 9, 2017 - Usuários de crack caminham livremente pela Praça Princesa Isabel. Dados revelados por pesquisa da Secretaria Estadual de Desenvolvimento Social mostram que número de dependentes químicos na região mais do que dobrou em um ano. Na manhã desta sexta-feira  (Credit Image: © Bruno Rocha/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
    20170609_zaa_f109_034.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_041.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: POSTCARD FROM MOSUL, A BRITISH DAD HAS BECOME THE FIRST PERSON TO TAKE A HOLIDAY IN THE RUINS OF ISLAMIC STATE – AND HE’S EVEN INTERVIEWED AN ISIS BRIDE A married British dad has become the first person to take a HOLIDAY in the ruins of the ISLAMIC STATE. Without visas and in constant danger of kidnapping, beatings from militia, and even death, Andy Drury took a £4,000 three-day mini break in what was once Hell on Earth. Dad-of-four Andy, 53, has brought back never-before-seen photographs of the devastated former ISIS Caliphate centre Mosul, in Northern Iraq. And amidst shocking apocalyptic scenes the innocent survivors and their families have spoken to him about trying to rebuild their lives in the rubble. The building firm owner, from Guildford, Surrey, even gained access to an ISIS bride whose husband and two sons are all believed to have fought for the death cult. Andy has spent the last 20 years touring areas of the planet most us don’t dare tread and it’s not the first time he’s been to Iraq. In 2016 he narrowly escaped death after visiting the frontline in Bashiir, south of Kirkuk, where he spent time with Kurdish soldiers fighting ISIS. During that encounter Andy, who doesn’t wear a bulletproof vest or helmet, was shot at by Islamic State but luckily escaped unharmed. Andy, who lives with his wife and children, said his biggest reason for returning to the dangerous region last month was to see if the men he spent time with on the front line were still alive. His three-day tour was split into the former front line near Kirkuk on day one, the former ISIS stronghold Mosul on day two, and a last day visiting a refugee camp and interviewing an ISIS wife. Andy said: “I must be the first person to be have been a tourist in the ruins of Islamic State. “My fixer Ammar (not his real name) was right on the front line for the taking back of Mosul, taking reporters in there. “But he said he is more scared with me, with the news reporters he
    MEGA527512_009.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by David Probert goes on to win the Amix Silver Bowl Handicap Stakes (Class 2) at Haydock Park Racecourse.
    36702578.jpg
  • Crack On Crack On ridden by David Probert (second left) wins the Amix Silver Bowl Handicap Stakes (Class 2) at Haydock Park Racecourse.
    36702565.jpg
  • zReportage.com Story of the Week # 634 - Bloodline - Launched June 19, 2017 - Full multimedia experience: audio, stills, text and or video: Go to zReportage.com to see more - This essay offers a rare look inside the daily lives of members of one of the biggest gangs in the United States.'The Bloodline' are a chapter designated by the Brooklynn Latin Kings gang to the State of New York, one of the most organized gangs in America with more than 35,000 active members. The Kings are the oldest and largest Hispanic street gang in the United States, its roots date to 1954 Humboldt Park in Chicago. We see the extreme life conditions for the majority of gang members and also the relationship between gang members and society. It explores the intimacy and naivety of teenagers who have been pushed by their economic status, racial or social issues to survive in a hostile environment in one of the most developed cities in the world. It also draws attention to the happiness, unity and respect they show each other and the importance of the family and religion in their lives. The Trump administration recently vowed to crack down on violent gang members and criminals from American Communities. Recent nationwide gang apprehension programs such as Project Dawn, focusing on dismantling transnational gangs have seen hundreds arrested in New York alone. (Credit Image: © Nicolas Enriquez/zReportage.com via ZUMA Wire)
    20160605_634_e115_000.jpg
  • May 19, 2017 - Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand - Police officers detained relatives of shot death victims from the military crackdown on May 19, 2010 while gathering 7 years mourning activities by laying flowers and contributed a dramatic performance where the incident took place. On those violated incidents made 99 deaths and over 200 injured. (Credit Image: © Thitinun Sampiphat/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170519_zaa_p133_008.jpg
  • Astronomers have produced a highly detailed image of the Crab Nebula, by combining data from telescopes spanning nearly the entire breadth of the electromagnetic spectrum, from radio waves seen by the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) to the powerful X-ray glow as seen by the orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory. And, in between that range of wavelengths, the Hubble Space Telescope's crisp visible-light view, and the infrared perspective of the Spitzer Space Telescope.The Crab Nebula, the result of a bright supernova explosion seen by Chinese and other astronomers in the year 1054, is 6,500 light-years from Earth. At its center is a super-dense neutron star, rotating once every 33 milliseconds, shooting out rotating lighthouse-like beams of radio waves and light -- a pulsar (the bright dot at image center). The nebula's intricate shape is caused by a complex interplay of the pulsar, a fast-moving wind of particles coming from the pulsar, and material originally ejected by the supernova explosion and by the star itself before the explosion.This image combines data from five different telescopes: The VLA (radio) in red; Spitzer Space Telescope (infrared) in yellow; Hubble Space Telescope (visible) in green; XMM-Newton (ultraviolet) in blue; and Chandra X-ray Observatory (X-ray) in purple.The new VLA, Hubble, and Chandra observations all were made at nearly the same time in November of 2012. A team of scientists led by Gloria Dubner of the Institute of Astronomy and Physics (IAFE), the National Council of Scientific Research (CONICET), and the University of Buenos Aires in Argentina then made a thorough analysis of the newly revealed details in a quest to gain new insights into the complex physics of the object. They are reporting their findings in the Astrophysical Journal."Comparing these new images, made at different wavelengths, is providing us with a wealth of new detail about the Crab Nebula. Though the Crab has been studied extensively for years, we still have
    RTI20170510_sha_z03_413.jpg
  • Mar 7, 2017 - Antarctica - The shape of the world is hanging by a thread Ð or rather, according to experts, by a 110 mile-long (177km) rift. That's the extent of a rapidly expanding crack in an enormous ice shelf in Antarctica. When the Larsen C shelf finally splits, the largest iceberg ever recorded (bigger than the US state of Rhode Island and a third the size of Wales) will snap off into the ocean. Widening each day by 3 ft (1 m), the groaning cleft is on the verge of dramatically redrawing the southern-most cartography of our planet and is likely to lead, climatologists predict, to an acceleration in the rise of sea levels globally.The shape of the world is hanging by a thread or rather, according to experts, by a 110 mile-long (177km) rift. That's the extent of a rapidly expanding crack in an enormous ice shelf in Antarctica. When the Larsen C shelf finally splits, the largest iceberg ever recorded (bigger than the US state of Rhode Island and a third the size of Wales) will snap off into the ocean. Widening each day by 3 ft (1 m), the groaning cleft is on the verge of dramatically redrawing the southern-most cartography of our planet and is likely to lead, climatologists predict, to an acceleration in the rise of sea levels globally. (Credit Image: © NASA via ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    RTI20170307_shn_z03_320.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_042.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_040.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_039.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_038.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_037.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_035.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_036.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_033.jpg
  • In a land as parched as Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, no visitor arrives with more fanfare than the water man...That would be Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua. And when he rumbles down the dusty road bearing some 3,000 gallons of fresh water, the elephants, buffalo, antelope and zebras come running...They've come to know the water man by the rumble of his engine. And his lifesaving cargo. ''There is completely no water, so the animals are depending on humans,'' Mwalua said,. ''If we don't help them, they will die.'' Mwalua fills the bone-dry watering holes in the region, driving for hours on end every day to haul water to where it's most desperately needed...The holes themselves, lined with concrete, often need cleaning — Mwalua blames it on buffalo droppings — and sometimes, he will just hose down an area of cracked earth for the grateful animals...''The buffalo roll in the mud so they suffocate the fleas and ticks,'' he says. Many animals don't even wait that long, fearlessly crowding the truck as Mwalua cranks the tap...''Last night, I found 500 buffalo waiting at the water hole,'' he says. ''When I arrived they could smell the water. The buffalo were so keen and coming close to us...''They started drinking water while I was standing there. They get so excited.'' Mwalua, who is a pea farmer in his local village, came up with the idea after seeing firsthand the grim toll climate change has taken in his native land. In the last year especially, he says, the area has seen precious little precipitation, leaving animals to die of thirst in these cracked lands...''We aren't really receiving rain the way we used to,'' he says. ''From last year, from June, there was no rain completely. So I started giving animals water because I thought, 'If I don't do that, they will die.''' Between road trips, Mwalua runs a conservation project called Tsavo Volunteers. The 41-year-old also visits local schools to talk to children about the wildlife that is their legacy...''I wa
    20170220_zaf_y60_034.jpg
  • March 7, 2017 - Antarctica - Arctic Sea Ice Extent. The shape of the world is hanging by a thread Ð or rather, according to experts, by a 110 mile-long (177km) rift. That's the extent of a rapidly expanding crack in an enormous ice shelf in Antarctica. When the Larsen C shelf finally splits, the largest iceberg ever recorded (bigger than the US state of Rhode Island and a third the size of Wales) will snap off into the ocean. Widening each day by 3 ft (1 m), the groaning cleft is on the verge of dramatically redrawing the southern-most cartography of our planet and is likely to lead, climatologists predict, to an acceleration in the rise of sea levels globally.The shape of the world is hanging by a thread or rather, according to experts, by a 110 mile-long (177km) rift. That's the extent of a rapidly expanding crack in an enormous ice shelf in Antarctica. When the Larsen C shelf finally splits, the largest iceberg ever recorded (bigger than the US state of Rhode Island and a third the size of Wales) will snap off into the ocean. Widening each day by 3 ft (1 m), the groaning cleft is on the verge of dramatically redrawing the southern-most cartography of our planet and is likely to lead, climatologists predict, to an acceleration in the rise of sea levels globally. (Credit Image: © NASA via ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    RTI20170307_shn_z03_302.jpg
  • South Africa - Durban - 03 June 2020 - Grant beneficiaries in Durban wake up at the crack of dawn to try and be the first one's in the queues at the paying stations <br />
Picture: Doctor Ngcobo/African News Agency(ANA)
    grant1.jpg
  • Paulina Vega (Miss Universe 2014) attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_068.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Dan Carter, Geri Halliwell, Daniel Ricciardo, Paulina Vega, Bella Hadid, Cadel Evans attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_065.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_059.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_050.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_049.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_048.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_036.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Geri Hallivell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_035.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_034.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_029.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_024.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_016.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_015.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_014.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_009.jpg
  • Geri Halliwell attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_002.jpg
  • File photo dated 10-07-1954 of Roger Bannister, the first man to crack the four minute mile, easily retains his Mile title in the Amateur Athletic Association championships at the White City Stadium, London.
    35334238.jpg
  • A family looks at a crack in the earth along the foundation of a building at the Landmark at West Place Apartments after Hurricane Irma hit Central Florida on Monday, September 11, 2017. Photo by Mary Shanklin/Orlando Sentinel/TNS/ABACAPRESS.COM
    606523_012.jpg
  • Paulina Vega (Miss Universe 2014) attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_071.jpg
  • Paulina Vega (Miss Universe 2014) attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_070.jpg
  • Paulina Vega (Miss Universe 2014) attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_069.jpg
  • Paulina Vega (Miss Universe 2014) attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_067.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Geri Halliwell, Daniel Ricciardo attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_066.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Dan Carter, Geri Halliwell, Daniel Ricciardo, Paulina Vega, Bella Hadid, Cadel Evans attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_064.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Dan Carter, Geri Halliwell, Daniel Ricciardo, Paulina Vega, Bella Hadid, Cadel Evans attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_062.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Geri Halliwell, Daniel Ricciardo, Bella Hadid attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_061.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_060.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_058.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_057.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_056.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_055.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_054.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_053.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_052.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_051.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_047.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_046.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_045.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_044.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_043.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_042.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_041.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_040.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_039.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_038.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_037.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_033.jpg
  • Bella Hadid attends the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_032.jpg
  • Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_030.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_028.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_027.jpg
  • Tom Brady, Bella Hadid, Geri Halliwell attend the Tag Heuer gala night (Don't crack under pressure) aboard a boat at Port Hercule during the 76th Grand Prix of Monaco in Monaco, on may 26, 2018. Photo by Marco Piovanotto/ABACAPRESS.COM
    638529_026.jpg
Next