TRAVELLING

Here’s How to Watch the Emmys Live For Free to See if Your Favorite TV Shows Win Big

If you love TV, you may want to know how to watch the Emmys 2022 live online for free to see which of your favorite shows win big and which go home empty-handed.

The Emmys, which are voted on by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, started in 1949 as an award show to honor the best of the best in television. The Emmys are considered one of four major entertainment awards in the United States, along with the Grammy (for music), the Oscar (for film) and the Tony (for theatre.) Less than 20 people have won at least one Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony, which make up an EGOT.

Today’s Top Deals



Watch Emmys 2022 $1.99+

Buy Now

As for what an “Emmy” is, the word is the French version of the television crew slang term, “Immy,” which is a nickname for image orthicon,” a camera tube once used in early television cameras cameras. The design for an Emmy award is a winged woman holding an atom. The award was designed by television engineer Louis McManus, who used his wife as the model for the trophy. “The statuette of a winged woman holding an atom has since become the symbol of the Television Academy’s goal of supporting and uplifting the arts and science of television: The wings represent the muse of art; the atom the electron of science,” the Emmys website reads.

This year’s 74th Primetime Emmy Awards honor the best of American primetime television from June 1, 2021 to May 31, 2022. The awards follow the 74th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards, which were held on September 4 and September 4, 2022, and honor the best in artistic and technical achievement in American primetime television. So where can fans stream the Emmys 2022?

Read the rest
Read more
VACATION

Woman Chronicles ‘Horrible’ State House Was Left in After Vacation Rental

The pitfalls of renting your home out as a vacation property were put into sharp focus in a video that went viral on social media.

Vacation rentals are big business with Statista estimating revenue in the vacation rentals segment will reach $82.78 billion this year with the number of users predicted to amount to 887.8 million by 2026.

But while there’s clearly money to be made in the market, those getting into it need to know the potential downsides like broken doors, dirty bedrooms and guests who don’t seem to want to leave.

Carley Harrison knows that more than most. Harrison told Newsweek she first started out in the holiday rentals industry five years ago “by accident.”

A broken door and leftover food.
A broken door and leftover food – some of the discoveries made while looking around the property after “check out.”
Carley Harrison/Holiday Heim

“I got divorced and couldn’t make ends meet,” she said. “I had to pay for all my bills, three kids, and for the divorce—so when my kids were at their Dad’s I rented my flat out.”

While they were away and the flat was occupied she found places to sleep on friends’ couches, at work or occasionally in her car. She’s come a long way since then though with the business proving so successful she recently quit a corporate job to focus on running a holiday home.

But although she’s seen plenty during her time in the industry, one recent set of guests proved so troublesome she decided to take to social media to give followers a glimpse of how the house was left in their wake.

To clarify: Although the original version of the video mentions Airbnb, both Harrison and Airbnb have confirmed to Newsweek that the property featured in the video was not let out via the

Read the rest
Read more