Tuesday, April 7, 2026

A Gentle Reminder for Planning Your French Riviera Escape

 

As the warmer months approach, the familiar wave of travel content begins to flood our social media feeds—sun-drenched terraces, perfectly framed coastlines, and curated itineraries promising to show you the best of the French Riviera in just a few days. It’s inspiring, no doubt. But it’s also worth approaching some of this advice with a thoughtful eye.

If you’re planning a trip to this remarkable stretch of coastline, one of the kindest things you can do for yourself is a bit of independent research. Not to take away from the excitement—but to ensure your experience feels as good as it looks. And also sometimes not completely knowing is the best part of an adventure in travel.

Living here, you start to notice patterns. Some travel advice circulating online—particularly from short-term visitors or influencers or those passing through—can occasionally miss the mark.

Details like transport costs, local customs, or even the best way to get from one place to another aren’t always as they’re presented. And while the idea of seeing everything at once can be tempting, trying to fit too much into a single day often leads to fatigue rather than fulfillment. We see that all the time at the end of a day with visitors. And it doesn’t appear enjoyable.

Places like Monaco, Menton, or Villefranche-sur-Mer aren’t just photo opportunities—they each have their own rhythm, character, and quiet details that reveal themselves best when you slow down. The Riviera, after all, is something to be savoured.

Take Èze Village as another example. You may have seen recommendations suggesting a hike up from the seaside station. While it’s certainly a beautiful trail for those prepared, it’s not the only option—and not always the wisest in the summer heat.

There’s a local bus (#83) that runs regularly, and other simple alternatives such as grabbing an Uber for a quick ride that make the journey far more comfortable. Sometimes the most “authentic” experience is simply the one that allows you to enjoy your surroundings safely and at ease.

It’s also worth being mindful when it comes to concierge-style services advertised on social media. While there are reputable professionals with deep local knowledge, there has been a rise in offerings from individuals or companies without a real presence in the region. Promises of exclusive access—to all the restaurants, beach clubs, or major events—can come with high costs and, quite occasionally, uncertainty.

Whenever possible, booking directly or working with established local providers can offer both peace of mind and often better value. And sometimes what is considered a hot spot is actually a tourist trap. Once again, go where the locals are for a more authentic experience.

At its heart, the French Riviera isn’t a checklist—it’s a feeling. It’s the unplanned lunch that lingers into the afternoon, the quiet streets just beyond the main squares, the conversations, the scents, the subtle differences between one town and the next. Even those who live here haven’t seen it all—and that’s part of the magic.

So take your time. Stay curious. Ask questions. And whenever you can, lean on local knowledge.

Because the best trips aren’t the ones where you’ve seen everything—they’re the ones you can’t wait to continue.  

Champagne Lifestyle, Unpaid Reality: The Côte d’Azur Jet-Set Illusion Cracks

 

On the surface, it was the kind of life the French Riviera sells to the world: luxury, appearances, and effortless wealth. But according to a report by Nice-Matin, a young couple living the high-flying “jet-set” lifestyle on the Côte d’Azur is now facing legal trouble for something far less glamorous — allegedly failing to pay their rent.

A stunning villa on the heights of Villefranche-sur-Mer of over 350m² with contemporary lines, overlooking the billionaires’ peninsula of Saint Jean Cap Ferrat. And the rent to match: 58,000 euros for two months’ occupancy.

The case, now in the hands of the courts, exposes a stark contradiction. The pair reportedly maintained an image of affluence on social media, while attempting to move through elite social circles and projecting a life of ease and excess. Yet behind the curated façade, their landlord claims months of unpaid rent — a detail that cuts sharply against the image they worked to uphold.

This isn’t just a story about unpaid bills. It’s a snapshot of a broader Riviera paradox: in a region synonymous with wealth, the pressure to appear rich can sometimes outweigh the reality of actually being solvent. The Côte d’Azur has long attracted aspirational lifestyles — influencers, social climbers, and transient elites — all orbiting the same high-cost ecosystem.

In that environment, image becomes currency. Yet for many of us locals they can become transparent in their goals and seeing someone covered in designer wares (fake or real) tends to tell us what is likely more of the truth.

According to the report, the dispute escalated to legal proceedings after attempts to recover the owed rent failed. What makes the case particularly striking is the contrast between the couple’s visible lifestyle and the alleged financial neglect behind closed doors.

It’s a familiar modern narrative: luxury as performance. Designer outfits, high-end venues, and social media optics can create the illusion of stability — even success — while masking financial fragility. On the Riviera, where sometimes status is both hyper-visible and relentlessly competitive, that illusion can be especially seductive.

But reality, as this case shows, eventually collects its debts.

Whether the courts ultimately rule against the couple remains to be seen. What is already clear, however, is that the line between wealth and the appearance of wealth is thinner than ever — and on the Côte d’Azur, that line can come with a very real price.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Le Bal des Licornes (The Unicorn Ball)

 

Step into a world where the rules dissolve and self-expression takes center stage. Le Bal des Licornes isn’t just a party—it’s a bold, glitter-drenched celebration of identity, creativity, and unapologetic joy. Designed for the LGBTQIA+ community and everyone who moves with its spirit, this is your invitation to let go, light up, and live out loud.

Hosted at Stockfish in Nice, the night unfolds as a living, breathing spectacle. Six boundary-pushing artists and four enigmatic unicorns guide you through a seamless cascade of performances—each moment more immersive than the last. The space transforms across four vivid tableaux, each reflecting the many sides of who we are and who we dare to be.

As the night heats up, so does the energy. Expect a soundtrack that evolves with you—iconic pop and queer anthems from legends like Mylène Farmer, Lady Gaga, Beyoncé, and Dua Lipa, before slipping into deep, pulsing circuit electro that keeps the dancefloor alive until morning.
Uninhibited, electric, and entirely unforgettable—Le Bal des Licornes is where you shine exactly as you are.

Saturday April 18, 2026 from 06:30 PM

Don’t miss out! Get your tickets early!
Enter the fantasy. Become the spectacle. Welcome to Le Bal des Licornes.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

A Chance Encounter at Villa Nellcôte

 

Yesterday was one of those quiet Riviera mornings that feels almost staged—soft light, calm sea, and the kind of stillness that only exists before the season fully wakes up.

Walking back home from Villefranche-sur-Mer yesterday, I took the seaside route along the beach toward Beaulieu-sur-Mer, skirting the edge of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat where a row of extraordinary waterfront villas sits quietly behind walls and hedges. The kind of homes that don’t announce themselves—and don’t need to.

As I approached the gates of Villa Nellcôte, I noticed a middle-aged couple and their son lingering just outside. They were doing their best to casually peer through the tightly black screened entrance of the majestic gates, searching for a glimpse—any glimpse—of what lay beyond.

It was innocent enough. Curious, even endearing.

They saw me walking by and stiffened slightly, like they’d been caught in the act. I smiled, pointed at the gate, and said, “Rolling Stones?”

Instant recognition. Big smiles. “Yes.”

They had come all the way from North America, they told me. This was one of the stops they had to see.

We fell into conversation.

They asked if I lived nearby and thought it must be amazing..it is. They wondered about the property—how big it was, whether you could see it from the main beach (a bit), and if there was any better vantage point (only while on the sea, really).

They knew a little. But not the full story.

So I filled in the gaps where I could from my knowledge and experiences here. And as I did, you could see it happen—that moment when a place shifts from “nice villa behind a gate” to something far more layered, far more alive.

A Mansion Built for Wealth—Not for History

Long before it became legend, Villa Nellcôte was simply a statement of Riviera ambition.

Built in 1899 during the Belle Époque, originally named Château Amicitia, it was designed for grandeur: marble columns, symmetry, and sweeping views over the bay. It passed through the hands of financiers and shipping magnates, each adding polish but little noise.

Like many properties along this coastline, it picked up whispers over time—wartime stories, rumors, embellishments. But nothing that would define it.

Not yet.

When The Rolling Stones Moved In and Everything Changed

That came in 1971, when Keith Richards rented the villa.

At the time, the band had effectively fled Britain, dodging punishing tax rates and scattering across the south of France. Richards chose Nellcôte—not for practicality, but for privacy.

What followed was anything but quiet.


The basement became a recording studio—humid, makeshift, and far from ideal. Yet between June and August of that year, the band created much of what would become
Exile on Main St..

But the music was only part of it.


 The villa turned into a kind of gravitational center for chaos:
  • A steady stream of visitors drifting in and out

  • Long, disjointed nights of recording

  • Drug use that blurred time and structure

  • Equipment disappearing—some stolen, some simply lost to the haze

It was disorganized, excessive, and completely uncontained.

And somehow, it worked.

What came out of that basement would go on to become one of the most revered albums in rock history—raw, unpolished, and impossible to replicate.


Richards’ chapter at Nellcôte didn’t end cleanly. Legal troubles caught up with him, culminating in a 1973 conviction in Nice and a temporary ban from France. The era closed as abruptly as it had begun.

Back Behind the Curtain

After the Stones left, Nellcôte slipped back into its default state: private, guarded, and largely unseen.

No reinvention. No museum conversion. No guided tours.

 

Just silence.

Over the years, it passed quietly between ultra-wealthy owners, remaining one of the Riviera’s most elusive properties—not because it’s hidden, but because it refuses to be accessible.

Ownership, Sanctions, and Modern Intrigue

In more recent years, the villa was acquired by Russian industrialist Viktor Rashnikov.

Then, in 2022, history added another unexpected layer: French authorities seized the property as part of sanctions tied to the war in Ukraine.

Even now, it remains closed off—high walls, screened gates, and only the faintest suggestion of what lies inside unless you’re out on the water looking back.

Why Nellcôte Still Pulls People In

Standing there talking to that family, it struck me how powerful the pull of a place like this really is.

You can’t go inside. You can barely see it.

And yet people travel across the world to stand outside its gates.

Because Nellcôte isn’t just a villa. It’s a convergence point:

  • Belle Époque ambition

  • Wartime myth

  • Rock ’n’ roll excess

  • Modern geopolitical tension

Most historic homes get cleaned up, explained, and packaged.

This one didn’t.

As we said goodbye, they headed toward the beach, satisfied they’d found it—even if all they really saw was a gate.

And walking away, I had the same thought that sparked this piece.

Some places don’t need to be seen to be felt.

Villa Nellcôte is one of them.