Thursday, May 7, 2026
Nice to Rise for Equality: LGBTQ+ Community Calls for Powerful Peaceful March on May 17
Uber Takes to the Sea: Boat Transfers Between Nice and Cannes Launch This June
Starting June 26, Uber will officially launch Uber Boat along the Côte d’Azur, allowing passengers to book private boat trips directly through the Uber app—including highly anticipated coastal transfers between Nice and Cannes.
Yes, instead of sitting in summer traffic on the A8 or crawling along the crowded coastal roads, travelers will soon be able to open Uber, tap a new “Boat” option, and head to Cannes by sea.
The move comes through Uber’s partnership with Click&Boat, Europe’s largest peer-to-peer boat rental company, which gives Uber access to a fleet of roughly 50,000 boats across Europe without needing to operate its own vessels.
The Riviera’s New Luxury Commute
For years, private boat charters between Nice and Cannes have been reserved largely for the wealthy, yacht owners, and concierge-booked tourists.
Uber is now trying to make that process far simpler.
Users will be able to reserve:
Private boat charters
Skippered day trips
Coastal point-to-point transfers
Leisure cruises
Smaller boats with or without license requirements
The goal is convenience: no separate booking platforms, no charter brokers, no endless WhatsApp negotiations with local operators.
Just book through the same app people already use for airport transfers and late-night rides home.
A Direct Answer to Riviera Traffic Chaos
Anyone who has tried getting from Nice to Cannes during summer—or worse, during the Cannes Film Festival—knows the pain.
Traffic can turn what should be a 30-minute trip into a two-hour ordeal.
Uber is clearly targeting that frustration.
Instead of gridlock, travelers can take the coastline itself, with routes expected to include:
Nice → Cannes
Cannes → Îles de Lérins
Nice → Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat
Nice → Villefranche-sur-Mer
Cannes → Saint-Tropez
For tourists, influencers, executives, and festival guests, the pitch is obvious: skip the traffic, arrive by boat.
Because on the Riviera, arriving dramatically is half the point.
Not Cheap—Just Easier
Uber Boat is unlikely to be a budget option.
Since the service pulls directly from Click&Boat’s existing listings, pricing will remain comparable to traditional charter bookings. Skipper fees, fuel costs, deposits, and Uber’s own service fees mean this is more about luxury convenience than affordability.
Uber One members, however, will receive 10% back in Uber credits, which can be used later on Uber rides or Uber Eats orders.
So yes, your yacht transfer might help pay for your hangover lunch.
A Bigger Push Into Lifestyle Travel
Uber announced the expansion during its GO-GET 2026 event in New York as part of its broader push to become more than just a rideshare app.
Hotels, flights, dining reservations, event access—and now boats.
The company wants to own the full travel experience.
In France, launch cities include Nice, Cannes, Marseille, Paris, Annecy, Saint-Tropez, and Toulon.
But nowhere fits the concept better than the Riviera.
Because if there is anywhere on earth where “Uber Boat” feels less like innovation and more like inevitability, it is here.
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Cannes 2026: From Post-War Dream to the World’s Most Glamorous Red Carpet
Since then, it has grown into the most prestigious film festival in the world, where winning the Palme d'Or can transform careers overnight.
Films Everyone Will Be Watching
Among the most anticipated competition titles:
Amarga Navidad by Pedro Almodóvar
Parallel Tales by Asghar Farhadi
Paper Tiger by James Gray
Coward by Lukas Dhont
All of a Sudden by Ryusuke Hamaguchi
The Unknown starring Léa Seydoux
Gentle Monster featuring both Catherine Deneuve and Léa Seydoux
Another Day by Jeanne Herry
Karma, out of competition, starring Marion Cotillard
Also drawing major attention is Ira Sachs’s The Man I Love, starring Rami Malek and Rebecca Hall, expected to be one of the major conversation pieces on the Croisette.
Celebrity Watch: Who Will Be on the Red Carpet?
Expect a flood of star power this year, including:
Penélope Cruz
Javier Bardem
Julianne Moore
Cate Blanchett
Tilda Swinton
Demi Moore
Léa Seydoux
Marion Cotillard
Rami Malek
Catherine Deneuve
And of course, the unofficial stars of Cannes remain the photographers, publicists, and fashion houses battling to create the one image everyone remembers.
More Than Movies
For the South of France—especially Nice, Antibes, and Cannes itself—the festival is an economic engine. Hotels fill months in advance, restaurants are booked solid, yachts crowd the harbor, and luxury brands take over beach clubs and rooftops.
But beyond the spectacle, Cannes still matters because it remains one of the last places where cinema itself is treated like a world event.
Before streaming algorithms decide what audiences should watch, before awards campaigns begin, and before box office numbers dominate the conversation, Cannes asks a simpler question:
What is the best film in the world right now?
For nearly 80 years, filmmakers have come here hoping to answer it. Starting May 12, they will try again.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Nice and the 2030 Winter Olympics: A Mediterranean Gateway to the French Alps Games
The idea of the Winter Olympics being connected to Nice might
sound unusual at first. A sun-drenched Mediterranean city known for its
beaches, palm-lined promenades, and Riviera lifestyle is not the typical
image of winter sport.
Yet for the 2030 Winter
Olympics—officially awarded to the French Alps region—Nice is set to
play a central and highly visible role in what is being called a new
model for the Olympic Games.
Rather than a single
host city, the 2030 Games will be spread across multiple clusters under
the banner of “French Alps 2030”, officially awarded by the
International Olympic Committee in 2024.
The
concept is deliberately regional: snow sports will take place in Alpine
hubs across Savoie, Haute-Savoie, and the Hautes-Alpes, while coastal
Nice anchors the Games with indoor events and international access. This
structure reflects a modern Olympic strategy—reduce new construction,
use existing venues, and distribute economic benefits across a wider
territory.
Nice as the Coastal Olympic Hub
Nice’s role is expected to be one of logistics, ceremonies, and indoor ice events. The city is projected to host competitions such as ice hockey, curling, short track speed skating, and potentially figure skating, along with the closing ceremony. The Allianz Riviera stadium and surrounding infrastructure are being discussed as key Olympic venues.
What makes Nice particularly strategic is its geography. Within roughly an hour or so, athletes and spectators can travel from the city’s Mediterranean coastline to Alpine resorts such as Isola 2000 and Auron, which will support snow sports events. This rare “sea-to-snow” connectivity is one of the strongest arguments in favour of Nice’s involvement.
Equally important is access. Nice Côte d’Azur Airport is one of France’s busiest international hubs, with direct global connections that far exceed those of many mountain-only destinations. For the Olympics—where thousands of athletes, media representatives, and spectators converge—this level of accessibility is a major logistical advantage.
Tourism, Business, and Economic Opportunity
For Nice and the wider Côte d’Azur, the Olympics represent a significant economic opportunity. The city is already one of Europe’s leading tourist destinations, but the Games could extend its global profile beyond the summer season.
Key potential benefits include:
Tourism expansion year-round, especially winter visibility for a traditionally summer-heavy destination
Increased demand for hotels, short-term rentals, restaurants, and luxury retail
Growth in transport, event services, and hospitality employment
Long-term branding of the region as a “gateway to the Alps”
For businesses, especially in hospitality and real estate, the Olympics can act as a catalyst for investment and infrastructure upgrades. If managed well, the Games could reinforce Nice’s position as a premium international destination that bridges coastal luxury and alpine sport access.
A New Olympic Model—But Not Without Questions
The French Alps 2030 bid is intentionally designed to avoid the pitfalls of past Olympics. Instead of building entirely new infrastructure, organizers aim to use existing venues across the region and minimize long-term “white elephant” facilities. Some events may even be hosted outside the immediate Alpine area if necessary, reflecting a flexible and cost-conscious approach.
However, this model also raises legitimate concerns.
Infrastructure pressure and costs
Even with reduced construction, hosting Olympic events requires upgrades to transport, security, and venue capacity. Residents often worry that public funds will be diverted from long-term local priorities such as housing, healthcare, and transport infrastructure.
Environmental impact
The sustainability narrative is central to the 2030 plan, but the reality of moving large numbers of people between coastal and mountain zones raises questions about emissions, road congestion, and ecological disruption in sensitive Alpine environments.
Legacy uncertainty
While tourism gains are likely, Olympic history shows mixed outcomes when it comes to long-term benefits. Cities often experience short-term economic boosts followed by debates about whether the investment truly paid off for residents.
Balancing Opportunity and Responsibility
Despite these concerns, the potential upside for Nice is significant. Few cities in the world can offer such a combination of international airport access, established tourism infrastructure, and immediate proximity to high-altitude winter sport venues.
If successfully managed, the 2030 Winter Olympics could:
Strengthen Nice’s global identity beyond summer tourism
Accelerate transport and infrastructure improvements
Boost winter tourism in the Alpes-Maritimes and surrounding regions
Create a lasting partnership between coastal and mountain economies
The challenge will be ensuring that the Games leave behind meaningful improvements rather than temporary disruption.
End Game
The 2030 Winter Olympics in the French Alps represent a shift in how the Games are conceived—less about a single city, more about a coordinated regional ecosystem. Within that structure, Nice stands out as the Mediterranean gateway, linking international travel, coastal tourism, and alpine sport.
It is an ambitious vision: sunshine and snow, sea and ski, all within a single Olympic experience. But as with all large-scale events, success will depend on execution. If done well, Nice could emerge not just as a supporting host, but as one of the defining symbols of a reimagined Winter Olympics.








