Lifestyle
World’s Best Cruise Destinations?
Published
10 years agoon
By
Willie David
Still, ship masters repeatedly visit ports of call, becoming familiar with not only the local waters but also with spectacular sights that can be seen from the ship as well as the culture and lifestyles they and their passengers experience on land.
With that in mind, here are 10 Captains’ Favorite cruise destinations.
French Polynesia
Captain Mariano Manfuso, Island Princess, Princess Cruises
“If I close my eyes, I can still remember the extraordinary sunsets of French Polynesia. Visiting these islands is a unique experience. The lure is not only the friendly Polynesian people but also the atmosphere, from the warmth of the air scented with tropical flowers to the romantic sunsets that indicate the end of another extraordinary day in these marvelous islands.”
Captain’s tip: “Bora Bora is the perfect place for diving and water safaris, an enchanting geological phenomenon.”
Sydney, Australia
Captain Dino Sagani, Golden Princess, Princess Cruises
“The way from the sea into Sydney Harbour is second to none – the white surf breaking onto the rocky Heads that mark the entrance, a natural welcome to the beautiful waters. When making the final approach to the Overseas Passenger Terminal, the beautiful Sydney Opera House on the Port Side and the majestic Harbour Bridge on the Starboard Side, it is just the perfect place. You dock in the middle of these two iconic monuments of such an amazing city.”
Captain’s tip: “It’s an easy 15-minute walk east of the terminal to the quiet glory of the Royal Botanic Gardens.”
Indonesia
Captain Hans Mateboer, Rotterdam, Holland America Line
“When I first went to sea, I sailed for one of those old and famous shipping lines on a regular run to Indonesiaand other places in the Far East. I find myself now on the Rotterdam, after 30 years, going back to the same places. Much has changed but also a lot has stayed the same. Indonesia is a country which has a special place in my heart.”
Captain’s tip: “An unexplainable adventure there is the sunset. Seeing this huge warmth-generating star touch the horizon and seemingly stay there for a while, then disappear too soon, is a wonder that is unbelievably grand in its simplicity.”
Fort de France, Martinique
Captain Ignazio Giardina, Costa Favolosa, Costa Cruises
“Cruising in the Caribbean, Fort de France in Martinique is my favorite port, a relaxed and friendly place where you can experience the kindness and culture of the Creole people in a gorgeous and natural setting. The climate, food and the zouk (folk music) are all amazing.”
Captain’s tip: “There are many opportunities for water sports. I’ve personally enjoyed the ship’s excursions for snorkeling, diving, sailing and fishing – all delightful.”
Manaus, Brazil
Captain David Pembridge, Britannia, P&O Cruises UK
“Requiring a passage of some 800 miles up the Amazon River, reaching Manaus is an adventure in itself. The ship transits mysterious channels, passes islands that move and crosses areas that are actually shown as land on navigational charts, which takes some getting used to if you’ve spent your life avoiding charted land. There are villages where the local population is more interested and entertained by you than you are with them. And then you arrive at this bustling city of 2 million in the middle of the Amazon Rainforest.”
Captain’s tip: “Dressing in formal attire and attending a champagne reception and performance at the historic Opera House in this remote city is an amazing and memorable experience.”
Panama Canal
Captain Peter Philpott, Aurora, P&O Cruises, UK
“The Panama Canal resonates with me for the fact it was constructed in the first years of the 20th century, and completed in 1914, yet today’s larger ships can still pass through the famous locks. When we sail through the steep-sided Gaillard Cut section of the canal, one cannot but think with awe of the vast numbers of canal construction workers who lost their lives in the jungle in order to complete this Wonder of the World, connecting two oceans, which forever changed the face of the shipping industry.”
Captain’s tip: “Plan to spend time observing during the 10-hour passage as your ship is raised and lowered. You’ll at times be just inches from the canal’s side, the green jungle beyond.”
Grand Turk
Captain Claudio Cupisti, Carnival Liberty, Carnival Cruise Line
“Try to imagine an intimate, authentic Caribbean island, with a small and colorful downtown and a laidback but welcoming atmosphere. Try to envision perfect crystal clear water and white sand beaches just a step away from the ship. This is an island where I de-stress and get in touch with my true soul.”
Captain’s tip: “There adventures including scuba diving (my favorite activity), helicopter and boat rides and swimming with sharks. You can also just relax on the beach by walking away from the pier area and following the coastline in any direction.”
Hamburg, Germany
Captain Nico Berg, AIDAStella, Germany’s AIDA Cruises
“There’s nothing nicer than traveling up the Elbe in the morning and entering Hamburg Port. In summer months, when the ship is just in front of the curve of the harbor piers (Landungsbrücken), the sun usually rises behind historic Hamburg Michel (church) and the view is just amazing. Although I’m at home all over the world as a seafarer, Hamburg always gives me a feeling of coming home. When our ship leaves Hamburg Port, tourists stand along the Elbe and excitedly wave at us.”
Captain’s tip: “I would recommend taking a small barge through the Speicherstadt (the historic canals of the largest warehouse district in the world).”
Brisbane, Australia
Captain Colm Ryan, Pacific Aria, P&O Cruises Australia
“When we arrive here it is an early morning for me, as I have to attend to navigation through Moreton Baybefore reaching the Brisbane River. There is not much that beats this transit. It is usually quiet as not many boaters are out at that time of the morning. In the summer as the sun rises, it highlights the skyscrapers of the city, seemingly announcing that you are entering and welcome to a modern and vibrant Brisbane.”
Captain’s tip: “Brisbane is easy to walk around with many areas dedicated to pedestrians and particularly friendly locals. You’ll find a wealth of restaurants and nightlife on the South Bank of the Brisbane River.”
New York
Captain Marc-Dominique Tidow, AIDALuna, AIDA Cruises
“Arriving in New York with the ship early in the morning will never become routine for me. As we approach our destination, still relatively far out at sea, our ship passes Long Island. It’s still dark when we pass the second highlight, the Verrazano Narrows Bridge, the huge bridge connecting Brooklyn and Staten Island. Then we pass the Statue of Liberty on our way into the harbor. But most beautiful of all is when you pass the Hudson side ofNew York, with the sun rising behind the city. From the height of the ship you can look down into the individual streets of New York.”
Captain’s tip: “Be up at 5 a.m., standing on the railing with a cup of coffee and watch as the ship approaches Manhattan. It’s something everyone needs to experience for themselves.”
Entertainment
Jeffery Lorenzo Williams: Defying Limits and Redefining Possibility
Published
6 months agoon
November 6, 2025ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN NEWS) – When you hear the word “disability,” it’s easy to imagine limits, restrictions, and barriers. But for Jeffery Lorenzo Williams, those words have no place in his vocabulary. Paralyzed at 13, Williams identifies as a person of determination — a term that reflects strength and capability, not limitation. His life has become a masterclass in turning adversity into empowerment, proving that the most powerful movement begins in the mind.
During an exclusive interview with FNN News, Williams reflected on the event that changed his life and the mindset that carried him forward.
“I never focused on what I couldn’t do,” Williams said. “I focused on what I could and I just kept moving forward.”
That perspective has shaped a career defined by reinvention. Today, Williams is an accomplished New York City real estate broker, motivational author, pilot, and footwear designer. Each title tells part of the same story — one of perseverance, creativity, and purpose.
Through his footwear brand JLorenzo’s, Williams designs adaptive sneakers that merge fashion with motivation. His collections feature empowering inscriptions such as “Be somebody nobody thought you could be.” He laughs as he recalls me being his first customer. “Each inscription represents walking not just physically, but walking in purpose,” he said.
His work has not only built a stylish, inclusive brand but has also redefined what representation in fashion can look like. Earlier this year, Williams brought that message to Daniel’s Leather’s Inclusive Fashion Show during New York Fashion Week 2025, joining nearly 40 wheelchair-using models, including Ms. Wheelchair America 2026, Latavia Sturdivant. The event was more than a showcase — it was a celebration of visibility and empowerment. “The energy was incredible,” Williams said. “It wasn’t about being different, it was about being seen.”
Beyond fashion, Williams takes his passion for breaking barriers to the skies. As a licensed pilot, he flies glider planes, something he calls the ultimate expression of freedom.
“Flying gives me freedom,” he said. “It’s proof that even when life grounds you, you can still soar.”
His memoir, “My Feet Are Off the Ground: Turning Tragedy Into Triumph,” chronicles his remarkable journey from paralysis to success. Proceeds from the book fund nursing scholarships, extending his lifelong commitment to giving back. Looking ahead, Williams plans to bring his story to new audiences through a documentary and a stage play, with his son, Jeff Jr., potentially portraying him on screen.
When asked if he would change his past, Williams paused thoughtfully before answering.
“Of course, I’d love to walk,” he said. “But if I hadn’t gone through what I did, I wouldn’t have been able to touch and change lives the way I have. That’s worth more than anything.”
Jeffery Lorenzo Williams doesn’t just live with determination — he embodies it. Through his work, his story, and his example, he continues to challenge the world’s perception of ability. His life is a vivid reminder that real barriers often exist only where others place them, and that courage, when paired with purpose, can truly move mountain.
In a world quick to define people by their obstacles, Jeffery Lorenzo Williams is a compelling reminder that true limitation exists only where we allow it.
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Kareen Kennedy is the Assistant Editor for Florida National News
kareen.kennedy@floridanationalnews.com
Cultural
Breaking the Surface: Black Faces, Deep Roots — How Catherine White and André Musgrove Reframe the Stigma of Swimming
Published
8 months agoon
September 5, 2025ORLANDO, Fla. (FNN) – Across cultures, the assumption that Black people don’t swim is pervasive—a stereotype steeped in history and reinforced by generational trauma, lack of resources, and systemic barriers. But the tide is turning, thanks to powerful voices like Naomie Harris and André Musgrove, who are illuminating why Black bodies belong in the water—and why belonging matters.
Cat White & Naomie Harris: A Sea of Sisterhood Brought to Screen
The soul of Swim Sistas begins not just with who narrates it, but with who envisioned it. Cat White, a filmmaker and advocate for intersectional storytelling, created the documentary as a response to both personal experience and a wider cultural erasure. Through her lens, Swim Sistas explores the relationship Black women have with water—a relationship shaped by history, trauma, resilience, and ultimately, joy.
To bring this vision to life, White enlisted Golden Globe–nominated actress Naomie Harris (Moonlight, Caribbean narratives) to narrate the film, lending it both star power and emotional resonance. Harris’s narration gives voice to the shared journey: from entrenched fears to waves of empowerment. Through White’s storytelling and Harris’s delivery, the documentary dismantles the enduring myth that Black bodies and water don’t belong together. It instead celebrates a growing community of Black women who find solace, strength, and self-love in the water.
For many Black families, the water is layered with cautionary lessons like “don’t go in deep,” “stay where others can see you”—echoes of a legacy built on exclusion: restricted pool access, segregated beaches, and underfunded swim education. These generational warnings created barriers rooted in fear. But thanks to filmmakers like White, narrators like Harris, and creatives like Musgrove, the tides are shifting. Each story is a ripple—together, they form a wave.
André Musgrove: From Freediver to Ocean Emissary
At 28, Bahamian-born André Musgrove is redefining what it means for a Black man to be at home in the deep. A professional freediver, underwater photographer, and filmmaker, he routinely dives on a single breath, chasing sharks, rays, and unexplored depths to weave breathtaking narratives beneath the waves.
Musgrove’s artistry confounds expectations. He captures freedivers gliding alongside Caribbean reef sharks, modeling underwater dances or playing piano statues in sunny Exuma—media that challenge fear and reaffirm beauty in oceanic space. His iconic shot of a woman in a yellow dress, playing piano underwater amid shifting currents, synthesizes liberation and poetry—evidence that vulnerability and power can coexist concrete beneath the waves.
Why Their Stories Matter:
Visibility that Heals
When viewers see Harris’s voice guiding Black womxn toward water wellness or see Musgrove—a Black ocean explorer—embracing megafauna, the pool of imagination expands. Each new image, story, and film douses generational fears with renewed possibility.Reclaiming Water as Safe Space
Harris and Musgrove aren’t just swimming—they’re forming ecosystems of belonging. Harris speaks to the physical and emotional barriers she witnessed; Musgrove’s vivid underwater scenes repaint the ocean as a realm of respect and intimacy, not threat.Cultural Continuity and Conservation
Musgrove’s Bahamian roots affirm a legacy: in many Caribbean cultures, Black families have longstanding bonds with the sea. His films speak not only to identity but also to stewardship—marrying beauty with activism by highlighting endangered sharks and oceanic preservation.
Their shared fields—water-based storytelling—mask distinct journeys. Harris amplifies communal healing through narrative. Musgrove carves visual odes that open eyes, hearts and eventually, closed fists around fear. Together, they are dismantling stereotypes, expanding Black representation, and leading a cultural current toward liberation.
Looking Ahead
Documentaries like Swim Sistas, narrated by figures like Harris, help normalize Black comfort in aquatic spaces.
Artistry and activism, exemplified by Musgrove’s freediving and filmmaking, bridge social perceptions with ecological purpose.
Institutional shifts are underway—more Black-led swim clinics, inclusive swimwear brands, and aquatic programming powered by cultural pride.
Take-Home Ripple: The Water is Ours
When Naomie Harris recounts individual resistance family fears, cultural reluctance and André Musgrove captures freedivers harmonizing with whales, they’re not just swimming. They’re unfurling ancestral belonging, reconnecting Black bodies to a grace long denied. Their stories echo: Black lives and limbs are meant for water.
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Kareen Kennedy is the Assistant Editor of Entertainment for Florida National News
kareen.kennedy@floridanationalnews.com
Lifestyle
St. Lucian Dona Regis-Prosper Named First Female Secretary-General and CEO of the Caribbean Tourism Organization
Published
3 years agoon
July 13, 2023BRIDGETOWN, Barbados – The Caribbean Tourism Organization (CTO), the premier tourism development agency for 25 Caribbean countries and territories, has appointed Dona Regis-Prosper the new Secretary-General and Chief Executive Officer. Beginning her assignment on September 1, 2023, Regis-Prosper, who hails from St. Lucia, is set to make history as the first woman to assume leadership of the intergovernmental body.
With an impressive career that spans more than 22 years, Regis-Prosper brings an unparalleled depth and breadth of knowledge and experience in the tourism industry to the CTO. She has lived and worked in multiple Caribbean destinations, and served as Director of Marketing and Product Development of the St. Lucia Air and Seaports Authority; Director of Business Development for Margaritaville Caribbean Group in Jamaica; CEO of the Tortola Pier Park in the British Virgin Islands; and General Manager of the Antigua Cruise Port where she is currently employed.
Chairman of the CTO, Kenneth Bryan, who is the Minister of Tourism and Ports of the Cayman Islands, welcomed Regis-Prosper to the regional body. “We are extremely pleased to have Dona Regis-Prosper come on board to lead the CTO. Her vast experience, strategic insight, and impressive track record in the tourism sector make her an exceptional choice to propel our organization into a new era,” he stated, adding that having more women in positions of influence enhances the efficiency of the region’s major economic earner and sends positive messages of encouragement and inspiration for women and girls across the Caribbean.
A dynamic and transformative leader who has built and sustained a strong network of professionals in both the public and private sector (working closely with regional government officials, tourism stakeholders, and industry professionals), Regis-Prosper emerged as the top choice from a pool of more than 60 highly qualified applicants. The rigorous selection process included multiple rounds of interviews and a comprehensive assessment related to addressing some of the most pressing issues faced by the regional tourism industry.
Chairman Bryan disclosed that throughout the selection process, ministers, commissioners and directors lauded Regis-Prosper’s transformational leadership style. “They found her to be innovative, forward-thinking, results-driven, and solution-oriented,” he said, noting that her perspective on managing the climate crisis was particularly well-received, illustrating her deep-seated passion for sustainability and her ability to develop practical solutions to critical industry issues.
Regis-Prosper takes over the organization’s leadership reins from Acting Secretary General and CEO Neil Walters, CTO’s Director of Finance and Resource Management, who has been filling the position following the retirement of Barbadian Hugh Riley in 2019. The other two Caribbean tourism professionals to serve in the region’s top tourism post include the late tourism stalwart Jean Holder and Vincent Vanderpool Wallace, former Bahamas Director General and Bahamas Minister of Tourism.
Of her new role, Regis-Prosper stated, “I am deeply honored to have been selected to serve as Secretary General of the CTO and am grateful for the trust and confidence the CTO Council of Ministers and Commissioners of Tourism and the Board of Directors have placed in me. I eagerly look forward to working with our dedicated team and diverse stakeholders to promote the Caribbean tourism sector, champion sustainability, and continue to foster impactful relationships and deliver ROI for our members.”
With a Master of Business Administration degree, Certified Professional Marketer qualification, and significant experience in business development, strategy, marketing and sustainability, Regis-Prosper is well able to lead the Caribbean tourism sector into a bright and prosperous future, Chairman Bryan asserted.