萝莉视频

Pastor & Co. sets sights on 萝莉视频鈥檚 luxury market

Pastor & Co. sets sights on 萝莉视频鈥檚 luxury market
Levi Pastor with luxury furniture KAWS x Campana Companion Plush Chairs fetching over $300,000 each. (Supplied)
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Updated 03 August 2024

Pastor & Co. sets sights on 萝莉视频鈥檚 luxury market

Pastor & Co. sets sights on 萝莉视频鈥檚 luxury market

DUBAI: Pastor & Co., a company known for sourcing and selling rare and luxury items from leading brands, is looking to expand its business in 萝莉视频 with moves into hospitality and tourism.

The firm built its reputation on supplying high-end watches, contemporary art, and luxury furniture, and now has its sights set on the Kingdom鈥檚 growing luxury market.

Pastor & Co. rose to prominence in 萝莉视频 through its partnership with Farfetch Fashion Concierge, quickly becoming the primary supplier, thanks to its expertise in distinguishing authentic luxury items from counterfeits.




Co-founders Solomon and Levi Pastor with the 100 piece limited KAWS Four Foot Dissected Companion 鈥淏lack鈥 Art Sculpture sold for $190,000. (Supplied)

鈥淭he market was hot, and fake products were becoming increasingly sophisticated,鈥 Solomon Pastor, the company鈥檚 director, told Arab News.

鈥淔arfetch recognized us as not only being expert curators but as having infinite knowledge of the tiny details that set an authentic item apart from a fake.

鈥淲e were able to prove ourselves on what was a huge stage, and quickly outsold the likes of Harrods and Louis Vuitton in terms of units sold, simply because we could source thousands of items on demand.鈥澨

Originally started as SneakerPlug by Levi Pastor while still in high school, the business initially focused on limited sneakers and apparel for UK and US rappers and sports stars. As demand for luxury items grew, Solomon joined, expanding the firm鈥檚 catalog to include timepieces, jewelry, art and luxury homeware items.




Solomon Pastor at our Dubai warehouse with the 25 piece limited luxury furniture Estudio Campana x Fendi The Armchair Of A Thousand Eyes. Sold for $215,000. (Supplied)

Pastor & Co.鈥檚 reputation has attracted high-net-worth individuals, including members of 萝莉视频鈥檚 royal family.

鈥淲e are honored to have sourced items for members of the Al-Saud family and other members of royal families. We value their trust in us, and part of that trust is complete confidentiality,鈥 Solomon said.

The firm鈥檚 involvement in 萝莉视频鈥檚 Diriyah and AlUla mega-projects marks a new chapter.

鈥淲e are really excited by the transition of the Kingdom and are in awe of the vision of Mohammed bin Salman,鈥 Solomon said.

鈥淥ur relationship is in its infancy, but we are particularly focused on introducing our service within hospitality as well as the luxury items we can offer.鈥

Respecting the culture and history of AlUla and Diriyah, while embracing the opportunities both projects offer is a priority for the company.

鈥淪o far, our experience has been that the Saudi people are overwhelmingly warm and welcoming. Pastor & Co. has the opportunity to show the world how misinformed they have been about the Kingdom, and elevate luxury tourism through the items and services we offer,鈥 Solomon said.

In a groundbreaking initiative, Pastor & Co. plans to host Central, one of the world鈥檚 top restaurants, from Lima, Peru, in 萝莉视频.

鈥淐entral has never presented outside of Lima, so this would be an extraordinary coup for Saudi. We guarantee that Saudis have never experienced anything like this in their Kingdom, so we want to offer this opportunity to the Saudi people, high-net-worth expats and gastro tourists,鈥 Solomon said.

Looking ahead, Pastor & Co. aims to contribute to 萝莉视频鈥檚 Vision 2030 by enhancing luxury tourism through a range of service and culinary offerings.

鈥淧astor & Co. was founded by two very young entrepreneurs, and 萝莉视频 has an overwhelmingly young population, which is important for the progression of the Kingdom,鈥 said Solomon.


Razane Jammal shares behind-the-scenes look at 鈥楾he Sandman鈥

Razane Jammal shares behind-the-scenes look at 鈥楾he Sandman鈥
Updated 3 min 58 sec ago

Razane Jammal shares behind-the-scenes look at 鈥楾he Sandman鈥

Razane Jammal shares behind-the-scenes look at 鈥楾he Sandman鈥

DUBAI: British Lebanese actress Razane Jammal took to social media this weekend to share behind-the-scenes shots from her time filming Netflix鈥檚 鈥淭he Sandman.鈥

The second season of the show landed on the streaming platform in July in two parts, with the second half of the season premiering this weekend.

鈥淒ream dangerously and beware of the kindly (not so kindly) ones,鈥 Jammal captioned her post on Instagram.  

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The carousel of photos shows Jammal in the a hair and makeup studio, as well as on location in a mist-covered field.

In the role that arguably shot her to stardom, Jammal played Lyta Hall in 2022鈥檚 鈥淭he Sandman,鈥 based on the legendary graphic novels 鈥 and she reprised her role in the latest season.

In season one, her character dreams of her dead husband each night, slowly realizing that he is not a figment of her imagination but is hiding out in the dream world.

It is a part that Jammal managed to play truthfully with subtlety 鈥 a subtlety for which she credited her mother in a previous interview with Arab News.

鈥淚鈥檝e always been extra, and my mom was far more subtle than I am. I had to fine-tune myself to vibrate on her frequency, a frequency that was very sweet and very raw, and vulnerable and nurturing. I took that from her.

鈥淚 grew up having a simple, community-based life in a place where you have 500 mothers and everyone feeds you and you feel safe 鈥 even if it鈥檚 not safe at all. At the same time we went through so many traumas, from civil wars to assassinations to losing all our money in another financial crisis.鈥

 鈥淭he Sandman鈥 is based on novels written by British author Neil Gaiman.

This is the final season of the series, with Netflix announcing the cancellation of 鈥淭he Sandman鈥 after Gaiman faced a civil lawsuit accusing him of rape and sexual assault earlier this year, amid more accusations of sexual misconduct.

鈥溾楾he Sandman鈥 series has always been focused exclusively on Dream鈥檚 story, and back in 2022, when we looked at the remaining Dream material from the comics, we knew we only had enough story for one more season,鈥 鈥淭he Sandman鈥 showrunner Allan Heinberg said in a statement to Variety in January, indicating that the reason behind the show鈥檚 cancellation was a lack of script material.

Several other projects, including a stage adaptation of 鈥淐oraline,鈥 were cancelled in the wake of the allegations.

Gaiman has denied the allegations.


Tributes pour in as Lebanese musician Ziad Rahbani dies at 69

Tributes pour in as Lebanese musician Ziad Rahbani dies at 69
Updated 42 min 34 sec ago

Tributes pour in as Lebanese musician Ziad Rahbani dies at 69

Tributes pour in as Lebanese musician Ziad Rahbani dies at 69

DUBAI: Lebanese musician and playwright Ziad Rahbani, who was the son of iconic singer Fayrouz, died on Saturday at the age of 69.

Rahbani, who was born on Jan. 1, 1956, began composing for Fayrouz as a teenager and is the mind behind legendary songs including 鈥淜ifak Inta鈥 and 鈥淏ala Wala Shi.鈥 His father, composer Assi Rahbani, was a musical icon in his own right.

Considered one of the most influential voices in Lebanese music, Rahbani was also a fierce political commentator and was known for his biting political satire and political theater. Notable plays by Rahbani include 鈥淣azl Al-Sourour,鈥 鈥淎 Long American Film,鈥 and 鈥淏ema Inno.鈥 

Lebanon's Prime Minister Nawaf Salam paid tribute to Rahbani in a post on X, calling him 鈥渁n exceptional creative artist and a free voice who remained loyal to the values of justice and dignity.

鈥淶iad embodied a deep commitment to human and national causes,鈥 Salam added. 

鈥淥n stage, through music and words, he said what many did not dare to say, and for decades, he touched the hopes and pains of the Lebanese people. With his piercing honesty, he planted a new awareness in the conscience of national culture.鈥


For one filmmaker, telling Pakistan鈥檚 untold stories has become a path to healing

For one filmmaker, telling Pakistan鈥檚 untold stories has become a path to healing
Updated 26 July 2025

For one filmmaker, telling Pakistan鈥檚 untold stories has become a path to healing

For one filmmaker, telling Pakistan鈥檚 untold stories has become a path to healing
  • Insulting remark pushed Athar Abbas to leave corporate job, find healing in the stories of strangers
  • Abbas鈥檚 social media documentaries spotlight working-class lives, mental health stigma in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Mobile phones, data cables and memory cards sprawl across the editing table in Athar Abbas鈥檚 modest Islamabad apartment.

It鈥檚 an organized chaos the 38-year-old filmmaker fully embraces 鈥 a far cry from the mental turmoil that once engulfed him.

Abbas, a former commercial producer, now documents the lives of ordinary Pakistanis in short, emotionally charged videos he publishes on social media. His mini-documentaries 鈥 raw, personal and deliberately unpolished 鈥 have attracted tens of thousands of followers across platforms, racking up over a million views in the past year.

But Abbas鈥檚 foray into digital storytelling wasn鈥檛 born of ambition. It was a survival tactic.

He began filming after quitting his job at a construction company, where a senior colleague dismissed his work as 鈥減athetic.鈥

The insult gnawed at his confidence and spiraled into a depressive episode. Eventually, Abbas turned to the one outlet that had always brought him calm 鈥 the camera.

鈥淚 picked up my camera and started making stories,鈥 Abbas told Arab News. 鈥淎nd unintentionally, I realized that maybe for an artist, there鈥檚 no therapy greater than his art.鈥

Pakistani filmmaker and content creator Athar Abbas speaks during an interview with Arab News in Islamabad on July 18, 2025. (AN Photo)

Pakistan, a country of over 240 million people, faces a chronic shortage of mental health services.

According to the World Health Organization, more than 24 million people in Pakistan are in need of psychiatric support. Yet the country has only around 500 trained psychologists and 400 psychiatrists, roughly one mental health professional for every 260,000 people.

The stigma around mental illness remains deeply entrenched, especially for men. Talking about emotional vulnerability is often seen as weakness, a perception Abbas says is reinforced in professional environments.

鈥淗e feels that his manly personality will be affected,鈥 he said, referring to why many Pakistani men hesitated to express emotions, especially those that communicated perceived weakness.

鈥淪o he doesn鈥檛 even share that he has a problem with something.鈥

In Pakistan鈥檚 corporate sector, long working hours, harsh managerial practices and lack of mental health policies have contributed to high stress levels.

A 2024 review by the Pakistan Society of Human Resource Management found that most companies lacked formal emotional wellness programs.

Creative professionals, Abbas said, often bore the brunt of toxic leadership.

鈥淚f you talk to anyone in the creative field, they will tell you they are distressed because of senior management鈥檚 behavior,鈥 he said.

鈥淯nfortunately, it greatly affects mental health.鈥

A separate 2025 study in the Pakistan Social Sciences Review noted that while some younger professionals are more aware of mental health issues, institutional support remains weak, leaving them vulnerable to burnout and depression.

鈥楿NTOLD PAKISTAN鈥

For Abbas, the path to stability came through storytelling.

He launched a series titled Untold Pakistan, filming everything from a street vendor鈥檚 hustle to a single mother鈥檚 struggle for dignity. In one video, a man named Kamran Ali cycles from Germany to Layyah, Punjab, only to learn of his mother鈥檚 death upon arrival.

鈥淪torytelling became a way to survive,鈥 Abbas said.

This combination of screenshots, taken on July 26, 2025, shows stills from short videos by Pakistani filmmaker and content creator Athar Abbas. (Courtesy: Instagram/@athar.abbass_)

His films resist sensationalism. There are no stunts or celebrity cameos. Instead, they dwell in moments often overlooked: fatigue, memory, longing, resilience. The comment sections on his pages are peppered with viewers opening up about their own traumas, some for the first time.

Abbas recalls a message from a young man in Lahore who said one of the videos gave him the courage to speak to his father about something he鈥檇 been avoiding for a long time.

鈥淭hat one message made all the late nights worth it,鈥 Abbas said.

After 15 years of directing ads, music videos and corporate content, Abbas has no interest in going back. His priorities have shifted.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 set out to become an influencer,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 just needed to breathe.鈥


Saudi initiative Sound听Futures seeks to bridge music industry gaps

Saudi initiative Sound听Futures seeks to bridge music industry gaps
Updated 26 July 2025

Saudi initiative Sound听Futures seeks to bridge music industry gaps

Saudi initiative Sound听Futures seeks to bridge music industry gaps

DUBAI: 萝莉视频鈥檚 MDLBEAST Foundation is inviting regional entrepreneurs to take part in the 2025 edition of Sound Futures, an initiative designed to bridge the gap between music-related startups and investors.

The initiative aims to create local jobs, foster entrepreneurship, and accelerate the regional music economy by giving a stage to startups and entrepreneurs in the music and music-tech space to pitch their ideas to an audience of investors and industry experts during the XP Music Futures Conference, which will run from Dec. 4鈥6 in Riyadh.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

鈥淭he music and creative industries in Saudi and the Middle East are evolving rapidly, but support systems for early-stage startups still lag behind at the moment 鈥 Sound Futures offers a timely platform for founders to gain access to mentorship, exposure, and possibly investment and funding to help bring their ideas to life or scale their businesses,鈥 MDLBEAST鈥檚 Bader Assery told Arab News.

Applications are open to startups, budding entrepreneurs and even students from across the Middle East and North Africa region, with a focus on discovering the next big thing in music 鈥 innovations that could shape the future of music creation worldwide.

鈥淥ne great example is Maqam Labs,鈥 Assery explained. 鈥淭hey started with an idea in year one and returned the following year with a working physical synthesizer that brings Middle Eastern scales (Maqamat) into the world of electronic music.鈥

The initiative aims to 鈥渃hampion early-stage music startups. Whether they鈥檙e building tools for artists, fan engagement platforms, or music tech products,鈥 with applications set to close by October.

According to Assery, key challenges faced by music startups in the region include financial concerns, as well as a lack of access to potential industry partners.

鈥淎ccess is the biggest hurdle we鈥檝e seen so far. Access to capital, the right mentors, industry partners, and even data. Founders also talk about the difficulty of validating their ideas in a market that鈥檚 still building its infrastructure,鈥 he said, referencing issues Sound Futures seeks to address.


萝莉视频鈥檚 Ithra launches open call for $100,000 art prize

萝莉视频鈥檚 Ithra launches open call for $100,000 art prize
Updated 25 July 2025

萝莉视频鈥檚 Ithra launches open call for $100,000 art prize

萝莉视频鈥檚 Ithra launches open call for $100,000 art prize

DHAHRAN: Artists across the region are invited to apply for the Ithra Art Prize, with $100,000 up for grabs and the chance to have their work displayed at one of the Middle East鈥檚 leading cultural institutions.

The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture (Ithra) announced the open call for the seventh edition, with the head of the museum calling it one of area鈥檚 鈥渕ost generous and influential鈥 art grants.

Artists from across the Arab world can submit their proposals via the Ithra website, with a deadline of Oct. 16. This edition will also, for the first time, recognize five finalists with production grants. Their work, along with the winning commission, will be exhibited at Ithra鈥檚 headquarters in spring 2026. 

Launched in 2017, the prize initially focused on Saudi and Saudi-based artists but was expanded in its fourth edition to include contemporary artists of Arab heritage across 22 countries.

Farah Abushullaih, Ithra鈥檚 head of museum, told Arab News it served as 鈥渁n open invitation to artists to speak in their own voice.鈥

She said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking for proposals that reflect depth, authenticity and a clear vision. What stands out is work that is intellectually grounded and emotionally resonant.鈥

Both new commissions and re-contextualized existing works are accepted, provided they are closely linked to the artist鈥檚 ongoing research and creative trajectory. 

Applicants must be aged 18 or older and of Arab heritage or residing in one of the 22 Arab countries. Both individual artists and collectives may apply.

鈥淭he prize is about expanding the region鈥檚 cultural conversations through bold, original ideas. Ithra is committed to supporting them every step of the way, from conception to creation and beyond,鈥 said Abushullaih.

The Ithra Art Prize has played a pivotal role in advancing contemporary art from the region since its inception. Past winners have displayed their works at leading cultural events including Art Dubai, the Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale and the AlUla Arts Festival.

Abushullaih said: 鈥淚thra continually evolves its programs to reflect the changing artistic landscape and needs of the Kingdom and the region. In the case of the Ithra Art Prize, this goes beyond funding; we offer a platform for dialogue, critical thinking and meaningful cultural exchange.鈥

She added sustaining this impact was an ongoing commitment. 鈥淚t requires long-term investment in artists鈥 development, authentic community engagement and creating opportunities for works to resonate, both locally and globally. We want Ithra to be a meeting place for cultures to interact, share, and grow,鈥 she said.

Looking ahead, Ithra is already in discussions to present the winner鈥檚 work beyond Dhahran.

鈥淧artnerships and collaborations have always been central to how we develop our programs and extend the reach of the artists we support,鈥 said Abushullaih.

鈥淲e are in dialogue with institutions based in 萝莉视频 and internationally to explore ways for the seventh edition of the prize to be seen by a wider audience and experienced in new contexts beyond Ithra.鈥