Riyadh Season Festival Kicks Off with BTS Concert

Boy band BTS arrive for the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019, in Los Angeles. (AFP)
Boy band BTS arrive for the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019, in Los Angeles. (AFP)
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Riyadh Season Festival Kicks Off with BTS Concert

Boy band BTS arrive for the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019, in Los Angeles. (AFP)
Boy band BTS arrive for the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019, in Los Angeles. (AFP)

The Riyadh Season festival kicked off on Friday with a concert by global K-pop sensation BTS.

Attracting a massive crown of avid fans, the septet performed at the King Fahd International Stadium.

The concert was part of their record-breaking BTS World Tour “Love Yourself: Speak Yourself”, which was crowned the top-grossing tour for May, amassing over $50 million during that month alone, cementing BTS’ position as the biggest pop act on the planet.

Global icons, BTS have enjoyed unprecedented success in the Middle East and are the only Korean pop act to ever reach 25 million plays on Anghami, the MENA region’s largest music streaming service – further proof of the massive impact their music has had on fans throughout the region.

BTS World Tour “Love Yourself: Speak Yourself” kicked off its monumental stadium run on May 4 at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Los Angeles before traveling through Soldier Field in Chicago, MetLife Stadium in E. Rutherford, New Jersey, Allianz Parque in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Wembley Stadium in London and Stade de France in Paris, France. It also recently hit Yanmar Stadium Nagai in Osaka and Shizuoka Stadium Ecopa in Shizuoka, Japan this month.

The global boyband recently made history as the first Korean act to present at the Grammy Awards. In 2018, BTS scored two number 1 albums on the Billboard 200, embarked on a sold out world tour, landed the cover of TIME, and had the highest-grossing cinema event with Burn the Stage: the Movie.

Saudi Arabia witnessed its first ever K-pop concert in July with superstar group Super Junior performing at the Jeddah Season festival.

In line with one of the pillars of the Kingdom's vision 2030 in creating a vibrant society, the General Entertainment Authority (GEA) has been established to organize, develop and lead the entertainment sector in providing exciting entertainment options and experiences tailored to the needs of people from all walks of life around Saudi Arabia. GEA also stimulates the role of the private sector in building and developing entertainment activities.

The General Entertainment Authority contributes to supporting the Saudi economy by participating in diversifying its sources, raising its gross domestic product, supporting small and medium enterprises, and increasing the proportion of foreign direct investment in the entertainment sector.



Germany Goes Nuts for Viral 'Dubai Chocolate’

Pieces of Dubai chocolate with gold leaf are pictured at Abu Khaled Sweets oriental pastry shop in Berlin's Wedding district on November 14, 2024. (AFP)
Pieces of Dubai chocolate with gold leaf are pictured at Abu Khaled Sweets oriental pastry shop in Berlin's Wedding district on November 14, 2024. (AFP)
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Germany Goes Nuts for Viral 'Dubai Chocolate’

Pieces of Dubai chocolate with gold leaf are pictured at Abu Khaled Sweets oriental pastry shop in Berlin's Wedding district on November 14, 2024. (AFP)
Pieces of Dubai chocolate with gold leaf are pictured at Abu Khaled Sweets oriental pastry shop in Berlin's Wedding district on November 14, 2024. (AFP)

When Ali Fakhro lays out a row of pistachio-filled chocolate bars in the morning at his bakery in Berlin, he knows they will be gone in a matter of hours.

Inspired by the viral success of the crunchy delicacy known as "Dubai chocolate", Fakhro, 32, hunted down a recipe and began making his own version two months ago.

"On the first day I made 20 bars, but they went fast. The next day, I made 50 -- all gone too," he said.

So-called Dubai chocolate was invented in 2021 by British-Egyptian entrepreneur Sarah Hamouda, who is based in Dubai.

The chunky treat consists of a blocky, hand-decorated chocolate bar with various quirky fillings -- the signature flavor being a rich pistachio cream.

The treat went viral when TikTok food influencer Maria Vehera posted a video of herself eating a bar in her car, which has since been viewed more than 100 million times.

The real thing is only available to local customers in limited quantities, but the trend has led to an explosion of copycat versions of the chocolate around the world.

Shop owner Ali Fakhro prepares Dubai chocolate at his Abu Khaled Sweets oriental pastry shop in Berlin's Wedding district on November 14, 2024. (AFP)

- Queueing in the cold -

Fakhro, who runs Abu Khaled Sweets in Berlin, experimented "several times" with different recipes before finally landing on the right ingredient to give the pistachio cream its famous crunch -- a finely shredded Middle Eastern pastry known as kataif.

Germans have been scrambling to get their hands on the chocolate with bars selling for over 100 euros ($104) on the internet.

Last week, a 31-year-old man was caught by customs attempting to smuggle 45 kilograms of the sweet treat into Germany from Switzerland.

When Swiss manufacturer Lindt launched its own version of the Dubai chocolate in Germany this month, customers queued for hours in the cold to get their hands on a bar.

At up to 20 euros per bar, the delicacy is far more expensive than your average chocolate bar -- but that didn't seem to be putting anyone off.

"I waited 10 hours. I've been here since midnight just to taste this chocolate," 18-year-old student Leon Faehnle told AFP outside a Lindt shop in Stuttgart.

Customers line-up in front of a branch of chocolate producer Lindt before the sale of 100 Dubai Chocolate bars starts in Stuttgart, southern Germany, on November 15, 2024. (AFP)

- 'Easy money' -

Lindt launched the chocolate in Germany with 1,000 numbered bars in 10 shops, a spokesman for the group told AFP, and is planning a similar launch in Austria on November 30.

Dubai chocolate has also been a hit in France, with a version by chocolatier Jeremy Bockel on show at the Salon du Chocolat in Paris earlier this month.

Yannick Burkhard, 21, queued for three hours in Stuttgart to get his hands on the chocolate -- but is not planning to eat any of it himself. Instead, he will sell it on the internet.

"I would never pay that much for this. It's quick and easy money," he said with a smile.

"This bar cost 15 euros, but it can sell for almost 100 euros... There are lots of offers on eBay, up to 300 euros," said a customer who gave his name only as Lucas, 24.

Faehnle had a more wholesome plan for his bars as he exited the shop in Stuttgart beaming with pride at his purchase.

"Now I'm going to go home and share them with my grandparents," he said.