Current

Hotel Rutherbach since April 25, 2016 with a new website

Written by
Rate this item
(1 Vote)


After the change of the operator, the Hotel Rutherbach now presents itself with an updated website 

The new version of the hotel's website also took into account the current functionality and display requirements for different devices. This way, the website can be displayed optimally in a smartphone, tablet, laptop or on a desktop PC.  

Read 2883136 times

45702 comments

  • Comment Link kamyoneti otomobile cevirme Saturday, 07 December 2024 12:34 posted by kamyoneti otomobile cevirme

    I like what you guys aree usually up too. Thiss type of clever
    wrk and reporting! Keep upp the awesome works guys I'veincluded you guys to our blogroll.

  • Comment Link จัดดอกไม้งานศพ Saturday, 07 December 2024 11:25 posted by จัดดอกไม้งานศพ

    What do pop star Lily Allen, Olympic gold medal-winning diver Jack Laugher, tennis player Nick
    Kyrgios and 25-year-old Bonnie Blue from Nottingham,
    who has filmed herself having sex with hundreds of 18-year-old students (and sometimes their dads, too), all have in common?

    Yes, you guessed it. They are all ‘creatives' on OnlyFans, the adults-only online content provider founded in 2016 by a young
    Essex businessman called Tim Stokely, which is
    now one of the most visited (and lucrative) websites in the world.


    Just last month, Lily Allen caused a stir by revealing that she makes more money
    charging $10 (£8) - the site works in dollars -
    for pictures of her feet on her OnlyFans account labelled ‘La Dolca Feeta' than she does from her 7.5million monthly listeners on Spotify.



    But Lily's content is tame in comparison to much of the content on the site,
    the sort company execs refer to as ‘spicy'. Everything from cheeky shots of bottoms peeking out of bubble baths, blondes stirring
    vats of steaming pasta in G-strings, hot men waxing cars in their pants, right through
    the sex spectrum to twosomes, threesomes, sixsomes and hardcore pornographic videos.


    But also because, thanks to the allure of OnlyFans and the astonishing sums that a teeny number
    of the platform's 4.1million creatives are raking in, more
    and more young women (and it is mostly young women) who would
    never have considered it before are suddenly happy to join in and sell photos of,
    well, pretty much anything, to pay rent, settle credit card bills or splash out on nice
    holidays. Basically, a flashier life all round.

    ‘We feel empowered. We have agency. It's completely up to me if I take my top off
    or not,' says one 21-year-old girl, who joined a year ago and makes enough in a week to cover a year's student rent at
    Sheffield University and prefers not to give her name.


    ‘And I am happy to do it because for once I
    make the rules, in the safety of my home and they're paying
    me to do it. It's a mug's game, but I am not the mug.'

    For the benefit of those readers who are not among the site's 305million users,
    OnlyFans offers creators a platform where they
    can charge their fans a subscription fee ranging from $4.99 to
    $49.99 a month to look at their content, contact them (or more often access their ‘chatter' - more of which
    later) and access often more explicit, personalised, ‘à la carte' content through ‘tips'.





    OnlyFans model Bonnie Blue has filmed herself having sex with
    hundreds of 18-year-olds





    Rapper Cardi B is said to make $9million (£7.1million) a month
    from the site





    Actress Bella Thorne, a former Disney child star,
    made a record-breaking $1million (£800,000) in 24 hours

    ‘Pay $10 to unlock this video'. ‘Click here for more spicy content'.
    ‘The more you pay, the more you see'. You get the gist.


    In 2023, the site generated a record $6.6billion (£5.2billion), of which the
    company takes a straight 20 per cent - much less than YouTube - and the rest
    goes to the ‘performers'.

    It is unlike Instagram or other social media sites in that nothing is suggested - instead, you have to
    search for, and then subscribe to, individual
    accounts to see much more than profile pictures.

    Which is a good thing, because while some of the content is anodyne, much is highly sexual and
    many people on the site can bob freely from one to another.
    Perhaps a cookery hack one day, modelling new boots the next,
    then graduate to a few cheeky cleavage and bikini shots and more, as the money becomes more
    tempting.

    Every week, it seems, we hear of someone who has made millions.


    Last month it was announced that American influencer Corinna Kopf had
    retired from the site, aged 28, after making $67million (£53million).
    In her best month, she reportedly earned more than $2million (£1.6million).



    Rapper Cardi B is said to earn more than $9million (£7.1million) a month from the site.


    Meanwhile, Darcie Rattles was an out-of-work bricklayer with £6,000 in credit card
    bills and debts when she joined OnlyFans in 2022.

    ‘I was thinking: how the hell am I going to get to next week?
    How am I going to pay my credit cards?' she says in an online
    interview. ‘I'm young, I've got a good body and I've got a lot of followers.
    It is what any girl would turn to. It had been in the back of mind for two years, but then I did it.'

    Within two days of launching, she had earned enough to
    pay off her debts. Today, Darcie, who comes across as likeable, down-to-earth and has no qualms about
    what she shares, claims to earn more than £250,000 a year.






    Pop singer Lily Allen has discovered a niche market...






    ... she sells pictures of her feet for £8 and makes more money from her account labelled 'La Dolca Feeta'
    than she does from her 7.5million monthly listeners on Spotify

    ‘It doesn't matter to me whether I get my feet
    out, or my other bits out,' she says.

    Though it does tend to be the other bits, because Darcie's content promises very
    few clothes and, for those who pay extra, ‘a naughty side to me you've never seen before'.


    But even Darcie seems like the girl next door compared to
    Lily Phillips, a British model who earned £2,000 in her first 24 hours on the site
    and recently went viral for sleeping with 101 men over a 14-hour period.
    She has since announced she is planning to set a record of
    having sex with 1,000 men in 24 hours.

    And Bonnie Blue, a beautiful blonde with a golden tan and astonishingly white teeth, who has worked her way round Derby, Nottingham, Cancun and Australia,
    sleeping with university students.

    On one night during Nottingham Trent freshers' week - after
    publicising her stunt by wearing a sandwich board that
    read: ‘Bonk me for free and let me film it' - she had boys queuing up from 6pm until five in the morning.



    ‘I got through them all,' she said proudly in one interview in which she reminds us that, thanks to OnlyFans, she has already banked more than £3 million - for which she was applauded by her followers
    for her entrepreneurship.

    But all that is chicken feed when you consider the £370 million dividend that company owner paid himself last year.


    And these days that's Leonid Radvinsky, who bought a
    majority stake from Tim Stokely in 2018, two years after he started the business with
    the help of a loan from his father.

    It was the Covid-era lockdowns that thrust OnlyFans into the stratosphere.
    Everyone shut up at home, nothing to do. In 2020, it generated revenues of $2.23billion (£1.8billion).
    By 2021, it was up to $4.8billion (£3.8billion). There was a brief hiatus in October
    of that year when they tried banning sexually explicit content but that lasted about ten minutes before they switched
    back.

    There have been plenty of scandals along the way. A BBC investigation back in 2021 revealed that children were not just accessing the material online by foxing the age verification process
    but were also selling explicit videos on the website.

    Leah, 17, had used a fake driving licence to set up an OnlyFans account where she made £5,000 uploading
    revealing videos of herself.

    There have also been claims of OnlyFans creators using public gyms and spaces to make adult content.


    Recently there has been more concerns that the company is not doing enough to protect minors.



    OnlyFans, however, prefers to portray itself as a force
    for good, with supporters arguing that it empowers people
    by allowing them to sell content - over which they have full control - directly to consumers.

    And many of the Gen Z generation seem to agree. ‘It's fine.
    It's empowering. It's taking control,' they cry, pointing out
    that the site has loads of moderators and a tight security system to ensure that
    all users are over 18.

    And they say, anyway, that OnlyFans isn't just about sex.



    Of course, they're right. It has long been awash with pneumatic reality TV stars and the likes of Lottie Moss, Kerry
    Katona and Katie Price, who are happy to tease their followers with a few cheeky peeks in skimpy bikinis.


    I spend an afternoon browsing the site and, while it is not
    all ‘spicy' content as the company executives like to call it, everything is dripping with
    sauce and promise.

    The big lips, the push-up bras, even the way a pretty Spanish chef
    is holding her paella pan. Company executives have been pushing hard to make the platform more
    mainstream - offering contracts and financial incentives to encourage musicians, sports stars,
    cooks, anyone really, to come on and share a bit of exclusive
    - or niche - content.

    Really, anything that people will pay to look at - glimpses backstage at concerts.
    Celebrities in the bath.

    During the 2024 Olympic Games, a raft of athletes jumped on the OnlyFans bandwagon to share pictures
    of their beautifully toned bodies.

    Along with Jack Laugher, Team NZ rower Robbie Manson uses
    the site to share ‘exclusive content that tastefully explores the boundaries, including artistic
    portrayals of nudity' for $14.99 a month. British speedskater




    Olympic diver Jack Laugher is among a number of sports stars using OnlyFans





    Reality TV star Kerry Katona has also teased followers with content





    Lottie Moss  has also taken to the adults-only online content provider that
    was founded in 2016 and is used by 4.1 million creatives

    Elise Christie turned to the site when she found herself in financial difficulties.



    All of which seems to be working well for them, but
    it can be rather murkier for others.

    Not least because, in less than a decade, OnlyFans has
    spawned an entire support industry of ‘sugar daddies' who support performers financially and ‘chatters' who work for
    them. ‘Sugar daddies' tend to be older male businessmen who ‘invest' in promising creatives.
    In what are referred to rather murkily as ‘mutually beneficial deals', they invest
    in branding and marketing and videography to boost traffic.


    Chatters are different. For the real stars, the traffic is so
    high and the interaction with followers so demanding that if
    they had to do it all themselves, there's no way they would ever have time to
    put their pyjamas back on.

    So ‘chatters' - a sort of online 21st-century Cyrano de Bergerac - do that for them.
    Keeping them engaged, online, needy and most of all, spending, spending, spending for more
    and more content.

    Which means, of course, that the whole thing
    is a total scam. The poor daft subscriber thinks he's really making a
    connection with ‘Racy Tracey from Twickenham', but is more likely chatting to a middle-aged
    father of three from the Philippines.

    He will have learnt everything about Tracey - her favourite colour, favourite animal and favourite position - have
    studied a script that reminds him ‘it's all about selling, selling,
    selling', and will be being paid $4 an hour for his efforts.
    Or the subscriber could just be talking to an AI bot - which perhaps is more appealing.




    Read More


    EXCLUSIVE

    A year after split, I've had a baby and got engaged, writes Mother Pukka ANNA WHITEHOUSE


    Chatters can be dangerous. As Alanya, a paralegal from Scotland, discovered when she learned that one of her most enthusiastic followers had travelled to her home town to find her,
    encouraged by her chatter.

    ‘My chatter told him that I loved him.
    I would never, ever have said that,' she said.

    But, sadly, chatters, sugar daddies and stalkers are not a problem for most creatives.
    Almost all of whom are still struggling to make any proper
    money, however many clothes they take off.

    They will never know the clout of Cardi B, or Lily Allen, or former Disney
    child star Bella Thorne, who famously made a record- breaking $1million (£800,
    000) in 24 hours when she joined in August 2020.
    (Though initially there was some confusion as
    to whether she would be appearing nude or not. She did not - which caused quite a rumpus.)

    Because, unlike celebrities who can redirect their existing social media followers to
    their OnlyFans accounts, most people find it hard to grab attention without
    doing something, well, grabby.

    So, despite all the tales of golden riches, the average earnings of an OnlyFans creative
    is still just $150 (£118) a month and, with the market now so flooded, is only likely to go
    one way.

    And it's easy to see how, if you're a young woman who has
    convinced yourself that you're in control, empowered and mistress
    of your own destiny, you could find yourself moving inevitably and inexorably up (or
    perhaps down) the scale, revealing more and more.


    Until, before you know it, like Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips,
    you've kept nothing back for yourself.


    NottinghamLily AllenOnlyFansJack Laugher

  • Comment Link Kukeseente tervislikud omadused Saturday, 07 December 2024 06:39 posted by Kukeseente tervislikud omadused

    I think everything composed was very reasonable.
    However, what about this? what if you were to write a awesome headline?
    I am not saying your content is not solid., but suppose you added something that grabbed
    people's attention? I mean HOTEL Rutherbach - Hotel
    Rutherbach since April 25, 2016 with a new website is a little plain. You
    might peek at Yahoo's home page and watch how they create article titles
    to get people to open the links. You might try adding
    a video or a pic or two to get people interested about everything've written. In my opinion, it
    might make your posts a little livelier.

  • Comment Link horizontal rolling discharge chute outlet door Friday, 06 December 2024 22:04 posted by horizontal rolling discharge chute outlet door

    Hello there! Do you use Twitter? I'd like to follow you if that would be okay.
    I'm definitely enjoying your blog and look forward to new posts.

  • Comment Link learn the facts here now Friday, 06 December 2024 18:15 posted by learn the facts here now

    I quite like reading through a post that will make people think.
    Also, many thanks for allowing me to comment!

  • Comment Link chute door handle Friday, 06 December 2024 16:27 posted by chute door handle

    Hey there! Do you know if they make any plugins to assist
    with SEO? I'm trying to get my blog to rank for some targeted keywords but I'm not seeing
    very good success. If you know of any please share. Cheers!

  • Comment Link 桃園房屋貸款 Friday, 06 December 2024 15:12 posted by 桃園房屋貸款

    Great article.

  • Comment Link iqos i one Friday, 06 December 2024 14:59 posted by iqos i one

    id="firstHeading" class="firstHeading mw-first-heading">Search results

    Help









    English














    Tools



    Tools
    move to sidebar hide

    Actions





    General

  • Comment Link ดอกไม้จัดงานศพ Friday, 06 December 2024 13:50 posted by ดอกไม้จัดงานศพ

    The existence of an exclusive hideaway for the
    country's movers and shakers where secret deals
    were done in private luxury first exploded into
    the public eye back in 2007.

    Back then, the fact that Qantas spent hundreds of thousands of dollars wining and
    dining the nation's political elite in ultra-exclusive VIP lounges was relatively unknown.

    It was a time before Alan Joyce's tenure as the CEO of Qantas had
    even started, when he was boss of the comparatively lowly budget airline, Jetstar.


    And unlike Anthony Albanese's current slide in the
    polls leading up to an election in next year, the prospects back in 2007 were rosy for Labor. 

    The election that was looming was the 'Kevin 07' landslide that
    would see Kevin Rudd become prime minister and John Howard lose his own seat. 

    The issue which blew open the 'guilty secret' of the Chairman's Lounge then wasn't about a prime minister's privileges,
    although John Howard and Kevin Rudd were certainly both members during their terms as PM. 

    But when broadcaster Steve Price - himself a long time Chairman's Lounge member - revealed a politically charged remark made
    within the club's hallowed walls, the cat was out of the bag.


    The political revelation - a comment by ex-rock star turned
    senator Peter Garrett that Labor would change the policies it campaigned on if it won government - did not deter his party from romping in on election day.


    In contrast, the scandal currently engulfing Anthony Albanese about his Chairman's Lounge membership and that of
    his ex-wife Carmel Tebbutt, and their son Nathan could bring down the prime minister.   




    The exclusive Qantas Chairman's Lounge (above) has been a well-kept secret for years, but it exploded into the public conscience in 2007 as the result of
    a political furore





    Broadcaster Steve Price revealed he had been a Chairman's Lounge member since 2002 during a row before the 2007 election won by Kevin Rudd which let the
    cat out of the bag about the VIP club

    The existence of the lounge was so little known back in 2007 that in defending his disclosure
    of Garrett's remark, Steve Price had to explain what the private enclave actually
    was.

    In a first person piece he wrote: 'The Chairman's Lounge is a separate frequent flyers lounge away from the crowded normal Qantas Club. 

    'As its name implies, the people given access to
    it are approved by the Qantas chairman, Margaret Jackson. 

    'I have been a Chairman's Lounge member since 2002.'

    In his opinion piece, Price also revealed TV entertainment reporter Richard
    Wilkins was also a member of lounge.

    Wilkins had also been inside at the time and was his only witness to the remark Price said Garrett had made.


    Other prominent media figures, such as 60 Minutes reporters, actors
    and performers, and well-known writers and
    sports people are said to be among the lounge's exclusive
    membership of around 6000.

    Price went on to defend himself for reporting what some claimed was a confidential conversation in a private place,
    but which exposed him to criticism over his own membership for allegedly promoting Qantas on his radio
    show.




    Back in 2007, Alan Joyce (left) was boss
    of the comparatively lowly budget airline Jetstar, and then Qantas CEO
    Geoff Dixon (right) had the power over who made the cut to the Chairman's
    Lounge





    One observer has described the relationship bet6ween leading politicians
    such as PM Anthony Albanese and the former Qantas CEO Alan Joyce (above)
    as 'alarmingly cosy'

    'Why on earth is Qantas giving a controversial shock jock membership of
    its Chairman's Lounge, which is supposedly to enable our
    elite politicians and business leaders some privacy from the hoi
    polloi?' demanded Crikey reporter Stephen Mayne at the time.


    'The Chairman's Lounge is meant to be all about
    discretion and confidentiality,' he said, accusing Price of breaking 'a confidence'.


    The following year, before he was succeeded as Qantas CEO by Alan Joyce, Geoff Dixon was the sole gatekeeper of entry into the club's hushed confines.


    Qantas Chairman's Lounge membership was 'so exclusive that you have to be personally invited by the airline's chieftain',
    Nine newspapers reported in 2008.

    'A marvellous benefit of lounge membership is that the mega
    rich and powerful avoid having to mingle with the riffraff who will be travelling cattle class.


    'Having said that, members of the ultra-exclusive club have included
    Pauline Hanson.

    'Another lounge member is Brad Cooper, who is currently enjoying a prolonged exposure to cattle-class in Kirkconnell Correctional Centre.' (Cooper was the former HIH insurance executive
    jailed for eight years on fraud and bribery offences).





    Membership of the elite lounge is confined to about 6000
    Australians including politicians from both sides, senior public servants, TV stars
    and actors






    The 'scandal' currently engulfing Anthony Albanese about his Chairman's Lounge membership and that of his ex-wife
    Carmel Tebbutt, and their son Nathan could bring down the prime minister (above the PM with partner Jodie Haydon and ex-Qantas CEO Alan Joyce)

    The report noted that politicians declaring membership of the lounge 'which most of their spouses got too' in their pecuniary interests that year included Liberal MPs of the day, Philip
    Ruddock, Bob Baldwin and Andrew Southcott.


    Labor MPs with lounge privileges included Tanya Plibersek,
    Bob McMullan, and Sharon Grierson, and Martin Ferguson declared a bottle of Grange hermitage as a gift from Qantas, as did Liberal, Christopher Pyne.



    Asked if all MPs got the captain's pick from
    Geoff Dixon, the airline's spokesperson  told Nine:
    'We like to retain a bit of mystery. Membership is by invitation only and it
    is reviewed periodically.'

    Fast forward to today, and nearly every single federal
    politician in the country has accepted free membership
    of the controversial, invitation-only lounge with one even describing it as an 'entitlement'. 

    Qantas and the Albanese government recently denied the 'very,
    very high-end perk' gives the airline a disproportionate level of influence over the country's politicians.


    They were commenting ahead of the launch of the new book The Chairman's Lounge by former Australian Financial Review columnist Joe Aston, which has stirred up the
    controversy. 

    A Daily Mail Australia audit of the members' interest registers - in both Federal Parliament's House of Representatives and the
    Senate - revealed almost 93 per cent of the nation's leaders have been 'gifted' membership to the lavish, all-inclusive lounge.


    Mr Albanese has defended himself by saying he declared all his benefits in pecuniary interest statements. 

    At a press conference this week, he repeated that all of his upgrades 'have been declared as appropriate.

    What's appropriate is transparency.'  

    Apart from the PM, members include every one of his 22-person Cabinet, his seven-person Outer Ministry and all 12
    assistant ministers.





    PM Anthony Albanese and every member of his 22-person Cabinet, his seven-person Outer Ministry and all 12 assistant
    ministers are members of the exclusive Chairman's Lounge





    Entry to the country's six opulent VIP clubs are suitably discreet,
    but once inside, the designer lounges offer free à la carte fine dining, table
    service and a discreet army of dedicated lounge attendants

    On the Coalition side of parliament, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, deputy leader David Littleproud and former
    deputy Barnaby Joyce are also among the swathes of
    politicians who have disclosed they have taken up free membership to the
    contentious club.

    Bill Shorten is a member, Tanya Plibersek is still a member and so is Teal MP, Zali Steggall.


    Last year it was reported that Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chairwoman Gina Cass-Gottlieb and Australian Securities and Investments Commission chairman Joe Longo and some of their
    deputies are members of the Chairman's Lounge despite regulating the airline. 

    Senior public servants in the club included Department of
    Prime Minister and Cabinet secretary Glyn Davis, deputy secretaries Nadine
    Williams, Liz Hefren-Webb, Rachel Bacon and ambassador to Beijing, Scott Dewar.


    Other Qantas freebies bestowed on members include numerous business class
    flight upgrades, model Qantas aircrafts, frequent flyer points, and tickets to sporting and entertainment events. 

    Touted as 'the most exclusive club in the country', membership to the Chairman's Lounge is still veiled
    in secrecy.




    The new book The Chairman's Lounge by former Australian Financial Review columnist
    Joe Aston (above) has stirred up the controversy 





    Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chairwoman Gina Cass-Gottlieb and Australian Securities and Investments Commission chairman Joe Longo are members despite regulating the airline

    Even the entrances to each of the country's six opulent VIP clubs
    - in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Canberra and Perth airports - are suitably discreet.


    Once inside, however, the designer lounges are noticeably luxurious, with free à la carte fine dining,
    table service, a decadent selection of wines and Champagne and a discreet army of dedicated
    lounge attendants.

    Virgin Airlines has its own version of the VIP enclave, the 'Beyond'
    lounge. 

    Only a handful of federal politicians have relinquished their
    membership to the Qantas Chairman's Lounge in the wake of the furore.


    The select few to take a principled stand on the issue include South Australian senator Barbara Pocock and former Wallabies star turned ACT senator David Pocock, along with MPs Stephen Bates,
    Queensland Green Elizabeth Watson-Brown, and Monique Ryan, a Teal from Victoria.


    Geoffrey Watson SC, a former counsel assisting the Independent Commission Against Corruption and a director
    of the Centre for Public Integrity, has implored all politicians and policymakers to follow suit.



    'There are certain positions in life where you cannot take Chairman's Club membership,' he said.


    'You're taking public money for the job and you are supposed
    to represent the public. Why not sit with them while you're waiting for a plane?'


    QantasAnthony Albanese

  • Comment Link check it out Friday, 06 December 2024 12:36 posted by check it out

    Howdy just wanted to give you a quick heads up.

    The words in your article seem to be running off the screen in Opera.
    I'm not sure if this is a formatting issue or something to do with internet browser compatibility but
    I figured I'd post to let you know. The design look great though!
    Hope you get the problem resolved soon. Cheers

Leave a comment

Make sure you enter all the required information, indicated by an asterisk (*). HTML code is not allowed.

Search

Cookies make it easier for us to provide you with our services. With the usage of our services you permit us to use cookies.