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Greece Has Found Its Summer Anthem: Meet Danai, the Voice Behind “Ki Allo”

12 June 2026 at 07:50
Danae Ki Allo Greek Summer Hit
The song with its its hypnotic pop hook has taken Greece by storm. Credit: danaidede/Instagram

If there is a song that will dominate the Greek charts this summer, it is probably “Ki Allo” (And More) by newcomer Danai, (Danai Dede) which has completely stormed social media over the past few weeks.

If you have spent any time scrolling through TikTok or Reels lately, your algorithm has likely introduced you to its hypnotic pop hook. The infectious track has triggered an explosion of user-generated content, with thousands of creators using the audio for transitions, beach-day aesthetics, and lip-syncs. Almost overnight, Danai has delivered the textbook definition of a modern, internet-era breakthrough, proving that the route to a summer smash now runs directly through short-form video.

Danai’s “Ki Allo”: The blueprint of the summer juggernaut

While “Ki Allo” is her definitive solo breakout moment, Danai Dede, born on Rhodes, but now living in Athens,  is no stranger to the formula for a hit. She first caught the public’s attention as the standout female vocal feature on Saske’s double-platinum hit “Aurio”, which dominated radio airwaves and beach bars. She followed that up with her solo track “Kalokairi”, proving her innate knack for capturing the effortless, sun-drenched nostalgia that listeners crave.

With “Ki Allo,” she has struck gold once again. The track’s distinctive, unpretentious vocals have become a favorite tool for creators, driving massive organic engagement. This social footprint has converted directly into commercial success, sending “Ki Allo” skyrocketing up digital streaming charts and inspiring a wave of early club remixes.

@konsta601

Need this song #danae #kiallo #greekmusic #greece #greek

♬ original sound – Danae🌊🪽🌬

Why “Ki Allo” Greek summer season

Unlike traditional, heavily manufactured pop anthems, Danai’s style is indie-pop leaning, cool, and effortless. She performs with a raw, natural delivery that feels deeply relatable to Gen-Z listeners.

By blending modern urban pop sensibilities with a laid-back, addictive rhythm, “Ki Allo” delivers the exact type of replay value required to dominate long road trips, beach clubs, and warm summer nights. As the season kicks into high gear across Greece, Danai’s viral hit is officially the track to beat.

@vaspapad

Και μετά φαγητό σε κάποιο ταβερνάκι ☀ #summer #greeksummer #greece #greekisland #tamning

♬ Ki Allo – Danae

“Ride the Greek Wave”: Greece Named Country of Honor for Cannes 2027

11 June 2026 at 06:26
Filming of Maestro in Blue in Greece, which has been named country of honor at Cannes 2027. The surrounding island waters seen with a fishing boat.
Filming Maestro in Blue in Greece. Credit: Neflix

The Cannes Film Market (Marché du Film) has officially named Greece as its 2027 Country of Honour for the landmark 80th edition of the Cannes Film Festival. This prestigious spotlight celebrates the country’s rapid ascent into a premier global audiovisual hub.

Operating under the banner “Ride the Greek Wave,” the initiative will highlight the convergence of Greek creativity, a booming production sector, and its growing role in international storytelling.

“With the remarkable momentum of its film and audiovisual industry today, Greece embodies the spirit of creativity, openness, and international collaboration that the Marché du Film seeks to celebrate through its Country of Honour initiative,” said Guillaume Esmiol, Executive Director of the Marché du Film.

This major milestone follows a massive influx of high-profile international projects utilizing Greece’s scenic versatility and its highly competitive 40% cash rebate incentive.

Cannes celebrates Greece as a film and TV production hub

Major recent film and television productions that have set up camp across Greece’s islands and mainland include:

Emily in Paris (Netflix): For its highly anticipated new season, the ultra-popular streaming franchise has expanded Emily Cooper’s horizons to Greece. Production crews completely took over Mykonos, filming major scenes featuring Lily Collins and co-star Lucas Bravo at the pristine Agios Sostis Beach, as well as the island’s iconic windmills and the narrow alleys of Little Venice.

The Riders: Hollywood star Brad Pitt spent weeks touring Greece to film this high-stakes psychological drama directed by Oscar-winner Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front). The production spanned diverse settings across the country, from a dramatic artificial storm sequence shot inside a historic studio in Menidi to location shoots on the car-free island of Hydra, the historic railway station of Chalkida, and right in front of Athens Town Hall in Kotzia Square.

The Odyssey (Universal Pictures): Christopher Nolan’s highly anticipated, ancient-set cinematic epic based on Homer’s poem, which utilized locations across the Mediterranean, including Greece.

The Return: A gritty, atmospheric retelling of Odysseus’s homecoming starring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche, filmed extensively amidst the ancient olive groves and rugged cliffs of Corfu.

House of David (Amazon MGM Studios): A sprawling biblical drama series that transformed the landscapes of Attica and the Peloponnese into ancient Israel.

Malice (Prime Video): A psychological thriller series starring David Duchovny and Carice van Houten, which filmed across Athens, Piraeus, and the sun-bleached Cycladic islands of Paros and Antiparos.

Maestro in Blue (Netflix): The critically acclaimed, internationally distributed Greek drama series produced by Christoforos Papakaliatis, which wrapped up its sweeping story against the stunning backdrop of Paxos and Corfu.

Greece’s audiovisual sector

Leonidas Christopoulos, CEO of Greece’s film and media agency EKKOMED, noted that the Cannes distinction is a massive victory for the local industry: “This distinction is both a significant recognition and a unique opportunity to showcase Greece’s vibrant creative ecosystem on the international stage. Today, Greece is a place where cinematic heritage meets contemporary talent, innovation, and international collaboration.”

EKKOMED says that Greece’s audiovisual sector contributes €1.9 billion ($2.18 billion) to the national economy, supports approximately 44,000 jobs, and includes nearly 3,000 companies active across production, post-production, animation, and related creative services.

Xena: How Hollywood Created a Greek Warrior Princess Who Never Existed

By: guest
10 June 2026 at 21:46
Xena, played by Lucy Lawless
Xena, played by Lucy Lawless. Photo: Screenshot from Season 2, episode “Return of Callisto.” Courtesy: Studios USA Television

Xena the Greek warrior princess, who started as an antagonist of Hercules, captivated audiences around the world more than twenty years ago. One of the joys of looking back at Xena is its playfulness. It features some badass female characters and at times offers a serious message about female solidarity and feminism.

By Amanda Potter

Xena the fictional Warrior Princess, played by Lucy Lawless, captivated audiences around the world for six series with her high kicks, sword skills, and distinctive war cry. The series followed her as she fought her way through armies, monsters, and gods alongside her soul mate and moral compass, Gabrielle (Renee O’Connor).

Xena travelled across space and time, taking us from ancient Greece to Rome, Egypt, Britain, China, India, Scandinavia, and finally to Japan, where it all came to an end twenty years ago on June 18, 2001.

Starting life as an antagonist of Hercules in three episodes of Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, Xena was so popular as a character that she was given her own spin-off series that ran from 1995 to 2001. At the time, Xena: Warrior Princess was considered groundbreaking, as it starred a strong female action heroine and was the only popular adventure, action, science fiction, or fantasy show that featured female leads without male counterparts.

On the twentieth anniversary of the final episode, it is worth revisiting this great show and exploring why it was loved by a broad spectrum of viewers, from young girls drawn in by an active female role model to ancient history buffs, sci-fi fans and the LGBTQ community.

The Fictional Greek Warrior Princess and the Amazons

A reformed warlord from ancient Greece, Xena was not an Amazon but a friend to the tribe of warrior women. To ancient Greek writers, the Amazons were women who fought and behaved like men and were unnatural barbarians. They have since been adopted as positive female role models who break with misogynistic stereotypes of womanhood—they live in a self-sufficient, female-dominated society as warriors and intellectuals. The term “Amazon feminism” is now used to describe a branch of feminism that promotes female physical prowess as a way to achieve gender equality.

Before Xena, the Amazons featured in the 1970s Wonder Woman television series. Not quite the feminist icons we expect today, these women wore pastel-colored negligees as they adopted a peaceful life—without men—on Paradise Island.

In Xena, while the Amazons may also have been attired in revealing costumes made of furs and skins, their separatist society valued martial, as well as academic, skills. An Amazon tells Gabrielle that the Amazon world is based on “truth and an individual woman’s strength.”

The Amazons from Greek mythology lived apart from men at the edge of the known world and fought bravely against male heroes such as Hercules, Theseus, and Achilles. In Xena, the Amazons also lived in a matriarchal society and were skilled fighters who could hold their own against men.

The Amazons in Wonder Woman (2017) can be seen as Xena’s big-screen descendants. The costumes and fighting prowess of Penthesilea (Nina Milner) in the BBC drama Troy: Fall of a City (2018) has tinges of Xena. The leadership ability of the immortal Amazon Andy (Charlize Theron) in the Netflix film The Old Guard can also be seen as inspired by Xena.

But while Troy: Fall of a City and The Old Guard are aimed at older audiences, Xena was popular across all age groups. For instance, episodes of Xena were broadcast in the UK on Channel Five’s Milkshake! Saturday morning slot in the ’90s and early 2000s for young viewers. This led many young girls to adopt Xena as their role model.

The Xena subtext

Xena was also popular with gay and lesbian viewers. In the 1990s, openly gay relationships were mostly missing from popular US television series. However, Xena’s relationship with Gabrielle was interpreted as friends and lovers as much as hero and sidekick. Series producers began to play with this idea, for example, putting Xena and Gabrielle together in a sexy bath in season two fan-favorite episode “A Day in the Life,” so that for many, the subtext became the main text.

Although a lot of fans were dismayed that Xena died in the final episode, they were treated to a long goodbye kiss between Gabrielle and Xena’s ghost. Series producers never openly made Xena and Gabrielle a lesbian couple. But LGBTQ+ fans championed their relationship, which is believed to have paved the way for the openly gay relationships we see in television series today.

One of the joys of looking back at Xena twenty years afterward is its playfulness when compared with dark sci-fi fantasies like Game of Thrones. It features some badass female characters and at times offers a serious message about female solidarity and feminism, but doesn’t take itself too seriously. Some of the special effects may now seem dated, but the storylines still ring true, and the characters of Xena and Gabrielle can continue to be inspirational for a new generation of young female viewers.

Amanda Potter is a Visiting Research Fellow at The Open University. The article was published in The Conversation and is republished here under a Creative Commons License.

Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Marks 20th Edition With Orpheus Awards in Hollywood

5 June 2026 at 18:29
Guests and honorees pose on the red carpet at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night in Hollywood.
Guests and honorees gather on the red carpet during the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night and Orpheus Awards Ceremony at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood. Photo: UrbaniteLA

The Los Angeles Greek Film Festival marked its 20th edition in Hollywood with the Orpheus Awards Ceremony, honoring Greek and Cypriot filmmakers and paying tribute to Oscar-winning composer Alexandre Desplat.

The festival’s Closing Night Film and Orpheus Awards Ceremony took place on May 31 at the Egyptian Theatre, in collaboration with the American Cinematheque. This year’s edition brought together filmmakers, artists, industry professionals, and supporters of Greek cinema for a week of screenings, red carpet events, tributes, and awards. The festival’s virtual film program continues through June 14.

Founded in 2007, LAGFF has grown into one of the most important platforms for Greek and Cypriot cinema outside Greece. Over the past two decades, it has screened more than 800 films, hosted over 700 filmmakers, and reached an audience of more than 50,000.

Alexandre Desplat honored at closing night

One of the evening’s major highlights was the presentation of the Honorary Orpheus Award to Alexandre Desplat, one of the most acclaimed film composers working today.

Desplat, who won Academy Awards for his scores for The Grand Budapest Hotel and The Shape of Water, received the honor for his contribution to contemporary cinema. Filmmaker Malcolm Washington presented the award during the Closing Night ceremony, while Fay Lellios produced the tribute.

The evening also included a remembrance tribute to George Kolovos of G.P. Kolovos & Associates, a longtime benefactor of the Los Angeles Greek Film Festival.

“The 20th celebratory edition of LAGFF left indelible memories,” said Aristotle Katopodis, Artistic and Festival Director of LAGFF. “Feting Alexandre Desplat, remembering Dean Tavoularis, and paying respects to our 20-year-long benefactors, the Kolovos family, are images deeply etched in our hearts and souls.”

Katopodis also congratulated the filmmakers whose work was celebrated this year and thanked the festival’s supporters, sponsors, and team for championing Greek cinema.

Alexandre Desplat and Solre Desplat on the red carpet at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival in Hollywood.
Oscar-winning composer Alexandre Desplat and Solre Desplat attend the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night and Orpheus Awards Ceremony in Hollywood. Photo: UrbaniteLA

Hold onto me wins best feature film

The Closing Night Film, Hold Onto Me, directed by Myrsini Aristidou, won the Orpheus Award for Best Feature Film.

The film, which previously won the World Cinema Audience Award at Sundance, was one of the leading titles of this year’s festival. Following the screening, actor Michael Grant hosted a Q&A with Aristidou.

KNX Radio’s Vivianne Linou hosted the Orpheus Awards Ceremony.

2026 orpheus awards winners announced by the Los Angeles Greek film festival

In the animation category, Dream by Semiramis Mamata won the Orpheus Award for Best Animation Film. The Special Jury Award for Animation Film went to Poppy Flowers by Evridiki Papaiakovou.

The Orpheus Award for Best Short Film went to Prelude to a Supernova by Christos Artemiou, while the Special Jury Award for Short Film went to Gekas by Dimitris Moutsiakas.

In the feature film categories, Hold Onto Me by Myrsini Aristidou won Best Feature Film. Krysianna Papadakis and Stergios Dinopoulos received the Orpheus Award for Best Director for Bearcave, while Amerissa Basta received the Special Jury Award for Best Director for Life in a Beat.

The Orpheus Award for Best Performance went to Denise Fraga for Dreaming of Lions. Niovi Charalampous received the Special Jury Award for Best Performance for Smaragda – I Got Thick Skin and I Can’t Jump, while Vangelis Mourikis earned an honorable mention for Patty Is Such a Girly Name.

Audience awards and social justice honors

The Audience Award for Feature Film went to Best Friends Forever by Konstantinos Mousoulis. The Audience Award for Short Film went to The Smoker by Alexa Economacos.

The festival also presented its Social Justice Awards in partnership with Loyola Marymount University’s Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts, Department of Classics and Archaeology.

The Social Justice Award for Short Film went to The Wolves Return by Stelios Moraitidis, while the Social Justice Award for Feature Film went to Maysoon by Nancy Biniadaki.

Award presenters included animator Aliki Theofilopoulos, actor and author Patricia Kara, music composer George Kallis, and film distributor Bill Vergos.

The jury panel included Leo Behrens, Nora Bernard, Karen Cifarelli, Cheng Guo, Harrison James, Chieh-Chih Liao, Eric Nazarian, and Irene Soriano Saxon.

Alexandre Desplat and LAGFF Artistic Director Aristotle Katopodis at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival in Hollywood.
Honorary Orpheus Award recipient Alexandre Desplat with LAGFF Artistic and Festival Director Aristotle Katopodis at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night in Hollywood. Photo: UrbaniteLA

Los Angeles Greek film festival celebrates orpheus awards at the Egyptian theatre

This year’s Closing Night continued LAGFF’s collaboration with the Egyptian Theatre, Netflix, and the American Cinematheque.

The Egyptian Theatre, one of Hollywood’s most historic movie palaces, opened in 1922 and helped shape the early history of film premieres in Los Angeles. Restored through a partnership between Netflix and the American Cinematheque, the venue now combines its historic character with modern projection capabilities.

For LAGFF, the setting offered a symbolic backdrop for a festival that has spent two decades connecting Greek and Cypriot cinema with the wider Los Angeles film community.

Chambley : an ultralight air rally sets out to conquer Europe

1 June 2026 at 08:24
A microlight flight across Europe (UAC photo)

A microlight flight across Europe (UAC photo)

From July 25 to 31, 2026, the Chambley-Bussières Air Base in northeastern France will host the official qualifying week for the Ultimate Air Challenge (UAC), a one-of-a-kind European ultralight aircraft competition.

Held as part of “Chambley Air Passion – The Sky Celebration,” the event will place France’s Grand Est region at the heart of a major continental aviation gathering. Georges Humeau, president of the Chambley ultralight flying club, and Vincent Pouilleux, owner of the well-known restaurant La Carlingue à Mémé, are the driving forces behind the project.

The official start of the European race will take place in Chambley on August 1, 2026, with crews expected to return by August 8, bringing to a close nearly two weeks of aviation activities in the region.

A european showcase

Pilots from several European countries will converge on Chambley to validate their performance during the qualifying phase. The results will determine the official starting order for the race and provide a strategically important and highly competitive stage of the event.

Throughout the week, spectators will be able to watch aircraft departures and arrivals, attend pilot briefings, follow the evolving rankings, meet competitors, and enjoy a variety of activities and entertainment on the airfield.

Highlighting the regional aviation industry

chambley-logo
chambley-logo

Chambley Air Passion will open its hangars and facilities to the public, showcasing flying clubs, aviation professionals, schools, industrial partners, and training organizations.

The event aims to highlight the region’s aviation expertise, attract families and aviation enthusiasts, generate local economic benefits, and establish Chambley as a major aviation hub in eastern France.

A seven-day journey across twenty countries

The Ultimate Air Challenge presents a deceptively simple yet formidable challenge: take off from Chambley, fly over as many designated checkpoints across Europe as possible, and return to the starting point within seven days.

Between August 1 and August 7, 2026, participants will be free to chart their own routes through countries including Germany, Spain, Greece, Norway, the United Kingdom, and Finland. In total, approximately twenty countries will be accessible, with some competitors potentially accumulating more than fifty flight hours during the event.

Chambley, a cradle of regional aviation

The Ultimate Air Challenge aims to become for ultralight aviation what major ocean races are for sailing: an iconic, widely followed, and highly publicized competition.

By hosting both the qualifying week and the official start of the European race, Chambley is reinforcing its position as the birthplace of a competition designed to leave a lasting mark on the European aviation landscape.

Overview and Rules of the UAC

Georges Humeau: President and Organizer of the UAC

Georges Humeau, Président du club ULM de Chambley (DR)
Georges Humeau, Président du club ULM de Chambley (DR)

A co-organizer of Chambley Air Passion alongside Vincent Pouilleux, Georges Humeau, 69, is a lifelong aviation enthusiast with a particular passion for ultralight aircraft.

For the past fifteen years, he has led the Chambley Sport & Leisure Ultralight Club, sharing his enthusiasm with new generations of pilots. He also serves as president of the Chambley-Based Aviation Users Association (AUAB) and of the Ultimate Air Challenge itself.

Previously, Humeau served as vice president of the regional committee of the French Ultralight Federation and secretary of the national federation, which represents approximately 16,000 members. He stepped away from those positions to focus on his region, his airfield, and the ambitious projects he is now developing.

Originally from Issy-les-Moulineaux near Paris, Humeau eventually settled in Metz and joined the Chambley ultralight club.

“I joined when I turned fifty,” he recalls. “I’ve always been involved in nonprofit organizations, and I wanted to contribute my own vision and ideas. I started as the club’s secretary, then became vice president, and finally president in 2014.”

A former Airbus A380 pilot among the students

passeport-jeune-Today, the Chambley Sport & Leisure Ultralight Club has approximately 160 members and owns six aircraft. It also trains around fifty students, some of whom travel from La Rochelle, Saint-Brieuc, Luxembourg, and Paris.

One student is even a former Airbus A380 pilot.

“They appreciate the atmosphere and the energy of the club,” Humeau explains, “but above all, they value our operating model, which relies entirely on volunteers.”

An ultralight pilot license can generally be earned after 25 to 30 hours of flight instruction, at a cost of approximately €93 per flight hour. As with a driver’s license, candidates must pass both a written and a practical examination.

As part of Chambley Air Passion, Humeau will also introduce young people to aviation through a “Youth Passport” program. Participants who demonstrate commitment through regular visits to the club will be rewarded with a complimentary ultralight flight.

Another initiative involves a partnership between the club and Jean XXIII High School in Metz. The school plans to launch a higher-education aviation program next academic year. The bachelor’s degree program, developed by the IPSA School of Advanced Sciences and Engineering in partnership with Jean XXIII, is expected to further strengthen aviation education in the region.

These efforts appear to be paying off: membership has increased steadily by about five percent annually for the past twelve years.

Vincent Pouilleux: “A Popular, Friendly, and Festive Event”

Vincent Pouilleux, owner of La Carlingue restaurant in Mémé (DR)
Vincent Pouilleux, owner of La Carlingue restaurant in Mémé (DR)

Vincent Pouilleux, owner of the restaurant La Carlingue à Mémé, is one of the key organizers of Chambley Air Passion, which will run from the morning of July 25 through the evening of August 2, 2026.

“Our goal is to create an event that is popular, friendly, and festive, centered around aviation,” he says. “Every association based at the airfield and affiliated with the AUAB is taking part, along with neighboring municipalities and numerous partners.”

Games, Entertainment, and Activities for All Ages

The festival program includes a wide variety of family-friendly attractions, exhibitors, games, and workshops for children. Visitors can enjoy face-painting stations, jugglers, circus performers, amusement rides, and live entertainment announced throughout the event.

Military units and firefighters will also participate.

The sky itself will be part of the celebration, featuring kites, indoor model-aircraft workshops, miniature hot-air balloons, full-size hot-air balloons, airplanes, gliders, ultralights, paragliders, and skydivers.

Wednesday will be dedicated entirely to children. Hospitalized children and individuals with disabilities will be invited as honored guests.

Throughout the festival, visitors will have opportunities to win flights in hot-air balloons, airplanes, ultralights, gliders, and paragliders.

Music and dance enthusiasts can gather at a traditional open-air dance pavilion set up on the main esplanade.

The cultural side of aviation has not been overlooked. The event will also feature lectures by pilots and aviation experts, book signings by specialized authors, and aviation-themed booksellers.

The final weekend will conclude with what organizers promise will be a major surprise.

More Informations:
AUAB – Tel. +33 6 58 58 77 97

L’article Chambley : an ultralight air rally sets out to conquer Europe est apparu en premier sur FrenchDailyNews.

Chambley Air Passion 2026: nine days to make Lorraine the ruropean capital of light aviation

1 June 2026 at 07:52
chambley-logo

chambley-logo

From July 25 to August 2, 2026, the Chambley Planet’Air airfield will host the inaugural edition of Chambley Air Passion. More than just an airshow, the event aims to become Europe’s premier gathering for light aviation and a meeting point for ultralight pilots from across the continent.

A new aviation event

For nine days, Chambley Planet’Air will come alive with aircraft departures, pilot gatherings, and aerial activities. With Chambley Air Passion, organizers are introducing a new format that differs significantly from traditional airshows focused on a few hours of flight demonstrations.

The objective is clear: to put Chambley back on the map of major European aviation events and transform the airfield into a vibrant destination where pilots, aviation enthusiasts, and the general public can gather from morning to evening.

“We want to create a true aviation gathering—a place where people come to fly, connect, discover new things, and share a common passion,” the organizers explain.

Bringing together every aviation discipline

Logo Chambley

The event will showcase the full range of aviation activities based at Chambley. Fixed-wing ultralights, weight-shift trikes, gyroplanes, powered paragliders, sailplanes, paragliders, skydiving, model aviation, and hot-air balloons will all be featured throughout the week.

Mass hot-air balloon launches at sunrise and sunset are expected to be among the highlights of this first edition. Flight demonstrations and aircraft presentations will also help shape the daily program.

Visitors will have access to exhibition areas, the opportunity to get up close to aircraft, and the chance to interact directly with pilots and crews. Flight simulators, educational workshops, aviation training exhibits, and introductory activities will allow attendees to immerse themselves in the world of aviation.

Military units, fire and rescue services, and the French Gendarmerie will also participate by showcasing their equipment and missions.

Making Chambley the summer’s rremier ultralight gathering

Beyond attracting the general public, Chambley Air Passion is primarily designed for pilots themselves. The Lorraine airfield offers several unique advantages: extensive infrastructure capable of accommodating a large number of aircraft, ample parking and camping areas, favorable airspace, and a central location in the heart of Western Europe.

Throughout the event, crews arriving by ultralight aircraft will be able to park on-site, take part in activities, and experience the event from within the aviation community. Organizers hope to create a genuine hub for light aviation enthusiasts.

Within aviation circles, some are already referring to the concept as a future “French Oshkosh” dedicated to European light aviation. The comparison reflects the ambition to recreate a major pilot gathering where camaraderie is just as important as flying itself.

The Ultimate Air Challenge: the event’s centerpiece

chambley-logo

The highlight of the inaugural edition will undoubtedly be the official start of the Ultimate Air Challenge 2026, scheduled for August 1 following several days of qualifying rounds held at Chambley.

This European ultralight competition is based on an original concept inspired by offshore yacht racing. Teams must reach sixty checkpoints spread across more than twenty European countries while choosing their own routes.

Navigation, weather management, fuel consumption, regulatory requirements, and strategic decision-making will all be critical factors for competitors hoping to win.

Thanks to a real-time tracking system, spectators at Chambley will be able to follow competitors’ progress throughout the challenge.

A catalyst for regional development

Beyond its sporting and entertainment value, Chambley Air Passion is also intended as a regional development initiative. The event aims to highlight the capabilities of the Chambley Planet’Air facility, attract visitors from across the Grand Est region and neighboring countries, and promote aviation careers and training opportunities.

In a region that hosts relatively few major public events during the summer season, organizers hope to establish the gathering as a permanent fixture on the event calendar. The presence of the Ultimate Air Challenge immediately gives the event a European dimension and international visibility.

A bold vision

With Chambley Air Passion, the Lorraine airfield is doing more than launching another aviation event. It is openly pursuing the goal of becoming, for nine days, the place where Europe’s pilots most want to gather.

As a crossroads, meeting place, and showcase for light aviation, Chambley may well host in the summer of 2026 the event that the French-speaking ultralight community has been waiting for for many years.

L’article Chambley Air Passion 2026: nine days to make Lorraine the ruropean capital of light aviation est apparu en premier sur FrenchDailyNews.

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