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The 2026 Women’s Prize winners talk rejection, process and finding stories worth telling There’s a place for your backpack on the train – it’s not your back Want to know why São Paulo is so vibrant and ambitious? Here are 10 observations The biggest contest of the 2026 World Cup is off the pitch Japan must prioritise pragmatism with China over provocation Few artists made a bigger splash than David Hockney, who has died at 88 Why US cities are poised to be fantastic World Cup hosts Copenhagen’s 3 Days of Design proves that big things can come in small packages Tacky? Yes. Patriotic? Often. But the World Cup needs its anthems A sticky World Cup tradition: Tracking down Panini football stickers Dane in the life: Takeaways from Copenhagen’s 3 Days of Design AI isn’t reinventing the wheel but it should heed the lessons of human innovation Seven Amsterdam bookshops worth writing home about Amid rising regional tensions and soaring travel costs, Gulf residents are choosing staycations The Mercadona doctrine and how to make yourself at home part-time Montevideo might be small but it knows how to appreciate good architecture London’s Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration opens in a bid to draw new audiences to the art form A shore thing: Konfekt’s summer issue is an ode to sun, sand and sea ‘What we are dealing with is a moral trauma’: How NGO Superhumans is helping to rehabilitate battle-scarred Ukrainians A shore thing: Konfekt’s summer issue is an ode to sun, sand and sea Mark Carney is the gaffer to get behind as World Cup co-host Canada readies for kick-off Couture is ‘a dance with the materials’: Iris van Herpen on keeping the art of fashion alive See the best of the Swedish capital with Monocle’s guide to Stockholm From the Pope to Bad Bunny, ‘Madrileños’ have plenty to put their faith in this weekend At the Black Sea Security Forum in Odesa, Ukraine looks increasingly like the leader of the free world Forget Milan, Paris and London: Helsinki is where talent scouts head to look for the best fashion designers Looking to the sky reveals much about what’s happening on the ground Is Lisbon’s art market on the up? Arco Lisboa, the city’s growing contemporary art fair, has put on a promising display Off the wall: How Frank Bowling painted his way to prominence Dress codes for dummies: Can AI save Chad and Britney from their worst wardrobe impulses? What is so special about ‘Le Petit Prince’? Electric bikes are handy but why must they be used as garbage bins on wheels? The best new books, films, museums and albums in June How Iranians have been coping with the US-Israel conflict through limited internet access Ibiza is hoping to capitalise on Dubai’s affluent tourist exodus – but it would do well to remember its roots Songtsam: Modern Chinese hospitality Editor’s letter: Andrew Tuck on the booming business of coffee What’s hot in the world of coffee? We spill the beans on the global market Not your average joe: 25 of the world’s best coffee shops, run by next-generation owners Breaking new ground: 25 exceptional brands that are leading the coffee industry Travel across L’Empordà, Spain – a coastline of storied hotels, seafront tables and surrealist heritage
SpaceX IPO, diamond smuggling and the inconvenient truth about Mars
Tyler Brûlé · 2026-06-14 · via Monocle

Guess where I am. Go on. Guess! Guess! Okay, I’m going to give you a hint. I’m in a pod, far away from home and I’m staring down at a reddish surface. Beside me are small jars packed with delicious bites and packets of freeze-dried vegetables. Of course, there are also energy bars as this is a long journey. Inside my pod, I’m surrounded by screens and touchpads and lots of buttons. I have a little door for privacy and nearby there is a Chinese teenager who I’ve identified as passenger zero because he has a crewcut with blonde tips, an action suit (stretchy black pants, stretchy, clingy T-shirt), extra-large headphones and a diamond stud in each ear. He’s not carrying anything else – no bag, no reading material, no power bank, no extra layers, no impulse purchase Rabanne fragrance from duty-free. He doesn’t blink, doesn’t smile, he just looks forward. His eyebrows are exquisitely groomed. I’m wondering how he can embark on such a journey with so few possessions and the more I analyse his behaviour, the more I’m convinced that he’s been trained and selected for what’s ahead.

He doesn’t need anything other than headphones and diamonds because he is part of a generation that will soon venture far, far away, and need very little in the way of worldly possessions – because information will be beamed to screens in their eyelids, space undies will be self-cleaning, sweat glands will be permanently removed from intimate areas and meals will always be in the form of kibble. Yes, gentle reader, I am hurtling along in a gleaming slender tube with a proper Space Cadet and, wow, do I have a lot of questions about the SpaceX IPO and my upcoming trip to Mars.

Before that, however, let’s flutter back down to earth, for the briefest of moments. The more eagle-eyed Faster Lane readers will have figured out that I am currently flying high above the red earth of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, my futuristic pod is seat 1A on an Etihad Airbus 321LR, the little jars of mini bites really do exist and the Chinese kid, I’m onto him. He’s a smuggler. Those diamond studs were picked up in Antwerp and he’s going to wear those headphones to hide them as he walks through customs in the UAE. (On a related note, in a future column I will tell you all about a Flemish acquaintance who told me that her family friends were involved in the diamond trade and actively engaged in “Tuchus Geschäft”). And just in case you were wondering, no, I have not had the tiniest sip of the Perrier-Jouët Belle Époque Brut 2015 or the Perrier-Jouët Blason Rosé but clearly someone who has been writing the copy for SpaceX’s Mars mission manifesto has.

While I am quite sure there are many readers who did quite well out of the SpaceX IPO and have joined the ranks of new-gen tech-meets-defence millionaires, I am also sure that we need to pause, pull ourselves away from our more responsible Sunday reading, don our interstellar Starship jumpsuits and read what analysts clearly thought justified the company’s valuation.

I fully understand that it’s easy to get carried away with thoughts of speeding through the heavens when days are spent on earnings calls for agri-tech firms. But seriously? It’s going to take 90 days to get to Mars in a vehicle that will accommodate 100 people and can carry up to 100 tonnes. Let’s stop right there. A little simple arithmetic gets me to at least 50 tonnes of food and drink – assuming that Space Cadets won’t be in medically induced comas, and will need more than kibble and water to get through the journey. On top of that you have all the extra bits that these people will need for life on Mars – pets, favourite house plants, vinyl collections and 40 years of Monocle magazines. If you’ve saved every piece of print we’ve done for the past two decades, that’s more than a quarter of a tonne right there. Did none of the highly paid bankers looking at this flotation ask such a simple question? Or probe into grittier topics, such as what people will do for three months in space in a nine-metre-wide Starship? Are there renders of what the couchettes will be like? Is there a sample “day in the life”, let alone three months in the life of making it to Mars?

Meanwhile, back here on planet reality, the Swiss are today voting on measures to cap the population at 10 million people. I’m curious if the country invested big in SpaceX to handle future population overspill? Who needs sunny mountain living when you can be semi-weightless on Mars?

Enjoying life in ‘The Faster Lane’? Click here to browse all of Tyler’s past columns.

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