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Showing posts with label Lifestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lifestyle. Show all posts
Imported music lines local pockets

Imported music lines local pockets

Demi Lovato’s concert is a prominent example of the growth of international partnerships
Pop star Demi Lovato arrives in Phnom Penh for a one-off concert next week. The show – expected to attract as many as 40,000 fans – will be one of the biggest Western musical performances hosted in the Kingdom.
The Lovato show signals an emerging shift in the country’s music landscape, with Western music gaining popularity in a largely K-pop driven market. Businesses too, recognise the rise, with many attaching themselves to Western pop-stars, whose appeal helps boost a brand’s image among Cambodia’s youth.
“[Young professionals] have strong buying power in the market since they are now starting to earn a [better] living,” said Carlos Philip Bamba Gatulda, public relations and marketing manager at music channel MyTV.
The increase in spending power, and the pull of the glitzy production that both K-Pop and international performers like Lovato have, means brands are increasingly looking to associate themselves with young performers, Gatulda added.
“With this, most advertisers target these audiences, thus making our monthly booking for TV spots a decent number.”
Businesses are aware of Cambodians' love of music, evident in small-business sponsored concerts in the provinces and the blaring street-side music used to attract consumers to stores, said Laurent Notin, managing director at Brains Communication.
“Concerts are very popular on TV too: TV channels often record peak audiences when they broadcast concerts,” he said.
“A good association between the music and the brand can definitely help brands resonate into the minds of consumers – like a song can remind you of a particular personal souvenir,” he added.
Universal Music entered the Cambodian market last year and has a partnership with Smart to distribute and resell the US label’s music and digital content. The Lovato concert, born out of the Smart-Universal venture, allows the telco to position itself as a youthful brand, extending its appeal among young Cambodians.
But where music production and sales are concerned, the local market still has many challenges.
Sandy Monteiro, president for Universal in Southeast Asia, said that in the past in Cambodia, like other regional markets, international music was made popular by local musicians playing cover versions of Western music.
While other markets, he added, have moved on from this trend, Cambodia is only starting to develop an ecosystem for original music, where listeners are encouraged to access and pay for music.
“It’s also about creating an environment and bringing best practices to the country, where Cambodian artists and songwriters get the kind of rewards for their work that artists around the world receive,” Monteiro said.
It is difficult to put a figure on the Cambodian music sector, according to Monteiro, given its current informal nature, and the challenge for his company is how much to charge – $1, 50 cents or 25 cents per song.
Smart Brand ambassador Laura Mam
Smart Brand ambassador Laura Mam. Hong Menea
In a move to protect intellectual property rights, the Cambodian government last year registered more than 180 songs of golden age singer Sinn Sisamouth, so that his family could claim rights to the songs.
The family claimed that Sisamouth’s songs were being reproduced without permission, depriving them of much-needed royalties.
Cambodia’s music sector has recently seen many local music labels, like Town Production and Sunday Production, increase their focus on music production.
Meas Sokrattanak, general manager at Town Production, said professionalism in the industry was limited and certain issues, such as a lack of human resources and piracy, made it more feasible to just “cover international songs with lyrics of our own language”.
“We have some good, talented singers these days, but producing our own music will need some time in the future, unless the piracy problem is solved,” he said.
Piracy of CDs means labels make barely enough money to cover the costs of their production, making original music creation even less feasible, Sokrattanak added.
But while local Cambodian music grapples with building a more formalised and professional framework, there are some bright spots, albeit moulded on the appeal of international production.
“Cambodia is an open playing field, there is so much room for the “never been done before”, said rising Cambodian-American pop star Laura Mam.
“Marketing and promoting yourself is important, more than ever. But what’s more important at this point is growing your skill level as an artist.”
Source: Phnom Penh Post
'Thunder and Lightning' herald a new season from Sophiline Arts

'Thunder and Lightning' herald a new season from Sophiline Arts

Under the ornate, fan-shaped roof of the Chaktomuk Theatre, a battle of the elements is raging as dancers from the Sophiline Arts Ensemble rehearse for the opening night of its new show.
The jealous giant Ream Eyso chases Moni Mekahala, guardian of the seas, through the skies. He flings his axe towards his rival, but it hits the clouds instead and a resounding boom echoes. In response, Moni Mekahala throws a precious jewel into the air, creating a glare that blinds the giant. Through this celestial duel, thunder and lightning are born.
The tale, performed from tonight until Sunday under the title Thunder and Lightning, will be familiar to many Cambodians as a centuries-old prayer for agricultural fertility.
Its traditionalism may come as a surprise to those familiar with the work of its choreographer: Sophiline Shapiro, a driving force in the modernisation of Cambodian dance whose 2013 show A Bend in the River toured internationally and featured a set design by abstract sculptor Sopheap Pich.
But she says that this canonical performance has an equally important impetus: the need to document a dance preserved only in the memories of a handful of teachers, and on a badly worn video cassette that Shapiro was handed in 1996.
When the choreographer and her husband, John Shapiro, founded the Sophiline Arts Ensemble in 2007, remastering this particular dance was an early priority: “I started to train my dancers straight away,” she says, “The tape was in such a bad condition it was important to learn it quickly.”
With the help of some of the original dancers, Shapiro pieced together the two-hour production and hastily filmed a new master copy.
Before this evening’s performance, Shapiro will take to the stage to introduce the piece. Although she expects audiences to be familiar with the general outline of the story, she wants to explain its subtler themes: the need to balance opposing forces; our daily inner struggle to have good win out over evil; the majesty of a powerful woman.
“In Cambodian mythology a lot of women play pretty princesses,” she says, “but Moni Mekahala is a leader. Although she carries the most powerful jewel she doesn’t use it to intimidate, she uses it to protect the world.”
She hopes that she will be looking out at a sold-out auditorium, but it’s hard to know for sure. Because, as John Shapiro explains, the real innovation of this piece isn’t the show itself, it’s the production model behind it.
Rather than performing as they used to, as part of a festival or for free in their small Takhmao Theatre in Kandal province, the company is pushing forward with a new model of selling tickets. “With the exception of pop music and tourist shows there is no history of ticketed shows in Cambodia,” he says. “Going back to Ankorian times [public dance] has been achieved through patronage.”
John admits that the ingrained expectation of getting something for nothing in Cambodia makes the project a risky experiment, as does the absence of any infrastructure for online ticketing, but the signs are positive.
In June the company’s inaugural run of paid-for performances sold out completely, with a waiting list for the last night.
Provided that the new model proves durable, the Shapiros plan to ease back on international touring and devote their energies to putting on three seasons of dance per year at the Chaktomuk.
The aim, Shapiro says, is to be “the local equivalent of the New York City Ballet”, although he hopes that Cambodian spectators will prove different in one important respect. “In lots of countries half your audiences are nodding off because they’re so old. You can’t survive with an audience that’s geriatric.”
Tickets for this show start at $3 for students. “It’s like going to Brown and getting a cappuccino and a muffin,” says Shapiro.
Source: Phnom Penh Post
T-ara's Eunjung expresses her love for being a celebrity

T-ara's Eunjung expresses her love for being a celebrity

T-ara's Eunjung appeared on the April 28 installment of Mnet's '4 Things Show' and talked about loving her life as a celebrity despite the turmoil and utter sadness that came with the bullying rumors.
 She said, "When I go into filming, I go into filming with sparkling eyes as if nothing is wrong, and when the camera turns off, I sleep."  Hyomin added, "It's definitely the constitution of broadcasts and stages.  It's the constitution of a celebrity."
Eunjung added, "I have quite a happy job.  I'm going to be a celebrity even in my next life. Then, I want to try living as a free spirit.  It'll be fun."  

Further showing her passion for this lifestyle, she said, "I'm going to be a celebrity even if I'm not popular.  Even if I'm on a small theater stage, I want to do it.  I was lucky and the staff members were good, which is why I think I did well.  I don't think popularity happens just because I will it to.  Even if I do my best, it won't happen if it won't happen.  I want to be a celebrity even when I'm a grandmother.  If so, I need to live well today."

Yoon Eun Hye Chooses Her Favorite Kiss Scenes

Yoon Eun Hye Chooses Her Favorite Kiss Scenes

When Yoon Eun Hye recently appeared on the program "Section TV" she spoke about drama co-stars and onscreen kisses.
Yoon Eun Hye's fans may have favorites among her kiss scenes but so does the actress.

One of her favorite onscreen kisses took place ten years ago when she appeared in her very first drama "Goong," also known as "Princess Hours." Most k-drama kisses take at least ten episodes to happen, heightening the anticipation, but this one took almost two-dozen episodes, even though the characters were married shortly after the drama began.
Where did that kiss scene rank? The actress chose that drama's kiss with Joo Ji Hoon for her second favorite among all her kiss scenes.
K-dramas are also famous for their themed kiss scenes, which are sometimes even related to food. There was the cappuccino foam kiss between Hyun Bin and Ha Ji Won in "Secret Garden," the kimchi kiss scene between Lee Chung Ah and Jung Il Woo in "Flower Boy Ramen Shop" and the toast kiss scene in "Pinocchio."
Yoon Eun Hye said her third favorite kiss scene involved coca cola. She shared that kiss scene with Kang Ji Hwan in the comedy "Lie To Me." The soda kiss scene, which drenches them in coca cola, looked very sticky but was sweet.
And what was her all-time favorite kiss scene?
That kiss took place in "Coffee Prince." In that drama she is disguised as a boy so she can work in a restaurant managed by a character played by Gong Yoo. He falls in love with her and at first tries to fight his feelings, thinking she is a boy, but then decides that he loves her any way, no matter what gender she/he is.
"Even now, when I watch it, it's still romantic," said Yoon Eun Hye.
If none of the kisses after that ranked as her favorite, a few were still memorable. Her kiss scenes with Yoon Sang Hyun in "My Fair Lady" were short but sweet. She was affectionate with Jung Yong Hwa and exchanged more sweet kisses with Lee Dong Gun in "Marry Him If You Dare." And her kiss scenes with Park Yoo Chun in "Missing You" were also memorable because of their intensity and the tears that the two shared. Not only is Yoon Eun Hye a great kisser but she is also a talented crier.
The next actor Yoon plans to kiss is Park Shi Hoo. Yoon and Park will co-star in an upcoming film titled "After Love."
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10 Worst Photoshopped Selfies EVER

1. Ms. Curvy
This has got to be one of the dumbest photoshops I have ever seen. This doesn’t even look real. I hope she didn’t try to show this photo off to anyone! Try to work on your software skills before doing this again!
This has got to be one of the dumbest photoshops I have ever seen. This doesn’t even look real. I hope she didn’t try to show this photo off to anyone! Try to work on your software skills before doing this again!
2. Big Booty Judy
This girl didn’t have a bad body to begin with, I guess some people just want to perfect themselves and look as good as possible. Maybe that was her case? Clearly she didn’t realize that people will notice the background is also smudged! This photo is so bad she like go to jail for it! Better call your attorney now. Just kidding.
This girl didn’t have a bad body to begin with, I guess some people just want to perfect themselves and look as good as possible. Maybe that was her case? Clearly she didn’t realize that people will notice the background is also smudged! This photo is so bad she like go to jail for it! Better call your attorney now. Just kidding.
3. Hips Don’t Lie
Girls are meant to have wide hips and there shouldn’t be nothing wrong with that. But for her she wanted to look slimmer even though her body was totally fine in the first place. Also your hands don’t look so good. You should maybe go see a doctors and get health insurance for something like that.
Girls are meant to have wide hips and there shouldn’t be nothing wrong with that. But for her she wanted to look slimmer even though her body was totally fine in the first place. Also your hands don’t look so good. You should maybe go see a doctors and get health insurance for something like that.
4. That Awkward Moment
It’s pretty awkward when one of your Facebook friends points out that you have edited a photo when you claim to be a natural beauty queen… I bet she deleted this post quickly and stated that someone hacked into her account and posted this picture. Tisk tisk. Work on your software skills please.
It’s pretty awkward when one of your Facebook friends points out that you have edited a photo when you claim to be a natural beauty queen… I bet she deleted this post quickly and stated that someone hacked into her account and posted this picture. Tisk tisk. Work on your software skills please.
5. Uni-Boob Job
ither she got uni-boob job or this photo was edited. Hmm, I’m just gonna take a wild guess here and say she didn’t get a boob job. Someone needs to work on their photoshop skills…
either she got uni-boob job or this photo was edited. Hmm, I’m just gonna take a wild guess here and say she didn’t get a boob job. Someone needs to work on their photoshop skills…
6. Curved Wood
Okay, so I will totally disregard the hair here, but what about that simple boob enhancement, huh? I wonder why the background is curved?
Okay, so I will totally disregard the hair here, but what about that simple boob enhancement, huh? I wonder why the background is curved?
7. Nice Try
Seems that maybe she wanted a skinnier waste-line…
Seems that maybe she wanted a skinnier waste-line…
8. Do You Even Lift, Bro?
Okay, so how much do you REALLY lift?
Okay, so how much do you REALLY lift?
9. I Like Those Wood Planks
I have to agree with the Facebook comment. Those wood planks go pretty well with your curvy legs and skinny waste.
I have to agree with the Facebook comment. Those wood planks go pretty well with your curvy legs and skinny waste.
10. Photoshopped Booty
Cause every guy likes a big photoshopped booty, right? Nice try though.
Cause every guy likes a big photoshopped booty, right? Nice try though.
Source:grabmeme
Sichuan man surprises cancer-stricken fiancée with hospital wedding shoot

Sichuan man surprises cancer-stricken fiancée with hospital wedding shoot

Twenty-six-year-old firefighter Guo Kai arrived at the orthopedics ward of Sichuan People's Hospital with a team of professional photographers on April 26 to surprise his bed-ridden fiancée with a wedding photo shoot for her birthday.
proposal-hospital2.jpg
Dong Hui, 22, was diagnosed with malignant giant-cell tumor of the bone (GCTOB) in April, and now has difficulty even standing up. Regardless, nurses helped her put on a brown wig and change into a white dress so that she could join the photo shoot with her fiancée. According to CCTV News, Dong had to take extra painkillers just to smile and pose for the camera.
wedding-hospital7.jpg

Guo said Dong had been complaining about pain in her back since last summer, but doctors found nothing wrong with her. On the evening of March 16, the couple's one-year anniversary, the pain was unbearable, and Guo had to send her to the Sichuan Hospital. She was kept there after being diagnosed with fourth-level GCTOB.
proposal-hospital4.jpg
“Cases of cure are rare, but as a mother I’ll keep trying. It is so unfair. My daughter is still so young,” Dong's mother told reporters as she watched the birthday celebrations. Dong is being transferred to another hospital specializing in tumor treatment today.

proposal-hospital5.jpg

A similar tear-jerking story from December documented as a 19-year-old woman in Sichuan threw a surprise wedding at a hospital ward for her boyfriend, who'd been diagnosed with leukemia.
Source:Chinanews.com
Demi Lovato coming to Cambodia

Demi Lovato coming to Cambodia

International pop star Demi Lovato is coming to Cambodia, with a free Phnom Penh concert on May 5 that is expected to draw more than 35,000 fans.
The concert, announced at a press conference on Thursday morning, is being organised by Cambodian telco Smart Axiata, in collaboration with Universal Music, and will be the final stop on Lovato’s Demi World Tour.
“Today’s announcement marks a milestone for Cambodia and Smart. We are totally excited being able to bring such a world class artist like Demi to Cambodia. When having announced the partnership with Universal Music last year, we had promised to make such events to happen in Cambodia, with this concert we deliver on our promise,” said Thomas Hundt, CEO of Smart Axiata.
Demi Lovato, who shot to fame as a Disney Channel star in the US before making the leap to a recording career, is popular for such hits such as “Let It Go,” “Heart Attack,” “Skyscraper” and her latest single “Nightingale.”
Lovato’s selection was influenced by a sustained campaign mounted by a local Facebook fan group - Demi Lovato Cambodia Fan Club - which has over 23,000 followers. The fan club has been asking followers to post an image on Smart’s Facebook page, requesting them to bring their favorite star to the Kingdom – with more than 20,000 requests being posted so far.
Demi Lovato herself posted a video on April 3, responding to the campaign, saying that she was excited to have so many Cambodians requesting her to come and perform.
“Let me look into my schedule and see what’s possible. Stay tuned,” Lovato said, at the end of the 20-second video.
Smart also announced Laura Mam, popular Cambodian-American singer and songwriter, as their brand ambassador.
At the same presser, the telco announced the launch of an unlimited music-streaming app called Smart Music.
The app, available only to Smart subscribers, will cost 30 cents per week for unlimited streaming of World, Khmer and Pop and Rock music, with all subscriptions free till April 30, 2015.
Source: PP Post
Cambodia tops Tropfest again

Cambodia tops Tropfest again

Cambodia has taken the top prize at the Tropfest Southeast Asia short film competition for the second year in a row, with a story about a cancer-stricken child.
Filmmaker Ly Polen’s short 'Colourful Knots' was awarded the gong at a ceremony in Penang, Malaysia, on Sunday night.
The 25-year-old walked away with a $12,000 cash prize and a ticket to Los Angeles to meet industry heavyweights.
Polen was the runner-up at last year’s competition when 'Rice', the black and white silent film by fellow Cambodian Sothea Innes, claimed the top prize. Innes did not enter this year.
'Colourful Knots' tells the story of a wealthy young girl who, after she is diagnosed with cancer, befriends and exchanges gifts with two children who live on the streets and sell lotus flowers.
"I am really happy to join the competition again, and I didn't really expect to win, because the other films were really good, too," Polen said while accepting the award.
Second prize went to Filipino director Jake Soriano for his film 'The Steel Child', while another Cambodian filmmaker, Chap Somchanrith, picked up third prize for his Cambodian take on the Western genre, 'A Fistful of Pebbles'.
Somchanrith said he believed Cambodia’s success at Tropfest would benefit the local film industry as whole.
“When you show your films made by Cambodian filmmakers to a group of international audience [members], shorts or features, if it's good, it shows just how talented Cambodian filmmakers are and how much potential we have,” he said.
“I believe this opens doors and attracts producers to come to Cambodia and help produce even more films.”
Eleven countries submitted a total of 115 entries to the competition with five of the 16 shortlisted films hailing from Cambodia.
Cambodian filmmaker Chhay Bora, who was on the competition’s pre-selection panel, said Sunday’s event was “amazing”. The night featured a concert, and several thousand people watched the films on an outdoor screening.
“I dream of having something like it in Cambodia,” he said.
The storytelling, acting and cinematography of Polen’s film stood out amongst the rest of the entries, he said, but the quality of all the Cambodian entries was very high.
“The director of the festival cannot imagine that Cambodia doesn’t have a film school,” Bora said.
Tropfest started in 1993 in Sydney and is now the largest short film competition in the world, with legs in Australia, New Zealand, the US and the Middle East. The first Tropfest was held in Southeast Asia last year.
“Tropfest is all about celebrating creativity among talented filmmakers, and I am constantly inspired by the incredible films we receive,” Tropfest Southeast Asia managing director Joe Sidek said in a statement.
In a statement, Motion Picture Association Asia Pacific president Mike Ellis congratulated Polen on his win.
“These filmmakers offer fresh new voices to reflect the breadth of cultures in the region, and Tropfest will provide a launching pad that will connect their stories to a growing audience,” he said.
Kind of behavior evaluation that can earn more money than people in general?

Kind of behavior evaluation that can earn more money than people in general?

The company's website evaluation capacity development and professional quality Truity Psychometrics Research findings from the human personality that affect its earnings.

According to the study above, the context for individual Americans who care themselves or people with individual selfishness, loneliness or soon believe others can earn an average of $ 32 000 per year. Concerns for individual attention from many others, like the judge may earn up to $ 77, 000 per year.

The company's research suggests that the difference of getting many types of personal income above is due There are different techniques to manage their daily lives as individuals.

However, the author of this Research incentives for individuals who care about themselves or selfishness, loneliness and susceptible to others should not despair, because according to reports the UK's research has shown that individual have high odds on the job position in markets other than the individual parts.

Research suggesting that such individuals should be able to update (Update) or make themselves even further progress to communicate with the people around, in particular, is creating more debate.

Meanwhile, the researchers also found that among those attending to consider the many others think and like many criteria 2 3 men earn more than women. So sex is the other case, which affects about money.

The study also found that individuals who like to compete and excel in arguments or reasons are can become a leader.
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