Ahad, 28 Oktober 2012

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


Former British pop star Gary Glitter arrested

Posted: 28 Oct 2012 05:15 AM PDT

Gary Glitter in a police truck to be taken to prison in Vung Tau, a resort town 120 km southeast of Ho Chi Minh City, in this March 3, 2006, file photo, after he was found guilty of child sex offences. — Reuters pic

LONDON, Oct 28 — Former British pop star Gary Glitter was arrested yesterday in connection with an investigation into allegations of child sex abuse by the late BBC presenter Jimmy Savile, the BBC said.

A police statement said a man in his 60s had been picked up just after 7 am on suspicion of sexual offences in the investigation into "Savile and others". The statement did not name the man and a spokesman declined further comment.

The arrest widens a scandal that has already damaged the reputation of the publicly-funded BBC and the legacy of Savile, a former DJ who was one of the broadcaster's top show hosts.

The BBC and Sky News identified the man picked up from his London home as Glitter, a 68-year-old who was popular as a glam-rock singer in the 1970s. Glitter, born Paul Gadd, had previously been jailed in Vietnam for child sex offences.

Allegations that Savile sexually abused young girls for decades first emerged in an expose on the British TV channel ITV. Since then, police say some 300 victims had come forward. — Reuters

S. Korea irked by Japan indifference to ‘Gangnam Style’

Posted: 27 Oct 2012 10:20 PM PDT

S. Korea irked by Japan indifference to 'Gangnam Style'

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (L) practises some "Gangnam Style" dance steps with South Korean singer Psy (2nd L) during a photo opportunity at the UN headquarters in New York October 23, 2012. — Reuters pic

SEOUL, Oct 28 — While South Korean rapper Psy's "Gangnam Style" has taken the world by storm, it has largely fallen flat in Japan — an anomaly viewed with grave suspicion by some in the singer's home country.

Korean K-pop music is huge in Japan, but for one reason or another Japanese music fans have remained relatively immune to the seductive powers of Psy and his horse-riding dance.

In South Korea there has been speculation that a bitter territorial dispute over contested islands may have caused Japanese fans to shun the song.

While the number has topped the UK charts and currently sits at number two on the US Billboard ranking, it has only scraped into the top 30 of the Japanese iTunes chart.

To make matters worse, various Japanese music blogs have suggested that the video's success on YouTube — 530 million views and counting — was down to South Koreans using automated viewing programmes known as "bots".

Some even started playfully referring to the song as "F5 Style" — a reference to the keyboard key used to refresh the window of an internet browser.

On Monday the Korean Wave Research Institute (KWRI) — a non-profit body established in 2010 to "aggressively" promote Korean popular culture around the globe — hit back.

Denouncing the "conspiracy theories" of YouTube chart manipulation, KWRI president Han Koo-Hyun said the "outrageous" Japanese argument was "tantamount to doubting a world record in an Olympics marathon".

Scepticism about the song's worldwide popularity on YouTube "should be viewed as a primary school kid's jealousy and envy", Han said in a press release.

Not content with defending the success of "Gangnam Style", Han launched a vitriolic attack on the only Japanese entry in YouTube's chart of the 30 all-time, most-viewed videos.

Currently ranked 29th with more than 237 million views, the video shows a young Japanese woman engaging in the popular Internet meme activity of dropping some mentos candy in a bottle of diet coke so that it sprays soda everywhere.

Mocking what he described as the "most grotesque and preposterous content" on the entire chart, Han said it was "another lowly example showing the video-related preference of the Japanese".

Several reasons have been suggested for "Gangnam Style's" lack of success in Japan, including the fact that Psy didn't follow the path chosen by most K-pop stars of releasing a Japanese-language version. — AFP/Relaxnews

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