Selasa, 20 November 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Food


A Cham-ing bagel shop in Subang Jaya

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 05:07 PM PST

Sulayman Cham has 20 years' experience making bagels... the American way. — Pictures by Choo Choy May

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 21 — "Is this African food?" asked the woman, pointing at the rows of freshly-baked bagels at Cham Bagel Bakery in Subang Jaya.

I gave the owner Sulayman Cham an amused look and watched as he continued speaking to the woman, a polite smile on his face. She had walked in trying to sell something to Sulayman.

When she left the bakery, I started laughing because her asking him if the bagels were African had been so absurd.

"Why didn't you tell her what a bagel is?" I asked the 44-year-old Sulayman who started the New York-style bagel bakery here in May last year.

"That's one of the biggest challenges I face actually, having to introduce what a bagel is to Malaysians. Usually, it is Malaysians who have lived or travelled abroad who are exposed to bagels," he said.

What differentiates a bagel from a doughnut even though both have holes in them is that a doughnut is fried whereas a bagel is boiled then baked so they are dense and chewy in texture as opposed to light and "fluffy" like a bun.. or well, a doughnut. In Sulayman Cham's recipe, he does not use any oil or butter so it's a healthier option compared to doughnuts.

Most of the time the bagels we get here are frozen ones imported from the United States. There are some cafes or restaurants that make their own bagels but it's hard to get the taste and texture right.

Cham Bagel Bakery offers a variety of bagels in different flavours like strawberry, oatmeal raisin, chocolate chip... have it with cream cheese or try one of their bagel dogs.

With more than 20 years of experience baking bagels, you can be assured that the bagels from Cham Bagel Bakery taste exactly like the ones in the States.

Many of Sulayman Cham's customers have said that the bagels at his shop are as good as the ones abroad. Personally, I've not been to the States so I do not know what American bagels taste like but the first time I tasted Cham Bagel Bakery's bagels, I have to say that they are good.

"When you do something for more than 20 years, it becomes part of you," said Sulayman who started baking bagels back in 1989 when he went to study in the States.

Originally from Gambia, Africa, Sulayman studied business, accounting and economics at Strayer College, Washington DC. He was looking for a part-time job and he came across a popular bagel shop. Initially, the owner of the shop said that he was not hiring.

Sulayman then decided to work at Jerry's Subs and Pizza. Lady Luck came knocking on his door while he was there because a manager from the bagel shop took notice of him. The manager told the bagel shop owner that Sulayman was a hardworking man and that he should hire him.

Long story short, the bagel shop hired Sulayman and pretty soon he was one of their best bagel bakers.

"I only wanted to work there for two weeks but my boss liked me. He said I was fast and I was very good at baking bagels. Having long arms helped, I guess. Back then, I could bake 10,000 bagels per day. You can ask my partner if you don't believe me," said Sulayman.

Slices of roast beef and plenty of fresh veggies make for a very yummy bagel sandwich.

His former employer is now his silent partner in Cham Bagel Bakery. The story of how Sulayman opened the bakery in Malaysia is another interesting one.

In 2008, Charlie Daily of Wholly Bagels offered Sulayman a job opportunity in New Zealand...  to start the bagel company there. Daily learned his bagel baking skills from Sulayman and it was perfect timing because Sulayman wanted to work somewhere new.

To get to New Zealand, Sulayman had to go through Malaysia. Unfortunately for him, there were some issues with his visa and Sulayman had to spend four and a half months in Malaysia to get it sorted out. Eventually, the New Zealand deal didn't work out so he went back to Gambia.

However, while he was in Malaysia, he noticed that there were no bagel shops here. Sulayman then seized on the opportunity to open Cham Bagel Bakery and the rest is history.

Most of his clientele are Malaysians who know about bagels and expatriates or college students who are curious to know what bagels are about. There are 18 different flavours to choose from currrently but Sulayman has more recipes up his sleeves.

"Even now with 18 flavours, my customers have problems deciding which flavours to go for. It's like what they say, you don't throw all your punches at once. You save them for later," he said.

For Sulayman, he truly believes in the quality of his bagels and that is why he decided to do the production himself although he could have trained and hired other people to do it.

"A good product will sell by itself. Yes, advertising, marketing and promoting is important but at the end of the day, it is the quality of the product. That's my philosophy," said Sulayman who personally hand rolls and bakes each bagel and bagel roll at Cham Bagel Bakery.

Cham Bagel Bakery offers options of sweet or savoury bagels with flavours like strawberry, honey oat, banana nut, onion, cheese and more. You can add a choice of fillings such as roast beef, egg salad, cream cheese, tuna salad and so on.

Cham Bagel Bakery

41, Jalan SS 15/8A, 47500

Subang Jaya

Selangor, Malaysia


Chocolate desserts are no longer limited to the sweet and gooey

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 07:23 AM PST

Tablets of Belgian chocolate are seen in a shop in central Brussels November 19, 2012. — Reuters pic

NEW YORK, Nov 20 — Restaurants and cooking schools are pairing chocolate with ingredients as surprising as beets, goat cheese and lasagna noodles to bring an entirely different taste to the dessert menu.

From the white chocolate and goat cheese at the wd-50 restaurant in New York City, to the baked pizza dough dessert at the Queen Margherita Trattoria in Nutley, New Jersey, chocolate is getting a makeover.

"Oh wow, awesome!" said Kelly Horn, 24, of Darien, Connecticut, as she dug into a mound of baked pasta and Baci, the Italian candy whose name means "kiss," at a chocolate cooking class at Eataly, a Manhattan food bazaar.

"I was intrigued. I've never really seen chocolate used that way," said her boyfriend, Neal Siegrist, 24, a food fanatic and financial trader who enrolled the couple in the class, run by the Italian chocolate maker Perugina's La Scuola del Cioccolato, which is based in Perugia, Italy.

With an eggplant in one hand and a bar of chocolate in the other, food historian Francine Segan told the class that since chocolate is derived from the seed-like cocoa bean, its flavour can be pulled in different directions.

"Chocolate is not sweet until you add sugar," Segan told her 30 students. "If you have 100 percent chocolate, it can go either way, to the sweet or the savoury."

The unusual dessert creations have centuries-old roots that date to when Christopher Columbus brought home chocolate to the Old World and cooks tried to stretch the precious import with less expensive local ingredients, like the chick peas that grow abundantly in Italy.

"Chick peas have that wonderful creaminess that doesn't take away from the chocolate," Segan said as she prepared a chocolate chick pea dessert ravioli.

Less sweet than many desserts, the odd-couple pairings largely keep chocolate flavors in check, which was just fine for Cate Liguori, 27, and her mother Stephanie Sands, 59, who lives near the American chocolate capital, Hershey, Pennsylvania.

"I liked them more than I expected because they weren't super chocolaty," said Liguori, a fashion buyer

Sands, an accountant, said, "It was something so unexpected, something you had to alter your taste buds for."

Adventurous stay-at-home cooks who forage for ideas online can find recipes for chocolate dessert lasagna, chocolate-beet cake and a chocolate zucchini roll on such sites as FoodNetwork.com and Epicurious.com. Segan keeps chocolate in her kitchen spice cabinet to wield in unexpected ways while cooking dessert.

"Chocolate has that earthiness that goes wonderfully with the eggplant's neutral canvas," Segan explained to the sold-out class.

"Is it sweet enough?" she asked as Grace Palumbo, 59, a media consultant from Toronto visiting New York with friends, took an exploratory bite.

"It's perfect," Palumbo said. — Reuters


Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Galatasaray boost hopes with win over United

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 03:09 PM PST

Manchester United's Phil Jones (left) fights for the ball with Galatasaray's Burak Yilmaz during their Champions League Group H soccer match at Turk Telekom Arena in Istanbul November 20, 2012. ― Reuters pic

ISTANBUL, Nov 21 ― Galatasaray earned a 1-0 victory in a hard-fought battle with a young Manchester United side yesterday, snatching the win through a Burak Yilmaz header in their Group H Champions League game.

The victory boosted Galatasaray's hopes of reaching the knockout stage, putting them in second place in the group, behind United who had already qualified after four wins in their first four matches.

Burak put the Turkish champions ahead in the 53rd minute, heading into the top left corner above the head of Rafael after Felipe Melo had gone close seconds earlier and won a corner.

Hamit Altintop just failed to double Galatasaray's lead in the 78th minute with a powerful shot which flew off the crossbar.

United, knowing qualification was already assured, rested a number of senior players including Wayne Rooney, Rio Ferdinand, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, David De Gea and Robin van Persie.

In their final match on December 5, Galatasaray, who are ahead of CFR Cluj on goal difference, will play Braga. The Portuguese side, who lost 3-1 to Cluj, are already out of the competition on three points.

After a cagey start, Galatasaray became more of a threat as the first half progressed, pinning the visitors back into their own half but creating few goalscoring opportunities.

Striker Burak headed over the bar from a Selcuk Inan free kick in the 21st minute.

United chances

Galatasaray went close again some 10 minutes later when a strike from Hamit forced a save from Anders Lindegaard and United scrambled the ball away.

United worked hard to keep possession and neutralise any threat from Galatasaray and had chances of their own in the first half.

Eighteen-year-old Nick Powell, on his Champions League debut, saw his header fly off the crossbar in the 43rd minute.

Galatasaray started the second half in determined fashion and an Albert Riera volley from outside the penalty area was save by Lindegaard in the 49th minute.

United stepped up a gear and sought to find a way back into the game but Galatasaray survived a late bout of pressure to secure the points.

"Beating Manchester United is important," said Galatasaray coach Fatih Terim.

"We played brilliantly and unselfishly. My players played football in a way we have been expecting for a long time.

"We are very hopeful for second place," he added.

"There is no guarantee in football but we will play well at Braga who no longer have any chance."

United manager Alex Ferguson said: "Parts of the game were good but in the area which we were worried about ― set pieces ― we suffered.

"Other than that I was satisfied and it was a decent performance," Ferguson told the club website.

 "We had some good attacking play in the first half and at that point the only trouble they gave us was from outside the box. It was a very competitive, good game."

United's Darren Fletcher said the Istanbul pitch had made things difficult.

"The biggest problem was that the pitch wasn't good at all," the midfielder told Sky television.

"It was difficult to play one-twos." ― Reuters

Ukraine eye England’s Redknapp for manager post

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 07:48 AM PST

KIEV, Nov 20 – Ukraine want former Tottenham Hotspur manager Harry Redknapp to take charge of their national team after being turned down by Ukrainian striker Andriy Shevchenko.

Englishman Redknapp, 65 (picture), sacked by Spurs in June, emerged as favourite when Ukrainian Football Federation (FFU) chiefs met today, a statement said on the federation's website http://www.ffu.org.ua/ukr/ffu/about/ffu_news/10755/

"The praesidium took the decision to begin talks with Redknapp's representatives relating to him working in the post of chief coach of the national Ukraine team," the statement said.

FFU official Mikhail Fomenko, in comments quoted by the website, said Redknapp fitted the bill.

"He has a lot of experience, coaching talent and knows how to motivate footballers," Fomenko said.

"In whatever team he led Redknapp very quickly improved the quality of the play and achieved significant progress. Today he is an expert in the game and one of the best England coaches," Fomenko said.

Redknapp enjoyed an eventful four-year spell as Spurs manager, taking them from the bottom of the Premier League to victories over European giants in the Champions League.

He was heavily linked to the England job before the Football Association appointed Roy Hodgson in May.

Ukraine's soccer chiefs first turned to retired striker Shevchenko to fill the post left vacant by Oleg Blokhin who departed to coach top Ukrainian club Dynamo Kiev.

But Shevchenko, 36, who played for AC Milan and Chelsea as well as Dynamo Kiev in a glittering career, turned the job down yesterday saying it was "premature step" for him.

Ukraine sit in fifth place in their 2014 World Cup qualifying group, with two points from three games. – Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views


Ukraine eye England’s Redknapp for manager post

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 07:48 AM PST

KIEV, Nov 20 – Ukraine want former Tottenham Hotspur manager Harry Redknapp to take charge of their national team after being turned down by Ukrainian striker Andriy Shevchenko.

Englishman Redknapp, 65 (picture), sacked by Spurs in June, emerged as favourite when Ukrainian Football Federation (FFU) chiefs met today, a statement said on the federation's website http://www.ffu.org.ua/ukr/ffu/about/ffu_news/10755/

"The praesidium took the decision to begin talks with Redknapp's representatives relating to him working in the post of chief coach of the national Ukraine team," the statement said.

FFU official Mikhail Fomenko, in comments quoted by the website, said Redknapp fitted the bill.

"He has a lot of experience, coaching talent and knows how to motivate footballers," Fomenko said.

"In whatever team he led Redknapp very quickly improved the quality of the play and achieved significant progress. Today he is an expert in the game and one of the best England coaches," Fomenko said.

Redknapp enjoyed an eventful four-year spell as Spurs manager, taking them from the bottom of the Premier League to victories over European giants in the Champions League.

He was heavily linked to the England job before the Football Association appointed Roy Hodgson in May.

Ukraine's soccer chiefs first turned to retired striker Shevchenko to fill the post left vacant by Oleg Blokhin who departed to coach top Ukrainian club Dynamo Kiev.

But Shevchenko, 36, who played for AC Milan and Chelsea as well as Dynamo Kiev in a glittering career, turned the job down yesterday saying it was "premature step" for him.

Ukraine sit in fifth place in their 2014 World Cup qualifying group, with two points from three games. – Reuters

Schumacher wants to savour his second F1 farewell

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 07:38 AM PST

German Formula One driver Michael Schumacher poses with the Legend of Sport trophy at the German Sports Press Ball in Frankfurt in this file photo of November 10, 2012. – Reuters pic

LONDON, Nov 20 – Six years on from his retirement from Formula One at the 2006 Brazilian Grand Prix, Michael Schumacher will say farewell again at Interlagos on Sunday and this time he intends to savour the occasion.

The seven times world champion, who was racing for Ferrari in 2006 and is now ending a disappointing three year comeback with Mercedes, has made clear he is calling it quits for good this time.

The 43-year-old German, whose place will be taken by 2008 champion Lewis Hamilton next season, said the Sao Paulo circuit – a ramshackle bowl steeped in motor racing passion – was a fitting place to round off an astonishing career that began back in 1991.

"I always enjoy the enthusiasm of the fans, and it's simply a great circuit which has seen many memorable events and always produces spectacular races as the unique layout guarantees plenty of action," Schumacher said in a team preview for Sunday's season finale.

"For me, it's also the circuit that brings back my memories of Ayrton (Senna)," added the man whose first title, with Benetton in 1994, came after the great Brazilian's death at Imola that year.

Triple champion Senna won at Interlagos in 1993 with the young Schumacher standing alongside on the podium in third place. The German has gone on to win the race four times.

"My departure from Formula One will probably be less emotional for me this time than in 2006, when we were still fighting for the championship and everything was much more intense," said Schumacher.

"This time round, I will be able to pay more attention to my farewell and hopefully savour it too. I have had fantastic years in Formula One and a lot of support from fans around the world, and I wish to particularly thank them for that."

Schumacher will leave with his legacy perhaps less glittering than before but with most of his records intact and unlikely to be matched for years, if not decades, to come despite the best efforts of Red Bull's championship leader and compatriot Sebastian Vettel.

Those records include his seven titles, 91 race wins, 155 podium finishes and 68 pole positions.

Schumacher has scored more points than any other driver, led more laps and set more fastest laps. His 13 wins in 2004, 19 successive podiums (2001-02) and 24 consecutive scoring finishes are so far unrivalled.

His comeback, after three years out, has been a pale shadow of his dominance with Ferrari and he has been on the podium just once – a third place at this season's European Grand Prix in Valencia.

Mercedes have not scored a point in their last five races while Schumacher, who was a title contender in Brazil in 2006 when Spaniard Fernando Alonso won his second title with Renault, has drawn a blank in his last six.

"I would be happiest if I could say goodbye with a strong race, and I am sure we will be doing everything we can to make it happen," said Schumacher. – Reuters

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Features

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Mulberry awarded at the 2012 Walpole Awards

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 06:56 AM PST

Mulberry's famous 'Alexa' bag. — All rights reserved.

LONDON, Nov 20 — Famed for reinventing the 'it bag,' luxury group Mulberry was named Walpole's 2012 Best British Luxury Brand at a ceremony in London.

Mulberry beat off stiff competition in the category from a resurgent Stella McCartney who has had a shining Olympic year, and Alexander McQueen.

Mulberry creative director Emma Hill accepted the award at a ceremony at London's Banqueting House, held in association with private bank Coutts.

In other catergories, the Best Luxury Brand Online prize went to Burberry, while Best Emerging British Luxury Brand was won by designer swimwear label Orlebar Brown.

Mulberry was founded in 1971 but has been revitalized by the presence of Emma Hill and the success of the brand's famous 'Alexa' bag. The company announced a renewed focus on Asian markets.

"We just opened a flagship store in Singapore a couple of weeks ago and we're really looking at expanding our stores, expanding our flagships and specifically expanding our men's collections. The male Asian consumer is growing hugely," Hill told CNBC.

Previous recipients of the awards include Vivienne Westwood, while Victoria Beckham won Emerging British Luxury Brand in 2011.

"This year's Walpole award winners represent some of the most talented organisations from across the luxury industry and we are delighted to recognise their exceptional achievements," said Walpole CEO Julia Carrick who is also publisher and founder, of the Financial Times's How To Spend It magazine.

Walpole is a not-for-profit organisation that represents the British luxury industry. The group positions itself as the "voice of British luxury" and it "leads an active programme of thought leadership, research, political engagement, initiatives and events to promote and inspire British luxury worldwide." — AFP-Relaxnews

Learning the art of giving, Japanese-style

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 06:47 AM PST

Japanese Soke Ogasawara (L) attends a ceremony of Origata, Japan's art of gift wrapping during the opening of the "Miwa" pavillon, on October 30, 2012 in Paris. — AFP pic

PARIS, Nov 20 — What matters at Christmas time is the spirit, right? For those yet to be convinced, a tiny Japanese pavilion in Paris offers to initiate Westerners to a 700-year-old gift-giving ritual known as Origata.

You could hardly be further from the push and shove of the holiday shopping season: the tiny wood-panelled cubicle in the city's Latin Quarter is like a hybrid of concept store, art gallery and miniature temple.

Opened this month by Japanese businessman Takeshi Sato together with a young Frenchman, Joan Larroumec, the Miwa pavilion is billed as an exclusive members' club, offering a gateway to Japanese high culture.

"It's a business venture, but one that also aims to spread knowledge of traditional Japanese culture," explained Larroumec. "It's a window onto a side of Japan that is inaccessible to most people."

Chief among these customs is the Origata gift ritual, rooted in traditional Shinto culture, which has been practised primarily for the Japanese imperial family since the 14th century.

"It all starts with a tea ceremony, using water exported from Japan," Larroumec said.

"We listen to the person, to the meaning they want their gift to have, how they want the recipient to feel, and then there are a whole set of codes that determine the way we wrap it, the different paper, knots and folds.

"The aim is to put meaning back into the art of giving."

Except for the word "ori", meaning to fold, Origata bears no relation to the paper-folding craft of origami.

Since the 14th century, Keishosai Ogasawara's family have held the keys to the art as chiefs of protocol for the imperial family, handing down its codes generation to generation and -- in recent years -- sharing them with the public.

She travelled from Tokyo to witness the opening of the pavilion, which was ceremonially inaugurated by two Shinto priests.

'Exact opposite of email'

"Origata is about putting your feelings into an object," she explained to AFP, infinitely soft-spoken and clothed in a pale pink kimono. "The knot represents the bond between two people."

"In a world of email and instant communication, this is the exact opposite," added Larroumec.

In Japan, Sato's firm Rightning specialises in running craft-based projects for the likes of Louis Vuitton, or telecoms giant Docomo, for whom he created a phone made of Japanese cypress, or hinoki, the wood used for temple-building.

For the Miwa project he drew on his contacts in traditional craft circles, from Ogasawara herself, to the artisans who built it from hinoki.

Ogasawara trained the two mistresses of ceremonies who will officiate at the pavilion -- a basic three-week course, they admit, compared with the three to five years needed to perfect the art.

The organic washi paper used for the ceremony comes from a craftsman with the honorific Japanese title of "Living National treasure", bestowed on one member of a generation for any given field.

The room's central counter is made from a single slab of 300-year-old hinoki, without a single knot -- "which means 16 generations of gardeners took turns to remove the young shoot from the tree," said Larroumec.

A gift display table was recreated using plans salvaged from centuries-old Origata manuscripts. A tiny steel and hinoki paper knife was made by a centuries-old samurai sword manufacturer.

The wood-panelled walls are covered with tiny cubicles concealing ritual objects or ones for sale.

"It all stems from the Japanese notion that perfection requires hundreds of imperceptible details," said Larroumec.

Such refinement comes with a hefty price tag, though.

For an annual fee of 1,000 euros (RM3,920), members can book an Origata ceremony any time they like. They can also purchase artefacts rarely seen outside Japan, from 3,000-year-old Jomon vases, to 19th-century kimonos worth up to 80,000 euros.

A fortnight after its launch, Miwa had signed up two dozen Japanese members, and a dozen French ones, all recruited in exclusive French-Japanese cultural circles in Paris. It aims for 100 members within a year.

"The membership fee might seem steep, but not when you consider people are getting access to collectors' objects worth 20,000 to 80,000 euros," explained Larroumec.

Among the Japanophiles Larroumec has approached is former president Jacques Chirac -- a well-known admirer of the culture. He has yet to respond. — AFP-Relaxnews

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


‘Hitchcock’ trains lens on the love story of Alfred and Alma

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 07:12 AM PST

Actress Helen Mirren attends the film premiere of "Hitchcock" in New York November 18, 2012. — Reuters pic

NEW YORK, Nov 20 — She won Oscar gold for her uncanny performance as Britain's Queen Elizabeth, but Helen Mirren's latest portrayal finds her as the power behind the throne—or, more precisely, the director's chair.

In "Hitchcock," Mirren stars opposite Anthony Hopkins as legendary director Alfred Hitchcock's devoted wife Alma Reville, and early buzz has her a contender for another Oscar nomination.

The film, which opens in limited release on Friday, explores the domestic life of one of Hollywood's most iconic and revered directors, set during the days of his struggle to put the ground-breaking 1960 classic, "Psycho" on the silver screen.

Toggling back and forth between his on-set battles with censors and his cast including Janet Leigh (Scarlett Johansson), Vera Miles (Jessica Biel) and Tony Perkins (James D'Arcy), and his strained relationship with Alma as she copes with his well-documented obsession with his ravishing leading ladies, "Hitchcock" treats film fans to a glimpse of bygone Hollywood.

But it paints a more nuanced and sympathetic portrait of the director Hopkins called "a damaged man" than the recent television film "The Girl," which dramatised the hell Hitchcock put Tippi Hedren through during filming of "The Birds."

"It's a great role," Mirren said of Alma, a film editor and assistant director in her own right who ceded the spotlight to her husband, but as the film makes clear was involved in virtually every aspect of his films and even re-cut "Psycho" into the masterpiece it is known as today.

"So, you don't turn that down," she told Reuters.

Having won her Oscar as one of the world's most famous women, Mirren said she finds herself drawn to "the ones I don't know anything about, like Alma. Those are the most fun."

With little to go on, Mirren said she turned to the 2003 book "Alma Hitchcock: The Woman Behind the Man," by the couple's daughter Patricia, who also acted in several Hitchcock films.

"I'm not that much of a film buff that I knew about Alma, and I had no idea about Hitchcock's private life," she said, adding the book aimed "to bring her mother out of the shadows."

Hitch the brand

By all accounts making the movie about the movies was a joy, with Mirren and Hopkins co-starring in their first film together under first-time director Sacha Gervasi ("Anvil: The Story of Anvil"), who fixed a script that had made the rounds.

Hopkins described it as the "most fun" since his Oscar-winning role in the thriller "Silence of the Lambs."

Mirren recalled rushing off to work each day: "I couldn't wait." And it helped that the actors have the same approach.

"There's no mystery to it ... They talk about chemistry, and Helen agrees with me, there's no such thing. You know your part, she knows hers, and off you go, hope it works," Hopkins said.

But Mirren and Hopkins, who is also being touted for an Oscar nomination, parted ways when speculating on how the auteur director, who never won an Oscar during five decades of work, would have fared in the Hollywood of today.

"He would have despaired," Hopkins said. "It would have been anathema to him. That kind of artistry is gone."

Corporate control means "you have eight or nine producers on the set, everyone's got a say in the scripts, and even craft services!"

But Mirren differed, imagining "he'd do brilliantly well."

"He was a great salesman, and the Hollywood of today is so much about being a salesman and being able to sell yourself as a brand," she explained. "He did that brilliantly. I think the two of them sold Hitch. Hitch was the faceman, he was the brand."

"Also," she added, "his filmmaking techniques would be incredibly successful," given the technological advances since Hitchcock's death in 1980.

Hitchcock was on a roll in his early 60s, with his "Psycho" follow-up, the shocking thriller "The Birds" becoming a hit and a much-loved classic. But none of the handful of films he made afterward attained their iconic status.

Mirren, 67, by contrast, truly hit her stride during her 40s, despite a steady two-decade career by that point.

Starting with the TV show "Prime Suspect" to the films "Gosford Park," "The Queen" and "The Last Station," she racked up four Oscar nominations and a mantel full of Emmys, which raises a question about the validity of complaints that Hollywood has no use for actresses over 40.

"I think what has changed is, the world around has changed," Mirren said when reflecting on her success and acclaim.

"I was lucky that I hit my 40s just as the world around me was changing. Twenty years before I never would have been cast in 'Prime Suspect' because there were no women inspectors."

And so, she looks forward.

"As I've carried on, my God, 20 years ago it was inconceivable that you'd have a female president of the United States," she said.

"Now, the next president of America may well be a woman, and if there is a female president, that means that if a movie comes along, and there's the president of America ..." She laughs.

"You know what I mean?" — Reuters

Stallone’s daughter to make Paris ball debut

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 06:44 AM PST

US actress Rosanna Arquette (R) and her daughter Zoe Bleu Sidel pose during the closing Ceremony of the 52nd Monte-Carlo Television Festival on June 14, 2012 in Monaco. Zoey will be at the debutante ball. — AFP pic

PARIS, Nov 20 — Sylvester Stallone's 16-year-old daughter Sophia-Rose will be among the 21 young women stepping out at the debutantes' ball in Paris this weekend, organisers said on Monday.

Taking place at the glitzy Crillon Hotel on Saturday, the ball will also draw the daughter of US actress Rosanna Arquette, 18-year-old Zoe-Bleu Sidel, as well as Lily Rivkin, 17, daughter of the US ambassador to France Charles Rivkin.

Launched in 1992, the high-society highlight updates a custom stretching back to the royal courts of France and England.

Dressed in haute couture and accompanied by cherry-picked cavaliers the young women from 14 countries, daughters of a global elite of actors, business leaders and aristocrats, will have dinner before the big dance.

"Le Bal" is held every year in late November during the US Thanksgiving weekend. Proceeds from this year's event will go to the "Enfants d'Asie" charity for Asian children.

Past debutantes include the daughters of actors Forest Whittaker, Clint Eastwood, the blockbuster author Daniele Steel or car tycoon Carlos Ghosn, and the granddaughters of ex-Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. — AFP-Relaxnews

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Books

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Pope’s third book on Jesus reaffirms virgin birth

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 06:00 AM PST

Pope Benedict XVI's book 'The Childhood of Jesus' is seen during a presentation in Vatican November 20, 2012. Pope Benedict published the last part of his trilogy on the life of Jesus on Tuesday, delivering an early childhood narrative which strongly reaffirms the doctrine of the virgin birth as an 'unequivocal' truth of faith. The book, 137 pages in its English version, is titled 'The Infancy Narratives – Jesus of Nazareth' and is being published simultaneously around the world in 21 languages. – Reuters pic

VATICAN CITY, Nov 20 – Pope Benedict published the last part of his trilogy on the life of Jesus today, delivering an early childhood narrative which strongly reaffirms the doctrine of the virgin birth as an "unequivocal" truth of faith.

The book, 137 pages in its English version, is titled "The Infancy Narratives – Jesus of Nazareth" and will be published around the world in some 20 languages. It goes on sale tomorrow.

It is bound to be another international bestseller like the previous volumes. The Vatican said a million copies had already been printed and more runs were expected soon.

Divided into a forward, four chapters and an epilogue, it traces and analyses the gospel narratives from the birth of Jesus to his presentation in the temple at the age of 12.

The previous two volumes dealt with the adult life of Jesus and his public ministry.

One section of the book is called "Virgin Birth – Myth or Historical Truth?"

The Church teaches that Jesus is the son of God and was not conceived through sexual intercourse but by the power of the Holy Spirit, one part of the divine trinity.

In simple language that is at once academic but still easily accessible to a non-specialist readership, Benedict says the story of the virgin birth is not just a reworking of earlier Greek or Egyptian legends and archetypal concepts but something totally new in history.

"It is God's creative word alone that brings about something new. Jesus, born of Mary is fully man and fully God, without confusion and without separation ..." he writes.

"The accounts of Matthew and Luke are not myths taken a stage further. They are firmly rooted, in terms of their basic conception, in the biblical tradition of God the Creator and Redeemer," he writes.

"Is what we profess in the Creed (a Christian prayer that includes belief in the virgin birth) true? he asks. He answers: "The answer is an unequivocal yes".

CORNERSTONES OF FAITH

Catholics should see belief in the virgin birth and the resurrection of Jesus from the dead as "cornerstones of faith" because they are undeniable signs of God's creative power.

"If God does not also have power over matter, then he simply is not God," Benedict writes. "But he does have this power, and through the conception and resurrection of Jesus Christ he has ushered in a new creation."

Benedict tackles the "question of interpreted history," or the attempt by the gospels to understand events after they took place in the context of the word of God and their relationship to prophesies in the Old Testament.

"Hence the aim (of the evangelists) was not to produce an exhaustive account, but a record of what seemed important for the nascent faith community in the light of the word. The infancy narratives are interpreted history, condensed and written down in accordance with the interpretation," he writes.

In other sections of the book Benedict discusses the genealogy of Jesus, the figure of St Joseph, the story of the wise men who the Bible says paid tribute to the infant Jesus in the manger in Bethlehem.

He writes of the symbolism of Jesus having been born in a manger: "From the moment of his birth, he belongs outside the realm of what is important and powerful in worldly terms."

The pope dedicates a section of the book to the Bible story of the three kings who paid tribute to the infant Jesus.

Benedict says that while he believes in the story of the adoration of the Magi, no foundation of faith would be shaken if turned out to be an invention based on a theological idea.

In his two previous volumes on the life of Jesus, issued in 2007 and 2011, Benedict condemned violence committed in God's name and exonerated Jews of responsibility for the death of Jesus. – Reuters


Russian sci-fi author Boris Strugatsky dies

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 02:30 AM PST

'Roadside Picnic' cover book. – All Rights Reserved

MOSCOW, Nov 20 – Russian writer Boris Strugatsky, famous for co-authoring Soviet-era science-fiction novels critical of the authorities with his late brother Arkady, passed away yesterday at 79, his foundation said.

Born in 1933 in Saint Petersburg, Strugatsky was educated in math and worked in Russia's main astronomical observatory in Pulkovo before the Strugatsky brothers became full-time writers and classics of science fiction.

The Strugatsky brothers began publishing their deeply philosophical works in the 1960s amid the country's infatuation with space travel, but their writing quickly turned away from utopian social realism, focusing on the darker sides of modernity, with a dose of satire on the Soviet system.

One of their best-known works, "Roadside Picnic", follows a protagonist who illegally ventures into the Earth's dangerous paranormal zones to look for artifacts he later sells on the market, losing his son in the final quest.

The book was censored countless times and later made into the acclaimed film "Stalker" by director Andrei Tarkovsky, and was seen as prophetic due to the Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe aftermath 15 years after its publication.

The Strugatsky writer tandem broke apart with the death of Arkady in 1991, but their works inspired generations of science fiction authors and a broad fan base that picks apart their novels for hidden philosophical meanings.

Boris Strugatsky published two novels on his own after his brother's death, which were not as widely read, and was known for his active stand on political issues, frequently criticising President Vladimir Putin and calling his policies a return to stagnation of the late Soviet era.

In 2009, he engaged in a long correspondence with jailed oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, which was later made public, discussing the nature of authoritarianism and the future of humankind faced with global challenges like the end of oil.

Most recently he participated in political petitions demanding the release of jailed feminist punk band Pussy Riot and of protesters arrested on the eve of Putin's inauguration in May.

The writer lately had heart troubles and was in the hospital undergoing dialysis, RIA Novosti quoted a close friend who requested anonymity. The Arkady and Boris Strugatsky foundation confirmed his death on its official site. – AFP/Relaxnews


Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Bahasa


Serangan di Gaza: Anggota parlimen gesa dunia bersatu hati tekan Israel

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 01:40 AM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, 20 Nov — Anggota Parlimen termasuk pembangkang hari ini menggesa dunia supaya bersatu hati untuk terus memberikan tekanan kepada Israel agar menghentikan serangan ke atas rakyat Gaza di bumi Palestin.

Datuk Idris Haron (BN-Tangga Batu) berkata kuasa besar dunia seperti Pertubuhan Bangsa-Bangsa Bersatu (PBB) dan Pertubuhan Kerjasama Islam (OIC) perlu duduk semeja dan menyelesaikan konflik ini bersama-sama.

"Berilah peluang kepada penduduk Gaza untuk hirup udara segar dan hidup seperti biasa seperti penduduk lain di muka bumi ini," katanya ketika ditemui pemberita di lobi Parlimen hari ini.

Usul tergempar bertajuk 'Mengecam Serangan Kejam oleh Israel ke atas Wilayah Palestin di Gaza' dibentang di Dewan Rakyat hari ini.

Usul telah dicadangkan oleh Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak dan dibentangkan oleh Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz.

Datuk Mohamed Aziz (BN-Sri Gading) pula berkata tekanan itu penting supaya dunia dapat bersatu hati menentang kekejaman rejim Zionis yang berterusan menyerang bumi Gaza sehingga membawa kematian kepada kanak-kanak yang tidak berdosa.

"Ini satu usul yang penting dan isyarat jelas dari rakyat Malaysia yang menentang kezaliman regim Zionis terhadap rakyat Palestin.

"Kita perlu terus berusaha memberi tekanan kepada Israel supaya kita dapat membebaskan bumi Palestin dari kekejaman rejim Zionis," katanya.

Sementara itu Dr Tan Seng Giaw (DAP-Kepong) berkata seharusnya sudah ada mesyuarat tergempar antara Majlis Keselamatan PBB untuk mengusulkan gencatan senjata kerana apa yang berlaku ketika ini tidak boleh diterima dunia.

Salahuddin Ayob (PAS-Kubang Kerian) pula berkata Malaysia perlu memainkan peranan yang lebih berkesan dalam menangani isu itu dan tidak boleh berharap kepada PBB sahaja.

"Patut ada inisiatif lain seperti memainkan peranan sebelum ini dalam  pemeteraian Kerangka Perjanjian Damai antara kerajaan Filipina dan Barisan Pembebasan Islam Moro (MILF) yang diadakan pada Oktober lepas.

"Maka kalau itu (kerangka perjanjian) boleh kita lakukan, tiada masalah untuk main peranan yang lebih dari PBB. Kita mampu bagi komitmen," katanya.

Dalam pada itu anggota Parlimen Parti Keadilan Rakyat (PKR) dari Balik Pulau Mohd Yusmadi Mohd Yusoff berkata hak asasi manusia perlu diangkat lebih tinggi dan seharusnya keganasan yang berlaku ketika ini perlu dihentikan.

"Dalam hal ini, peranan Malaysia perlu lebih jelas supaya diikuti Parlimen lain," katanya. — Bernama

Kerajaan tubuh jawatankuasa khas kaji isu bayaran hasil petroleum

Posted: 20 Nov 2012 01:32 AM PST

PUTRAJAYA, 20 Nov — Kerajaan persekutuan bersetuju menubuhkan sebuah jawatankuasa khas untuk mengkaji secara adil dan telus berhubung isu bayaran tunai hasil petroleum kepada negeri-negeri di Pantai Timur Semenanjung.

Menurut kenyataan Pejabat Perdana Menteri hari ini, jawatankuasa khas itu akan dipengerusikan bekas ketua hakim negara Tun Abdul Hamid Mohamad.

Ia akan dianggotai pakar undang-undang antarabangsa dan tempatan; wakil kerajaan negeri Terengganu, Kelantan dan Pahang yang diperkenan Sultan negeri-negeri berkenaan.

Penubuhan jawatankuasa khas itu bertujuan mengkaji secara menyeluruh isu bayaran tunai dengan mengambil kira semua aspek yang dibangkitkan oleh negeri di pantai timur tersebut.

"Jawatankuasa itu dijangka akan menamatkan tugasnya dalam tempoh enam bulan bermula dari tarikh penubuhannya," jelas kenyataan itu lagi.

Kerajaan persekutuan juga menerima calon dari Kelantan dan Pahang sementara calon dari Terengganu masih dalam pertimbangan kerajaan negeri berkenaan.

Mengikut laporan media, Kelantan membuat tuntutan RM10.4 bilion hasil petroleum dan gas yang dikeluarkan.

"Memandangkan Kelantan telah bersetuju dengan penubuhan jawatankuasa tersebut dan telah pun menamakan calon mewakilinya, maka adalah wajar segala isu dan tuntutan dikemukakan kepada jawatankuasa tersebut," tambah kenyataan itu lagi. — Bernama

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion

0 ulasan
Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


West Brom benefit from Long game

Posted: 19 Nov 2012 03:45 PM PST

NOV 20 — While Fernando Torres might have entered Chelsea's trip to West Bromwich Albion on Saturday as the striker under the spotlight, by the end of the game everyone was talking about Shane Long.

Torres cut a miserable figure, sadly reproducing the worst of his form since his £50 million (RM243 million) move to Stamford Bridge nearly two years ago. He failed to trouble home goalkeeper Boaz Myhill and was substituted after 62 minutes, even though Chelsea were trailing and in need of a goal.

Long, by contrast, received a standing ovation from West Brom fans when he was replaced, having run himself into the ground, with 10 minutes remaining.

The Irish striker scored his team's opening goal — which he marked by revealing a T-shirt bearing a message commemorating his recently-deceased grandmother — and then created the second for Peter Odemwingie in a memorable 2-1 victory for the Baggies.

Long (centre) celebrates his goal against Chelsea during their English Premier League match at The Hawthorns in West Bromwich on November 17, 2012. — Reuters pic

Twenty-five-year-old Long's story is one of the English Premier League's more unlikely and more heartening success stories. He grew up in a small village in Tipperary in the Republic of Ireland, spending the majority of his spare time playing the Irish national sport of hurling.

Although he enjoyed watching the EPL on television — developing a particular fondness for Leeds United due to the Irish players in their squad — he hardly ever played football due to the demands placed on his time by his burgeoning hurling career, which saw him represent his county and appear in two national youth finals.

But at the age of 17, his life took a big turn in a new direction. He had recently started playing football more regularly and was quickly noticed by scouts for Cork City, one of the biggest teams in Ireland, who wasted no time in handing him a professional contract.

Within months Long caught the eye of English Championship club Reading, who were in town to assess the talents of another Cork striker, Kevin Doyle. When Reading subsequently signed Doyle, they decided to take a gamble on the young and raw Long as well, buying him for the meagre sum of €25,000 (RM100,000).

I worked at Reading at the time, and vividly remember meeting 18-year-old Long for the first time when he arrived in England during that summer of 2005. He was a shy, nervous and polite teenage boy, clearly bewildered by the speed at which everything was happening around him.

At the press conference to announce his signing, he was accompanied not by a smart-suited, sharp-talking, jewellery-laden agent... but by his mother. And when he was asked to conduct an interview for local television, he turned bright red at the prospect as his mother beamed away in the background, unable to disguise her gleeful pride at her son's glamorous new status.

But it soon became apparent that little Shane was the real deal. Fast, athletic, incredibly fit, with a prodigious leap and an unshakeable work ethic, he was promptly fast-tracked into the senior squad as initial notions of him being "one for the future" were swept aside.

Within five months he was in the first team. By the end of the season he'd made 15 appearances and scored four goals. And most amazingly of all, it happened during a season which saw Reading win promotion by romping to the Championship title with a record-breaking 106 points.

All of a sudden, Shane Long was a professional footballer in the EPL. It was fairytale stuff, especially considering the fact that his main sport had always been hurling and that he'd only been playing football seriously for two years.

Maintaining that rate of progress would have been impossible and for the next couple of years Long's form dipped somewhat, coinciding with Reading suffering relegation in 2008, but he was reinvigorated by the appointment of Brian McDermott as Reading manager in 2010.

McDermott possesses Irish roots and had gone to great efforts to look after Long when he first arrived in England four years previously, and the closeness of their relationship led to a scoring spree that saw Long finish the 2010/11 season as the second-top scorer in the Championship with 21 goals.

That form attracted plenty of interest, with Celtic, Newcastle and West Ham among the clubs linked with his signature before West Brom eventually won the race by splashing out a £6.5 million fee in the summer of 2011. Quite a return on Reading's initial €25,000 investment.

Neither Long nor West Brom have looked back since, and the striker is now gradually establishing a reputation as one of the EPL's better all-round front men.

He'll never be the most prolific striker in the world, but he offers so much to a team through his work rate, ability to stretch defences and penetration down the wings that his contribution has to be measured in far more than goals.

Long's performances are one of the main reasons for the Baggies' magnificent start to the season, and their big concern now must be whether they can keep hold of him. There's every chance that the Shane Long story will have another new chapter before long.

As for Torres, you have to suspect that his days at Stamford Bridge are numbered. It's increasingly impossible to escape the conclusion that the striker has been left permanently damaged by the injury problems he suffered around the 2010 World Cup finals, and that he will never be the same player again.

With increasing rumours that Chelsea will sign Atletico Madrid's brilliant Colombian striker Radamel Falcao in January, perhaps allowing Torres to return to Spain — and his former club Atletico — as part of the deal would be exactly the change of scenery that he needs.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

From the makers of infotainment

Posted: 19 Nov 2012 03:35 PM PST

NOV 20 — Certain ministers and government functionaries have been known particularly in the last few years to have the knack for providing "infotainment", an uneasy concoction between information and entertainment, to information-hungry Malaysians.

And most of the time this infotainment is the result of the mental diarrhoea that these bunch of people think is fit to share with fellow Malaysians.

The latest offering came from the indefatigable Information, Communication and Culture Minister Rais Yatim (whose comment was transmitted via his special duties officer Mohd Nazri Abdullah) who urged the Broadcasting Department, among other government agencies, "to provide fair coverage for all Barisan Nasional (BN) state and parliamentary representatives in the state (of Sabah)."

Of concern to Rais was that "representatives in many areas in Sabah, such as the islands and interior, did not get much coverage although they too were working hard for the people."

The principle of fairness is noble and all-encompassing indeed, and which is why it should be applied not only to BN representatives in Sabah but also those from the opposition parties for they too represent a portion of the populace in the state.

In other words, selective fairness is, if I may employ an oxymoronic terminology for this occasion, unfair fairness. A truly warped notion of even-handedness.

What is paramount here is that the work of all elected representatives in Sabah must be covered by the Broadcasting Department if it is to ensure fair journalism as it should be practised by an institution funded by taxpayers' money.

Furthermore, this concern for fair coverage in Sabah should not be given emphasis only prior to a general election but for all times. Politicians, irrespective of their party affiliations, must be made accountable all the time via the media, among other institutions.

Incidentally, talking of pre-election media coverage reminds us of images of Sabah and Sarawak natives in yesteryears that "graced" the front pages of the mainstream newspapers before the nation went to the poll in a way that can only be construed as being cynical on the part of the KL (Kuala Lumpur)-centric editors concerned.

This brings me to the next related point: the Broadcasting Department and RTM owe it to the people, especially the taxpayers, to give a fair and comprehensive coverage of not only politicians from both sides of the political divide, but also and especially the ordinary people who cry out for easy and equal access to the mainstream media.

For one thing, the news bulletin on RTM (Radio Television Malaysia), if it were to aim for higher standards of journalism, must not be about (often grisly) stuff that come out from the gaping mouths of Cabinet ministers and ruling politicians only, but also commentaries and feedback from other stakeholders such as professionals, social activists, villagers, the poor and the marginalised.

More importantly, democracy demands that people be given their voice in such important matters as public policies and economic measures taken by the authorities, which impinge upon their day-to-day existence. This is participatory democracy at its best — apart from the normal routine of the people exercising their democratic right to vote every four or five years at the end of a parliamentary term.

Besides, opening up the media to the ordinary people beats meeting with a select group of youngsters at a fancy coffee shop in, say, upmarket Bangsar in the professed desire on the part of the political leadership to intently seek out their opinions. Attentive and genuine listening to a wider audience doesn't necessarily have to be an expensive and exclusive endeavour.

But providing fair access to the media is more than just being concerned about fairness. It is also about ensuring diversity in media content so that it reflects the rich diversity that we have in our multiethnic, multicultural and multi-religious society. 

Is it any wonder, then, why, for instance, after so many years since the formation of Malaysia, many Malaysians in the peninsula are still less knowledgeable, if not ignorant, about their cousins in east Malaysia and vice versa?

Moreover, diversity also shouldn't be limited to only offering news bulletins in vernacular languages on television and radio as well. Obviously, it involves much more than that.

In concrete terms, it means that the broadcasting stations, apart from the print media, have to liberate themselves so that they offer programmes and content not only to cater to the political and cultural needs of the dominant groups of society, but also and especially those of the minorities as well. 

In this way, Malaysians from various walks of life, i.e. the diverse stakeholders, can be made to feel a sense of belonging to the constructed nation called Malaysia.

Only then can we Malaysians be proud of the media content that is not only informative, but also entertaining and intellectually challenging at the same time.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved