Category Archives: News

Tiara talks about Playboy Indonesia


On her blog Tiara Lestar is writing about the upcoming launch of Playboy Indonesia and her future career as a ‘nude’ model for that magazine. Let me quote some paragraphs (I suggest you read the whole posting. Quite interesting how she sheds some light on her thoughts about modeling and politics).I respect Playboy as an internationally known publication. Everyone from legendary Marilyn Monroe to Pamela Anderson to Madonna to Cindy Crawford have benefited from their professional relationships with the magazine. I have made a personal decision as a model to also follow that route last year. This decision certainly wasn’t popular in my own country. Heck, it was a huge disappointment for my parents too. I regret that part of it. For that, I am sorry. For my parents who I love very much, and for them alone, I have made another personal decision to not pursue that line of work anymore. Being on the cover of Playboy can be considered peak of any model’s career. As they say, “Been there done that.”

However, I was aware of one thing; I appeared in a country that does not consider Playboy and nudity as taboo. My appearance was never intended for consumption of Indonesia. How many Indonesians do you now read Playboy Spain? My pictures circulating on the internet happened without my being consulted. I do not have rights to those pictures. Not offending my countrymen was one of the criteria of my decision making process in appearing in Playboy Spain.

Tiara, as a ‘cosmopolitan woman of the world‘, you could have known that appearing in Playboy Spain (and Penthouse Holland) would mean that these images could find their way to Indonesia. This is the information age… Everything we say or do is captured somewhere on the web. Once a photo is out there, someone will scan it or rip it of a site and it will never go away and travel the world in a split second. You must have realised this?

Personally I think you should be very proud of the pictures by Adam Yurman and the role you are playing in the path to a perhaps more liberal Indonesia. But it sounds to me a bit like you are backing out on the whole thing? Not so long ago you were honoring Asian-Sirens for our role in all this…

Just my two cents 😉

Playboy magazine set for Indonesia despite protests

An Indonesian publisher vowed on Friday to go ahead with the launch of a local version of Playboy magazine despite growing protests from conservative Muslim groups and nationalist politicians. Since word of the planned launch circulated a few weeks ago, some Islamic groups have urged the government to prevent publication of the men’s magazine in the world’s most populous Muslim nation, even if it was a less racy version.”There was a thought to issue Playboy Indonesia mid-year but with this controversy that plan may be expedited or pushed back,” said Ponti Carrolus, director of PT Velvet Silver Media, which holds the Indonesian license from the U.S.-based magazine.

Carrolus told a news conference that Playboy Indonesia would not publish nude pictures, the magazine’s trademark.

Avianto Nugroho, who handles the magazine’s promotion, told Reuters separately the launch was a “certainty,” but gave no date.

Media observers said Playboy Indonesia’s content would be close to local franchises of men’s magazines such as FHM or Maxim, which rely heavily on pictures of scantily dressed women but stop short of nudes.

Despite regular campaigns against pornography, many sidewalk vendors in Indonesia stock sexually explicit movies and the country has a flourishing sex industry.

In recent years, lifestyle magazines for Indonesia’s growing secular middle class have flooded the market, including those targeting a male audience.

Many are franchises of foreign publications in the United States, Europe, Australia and more liberal Asian nations.

Founded in 1953, Playboy has about 20 local editions around the world that cater to local taste rather than simply exporting and translating its U.S. content.

Source:
Reuters

Kaila Yu finalist @ RipeTV.com

Vote for Kaila Yu at RipeTV.com

Check Kaila Yu out as one of the finalists for RipeTV hosting. Go to www.ripetv.com then go to “shows”, then “casting Ripe” and then click on Kaila Yu to watch a video of her in bikini. Click Vote (list on the right side of the page) and Submit (bottom) if you think she should win. (I sure think she should win! Don’t you? 😉
Thanks to 42465103 (what a strange username?) for the tip!

Naked News breaking into Japanese market

Naked News breaking into Japanese market

Naked News. In case you have never heard of this ingenious production, it is a news show out of Canada that essentially provides network-like (24-hour) news via newscasters, anchors and correspondents who strip, or are already nude.

Now, while one would have assumed that this may have been considered a mainstay in Japan during even the last century (when Naked News was founded), somehow the West beat Japan on this one.

Now naked news is coming to Japan! At at the head of their effort will surely be the Asian, sexy, naked newscaster Lily Kwan (photo above). But is there video (without the pesky byline name bar covering her bits) you ask…?Indeed there is. In Asian Sex Gazette’s on-going effort to keep people abreast of developments in Asia related to sex, we’ve seen fit to provide readers with a sample of Ms Kwan’s news bits (along with the other bits).

Full story and video here.

Asia Goes Crazy Over Korean Pop Culture

Asia Goes Crazy Over Korean Pop Culture  (from left to right: Jun Jihyun, Song Hyekyo, Chae Youn, Lee Hyolee)

In the 80’s music minded Europe went crazy about what they called the Neue Deutsche Welle (German Wave). The hottest thing in Asian pop culture these days is South Korea. The so-called Hallyu or Korean Wave covers the craze for South Korean TV dramas, movies and pop singers – but increasingly also for fashion, cosmetics and electronics.The Korean drama “Jewel in the Palace” clocked up record television ratings in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan last year. Even Chinese President Hu Jintao admitted to being a fan of the historical drama about a cook at Korea’s royal court. The show’s actors have become mega stars across Asia.

South Korea has been exporting movies and TV dramas since the late 1990s. Many Asian TV networks initially bought them because the glossy productions were comparatively cheap. But audiences from China to the Philippines soon got hooked.

Lisa Leung is assistant professor of cultural studies at Hong Kong’s Lingnan University. She says one of the reasons for the dramas’ strong appeal is that, unlike Western productions, they are culturally close to Asian viewers.

“Audiences can not only identify with the skin color, the hair color, the similar faces and looks of Korean actors and actresses but also the kind of values expressed in these TV dramas,” she explained. “More to the point the kind of stress on familial values, the filial piety, the love between siblings and friendship and all these elements that might make Korean television dramas so popular in Asia.”

Korean Singer: Kwon BoASouth Korean pop stars, like the singer BoA, have also achieved cult status in many Asian countries. One young woman in Hong Kong looks for magazines and posters featuring her favorite pop star, the South Korean singer and actor Rain.

“I like him, I’m his big fan,” she said. “He dances great and he sings great. And his performance in the drama is good as well.”

The popularity of South Korean films and music has led to a veritable craze for everything Korean across Asia.

Hong Kong street markets sell traditional Korean robes to children and some brides in China are wearing them for wedding photos.

Learning Korean has become increasingly popular in many Asian countries, as have Korean food, fashion and cosmetics. Ms. Leung says in China the craze has even meant more people undergoing plastic surgery, as she noticed during a research trip last year.

“I found that there were more and more younger girls and also older women wanting to go through plastic surgery,” she said. “They would be visiting these hospitals which stress this kind of Korean-style cosmetic technology. This is not too much of a question of wanting to look more Korean, but I think in mainland China the audience might have been affected by Korean TV dramas and that they want to look more beautiful.”

Ms. Leung says advertisements featuring South Korean idols have resulted in increased sales for the country’s products, such as Samsung mobile phones or LG electrical appliances.

Shim Doo-bo, a South Korean, is assistant professor of communications and new media at Singapore’s National University. He says Koreans living overseas have profited from the popularity of their country’s cultural exports – like the South Korean housewives he interviewed in Singapore.

“They reported to me that after the immense popularity of Korean television dramas and films they feel that they are better treated by local Singaporean people,” said Shim Doo-bo.

In many parts of Asia, Korea has become a byword for cool. South Koreans have coined a new word to describe the phenomenon: Hallyu, meaning “Korean wave”.

Mr. Shim says his country has not been slow to cash in on the craze.

“Many regional governments within Korea have built up theme parks based on the characters of Korean dramas and films and the image of [South] Korea of a country which used to be known to other countries for labor strikes or student demonstration strikes for democracy is slowly moving to cool or fashionable or dynamic,” he said. “So that recently officially the [South] Korean government inaugurated a campaign of so-called dynamic Korea as its catchphrase for the tourist industry.”

As Asian tourists are now visiting South Korea specifically to see the locations where popular dramas are shot, the government has organized events with famous entertainers and launched a multilingual web site with information on movies and TV dramas, actors and filming locations.

The Korean wave is a point of national pride for South Korea. After having been colonized or overshadowed by its neighbors, Japan and China, for centuries, the country finally has the chance to outdo them on the cultural stage.

But Hallyu has also boosted South Korea’s economy. In 2004, the export of film and television programs along with tourism and merchandising generated revenues totaling nearly $2 billion.

Source:
http://english.chosun.com/