Category Archives: News

Gong Li hottest women of 30-something

Gong Li hottest women of 30-something

Jessica Biel has been proclaimed the sexiest woman alive by Esquire magazine, following last year’s honoree, Angelina Jolie. The magazine also picks a woman for three older age brackets including the Chinese actress Gong Li (39 years).

Born in Shenyang, Liaoning, China, Gong Li has appeared in most films directed by Zhang Yimou up till 1995. She grew up in Jinan, the capital of Shandong Province. In 1985, she enrolled in the Central Academy of Drama to study acting, and graduated in 1989. She was still a student there when Zhang Yimou chose her in 1987 for the lead role in his first film as a director, Red Sorghum, which was awarded the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival. Gong Li has since become one of the most successful actresses in Chinese history, with fame that has extended abroad as well.

Natalise & Amy Nguyen @ HID Pleasanton 10/8/05

Natalise and Amy Nguyen

I apologize for the last minute notice but I just learned that Natalise will be performing live at Hot Import Daze in Pleasanton (near San Francisco) which takes place October 8th, 2005 from Noon to 7PM. I already knew that Amy Nguyen of xoxoamy.com was making a rare California appearance at this event but figured she had gotten enough “exposure” recently. Speaking of rare California appearances, Kalia Yang will be making one as well at this event.

While browsing the Hot Import Daze website, I came across the Glo Go dancers and here is a picture of them:

Glo Go Dancers

Click on the photo above to see the full size photo and description of the Glo Go dancers. It looks like mostly hot Asian models and I particularly like what Christine Mendoza is wearing!

Other Asian models who will be attending include: Natasha Yi, KT So, Sasha Singleton, Nikki Cash, Eri Moriyama, Liz Le, Jenny Chu, Kat Guiterrez, Jeri Lee, Sandy Saya, Lulu Leia, and Sara Brinsfield.

Red-light nights, Bangkok daze

Bangkok daze

Okay I know this is not the standard fare, but:

Spending an evening in the tawdry red-light districts of Bangkok with old friends and new ones, some may begin to ponder the decadence and depravity on offer and the people who participate in one of Asia’s most renowned sex tourist destinations. Full story here.Again I know it is not the usual, but as we have learned from such hotties as Vivian Lin (Petchara), this is a locale that often generates the very sirens we all fawn over and toil to offer coverage on.

Anyway, if I have strayed from what is the thesis of Asian Sirens, I apologise. Marco will scold me, kill the entry and I promise not to do it again. 🙂

On a final note – I hope you like the article.

Miss Thailand didn’t expect to have to live there

Miss Thailand didn't expect to have to live there

Australian beauty Angela MacKay has handed back her Miss Thailand crown just 10 days after winning it, saying her entirely unexpected triumph interfered with her modeling career. “I really went into the competition because I just wanted to learn how to speak Thai and I wanted to have a Thai experience,” said the 21-year-old from Perth with an Australian father and a Thai mother.”I wanted to just learn about Thai culture. I honestly didn’t expect to win at all. It was a very, very big surprise to me,” she said before heading back to New York late on Tuesday to go back to modeling.

MacKay said she had been persuaded to enter by relatives in Thailand when she came for a visit and hadn’t realized that the title required her to stay in the country for the coming year.

She returned the prize money of 1 million baht, a diamond crown worth 800,000 baht and a car.

Thailand will send second placed Sirinda Jensen to the Miss World contest in China in December. Jensen is half Thai and half Dutch.

Source: Reuters

UPDATE:
And the runner up is: Sirinda Jensen!

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I don’t have anything to add. I think asiansweetheart said it allready in her comment.
And thanks for the photo’s!
Robin

A Message For Our Indonesian Friends

Read this post in INDONESIAN.

Like most internet fora, Asian Sirens does not allow the posting of abusive messages. Unfortunately however, there were many abusive messages in the flood of Indonesian posts we’ve received recently. Because none of the moderators here can read Indonesian, we have had to enforce a policy of only allowing English posts.

Please understand that this policy is not discriminatory; in fact, we’ve had to enforce it in the interests of fairness. If somebody posts an abusive message in English, it will be deleted, so it wouldn’t be fair to allow somebody to do this just because they post in another language. And as we cannot read Indonesian, the only way we can make sure we remove all abusive messages is to remove all non-English messages.

The other advantage of this policy is that it allows everyone to understand and contibute to what is being discussed. If somebody would like us to link to an Indoensain forum on anther site, we would be very happy to do that. But from now on, Asian Sirens will be English only.

Girlie mags must stay abreast of the net

If sex sells, then the internet has become the primary place to purchase it. But the growth of online adult content is likely to mark the end of an iconic, if widely reviled, cultural phenomenon: the ‘girlie magazine’.Like the first drag on a cigarette or kiss at the school disco, buying a porn mag from the corner shop became a rite of passage for a generation of teenage boys. The advent of the internet changed all that, making pornography more widely available, but multi-million pound ‘adult’ empires that have been slow to embrace the online world face an uncertain future.

Even when the internet was in its infancy, observers predicted online profits would come from ‘pills, porn and poker’. A decade or so later, that prophecy has proved remarkably true. The adult internet industry generates over £1 trillion of revenue a year, accounting for 13 per cent of total online turnover, making it the most lucrative internet business.

The rapid adoption of new technology coincided with a relaxation in the regulations surrounding pornography.

In America alone, more than $5 billion a year is spent on hardcore DVDs. Some commentators claim the speed with which consumers dumped VCRs for DVD players – at a far faster rate than previous moves from old to new formats – owed much to pornography.

While thousands of internet entrepreneurs have built profitable businesses charging monthly subscription fees for pornography, some of the giant publishing empires have been slow to adapt.

Last month, Penthouse, the US title set up to compete with Playboy, filed for bankruptcy protection. Although its financial problems owed much to the extravagant lifestyle of founder Bob Guccione and an ill-conceived casino investment, the business had been slow to move its content online.

Like other print media, adult publishers need to invest huge sums to ensure their content is available on a range of platforms. Jolyon Barker, media partner at accountant Deloitte, says: ‘A key challenge for the wider publishing industry is to transform its culture from being print-oriented to becoming multi-media brands. While print will remain important for many years to come, it will no longer be the dominant channel to market.

‘In some cases, it may even become the “window display” that drives consumers to paid-for content … In future, previously paid-for print copy may literally become a [free] flyer driving users to paid-for television or internet sites.’

Playboy, the world’s best-known adult brand, has survived by reacting quickly to technological change – building a portfolio of pay-TV channels and filming photo shoots for distribution on DVD. The magazine, which still has a respectable circulation in dozens of countries worldwide, acts as a marketing tool for other products in its multi-billion adult empire.

‘It is no longer sustainable for publishing companies to create for print, then copy and paste into a web channel,’ says Barker. ‘The publishing houses that succeed will be those that can apply the brand value of their titles over a range of media, with print and online among the most important, but with radio and television also [crucial].’

Express Newspaper’s owner Richard Desmond, whose Northern & Shell magazine group was one of the UK’s largest adult publishers, was also quick to absorb the lessons of the multi-media age. He chose to shed his adult magazine titles after a long search for a buyer, but retained his profitable TV channels, which include The Fantasy Channel and the Red Hot brands.

The digital revolution has only just begun, and the latest generation of internet-enabled mobile phones will also use porn to drive revenues. Mobile operators have accepted that one of the few ways of recouping the huge sums spent on their 3G licenses is by supplying pornography. (The industry is predicting $4bn revenues annually from this.)

In the meantime, the steady increase in internet usage represents the greatest threat, or opportunity, for purveyors of adult content. According to US consultancy Pew Internet, almost all of today’s young people have access to the internet. In the US, 87 per cent of 12- to 17-year-olds were using the internet in 2004, up from 73 per cent in 2000. The frequency of teens’ online usage has also risen by 51 per cent since then, and the number of teens who say they use the internet daily is up from 42 per cent in 2000.

But while hardcore pornography has found a natural home online, it is unlikely to disappear from newsagents. Much of the adult content has simply migrated from the top shelf to the bottom in the form of ‘lads mags’ like Loaded and Maxim. They contain acres of naked female flesh, and are often sold with free titillating, soft-porn DVDs mounted on their covers. Unlike their predecessors, they provide a more acceptable soft porn read, with similar content, but none of the stigma attached to top-shelf titles.

Girlie mags haven’t disappeared; they’ve been reborn in a more palatable form.

Source:
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,6903,1567072,00.html