ASIAN CANADIAN

A quirky blog that features news from Canada and around the world with an Asian twist. Send Asian Canadian News, Events, and Stories to webmaster@asiancanadian.net

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Strong dollar helps boost travel overseas, overnight visits to U.S.

OTTAWA (CP) - A strong dollar helped boost overnight travel to the United States for the third straight quarter between April and June, while Canadians set another quarterly record for travel to countries other than their southern neighbour.
And Statistics Canada says that while fewer Americans came north, more overseas visitors came to Canada during the second quarter.

Canadian residents took about 3.9 million overnight trips to the United States between April and June, up 7.5 per cent from the same three months last year.

Typically, more Canadians visited New York state than any other while Florida came second; spending by Canadians declined in five of the Top 10 states but rose 2.5 per cent overall to about $2.9 billion.

Canadians set a new record for second-quarter travel overseas this year with nearly 1.6 million trips, or 5.5 per cent more than in the same quarter last year, with Britain, France and Cuba the most popular destinations.

Cuba was up 13.4 per cent while visits to Italy dropped 34.6 per cent; travel to China broke a four-year-old record in the second quarter.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

India's Shiite Muslim women can initiate divorce under new rule

Associated Press

NEW DELHI — Leaders of India's Shiite Muslim community have approved changes to the community's marriage laws to give women more grounds for divorce, a news report said Monday.

The All India Shia Personal Law Board said women can seek divorce on grounds of mental or physical torture, adultery, or being barred from studying or taking up a job, the Hindustan Times reported.

The law board, which is the top body for India's Shiites, rules on personal matters such as marriage, divorce and child custody.

India's constitution lets the country's main religious minorities — Christians and Muslims — use their own religious laws for personal matters.

Shiites are a minority within India's Muslims, who account for nearly 130 million of the country's roughly one billion people.

Sunni Muslims, who form the majority of Muslims in India, are governed by the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, which allows women the right to initiate divorce only on grounds of cruelty or impotence.

The All India Shia Personal Law Board's decision “ensures that the [Shiite] community is progressive and ensures equal rights for women,” the Hindustan Times quoted Zaheer Abbas Rizvi, general secretary of Shiite law board, as saying.

The new Shiite nikahnama, as Muslim marriage contracts are known, has the approval of Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the Iraqi cleric who is considered the religious head of the world's Shiites, the Hindustan Times said.

Officials from the board could not immediately be reached for comment.

The new contract also gives Shiite women the right to maintenance after a divorce until they become financially independent.

The agreement is traditionally signed at the wedding ceremony by the bride, groom and their witnesses, and now must also carry details of the professions of the betrothed and their salaries, as well details of dependents and any previous marriages.

Honda to sell it all under one roof

Idea is to tempt clients to buy more
GREG KEENAN
Globe and Mail

Honda Canada Inc. is moving to a new generation of retail outlets that will offer all its consumer products at one location -- from lawnmowers and snow throwers to motorcycles, cars and trucks.

The new concept, called Honda Centre in Quebec and Honda Powerhouse in the rest of Canada, is already in place at one Honda dealership in each of Quebec and Ontario and there are more to come, said Jim Miller, senior vice-president of Honda Canada.

"We're putting them together to reinforce the brand," Mr. Miller said. The creation of the Honda Ridgeline sport utility truck was essentially the final piece of the puzzle because now "we've got the truck that you can put your ATVs in back of," he said.

Honda's consumer products also include water pumps, portable generators, weed trimmers and marine outboard motors.

"It's a natural evolution to bring customers the Honda products they want, closer to where they live, work and play," added Honda spokeswoman Sandy Di Felice.

Market studies are under way in Calgary and Vancouver to determine whether the new concept makes sense. Calgary is a booming market with the growth in the oil patch, and Vancouver has for years been one of the strongest markets for Asian-based auto makers.

Dealers and sales people in stores offering all the company's consumer products will be trained across the entire range.

Industry analysts said it makes sense to put all the products under one roof so that anyone buying a generator can be encouraged to look at an all-terrain vehicle or a car.

Honda has 214 car dealers in Canada and 310 motorcycle dealers.

"I think it's something that is at least worth trying out," said Tony Krajewski, a consultant in the automotive practice at Deloitte.

The idea also appeals to Joe Zanchin, who owns one Honda dealership northwest of Toronto and another one that will be officially opened in a new auto mall in Vaughan tomorrow.

"I'm confident," Mr. Zanchin said.

"I think it's the way to do it."

He is dedicating about 10 acres of the new mall to Honda. Next to his Honda car and truck dealership will go a store for the generators, motorcycles and other products.

Next to that will be a dealership offering Acuras, Honda's luxury car brand.

He figures people travelling between the Honda and Acura outlets will stop in the Honda Powerhouse to check out the other consumer products and Honda accessories.

Honda sold 155,000 cars and trucks in Canada last year, along with 21,000 motorcycles, 23,400 all-terrain vehicles, 25,000 generators, 6,000 outboard engines, 4,000 weed trimmers and 6,700 snow throwers.

Wal-Mart finds a way into Indian market

Associated Press

NEW DELHI — India may soon have stores displaying the Wal-Mart brand despite government rules against foreign companies operating multi-product retail chains here.

The U.S. retail giant has tied up with India's top telecommunications company Bharti Airtel Ltd. in a joint venture that will set up hundreds of stores across the country, Sunil Bharti Mittal, chairman and CEO of the Indian company, said Monday.

“We have signed an MOU (memorandum of understanding) for a joint venture and a franchise agreement,” Mr. Mittal told reporters on the sidelines of an international business summit in New Delhi.

He declined to divulge the financial terms of the deal, but said it “will be a partnership of equals.”

It wasn't immediately clear if Wal-Mart Stores Inc. had given up on plans to set up its own stores in India, where resistance from political groups and domestic businesses has prevented the government from allowing foreign companies to operate multi-product retail chains.

“Wal-Mart was keen to get into India. I think they have chosen the right partner,” Mr. Mittal said. “It is going to be a large investment. . . We are going to be a big player in this market.”

The deal marks Bharti Airtel's first foray into the broader retail market and signals its desire to diversity into new areas of business. The company is already a popular brand in India, offering mobile phone services to more than 24 million users. Mr. Mittal said that Bharti Airtel hopes to learn from Wal-Mart how to operate in the retail market.

It would take several months before the first of the stores opened their doors.

“My own wish is August next year,” Mr. Mittal said. Eventually there will be “several hundred stores across the country [that] will probably carry both brand names.”

India's booming retail market, estimated at more than $200-billion (U.S.), is currently dominated by more than 12 million mom-and-pop shops. Large air-conditioned stores remain a rarity. Sales through company-owned network stores currently totals about $8-billion, or less than 5 per cent of the market.

Rising middle class incomes and an increase in demand for branded products, however, make India a compelling destination for global retail companies.

In recent years, several large Indian companies have diversified into retail business.

Reliance Industries Ltd., one of India's top business groups, has already lined up billion of dollars to invest in a retail chain that would also showcase large superstores like Wal-Mart. The company opened its first retail outlet in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad earlier this month.

Reliance chairman Mukesh Ambani, who also was attending the business summit in New Delhi, welcomed the deal between Bharti Airtel and Wal-Mart, saying it will strengthen competition in the market.

“There is (enough space) for six to eight large players in this market,” Mr. Ambani told reporters.

Bharti Airtel's Mr. Mittal said the deal complies with existing government rules.

Although India does not allow foreign companies to open multi-product retail stores, they can still make wholesale purchases to support their global supply chains.

Wal-Mart already operates a procurement centre in the southern Indian city of Bangalore. The company is expected to source products worth nearly $2-billion from India for Wal-Mart stores worldwide this year. However, the figure is small, compared with $18-billion worth of goods that the company exports from China.

Mr. Mittal said the alliance will help the U.S. company scale up its procurement from India.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

This art is strictly for the sewers

DEIRDRE KELLY
globeandmail.com

Art isn't just in the eye of the beholder. In Toronto, it may soon be underfoot.

Following such cities as Vancouver, Tokyo and Kyoto, which have decorated manhole covers on their streets, the city is inviting citizens to submit design ideas for Grounds for Art, a project to bring public art to the new streets of Regent Park.

Rebecca Ward of the city's culture division, who is overseeing Grounds for Art, said this week that, as of earlier this week, the city had received 91 submissions for the competition, which ends Monday. The object is to find three winning designs, one each for storm, water and sanitary sewer designations. The winners will each receive a cash prize of $1,800 from the city.

Proposals so far run the gamut from more literal ideas about the weather to more abstract images, some including text, inspired by the roundness of the cover itself.

The shape of the covers, which measure 624 millimetres in diameter, seems to be the only restriction. That, and the city's request that the images be in black and white, to complement the standard iron colour of the manhole covers.

While sewer art isn't unique to Toronto, what makes the city's project stand out is that the designs are for new covers and not pre-existing ones as has been the case in other urban centres. "These are new streets going into Regent Park," Ms. Ward says. "It's part of how public art is involving artists in infrastructure projects to build creativity into every aspect of city building."

That about has it covered.

CANADIAN STARS DEMAND ACTION FROM CRTC

ACTRA performers speak out at opening day of CRTC TV hearings

Canadian stars including Wendy Crewson, Sonja Smits, Fiona Reid, and R.H. Thomson spoke out today about the Canadian TV drama crisis during the first day of CRTC public hearings. ACTRA has been sounding the alarm about the crisis in Canadian television drama for years, and demands that the CRTC fix its disastrous 1999 Television Policy.

"Our culture defines us as a nation yet we can't hear or see ourselves when regulations encourage Canadian broadcasters to show American drama series and movies," said ReGenesis star Wendy Crewson. "Canadian broadcasters are filling their prime-time slots with hundreds of millions of dollars worth of U.S.-made drama programs. We've been shut out of our own home."

The CRTC commenced its review of the regulatory framework for Canadian over-the-air television on November 27, 2006. ACTRA formally presents before the CRTC on December 4, 2006.

"These hearings are crucial for fixing the destructive policy that removed spending requirements for Canadian broadcasters as they continue to spend an all-time high on American programming," said October 1970 star R. H. Thomson. "Canadian stories and dramas are being marginalized more than ever on our public airwaves. We are pleased to see that CRTC has recognized the problem and hope that they will now address it."

ACTRA's submission calls for regulations requiring Canada's private broadcasters to spend at least 7% of their advertising revenues on new Canadian English-language drama programming and to schedule at least two hours more of new Canadian dramas in real prime-time (Sunday to Thursday, 7:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.).

ACTRA (Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists) is a national organization of professional performers working in the English-language recorded media in Canada. ACTRA represents the interests of 21,000 members across Canada -the foundation of Canada's highly acclaimed professional performing community.

Girls are more ready for school, Statscan says

TENILLE BONOGUORE
Globe and Mail Update

By the time a child is three, the groundwork for their schooling abilities is laid and differences between girls and boys, rich and poor is already starting to appear, new research suggests.

In general, girls are more ready to learn at the age of five, says a Statistics Canada report which assessed children's readiness for school and then traced back two years looking for earlier behavioural hints.

At five years old, girls have better communication skills, attention and self-control levels, and are more independent in dressing, while boys display more curiosity.

Boys and girls were evenly matched for cleanliness, co-operative play, vocabulary and work effort.

A family's income also appears to have a strong impact on how ready a child will be for school, but it doesn't determine the entire picture, the researchers found.

Children from lower income households didn't understand as many words, couldn't communicate as well, had lower knowledge of numbers, and lower attention and co-operative play rates.

But the family's affluence had no impact on work effort, curiosity, self-control and independence of dress and cleanliness.

More important than income was positive interaction with parents. Children who talk to their parents and receive largely positive feedback — being encouraged to do one thing, instead of discouraged to do another — rated higher in communication, curiosity and co-operation.

Sport also helps develop communication skills, number knowledge and use of symbols, and children who attend kindergarten go to school with better copying and symbol use, the study found.

But there's a lot of flux between the ages of three and five.

At the age of three, affluent children ranked higher than less affluent children in work effort and self-control of behaviour, but these differences had disappeared two years later.

In the same age bracket, girls and boys start off with the same levels of self-control of behaviour, but girls surge ahead by the time they're five, developing more self-control than their counterparts.

Chinese currency hits new high against U.S. dollar

Associated Press

SHANGHAI, CHINA — China's currency rose to a fresh high against the U.S. dollar on Monday, as the central bank set its rate at 7.8402 yuan per dollar, the highest level since the current exchange system was set up in July 2005.

The People's Bank of China, the central bank, did not comment on the abrupt shift in the official parity rate — a weighted average of prices given by market makers, excluding the highest and lowest offers — to well above 7.8500.

But traders said the dollar's slide to a 19-month low against the euro in international markets Friday may have helped trigger the U.S. unit's slip against the yuan.

The dollar was at 7.8423 at around 7:30 GMT, down from Friday's close of 7.8525. On the automatic price-matching system, another way of measuring the exchange rate, it was at 7.8413 at 7:20 GMT.

That means Beijing has allowed the yuan's value to rise by about 3.3 per cent since it revalued the currency by 2.1 per cent in July 2005, severing the yuan's virtual peg with the dollar.

China allows the dollar-yuan rate to move no more than 0.3 per cent above or below the daily parity rate each day. Other currency pairs — the yuan's values against the yen, euro, Hong Kong dollar, and British pound — are allowed to move within 3 per cent of the parity rate each day.

Washington has been prodding Beijing to let its currency float more freely with market forces, arguing that controls keep the yuan undervalued, giving Chinese exporters a price advantage overseas and adding to China's trade surplus with the U.S., which hit a record $202-billion (U.S.) last year.

President George W. Bush faces growing pressure to counter that trend following the Democrats' capture of Congress in elections earlier this month.

American officials are expected to raise the currency issue in a top-level U.S. mission to Beijing next month, led by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Commerce Secretary Carlos Guiterrez. In an unusual move, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is expected to accompany the delegation.

China says it plans to allow market forces to play an increasingly important role in determining the yuan's value but that such changes must come gradually to allow Chinese financial institutions and manufacturers time to adapt.

Overall, the yuan has gained about 5.1 per cent in value against the dollar since before its revaluation in July 2005.

They’re doing it for the laughs

Sketches by four Asian American troupes tweak perceptions.

By Chrys Wu, LA Times Staff Writer
chrys.wu@latimes.com

Not many people would dare to make Genghis Khan the spokesman of a condom ad. But in Burbank, the leader of the Golden Horde is one of dozens of characters employed by four of Southern California's most prominent Asian American theatrical troupes to make a point: Asians can do comedy.

"TeleMongol" is the story of a fictitious Asian American network whose executives are given the chance to program shows by Asian Americans, for Asian Americans. They want to smash stereotypes, comment on pop culture and educate their audience, but they also need to make money for their primary investor — which leads to experiments in programming, as shown through various sketches.

"I wanted something kind of thematic tying the show together," says Philip Chung, a founding member of Lodestone Theatre Ensemble. He hatched the idea for the production after a season that wrapped with three dramatic plays in a row. A friend suggested that Chung seek comic relief, which Chung says seemed a brilliant idea, particularly since there's a "perception that Asian people really aren't funny.... I really think that this is a show that can stand on its own with any comedy show, whether it's Asian comedy or not."

He approached the troupes Cold Tofu, OPM and 18 Mighty Mountain Warriors because they were the best-known in town, and decided that a collaboration by such disparate groups would work best if it established a framework for a series of comedy sketches, much like "SCTV."

By doing so, "we would kind of have a better shot at putting together a cohesive whole, but you still get to do whatever you want," Chung says.

The show, which unites the four troupes for the first time, took shape during the course of nearly a year. Each group is represented by a producer, and each submitted sketches that were read, workshopped and approved with guidance from director Henry Chan, whose sitcom credits include "Moesha," "The King of Queens," "Scrubs" and " 'Til Death."

Chan is proud of his Chinese heritage, but when he was asked to direct "TeleMongol," he made his position clear: "The first thing I said is, 'I don't want us to get on a soapbox to preach,' because I never believed that was an effective way to do anything. First and foremost, we want to be funny," he says. "People always look at Asian American theater: 'You guys have a message.' ... I don't feel like we have to do anything. Let's just have fun."

Fun, of course, is one goal of comedy, but when it comes from ethnic ensembles, there's an expectation of purpose as well. "Asian Americans doing comedy is kind of political," says Greg Watanabe, of 18 Mighty Mountain Warriors. "Part of the reason Asian American theater even exists is because there's an absence of representation, or misrepresentation."

Chan adds that the show is "our way of poking at television in general, and Asian television in particular." Sometimes, the director says, the shows "are so self-righteous." By contrast, he describes "TeleMongol" as "funny, sexy, irreverent, insensitive." In other words, if you're still living at home, or you're tied to that invisible leash that some parents seem to have on their adult children, you are hereby warned: Your mom's not going to like your seeing this show.

There are 18 sketches in 70 minutes, and 14 cast members. With so many people involved, the writers must have wondered: Would too many comics spoil the punch lines?

"It's been a great experience, considering you have four groups, four different ways of working, four possibilities for disaster," says Chung. "The hardest thing has been coordination: Setting up meetings has been the toughest. Creativity has been the easiest."

All of the sketches were written expressly for "TeleMongol," but fans of the four ensembles will be familiar with some of the characters, such as nail salon owner cum relationship expert Dr. Pho, whose thickly accented "What's your problem!" had the audience at Saturday's premiere shrieking with laughter.

The part, created and played by Cold Tofu member Wanru Tseng, is a stereotype. But it's also a touchstone — anyone who's ever had his or her nails done at one of the many shops in town has probably been given advice by the manicurist, most likely a Vietnamese woman, whether asked for or not.

"TeleMongol" also has something you don't see often in mainstream media: hot Asian guys.

"It's always bad when a costumer comes up and asks you, 'Are you comfortable in a thong?' " jokes Watanabe, who plays an adult-film star in the sketch "Project Apple: (PSA)." The piece is a public service announcement that plays on the dichotomous stereotypes of Asians as sex objects and Asians as highly educated people.

Ewan Chung, looking buff in a Chippendales-style outfit, plays the model in "Date or No Date," written by Cold Tofu cast member Denise Iketani, in a twist on the TV game show "Deal or No Deal." Though Chung's role is to be eye candy, the sketch itself examines the "issues women in general have to face looking for a guy these days," Iketani says. Even if people don't admit it, looks, income and job prestige matter when it comes to seeking a mate. But the sketch points out that it's unwise to make assumptions based on these criteria alone. "There's definitely commentary, there's many layers to what's going on — not just ethnically, but gender-wise, even perhaps sexual preference."

In "Asian Surreal Life," Cold Tofu member Corinne Chooey does a sendup of Bai Ling, while Watanabe and OPM member Charles Kim do impressions of George Takei and Sammo Hung, respectively. A slightly deeper-than-average knowledge about Asian movie and TV actors will help audiences get more out of it. (Hint: Before going to the show, do a Web search for Rick Yune and read the entries about Bai Ling on GoFugYourself.com.)

But the idea behind "TeleMongol" tries to reinforce a universal truth of comedy: When done well, it transcends barriers and makes audiences see the world in a different way.

"People should go to this show because it's funny," Iketani says. "I think it's a little bit different — I think, if we're talking about a multiracial audience, they're going to be seeing Asians doing things they don't usually see us do."

Tears, and in between by Lucie Chan

November 22- January 20, 2007

Lucie Chan, Tears, and In Between (detail), 2006. Drawing installation: charcoal, paper cutouts

Drawing comparisons to groundbreaking artists such as Ed Pien and William Kentridge in addition to a nomination for the prestigious Sobey Art Award in 2006, Lucie Chan is a Canadian artist to watch!

Born in Guyana and educated in Canada, Halifax now provides the backdrop for Chan's delicate and evocative drawing-based art practice. Manifesting itself in many forms -charcoal sketches, paper installations, handmade animations - Chan's artwork articulates themes of longing, rootlessness and diaspora.

For her site-specific installation at the Foreman Art Gallery, Tears, and in between, Chan shapes accumulated drawings into giant teardrop form sculptures which she suspends from the ceiling of the gallery creating a veritable forest of dark figures set in stark white territory. Many of the suspended sculptures house animations based on Chan's elegant drawings.

While developing Tears, and in between, Chan drew on her experiences interviewing recent immigrants to Canada. Chan's poetic animations are based on her interactions with these individuals and their personal histories and experiences. Out of the somber darkness and ambiguity of the teardrop drawings her delicate animations provide the only colour in the exhibit and represent the hope that Chan's subjects have for their futures in a new country.

Foreman Art Gallery of Bishop's University
2600 College Street, Sherbrooke, QC
gallery open Tuesday-Saturday, noon to 5pm

Sony finds defect in Cyber-shot digital cameras

Sony Corp., Tokyo, Japan, said on Friday its Cyber-shot compact digital cameras might not work in warm and humid areas and that it would repair any affected cameras free of charge, reports Reuters. The liquid crystal displays in eight models that went on sale from September 2003 to January 2005 may not show images correctly or the cameras may not be able to take photos at all, Sony said in a statement.

Of the over 1 million models sold, Sony expects 4,000 could need repairs, the company said. Sony found similar defects in other digital and video cameras in October last year, when it discovered condensation could seep into the gadgets and damage the charge-coupled device, a chip used to capture images, reports Reuters.

The problem, which Sony does not expect to affect its earnings, comes after the electronics maker swung to a quarterly loss due to the cost of recalling millions of computer batteries.

Goh Ballet NUTCRACKER Comes to Whistler!

Event: Goh Ballet’s Nutcracker
Venue: Maurice Young Millennium Place in Whistler
Dates: Friday & Saturday, December 22 and 23, 2006
Times: 4 pm matinees and 8 pm evening shows both days
Admission: $37.50 for adults & $17.50 for children under 12
Tickets: On sale December 05 at 604.935.8410, at the
Millennium Place box office or online at www.ticketmaster.ca

Whistler, BC — Nutcracker is coming to the stage this Christmas, as the first professional-level ballet production of this traditional favourite in Whistler. Performed by the internationally acclaimed Goh Ballet of Vancouver, and presented by Millennium Place, the Nutcracker will delight and charm all ages.

“We are thrilled to be presenting the Goh Ballet and the Nutcracker,” said Mr. Dennis Marriott, general manager, Maurice Young Millennium Place. “There is already a palpable buzz and excitement in the community about the upcoming performances. It’s the perfect signature event for our North Pole Central – a Real Whistler Family Holiday – entertainment series.”

Evening performances at 8 pm and matinees at 4 pm of the Nutcracker will take place Friday and Saturday, December 22 and 23. To accommodate the intimacy that the Millennium Place stage offers, captivating multimedia components and enchanting spoken words will be added to the dazzling choreography of the ballet. The Goh Ballet’s Nutcracker promises to breathe new life into this timeless holiday tradition.

“The calibre of our dancers is known all over the world and Whistler’s leading position as an international destination is the perfect setting for our Nutcracker,” said Mr. Choo Chiat Goh, artistic director of the Goh Ballet. “We are delighted to work with Millennium Place to bring the Nutcracker to fruition.”

Tickets for the Nutcracker will go on sale Tuesday, December 5th. Prices are $37.50 for adults and $17.50 for children (under 12). Special student/senior and matinee prices are also available. To purchase call 604-935-8410 or visit the Millennium Place box office or ticketmaster.ca.

About the Goh Ballet
The Goh Ballet is an internationally renowned dance academy established in 1980 in Vancouver, Canada. Its graduates perform with some of the most prestigious companies in the world including The National Ballet of Canada, American Ballet Theatre and San Francisco Ballet. Students of the Goh Ballet are also recognized among the best in the world having captured numerous international medals, including top prizes from Genée International and Prix de Lausanne, the most prestigious dance competition on the planet. Today, the Goh Ballet continues its tradition of excellence by producing professional-level performances for audiences throughout BC and around the world. Visit www.GohBallet.com.

About Millennium Place
Maurice Young Millennium Place is Whistler's centre for arts, culture and inspiration. Millennium Place produces programs such as Real Canadian in Whistler that celebrate the heart and soul of Canada, our people, through performing and visual arts, cultural activities and inspirational events. Millennium Place also produces North Pole Central, a Real Whistler Family Holiday which this season runs December 16th – 30th.

For more information about Millennium Place programs and events visit www.myPlaceWhistler.org.

For more information, please contact:

Dennis Marriott, General Manager
Maurice Young Millennium Place
604 935 8411
dmarriott@myPlaceWhistler.org

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

First Encounter - An Exhibition of Small Works - With Children In Mind

November 30 - December 23, 2006

Artist Reception: Thursday, November 30, 6-8 pm
Kids Art Party: Saturday, December 9, 2-4 pm

Diane Farris Gallery is delighted to present First Encounter, a group show of artworks created or chosen for young children and the young at heart by gallery artists and guests.

We believe that those first, early encounters with the arts become life-long memories that prompt hobbies, careers, and new ways of seeing.

Children are especially welcome to attend this exhibit as it has been created with them in mind and will be hung at a lower level for their enjoyment. This fun, salon style show is comprised of a large number of pieces that are certain to lift your spirits and perhaps provide you with a first gift of art for a little one in your life!

On Saturday December 9, the Diane Farris Gallery will host a Kids Art Party where children are invited to create their own small masterpieces with materials we supply - including the terrific new Chihuly Art Kits. Please drop in between 2 and 4 pm for a delightful afternoon and take home the work of your very own prodigy.

Artists will be on hand to help!!! Cookies & Refreshments will be served!

Artists include: Alex Abdilla, Shannon Belkin, Roberta Bondar, David Burns, Gary Cody, Judith Currelly, Michael Dennis, John Dennison, Angela Grossmann, Amy-Claire Huestis, Kathryn Jacobi, Elzbieta Krawecka, Justin Ogilvie, Natty Saidi, Xue Mo, and special guests.

Plus - Dale Chihuly's new "Chihuly Art Kits" for kids!

COME BY AND BE MERRY WITH US!

Diane Farris Gallery, 1590 West 7th Avenue, Vancouver

This exhibition can be viewed on-line at: www.dianefarrisgallery.com/exhibit/first_encounter/press_release.htm

Tel: (604) 737-2629 Fax: (604) 737-2675

No business model for HDTV, CBC tells CRTC

GRANT ROBERTSON
Globe and Mail Update

GATINEAU, QUE. — As television shifts towards high-definition channels and programs, broadcasters are finding no business model for HDTV and are instead being forced to foot the massive bill, the head of CBC warned Monday.

Speaking on the opening day of a two-week regulatory probe into the state of Canada's television sector, CBC president Robert Rabinovich said advertisers are not willing to pay more for commercials on high-definition channels or during HD programs.

That has left Canadian broadcasters struggling to figure out how the industry will pay for the massive shift towards high-definition, which requires new infrastructure and programming costs that are roughly 25 per cent higher.

“There's no evidence either in Canada or the United States that we have found for advertisers willing to pay a premium for a program that's in HD,” Mr. Rabinovich said. “So basically they're saying if you want to shoot in HD, that's your business, we're not going to pay you more.”

The regulatory hearings being held by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission are the first major review of the rules governing TV broadcasters since the late 90s.

CBC was the first of Canada's broadcasters to appear at the hearing, painting a dire financial picture for the industry during two hours of testimony. The CBC, which gets slightly more than half its revenue from commercials and the rest from government funding, said ad dollars are eroding from the industry as audiences migrate to other forms of entertainment such as the Internet, and advertisers follow the migration.

Faced with the transition of TV to high-definition, the broadcasters are proposing various plans that ask the regulator to drop some or all of their over-the-air signals. Those are the free broadcasts that are available without cable or satellite. The industry argues that between 80 and 90 per cent of Canadians are cable or satellite subscribers, so the conventional broadcasting method can soon be eliminated. That could save costs for the networks, who would otherwise have to spend millions updating the infrastructure.

While some networks want to drop those altogether, the CBC is proposing a hybrid model, where it would build more than 40 digital over-the-air transmitters, capable of carrying the HD signal, in urban markets. CBC executives say most of Canada's remaining over-the-air customers live in cities. The public broadcaster has already built eight of these in various cities.

The transition to HD has been likened to the shift from black and white to colour, or the move to stereo in the 80s. Mr. Rabinovich said the networks won't see any increase in their business despite the higher cost, so the CBC is arguing the regulator should allow the conventional broadcasters to start charging cable and satellite companies to carry their signal.

The feeds from conventional broadcasters, such as CBC, CTV, Global, City TV and others, are currently provided free. Specialty cable channels such as Showcase, HGTV and TSN are allowed to collect a fee as compensation for their lower placement on the dial and, arguably, the smaller ad revenue they attract because of their channel location.

All broadcasters are pushing for these fees to be introduced, which could increase a monthly cable bill by between $3 and $7 by some industry estimates, depending on what the rate is set at.

It is likely that the regulator would require the networks to pour more funding into Canadian content and productions if it did agree to the fee.

The CBC said Monday it supports that concept.

However, the industry has not come to a consensus on what the fee should be set at. CanWest has proposed a monthly rate of 50 cents per subscriber per network. Mr. Rabinovich said he did not know what the ideal rate should be, if the regulator decides the idea has merit.

“The conventional broadcasters agree on a fee, they don't agree on the reasons for the fee and they don't agree on the size,” he said. “We think that should be done on each [broadcaster's] individual theory.”

CRTC commissioners questioned CBC executives over whether the networks were using the fee concept as a way to get the regulator to “skate them back onside” in terms of profitability. Mr. Rabinovich said no, because costs are going up regardless due to HD content, while ad revenue is falling.

The first two days of hearings will see the broadcasters present, including Global and CTV Monday afternoon. Cable and satellite providers, who are opposed to the fee idea, are scheduled to speak Wednesday and Thursday in Gatineau.

Panda poo paper yields profits for Thai zoo keepers

CHIANG MAI, Thailand (AP) - There's the Panda Express fast-food chain, mascot Jing Jing for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the forthcoming animated movie Kung Fu Panda and even a Mexican rock band named after the cuddly bear. Not to be outdone, Thailand has come up with yet another, seemingly unlikely way to capitalize on the globally loved, bamboo-munching animal - panda poo. When keepers of the country's panda couple - Chuang Chuang and Lin Hui - tired of disposing the 25 kilograms of feces daily produced by the duo, Prasertsak Buntragulpoontawee came up with the idea of turning it into notebooks, fans, bookmarks and key chains.

"At first the Chinese were very skeptical," said the head of Chiang Mai Zoo's panda unit, referring to the proprietary attitude China takes toward its iconic animal.

But the multicoloured paper products have proven hot selling-items at the zoo, with the the equivalent of about C$9,350 earned to date helping balance the accounts of panda keeping.

The Thai government pays the equivalent of $285,000 a year to China's Wulong Panda Research Institute to rent the pandas, who, depending on the weather, reside in either a $1-million, air-conditioned cage or an extensive, fan-cooled outdoor enclosure ringed by a mini-replica of China's Great Wall.

Panda poo paper production involves a daylong process of cleaning the feces, boiling it in a soda solution, bleaching it with chlorine and drying it under the sun. Experimentation continues on how to reduce the chemicals now used.

Prasertsak said he was inspired by sa paper, or mulberry leaf paper, a traditional, local product which has proven a highly popular gift item in recent years.

"We tried selling it on markets outside but so far with not so much success," he said.

"But in the zoo, when people see real pandas and then their product they're excited and buy."

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Cellphone TV to reach mass audience in 2008, Ericsson predicts

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Watching television on cellphones will be a mass phenomenon in 2008, Sweden's LM Ericsson predicted, saying the maker of telecommunications gear will work closely with Japan's Sony Corp. to develop new media solutions for wireless connections. About one third of the world's cellphone users will regularly be watching TV broadcasts on their handsets in two years, which will open up lucrative opportunities for content producers and carriers, said Per Nordlof, Ericsson's director of Product Strategy, at a joint press briefing with Sony in Stockholm.

The two companies already have a joint venture, Sony Ericsson, for making mobile phones, but said they also see numerous opportunities for co-operation to cash in on the expected boom in mobile TV.

"It plays to the strength of both companies," said Eric Siereveld, Sony Europe's director of Professional Solutions.

The two companies demonstrated a number of solutions they think will soon become commonplace, including systems where video and pictures can easily be sent between a regular TV and a mobile phone, allowing friends and family members to share footage at the press of a button.

Such solutions - based on the Digital Living Network Alliance, a cross-industry standard for allowing digital devices to share content through a home network - could hit the market by the second half of 2007, Nordlof said.

Ericsson and Sony will also work together to create new software to power such DLNA-based home networks, he said.

Ericsson also announced a contract with Belgian phone operator Proximus to provide an end-to- end solution for mobile-TV broadcasts. The service includes what Ericsson hailed as the "world's fastest channel selector solution" for mobile TV, which lets users surf between channels by pressing a number key on the handset - similar to using a remote control.

"This saves time and brings the mobile TV experience closer to that of a home TV experience," Ericsson said in a statement.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Japanese automakers' domestic production mostly up in October

TOKYO (AP) - Most major Japanese automakers boosted production in Japan in October from the previous year, the companies said Monday, getting a strong lift from growing global demand for fuel-efficient models. Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE:TM), Japan's top automaker, said its domestic production rose 15.9 per cent on year to 364,777 vehicles, marking the 14th consecutive monthly gain.

But Japan's No. 2 automaker Nissan Motor Co. (NASDAQ:NSANY) saw its production in Japan for that month inch down 0.5 per cent on year to 101,619 vehicles. Nissan has an alliance with Renault SA of France.

Domestic output at Honda Motor Co. (NYSE:HMC) jumped 23.7 per cent in October on year to 122,814 vehicles, marking the fifth straight month of on-year growth.

Mazda Motor Corp., an affiliate of Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:F) of the United States, said its October output in Japan rose 17.8 per cent from a year earlier to 84,116 vehicles, gaining for the 12th consecutive month.

Mitsubishi Motors Corp. said Japan production rose 16.6 per cent on year to 68,389 vehicles.

The rise in production underscores overseas users' appetite for Japanese automakers' models with good mileage amid surging oil prices.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

New rules for Alberta basement suites

(CBC) - The Alberta government has issued new safety standards for basement suites in homes.

The new rules apply to any self-contained unit in a single family home.

The rules - which include standards for fire protection, windows, ceiling height and smoke detectors - will apply to newly constructed suites at the end of the year. Existing suites will have until the end of 2008 to comply.

Municipal Affairs Minister Rob Renner said such suites provide affordable housing in communities with low vacancy rates. "The building code police are not going to be going up and down the block looking for illegal suites to shut down," he said.

"I suspect some of the existing suites may be regulated out of existence. But at the same time, I think there is a number of people that may look at the opportunities that developing their basement may provide to offset their mortgage."

Renner said municipalities will continue to use zoning regulations to decide when and where basement suites will be allowed.

© the CBC, 2006

Monday, November 27, 2006

PREMIER TURNS SOD AT GUANGDONG-BC PACIFIC GATEWAY PARK

GUANGZHOU – Premier Gordon Campbell helped celebrate British Columbia’s special relationship with its sister province in China by turning the sod today on the Guangdong-British Columbia Pacific Gateway Park, which will also serve as a showcase for outdoor wood products from B.C.

“No part of China shares as many economic and personal ties to British Columbia as Guangdong province, which has provided more immigrants to our province than any other part of China,” said Campbell. “In fact, Guangdong province has declared November 25 as B.C. day – a great honour for British Columbia.”

As the Garden capital of China, Guangzhou is the ideal location for B.C. to showcase the durability of our outdoor wood products such as pressure-treated Hemlock, SPF and Western Red Cedar, and tap into new markets,” continued Campbell.

Campbell also opened the Chung Ai Photographic Society Exhibition, a show of 130 photographs of British Columbia created by B.C. photographers.

“This display of talent by B.C. photographers will show off our province and help promote British Columbia as a tourism destination. The Chung Ai Photographic Society is doing its part to strengthen the cultural ties between our provinces,” said Campbell. “Our province had the great honour of hosting a similar exhibit of Guangdong photography in October 2006 during the visit of Governor Huang Huahua and his delegation.”

Much of the visit to Guangdong is about extending the cultural ties with British Columbia. Campbell is also attending the opening ceremonies of the Guangdong International Tourism and Culture Festival, an event attended by 60,000 people and likely viewed by 95 million. British Columbia performers at the event include Whistler vocalist/songwriter Ali Milner, Delta’s country/folk music group The Higgins Family, and 12 youth dancers from across B.C.

Tomorrow – B.C. Day in Guangdong – the Premier will run in the Guangzhou Terry Fox Run, visit the city of Jiangmen, and attend a cultural performance by Guangdong Sister Provinces/States.

Campbell is in Guangdong as part of a mission to Japan and China, including the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, to promote British Columbia as Canada’s Pacific Gateway. This is his third mission to Asia, following visits to China and India in 2003, and China and Japan in 2001.

Assiniboine Park, Winnipeg Public Art Opportunity

Artists are invited to submit first-stage proposals in a two-stage call for a permanent, site-responsive public art installation in Assiniboine Park.

Deadline for proposals is February 2, 2007.

The selected artist will create a permanent artwork in the area of the Footbridge in Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The Park just celebrated its one-hundredth anniversary. Although designed in the English Landscape Style the Park is firmly rooted in the Prairie landscape. Assiniboine Park is a vital gathering place, and the site for the artwork installation is located in an important transition area.

This national call is open to Canadian Artists.

For full details on the proposal call please go to www.winnipegarts.ca and follow the public art links. For further information please call Tricia Wasney at 943-7668, or email twasney@winnipegarts.ca .

Thai military says martial law can be lifted in some areas

Associated Press

Bangkok — Thailand's military chiefs have agreed that martial law imposed after their coup in September can be lifted in parts of the country, army commander General Sondhi Boonayaratkalin said Monday.

The armed forces chiefs, who staged a bloodless coup against the former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, said it will be up to the interim civilian government that they appointed to act on their recommendation.

Martial law was imposed in an effort to ensure stability after the coup, which was the culmination of months of political tension after a protest movement arose early this year demanding Mr. Thaksin's ouster because of alleged corruption and abuse of power.

Since then, Mr. Thaksin has been vague about his political plans, while the military and the government it appointed have said they fear instability that could be instigated by the former prime minister's supporters.

Gen. Sondhi, who heads the Council for National Security, said that the partial lifting of martial law was the military's recommendation, but that it was up to the government to enact and announce it.

Army spokesman Colonel Akara Thiprot said martial law would not be lifted in areas where the situation was still considered unstable. He said these included border provinces in the south facing an Islamic insurgency, and provinces in the northeast and north, considered strongholds of support for Mr. Thaksin, as well as Bangkok, the capital.

Gen. Sondhi said the government should make sure it has laws or other legal means to allow security forces to maintain order after lifting martial law.

one cool word magazine

one cool word magazine is currently seeking your:
art
writing
music
spoken word

(we are looking for all genres in all categories, the more diverse and original the better. some ideas: paintings, drawings, photography, digital artwork, sculpture, fashion design, tattoos, stageplay, screenplay, poetry, fiction, non-fiction, essay, rant, commentary, indie, emo, acoustic, rock, pop, funk, jazz, rap, reggea, experimental, hardcore, vocal spoken word, spoken word with music, ETC. if we missed something, please send it to us anyways!).

we are a vancouver based art & literary magazine with a CD compilation of music and spoken word.

DEADLINE FOR WINTER 2006 ISSUE: December 15, 2006
MUST BE A RESIDENT OF THE GREATER VANCOUVER AREA TO SUBMIT

details: www.onecoolword.com and click on "submit"

Tracy Stefanucci
Co-Editor, Submissions Coordinator
one cool word magazine
www.onecoolword.com
604.690.4164

DRAGON COMPANY LAUNCH FILM SLATE IN 2007

Invitation for Writers to Submit Scripts, Treatments, Synopses and/or Concepts for Development

Zoltán Barabás, Co-Producer of the award-winning film The Entrance (www.theentrancemovie.com ), announces preparations to expand the activities of his production enterprise, the DRAGON company.

the DRAGON company will build of slate of 6 - 10 films for production 2007 - 2010. In order to build its slate, the DRAGON company is accepting thriller/horror genre submissions for:

o Screenplays for feature film production,
o Teleplays for television show production, and
o Synopses and concepts for film and TV development.

Contact:
Zoltán Barabás
T 604 562 5821
F 604 876 5304
E zoltan@zoltanbarabas.com

TV networks want new rules

GRANT ROBERTSON
Globe and Mail Update

A federal review of the television sector that begins Monday in Gatineau, Que., is being called one of the most crucial meetings of the Canadian industry since TV made the leap from black and white to colour.

Operators of the conventional national networks, including CanWest Global Communications Corp., CTV Inc. and CHUM Ltd. (which is in the process of being acquired by CTV's parent, Bell Globemedia, which also owns The Globe and Mail) want the federal broadcast regulator to let them charge cable and satellite companies for their signals.

They also want the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to loosen the restrictions on TV advertising, allowing more commercial minutes per hour and putting fewer limits on product placements and infomercials.

CanWest Global, whose TV business has slumped in recent years, is expected to take the most vocal stance.

New technology — such as streaming Internet broadcasts and Personal Video Recorders that allow audiences to skip ads easily — have the networks worried about eroding fortunes.

“In the face of increasing and accelerating fragmentation from regulated and unregulated competitors, we require access to this [fee for carriage] revenue source,” CanWest told the CRTC in a filing prior to the hearing.

While the networks are expected to paint a bleak picture of their futures, National Bank Financial analyst Adam Shine said the industry is by no means dying.

“One still can't write the obituary for conventional TV for the foreseeable future,” Mr. Shine said in a research note. “Though steadily eroding, the power of the medium to draw large audiences and offer advertisers unparalleled reach remains.”

However, analysts say regulatory changes are needed to ensure its viability in the future.

The proposed changes could mean a significant increase in revenue.

Mr. Shine estimates CanWest could get $20-million to $30-million in additional advertising dollars if the rules governing advertising are loosened.

The introduction of subscriber fees could mean another $13-million to $17-million.

The debate has splintered the industry.

Cable provider Rogers Communications Inc. calls the networks' bid for subscription fees a cash grab. It argues they could add from $3 to $7 to monthly cable bills, potentially angering consumers.

Cable and satellite providers say they will instead back the networks in their bid to have ad rules changed.

“If you're concerned about Canadian broadcasters, cut them some slack on advertising, cut them some slack on product placements,” said Ken Englehart, Rogers' vice-president of regulatory affairs.

Simply allowing more commercials won't likely fix the problem in the eyes of the major networks though, who argue cable specialty channels have an advantage.

Specialty channels — those higher up the dial such as HGTV and Showcase — were granted the right to collect subscription fees when they began broadcasting. That money was intended to make up for the lower ad revenue that came from not being carried on primary cable packages.

But the proliferation of digital cable and satellite into Canadian homes has brought specialty channels to larger audiences, CTV president Rick Brace said.

“If subscription fees are good for specialty and they're also getting advertising minutes per hour as well, then maybe the commission also has to look at the conventional TV business being treated equally,” he said.

The last TV policy review of this magnitude concluded in 1999. Those hearings focused largely on funding for Canadian productions.

This time around, subscription fees, advertising rules and the cost of switching to high-definition television (HDTV) feeds will dominate the discussion.

Should the CRTC give the networks what they want, the regulator will likely seek a tradeoff that would require them to pump more money into Canadian productions, while increasing the amount of on-air promotions for domestic television programs, observers say.

GODS, DEMONS AND YOGIS

This interdisciplinary work highlight the expressive potential of Indian Classical dance and music and the contemporary relevance of traditional tales. This piece brings together some of Vancouver's finest talent in music, dance and theatre in a collaborative venture.

Sunday, December 3
Roundhouse Community Center
181 Roundhouse Mews, Vancouver
7 PM

STRINGS AND SKINS

South Delta Jazz Festival presents two of Vancouver's finest world music ensembles (Sangha and Ta Ki Ta) in one amazing concert! Indian and persian music meet with jazz and workd rhythms to create new musical traditions.

Friday, December 1
St. Mark's-Trinity Church
1805 Larch (at 2nd Ave), Vancouver
7:30 PM

Shelters packed, planes grounded as snow hits B.C., cold grips Prairies

VANCOUVER (CP) - First it was the rain. Now, it's snow that's causing havoc on Canada's usually wet coast. Two weeks ago, torrential rains triggered boil-water advisories for more than one million people. For 900,000 of them, that warning remains in place.

On Saturday, wet snow began to fall on the Vancouver region, prompting homeless shelters to scramble to find space for hundreds of street dwellers and transport officials to warn of delays.

Snow is forecast through Wednesday with the possibility of sun on Tuesday.

Such conditions led to homeless shelters being filled to bursting in Vancouver and Victoria.

"Certainly, it's been very busy for the Salvation Army in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, there's no doubt about that," said Salvation Army Capt. John Murray.

He said as of Sunday, the army had not had to implement its extreme cold weather measures in Vancouver.

"We anticipate that over the next 72 hours as the temperature does drop, those beds are going to become critically, extremely important to the people on the streets," Murray said.

In Victoria, the demand for beds led to the opening of a church in neighbouring Esquimalt to provide another 25 beds above what Victoria can offer.

At Vancouver International Airport on Sunday afternoon, most arrivals were either late or cancelled. Virtually no flights departed on time, if at all.

Spokeswoman Jody Holgate said many regional flights had been cancelled due to the weather.

Through much of Sunday, the airport was alternating between its two runways, with one in use as the other was being cleared.

"As long as it keeps snowing at the current rate, we'll continue with that," Holgate said. "That ensures there's always one runway that's clear."

For a variety of storm-related reasons, about 14,000 thousand B.C. Hydro customers were without power throughout the Lower Mainland on Sunday.

Slippery road conditions on Sunday morning were being blamed for at least one death.

In the Vancouver suburb of Surrey, RCMP say a passenger was killed when a vehicle crossed the centre line and was struck by an oncoming vehicle.

It was one of many serious accidents throughout the province.

While the temperature in Vancouver hovered around freezing, in northern British Columbia the mercury plummeted.

At Fort St. John airport, 1,600 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, a high of -26C was forecast for Monday.

The bitter cold that has gripped most of the Prairies for days may have been a factor in at least three deaths in Alberta.

The body of a homeless man was found Saturday morning on a Calgary street.

The bodies of a couple who had been living in a school bus outside Edmonton were found, frozen solid, last Thursday.

Shelters around Alberta made extra beds available on the weekend to try to ensure the homeless had a place to stay warm.

The home of the world-famous Calgary Stampede was being used as a temporary overflow emergency shelter.

Winter made an early, bone-chilling appearance in Saskatchewan with Regina and area included in a broad storm watch issued by Environment Canada.

Up to 10 centimetres of snow was expected Sunday through Monday over southern Saskatchewan.

Frigid conditions were expected to continue Monday as the disturbance over British Columbia headed toward Saskatchewan.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

ASIAN POP - Do you think we're sexy?

- By Jeff Yang, Special to SF Gate
URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/g/a/2006/11/22/apop.DTL

As George Clooney celebrates his second time around as People's "Sexiest Man Alive," Jeff Yang looks at the status of Asian men in American culture. From Gedde Watanabe in "16 Candles" to Daniel Dae Kim in "Lost," it seems like the image of the Asian male has come a long way, baby. Or ... has it?

Flipping through my glossy copy of People's annual "Sexiest Man Alive" issue (Double sized! Over 200 hunks-a hunks-a burnin' love inside!) has led me to a couple of quick conclusions. The first is that George Clooney is, indeed, a piping-hot serving of manwich. I mean, I'm a straight, married male with a kid, but I can still see how if I were of a different gender or sexual orientation, I'd have great difficulty throwing Clooney out of bed for eating whole-grain Tuscan crostini.

The second is that, even so, Clooney is not even close to my pick for the Sexiest Man Alive. In fact, I wouldn't even call him the sexiest man in the Nov. 27 edition of People. That's because the issue also contains Yul Kwon, described by People's editors in interviews as a Sexiest Man Alive "finalist" and profiled in the mag's section on "Sexy Men in Sexy Environments."

Clooney is smart, funny, owns an Italian villa, and is the kind of sharp dressed man that ZZ Top correctly noted every woman's crazy 'bout. But Kwon is another creature entirely -- a genetic specimen so undeniably ideal (at least in comparison to yours truly, as both wife and mother have hinted) that he prompts thoughts of the classic comedy "Twins."

This is Yul: classically sculpted features, egg-carton abs, able to reconstruct civilization on a desert island with nothing more than a pair of coconuts and a feral chicken. And this is me: laughably doughy features, egg-shaped physique, desperately trying to file a piece on sexy Asian guys before my editor sends burly men to snap my fingers like takeout chopsticks. It shouldn't be difficult to identify who's the Arnie and who's the Danny in this comparison.

"The thing about Yul that's compelling is that he's smart, he's strong, he's a leader, but he knows when to show strength and when to be restrained, and God, look at those abs," says Cynthia Wang, People's associate L.A. bureau chief. "Everyone was saying, 'Wow, we can't miss that man, the way he looks, the way he behaves -- he's got to be part of this issue.' And as both an Asian American and, admittedly, a reality TV junkie, it's great to see that."

There are other Asian men in the "Sexiest Man Alive" issue, too -- including "Harold and Kumar"'s John Cho, "Lost"'s Daniel Dae Kim and Hong Kong pop idol/"Grudge 2" star Edison Chen. In fact, if you take it at face value that People magazine is a reflection of, well, people and their attitudes toward mainstream popular culture, you'd have to say that the image of Asian men has taken an enormous leap forward in the two decades since the "Sexiest Man" issue was inaugurated (with the original honor going to Mel Gibson -- lo, how the mighty have fallen).

Not So Fast, a Bit More Furious?

Of course, not everyone buys into that line of reasoning. Take for example Ethan Lee, UC Berkeley grad and creator of a buzzed-about new Web comic called "Single Asian Female," which he calls an attempt to encapsulate some of what he learned in his Asian American Studies classes into "a form that's easy to read and understand."

If it seems a little weird for guy to be writing a strip called "Single Asian Female," well, Lee says it's because he wanted to talk about issues that could only be effectively expressed from the point of view of an Asian American woman -- "like the story about Asian females getting hit on by white guys with Asian fetishes."

Also, as some on the Web have suggested, people are a lot more likely to read a strip with an Asian American female protagonist -- just like they're more willing to watch news with an Asian American anchor, or more likely to accept an Asian woman as a romantic lead.

"Asian men are still stereotyped as geeky, sexless losers, including by some Asian American women," says Lee. "I remember that even in my Asian American Studies classes, there were two or three Asian women who bragged how they only date white men. I distinctly remember one of them saying, 'I'm afraid an Asian man might beat me,' and another saying, 'Well, I've always been attracted to the Abercrombie and Fitch model type.'"

But, I ask him, is that really representative? Even if there are attitudes like that out there, it's hard to think that those are really the norm today. Certainly things have changed in the past 20 years, with society moving -- slowly -- toward a more progressive, inclusive standard of beauty, right?

Lee doesn't think so. "Go to any newsstand, and just stand back and look at the magazine rack," he says. "Over 90 percent of the people looking back are going to be white. If you exclude Beyonce, Oprah and a bunch of athletes, you're talking more like 99 percent. That's what Asian Americans internalize when they think about who's sexy, about who they want to get with. They think: 'White people are sexy, and we want to get it on with a guy like George Clooney.'"

Jeff Adachi, San Francisco public defender and producer/director of "The Slanted Screen," a documentary exploring the evolution of the Asian male image in film and television, is somewhat more sanguine. "Slanted Screen" also makes the case that representation in media both reflects and impacts societal attitudes -- but Adachi believes that the worst excesses of Hollywood history are behind us, and a new breed of Asian American actors, producers and directors is crashing the show-biz gates in a way that's not only increasing the number of Asians in film and on TV but reframing the way we're being portrayed as well.

"Historically, it's true, Hollywood tended to take three steps forward and two steps back," he says. "But we're positioned now to make much larger gains than in the past. You look at this younger generation of Asian Americans, who didn't grow up immersed in civil rights, and the idea of being constrained by race is completely foreign to them. ["Mad TV" cast member] Bobby Lee, he told me he never auditions for an Asian role, because he knows he's not going to get it -- it's going to go to the really good-looking Asian guy. So he only auditions for 'white' roles -- and he gets them, because he's funny and talented and doesn't have any baggage. He went out for a commercial that was looking for a 'mountain man,' a guy living out by himself in the wilderness, and he said he was the only person of color to show up for the audition. Everyone else was a big, bearded Caucasian guy. And he got the role."

I'm Too Sexy (for This Column)

That brash, damn-the-torpedoes, what-do-I-have-to-lose sensibility isn't just a blueprint for storming the gates of Hollywood; it's also a critical ingredient in the recipe for masculine sex appeal, regardless of race, ethnicity and culture. A nation of emo boys notwithstanding, being comfortable with who you are, even defiantly so, can make the gnarliest of dudes a lovebeast of epic proportions. It's what makes mirror-shattering rock stars like Mick Jagger, Steve Tyler and Ric Ocasek such model magnets (well, that and a few million in the bank).

"I think if you compare the general demeanor and attitudes of young Asian American men now versus a generation ago -- when people like you and me were coming of age -- you'll find a lot more self-confidence," says Oliver Wang, cultural critic, assistant professor of sociology at California State University, Long Beach, and fellow blogger at the Asian American papa community Rice Daddies. "Not that we've reached the promised land of secure masculinity yet. Hell, what men have?"

Karin Chien, producer of "The Motel" and "Robot Stories," agrees. "Sexiness comes from within," she says. "It's confidence and power and success and humor all rolled up into one big package. Sexiness is knowing that you're hot, no matter what anyone else in the room -- or anyone at People magazine -- says."

Which brings me to my biggest reflection upon perusing this year's "SMA." Clooney isn't the sexiest man in the issue. But Yul Kwon, for all of his drop-forged perfection, isn't, either. From my humble perspective, 2006's Sexiest Man Alive is none other than Masi Oka, breakout star of the hit show "Heroes."

I've dropped a lot of love on "Heroes" recently, not only because I'm an addict of the program but because I think it captures the zeitgeist in a way that other series -- including the desperate denizens of Wisteria Lane and the Other-haunted castaways of "Lost" -- do not. We live in a time when we're searching for heroes. But in searching for them, we're also redefining them, casting them in new and more mundane images. We don't want flash, we want familiarity. We're seeking the extraordinary, but with an accent on the ordinary.

The heroic quest of Oka's character, Hiro Nakamura, isn't just saving the world; it's reframing the cultural dialogue on masculinity and sexual appeal, and reinventing the notion of heroism itself. Recent episodes have shown a new side to Hiro -- his romantic streak -- and my friends and I hope that the show's writers let him succeed in his chivalrous journey to save his perky soul mate, a Texas greasy-spoon waitress with superhuman mnemonic powers. (And yes, she's white, though interracial relationship issues seem refreshingly abstracted in "Heroes" -- there are at this count three significant trans-ethnic couples in the series, with nary a single reference yet to race, which, depending on your perspective, is either a sign of more tolerant times or proof positive that the show exists in a parallel universe.)

Hiro is a doughy, bespectacled and flamboyant out-of-the-cubicle geek -- a manga addict, a comic book fanboy, a hard-core Trekker. But he's so at one with his inner dork (which is also his outer dork) that it all ultimately proves irresistibly charming -- even, you know, sexy.

"I was talking to Tim Kring, the show's creator, and he told me that Hiro's character is completely the work of Masi," says People's Wang. "The way Hiro was written, the character wasn't nearly as funny and interesting as Masi's made him. The way Masi decided to play him has actually changed the direction of how the season's playing out. Did you know that all the Japanese dialogue in the show -- Masi does the translations himself. The script is written in English, and Masi converts the lines that are supposed to be in Japanese into phrases that are appropriate, slangwise. And that's kind of lost on people who don't speak the language. But it's part of what has made his character so authentic and appealing."

That's the ticket, right? It's always been out there -- it's the moral of every made-for-teens TV movie, the end zone of every sitcom's "Very Special Episode": Be at home in your own skin -- don't try to reformat yourself to the world's expectations, be yourself, love yourself, and just maybe, the world will follow.

Of course, we -- and the cast of "Heroes" -- have a long way to go before we can fix the world's problems. For one thing, the online poll at People's Web site, asking readers to vote on the show's sexiest male cast member, has Masi Oka stuck at 2 percent; floppy-haired Milo Ventimiglia is in the lead at 30 percent. I'm not saying that everyone who reads this should head over and crash the vote. But on the other hand, on behalf of Masi, me and hundreds of thousands of other happily (extra)ordinary dweebs, I leave you with this cryptic message:

Save the fanboy. Save the world.

Jeff Yang forecasts new Asian and Asian American consumer trends for the market-research company Iconoculture (www.iconoculture.com). He is the author of "Once Upon a Time in China: A Guide to the Cinemas of Hong Kong, Taiwan and Mainland China" (Atria Books) and co-author of "I Am Jackie Chan: My Life in Action" (Ballantine) and "Eastern Standard Time" (Mariner/Houghton Mifflin). He lives in New York City. Go to www.ouatic.com/mojomail/mojo.pl to join Jeff Yang's biweekly mailing list offering updates on this column and alerts about other breaking Asian and Asian American pop-culture news.

Hong Kong mulls introducing cardboard 'eco' coffins to speed cremations

HONG KONG (AP) - They're presentable, environmentally friendly and burn faster. Cardboard "eco-coffins" may just be the solution to long queues at Hong Kong's busy crematoriums, officials say. Health officials want to introduce the green coffins - made of corrugated cardboard and said to speed up the cremation process from 2 1/2 hours to one - to alleviate traffic at crematoriums, the government said Tuesday.

"With less time required for each session, we can arrange more sessions per day to cut queuing time for cremation," Carrie Yau, Hong Kong's permanent secretary for Health, Welfare and Food, said in a statement.

"That in turn will help ease the demand on our public mortuary."

Cremating the dead is more common and affordable than burials in land-scarce Hong Kong. The government said it has six crematoriums which provide 34,400 cremation sessions a year - about 94 sessions every day. But families of the dead often have to wait more than 10 days until they are assigned a slot.

Although the cardboard coffins are more efficient and are said to produce less toxic gas during combustion, they aren't likely to be popular in Hong Kong, where skimping on the traditional Chinese rituals of sending the dead away is seen as a sign of disrespect.

Still, Hong Kongers should try to accept the advantages of the coffins, said to be gaining popularity in Japan and Europe, Yau said.

"The eco-coffin coincides with the Asian philosophy of integration between man and nature," Yau said. "Due respect is given to the deceased, regardless of a simple or magnificent coffin."

© The Canadian Press, 2006

'Perhaps Love' takes top honours at China's Golden Horse film awards

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - "Perhaps Love," the musical story of a romantic triangle on a film set, took top honours Saturday at the 43rd Golden Horse Awards, the Chinese language equivalent of the Oscars. The film took four awards, including best director, Hong Kong's Peter Chan, and best actress, China's Zhou Xun.

It also won in the best cinematography and best original film song categories.

"Perhaps Love" had been nominated for 12 awards.

Coming in close on its heels was "After This Our Exile," a Hong Kong drama about a deadbeat father struggling to take care of his young son.

It snagged three awards, including best picture and best actor.

The best actor prize went to Hong Kong pop star Aaron Kwok, his second in a row in the category. Last year he won for playing a troubled police officer obsessed with his missing wife in "Divergence."

The best supporting actor award was won by nine-year-old Ian Gouw, a Dutch resident, who portrayed Kwok's son in "After This Our Exile."

The best supporting actress prize went to Nikki Shie for her role in "Reflections," a dark horse in the competition.

This year's Golden Horse field was weakened after the withdrawal of "The Go Master," whose lead actor Chang Chen was up for best acting honours.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Japanese planners reveal design of world's tallest tower for downtown Tokyo

TOKYO (AP) - Japanese planners this week revealed the design of a huge broadcast tower that is set to become the world's tallest structure upon completion in 2011, eclipsing even Canada's CN Tower. The tower will stand 613.5 metres tall, according to Tobu Railway Co., which has provided land for the project. Once finished, it will claim the title from the CN Tower in Toronto, 553-metre-tall communications structure and outlook point which is currently the world's tallest freestanding structure.

Dubbed the "New Tokyo Tower," the building will replace a 332-metre tower built in 1958.

The new tower, designed by award-winning Japanese architect Tadao Ando and sculptor Kiichi Sumikawa, will stand on a triangular foundation. But its slender body will turn into a cylinder as it stretches upward, its bluish-silver colour blending into the sky.

The tower is being built by Japan's six top broadcasters and is expected to greatly bolster television and radio transmissions in the capital.

Though it now competes with a plethora of skyscrapers, the old tower is one of Tokyo's most visible landmarks and is visited by 2.5 million tourists each year. The new tower will stand in the capital's Sumida ward, an area wedged between the Sumida and Arakawa rivers and known for its old-Tokyo ambiance.

Sumida ward beat out 15 other areas in Tokyo to host the tower, many of which were dropped after failing broadcast feasibility tests or coming up short in other ways, including the availability of mass transit.

© The Canadian Press, 2006

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Toronto School of Art

Winter registration for classes starting January 15, 2007 begins November 13, 2006.
Early registration discount ends December 22 .

Christmas Open House - December 14 - 16 2006
Opening Thursday December 14, 7 - 11 pm
Friday - 11 am - 5 pm, Saturday - 11 am - 5 pm.

See our full calendar on line
www.tsa-art.ca/main2.htm

Toronto School of Art
410 Adelaide St. West, 3rd Floor
Toronto, Ontario M5V 1S8
416.504.7910 or 1.888.628.7471
info_tsoa@on.aibn.com

The Art Gallery of Mississauga

ATTENTION GRADUATES OF THE ART AND ART HISTORY PROGRAM
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, MISSISSAUGA AND SHERIDAN COLLEGE.

Dear Alumnus,

Please submit to The Art Gallery of Mississauga and the Art and Art History Program recent examples of your work for consideration by jury for: AAHlumniex, an exhibition of recent work of graduates from the Art and Art History Program, to be held in the Art Gallery of Mississauga from February 15 to March 25, 2007.

The submission deadline is Friday, December 29, 2006. There is no entry fee. Send entries to the Art Gallery of Mississauga at the address below.

Please include the following with your entry: documentation for one (1) or two (2) of your recent works available for exhibition, in the format of slides, CD, or DVD, (no web sites), with the titles, sizes, media, year, retail value, installation guidelines, a 1 page C.V., and a Self-Addressed Return Envelope.

Work selected must be delivered to the Art Gallery of Mississauga by Monday, February 5, 2007.

The gallery is located at:
300 City Centre Drive
Mississauga, Ontario,
L5B 3C1, Canada
Attention: Robert Freeman, Curator

Work must be delivered in the format intended for exhibition in packaging suitable for safe handling, temporary storage, and return. Work may be picked up at the close of the exhibition after March 25, 2007.

A two-person jury comprised of Robert Freeman, Curator of the Art Gallery of Mississauga, and Seamus Kealy, curator of the Blackwood Gallery, will meet in by mid January 2007. The artists selected for exhibition will be notified by January 19, 2007.

Artists in the exhibition will receive the CAR/FAC group show fee, be highlighted in the publicity, and receive a special invitation to attend the opening with the community and students and faculty of the Art and Art History Program.

The opening of the exhibition is on February 15, 2007 and the exhibition continues to March 25, 2007.

On behalf of the Art Gallery of Mississauga and the Art and Art History Program we look forward to the participation of our alumni in this celebratory exhibition.

Robert Freeman, curator, Art Gallery of Mississauga
Seamus Kealy, curator, Blackwood Gallery
Louise Noguchi, co-coordinator, Art and Art History Program

300 CITY CENTRE DRIVE, MISSISSAUGA, ONTARIO, CANADA L5B3C1
TELEPHONE (905) 896-5088 FAX (905) 615-4167
WEBSITE: WWW.ARTGALLERYOFMISSISSAUGA.COM

Friday, November 24, 2006

Furious Chinese acupuncturists declare war on Ont. over bill

TORONTO (CP) - Furious Chinese acupuncturists are threatening to mobilize half-a-million people against Ontario's Liberal government over legislation making their profession self-regulating. The bill, which passed unanimously on Thursday, entrenches "quackery" and puts the public at risk, critics said. "Bill 50 discriminates against the Chinese medicine profession and against the Chinese community and is a second head tax," said Stephen Liu, co-chairman of the Canadian Society of Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture.

"We will fight to the last."

The reference to the hated tax once imposed on Chinese immigrants indicates the depth of anger over the legislation among many of Ontario's 3,000 practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine.

Critics say they find it offensive that the law allows other groups of health professionals - such as physiotherapists, massage therapists or chiropractors - to continue using acupuncture under standards set by their own regulating bodies.

Liu said Chinese acupuncturists opposed to the legislation will call on their patients, their families, friends, relatives and members of their churches - 500,000 people in all - to fight the Liberal party in next year's provincial election.

Dr. Stanley Shyu, a Chinese-trained doctor of traditional medicine who has practised in Canada for 32 years, said it's ludicrous to allow others to perform acupuncture without rigorous training.

Doing so waters down a profession that can cure a wide range of ailments when done by properly trained experts, but harms patients when done improperly, he said.

"You don't let laymen stick needles in people and call it acupu