Categories
Kitchen sink Pop culture

[1229] Of BUM 2007

So, yeah. I was at the blogger gathering Bloggers United Malaysia Gathering 2007. I arrived at the place right on the dot but, then, Malaysian time, you know. Since almost everybody came after 1800, the whole event started late. The infamous snowball effect got on and later, a rather healthy guy riled up, sort of asking why he had to wait for dinner.

Copyrights is unclear. Fair use.

By luck, I met former schoolmate Nik Nazmi. I was quite happy to see him because finally, someone that I personally know!

Apparently though, sitting right beside him was a mistake. At the event, he became a favorite punch bag of anti-KJ fraction in UMNO. You know, the pro-Mahathir, anti-Pak Lah kind of thing. I had to endure a relatively heated debate that I rather not go into at that particular point of time.

With them coming up with racial nationalistic tone assaulting PKR’s New Economic Agenda, I felt sympathy for the friend of mine whom stood his ground, despite me myself do not quite buy into the PKR’s NEA. I do not quite buy it for an entire different reason however.

Apart from me, there were two other persons listening quietly to the debate. I do think he managed to secure at least three votes from that table, if he decides to run for office.

Elizabeth Wong shared the same table with me. First time meeting her in person. The last time was through a video conferencing at Stanford. According to sources, she will need to wear burqa soon.

Finally met Nat, a fellow blogger at Metroblogging Kuala Lumpur, of whom has yet to write his first post. I think he was the first person to hold a conversation me at the event. Friendly.

Also met his girlfriend, Li Tsin, (Politikus). I was surprised to discover that she knew my name and recognized my face. And, she seemed to be estatic about meeting Kenny Sia.

And oh, Kenny Sia, the big man himself, was there, at least, in the latter part of the event. His flight to KL was delayed. I half expected him to crack joke all the time. But he did not.

Then there was Mob. Not quite whom I had imagine he would be. I thought he would be this one angry big man. Hey, with all of his posters, it was hard to think of otherwise.

And John Lee, apparently, became a star by his own right.

There was Rikey. Seemingly angry that nobody knew he was there.

One of the organizers, Howsy is another guy whom I thought would be one of those Krakatoan people whom would explode at any moment. Instead, just as Marina Mahathir said, he is as cute as his cartoon (OMG! They killed Kenny! You bastard). So, okay, maybe little Krakatoa.

There was Mahaguru, being a little bit too friendly. I knew the gathering theme was engage and embrace but I did not know I had to do it literally.

Desi turned out to be an veteran. He had his own books on sale at a book stand but I had only RM20 to spare. According to my weekly budget. I needed the rest of my money to fly off to Australia!

To think of it, I had thought the mean and median of attendees would be young. Quite the contrary, I most likely I sat on the 4th quartile of the normal curve!

Lucia Lai was quiet. Or maybe, I took no initiative to talk to too many people.

Lulu was there. No, no. Not that Lulu. Or that Lulu. It is Lulu instead!

Shook hand with Tony Pua, Jeff Ooi and another person that I cannot remember, among others.

While a few people introduced me to other people as a green libertarian, Tian Chua introduced himself to me as some strain of anarcho-syndicalist and he thought I am a leftie. I certainly am not so.

Met Sharon Bakar. She thought my face looks similar to one of her students at the Malay College. Could it be, she asked? I replied, “I’m far too young for that (possibility)”.

At the very end, Nat, Tikus, Desi, Mob, Lucia, Nik Nazmi and me enjoyed a round of teh tarik in Subang Jaya, talking about a matter that Desi sternly warned shall not be blogged. Before he told us that, I was thinking, hmm…

And oh yeah, managed to watch Drogba fooled van der Sar! Yeah baby yeah!

After the day ended, there were too many names to remember and I needed a break:

[youtube]XvIMWyMxjq0[/youtube]

Categories
Economics Pop culture Society

[1108] Of the poor listen to local music

At the Marginal Revolution, based on a paper by Omar Lizardo:

…the data supplied by Professor Lizardo show that the poorer a country, the more likely it will buy and listen to its own domestic music. This makes sense given that music is a form of social networking and the relevant networks are primarily local.

There is an article discussing the same subject on the NYT written by the author of Marginal Revolution.

I skimmed through the paper for regression analysis and I found this on page 15:

Omar Lizardo. Fair use.

Malaysia is somewhere in the middle, above the regression line. You may take a closer look at the graph by clicking on it.

I wonder how the inclusion of population size would affect the analysis.

Categories
Liberty Personal Photography Politics & government Pop culture Society

[987] Of satire at Istana Seri Menanti

It’s 2 AM on a Sunday. I just got back from a dinner event at Istana Seri Menanti.

To those that organized the sketch, I salute thee. It takes courage to stage it in front of the King and the Chief Minister of Negeri Sembilan. Thanks goodness that we still have some freedom of expression in this country, despite daily erosion.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

If this is the kind of quality play held at every annual MCOBA dinner, I wouldn’t mind attending the next edition. And the next too. Great job guys.

And, haha, thanks to Project Sayong for sponsoring my ticket. But I wonder, would this play hurt the project? LOL!

p/s – Nik Nazmi describes the play.

Categories
Politics & government Pop culture Society

[788] Of Sepet, Gubra and Marock

When Sepet came out, some people called the film as un-Malaysian. When Gubra came out, the same some people called it “pencemar budaya“. Pencemar budaya basically means culture polluter, whatever that is supposed to mean.

Well, about eight hours behind Malaysia, in Morocco, a film known as Marock is receiving similar hostile remarks.

In a report by Associated Press:

Acclaimed Moroccan director Mohamed Asli said “Marock” did not deserve inclusion in the festivals because it was “not a real Moroccan film,” although he subsequently told a magazine that he welcomed the public release because it would open debate. Some critics claimed to detect sinister Zionist propaganda in the depicted Jewish-Muslim romance.

By Morocco Times:

Laila Marrakchi’s new film Marock has received harsh criticism in Morocco during its screening at the National Film Festival held last week in Tangiers.

Several film directors and critics have attacked Marock and even went further to question Marrakchi’s nationality as a Moroccan.

Mohammed Asli, director of “In Casablanca, Angels don’t fly”, started a ferocious campaign against the young director, saying that her film “should not have been screened in the festival.”

Malaysian films Sepet and its sequel Gubra’s storyline sound similar to Marock’s in principle; it’s about cross cultural relationship. But in both Malaysia and Morocco, conservatives’ are having problem accepting the films’ premise.

Sepet and Gubra of course aren’t a love story involving a Muslim and a Jew but it’s about a Malay and a Chinese teenagers. If I may be a little bit politically incorrect, Chinese are the Jews of Southeast Asia. Even if you couldn’t accept that statement, don’t worry. To Malaysian conservatives, those on the extreme rights of political spectrum, all non-Muslims are Jewish. And all Malays are Muslims, at least constitutionally. So, the two counterparts actually concern one issue – intimate relationship between a Muslim and a Jew.

Well, now I know that Morocco and Malaysia have at least one thing in common; narrow-minded conservatives in both countries hate films on cross cultural relationship.

I highly advise all cultural conservative people to not live in a cosmopolitan society. It might be bad for your health.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

p/s – Whoa. Is Karl Rove being indicted? Rumors abound!

The source of this rumor seems to have originated from Jason Leopold at truthout.org. If true, cool!

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

pp/s – well, that indictment thing is false.

Categories
Pop culture

[688] Of a tribute to Leo McGarry, to John Spencer

A tribute to Leo McGarry, a great character in a great TV series. A tribute to a great actor, John Spencer.

According to Wikipedia further:

During the episode The Portland Trip, it is strongly suggested by a conversation between the President and Leo that Leo attended the University of Michigan, at least for undergraduate work.

Fair Use. Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:John_Spencer.jpg

You will be missed.

‘West Wing’ Actor John Spencer Dies at 58
By LYNN ELBER, AP Television Writer

LOS ANGELES – Actor John Spencer, who played the role of Leo McGarry in “The West Wing,” mirrored his character in several ways: Both were recovering alcoholics and both were driven.

“Like Leo, I’ve always been a workaholic, too,” he told The Associated Press in a 2000 interview. “Through good times and bad, acting has been my escape, my joy, my nourishment. The drug for me, even better than alcohol, was acting.”

Spencer died of a heart attack Friday. In a sad parallel to life, his character on the show had earlier suffered a heart attack that forced him to give up his White House job.

Spencer died after being admitted to a Los Angeles hospital during the night, said his publicist, Ron Hofmann. He would have been 59 on Tuesday.

I’ll be sacrificing my Wikipedia user page for him for a few days.

Go Blue. And God bless.