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Bae Doo-na breaks through borders in Netflix sci-fi series

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In the Netflix sci-fi series “Sense 8,” actress Bae Doo-na plays Sun Bak, vice president of a Seoul-based firm by day and an underground kickboxer by night. Bak is one of the toughest characters Bae has played in her prolific 17-year acting career. This is also the most widely watched series she has been in.

“I heard season one ranked as the most popular show in every region from North and South Americas to Europe. I was thrilled to learn that,” said Bae, who was speaking to The Korea Herald while in Berlin on Saturday. She is in Germany for the shooting of season two of “Sense 8,” which will take her to 16 different locations.

The drama series is streamed globally by Netflix which has helped the Korean star gain recognition outside of the Korean movie scene.

Bae has made regular appearances in the Wachowski siblings’ films ever since she was scouted by the American directing and producing duo made up of Andrew Paul and Lana Wachowski. She has starred in “Cloud Atlas” (2012) and “Jupiter Ascending” (2015). “Sense 8” is Bae’s third work with the directors.

“I was surprised to find out I would be actually shooting scenes in cities where the characters live. I was constantly travelling from Iceland to Nairobi, then to Seoul, to Berlin and to Mexico City when filming the season one,” said Bae. Each of the eight characters in “Sense 8” live in different cities around the world. Their minds connect with one another unexpectedly when their mental and emotional states are linked.

There will be even more globetrotting for Bae this year, as she will be filming season two in 16 cities, spending two weeks in each city until September.

“I always think the script writers are geniuses in putting together scenes scattered in many parts of the world,” said Bae.

But Bae was wary of giving too much away about Bak’s fate in season two.

“The directors are very cautious about spoilers,” said Bae. “Sun Pak, who was put in prison for taking her brother’s crime upon herself, will return stronger than ever in season two,” she added.

The similarity between her character in “Sense 8” and Bae in real life is that they have both grown stronger over the course of filming the series.

Acting in English-language films has been a great challenge for Bae. She had to leave her comfort zone in Korea and test her limits in delivering lines in English while adjusting to a new culture and system at the same time.

“I was thrown into a new world,” Bae said. “Everything was a challenge. I had to make new friends, learn a new language and a new culture.”

Lee Han-lim, head of Saetbyeoldang Entertainment, which represents Bae in Korea, said Bae tried to immerse herself in English-speaking environments whenever she had spare time.

“To deliver lines in English, you have to know how sentences and words you would say in movies are used in real life. Bae went to the UK several times to acquaint herself with everyday English,” said Lee. For a while, she dated English actor Jim Sturgess, a fellow cast member in “Cloud Atlas.”

Bae said that it takes her extra effort to master her English lines.

“I act instinctively in Korean, but in English, I have to try harder and also be mentally strong at the same time. Everything was a challenge,” said Bae. “The good thing is that the Wachowski directors have motivated me to battle insecurity about acting and continue to push forward. I feel I have become stronger now.”

In Korea, Bae has been an art-house movie darling, more likely to be cast in indie movies rather than commercially popular hits. Since her 1999 debut in the Korean edition of Japanese horror film “Ring,” Bae has played a variety of roles including a tough married woman in the comedy movie “Saving My Hubby” (2002), an archer in “The Host” (2006), a North Korean table tennis player in “As One” (2012) and a lesbian policewoman in “A Girl at My Door” (2014). She has starred in films by Park Chan-wook and Bong Joon-ho, two Korean directors who are well-known internationally.

Bae has won several best actresses awards in and outside Korea, including the Asian Film Awards in which she was recognised by the Hong Kong International Film Festival for her role in “A Girl at My Door” in 2015.

“I was particularly proud of myself starring in that movie. It was my type of movie. I didn’t consider any commercial aspects of the film when I selected that film,” said Bae. Bae voluntarily waived payment for starring in the low-budget film.

She knew she had made the right choice when the movie was invited to the Un Certain Regard section at the 2014 Cannes International Film Festival.

“I began to feel confident in roles that I selected,” said Bae.

She has built a unique standing in the Korean film scene for her diverse roles.

“Bae has created unique characters in films — characters that could only be made by her,” said Jeong Ji-ouk, a movie critic. “Bae focuses on films that she can do best and is not swayed by a desire to be in big-hit films.”

Her unique onscreen character drew attention in the world of high fashion last year. She was selected to be a muse of Louis Vuitton by its creative director Nicolas Ghesquiere.

“I discovered the Korean actress Doona Bae in the sci-fi action film ‘The Host.’ I was struck by her character and mysterious beauty. All of her movie choices are quite particular. She flits between an archery champion and an accomplished boxer (in the sci-fi TV series ‘Sense 8’), or even an inflatable doll (in ‘Air Doll’),” Ghesquiere said in the press release announcing Bae as the French luxury company’s new muse in October last year.

Her role as a sex doll in the Japanese movie “Air Doll” drew exceptional reviews from movie critics and the sci-fi image of the life-size doll in “Air Doll” allowed Bae to develop the cyborg character Sonmi-451 in “Cloud Atlas.”

“Her previous Japanese movies received quite good reviews. Her role in ‘Air Doll’ left a strong impression on many people,” said Jeong.

Bae’s agency added that Bae’s appearances in Japanese movies gave her the confidence to act in foreign languages.

“The movie (‘Air Doll’) was the beginning of Bae’s breakthrough in her acting career,” said Lee of Bae’s Korean agency.

Ghesquiere has praised her versatility in acting, which in turn inspires the French fashion house’s collections.

“I am fascinated by her gift for transformation, and I had her image very much in mind as I was creating this collection. She radiates strength and an artistic sensibility that corresponds to the values of the Maison,” said Ghesquiere in a press statement last year.

As a Louis Vuitton muse, Bae posed for the brand’s spring-summer advertisement campaign and attended its spring-summer collection show in Paris last October, rubbing shoulders with Catherine Deneuve, Alicia Vikander and Adele Exarchopoulos.

Between her busy overseas schedules, Bae found time to return to Korea to film the upcoming movie “Tunnel” by director Kim Sung-hoon, in which she co-stars with Ha Jung-woo and Oh Dal-su.

“Starring in Korean movies gives me comfort. That’s why I come back to Korea from time to time to search for good films,” she said.

“But I want to be good in every film, including those in foreign languages. After all, I am an actress and I love movies.”

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016 – 09:37
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Honking Horns! Chuggington LIVE! – The Great Rescue Adventure is making their wa…

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Honking Horns! Chuggington LIVE! – The Great Rescue Adventure is making their way to Singapore this coming June!

Book tickets through SISTIC at http://www.sistic.com.sg/events/cchug0616 now and enjoy 30% off! Terms and Conditions apply.


Honking Horns! Chuggington LIVE! – The Great Rescue Adventure is making their way to Singapore!

Tickets go on sale 2 Mar via SISTIC. Enjoy 30% Early Bird Discount* when you book before 20 Mar! bit.ly/chuglive

* Terms & Conditions apply.

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Marriage too costly for some rural bachelors in China

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Migration from rural areas to cities and an imbalance between the sexes has left the cost of marriage unaffordable for some country families, China Youth Daily reported

After the noise of firecrackers faded, Zhang Hu and his wife returned home with heavy hearts. Their son’s marriage cost the impoverished family their entire savings and a debt of as much as 150,000 yuan (US$23,000 or S$32,300). It is a huge sum for a family from a poor mountainous village in Northwest China’s Gansu province.

Fodianwan village is a notoriously poverty-stricken village in Qingyang. “Our village is so poor that there is barely any girl willing to marry young men from here,” said Zhang Hu. He said villagers had been used to the soaring price of betrothal gifts, or caili in Chinese, which means money a man takes to propose to the woman he loves.

The less developed an area is, the more costly the marriage is for the groom, especially in a place such as the Loess Plateau in Northwest China where the natural environment is harsh. “Love is no longer about tender feelings, but a matter of price,” said Liu Yanwu, a professor of sociology at Wuhan University.

Liu has surveyed the changes in cost of marriage in rural areas over past decades: from the 1970s to 1980s, marriage was hardly a burden to a rural family, and in the 1990s, a marriage cost the income of a rural labour of three or four years on average. But since 2000, the cost has witnessed a sharp increase: today, it needs a rural labour to work for 20 years to pay for the marriage if expenses such as house purchase are included – for a typical rural marriage the groom’s family is expected to provide house, and even a car in some better-off areas, for the newlyweds.

In rural areas of Qingyang, the price of betrothal gifts has jumped from around 10,000 yuan (S$2,100) in 2004 to 150,000 yuan by last year. The marriage of Zhang’s son almost dragged the family back to poverty.

One reason for the soaring bride price is the imbalanced sex ratio in China. For every 100 newborn girls, there were 115 boys born across the country last year, and in rural areas, where only boys are regarded as the heirs to carry on the family line, the ratio between men and women of marriageable age is even higher – in some places it is close to 2 to 1. The imbalance makes the competition for a wife fierce among rural bachelors.

The migration of rural populations to cities is also blamed for the rising cost of rural weddings.

As China’s urbanization has gathered pace up since the opening-up and reform policy was introduced in the late 1970s, more and more rural people have migrated to cities seeking better pay and an improved life. As a result, the number of women of marriageable age in rural areas is in decline and there are not enough partners for rural young men, said Zhang Yi, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The situation is worse in impoverished areas such as Qingyang. Since women are reluctant to marry into families from poor villages, the groom’s families have to pay a higher price for betrothal gifts, which means men from the poorest families are least likely to marry, said Zhang.

To keep a rein on soaring costs, the Qingyang government introduced a regulation against exorbitant betrothal gifts and extravagant wedding ceremonies last year, but the move proved a failure.

“The effect of the rule cannot reach our village because the tradition is too deep-rooted,” said Zhang Hu.

“In the marriage market, men from poor families are in disadvantageous positions and have a weaker ability to bargain with women’s families,” said He Xuefeng, rural government researcher at Huazhong University of Science and Technology.

“To woo a potential spouse, men from poor families have to pay a higher price for betrothal gifts, which raises the cost of the marriage market, and other families have no choice but to follow suit. Thus a vicious circle is formed,” said He.

The rising cost of marriage in rural areas has also led to other social problems.

Li Yanlin is a villager in Leping, East China’s Jiangxi province. He bought a Vietnamese bride for his son for 45,000 yuan last year. However, his daughter-in-law disappeared only a few months later along with some other brides from Vietnam.

Asked why he would buy his son a bride, Li said the cost of a Chinese marriage is too much for his family.

In recent years, many women from neighbouring Southeast Asian countries such as Myanmar and Vietnam have married rural Chinese men through marriage brokers or human traffickers. Marriage between such couples has become a prosperous business and one can easily find information about such foreign brides on online trading platforms.

But such illegal marriage is often fragile. Many foreign brides escape shortly after their wedding and domestic violence shadows the families as in the illegal relationships, husband and wife are unequal.

To help left-over bachelors find partners, local governments should develop their economies and improve the income of residents to encourage more women to marry local men, said Zhang Yi, adding that a rebalancing of China’s sex ratio is also urgently needed.

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016 – 09:37
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Benjamin Lim case: Facts & Falsehoods

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Jan 25, 2016

– 11-year-old girl molested in lift by boy in school uniform
– Boy was later identified as Benjamin Lim

  • CCTV footage
    • Benjamin detoured from normal route to follow girl
    • Girl entered lift, Benjamin quickly followed
    • Incident took place in lift, captured on CCTV
    • Benjamin got off at 13th floor
    • Took stairs to 12th floor
    • Took lift to ground floor

Investigation: How it was done

– Police went to school in plain clothes and unmarked cars
– Benjamin interviewed by one officer in principal’s office in presence of principal and other educators
– Benjamin interviewed by one officer in police station
– Interview conducted in open plan office, with officer at his workstation. Others were at their workstations
– Mother gave statement to Police
– Benjamin released in about 3.5 hours, went home with mother

Investigation involving young persons

– 2011 to 2015: 7,196 young persons (7-15 years-old) investigated
– 70 per cent warned, placed on Guidance programme or no further action taken
– 15 per cent charged in court
– 15 per cent under consideration

Aim: Priority is to rehabilitate, not criminalise

What would have happened if Benjamin had not taken his life

Police approach to young offenders

– Police try to avoid criminalising the conduct, where possible
– Better to give a second chance, help in rehabilitation

Charges brought against young offenders when:

– Offence is very serious
– Repeat offender

Likely Benjamin would receive no more than a warning

– Taking into account his age
– Also a first-time offence

Tolerant approach is not a licence for young persons to commit crimes

Falsehoods

FALSE: Police not in plainclothes when they went out to identify Benjamin
TRUTH: Police officers were in plain clothes, without any police markings

FALSE: 5 officers interviewed Benjamin and intimidated him, coerced into admission
TRUTH: One officer spoke to him in school, with principal and educators The other police officers were not present Interviewed by one officer at police station

FALSE: Benjamin was not offered food and drink
TRUTH: Benjamin declined the offer of food and drink

FALSE: The girl may not have been molested and made a false report
TRUTH: CCTV footage captured incident

Smear campaign by TOC

The Online Citizen tried to undermine public trust in the police

Published no less than 20 articles as part of smear campaign

Narrative conveyed by TOC articles:

– Police lied about going to school in plain clothes – FALSE
– Police intimidated the boy – FALSE
– Police put pressure on him to confess – FALSE

They want public to think Benjamin was innocent and committed suicide purely because of police actions

Misinformation not only untrue but wholly improper because of upcoming coroner’s inquiry

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016 – 09:39
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Singapore growth at tipping point, Moody's warns

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016 – 09:39
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BEWARE OF DISHONEST BLOGSHOP SHOPVEXED! OWES MONEY BUT FINDS EXCUSES TO NOT REFUND

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<Facebook complaint by Claudine>

In early 2015, Shopvexed VEXED Andrea Jang and I had a collaboration on an online flea. Whereby she (being Shopvexed) would 'sell' the products on my behalf, contact the buyer and process the payment. Thereafter, in which I would pack and mail out the item to the corresponding.

The division of payment would be for Shopvexed to receive 25% of the item cost price and the remaining 75% to me. These can be seen as per the email thread.

A payment for a $15 dress was received by Shopvexed and I was notified to mail out the item. I gave her my account number, naturally hoping to receive payment from her. However, over the course of weeks and months, was constantly told that "I'm busy" or "next week" followed by MIA.

The conversation was stored in my previous phone, in which i had my phone and number changed thus losing all the messages. There was no backup.

Tried contacting her ever since but did not receive a reply till the recent days which she decides to finally respond. She made it seem like it was a misunderstanding and that she 'forgot' on the transaction.

After agreeing to pay and transfer the money, half heartedly obviously, decides to MIA again. If it was a "mere $15" as she said, is it that difficult to pay up $11.25?! C'mon, does it take you days to walk to the ATM or log on to your ibank to transfer?

Believe I'm patient enough to have speak to her nicely and waited for her damn reply for close to a year lol. I am done with the excuses and bullshit. It clearly is an avoidance of payment. As much as I would like to respect her by not taking it to social media, she needs no respect by fooling, lying and deceiving others.

Am not writing this hoping to claim my $11.25. It's okay girl, you can have it. Dear all, please be cautious if ever dealing online. I've learnt my lesson.

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OUR POLICE FORCE DESERVE MORE RESPECT AND SUPPORT FROM SINGAPOREANS

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Dear All Singapore Stuff,

People from other countries looks up to people from our police force. But *some* of us totally disrespect them.

I think the kind of respect and support that comes from from others should come from us as well. Sometimes the amount of effort they put to keep our community a safe one is left unsaid. They deserve to be praised for all the extra effort, the time they sacrifise besides their working hours and every other unknown things they to for us.

So proud of those officers i saw today at Yishun mrt, going personally to girls and ladies awaring them about the increase rate of molest case at Yishun mrt and to be more safe. To even reach their thoughts and get their attention they have issued nice looking keychains. Despite the hot sun when all of us take shade they stand there watching out for us to be safe. So proud , just so proud.
Good job guys!

Suganya

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Filipino fishermen say China blocking access to South China Sea atoll: Media

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MANILA – China has stationed up to five ships around a disputed atoll in the South China Sea, preventing Filipino fishermen from accessing traditional fishing grounds, media in the Philippines reported on Wednesday.

The Philippine Star newspaper, quoting an unnamed Filipino fishing operator, said China began deploying ships to Quirino Atoll, also known as Jackson Atoll, after a fishing vessel recently ran aground in the area.

Eugenio Bito-onon Jr, the mayor of nearby Kalayaan in the Spratly Islands, told the newspaper the ships had been based at the atoll for more than a month. “They have many ships there,”he said.

Another unnamed fisherman was quoted as saying Chinese boats chased them away when they tried to enter the area last week. “These gray and white Chinese ships, around four of them inside the lagoon, prevented us from entering our traditional fishing ground,” he said.

The Philippines military said they received reports about the presence of Chinese ships in the area.

“We are still verifying these reports,” Brigadier-General Restituto Padilla, a Philippines military spokesman, told Reuters. “We know there are Chinese ships moving around the Spratly area. There are also ships around Second Thomas Shoal so we want to make sure if the presence is permanent.”

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, believed to have huge deposits of oil and gas. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims on the waters, through which about US$5 trillion (S$7 trillion) in trade is shipped every year.

The Philippines is awaiting a ruling by an arbitration court in The Hague on the territorial dispute.

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Wednesday, March 2, 2016 – 09:12
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Subway 50% Off 2nd Sub Promo 2 Mar – 13 Apr 2016 | SINGPromos.com

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JUST IN: Subway 50% off 2nd sub, valid for all subs under 350cal

Subway 50% Off 2nd Sub Promo 2 Mar – 13 Apr 2016 | SINGPromos.com

Fresh Friendships. Buy one and get one at 50% off for all subs under 350 cal at Subway for a limited time. Valid for the following subs

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Morning Minutes: What will make headlines, March 2, 2016

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March 02, 2016 7:00 AM

Morning Minutes is a round-up of stories that will break on Wednesday, March 2, and which we think you’d be interested in.



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