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Browsing Posts published in June, 2009

Jackson has dominated pop music since the late 1970s, becoming the first black entertainer to amass a strong cross-over following on MTV with his revolutionary transformation of the music video as an art form and as a promotional tool. The popularity of videos aired on MTV such as “Beat It”, “Black or White”, “Scream” and “Billie Jean” created a tremendous synergy that helped to put the relatively young channel “on the map”. BMI, The performing rights organization that represents Jackson and hundreds of other artists, stated that Jackson also popularized physically-complicated dance techniques, such as the robot and the moonwalk, that have redefined mainstream dance and entertainment. His distinctive style, dance moves, and vocals have influenced a whole generation of hip hop, pop, and R&B artists. He has been cited as the “Most Successful Entertainer of All Time” by Guinness World Records, and holds the record for the best-selling album ever, Thriller.
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When the power cuts that frequently plague Nepal were at their worst this winter, one of the biggest frustrations for many people was missing their favourite television soap opera.

Every Sunday night for a year, entire villages across the country have gathered around a single television for the latest instalment of “Dalan,” or “Exploitation,” a historical saga set in Nepal’s rural west.

In a nation more attuned to the noisy glamour of Bollywood movies from neighbouring India, the popularity of the slow-paced serial about a family of Dalits — the lowest social caste — has taken everyone by surprise, not least its makers.

“‘Dalan’ is a very simple show and we really didn’t expect it to be the huge success it has become,” said producer Purna Singh Baraily of the soap, which has fans as far away as Dubai, Hong Kong and the United States, where it is shown via satellite.

This handout released on June 22, shows actors in a scene from the Nepalese soap opera Dalan or Exploitation. Every Sunday night for the past year, entire villages in Nepal have gathered eagerly round a single television set to catch the latest instalment of the soap, a historical saga set in the countrys rural west.

This handout released on June 22, shows actors in a scene from the Nepalese soap opera 'Dalan' or 'Exploitation'. Every Sunday night for the past year, entire villages in Nepal have gathered eagerly round a single television set to catch the latest instalment of the soap, a historical saga set in the country's rural west.

“The fans say they love the characters and the fact that the show deals with its subject matter realistically,” said Baraily, himself a member of the caste once known as “untouchables.”

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KATHMANDU (AFP) – Nepal’s anti-corruption authority has come up with a novel solution to rampant bribe-taking at the country’s only international airport — the pocketless trouser. The authority said it was issuing the new, bribe-proof garment to all airport officials after uncovering widespread corruption at Kathmandu’s Tribhuvan International Airport. “We sent a team to observe the growing complaints about the behaviour of airport authorities and workers towards travellers and we discovered that the reports were true,” said Ishwori Prasad Paudyal, spokesman for the Commission for the Investigation of Abuse of Authority (CIAA). “So we decided that airport officials should be given trousers with no pockets. We have directed the ministry of civil aviation to implement our order as soon as possible,” he told AFP. “We believe this will help curb the irregularities.” Paudyal said CIAA investigators had observed theft as well as bribe-taking by airport officials, who would lose their jobs if the situation did not improve. His comments came a day after Nepal’s new Prime Minister Madhav Mumar Nepal expressed fears that corruption was tarnishing the airport’s reputation. Nepal’s tourism industry employs around 300,000 people in one of the world’s poorest countries. The landlocked Himalayan nation attracted a record 550,000 foreign visitors in 2008, two years after a peace deal that ended the decade-long Maoist insurgency. It has set an ambitious goal of attracting one million tourists a year by 2011.

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