Quantcast
Channel: Poison Apple
Viewing all 145 articles
Browse latest View live

Convent Secondary Schools in Malaysia

$
0
0
The history of government aided Convent Schools in Malaysia began in the middle of the nineteenth century. The arrival of the Infant Jesus Sisters to our shores marked the beginning of these Convent Schools that will go on the produce a legacy of great women who have contributed much to our nation. By the beginning of the last century, almost every major town in the country had at least one Convent School, and these all-girls schools rapidly became an integral part of out nation's education system and culture, excelling in English Language-based areas. However, the number of Convent schools in a region depended on the level of influence the British colonial masters had there, which is why some states like Penang and Perak have many Convent Schools, while others like Kelantan and Terengganu don't have any. There are about 30 secondary Convent schools in Malaysia. Some of them include:

1) Perlis
- None -

7) Wilayah Persekutuan Putrajaya


- None -

8) Negeri Sembilan

11) Pahang


- None -

12) Kelantan


- None -

13) Terengganu


- None -

14) Wilayah Persekutuan Labuan


- None -

15) Sarawak

Malaysia's Dawn Raid On London

$
0
0
On the 7th of September 1981, the London stock exchange was taken by surprise when hugely successful British-owned Guthrie plantation company was taken over by the Malaysian government. What came as a bolt from the blue was the fact that the company fell into the hands of the Malaysian government just within four hours under the leadership of then Prime Minister Dr . Mahathir Muhammad who had only assumed the post for a couple of months.



The issue of Guthrie being British-owned even after independence stemmed following the company's continuous rejections of the Malaysian government's efforts in replanting rubber trees to help small time Malay farmers and cooperating with workers unions that the British considered troublesome.  British companies in general kept delaying meeting with the Malaysian government representatives in their effort to work together to find a resolution for this matter. 

However, following the pressure imposed on them by the Central Bank of Malaysia, the people at Guthrie finally set up Guthrie-Ropel,  a subsidiary of Guthrie which owned about 17% of the total land area in Malaysia that was owned by Guthrie. This allowed locals to acquire a small piece of land owned by Guthrie through the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange. However, it was later discovered that most of the land that belonged to Guthrie - Ropel was unsuitable for agriculture and they were mostly located on the hills of Malaysia.

When Mahathir came into office in 1981, he was seen as being rather different from his three predecessors. For starters, he does not smoke, nor does he enjoy playing golf, a sport considered posh by most Malaysians. He is also not of blue blood, nor did he attend a British university. Apart from that, he does not have many British friends, and based on the articles he wrote in the papers, is not really pro-British. This would later prove to be true to a certain extent with his Buy British Last and Look East policies. He was also temporarily banned from his party following alleged seditious remarks on the May 13th Tragedy, but was readmitted three years later. 

Before the famous, or infamous depending on how you see it, Dawn Raid on London, the British government not only stopped subsidizing the education of Malaysian students in the United Kingdom, they also increased the tuition fees for foreign students. This new ruling was only limited to students from certain countries like Malaysia, while foreign students from other European countries were not effected.

This move was a big blow to the nearly 17,000 Malaysian students studying in the UK who were now burdened with the increased tuition fees which in some cases were threefold the original price. Many Malaysians, maybe Dr. Mahathir included, saw this as being unfair since Malaysia had one of the largest number of foreign students studying in the UK at that time. Malaysia also could not afford to educate these students at the time since there were only two universities operating in the country back then. Dr. Mahathir, who was then the Minister of Commerce during this change warned that increasing the fees for Malaysian students would harm Britain in the long run . However, his warning went unheard.

Soon, things got from bad to worse when the UK refused Malaysia's proposal for additional landing rights for the national carrier, Malaysia Airlines at Heathrow. However, at around the same time, a British supersonic Concorde aircraft invaded Malaysia's international airspace in Subang on its way to Singapore.

Dr. Mahathir was not the only Malaysian public figure who was deeply offended by the British's recent actions. His brother-in-law and governor of the Central Bank at the time, Datuk Ismail Ali also shared his views. He was behind the pressuring of Guthrie to set up Guthrie-Ropel. Upon assuming the position of governor of the Central Bank, Datuk Ismail displayed an unfriendly attitude towards the British. Mark Gent, the chairman of Guthrie back then said he and the director of Guthrie, Eric Griffith- Jones were made to wait outside his office for nearly half an hour before every meeting they had.

When Datuk Ismail became the governor, the nation's money which was deposited in British banks such as HSBC and Chartered were transferred to local banks. Foreign banks, in particular British banks, were also no longer given the opportunity to open up branches in Malaysia. Most of Guthrie's assests where sold to MPH, a company co-owned by wealthy Chinese tycoons in Malaysia in 1981. This decision, similar to most made by Guthrie, was not done by consulting the Malaysian government while in fact, PNB, a government agency owned 25 % of Guthrie's shares. The majority poor Malays had no chance for equal opportunity in this area.

For these reasons, Dr. Mahathir and Ismail decided that Guthrie must be taken over as soon as possible .

A year before becoming Prime Minister, Dr. Mahathir and Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, who were Minister of Trade  and the Finance Minister respectively were informed by Datuk Ismail Ali that he planed to take the British by surprise with the acquisition of one of their largest companies.

Four months before the Dawn Raid, the Malaysian government agency led by an investment manager named Khalid Ibrahim was given the special task to examine and develop strategies to ensure everything ran smoothly during the Raid.

Khalid, who had worked at Barings London, the firm which was one of a Guthrie's financial advisers, along with Malaysian investment experts and advisers from the merchant bank NM Rothschild & Sons Ltd. were asked to study whether Guthrie can be acquired. If it was possible, they were directed to formulate detailed strategies on how it could be done .

From their intensive study, the team discovered a flaw in the London Stock Exchange Act that can be exploited. With this vulnerability, an ambush to acquire Guthrie could be carried out. The condition was it had to be carried out as quickly and as covertly as possible, so much so that the British cannot detect it and stop it.

With Dr. Mahatir's consent, a capital acquisition worth 282 million pounds was taken from threedifferent sources - Petronas, Pernas and a new trust scheme offered to the Malaysian natives four months before the attack - the Amanah Saham Nasional (ASN ). To ensure that the British would not realize that the government of another country was behind this acquisition, Khalid was advised by Rothschilds to open a bank account in Switzerland for the payment of the shares.

Of all the British-owned companies owning large properties in Malaysia, Guthrie was targeted because other non-British investors owned shares in Guthrie; investors who were friendly with the folks at the government agency in charge of the Raid. Among the companies were Genting, Bank Simpanan Nasional , the Kuwait Investment Office and OCBC.

With the existing holdings amounting to 25 %, the government agency only needed to acquire another 15 % more for a total stake of 40 % of shares , making it a major shareholder of Guthrie.

For this, Rothschild was appointed to buy shares in Guthrie from large investors on behalf of the government agency, while Rowe & Pittman was appointed as the broker to buy shares in Guthrie from small investors .

The idea here is that most of the shares in Guthrie in Malaysia and London would be purchased simultaneously before the Stock Exchange was even opened, and it must be taken without being noticed by the management of Guthrie themselves.

To ensure the success of this covert raid, only a small group of planners who participated directly in the 'attack' was briefed on its details. It was later revealed that even Mohammad Desa Pachi, the chief executive of the government agency responsible for the Dawn Raid back then was not informed in detail on how the operation would be executed .

The day of the Raid - September 7, 9am London time (4 pm Malaysian time) .

According to the plan, all involved will get the approval of sellers before the the Stock Exchange opens . When it opens, the government agency will announce this groundbreaking news to the world and manage documentation only - as a surprise to Guthrie and other shareholders .

The complication lies in ensuring that the purchase is done covertly. This is because if the Raid is exposed too early, the stock price will soar and Guthrie's  management will respond to derail this ambush.

In Malaysia, Khalid who was given the task of managing purchases locally was optimistic that the Bank Simpanan Nasional, Genting and Kuwait Investment Group will accept the government agency's offer because all three were considered "friendly" to the Malaysian government.

Meanwhile that afternoon, Ismail rushed to Singapore on that day to meet the chairman of OCBC. His plan was to convince OCBC to accept the offer to buy shares in Guthrie owned by the bank at 3:30 pm, and then send a notice of receipt at 3:45 pm.

In London, it is still morning. Rowe & Pittman and Rothschilds were awaiting the green light from Malaysia to buy the shares from investors of Guthrie in the UK.

While in Singapore, Ismail and OCBC chairman Tan Chin Tuan discuss the purchase of shares in Guthrie over lunch. The discussion took a long time and ended with devastating news -  OCBC rejected the Malaysian's offer.

Khalid Ismail phoned in to inform everyone of the bad news. However, since Khalid was already able to buy shares from Kuwait, Bank Simpanan Nasional and Genting , they have no other way but to go on the offensive .

In London, the moment they received the green light, the two firms hired by the Malaysians started the purchasing process as quickly as possible. Rothschild managed to persuade M & G Investment Trust, a British trust company which owned 17 % of Guthrie, to sell 11 % of its shares in Guthrie to the Malaysians.

The brokers at Rowe & Pittman were assigned to buy shares from British small investors bought 5% of shares once owned by the British people.

Even without OCBC, in four hours time, the Malaysian government agency managed to acquire 8 million shares, or 50.41 % of the company without the knowledge or consent of the management of Guthrie .

By late afternoon London time , Guthrie had fallen into the hands of Malaysia .

Guthrie chairman,  Mark Gent only realized that that company was now owned by Malaysia after hearing about it on the news on the radio.

The sudden acquisition of a British-owned company through exploitation of the London Stock Exchange's system by one of their own former colonies was said to have caused great embarrassment to the British government. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher only found out about this a few days later. It was only natural that the Thatcher government responded immediately by tightening the rules at the exchange to prevent a recurrence of similar takeover by a foreign power of other major British-owned companies such as Dunlop.

While some brokers in London praised the transaction and even described it as being"cunning ", the British media mostly slammed the attack by calling it a " backdoor nationalization ".

Only a month later, Dr. Mahathir announced the boycott on British goods and services through the 'Buy British Last' campaign. This was Dr. Mahathir's response to the tin corner scandal of which the United Kingdom played a major role in. This scandal caused Malaysia's major export at that time to fall sharply in the world market. As a result, Dr. Mahathir ensured that all government contracts with the British to be frozen.

Dr. Mahathir's actions had a big impact on the British's businesses in Malaysia at the time and in the future. A Dunlop contract which was to supply tires to the government since 1963 was instead given to an American company, causing Dunlop to sell its assets to the Chinese Malaysian company, MPH .

Within three months, all the shares of Guthrie were slowly sold to the Malaysian government agency. At the end of 1981, 100% of Guthrie was fully owned by locals.

Ismail eventually took over the management of Guthrie and transfered its operational headquarters from London to Kuala Lumpur to mark the end of British control over the company. Shortly after the Dawn Raid, Mahathir boycotted the Conference of Commonwealth of Nations led by Britain. According to him , the meeting was another one to meet the white man's interests and not those of his former colonies. 

Dawn Raid had a large impact on many levels in the long run. For one, British firms in Malaysia which were previously said to have paid little attention to what the Malaysian government had to say started to become more open to negotiating new terms. 

Also, not long after the Malaysian takeover of Guthrie, the other three great British plantation companies operating in Malaysia - Highlands & Lowlands,  Barlows and Harrisons & Crosfield (H&C) finally sold their interests in Malaysia to the government agency. As a result, the land owned by Guthrie other former British-owned companies in Malaysia were taken over by Malaysians.

Since companies like H&C had rubber estates, palm oil plantations and other assets not only in Malaysia but in other countries such as India, New Zealand and China, the Malaysian government agency also become the new landlord to former British-owned assets around the world .Khalid would later on say that the profits gained from all these new assets exceed the cost used to finance Dawn Raid. He was quoted as mentioning something like "... we actually got Guthrie for free."

On February of 1982, After five months following the implementation of the 'Buy British Last' campaign, the United Kingdom sent its Foreign Secretary, Lord Carrington along with its Defense Minister, John Notts to Kuala Lumpur to negotiate but it was not fruitful. This forced the British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher herself to meet Dr. Mahathir to end the 'Buy British Last' campaign and solve the CHOGM issue. 

Following a meeting that was held in London in 1983 by Mrs. Thatcher, a few resolutions were made. One of it was that the British government would offer several financial aids amounting to 160 million pounds to subsidize Malaysian students furthering their studies in the UK. Also, Malaysia Airlines would be given added landing rights in Heathrow. 

Nostalgia Attack: Fantaghiro

$
0
0
Yes.. I remember watching this miniseries on TV2 years ago when I was in primary school. It was aired every Sunday night, and my parents would yell at me to go to bed early since I have school the next day, but I never listened. The story lines were always so interesting; set in medieval times with beautiful characters going on grand adventures and engaging in battles of epic proportions - the perfect ingredients for a fantasy story. 


Thank the good soul, whomever you may be, for downloading the series from TV9's website after it was aired and putting it up on YouTube. Now, everyone can watch it, and it is especially convenient for Malaysians as the subtitles are in Malay! I would have loved to watch it again on TV with my siblings who have never heard of this series before. Sadly, it was aired back in 2011 when I was still away at university.

Watching the series now after so many years, it is like watching the first season of Power Rangers all over again. The subplots are sometimes cheesy, dialogues are mostly over-the-top melodramatic, and don't even get me started on the primeval visual effects. However, the acting, costumes, main story line and above all, the background score, are simply amazing. 

Only now did I find out that the series is actually made in Italy. However, I can never figure out what language it was made in. Wikipedia states it was made in Italian but dubbed into various languages, including English. But then, the actors lip sync mostly match the audio, but sometimes they don't. A netizen speculated that it could be an Italian-made English-language series dubbed into Italian, and then dubbed again into English. That could be a possibility.  

Now that I'm watching the series as an adult, I can see the values behind the story. Princess Fantaghiro is not a conventional princess in the old school Disney kind of way. She is rebellious, but for a good course. Her two elder sisters are praised by their father, the King, for openly declaring their lowly status when compared to men. Fantaghiro refuses to be subjected to such mindset, and even goes as far as to pretend to be a boy in order to prevent a war between a her kingdom and a neighbouring one. This can really inspire female fans who can relate to the story. 


Time for a big budget Hollywood reboot. 

Top 10 Plot Twists in Tamil Cinema

$
0
0
I love getting tricked by a movie's ending, or as film buffs call it - getting Shyamalaned. However, this is very rare in Tamil cinema, although there are few movies that have attempted and executed them very well. So, here is my list of Top 10 Best Plot Twists in Tamil Cinema. In case it is not yet obvious enough, there are  major spoilers ahead. You have been warned =).

10) Parthen Rasithen (2000)

Shankar (Prashanth) is a fresh graduate looking for a job. He soon falls in love for the beautiful Sarika (Laila). However, his parents from the village are fixing an arranged marriage for him. so much so that he is willing to avoid the marriage alliance arranged by his strict father, Chidhambaram (Vinu Chakravarthy). Following the advice of his best friend Bhanu (Simran), he does not return home for the proposal ceremony, leading to a big misunderstanding between Chidhambaram and the supposed bride's family. Back home, Shankar comes to realize that the girl whose hand in marriage his parents were seeking was in fact Sarika.

The twist: Unknown to Shankar, Bhanu has been obsessed with him all along and has been sabotaging his and Sarika's relationship from the start so she can be with him instead.

9) Alli Arjuna (2002)

Arivazhagan (Manoj Bharathiraja) is a spoiled young man who spends all his time teasing girls and hanging out with his friends. One day, his ends up having to protect Savitri (Richa Pallod), a girl who is in the run from a mentally unstable old friend. She herself is still getting over the suicide of her best friend Nisha (Preetha), a victim of eve-teasing. Arivazhagan soon learns that the friend Savitri is running away from is in fact Nisha's elder brother Kishore (Karan), who is now an alcoholic obsessed in finding those responsible for his sister's suicide.

The twist: Towards the end, Savitri learns that Arivazhagan was the one who publicly harassed Nisha, driving her to commit suicide, although he never intended for it to end that way.

8) Modhi Vilayadu (2009)

Uday (Vinay Rai) is the hedonistic son of wealthy businessman Rajan Vasudev (Kalabhavan Mani). He does not attend college or does anything for a living, but instead spends all his time with his orphaned best friend Madan (Yuva) and their friends. One day, Madan is killed by accident when an assassin hired by Rajan's rivals comes after Uday.

The twist: In the middle of the movie, we learn that it was Madan who was Rajan's actual son all along, and Uday was the real orphan who he adopted to act as bait to avoid any harm from befalling his only heir. With his only son dead, Rajan has no use of Uday and dismisses his. The rest of the story is about how Uday tries to live by himself and make a living. 

7) Pachaikili Muthucharam (2007)

Venkatesh (Sarath Kumar) starts having an affair with Geetha (Jyothika), a beautiful stranger he meets on the train to work when his wife, Kalyani (Andrea Jeremiah) starts ignoring him. One day, while the two are planning a rendezvous at a resort, they are attacked by a criminal, Lawrence (Milind Soman) who easily finds out they are two married people having an affair. He ties Venkatesh up, rapes Geetha and leaves with all their money. Later, they are also blackmailed by Lawrence for money. Halfway through the movie, Venkatesh finds out Geetha is actually a con artist who works with Lawrence to con innocent married men like himself. In an effort to get his money back, he busts one of Geetha and Lawrence's cons. Thinking he has killed them, he leaves the city with his family and retrieved money.

The twist: Towards the end, we learn that Geetha survived the attack and abducts Kalyani and their son to blackmail Venkatesh for the money. 

6) Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa (2010)

By reading the synopsis of this movie, you might assume it is a stereotypical Tamil love story. It has all the usual elements in it - lovers from different backgrounds, romantic numbers, exotic settings, a possessive elder brother, a dotting best friend; you get the picture. However, by actually watching this movie right to the end, you will see that VTV is Gautham Menon's love letter to Tamil cinema. This is evident in the climax where Karthik (Simbu) proposes to Jessie (Trisha) and they get married. At first, we are led into thinking this is a happy ending.

The twist: The happy ending is actually nothing more than the end scene in the movie directed by Karthik – which Karthik and Jessie are watching together in the cinema in real life. Jessie is actually married to someone else and advises Karthik to move on. She leaves after saying this; "Not everything in movies can happen in real life..."

5) Amarkalam (1999)

A former gangster, Tulasi Das (Raghuvaran) is released from jail after many years and he tries to seek revenge from Birla Bose (Nassar), the police officer who put him behind bars and separated him from his wife and unborn child. Das hires Vasu (Ajit Kumar), a street smart youngster with a troubled childhood to kidnap Mohana (Shalini), Bose's adoptive daughter. Mohana soon starts getting Stockholm Syndrome when she listens to Vasu's life story and sympathizes with him. When Das finds out Mohana loves Vasu, he instructs Vasu to pretend to love her back. However, Vasu and Mohana soon genuinely fall in love for each other. With his mission completed, Das visits Bose to let him know he is behind Mohana wanting to marry a lowly rowdy.

The twist: During their meeting, Bose surprises Das by revealing that Mohana is actually Das' biological daughter who he and his wife adopted after Das went to jail. 

4) 7/G Rainbow Colony (2004)

The movie starts with Kadhir, a young man going to work but not being able to concentrate on his duties at the office as he cannot wait to meet his girlfriend, Anita later in the evening. As he awaits her at the beach, Kadhir's back story is shown in flashbacks. He used to be a good for nothing youth who always gave his parents problems. This changed when Anita moved into their apartment and befriended him. She manages to convince him to turn over a new leaf, so much so that his father becomes proud of him. However, things get complicated when they fall in love, although Anita is engaged to the son of a wealthy family friend who can save her family from debt. Kadhir and Anita have a big fight and he ends up chasing her away. While leaving in a frenzy, she is hit by an oncoming truck and dies.

The twist: At present day, Kadhir is revealed to be mentally unhealthy as he still thinks Anita is alive. He starts talking to her when she comes, although the audience can see this is merely a fragment of his sickly mind.

3) Pizza (2012)

Michael is a simple pizza delivery boy who is in dire need of more money as his wife is pregnant. One night, he becomes trapped in a mysterious bungalow where all kinds of strange things start happening. He only manages to escape when two police officers arrive. When Michael returns to the pizza cafe he works at, his boss is distraught to find out that Michael left his delivery bag in the haunted bungalow as it actually contained diamonds he was hiding away from the tax department. The boss, being a superstitious man, would rather lose the diamonds then risk entering the haunted bungalow to retrieve the bag. 

The twist: In the end, we learn that Michael knew about the diamonds in the delivery bag all along and had planned to steal them. He makes up a story in which he left the bag at the bungalow which his boss would never go into. At the same time, Michael's wife has moved abroad with the diamonds as she awaits her husband to join her. 

2) Snegithiye (2000)

Best friends Vani (Jyothika) and Radhika (Sharbani Mukherjee) are on the run from Gayathri (Tabu), a dedicated police officer after they are convicted of murdering Ramesh, a man they had initially only made up but turned out to be real. They suspect Geetha (Ishita Arun), the most popular girl on campus is behind the murder as she mysteriously disappears on the night the body suddenly falls on stage during a college event. Vani and Radhika find themselves running from the law in an effort to prove their innocence and clear their names. Meanwhile, Geetha constantly interrogates Malathi (Lakshmi), Radhika's wealthy aunt and Vani's mother (Manorama) on their girls' whereabouts. 

The twist: Vani and Radhika finally find Geetha hiding outside the city. She tells them on the night of the murder, she saw Gayathri, the dedicated police officer admired by women all over the city, gunning down Ramesh. Geetha fled their college that night out of fear that Gayathri might kill her too. 

1) The Villa (2013)

Jebin is an aspiring writer who is broke, but then finds out he has inherited an old villa which he never knew of from his late father. At the villa, Jebin discovers a hidden chamber full of his father's paintings that seem to predict the future, including one that seems to portray Jebin killing his girlfriend, Aarthi. In an attempt to prevent the painting's depiction from becoming real, Jebin seeks the help of a professor specializing in the supernatural. The professor concludes that due to all the negative energy trapped in the villa, anyone owning it will possess the power to predict the future. After much struggling, Jebin fails to neutralize the villa's negative energy and decides to take his own life before he takes Aarthi's. It is then revealed that Aarthi is really a gold digger, aspiring to marry Jebin for the money he would gain from selling the villa. She then goes on to marry a movie director.

The twist: For her wedding, Aarthi receives Jebin's posthumously published novel as a gift. From the cover, it is clear to the audience that Jebin too had the power to see the future, as the man in it resembles Aarthi's husband. Also, the murder painting was not a depiction of Jebin, but the director Aarthi married.

Gone Girl Trailer Analyzed

$
0
0
Alright! So the trailer for 'Gone Girl' has been out for some time now. The film stars Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike as Nick and Amy Dunne respectively. David Fincher is directing, which is almost like a guarantee the film adaptation will be as good as its source material. I've never been this excited for a movie adaptation of a novel I've read since the last Harry Potter movie came out a few years ago. I also don't recall enjoying a book as much as I enjoyed the final Harry Potter book. So, you get it; I basically cannot wait for this movie to come out in October. 


The title of the movie is nowhere on the movie poster. Perhaps only those who have read the novel can guess the title from the caption stating "Amazing Amy" at the bottom. 

Now, the trailer has been receiving a little bit of mixed reception on social media. Most people are not very happy about the song that plays in the background. The last time most of us heard the song 'Her' was Elvis Costello's cover version for the 1999 British romantic comedy 'Notting Hill' with Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts in it. So, I suppose I see why this song instantly evokes a more light-hearted feeling than a dark one in most people. However, the Richard Butler version accompanying this trailer has a more sinister vibe to it. Even though the original lyrics are maintained, those who have read the book will immediately understand how this song relates to Rosamund Pike's character. The description is spot on. 

Before we get into the trailer, let me tell you a bit about the story in case you have not read the book. Nick and Amy Dunne are a young married couple who are forced to move to Nick's small hometown after he loses his job. Amy has quite a bit of money from her trust fund. Together with his twin Margo, Nick uses it to open a bar. On Nick and Amy's fifth wedding anniversary, she goes missing and all the clues seem to point to him as his wife's alleged murderer.

Now, let's analyze the scenes that make up the trailer. Caution: there might be spoilers, although I would not be too worried since Gillian Flynn, the writer of the novel and also the movie's screenwriter has stated that there will be a new ending to the film version.

The trailer begins with a scene where Nick Dunne is addressing a candlelight vigil. We find out that from Nick's speech and the poster in the scene that Amy has already been missing. Mr. and Mrs. Elliot, Amy's psychologist parents are in the background.


We then cut to a scene to a shot of Amy in bed, looking up at something, probably Nick. As readers of the book already know, the story is told alternately from both husband and wife's perspectives. From the welcoming look she is giving, it is probably easy to tell that this is from Amy's version of events, if Fincher chooses to stay loyal to the source material's format. Viewers might not yet get an idea of what kind of woman she is. 


After a few other shots, we get one that is very crucial to the story - the broken ottoman in the Dunne's living room. This comes very early in the novel, which Nick sees after coming back home in the morning. It raises his suspicion that something is wrong with Amy and that she has probably gone missing. 


Next, there is a shot of Amy taking a bubble bath. Nick sort of silently stares at her as he walks by. Amy watches as he passes. We are not entirely sure what the meaning of this exchange is, but it is clear things are not really warm and cuddly in the Dunne household. 


After a few scenes of townspeople helping in the search of Amy, we come to a scene in a dark, deserted building. Nick is part of the search too. To readers, it is quite obvious this takes place in the abandoned shopping mall where we find out Amy has bought a gun. When reading this novel, this might make you think Amy feels as though her life is in danger and she needs to protect herself. 


We then see another scene filled with silent exchanges between the two characters. They both seem to almost fear one another. Nick is afraid as he approaches their bedroom. Amy almost obediently covers herself with a blanket as she is in bed. Nobody really knows what is going on here. 


And then, a few shots later, there is this one. Nick and Amy are having a very heated argument, which ends up with one of them violently pushing the other one aside. This scene can easily mislead viewers into making up their minds on who the villain is. 


Then we see Nick posing for pictures at a press conference. The media already realises he shows very little emotion for a person whose wife has gone missing. He even unexpectedly smiles to the cameras at one point, which is not something the husband of a missing wife would do. 


This does not go well with Margo, Nick's twin sister, as evident from this shot. She probably already knows that her brother is not the good husband as she always thought he was. 


Then, we see people watching a Nancy Grace-like TV show with a shot of Nick smiling next to his missing wife's poster. The case has already become a high-profile one, especially with Amy having been a child star when she was little. Nick even gets interviewed 


This scene had many people shocked. What is Tyler Perry doing in this movie? Apparently, he will be playing Tanner Bolt, a lawyer with a reputation of having defended bad husbands in court and winning almost every case. Like the audience/readers, he too is unsure of Nick's innocence. This is where the film seems to be different from the book. In the novel, Bolt is white with a black wife. 


Very quickly, this shot flashes across the scene. Even if you have not read the book, you will know this is a mystery film where nothing is what it seems, or everything is exactly as it seems.  Amy creates an infuriating treasure hunt that forces Nick to face his darkest secrets in order to find his anniversary present.


After that, there is this close-up scene where Nick and Amy are very slowly, almost reluctantly, bringing their heads together to kiss. This just further confirms there is something terribly wrong with these characters. 


We get this scene towards the end of the trailer with Affleck's voice over following in suit; "I did not kill my wife. I am not a murderer..." Which is funny to think when we are shown a shot of Pike's character seemingly dead from being drowned. 


It is great to see Fincher has maintained his iconic dark-looking cinematography which is apt for this kind of mystery-thrillers. Also, the trailer does not tell us much about the story, which adds up to its mystery. 

Dumbledore’s Army Reunites at Quidditch World Cup Final

$
0
0


By the Daily Prophet’s Gossip Correspondent, Rita Skeeter



There are celebrities – and then there are celebrities. We’ve seen many a famous face from the wizarding world grace the stands here in the Patagonian Desert – Ministers and Presidents, Celestina Warbeck, controversial American wizarding band The Bent-Winged Snitches – all have caused flurries of excitement, with crowd members scrambling for autographs and even casting Bridging Charms to reach the VIP boxes over the heads of the crowd.

But when word swept the campsite and stadium that a certain gang of infamous wizards (no longer the fresh-faced teenagers they were in their heyday, but nevertheless recognisable) had arrived for the final, excitement was beyond anything yet seen. As the crowd stampeded, tents were flattened and small children mown down. Fans from all corners of the globe stormed towards the area where members of Dumbledore’s Army were rumoured to have been sighted, desperate above all else for a glimpse of the man they still call the Chosen One.

The Potter family and the rest of Dumbledore’s Army have been given accommodation in the VIP section of the campsite, which is protected by heavy charms and patrolled by Security Warlocks. Their presence has ensured large crowds along the cordoned area, all hoping for a glimpse of their heroes. At 3pm today they got their wish when, to the accompaniment of loud screams, Potter took his young sons James and Albus to visit the players’ compound, where he introduced them to Bulgarian Seeker Viktor Krum.

About to turn 34, there are a couple of threads of silver in the famous Auror’s black hair, but he continues to wear the distinctive round glasses that some might say are better suited to a style-deficient twelve-year-old. The famous lightning scar has company: Potter is sporting a nasty cut over his right cheekbone. Requests for information as to its provenance merely produced the usual response from the Ministry of Magic: ‘We do not comment on the top secret work of the Auror department, as we have told you no less than 514 times, Ms. Skeeter.’ So what are they hiding? Is the Chosen One embroiled in fresh mysteries that will one day explode upon us all, plunging us into a new age of terror and mayhem?

Or does his injury have a more humble origin, one that Potter is desperate to hide? Has his wife perhaps cursed him? Are cracks beginning to show in a union that the Potters are determined to promote as happy? Should we read anything into the fact that his wife Ginevra has been perfectly happy to leave her husband and children behind in London whilst reporting on this tournament? The jury is out on whether she really had the talent or experience to be sent to the Quidditch World Cup (jury’s back in – no!!!) but let’s face it, when your last name is Potter, doors open, international sporting bodies bow and scrape, and Daily Prophet editors hand you plum assignments.

As their devoted fans and followers will remember, Potter and Krum competed against each other in the controversial Triwizard Tournament, but apparently there are no hard feelings, as they embraced upon meeting (what really happened in that maze? Speculation is unlikely to be quelled by the warmth of their greeting). After half an hour’s chat, Potter and his sons returned to the campsite where they socialised with the rest of Dumbledore’s Army until the small hours.

In the next tent are Potter’s two closest associates, the ones who know everything about him and yet have always refused to talk to the press. Are they afraid of him, or is it their own secrets they are afraid will leak out, tarnishing the myth of He Who Could Not Be Named’s defeat? Now married, Ronald Weasley and Hermione Granger were with Potter almost every step of the way. Like the rest of Dumbledore’s Army, they fought in the Battle of Hogwarts and no doubt deserve the plaudits and awards for bravery heaped upon them by a grateful wizarding world.

In the immediate aftermath of the battle Weasley, whose famous ginger hair appears to be thinning slightly, entered into employment with the Ministry of Magic alongside Potter, but left only two years later to co-manage the highly successful wizarding joke emporium Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes. Was he, as he stated at the time, ‘delighted to assist my brother George with a business I’ve always loved’? Or had he had his fill of standing in Potter’s shadow? Was the work of the Auror Department too much for a man who has admitted that the destruction of He Who Could Not Be Named’s Horcruxes ‘took its toll’ on him? He shows no obvious signs of mental illness from a distance, but the public is not allowed close enough to make a proper assessment. Is this suspicious?

Hermione Granger, of course, was always the femme fatale of the group. Press reports of the time revealed that as a teenager she toyed with the young Potter’s affections before being seduced away by the muscular Viktor Krum, finally settling for Potter’s faithful sidekick. After a meteoric rise to Deputy Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, she is now tipped to go even higher within the Ministry, and is also mother to son, Hugo, and daughter, Rose. Does Hermione Granger prove that a witch really can have it all? (No – look at her hair.)

Then there are those members of Dumbledore’s Army who receive slightly less publicity than Potter, Weasley and Granger (are they resentful? Almost certainly). Neville Longbottom, now a popular Herbology teacher at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, is here in Patagonia with his wife Hannah. Until recently the pair lived above the Leaky Cauldron in London, but rumour has it that Hannah has not only retrained as a Healer, but is applying for the job of Matron at Hogwarts. Idle gossip suggests that she and her husband both enjoy a little more Ogden’s Old Firewhisky than most of us would expect from custodians of our children, but no doubt we all wish her the best of luck with her application.

Last of the ringleaders of Dumbledore’s Army is, of course, Luna Lovegood (now married to Rolf Scamander, swarthy grandson of celebrated Magizoologist Newt). Still delightfully eccentric, Luna has been sweeping around the VIP section in robes composed of the flags of all sixteen qualifying countries. Her twin sons are ‘at home with grandpa’. Is this a euphemism for ‘too disturbed to be seen in public’? Surely only the unkindest would suggest so.

Sundry other members of the Army are here, but it is on these six that most interest is focused. Wherever there is a red head one may make an educated guess that it belongs to a Weasley, but it is difficult to tell whether it is George (wealthy co-manager of Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes), Charlie (dragon wrangler, still unmarried – why?) or Percy (Head of the Department of Magical Transportation – it’s his fault if the Floo Network’s too busy!). The only one who is easy to recognise is Bill who, poor man, is grievously scarred from an encounter with a werewolf and yet somehow (enchantment? Love potion? Blackmail? Kidnap?) married the undeniably beautiful (though doubtless empty-headed) Fleur Delacour.

Word is that we shall see these and other members of Dumbledore’s Army in the VIP boxes at the final, adding to the glitz and razzmatazz of a gala occasion. Let us hope that the behaviour of two of their younger hangers-on does not embarrass them, heaping shame on those who have previously brought honour to the name of wizard.

One always hesitates to invade the privacy of young people, but the fact is that anyone closely connected with Harry Potter reaps the benefits and must pay the penalty of public interest. No doubt Potter will be distressed to know that his sixteen-year-old godson Teddy Lupin – a lanky half-werewolf with bright blue hair – has been behaving in a way unbefitting of wizarding royalty since arriving on the VIP campsite. It might be asking too much that the always-busy Potter keep a tighter rein on this wild boy, who was entrusted to his care by his dying parents, but one shudders to think what will become of Master Lupin without urgent intervention. Meanwhile, Mr and Mrs Bill Weasley might like to know that their beautiful, blonde daughter Victoire seems to be attracted to any dark corner where Master Lupin happens to be lurking. The good news is both of them seem to have invented a method of breathing through their ears. I can think of no other reason how they have survived such prolonged periods of what, in my young day, was called ‘snogging.’

But let us not be severe. Harry Potter and his cohorts never claimed to be perfect! And for those who want to know exactly how imperfect they are, my new biography: Dumbledore’s Army: The Dark Side of the Demob will be available from Flourish and Blotts on July 31st. 

Written by JK Rowling for all Harry Potter fans!

For more original writing about the Quidditch World Cup Finals and other information about Harry Potter's world, visit Pottermore.com.

15 Places You Should Visit In Malaysia Before You Visit Their Foreign Counterparts

$
0
0
Malaysians who can afford it love going abroad on holidays. But for those of us who are still staking up to make a foreign trip, we might want to consider some of these great places right here in our shores before visiting places abroad. Here is a list of 15 places you should visit in Malaysia before you visit their foreign counterparts.

1. Before you lose yourself in the beauty of New Zealand...


Get awed by what Kundasang has to offer.


2. Before you stare into the night lights of New York City's skyline...


Consider first the magnificent skyline of Kuala Lumpur.


3. Before you pay the Blue Mosque of Turkey a visit...


Pay the Federal Territory Mosque of Kuala Lumpur a visit.


4. Before you go jungle trekking in the Amazon...


Give Taman Negara a try first.


5. Before getting dwarfed by Christ The Redeemer in Brazil...


Get dwarfed by Lord Murugan at Batu Caves. 


6. Before taking a stroll down a Sakura park in Korea


Take a stroll down a Tabebuia Rosea driveway in Penang.


7. Before taking photographs of Tudor buildings at Stratford-Upon-Avon 


Take some photos of the ones up at Cameron Highlands.


8. Before taking a selfie with US Marine Corps War Memorial Monument in Washington DC...


Take a selfie at the Malaysian National Monument in Kuala Lumpur.


9. Before you relax on the beaches at Phuket in Thailand


Go chill out at one of our many beaches, like the one in Redang.


10. Before you visit the Guilin Caves in China...


Pay Gua Kelam of Perlis a visit. 


11. Before taking a candid picture with the Leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy...


Take a candid at the Leaning Tower of Teluk Intan.


12. Before you take a turn into Piccadilly Circus for some shopping....


Take a turn into Bukit Bintang and visit the shops there.


13. Before you go scuba diving at the Reef in the Maldives...


Take a deep in the waters of Sipadan.


14. Before visiting the town of Colmar in Alsace, France...


Visit its Malaysian replica in Bukit Tinggi.


15. Before you walk into the Mountain River Cave of Vietnam...


Walk into the Deer Cave of the Mulu Mountains.

Who Are We?

$
0
0
We are the people of the world 
The collective, 
The masses, 
The capitalistic, communal fascists, 
We are you.

We are ready for action,
For tragedy,
Atrocity, hostility
And fashion.
We are the impersonal.

We love great films
But do not live great lives.
We create drama
But shy away from real life.
We are an army of sheep

We fight for causes
And stand up in the streets.
We fight for clauses,
Throw stones and bombs
And then build tombs with our feats.

We are an amorphous blob
We are a greedy fat man
Standing in a cue
Unnoticed, a nobody
A slob.

We are nameless
So that we can be shameless.
We are the mob,
The headless god.
We are blameless.

Debates, chat shows, votes of the public
And no opinion of our own
Online indulgence
Typing thoughts
Borrowed from a borrower
Selected, educated
And thoroughly plagiarised thoughts
Do’s and ought’s,
Typed, copied,
Copied, pasted,
Pasted, passed,
Passed in unprinted pages
Of a virtual web
Denser than the dark ages.
Thoughts we copy right,
Thoughts we own
And thoughts we’re not
thinking alone.

Everybody writes about it,
Thinks about it,
Talks about it,
But if somebody is actually doing it,
Nobody gives a shit.

The We.
The fancy lives of the We.
Making news out of lipstick
Travel and choice of ice cream,
All frivolous news
That comes out of our pockets
And leaves a nation starving.

We, the people
We, the classes
We, the businessman,
The poor man
And the ladies who pout with the fat off their arses.

Our self worth
Rests on the opinion of others,
On magazine covers,
On how many more overs,
On frequent lovers.

We, the masses,
The people,
The system,
The supporters,
The obedient payers of taxes.

We are to blame
And we should be ashamed.
We have neighbours,
We have money,
And we have poverty.
We have each other.

We are the problem,
And we are the solution.
We could know who we are,
We could go far,
If we just stopped being so wee.

Kalki Koechlin 


Neeya Naana: What Makes a Boy a Good Boy.

$
0
0
I  recently watched an episode of Neeya Naana that was aired on the 24th of August this year. The topic of discussion interested it me as it was about what makes a boy a good boy. On one side we had young men who represented the today's 'boys'. On another side were mostly parents, teachers and other members of society, including girls and young ladies.

The discussion started out with the host asking the members of society side what, according to their own code of conduct, makes a good boy. This is what they said:

1. The way he stands.

Boys who stand with their hands on their hips like the guy in purple are not good boys in one panelist's opinion. 

Standing crossed armed like this guy here is an indication of a good boy according to the panelist.

2. His hairstyle. 

A second panelist said a good boy always maintains a classic haircut like the guy standing. 

When asked, he pointed out that he does not favour this hairstyle as the hair is combed upwards and not to the side. 

3. The way his shirt is buttoned. It should be buttoned to second highest button and nowhere lower.

4. His dressing code. Regular shirts and long pants are a good indication with no excessive rings and wrist bands. 

5. The way he greets and addresses adults. Calling them sir, miss or madam is a positive sign. Bowing down a bit instead of saluting adults like movie stars is a good sign. 

6. How he socializes with the opposite sex. He should treat them like he would treat his sister.

7. He listens quietly to adults without talking unnecessarily and only speaks up when needed.

8. He does not poke fun at others or makes jokes at others' expense.

9. He only wears loose shirts that does not reveal the biceps and his underwear when bending over.

10. He maintains a calm and quiet attitude. An innocent look on his face is a good sign.

11. He is always reading something. It is an indication he is ambitious.

12. He mainly hangs out with his family rather than with friends.

Next, the host asked the boys side how they usually behave so people around them would think or notice they are good boys.

1. Standing up when their teacher enters their class with their notebook readily open in front of them.

2. Always pretending they are busy even though they are not.

3. Getting adults' blessings by bowing to their feet before leaving for some place or during special events like birthdays.

4. Doing their beds after they have gotten up.

5. Giving their seats to adults, particularly the teaching staff at wherever they are studying.

6. Always with a book no matter where they are.

7. Pretend to reject money given by adults before eventually taking it.

8. Quickly switching to the news channel when parents are around.

9. Pretend to agree with adults although we do not agree to what they are saying.

Now this gentleman down her should start his own class on how to behave like a good boy. He has done the following that has gained him the reputation of a good boy.


1. Welcome guests and offer them drinks.

2. Offer prasadam to adults and let them put holy ashes on their foreheads.

3. Asking permission from adults to leave when going out.

4. Offer to help teachers carry heavy stuff.

5. Handing in assignment much earlier than the submission date.

6. Asking adults how they are doing when they are not feeling well.

7, Doing charity and voluntary work.

Next, the hosts asked the parents and teachers in the panel what they would tell their sons and male students in order for them to grow up to be good boys.

1. Do not make friends with naughty kids.

2. Come home early.

3. Strict prohibition on bad habits such as drinking and smoking.

4. Keep sons busy with extra-curricular activities.

5. Place primary importance on studies and secondary importance on sports.

6. Waking up early in the morning.

7. Be honest about what they are doing and with whom and where.

9. Teach them about religion.

Just thought I would share this as it was an interesting topic. =)

The Story of Dolores Jane Umbridge

$
0
0
J.K. Rowling is serving up a special Halloween dose of Harry Potter for her die-hard fans, this time in the form of a profile of one of the most malicious characters in the Harry Potter universe. The story comes from Pottermore.com, the online home for the world of Harry Potter, which shared her latest story exclusively with TODAY.com.


Dolores Jane Umbridge was the eldest child and only daughter of Orford Umbridge, a wizard, and Ellen Cracknell, a Muggle, who also had a Squib son. Dolores’ parents were unhappily married, and Dolores secretly despised both of them: Orford for his lack of ambition (he had never been promoted, and worked in the Department of Magical Maintenance at the Ministry of Magic), and her mother, Ellen, for her flightiness, untidiness, and Muggle lineage. Both Orford and his daughter blamed Ellen for Dolores's brother's lack of magical ability, with the result that when Dolores was fifteen, the family split down the middle, Orford and Dolores remaining together, and Ellen vanishing back into the Muggle world with her son. Dolores never saw her mother or brother again, never spoke of either of them, and henceforth pretended to all she met that she was a pure-blood.

An accomplished witch, Dolores joined the Ministry of Magic directly after she left Hogwarts, taking a job as a lowly intern in the Improper Use of Magic Office. Even at seventeen, Dolores was judgemental, prejudiced and sadistic, although her conscientious attitude, her saccharine manner towards her superiors, and the ruthlessness and stealth with which she took credit for other people's work soon gained her advancement. Before she was thirty, Dolores had been promoted to Head of the office, and it was but a short step from there to ever more senior positions in the management of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement. By this time, she had persuaded her father to take early retirement, and by making him a small financial allowance, she ensured that he dropped quietly out of sight. Whenever she was asked (usually by workmates who did not like her) 'are you related to that Umbridge who used to mop the floors here?' she would smile her sweetest, laugh, and deny any connection whatsoever, claiming that her deceased father had been a distinguished member of the Wizengamot. Nasty things tended to happen to people who asked about Orford, or anything that Dolores did not like talking about, and people who wanted to remain on her good side pretended to believe her version of her ancestry.

In spite of her best efforts to secure the affections of one of her superiors (she never cared particularly which of them it was, but knew that her own status and security would be advanced with a powerful husband), Dolores never succeeded in marrying. While they valued her hard work and ambition, those who got to know her best found it difficult to like her very much. After a glass of sweet sherry, Dolores was always prone to spout very uncharitable views, and even those who were anti-Muggle found themselves shocked by some of Dolores's suggestions, behind closed doors, of the treatment that the non-magical community deserved.

As she grew older and harder, and rose higher within the Ministry, Dolores's taste in little girlish accessories grew more and more pronounced; her office became a place of frills and furbelows, and she liked anything decorated with kittens (though found the real thing inconveniently messy). As the Minister for Magic Cornelius Fudge became increasingly anxious and paranoid that Albus Dumbledore had ambitions to supersede him, Dolores managed to claw her way to the very heart of power, by stoking both Fudge's vanity and his fears, and presenting herself as one of the few he could trust. 

Dolores's appointment as Inquisitor at Hogwarts gave full scope, for the first time in her life, for her prejudices and her cruelty. She had not enjoyed her time at school, where she had been overlooked for all positions of responsibility, and she relished the chance to return and wield power over those who had not (as she saw it) given her her due.

Dolores has what amounts to a phobia of beings that are not quite, or wholly, human. Her distaste for the half-giant Hagrid, and her terror of centaurs, reveal a terror of the unknown and the wild. She is an immensely controlling person, and all who challenge her authority and world-view must, in her opinion, be punished. She actively enjoys subjugating and humiliating others, and except in their declared allegiances, there is little to choose between her and Bellatrix Lestrange.

Dolores's time at Hogwarts ended disastrously, because she overreached the remit Fudge had given her, stepping outside the bounds of her own authority, carried away with a fanatical sense of self-purpose. Shaken but unrepentant after a catastrophic end to her Hogwarts career, she returned to a Ministry, which had been plunged into turmoil due to the return of Lord Voldemort. 

In the change of regimes that followed Fudge's forced resignation, Dolores was able to slip back into her former position at the Ministry. The new Minister, Rufus Scrimgeour, had more immediate problems pressing in on him than Dolores Umbridge. Scrimgeour was later punished for this oversight, because the fact that the Ministry had never punished Dolores for her many abuses of power seemed to Harry Potter to reveal both its complacency and its carelessness. Harry considered Dolores's continuing employment, and the lack of any repercussions for her behaviour at Hogwarts, a sign of the Ministry's essential corruption, and refused to cooperate with the new Minister because of it (Dolores is the only person, other than Lord Voldemort, to leave a permanent physical scar on Harry, having forced him to cut the words 'I must not tell lies' on the back of his own hand during detention).

Dolores was soon enjoying life at the Ministry more than ever. When the Ministry was taken over by the puppet Minister Pius Thicknesse, and infiltrated by the Dark Lord's followers, Dolores was in her true element at last. Correctly judged, by senior Death Eaters, to have much more in common with them than she ever had with Albus Dumbledore, she not only retained her post but was given extra authority, becoming Head of the Muggle-born Registration Commission, which was in effect a kangaroo court that imprisoned all Muggle-borns on the basis that they had ‘stolen’ their wands and their magic.

It was as she sat in judgement of another innocent woman that Harry Potter finally attacked Dolores in the very heart of the Ministry, and stole from her the Horcrux she had unwittingly been wearing. 

With the fall of Lord Voldemort, Dolores Umbridge was put on trial for her enthusiastic co-operation with his regime, and convicted of the torture, imprisonment and deaths of several people (some of the innocent Muggle-borns she sentenced to Azkaban did not survive their ordeal). 

Birthday: 26th August

Wand: Birch and dragon heartstring, eight inches long 

Hogwarts house: Slytherin

Special abilities: Her punishment quill is of her own invention

Parentage: Muggle mother, wizard father

Family: Unmarried, no children

Hobbies: Collecting the 'Frolicsome Feline' ornamental plate range, adding flounces to fabric and frills to stationary objects, inventing instruments of torture

J.K. Rowling's thoughts on Dolores Jane Umbridge

Once, long ago, I took instruction in a certain skill or subject (I am being vague as vague can be, for reasons that are about to become obvious), and in doing so, came into contact with a teacher or instructor whom I disliked intensely on sight. 

The woman in question returned my antipathy with interest. Why we took against each other so instantly, heartily and (on my side, at least) irrationally, I honestly cannot say. What sticks in my mind is her pronounced taste for twee accessories. I particularly recall a tiny little plastic bow slide, pale lemon in colour that she wore in her short curly hair. I used to stare at that little slide, which would have been appropriate to a girl of three, as though it was some kind of repellent physical growth. She was quite a stocky woman, and not in the first flush of youth, and her tendency to wear frills where (I felt) frills had no business to be, and to carry undersized handbags, again as though they had been borrowed from a child's dressing-up box, jarred, I felt, with a personality that I found the reverse of sweet, innocent and ingenuous. 

I am always a little wary when talking about these kinds of sources of inspiration, because it is infuriating to hear yourself misinterpreted in ways that can cause other people a great deal of hurt. This woman was NOT 'the real Dolores Umbridge'. She did not look like a toad, she was never sadistic or vicious to me or anyone else, and I never heard her express a single view in common with Umbridge (indeed, I never knew her well enough to know much about her views or preferences, which makes my dislike of her even less justifiable). However, it is true to say that I borrowed from her, then grossly exaggerated, a taste for the sickly sweet and girlish in dress, and it was that tiny little pale lemon plastic bow that I was remembering when I perched the fly-like ornament on Dolores Umbridge's head.

I have noticed more than once in life that a taste for the ineffably twee can go hand-in-hand with a distinctly uncharitable outlook on the world. I once shared an office with a woman who had covered the wall space behind her desk with pictures of fluffy kitties; she was the most bigoted, spiteful champion of the death penalty with whom it has ever been my misfortune to share a kettle. A love of all things saccharine often seems present where there is a lack of real warmth or charity. 

So Dolores, who is one of the characters for whom I feel purest dislike, became an amalgam of traits taken from these, and a variety of sources. Her desire to control, to punish and to inflict pain, all in the name of law and order, are, I think, every bit as reprehensible as Lord Voldemort's unvarnished espousal of evil. 

Umbridge's names were carefully chosen. 'Dolores' means sorrow, something she undoubtedly inflicts on all around her. 'Umbridge' is a play on 'umbrage' from the British expression 'to take umbrage', meaning offence. Dolores is offended by any challenge to her limited world-view; I felt her surname conveyed the pettiness and rigidity of her character. It is harder to explain 'Jane'; it simply felt rather smug and neat between her other two names.

Adapted from: http://www.today.com/books/j-k-rowling-writes-harry-potter-halloween-tale-profiling-malicious-1D80248516?adbid=10152854018621350&adbpl=fb&adbpr=12566691349&cid=sm_t_main_1_20141031_34758797

Yennai Arindhaal: What is it be about?

$
0
0
Following the disappointing Ek Deewana Tha (2012) and the mediocre Neethaane En Ponvasantham (2012), Gautham Menon appears to be gearing up for a highly anticipated comeback with Yennai Arindhaal in early 2015. We will first look at what we know so far about the film before we finally speculate on what the story could be about. Let's start!

The last time Gautham Menon did a movie with a major movie star was with Surya Sivakumar in Vaaranam Aayiram (2008). Now, he is teaming up with Ajith Kumar for the first time, which did not seem possible at one point. Back in 2010, Ajith was supposed to make his 50th film with Menon but things did not work out and they both went on to pursue other projects. All that appears to be untrue with the two big names now teaming up, much to fans delight. Unlike most other Tamil movie stars, Ajith does not shy away from doing multi-starers like, Kandukondain Kandukondain (2000), Mankatha (2011) and Arrambam (2013). This film also has a big star cast.


Not much has been revealed about the movie, which is pretty common for movies by big directors with big actors. They do not need the added hype than fans' expectations. This is good as it does not spoil the film with badly-made trailers and keeps audiences excited. However, Menon has revealed that Ajith will be appearing in four different looks in the film, but no mention on whether any of them requires him wearing the khaki uniform. He will be playing a father to Baby Ankitha though, although it might one more closer to his actual age, unlike in Vaaralaaru (2006) and Aasal (2010).


From one of the released posters, we can see Ajith in a more younger look with short black hair, a thick moustache and khaki slacks, which is his look in the portion with Trisha in it. 


Another two posters show him with a rugged, bearded look in much darker settings. Leaked stills shows him in this look filming with Arun Vijay.

 

One still shows him slightly plump with stubble in his natural grey hair, which is said to be his look in the portions involving Anushka.


Trisha is teaming up with Gautham Menon for the second time after the romantic classic Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa (2010). She has gone on record by saying that she will be playing Ajith's wife in this film, which will be a much more intense love story than VTV. That is a huge sigh of relief as if there are two genres that Gautham is a master at, it is action thrillers and romantic dramas. From her saree-clad look in this still, she appears to be playing a more mature, orthodox Indian woman. 


Nothing much has been said about the other characters, although Menon has teased us with some information. Arun Vijay will be playing the second male lead opposite Parvathy Nair. Anushka Shetty will be playing an internet professional with newcomer Amit Bhargav as her admirer. Thalaivasal Vijay, who has played villainous roles in many films, will be playing a supporting role. What is most interesting is Vivek, who starred in Menon's debut, Minnale (2001) will be working for the second time with him in this film. Minnale was the first and last time Gautham Menon gave in to the norm of having a separate comedy track for commercial films. Since VIP (2014), Vivek seems to be transforming from a comedian to more of a comical actor. This suits Menon's style of storytelling more as seen from what VTV Ganesh did; casual funny dialogues with no over-the-top comedy. 


Another report alleged that Arun Vijay will be playing a negative part in the film. 


Is Anushka playing Ajith's second love interest in the film's other half? 


With a moustache like that, could Vivek be playing some kind of police officer? 

Another interesting fact about this project is the importance placed on the music, which is almost always considered a character on its own in a Gautham Menon film, even when it is not there like in Nadunisi Naaygal (2011). Harris Jayraj is teaming up with Menon for the first time since 2008. No matter which music director Menon works with, you can always expect beautiful songs and equally fantastical background scores. One song sequence was filmed in Jaipur, Jodhpur and Jaisalmer while another lullaby number with Ajith and his on-screen daughter was shot in Sikkim. Some scenes were even shot in Malaysia, although there is no report on whether it is for a song sequence. 

Now, let's speculate on what the story could be about. Word on the streets is that this is Gautham Menon's third Tamil police flick after Kaakha Kaakha (2003) and Vettaiyaadu Villaiyaadu (2006), although none of the released movie posters and leaked shooting spot images shows Ajith in a full police uniform. His co-star Trisha has explained that Ajith will be playing a radically different character from what he usually does. The khaki pants, hairstyle and moustache does lead us to believe that it should come as no surprise if Ajith plays some high-ranking civilian-clothed officer, as that it a territory Gautham Menon is yet to explore. 

Ajith appears to have two heroines, Trisha and Anushka, probably each for one half of the film. Since Ajith has four different looks in the film, this could imply that it is about different parts of his life. Gautham Menon is notorious for killing off at least one of his heroines in many of his films. Trisha probably plays his first wife who appears in the film's first half and is killed by a villain who has a grudge against Ajith's character. Their daughter probably dies with her, or maybe survives, even growing up to be Parvathy Nair's character. 


Ajith's character then might want to seek revenge, thus his more rugged look. Arun Vijay probably plays a friend or college who appears to be nice at first but has a secret sinister agenda, if it is true he is playing a villain. 


That is all I can speculate for now. It is not my intention to spoil this movie for anyone as like every other regular person out there, I am not sure what the story is about. Like all other fans, I like to fantasize about what the film is going to be about as the hype surrounding it continues to grow. All I do is put my thoughts into words to share with everyone else out there. Let's hope the movie lives up to our expectations. I know Gautham Menon will deliver after three years of his last release. Will update this blog after a teaser or trailer is released. Do comment below regardless if you agree or disagree with me. Cheers!

Dropped Tamil Films We Wish Were Completed!

$
0
0
Sometimes a script has been written, the cast and crew have been finalized, the producers are on board and a film is announced. Then, even after part of the film has been shot, the film is dropped altogether. There can many reasons for this to happen; producers decide to back out, the cast and crew gets busy with other projects, or controversies regarding the film's story. Here are some of the most anticipated Tamil films over the years that never actually made it.

1) Jaggubhai 

Director: K.S.Ravikumar

Cast: Rajinikanth and Aishwarya Rai


This was supposed to be the Superstar's next film after the average-grosser Baba (2002). AR Rahman was signed as the music director and the project was supposed to take off sometime in 2004. Even a photo shoot featuring Rajni in a terrorist-like look commenced and garnered much hype. However, Rajni and Aishwarya Rai became busy with Chandramukhi (2005) and Raincoat (2004) respectively while Ravikumar went on to work on Varalaru (2006). The project eventually got shelved. However, story has it that the movie was immediately dropped just after a few days of filming because the script was too similar to Baasha (1995). Ravikumar then went on and reused the name for his next movie with a different cast and script for his 2010 film with Sarath Kumar and Shriya Saran. 

2) Robo

Director: Shankar

Cast: Kamal Haasan and Preity Zinta


After completing Nayak: The Real Hero in 2001, Shankar announced his plans to direct a science fiction thriller with Kamal Haasan and Preity Zinta titled Robo. However, the film was dropped after a while as a film of that scale would require a big budget and there was an issue with funding. Shankar then moved on to work on Boys (2003). Shankar would later rewrite the script and cast Rajnikanth and Aishwarya Rai for the sci-fi blockbuster with a similar premise, Enthiran (2010). 


3) Mirattal

Director: A.R.Murugadoss

Cast: Ajith Kumar and Asin

 

Not to be confused with the 2012 film starring Vinay Rai, this film was originally announced in March 2004 as a revenge story with a photo shoot already taking place. This would have been Murugadoss and Ajith's second movie together after the the former's directorial debut, Dheena (2001) which earned Ajith the title 'Thala.' Yuvan Shankar Raja was signed as the music director. However the movie failed to launch after Ajith left the project due to disagreements and attempts to rope in Madhavan failed. Murugadoss then revamped the story by adding the Memento-inspired short-term memory lost aspect to it and proceeded by directing Surya in Ghajini.

 

4) Puli 

Director: S.J.Suryah

Cast: Vijay 


Taunted as S. J. Surya's dream project, this was supposed to be the director's second movie with Vijay following the highly successful Kushi (2000). However, Vijay was on the rise to become a commercial entertainer with all the formulaic masala flicks he did throughout the 2000s and this script did not fit the image he was trying to build. The project was dropped but later revived in Telugu with Pawan Kalyan. 

5) Yohan

Director: Gautham Menon

Cast: Vijay and Aishwarya Rai


This film was planned as a mystery thriller that would take place in some foreign cosmopolitan city. The director even had plans on making multiple sequels with each one taking place in a different city surrounding a different mystery. AR Rahman was supposed to be the music director with Menon producing it himself. However, Vijay dropped the film at the last moment claiming it did not suit his image. 

6) Arunachalam Vs. Chitra (AC)

Director: S.J.Surya

Cast: Simbu and Asin


The teaming up between the man behind New (2004) and Anbe Aaryire (2005), and the man behind Manmadhan (2004) and Vallavan (2006) was highly anticipated by those who enjoy these kinds of movies with mature themes. Asin was signed up as the female lead and a photo shoot also commenced. However, the delay of Vallavan apparently led SJ Surya to pursue other projects and the film was eventually shelved. 

7) Chennaiyil Oru Mazhaikkalam

Director: Gautham Menon

Cast: Trisha



The film was supposed to be an AR Rahman musical starring Trisha and four male newcomers; Nikitha, Satish Krishnan, Veera Bahu and Deva. It was supposed to be an urban film set within the IT world. However, the project was delayed and eventually canned even after more almost 40% of the filming was completed due to unknown reasons. Gautham Menon then went on to direct Vaaranam Aayiram (2008) and Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa (2010). 

 

8) Kettavan

Director: Simbu

Cast: Simbu and Genelia

  

This was supposed to be Simbu's 25th film. Initially, the script was dropped then revived again with Simbu in talks to direct it himself once Osthe (2011) was completed. The film was rumoured to be a much more intense psychological thriller than Manmadhan. However, the film appears to have been put on hold again and there is no news on if the film will be made or not. 


9) Dhruva Natchathram 

Director: Gautham Menon

Cast: Surya, Asin and Daniel Balaji


Yes, Gautham Menon tops the list as the director with the most shelved projects. Initially titled Thuppariyum Anandham, this film would have been Menon and Surya's hat trick had it materialized. The film would be set both in present day Pondicherry and back when the French still ruled the territory. There are many stories on why the film was dropped. The most popular one is that Gautham had presented Surya with an uncompleted script which he could not commit to, leading him to sign up for Anjaan (2014). Another story states that the film places more importance on other characters that were allegedly supposed to be played by Simran and Parthiban, and Surya's screen time would be very limited considering his status as a leading man in the industry. This led him to leave the project.




10) Marudhayagam

Director: Kamal Hassan

Cast: Kamal Hassan, Vishnuvardhan, Nassar, Sathyaraj and Pasupathy


This film probably has been shelved the longest in this list and though rumours of it being revived always surfaces, little proof of that exists. The film was launched at a grand scale by Queen Elizabeth II herself with Her Majesty visiting the sets alongside Tamil Nadu's chief minister at the time. Problems first rose in late 1998 when a group complained that the film misinterprets their community's historical figure. Then, another group complained that the film would glamorize the main character when he is allegedly a traitor. Extensive sets built were abandoned as the number of complaints grew. The British company that was supposed to fund the film also back out after it was alleged the film might be anti-British. Most of the film's sets and props were then used for another Kaml Hassan sterrer and directorial, Hey Ram (2000) which lured much controversy as well but went on to become a critical success. Though a trailer of the film was eventually leaked online, there is no saying when filming will resume. 


11) Idhu Maalai Neerathu Mayakkam

Director: Selvaraghavan

Cast: Dhanush and Andrea Jeremiah



This film, which would have been brothers Selvaraghavan and Dhanush's next venture after Mayakkam Enna (2011) but was canned and relaunched several times. It began filming in late 2006, but was then shelved and revived in late 2008 with Dhanush and Andrea Jeremiah in the lead roles. Dhanush was alleged to sport four distinctive looks for the film depicting various stages of his life, from a school boy right up to an elderly man. However, the project was shelved for unknown reasons for the second time. Now, rumour has it that Selvaraghavan's wife, Gitanjali will be directing the remaining portions of the film, although another report stated that this is a completely original film under the same title. 



12) Madras Talkies' Untitled Project

Director: Mani Ratnam

Cast: Aishwarya Rai, Akkineni Nagarjuna and Mahesh Babu


After the mediocre Kadal (2013), Mani Ratnam was all set for a comeback with an action thriller starring his muse Aishwarya Rai and Telugu stars Akkineni Nagarjuna and Mahesh Babu. However, Babu opted out of the project and negotiations with Ram Charan failed, after he claimed that the film lacked any commercial elements. There were then reports that Nivin Pauly was approached for the project although he denied it ever happened. The film appears to have been dropped now with Mani busy filing Okay Kanmani (2015) with Dulqueer Salman, Nithya Menon, Prakash Raj and Kanika.

Literature in English (2205): Exam Format, Answer Guidelines and Literary Texts

$
0
0
Back in my secondary school days, I was so sad that my school did not offer the Literature in English for SPM. It is funny how my teachers used to talk on the importance of English in Malaysia today and that getting an A1 (not A+ yet) for the subject is not enough. If that is true, then why didn't they introduce this subject? Maybe it was because my school was, and still is, a full-fledged science stream school. However, having minored in literature at university, I find that it has helped me explore territories that I never dared to face before. Literature taught me to be outspoken and to become an active learner rather than a passive one that just listens to lectures. This fed into my natural inquisitive and curious nature. As a film and novel lover, I came to like literature very easily as well. Enough about me. This is the current literary texts and examination format that is applicable until the year 2010, though I hear it is still used until today.

LIST OF LITERARY TEXTS

Novel
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
Fasting, Feasting (Anita Desai)
Holes (Louis Sachar)

Drama
Julius Caesar (William Shakespeare)
The Lion and the Jewel (Wole Soyinka)
An Inspector Calls (J.B. Priestly)

Short Story
Naukar (Anya Sitaram)
Cinderella Girl (Vivien Alcoc)
The Landlady (Roald Dahl)
A Common Story (Kassim Ahmad)
Neighbours (Robert Raymer)
Harrison Bergeren (Kurt Vonnegut Jr. )

Poetry
Theme: Relationships
Tonight I Can Write (Pablo Neruda)
Ways of Love (Chung Yee Chong)
A Prayer for My Daughter (Yeats)
The Way Things Are (Roger McGough)
For My Old Amah (Wong Phui Nam)
How Do I Love Thee? (Elizabeth Barret Browning)

Theme: Perceptions of Self
Birches (Robert Frost)
I Am (John Clare)
This Is A Photograph of Me (Margaret Atwood)
Waiting to Go On (Hugo Williams)
Daring Tears (Craig Romkema)
The Traveller (Muhammad hj Salleh)

Theme: Conflicts
Dulce et Decorum Est (Wilfred Owe)
The Man He Killed (Thomas Hardy)
Death of A Rainforest (Cecil Rajendra)
The War Against Trees (Stanley Kunitz)
A Quarrel Between Day and Night (Omar Mohd Noor)
"Crabbed age and youth cannot live together "(Shakespeare)


EXAMINATION FORMAT

Candidates will be asked to choose one question from each component (novel/drama/short story/poem).

Section A:
There are 6 short stories to be studied. Only 4 will be selected for testing each year. Each short story will be tested individually but the candidate is required to answer ONE out of the four questions.

Section B:
There are 3 novels to be studied. All 3 will be selected for testing each year. Each novel will be tested individually but the candidate is required to answer ONE out of the three questions.

Section C:
There are 3 plays to be studied. All 3 will be selected for testing each year. Each play will be tested individually but the candidate is required to answer ONE out of the three questions.

Section D:
There are 3 themes to be studied. All 3 themes will be selected for testing each year. Each theme will be tested individually but the candidate is required to answer ONE out of the three questions.

Candidates may answer more than one question for each component. The examiner will chose the highest mark the candidate has attained for ONE question. A single question comprises of three sub-questions. They are to be considered as a whole and not to be counted as separated questions. No extra marks will be given for any additional answers. No extra marks will be awarded beyond the maximum marks cited.Illogical/irrelevant information may be ignored by the examiner.

Section A: Short Stories [25 marks]

I. Text Comprehension. (Maximum of 5 marks)

1. First point given.
2. Appropriate supporting information given.
3. Second point given.
4. Appropriate supporting information given.
5. Third point given.
6. Appropriate supporting information given.
7. Overall understanding.
8. Language. (None of the common mistakes as stated.)

II. Plot Expansion. (Maximum of 8 marks)

1. Basic description correctly given based on the short story.
2. First point given.
3. Appropriate supporting information given.
4. Second point given.
5. Appropriate supporting information given
6. Third point given.
7. Appropriate supporting information given.
8. Fourth point given.
9. Appropriate supporting information given.
10. Overall contribution of stated event/incident/occurrence/etc to the plot.
11. Writing techniques used by author given.
12. Language. (None of the common mistakes as stated.)

III. Evaluation and Understanding with Reference to the Text. (Maximum of 12 marks)

1. First point given based on story.
2. Appropriate supporting information given.
3. Second point given based on story.
4. Appropriate supporting information given.
5. Third point given based on story.
6. Appropriate supporting information given.
7. Fourth point given based on personal ideas.
8. Appropriate supporting information with reference to the text.
9. Fifth point given based on personal ideas.
10. Appropriate supporting information with reference to the text.
11. Sixth point given based on personal ideas.
12. Appropriate supporting information with reference to the text.
13. Overall understanding.
14. Language. (None of the common mistakes as stated.)

Section B (Novel), Section C (Drama), and Section D (Poetry) are all worth 25 marks each as well. The guidelines for answering are more or less the same as in Section A.

Links to short stories:

Neighbours
http://missymacy.me/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/neighbours.pdf

The Landlady
http://missymacy.me/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/thelandlady.pdf

Harrison Bergeron
http://missymacy.me/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/harris.pdf

Cinderella Girl
http://missymacy.me/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/cinderella.pdf

Naukar
http://missymacy.me/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/naukar.pdf

Link to past years' Literature in English SPM papers:
http://hsp.myschoolchildren.com/literature-in-english-spm-2013-lpkpm/

Radio Stations in Malaysia With Frequencies

$
0
0

Radio Televisyen Malaysia


1) Nasional FM



A Malay general-service & national radio station which is the first Malaysia's radio station to broadcast in FM stereo since being launch on 20 June 1975. 

Johor Bahru, Singapore, Riau - 101.7
Melaka, North Johor - 96.6
Negeri Sembilan - 91.7
Klang Valley - 88.5
Selangor, Central Pahang - 95.3
Kota Bharu - 101.9
Jeli - 89.2
Kuala Terengganu - 91.7
Besut, North Terengganu - 98.8
North Perak - 89.7
Perlis, Kedah, Pulau Pinang - 100.5

2) TraXX FM



The country's first English radio station that started broadcasting in 1 January 1950 as the Blue Network.

Tangkak - 97.4
Johor Bahru - 102.9
Bukit Tinggi - 92.9
Baling - 91.7
Gurun - 98.7
Kota Bharu - 104.7
Jeli - 90.8
Bukit Bakar - 98.5
Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, West Pahang - 90.3 or 100.1
Melaka - 97.4
Negeri Sembilan, South Selangor - 88.7
Kuantan - 105.3
Jerantut - 89.9
Taiping - 105.3
Ipoh - 90.1
Pulau Pinang - 98.7
Kota Kinabalu - 105.3
Kota Belud - 102.5
Bintulu - 98.5
Miri - 104.5
Kuala Terengganu - 89.7
Dungun - 98.9
Besut - 97.0

3) Ai FM


Malaysi's first Chinese radio station that has been on the air since 1934.

North Johor, Melaka - 100.4
South Johor - 104.9
Negeri Sembilan, South Selangor - 89.7
Kuala Lumpur, Selangor - 89.3
West Pahang - 106.7
Kuantan - 106.1
Kota Bharu - 105.7
Jeli - 91.6
Kuala Terengganu - 90.5
Besut - 97.8
Jerantut - 90.7
Ipoh - 92.1
Perlis, Kedah, Pulau Pinang - 101.3

4) Minnal FM



 The first 24-hour Indian language broadcast service in the world and Malaysia's first Tamil radio channel. 

North Johor, Melaka - 103.3
South Johor - 101.1
Negeri Sembilan, South Selangor - 90.5
Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, Central Pahang - 96.3
Kuantan - 103.3, 
Kota Bharu, Machang - 106.7
Jeli - 92.2
Kuala Terengganu - 87.9
Jerantut, Terengganu - 91.9
Besut - 95.3
Ipoh - 96.9
South Perak - 98.9
Perlis, Kedah, Pulau Pinang - 96.7
North Kedah, North Perak - 89.7
North Kelantan - 100.9

5) Radio Klasik FM



Broadcasts Malay retro music. 

Gunung Pulai - 106.7
Melaka - 93.6
Negeri Sembilan, South Selangor - 87.9
Kuala Lumpur, Selangor, West Pahang - 98.3
Kuantan - 107.9
Kota Bharu - 96.5
Kuala Terengganu - 92.5
Ipoh - 88.3
Perlis, Kedah, Pulau Pinang - 94.9

Astro Radio


1) Era



Mainly plays Malay music but also a mixture of international hit songs as well. 

Klang Valley - 103.3
Pulau Pinang - 103.6
Taiping - 95.2
Melaka - 90.3
Johor Bahru - 104.5
Seremban - 103.6
Kuantan - 98.0
Kota Bharu - 103.3
Kuala Terengganu - 102.8
Kuching - 96.1
Kota Kinabalu - 102.4

2) Hitz. FM



 Malaysia's leading English-language station airing contemporary English hits with approximately two million listeners.

Klang Valley - 94.5
Pulau Pinang - 91.0
Ipoh - 94.3
Taiping - 91.3
Melaka - 91.1
Johor Bahru - 99.1
Seremban - 94.2
Kuantan - 94.1
Kota Bharu - 94.6
Kuala Kuching - 97.7
Kota Kinabalu - 101.6

3) MY FM



A Chinese station catering for younger listeners. 

Klang Valley - 101.8
Pulau Pinang - 99.7
Ipoh - 100.6
Taiping - 100.2
Melaka - 106.4
Johor Bahru - 95.4
Seremban - 100.6
Kuantan - 101.1
Kota Bharu - 102.3
Kuala Terengganu - 101.2
Kuching - 96.9
Kota Kinabalu - 104.0

4) THR Raaga



Starting out as the first privately owned bilingual Malay and English language radio station in the country, it provided stiff competition to other stations in both Malaysia and Singapore. Today, it is the country's leading Tamil radio station. 

Klang Valley, South Pulau Pinang - 99.3
Negeri Sembilan - 101.5
Central Perak - 97.9
North Pulau Pinang, Kedah - 102.4
Pulau Langkawi - 101.9

5) THR Gegar



This is former Malay slot of THR which has since split and is now its own station that airs in Malay but only in the East Coast of the Peninsular while Raaga airs in the West Coast. 

Kuantan - 88.8 
Kuala Terengganu - 106.8 
Kota Bharu - 88.1 


6) Mix FM



An English language station that caters to urban young adults by playing contemporary hits from the 90s to present day.

Klang Valley - 92.9
Pulau Pinang - 92.8
Ipoh - 92.7
Taiping - 93.6
Melaka - 93.0
Johor Bahru - 97.6
Seremban - 95.0
Kuantan - 93.2
Kota Bharu - 92.8
Kuala Terengganu - 98.3
Kuching - 95.3
Kota Kinabalu - 100.8

7) Lite FM



An oldies station that mainly airs songs from the 1960's to the 1980's targeting a more mature audience, although it occasionally plays contemporary hits. 

Klang Valley - 105.7
Pulau Pinang - 104.4
Ipoh - 101.5
Taiping - 89.3
Melaka - 92.2
Johor Bahru - 104.3
Seremban - 104.6
Kuantan - 104.7
Kota Bharu - 104.3
Kuala Terengganu - 105.9
Kuching - 100.1
Kota Kinabalu - 103.2

8) Sinar fm



A Malay station that focuses on mature listeners and plays classic music from both local and international artists.

Klang Valley - 96.7
Pulau Pinang - 97.1
Ipoh - 96.9
Kuantan - 97.2
Kota Bharu - 93.8
Taiping - 96.4
Seremban - 96.9
Melaka - 96.0
Johor Bahru, Singapore - 87.8
Terengganu - 97.5
Kota Kinabalu - 104.9
Kuching - 102.1

9) Melody FM



Mainly plays Chinese hits from 1970's to the 2000's for more mature listeners. 

Klang Valley - 103.0
Pulau Pinang - 106.5
Ipoh - 98.5
Kuantan - 100.0
Kota Bahru - 99.8
Taiping - 104.9
Seremban - 97.9
Melaka/North Johor - 107.3
Central Johor - 98.4
Johor Baru - 103.3
Terengganu - 104.0
Kuching - 103.7
Kota Kinabalu - 98.6

Star Publications 


1) Suria FM



A Malay station that plays songs from the 80's right down to contemporary hits. 

Klang Valley - 105.3
Ipoh - 96.0
Taiping - 91.7
Kuantan - 96.1
Melaka, North Johor - 88.5
Seremban - 107.0
Johor Baru - 101.4
Kota Kinabalu - 105.9
Perlis, Kedah, Pulau Pinang - 106.9
Kuala Terengganu - 102.4
Kota Bharu - 106.1

2) Red FM



An English language station for urban and suburban listeners that plays songs the 80's and 90's as well as current hits.

Kedah, Perlis - 98.1
Pulau Pinang - 107.6
Ipoh - 106.4
Negeri Sembilan - 106
North Johor, Melaka - 98.9
Pulau Langkawi - 98.1
Kuantan - 91.6
Klang Valley - 104.9
South Perak - 104.9
Taiping - 98.2
South Johor, Singapore - 92.8

3) 988 FM



A Chinese language station for urban and suburban professional adult listeners.

Kedah, Perlis - 96.1
Pulau Pinang - 94.5
Pulau Langkawi - 96.1
Taiping - 101
Ipoh - 98.8
Pahang - 90.4
Negeri Sembilan - 93.3
North Johor, Melaka - 98.2
South Johor, Singapore - 99.9

4) Capital FM



An English-language radio station mainly for women. 


Klang Valley - 88.9fm  
Penang - 107.6fm  

Media Prima


1) Hot FM



 Mainly broadcast in Malay, the station also plays a mix of Indonesian and English songs as well. 

Klang Valley - 97.6
Ipoh - 104.5
Pulau Pinang - 88.2
Alor Setar - 88.2
Melaka - 104.3
Johor Bahru - 90.1
Kota Kinabalu - 87.7
Kuching - 94.3
Kuala Terengganu - 105.0
Kuantan - 92.4

2) Fly FM



Mainly an English language channel that focusses on teenage and young adult listeners.

Klang Valley - 95.8
Negeri Sembilan - 98.6
Ipoh - 87.9
Pulau Pinang - 89.9
Melaka - 94.0
Johor - 94.0

3) One FM



A Chinese station playing contemporary hits. 


Ipoh, Central Perak & Kuala Kangsar - 87.6
Penang, Kedah and Taipin - MHz
Johor Bahru - 105.3
Klang Valley and South Perak  - 88.1
Melaka and North Johor - 88.1 
Seremban - 88.3 
Kota Kinabalu - 95.7 
Kuching - 98.3 
Kuantan, South Terengganu and Mersing - 100.4 

Places in Malaysia That Have Alternative British Names

$
0
0
1. Bayan Lepas - Jamestown



2. Penang - Prince of Wales Island



3. Seberang Perai - Province Wellesley



4. Bukit Larut - Maxwell Hill



5. Kuala Sepetang - Port Weld



6. Teluk Intan - Anson Bay



7. Klang - Port Swettenham



8. Labuan - Victoria



9. Kota Kinabalu - Jesselton



10. Tenom - Port Birch






Another Top 12 Beautiful Malaysian Churches

$
0
0
Before this, I made a top ten list of the most beautiful churches in Malaysia. However, there are many other Malaysian churches that did not make the list. Although we may not have grand fancy churches like Paris' Notre Dame or London's St. Peter's, we do have some quaint ones here in Malaysia. In case you don't see any of your own favourite ones on this list, make sure to check out the the separate list of Top 10 Most Beautiful Churches in Malaysia. 

1. Church Of Our Lady Of Lourdes , Ipoh.



2. St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Ipoh 



3. St. Michael's Church, Ipoh



4. St. John's Church, Ipoh 



5. St. Anthony's Church, Teluk Intan



6. Church of Visitation, Seremban 



7. Church of Our Lady Lourdes, Seremban



8. Church of Holy Name of Jesus in Balik Pulau



9. Church of Immaculate Conception, Johor Bharu 



10. Bandar Sri Aman Church, Sri Aman



11. St. Joseph's Cathedral, Kuching



12. St. Peter's Church, Melaka

Malaysia in Anime

$
0
0












Courtesy of https://www.facebook.com/Switcz

Institute of Teacher Education of Malaysia

$
0
0
The Institute of Teacher Education Malaysia is an institution of higher education that trains prospective elementary and secondary school teachers. In Malaysia, all of the campuses of the Institute of Teacher Education is managed by the Institute of Teacher Education Malaysia (ITE) Division of the Ministry of Education Malaysia (MOE) located in Cyberjaya. The institute's newly opened main campus is located in Nilai, Negeri Sembilan.

1.0 Introduction

Formerly functioning as separate teacher training colleges, the institute now functions as a centralized collective body. It is responsible for the training and education of prospective teachers of various levels including foundation programmes for students fresh out of secondary school, postgraduate teaching courses, special education certification courses, short holiday courses, in-service courses, continuous professional development programmes, graduate teacher programmes and many more. Apart from its homegrown degree programmes, the institute also conducts twinning programmes with Open University Malaysia (OUM ), and various overseas universities for language, science and mathematics courses. Selections for admission are conducted by the Teacher Education Division (TED) of the Ministry of Education.

2.0 History

The history of teacher education in the country started with the establishment of the following institutions:

1. 1878 - The Malay Training College of Singapore first started training teachers to serve in both Malaya and Singapore until 1895. It was then upgraded to a Teacher Training College, and is presently known as the National Institute of Education which trains teachers in Singapore and no longer has links with Malaysia.

2. 1898 - The Malay Teachers Training College was also opened in Taiping, but was closed soon following the establishment of the nearby Malay Training College of Matang in 1913. The house of the Malay noble of Taiping, Ngah Ibrahim temporarily served as the college building, until it was shifted nine years later to its permanent location in Tanjung Malim under the name of the Perak sultan at that time.

3. 1900 - The Malay Training College was opened in Malacca. 35 years later, it would be converted into the Women Teachers' Training College of Malacca

4. 1922 - The Sultan Idris Teacher Training College (SITC) of Tanjung Malim, Perak began training Malay teacher for Malay medium schools. Today, this college has been converted into the Sultan Idris University of Education and is no longer under the Ministry of Education.

5. 1935 - The Malay Women's Training College (MWTC), Malacca began training female teachers, mostly specializing in the field of Home Science. Today, this colleges has been absorbed into the institute of Teacher Education Malaysia and functions as the Malay Women's Campus. 

6. 1948 - The Batu Lintang Teacher Training College was opened in Kuching, becoming the first teacher training college opened in Sarawak before it became part of Malaysia. The Rajang Teacher Training College was opened many years later in 1966 following the formation of Malaysia. 

7. 1951 - The Malayan Teachers' Training College, Kirkby, Liverpool, England was acquired by the Government of Malaya ( now Malaysia ) as a British teacher training center to produce strong local instructors in teacher training and English language teaching. The college was closed in 1962 when the British government reclaimed the college site and converted it into a residential area and commercial center. This college trained 1500 teachers between the years 1952 to 1962. The college also witnessed the declaration of independence by His Royal Highness Tunku Abdul Rahman, the first Prime Minister of Malaysia.

8. 1952 - The Kent Training College was opened in Tuaran. Named after and opened by the Duchess of Kent, this college became  the first teacher training college in Sabah before the formation of Malaysia. 

9. 1954 - A Teacher Training College was established in Kota Bharu, Kelantan, becoming the first teacher training college in the east coast of soon to be Peninsular Malaysia.

10. 1955 - The Malaysian Teacher Training College (MTT), Brinsford Lodge, Wolverhampton, England was a former factory in Britain used as a teacher training college for Malaysian teachers from 1955 to 1964. This teacher training college trained 300 teachers in various subjects .

3.0 Growth

The Malaysian teacher training colleges went through rapid major changes through the early part of the 21st century:

1. 2002: The English Language Teaching Centre was established to specialize in producing English language teachers.

2. 2004: All 27 Malaysian teacher training colleges were upgraded into teacher training institutes.

3. 2005: The institute stopped providing certificate and diploma qualifications and instead started conferring Bachelor of Teaching and Bachelor of Education degrees for students under pre-service training programmes.

4. 2006: The institute continued with the new cycles of twinning programmes with overseas universities to produce language, science and mathematics trainee teachers.

5. 2008: The Amendment of the Education Act 1996 allowed the 27 colleges to be upgraded from teacher training colleges into institutes for teacher training. This change was approved by the House of Representatives on August 25th.

6. 2008: The State Council approved amendments to the Education Act 1996, Chapter 9 Section 42-49 on December 4th.

7. 2009 : The Minister of Education, Dato ' Hishammuddin Tun Hussein officially declared all 27 Malaysian teacher training institutes to be merged to form one Institute of Teacher Education Malaysia on January 16th. The main campus will be built in the university town of Enstek, Negeri Sembilan since all the 27 former colleges are too small to serve as the main campus. Instead, they will be converted into different campuses.

8. 2010: The administration for the Institute of Teacher Education Malaysia separated from the Teacher Education Division, allowing the institute's campuses to be fully maintained by the Institute of Teacher Education of the Ministry of Education in Cyberjaya.

4.0 Campuses

Apart from the main campus in Enstek, the institute still maintains and runs the former 27 teacher training colleges that are now its branches, excluding the English Language Teaching Center which is administered separately. The institute has campuses in almost every state in Malaysia:

1. Perlis
a) Perlis Campus, Kangar

2. Kedah
a) Sultan Abdul Halim Campus, Sungai Petani
b) Darulaman Campus, Jitra

3. Penang
a) Penang Campus, Bukit Chombee
b) Tuanku Bainun Campus, Bukit Mertajam

4. Perak
a) Ipoh Campus, Ipoh

5. Selangor
a) Islamic Education Campus, Bangi

6. Kuala Lumpur & Putrajaya
a) Malay Language Campus, Lembah Pantai
b) International Languages Campus, Lembah Pantai
c) Ilmu Khas Campus, Cheras

7. Negeri Sembilan
a) Technical Education Campus, Nilai
b) Raja Melewar Campus, Seremban

8. Melaka
a) Perempuan Melayu Campus, Durian Daun

9. Johor
a) Temenggun Ibrahim Campus, Johor Bharu
b) Tun Hussein Onn Campus, Batu Pahat

10. Pahang
a) Tengku Ampuan Afzan Campus, Kuala Lipis

11. Terenggau
a) Dato Razali Ismail Campus, Kuala Terengganu
b) Sultan Mizan Campus, Kuala Besut

12. Kelantan
a) Kota Bharu Campus, Kota Bharu

13. Sarawak
a) Batu Lintang Campus, Kuching
b) Rajang Campus, Bintagor
c) Miri Campus, Miri
d) Tun Abdul Razak Campus, Kota Samarahan

14. Sabah
a) Gaya Campus, Kota Kinabalu
b) Tawau Campus, Tawau
c) Keningau Campus, Keningau
d) Kent Campus, Tuaran

15. Labuan
- None -

5.0 Defunct Campuses

There are also 12 teacher training colleges that are no longer being operated by the Ministry of Education because of its location, limited infrastructure or position outside Malaysian jurisdiction. Here is a list of colleges that shut down:

1. Teruntum Teacher Training College (now functioning as the Kuantan District Education Office)
2. Mohd Khalid Teacher Training College (now SK Mohd. Khalid National Primary School)
3. Pasir Panjang Teacher Training College (now SM Terengganu Science Secondary School, or SESTER)
4. Seri Penang Teacher Training College (now left unoccupied)
5. Seri Kota Teacher Training College (now part of SK Jalan Kuantan 2 National Primary School)
6. Kinta Teacher Training College, Ipoh (now taken over by Ungku Omar Polytechnic)
7. Bintulu Science Teaching College (now taken back by Universiti Putra Malaysia Bintulu Campus)
8. Tengku Ampuan Afzan Teacher Training College, Kuantan (now moved to its permanent campus in Kuala Lipis, and old building is now taken over by Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah Polytechnic)
9. Sultan Idris Teacher Training College (now upgraded to Sultan Idris Education University and is no longer under the Ministry of Education)
10. The Malayan Teachers Training College, Kirkby, Liverpool, England (now a residential area and commercial center after being reclaimed by British government)
11. The Malaysian Teacher Training College (MTT), Brinsford Lodge, Wolverhampton, England (now a residential area and commercial center after being reclaimed by British government)
12. Singapore Teacher Training College (now National Institute of Education and is taken over by the Singaporean government)

Another Top 12 Beautiful Malaysian Hindu Temples

$
0
0
I had a hard time making the list of Top 10 Most Beautiful Hindu Temples in Malaysia because they are just so many of them that can even rival those in India. This is a list of the temples that did not make it into that other list, but still very much deserve an honourable mention.

1) Sri Maha Mariamman Temple, Midlands




2) Muneeswarar Temple, Simpang Halt 



3) Sri Shakti Temple, Bukit Rotan



4) Vinayaagar Temple, Sungai Petani



5) Sri Pasupathinath Temple, Kota Kinabalu



6) Mount Matang Sri Maha Mariamman Temple, Kuching



7) Railway Maha Ganapathy Temple, Ipoh 



8) Arulmigu Rajamariamman Temple, Johor Bahru



9) Kaaliamman Temple, Kempas



10) Sri Subramaniar Draupadi Amman Temple, Melaka



11) Nageswary Amman Temple, Puchong



13) Sri Bala Thandauthapani Temple, Seremban



14) Sri Maha Kaliamman Temple,Sri Kembangan



15) Sri Ganesar Temple,Kampung Pandan

Top 10 Most Beautiful Floating Mosques in Malaysia

$
0
0
While researching for my articles on the Top 10 Most Beautiful Mosques in Malaysia and the Top 10 Most Unique Mosques in Malaysia, I learned that there are quite a few mosques that are floating mosques. They are built at the edge of seas, rivers, ponds and lakes to create the illusion they are floating on water, making for quite the spectacle. Here is a list of Top 10 Most Beautiful Floating Mosques in the country. 


1) Putra Mosque, Putrajaya



2) Crystal Mosque, Kuala Terengganu



3) Tengku Tengah Zaharah Mosque, Teluk Ibai



4) Selat Melaka Mosque, Melaka



5) Bandaraya Mosque, Likas



6) Tanjung Bungah Mosque, Penang



7) Petronas Technology University Mosque, Seri Iskandar



8) Al-Hussain Mosque, Kuala Perlis



9) As-Salam Mosque, Puchong 



10) Darul Quran Mosque, Kuala Kubu Baru

Viewing all 145 articles
Browse latest View live