Nude pictures copied from HK star's computer





HONG KONG (Reuters) - Photos purportedly showing a Hong Kong actor partially nude with several starlets were copied from his computer when it was serviced last year and later distributed over the Internet, police said on Monday.

The photographs, seemingly of actor and singer Edison Chen in bed with singer Gillian Chung, along with suggestive images of actress Cecilia Cheung, were recently posted online, sparking a media frenzy in the celebrity-mad former British colony.

While Chung's company, Emperor Entertainment Group, initially said the photograph of the normally squeaky-clean star was a digital fake, Hong Kong police said some 1,300 private shots of celebrities had been stolen from a faulty personal computer belonging to an individual who took it to a computer shop for servicing.

"A person had taken his computer to be fixed, but during the maintenance period, someone used dishonest means to take some information from the computer and distributed this information indiscriminately to others," assistant police commissioner Wong Fook-chuen told reporters.

While the police gave no specific names, Hong Kong's Ming Pao newspaper reported the photographs belonged to Edison Chen, 27.

"A person in the shop found hidden inside (Chen's) computer, confidential nude pictures of naked female stars, which were then secretly copied," Ming Pao reported, quoting an anonymous source.

The computer shop was subsequently raided by police officers in a widening investigation across the territory, which has led to eight arrests for infringing obscene material laws, and the seizure of over 1,000 explicit images including six women, four of whom were public figures, the police said.

In a statement on his blog (www.clotinc.com/blogs/public/edc) over the weekend, Chen criticised some of the recent media coverage and widespread publishing of the images.

"I would like for u (sic) to respect the situation that everyone is in and report the truth to the fullest."

He didn't clarify whether the images had been faked or stolen, but his manager said Chen would co-operate with the police investigation.

Hong Kong's police commissioner, Tang King-shing, said the case was being treated seriously and warned the possession and distribution of such images might be illegal.

But Internet users and activists have since challenged this position, saying the police were being overly harsh.

(Reporting by James Pomfret; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Source:http://uk.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUKHKG6700820080204

I'm lucky fake body looks good


Jay Chou on his face superimposed on someone else's nude torso:
By Chang May Choon

February 05, 2008




HE once found his face superimposed on the picture of a nude body, but Taiwanese R&B icon Jay Chou didn't seem to mind.


-- Picture illustration
'Luckily, he has a good figure,' he told The New Paper with a laugh.

What's not funny to him, however, is the ongoing sex saga plaguing Hong Kong heart-throb Edison Chen.

In town yesterday to promote his new movie Kung Fu Dunk, Jay, 29, expressed sympathy for Edison, his co-star in the 2005 hit film Initial D.

A week ago, intimate photos of what allegedly appears to be Edison with singer-actress Gillian Chung and ex-girlfriend Bobo Chan were circulated online.

Hong Kong reports said the leak happened when Edison got a friend to send his laptop for repairs some time ago.

Raunchy pictures of what appears to be Hong Kong actress Cecilia Cheung and Joey Yung also surfaced, and the media speculated there would be more victims in the form of Edison's ex-flings, like Taiwanese singer Jolin Tsai.

When asked to comment, Jay, who was once romantically linked to Jolin, said: '(Such an incident) is hurtful for any artiste, especially female ones.

'It's not fair to the artiste that the photos got out. Everyone's shocked by the photos and everyone's discussing them, but I hope no more photos will surface.

'Let this come to an end already.'

What if a similar incident was to befall Jay, who is himself a budding director with the romantic flick Secret to his name?


Well, it couldn't, he seemed to say.

Jay claimed he does not like to take self-portraits, and it is his female assistant who took the few photos stored in his handphone.

She likes to borrow it because it has a better camera function, he said.

To this, the woman in question giggled in one corner of the room.

What's more, Jay claimed he never sends his phone for repairs.

'(If it's spoilt), I'll just change to a new one.'

After all, there are probably dozens of advertisers queuing up to get his endorsement.

His pop-music influence is legendary, and movies that boast his name have all turned out to be box-office hits.

The latest is Taiwanese veteran director Kevin Chu's Kung Fu Dunk, which stars Jay as a gongfu disciple who gets recruited by a businessman (Eric Tsang) to play varsity basketball and slam-dunks his way to fame.

SUFFERS IN SILENCE

Baron Chen and Chen Bo-lin co-star as his suave teammates while Charlene Choi plays the team's manager.

Director Kevin, who is banking on Jay's appeal to draw the crowds when the film opens on 7 Feb, praised his lead actor.

He said at the media conference held at Hotel InterContinental yesterday that Jay went beyond expectations.

Kevin also spoke of how Jay suffered in silence despite sustaining injuries while filming the slam-dunk stunts that required him to be suspended by wires in midair.

He said Jay's body hit the backboard so many times during the 150 retakes that he ended up with 16 bruises.

But the actor only mentioned it the next day as he did not want the director to feel sorry for him and cut short the filming.

Kevin said: 'This will be a basketball classic. There are other basketball films but we do it better because we have Chinese gongfu.'

Jay himself feels the movie is a breakthrough for him, as he got to do comedy and flaunt gongfu skills for the first time.

He composed the song Zhou Da Xia (Swordsman Chou) for the film and he hopes fans will call him that instead of his current nickname Zhou Dong (Chairman Chou).

He thinks Zhou Dong sounds old-fashioned and it's time to stop using it.

'I've been watching gongfu films since young and I once fantasised about becoming a gongfu star. It's just that I learnt the piano instead of the nanchaku (a Chinese weapon).'

So, what's next?

Jay said he will be performing at the CCTV Chinese New Year countdown special in Beijing.


Source:http://newpaper.asia1.com.sg/show/story/0,4136,155502,00.html

[KOREAN WAVE] Chasing the Korean Dream: 'Koreanovelas' fever is sweeping the Philippines



In the last few years, Korean films, TV dramas and pop music have become immensely popular abroad, a phenomenon known as the Korean Wave. This is the first in a series of essays by a select group of foreign scholars and journalists looking at the spread of Korean pop culture in Southeast Asian countries and beyond. - Ed.

The names Johnny, Jenny and Andrew may not ring a bell for Koreans, but for Filipinos, they started the so-called Korean Wave in the Philippines. They were the "Filipinized" names of the main characters in the drama "Autumn Story," better known as "Endless Love 1" when it was shown in the Philippines. It was the first-ever Korean drama to air in the country.

In 2002, the Taiwanese drama "Meteor Garden" swept through the Philippines and the rest of Asia, paving the way for Chinese dramas to enter local markets. The drama was aired on the ABS-CBN network, one of the Philippines' largest broadcasting companies. More Taiwanese dramas soon followed, heralding the start of the "Chinovelas" (Chinese + novelas, a word derived from the Spanish "novela") fever. Facing the risk of saturating televiewers' interest, the network's rival, GMA-7 looked elsewhere and took a chance on Korean dramas.

As with what ABS-CBN did to "Meteor Garden," GMA-7 translated and dubbed "Autumn Story" into Tagalog to give it a local flavor. It also changed the characters' names to make them easier for Filipinos who may find it difficult to remember, much less pronounce, complicated Korean names.

So the character of Yun Joon-suh (played by Song Seung-hun) became known as Johnny Yun; Choi Eun-suh (Song Hye-gyo) was Jenny Choi; and Han Tae-sukh (Won Bin) was Andrew Han. In late 2003, "Autumn Story" aired locally and is credited with having started the "Koreanovela" phenomenon in the Philippines. The drama has been re-aired twice since then and continued to receive high viewership numbers.

Nina Angeles was one of those who got hooked on the drama. She cited the interesting storyline and the good-looking actors as her reason for watching the drama. "Also, the scenery was very beautiful. Korea looked so beautiful, especially in autumn," she says.

Like Nina, many other Filipino fans began to take interest in Korean movies, as well. She recalls the first time she saw the VCD of "My Sassy Girl" in her brother's bedroom, and thought that it was a porn movie. "My Sassy Girl" was the first Korean film she watched and all the rest followed.

From watching Korean dramas and movies, it was inevitable that fans would take an interest in the country's culture, food and fashion. When, at the height of "Meteor Garden," people were signing up for Mandarin classes, now there was a sudden demand for Korean-language classes and "noraebang" or KTVs became a favorite hangout for fans who wanted to sing along to Korean pop songs.

And so, from Korean dramas and films, it was a natural progression to music, as in Nina's case. A self-confessed "rocker girl" who liked listening to Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, Black Crowes and Nirvana, she was nevertheless surprised at her sudden interest in Korean pop culture. "I was attracted to K-pop because it was different from the rock scene in the United States and the Philippines. It sounded a lot like American pop music but in a different language and had an Asian vibe," Nina explains.

She initially liked Lee Min-woo of the boyband Shinhwa, and used to watch him all the time in "Music Tank" on the Arirang channel. During a trip to Hong Kong, she bought CDs and DVDs of Shinhwa. "I feel I could relate more to M (Min-woo) and Shinhwa than N'Sync and Justin Timberlake," Nina says.

The language barrier was not a deterrent for fans like her to continue listening to Korean music. "When I started listening to music and watching dramas, I wanted to learn Korean," she says.

Paola Ebora, 21, was introduced to Korean music through a friend. "Listening to music in a foreign language I don't understand is nothing new to me, so what drew me to listening to K-pop is the same reason that drew me to C-pop (Cantopop): songs that don't distract me from studying because I can't sing along to them," Paola says.

Paola, a journalism student back in the Philippines, studied the language when she went to Korea as a foreign exchange student last year. "Now that I know a little bit of the language enough to sing along and understand parts of the song, I continue to be fascinated with K-pop because they give me what I like in Western music, only that they have the Asian feel."

Korean music and dramas appear intertwined for some fans like Kelly Gomez who likes the soundtracks of the dramas she has watched.

Kelly considers herself a "late bloomer," as far as Korean pop culture is concerned. "I remember the first-ever series that I really finished watching was 'Full House.'"

"Full House" starred Jung Ji-hoon, better known as Rain, and Song Hye-gyo; to Filipino fans, however, they were known as Justine and Jesse, respectively.

"Full House" was one of the highest-rating Korean dramas aired in the Philippines in 2005, peaking at 52 percent and averaging 42.3 percent during its entire run.

The country's two biggest TV networks, GMA-7 and ABS-CBN fight tooth and nail to acquire the rights to the latest Korean dramas. Since the airing of "Autumn Story," "Koreanovelas" have eclipsed local soaps which used to dominate local television.

Several reasons have been cited for the rise of "Koreanovelas": simple plots and few characters, good-looking and fashionable casts, good production values, engaging soundtracks and the showcase of Korean culture.

"I was amazed at how Korea was able to come up with so many dramas. They never seem to run out of stories or ideas because, so far, each drama or movie I have seen has a unique storyline; they are like a factory of drama series. And they always have such lovely casts," Kelly says.

In addition, the values reflected in the stories are not so different from Filipino values that teach about love for family, the importance of respecting elders and fighting for one's true love.

Also, Filipinos have grown tired of the formulaic Filipino soaps that used to run for years. One such drama, "Mara Clara" ran for about five years, so the audience literally saw its lead star grow up before their eyes. On the other hand, Korean dramas are fast-paced and the audience do not have to wait for years to know what would happen to the lead characters, and in the case of romantic dramas, whether they would end up together.

With the introduction of foreign dramas, Filipinos suddenly had more choices and local producers were forced to keep up with the competition. In the long run, however, it became more apparent that buying the rights to Korean or Chinese dramas was cheaper than producing local dramas.

Butch Raquel, an executive of GMA-7, noted in an earlier interview that the cost of buying a foreign drama is equivalent to only a fourth of the cost of a local production, adding that the advertising rates are the same. In short, networks earn more from foreign shows because they do not have to invest huge capital. At the same time, they rake in more revenues from advertising spots when these shows become instant hits.

Aside from a slowdown in local drama productions, which is an effect of the popularity of "Koreanovelas," many dramas were prematurely axed due to low ratings.

In 2006, the Philippines was the fourth-largest buyer of Korean dramas next to Japan, China and Taiwan, according to Leng Raymundo, vice-president for program acquisitions of ABS-CBN.

Aside from "Autumn Story" and "Full House," Korean dramas that have been shown in the Philippines include "Winter Sonata," "Lovers in Paris," "Daejanggeum (Jewel in the Palace)" and "My Girl." The latest to air is "Coffee Prince" which has also been enjoying high ratings.

"Daejanggeum," according to some reports, peaked to as high as 57 percent audience share and, due to its popularity, was rerun, again earning high ratings.


The titles of some Korean dramas were also changed, as in the case of "Gung," which was aired as "Princess Hours" and "What Happened in Bali," which was shown locally as "Memories of Bali." In the case of "Autumn Story," it was initially known as "Endless Love 1" and packaged with "Winter Sonata" as one series. "Autumn Story" was later re-shown under its original title.

Korean dramas being aired on GMA-7 and ABS-CBN also battled in the ratings game, as in the case of "Full House" (GMA-7) which was pitted against "Stained Glass" (ABS-CBN) in the same time slot. Most fans switched channels often and had to quit watching "Stained Glass" during the last episode of "Full House."

Many fans, however, prefer to watch the dramas in their original form, getting these from various sources like pirated copies or downloading from the internet. They say that watching the dubbed version can be annoying as not only the characters' names are translated, but even the music has been changed. The networks use local singers to sing the theme song of the dramas to better market them to the Filipino audience so hardcore fans resort to pirated copies, buying the original online or asking friends in Korea to buy for them.

The popularity of these Korean stars has also turned them into overnight superstars in the Philippines, where most stars these days come from reality-based shows. Stars that have come to visit the country include Lee Dong-gun, better known to his Filipino fans as Martin, the name adapted by his character for the local version of "Lovers and Paris"; Kwon Sang-woo, who even opened a branch of The Face Shop, a Korean beauty store, in Manila; and Lee Dong-wook of "My Girl."

Kelly recalls running alongside a bus carrying Kwon Sang-woo during his Manila visit, ignoring the danger of being run over.

But Kelly, like many fans, was also not about to wait out her life for their idols to visit the country. Tours to Korea became very popular. Last year, Kelly and her friends went on a "Koreanovela" tour that included visiting locations of the dramas "Spring Waltz" and "Princess Hours."

"What really made me decide to visit Korea is the 'Spring Waltz' drama. The sceneries were so lovely that I dreamt of visiting the place. I never knew that it would really come true," she says.

One of the highlights of their trip was seeing famous Korean director Yoon Suk-ho in person when they visited the "Four Seasons House," a joint project of the Seoul government and Yoon's production company. The tourist attraction features the sets of "Autumn Story," "Winter Sonata," "Summer Scent" and "Spring Waltz."

"That trip was really so worth it," says Kelly, whose group did not follow the itinerary provided by their package tour, but instead opted to discover Korea on their own. "Going to places that we've only seen in some of our favorite drama series and movies, to be able to personally see the places where they shot the dramas, see and touch the stuff they used and even talk to some people who were there when they were shooting, was just overwhelming."

In 2003, Nina dreamt of going to Korea to see her favorite stars up close. She realized that dream in 2005 when she got an offer to work in Seoul. But not before turning down another job offer in Taiwan.

But nothing could perhaps be more extreme than Paola, a journalism student, joining an exchange program and ending up specializing in engineering. She explained that the program she got accepted to was for industrial management and, as a result, she did not earn any credits for her studies.

Not that it bothered her. She says that it was the perfect chance for her to go and see Korea, the land of her favorite boyband TVXQ (Dongbangsingi).

Korea, she says, is a "mecca" for any K-pop fan. "Seeing the artists in person performing onstage, hearing their songs and seeing their faces on magazines and television... being in Korea was a dream come true," she says, adding that she loved the experience of being among K-pop fans.

The highlight of her trip was joining a TVXQ fan event, where she was the only foreign fan. Paola got to see her idols up close and even had her picture taken with them. It was, as she says, a once-in-a-lifetime chance that not every fan gets to experience, and the perfect way to cap her Korean dream.

By Yasmin Lee G Arpon
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