Friday 8 February 2013

Show Luo"s Singapore concert to be a little less showy

Show Luo’s Singapore concert to be a little less showy
By Han Wei Chou |
Posted: 08 February 2013 1427 hrs

 

 



 
 
 





SINGAPORE: Taiwan singer Show Luo revealed Thursday that his upcoming Show 2013 World Live Tour – Over The Limit concert at the Singapore Indoor Stadium will be slightly less elaborate, compared to his shows in Taipei.

The popular singer told reporters in a phone interview that he had no choice but to pull out certain segments of his March 1 concert, due to venue restrictions and safety considerations.

One segment called for Luo to perform onstage along with 124 other dancers, but will have to be modified as the concert venue in Singapore cannot accommodate them all.

A stunt where he jumps down from a height of 4.5 metres, as well as some pyrotechnic effects will also be absent from his Singapore show because of safety considerations.

Luo expressed that he wanted to manage people’s expectations as they may have read reports about his concerts, which were based on his performances in Taipei, and expect to see an identical concert here.

“I want to be honest about this.

“Even though I’m a little disappointed, I have to respect the rules,” said Luo.

Aside from clearing the air about his upcoming concert, Luo also shed light on his plans this year.

The singer said he hopes to appear in an idol drama in 2013, after working on Stephen Chow’s “Journey to the West – Conquering the Demons” last year.

When asked why he had waited for so long to return to drama after 2009′s “Hi My Sweetheart”, Luo explained that it is simply because he is “very strict about the script”.

“I don’t want audiences to feel that I am always taking on similar roles,” said Luo, pointing out that the scripts he had received so far often had the same feel as “Hi My Sweetheart”.

-CNA/ha

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Show Luo"s Singapore concert to be a little less showy

Thursday 7 February 2013

Taiwan cloud music service to launch in Singapore, Malaysia

KKBOX, a cloud-based music service provider from Taiwan, will officially launch an unlimited pay-per-month service in Singapore and Malaysia this March, as part of expansion plans into Southeast Asia.

The company wants to grow its footprint beyond Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan to other Chinese language music markets, said KKBOX managing director Alex Wang, in a report by Taiwan’s Central News Agency (CNA) on Thursday.

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KKBOX was founded in Taiwan in 2004 and was acquired by Japanese mobile operator KDDI in 2010.

Free registration for the trial service has already started in Singapore and Malaysia in January this year. Once formally launched next month, the music streaming service will likely cost S$9.90 (US$7.99) and MYR 14.9 (US$4.81), he added.

KKBOX was founded in Taiwan in 2004, and currently has more than 10 million songs in its library. The company is currently majority owned by Japanese mobile phone operator KDDI which holds 67.5 percent stake. The KKBOX’s management team holds 21.4 percent and Taiwan smartphone maker HTC holds 11.1 percent, the report said.

According to the company, when KKBOX launched its music service in Hong Kong in November 2009, it gained about 200,000 registered users within the first year.

Wang said he expects similar first-year growth in Singapore and Malaysia. The company has increased its digital music database in both countries by partnering local music artists and publishers, he noted.

“Local partners are very important to us. We have been in talks with several telecom operators and banks there because they have a wider customer base and mature payment systems,” Wang pointed out.

Wang added that KKBOX will also target Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines as part of the aim to become the leading music streaming service provider in Asia.

In Japan, KKBOX also plans to launch its own music service in March that would introduce more Chinese-language songs in the country, the report said. The company already offers a pay-per-month cloud music service, called “LISMO unlimited”, for mobile subscribers at 1,480 yen (US$15.84) since June 2011. The service was a partnership with operator KDDI and RecoChoku, Japan’s largest digital music content provider.


Taiwan cloud music service to launch in Singapore, Malaysia

Rangers vow to fight Singapore firm"s debt claim

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  • Rangers vow to fight Singapore firm"s debt claim

    Cerebra Technologies to acquire Singapore-based Cimelia Resource Recovery ...


    Cerebra Technologies to acquire Singapore-based Cimelia Resource Recovery ...

    Soccer scandal shows darker side of regimented Singapore


    SINGAPORE |
    Thu Feb 7, 2013 4:08pm EST

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Singapore has long cultivated a reputation as a clean, safe and regimented place to live and do business in a turbulent region, but the apparently major role of Singaporeans in a global soccer match-fixing scandal shows a seamy underside often out of view.

    The soccer scam, graft cases against high-level officials and revelations that some bank traders colluded to manipulate currency rates run contrary to the image of an orderly society, well-swept streets and manicured greenery in a place dubbed “Disneyland with the death penalty” by writer William Gibson.

    There was no particular reason for match-fixers to be based in Singapore, other than some of the suspects happened to live in the wealthy city-state, said Shashi Nathan, a leading criminal lawyer, noting that the syndicates worked in private and across borders using mobile phones and computers.

    “I’m on the one hand surprised that this has come out of Singapore. On the other hand, even with its heavy regulation, we have to keep in mind that the nature of the offence is very, very hard to detect,” said Nathan, a director at INCA Law LLC.

    “The mistake people make is, because Singapore is so clean and regulated, there’s no crime. If so, I’d be out of a job.”

    Singapore – a major financial centre whose long-ruling government favors an investor-friendly, technocratic approach – is ranked the fifth least-corrupt country in the world by Transparency International and regularly tops global lists for the ease of doing business.

    Murders are rare, gun crime is nearly non-existent and drug possession of any kind is a serious offence leading to jail time and sometimes lashings with a rattan cane. Drug traffickers face the death penalty by hanging.

    But Singapore still has its share of scandal and vice.

    An opposition party won a by-election last month after the speaker of parliament quit over an extramarital affair, one of several recent embarrassments for the government.

    Others include the arrest of the civil defense chief and the head of the police anti-drug unit on corruption charges last year after the men allegedly had sexual relations with female employees of vendors in exchange for help in influencing the awarding of government contracts.

    SEX, SOCCER AND VANDALISM

    In the Geylang district, licensed prostitutes from China, Thailand and other Asian countries work in brothels that are technically illegal but obvious in their purpose with red lights and flashing signs.

    An unlicensed and illegal sex trade is rampant in doorways and on street corners elsewhere in Geylang, at the notorious Orchard Towers complex known as “Four Floors of Whores” on one of Singapore’s glitziest shopping streets, in numerous massage parlors and in explicit online ads.

    Gambling is legal at two casino resorts that opened in 2010, at horse races and on soccer matches at state-run outlets but loan-sharking is a problem and, as the global soccer scandal shows, match-fixing has deep roots in Singapore.

    Investigators in Europe said this week they suspected a criminal syndicate in Singapore was at the heart of a bribery scam to affect the outcomes of hundreds of matches at the club and national level over several years.

    Authorities have stressed they are cooperating with the Europeans and take the problem of match-fixing seriously but have been tight-lipped about the details and extent of their investigation.

    The Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau said “stern action has been taken” in eight match-fixing cases it has investigated since 2005, including the jailing last year of two South Koreans who used to play in Singapore’s S-league.

    “In all, 11 individuals were charged and convicted in court,” the anti-corruption bureau said on Thursday.

    “One prominent case in 2007 involved the Liaoning Guangyuan Football Club … where the footballers were found guilty of having received bribes from the general manager of the club to influence the result of the matches. All involved players were eventually charged and dealt with.”

    In sentencing a mainland Chinese player in the Liaoning Guangyuan case to seven months in jail, the judge warned of the dangers to Singapore from match-fixing.

    “Soccer is a sport with a wide following,” District Judge Toh Yung Cheong wrote in February 2008. “Offences of this nature have attracted much public attention lately. If left unchecked, they are capable of tarnishing the image of Singapore.”

    The dangers are real for Zaihan Mohamed Yusof, who has reported extensively on match-fixing for The New Paper tabloid. He is concerned for his safety after his car was vandalized four times and over some “strange sightings of people” at his door.

    “The vandalism only started when we announced Singapore was a hub for match-fixing in about May 2011,” he said. “It could be coincidental. It could be kids. But other neighbors have not had cars vandalized, just me.”

    (Additional reporting by Rachel Armstrong and Paul Carsten; Editing by Nick Macfie)


    Soccer scandal shows darker side of regimented Singapore