dzof.org



What happened to drunk malays on film?

Watching Keluarga 69 on Astro Prima, and I see a drunk P. Ramlee walking back to face an upset father at home. It's played to comic effect, but the comedy is more in the argument between father and son, rather than a stumbling drunk not being able to make sense of his situation or environment. In other words, the drinking is bad

Could we do a scene like this these days without a character saying "Astarfirllahulazeem..."? Why has a moral imperative seeped into our entertainment?

I glanced over yesterday's headlines on PAS wanting to establish Hudud laws in Terengganu. Maybe I'm just a middle-class urbanite stuck far away from the realities of Kuala Terengganu, but it smacks of politics of the worst sort - we say what we say because it'll win us support.

Is this what has happened to the Malaysian film industry? When maybe a good story was once enough, now we have to incorporate 'good' values into the scripts. Again, we say what we say because it's what we feel people expect.

I want to say, let's remember the story comes first, and let viewers decide on the morality. So there.

Labels: ,


posted on Wednesday, December 24, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Yes, let the viewers deal with the story. Our film industries, I am sure we have many talents to advance interesting stories. The facts of life would be interesting.

But then, handling problems has shifted to number two in priority. Top priority has been pointing fingers; the blame game has become the culture of the Malaysian society. Part of that society, the viewers. Blame the movies for the existence of Mat Rempit? The irony, The Fast and Furious still get a place in the Malaysian cinemas.

This affects everything and we can't move forward easily when our own society seems to be conservative. But who can shout this out to be heard?
 
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
 
Post a Comment

Contradictheory: Thoughts not expressed

The original draft for last Sunday's Contradictheory column was much longer than required 900-word limit. This was partly because I wanted to write lots about self-censorship in life in general, but mainly because there's so much of it in the entertainment industry as well.

As it was, they cut out a bit I talked about Ghost. I think it was because of space rather than of anything offensive. The paragraph was this:
Yes, it's a game of guesswork. We generally look at what has previously been allowed as a basis. Once, horror films were taboo but recently things have been different. We even did a whole series about a ghost this year, which we felt was never at any risk of being banned because, (a) Our ghost looked like Naz Rahman, who isn't scary in the least; (b) It wasn't really a horror story about the supernatural, but a love story about two people who can never be with one another.

I think all of the examples come from Popiah Pictures productions. If you want, you can try figure out which came from which. The specifics are not that important, anyway.

Other examples that I could have used, but didn't:


...and so on and so forth.

Labels: ,


posted on Tuesday, October 14, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Bikes
 
Post a Comment

I love my meat

Isn't it ironic that after I write about the perils and pleasures of eating irresponsibly, not one, but two, articles appear in my inbox about food?

The first is an article from Salon about why you should eat fat. In an interview with the author of the newly realeased Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes (I especially like the last two words), I found out that recent studies indicate that there may not be a direct link between obesity and heart attacks. It looks like my idea of the quality of your ingredients makes the difference - lamb fat and spinach chappati is fine (recipe here, scroll down almost to the end), vegetable fats are not so healthy after all (see, trans fat).

Exactly the kind of thing I would have loved to include in my article.

The second article was one about how being vegetarian shrinks brains. (It also mentions that being obese has the same negative effect, but they've only seen it demonstrated on women - fingers crossed on that one for guys, then!)

Now if you'll excuse me, I have a dinner at Prime tonight...

Labels: ,


posted on Sunday, September 28, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Do tell more. Make dining more appropriate and sensible. Save us all from unnecessary cravings.
 
... and tell us how the "being vegetarian shrinks brains" theory ties in with someone you know who lives in oxford who hasn't eaten meat since she was tiny-weeny and did OK in her exams, i think. (and if you call her an abberation, i'll tell her you said so!)
 
Post a Comment

Contradictheory: Not the wild, wild West

I know these are 'sensitive' times, but it was sheer coincidence that this week's Contradictheory article came out at the same time the arrests rolled in. I couldn't help but notice that the diligent editors at the Star edited my piece by removing the following paragraph:

We shouldn't be shutting down entire websites because of one article on it. Yes, we should charge and arrest somebody because of that article, and make him take it down if he's found guilty, but that one article does not equal the entire server. You don't know what he's going to say in other articles.


I think that it was removed more because the Multimedia and Communications Commission reinstated access to the server, so it was a little out-of-date. In fact, their reasons for doing so are pretty much in line with what I wrote in this piece: in general, you should not be arresting people based on a presumption of what they will do in the future.

It wasn't originally meant to be a piece on the law, more on how you can't depend on technology to uphold civil society. But when I started writing about Article 10 of the Federal Constitution, I started thinking about it more.

I feel that we are still a country finding our way when it comes to interpreting our Federal Constitution with respect to the original framers' intents. The number of amendments since then has just complicated matters.

I believe that the line concerning the Freedom of Speech was originally there to reflect that open debate is important for a democracy. Vox populi, vox dei, as they say. Doesn't matter what they have to say, you should just say it.

Unless, of course, you are libellous or seditious.

Some close to me (well, more than a few) do not like our Sedition Act. I think the issue is with Section 4 that says "does or attempts to do, or makes any preparation to do, or conspires with any person to do". This is very close to Minority Report's arrest by precog.

However, I do think we need to be able to react to situations where people in authority demean or denigrate others by virtue of race and religion, especially when the strong abuse the weak. Thus, sedition laws have a place.

I guess that's what I meant when I said, "laws should be about protecting the weak and giving opportunity to the disenfranchised". Whenever law is used to strengthen the position of those in power, we should monitor it very carefully and use whatever checks and balances we have at our disposal. To me, a law (or use of it) that extends the gap between the haves and have-nots is one that is not well construed or applied.

Labels: ,


posted on Sunday, September 14, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
You mentioned in your article that the Bill of Guarantees which ensures no Internet censorship is only meant for MSC-status companies.

Is it true then that MSC-status companies can access those banned websites? If not, then the Bill of Guarantees has been violated.

The Bill which ensures no censorship in the internet, applies to accessing websites as well as posting one own website. It does not state that the censorship is limited to protecting only MSC-status companies' websites.
 
You're right that if an MSC-status company finds that it can't visit a censored website, it has grounds to complain. (I wouldn't be surprised if more than a few have, in fact.)

And, yes. As I understood it, it works both ways - for sites that they visit, as well as MSC-Status companies they create. (Although I can't ever remember this question being asked in any of the press conferences!)

I always wondered what the reaction would be if a company publically specialising in online porn opened up in Cyberjaya.
 
Post a Comment

Get the maths right

I need some help from anyone who knows statistics intimately to help me understand a problem. Something in the papers today just doesn't make sense. In fact, it stinks.

I was reading the NST today when I came across the article about the problems of teaching of Maths and Science in English. There is also a PDF download of the entire study.

That article concludes that teaching Maths in English does not work because a study showed that students were having problems answering questions in English.

Problem is, I don't think the data presented in the article supports this conclusion.

(Unfortunately, the actual data in the newspaper and the one in the website differs. I don't know why that is, you just have to rely on what I present here.)

Nine sample questions were quoted in the article. They were presented to Year 5 students (about 11 years old). Two are of interest:
(From NST, 7 September 2008, page 6)
Do you see the problem? The two questions are similar, but fewer students got the answer correct for the BM version. The Bahasa Melayu version. The version that's not in English.

How on Earth can anyone conclude that they have problems when learning in English?

(That aside, they also can't add. 1077+360+108 does not equal 1564 students. I'm sure it's a clerical error, or maybe there's one student who's Lain-Lain.)

More worrying:
To me, the real problem is that the standard of maths and science in the country is low. Horrendously low. I would hope more than 95% should know their multiplication table by heart by the time they are eleven.

Of course, it's all about the sample selection. And about the control. I don't know enough about these things, so that's why I'm asking for help.

I looked at the school sample in the study. They come from all over Peninsula Malaysia from cities as well as the rural areas. I don't know if the sample taken is 'fair', but it does look comprehensive.

The questions, on the other hand, I have problems with. I focused on the Maths because that's what I have a soft spot for.
This whole thing stinks to me of doing a flawed study with flawed conclusions. I can't see how anyone could take it without huge reservations.
Naturally, I look forward to any comments you might have.

Labels:


posted on Sunday, September 07, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
I don't wanna take sides, but I think the BM answers scored bit lower cos everything they were taught was in English. Or the stuudy should find out if the schools teach in both lingos simultaneously. You must know that even Anwar Ibrahim is against this policy as "contravenes Article 152 of the Fed Constitution; eroding the role of Bahasa as a national identity."
 
I don't really mind what language the subject is taught in, but the fact is that people are arguing about the language, when the basic skills are not even there.

These are basic multiplication and division skills that should be present, regardless of language used.

The arguments presented in the study obscure this fact. They are shining the torchlight at cracks in the wall after half the house has fallen in already.
 
whatever it is, any hope of successful implementation would take a few generations, several general elections; it'd take only ONE general election to take it down, provided democratic institutions are all in place. And the signs of resistance toward the policy are everywhere; be it tacit or obvious, logic or emotional. And these come from the people who participate in our democratic system. Are the Wonder Pets on TV9, Malaysians to begin with? :P

Yet I know there are also many out there who support the policy and their kids coped with it very well. So I suggest for schools whose students can cope with the policy, CARRY ON; for those who can't...let common sense prevail.
 
Post a Comment

Things I learnt today

Busy, busy, busy day.

posted on Tuesday, August 26, 2008 - permalink
Comments: Post a Comment

Upgrading to Fedora 9: Fun in a painful sort of way

What do you do on a Sunday when you're being rattled around by a cold? Take a deep breath and upgrade your copy of Linux from Fedora 8 to Fedora 9.

(For the uninitiated, my notebook is a dual-boot, XP and Fedora. I know which one is good for my soul, but practicalities force me to straddle.)

It shouldn't have been that difficult, but the truth is that the proclamations by linux enthusiasts oversell its benefits. This is one thing I don't like about the pro-Linux guys. Oh, Linux is ready for prime-time, they say. Linux is for everyone. All hail the now-full-of-user-friendly-GUIs Linux.

Rubbish. Although I have to admit that once it's set up, it's fine. And you can set it up any way you like. But the road there...

It's like someone promised you a scenic hike through the mountains, and then you found out that actually it was trudge 12-hour through some pretty toughish terrain, and you spent all the time with your head down, slogging away.

Fortunately, the Internet is full of signposts that help guide you (the trick is figuring out which ones are wrongly posted), and yes, the view at the end of it all is pretty good.

I'm going to list the problems I had between installation and the 'final' version. This is so that others have an indication of what to expect. And so I have somewhere to fall back to the next time I have to (re-)install this darned thing...
At the end of the day, I guess everything works, but I can't honestly see a non-technical person solving these problems on their own (so I'm offering myself at RM30 per hour...).
posted on Sunday, August 24, 2008 - permalink
Comments: Post a Comment

Handbags at twenty paces, aimed at my head

So I get slammed in today's paper for being a mysoginistic chauvinistic pig. And perhaps quite rightly so for a third of them. The original article in Contradictheory was pretty harsh. But I suppose I should try to explain my end of it.

I did get some forewarning of this when a close friend of mine called me up earlier in the week and asked "were you purposely trying to be controversial?". Well, yes I was - I have lately written too many 'feelgood, dogood' articles and it was about time I shook my quilly behind a bit. But judging by the response, I probably crossed a line. Or a raging torrent of river.

Before I begin, I apologise to anybody I offended. It wasn't meant to attack anyone in particular, merely the notion that staying beautiful is a good enough reason to not try and protect yourself. In case the tone of the article wasn't clear, I was NOT seriously suggesting that people carry male escorts with them wherever they go. (Well, for some women, only if the escort is me, and it's not because I want to protect their handbags anyway.)

The intent at the beginning was to say, don't carry handbags which are easily snatched, find other ways to pocket your valuables. But with every single girl that I talked to about this, the conversation always ended at this: it'll make me look ugly. Would every woman in the world who was asked this give the same answer? I doubt it. I have a six foot tall Canadian friend who whacked someone on the head with the attacker's helmet when he tried to rob her bag. And probably because of some Canuckian proverb about something worth doing once is worth doing over and over again with gusto, he probably got hit again. I think she'd say, "I'll take my handbag and my chances, thank you very much". And good for her too.

But, everyone girl I talked to about this in those few days mentioned it. To me, you can't really be that concerned about snatch thefts if "it'll make me look ugly" is your reason to not try something to stop or avoid it. "It's impractical", or "I don't think the risk is worth the hassle", or "I enjoy the practicality a fashionable handbag affords me, and woe betide anybody who tries to come between me and my carrying purse" would all be worthy answers. Yet, I tell you this: put a stop watch in your hand, propose to a woman that they can put their things in their pockets, and you get the 'ugly' word within sixty seconds.

Well, this got me mad when I heard this. It felt like a conversation at cross-purposes. Of course it's possible to go around without a handbag, or at least only a handbag with non-valuables in it. But the impasse at which this notion would not be entertained seemed to be 'bulky pockets'. Vanity is not always a bad thing, but when it pushes practicality aside, I don't like it. I feel the same way about superstition. There may be a place for it, but not at the expense of common sense.

So am I treating women differently from men in this case? Yes. So I am chauvanistic. Do I hate women for it? No, of course not. I get frustrated and think it's silly, though. And I am a pig? I ask you to not consider my shape and size and manners at the dinner table when you ask that, and so, no.

That friend of mine who chided me earlier in the week got it right. Am I suggesting that if you don't want a motorcycle stolen, then you shouldn't drive a motorcycle? Yes, that argument stands. But I think people who have motorcycles don't necessarily have much of a choice in finding something cheap that takes them around town quickly. And the risk of getting a motorcycle stolen, although much higher than handbags, is still low, especially if you take care to lock it up properly.

There is nothing wrong in being defensive in trying to protect your property. You lock your cars and set alarms. You hold your child's hand when crossing the road. You put your valuables somewhere safe and don't carry it around on your shoulder. Makes sense to me.

Labels:


posted on Sunday, July 27, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Don't know why you feel the need to defend yourself dude. Your opinion is pretty valid.
 
Post a Comment

Notes on my current status

Just to inform all what's be going on lately...

posted on Saturday, July 26, 2008 - permalink
Comments: Post a Comment

WCIT 2008 live blogging - GAID

GAID: Global forum on acess and connectivity

UN-GAID is a committee of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. They're basically the branch of the UN that looks at the problem of narrowing the digital divide. For them to hold their annual meeting here in Kuala Lumpur is as big a deal really as WCIT, if you're concerned about the digital divide.

Today the youth take the stage. By youth, we mean young, ethusiastic guys under 30 in age.

They're presenting in an inclusive way, asking people to step up and put forward their experiences in involving youth in accessibility programs.

By the way, the sound sucks big time, which is embarrassing for a world-class seminar. It sucked in this hall yesterday too. Kudos to the presenters for just switching the mikes off and projecting thir voices.

A lot of what they're presenting on stage is about making people aware of what they do, and they bring with them a bucket load of enthusiasm. They're certainly not dry, but their pitch sometimes does increase in frequency when it doesn't look like they have the audience's full attention.

GAID is also big on discussions. They have roundtable type conversations, eight people or so, which I think is too many to have a decent back-and-forth conversation. But they do say good things.

Attending and listening to what they were discussing makes me feel that the world is coming to grip with what it means to solve the digital divide problem. The issue of gettig technology in the right places is the least of it. As important are issues of regulation, content and funding. But they have really smart people working on the problem, and that gives me hope.

Labels:


posted on Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Hi,

I'm Jules and I work at bestrank.com, a company interested in blog
advertizing. I found your blog engaging and I'm contacting you to ask if
you are interested in blog post sponsorship.

If you are interested, kindly mail back for confirmation(jules@bestrank.com).Please include your blog's URL.
Looking forward to doing business with you.

Sincerely,

Jules Viernes
BestRank.com
 
Post a Comment

WCIT 2008 live blogging - Craig Barret's presentation

I tried to post this live, but my Asus ran out of batteries. I'm posting this again.

I missed the first five minutes or so of this lecture. He's talking about accessibility to school kids with respect to technology. As you might know (or probably not), I am a big fan of improving education through the use of technology. I consider the Smart School project to be my baby, albeit one with many surrogate parents. It was a painful birth, I was elated when it first saw the light of day, but now it's a toddler, I worry at the kind of friends its making - many of them to be unhealthy influences.

He's just making the point that the price of PCs are going down, selling in Jakarta for less than USD200. This, to me, is the sub-RM1000 PC that I've been dreaming of. My ASUS Eee baby is even better, being mobile to boot. Accessibility is a big deal when you're talking about technology, because it is that that gives opportunity. As a nation, we have enough money that we could provide every teacher and student ready access to technology so that they are not wanting. I'm not saying everybody gets a PC, but able to get to it when they need it

But he's missed the cost of maintenance and support. We don't just need affordable technology, but also reliable technology. OLPC is a great example of this. You can drop it, and it's fine. You can wind it up when you have no electricity. I think it also has no movable parts. But he didn't mention it, probably because it doesn't run on Intel chips.

Instead, they have their version of it. It too is rugged, it too is versatile, but it also runs on Intel chips.

Craig Barret however made an important point; that connectivity is issue. Some statistics on connectivity:
5% africa
24% asia
21% middle east
70% US
The real limiting factor is cost.
In the US 100kbps is US 50 cents a month
Africa 80 dollars a month
sub-sahara 250 dollars a month.
In Malaysia, my theoretical 1Mbs is RM77 per month - which isn't cheap when compared to the US.

He points out that Malaysia is progressive in Wimax. I agree that it's one of the things it seems we are doing well. My question is usually how do you get the market to understand these different technologies? How do you know it won't be overrun by some new wireless kid on the block? And how will Wimax be rolled out to the rural areas, if there aren't enough customers to justify it?

The example they are suggesting is to involve private sector, and Pakistan is taken as an example.

They have the universal service fund. but the company that distributes it is based on the private sector model. They auction off remote areas, to be funded by the government, and they combine providing access to schools with the communication lines.
Auctioned four different remote areas
Government is bureaucratic.
Board of company is 50-50 govt and private sector.

This talk is pro-private sector, and private sector involvement in public sector projects is something that worries me. "Let the private sector do it," he says, but I think the government needs to keep a very close eye on things. Do you trust people whose bottom line is to make money?

Partnership is great, but it needs to be a balanced. Otherwise these guys will maximise their bottom line at your expense.

He makes the point that relevant content is important. Middle East has almost no websites, for example, despite having 5% of the population. But local content has limited reach, even if it is also more relevant for locals. I'm not completely sold on the idea that it is so crucial, when compared to educating users to be members of the world community (instead of sitting in their own cybersphere).

Tele-health, which gets medical knowledge out to the rural areas. Malaysia was in prime position to implement this, but for some reason it didn't fly as well as it could have. Limited hospitals are connecte to each other in Malaysia, but at (I think) they use the same stadards, so information can be shared by all.

He then presented Grameen, which is an organisation that tries to narrow the gap between the haves and have not. Dr Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work giving microloans to the poor (especially the women) who were otherwise rejected for loans from banks. He then did the same with handphones, leasing them out to the poor, wich they then could pay for because of the increased business they got from being able to use phones to communicate. Based on the success of that work, he now wants to extend it to narrowing the gap with respect to access to ICT.

I like the work being done here very much. This is, in fact, giving opportunity, rather than handouts - something that our Government policies should really look into.

The whole thing was wrapped up with three kids being trotted out to be introduced as students whose lives had been changed through the use of technology.. To be fair, Craig Barrett always pointed out during the presentation that good teachers matter more than technology. But the kids had prepared speeches (which were well done, but stiff), which for me is a glaring example of how prescriptive our education is sometimes. It would have been great if they were more relaxed, as they were nearer the end of the presentation.

As a reward for their efforts, each student got one of theose Intel notebooks. Which was nice of them.

But still I'm not completely cofortable with private sector involvement in schools.

Labels:


posted on Monday, May 19, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Your blog posts related to WCIT 2008 are included in Unofficial WCIT 2008 Aggregated Feed
 
Post a Comment

WCIT 2008 live blogging - PMs Opening Speech

Seeing that I have a Wireless AP here in the hall, I'm going to take advantage to blog direct from the World Congress of IT event being held here in Kuala Lumpur.

Acknowledged as the most prestigious of all IT events, it pulls in the big names in IT. It's a big deal that Malaysia is hosting the event this year, a fact I think lost on the media. Nobody is really that excited about it outside the IT industry, I think. But I may be wrong.

The PM is currently giving the opening keynote speech, but this isn't his first contact with WCIT. He has spent the last few days involved with the International Advisory Panel (IAP), and I would like to think that the things discussed then will trickle through to WCIT. Anyway, this was the question I asked at the press conference, but didn't get much of an answer from the delegates.

One thing that's struck me about this opening ceremony are the number of kids involved. Schoolchildren sang a song (Paul Moss would say "pitchy", but Paula would say "beautiful), and schoolchildren held the PMs hands leading him up to the stage. Not great idea, it looked like a genial grandfather being coddled by his grandchildren, but Pak Lah explained, it was about how the youth of today is leading the generation of their forefarthers into the 21st Century.

Nevertheless, the opening speeches are predictable and pedestrian.

He has just announced the National Broadband iniative to increase broadband penetration to 50% by 2010 from 5% last year. Haven't we been trying to do this for the last five years?

"We are commited to facilitate more home-grown companies to be world-class" or something like that. What I say is, Show us the money. Again, this has been aroud for years, but why is progress slow? Or perhaps it's just deceptively so because the success stories are made by the quiet ones. Not everbody can be like Tony Fernandez.

Wireless KL is also mentioned again. Good concept, let's see the implementation before we applaud.

Aha. He has just mentioned that technology-based application with combined advances in agriculture, etc. can help solve the food crisis. We know what he likes and favours.

He has just announce smartcard technology will be used to control subsidies for petrol for certain segments of society. It sounds like the decision has been made This will be a ground for debate amongst some, I think.

Labels:


posted on Monday, May 19, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
hey!! out of curiousity, how do you find blogging in the hall? for those who are not so lucky to be there, keep posting!
 
bravo! looking forward for more fresh alternative views...
 
dzof, pm said 15% not 50% *lolz*! haih, malaysian accent like dat one. :P
 
Dang... I thought that 50% was a little on the optimistic side...
 
Post a Comment

Ghost Episode 2 - Notes

The recap makes it surprisingly clear what the first episode is about. In fact, we probably don't even need to spend 40 minutes telling a story. Just watch the recaps.

The story opens with Eza having breakfast and Zack reading the papers. Just like your average happy family, where the girl eats quietly, and the guy complains about how little press he's getting now that his dead. Quite coincidentially, as it's apt to happen on TV, Eza gets an email with - shock, horror, gasp - revealing photos of Zack with a school girl. Eza, trying quite cooly to tell Zack off (and yet not quite suceeding), says, "You nak sangat cerita pasal you".

Finally, the intro titles. Written by Douglas Lim, sang by Chelsia Ng (with Douglas Lim giving... colour). I thought it was quite nice that it told a story of nobody (except the little boy) being able to see Zack, and then he bumps into Eza and their lives changed. However, I miss the good ol' TV titles of the 80's, when we used to insert action scenes between the actors names, like the A-Team and Blue Thunder and Airwolf and have music pumping at full wattage through the speakers. I can but dream.


Zack continues to deny that it is him in the photos, because it doesn't look like his body. I'm sure the female population out there is whispering, "take off that damn shirt and prove it to us". Instead, cowardly Zack just says that that guy on the video is fat. Hey, if that guy is fat, then I, along with most guys that enjoy the occasional nasi lemak, are in some serious trouble. And there's the matter of the birthmark.

David Tan appears on TV, denouncing these photos and promoting his new movie at the same time: Impak Kuat, starring "Jack Imran". When Zack sees David, he suddenly realises that these photos were taken in David's bedroom. Which he has seen. Because, he's been there. During parties. With lots of hot chicks about. Which is just a coincidence, I'm sure. David, it seems, has a motive to do this, because Zack fooled around with the producer's ex.

Eza meets up with Julie, who's nattering on about the latest gossip in the industry and how Eza should move on after Adzam - two days after the breakup. Zack is just being plain annoying.

Zack is in the girl's bathroom with Eza. Strangely enough, Eza is okay with this. Eza explains that she is a gossip writer. Coincidentially, her editor calls up to say that Eza needs to meet her deadline, with a story. Eza is persuaded by Zack to tell her editor that the photos of Zack are fake, and that she'll come up with a story.

Back at home, Eza and Zack discuss on how they are going to get into David's bedroom. Zack says it's easy, in the sense that it's easy women that David loves. Eza just needs to go in and persuade him. Eza protest that her goods lie above the neck and not below, but Zack shows her what kind of clothes she needs to wear.

Eza walks out of the lift in David's office, uncomfortable with the clothes that are too tight. She auditions for David Tan, and although she is clumsy at first, she is coached by Zack and ends up giving a performance that is... well... it's sexy, at least for David Tan. He invites her to his party.

Julie comes by Eza's place with a boy in tow. She's meant to be there to help Eza dress up for Jimmy's party, but she seems more interested trying to foist her date upon Eza. Eza is a little shocked at this, but not as much as Zack when he sees how much Eza's transformed after her makeover.

Eza and Zack turn up at the party. It's a veritable who's who of KL social life, including Sham - Zack's biggest rival in all ways: films, publicity and, of course, girls. Zack leads Eza to David Tan's bedroom.

The duo enter David Tan's bedroom. How they just walk in without anyone stopping them, I have no idea. They snoop around and discover a hidden camera, aimed straight at the bed. Suddenly, they are interrupted by Sham walking in with some pretty young thing. Honestly, with this much traffic around, you might as well hang a red lantern outside and sell tickets for the show. As Sham is getting it on (or 'on down' or 'it up' - I never swing with the slang too much), Zack notices that he has a birthmark just like the guy on the video.

We're back at the party, where David Tan makes Jimmy give his two cents worth of Zack. He's reluctant, but he goes on to say wihtout him I'd be no one, nobody can replace him, let's party!


Aha. The Datin. Cheng-cheng-cheng. I wonder if anybody remembered her from episode one.
Yasmin previously acted in a teledrama called Nasi Lemak Dina in which Ping was involved in as Exec Producer or something (I didn't really understand how it all worked). She has large eyes which are pretty. These two statements are unrelated.

Jimmy slinks away with Sham. They do the dirty deal behind the scenes - "I'll make you bigger than Zack ever was". Between Sham in someone's private bedroom, and Zack's ex-manager and his biggest rival, you'd think somebody would have noticed them slinking away. Obviously a lot of slinking in the 'away' direction must happen in KL celebrity parties.

Datin Faizura runs into the bathroom, tearing up. Zack! You bastard! Why did you have to die?
Either she must really love him, or we have a case of schizophrenia coming up. So she's not a prime suspect, but she's 'involved'. Hell, who isn't?

Maybe Farouk. He just jumps into Eza's path to rescue her from David Tan. Only thing I'd have to say to Eza is, "What's a guy like that going to a party like this without a date?". Probably looking for a date himself, that's what.

Meet Adzam. And his new girlfriend, Haflin. Surprise, Eza.

Naz talks to Eza. Eza is annoyed, because Adzam has a new squeeze. Ini pasal you lagi ke? Zack tries to consoles Eza.

Eza finally figures it out. She realises that the girl with Sham in the video knows she's being filmed. She sees that the tape is labelled 'Baby'. And by holy coincidence, they actually have Sham's handphone. That has the name 'Baby' in its contact list.

Eza arranges to meet up with Baby. Who then launches into one long exposition. So, Sham was embarrassed by Zack. David Tan was upset with Zack. It was meant to come out before Zack died, so that he would be embarrassed. But funny how life works, eh?

The end is Eza talking to us, explaining what the theme of the story is. What would we do because of love?

And then, the end after the end is the Psycho girl cutting out photos. Just a teaser to leave you a little on edge.
posted on Monday, April 07, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Boy, you're MONTHS LATE! Now we know who the psycho fat lady is and what she looked like :P
 
Post a Comment

Now I'm international!

Some of you may have noticed that I have been promoting Ghost a little. I have no shame. I freely admit that. I even wrote that down in a national newspaper column. But in fact, the column wasn't really about television, or about the business of writing; it was about the serious business of how racism limits both opportunities for employers, and for the general public. I contrast that with the hiring policy of Popiah Pictures, and of how every one of different races just get down to the business of doing good work. They even gave it a nice title: A ghostly glimmer of hope. Positive, forward thinking, optimistic.

I guess I must have hit a chord or something, because guess what I see in a newspaper when I'm in Singapore? My name, and bits of my article on page A9 of Monday's issue of My Paper. It's strategically placed right above a piece about how Pak Lah's declining popularity, including the issue of race relations. What headline does my piece get? Why should ethnicity still matter - on Malaysian job opportunities. To me, this headline has a slightly different spin on it - it sounds like I'm complaining about the situation. Well, surely the article will put them right, right?

Erm. Perhaps not. Because in transferring the article, they also edited out all references to the TV show and to Popiah Pictures. As a result, the tone is a little more negative - a complaint without a balm to soothe it.

Don't get me wrong. I'm very happy to now be internationally syndicated. I didn't even know it was happening. I'm flattered like a bemused pancake under a steamroller. And I'm very comfortable with how the editing team at the Star have treated me. It's just that others who read My Paper might get the wrong impression of what I think.

At least 'Dzof Azmi' is a unique Googlable phrase.

Labels: ,


posted on Wednesday, February 06, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
Can you quickly come up with your posts for eps2 and 3 of Ghost, now that u can wiew them online while u're abroad?

BTW, check out http://ms.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost and help fill up missing cast info ;)
 
No need to be ashamed :) It's quite good - trying to catch as many episodes as I can - and I admit I'm getting quite a crush on nazrudin.
 
hmm..
i can't seem to locate what your blog is REALLy about.
maybe i'll read through it again later.
Anyways, thanks for stopping by my blog!
 
Post a Comment

Notes for Ghost Episode 1

For those of you who have not seen the program yet, 8TV has been generous enough to put up episodes on their website. This is a Good Thing, and I am grateful to whomever in 8TV it was who came up with this policy. (Incidentally, because I am currently out of the country, even I haven't had a chance to see it on Malaysian TV yet!)

Well, I know there were some people out there who liked reading the notes I did for Realiti, so I'll try to do the same for Ghost. However, because I was not as involved in this show, they'll be a little more sketchy, and more from the point of the viewer - less insight, more outside.

The number one thing I worry about when I first saw the pilot was: Is it clear enough? Is it clear what is happening in the episode, and does it unambiguously set up what is going to happen in the rest of the series? A very clever man once said that if your third act doesn't work, the problem is in the first act. Similarly, if you can't relate what happens in the final episode with what happens in the first... well, damnit, we should have rewrote the first.

Or at least make it clearer. So, the notes below are spoilers which explain what's going on in the episode.

So, I hope you're satisfied with the first episode, and that it sets you up for the rest. I think I've outlined above all the clues in the episode that relate to the murder. Please note that (as far as I'm concerned) this episode already introduces three potential suspects, excluding Eza or the possibility of a suicide/accident.

However (and this is important), Ghost is not one of these shows where all the clues have been laid out before hand and viewers will be able to figure out whodidit straight away. There are a lot of stories to tell, and although there are a few things you can guess at, there are also herrings of the red (or at least pinkish) variety. In fact, anyone who can even guess at the actual murder before episode 7 or 8 is possibly psychic or has inside knowledge of Ping's brain.

Labels: , ,


posted on Monday, February 04, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
"Ghosts actually affect the world around them, but do so unconsciously. It's when they want to deliberately interact with physical objects that things become difficult."

OK. I'll accept that.
 
One word.

Interesting!!
 
hi!m a big fan of the series.i really love the intro song.plz give me some details.n i cant access to the past episodes..is there any way i can get the whole series?thnx!
 
Wow! Huraian yang menarik.

Aku juga sedang membuat ulasan bagi musim ke-2.
 
Post a Comment

Thoughts on 8TV's new series: Ghost

If Dzof has peeked from under the anonymous bedcovers of the Internet, it must mean that he has something he thinks is important to say. Well, true:



Yes, Popiah Picture's latest production, Ghost, is making its debut this Sunday. As far as involvement goes, I feel I had less of a hand in this one than I did in Realiti, for all sorts of reasons, but mainly because I tried to jam too many things into one day.

The trailer above should give you a good idea what the show is about, but I wanted to write a little about the history of the show, and what guided us through its various machinations and incarnations.

Truth be told, the very initial idea came from Ping, and I never really questioned how it really started, but we seemed to agree that it should be two things: (1) A detective whodunnit - who killed Zack Imran?; and (2) A love story about what happens when want what we can't have.

For the detective part of things, I remember that we used Veronica Mars a lot as an example, and a lot of how clues are revealed as part of the larger story arc is basically either setting up or eliminating suspects. The final solution of how Zack died was settled even before episode two was written. So, no Sashi, it wasn't a case of "the manager in the parking lot with a candlestick".

I personally worry that it may be a little complicated, but we have trust that 8TV viewers are smart enough (and weaned enough) with modern entertainment that they can figure out how things fall into place.

For the love story, this is clearly set up from the very beginning, when Eza is dumped by her boyfriend Adzam in practically the second scene of the show. If you think this is a case of will-they, won't-they, then you're right. I don't know how clearly it's articulated in the final product, but the idea is that Adzam had his own particular reasons for dumping her, and then when those reasons are turned around, he looks for reconcilliation. And, yes, in effect Zack acts as the nth party in all this.

As for the "ghost" bits... well, we didn't delve too much into it. I had an idea that Zack should reveal his powers slowly over the season, much like Clark does in Smallville, but that idea was thrown out in the end. It's a slight shame for me, because I thought it would make for a nice third story arc, jiving nicely with the rise and fall of the other two arcs, but hey... I'm just a writer.

So, although on the surface it looks like we moved away to something more thriller-based, at the end of the day, like for most of life, it's still about love.

(AND, if you should happen to be on facebook, you can join in the fun by adding yourself to the group It's Ghost, not Hantu to keep track of the latest updates.)

Labels: , ,


posted on Thursday, January 31, 2008 - permalink
Comments:
yay veronica mars! looking fwd to the detective side, loved the vmars and the concept.
 
Ah, so you did read my email. ;)

I know who killed Zack Imran - it was Ping! And you! All of youse! Youse whacked him!

Cheryl Samad rocks! :P
 
Boo! U updated!! Congrats!!!

And, I'm very very sorry but I missed the first epi... I had everything planned, staying home to watch it but I kinda got carried away with my little thing on my own page.

Sorry lah kawan! Can you get me a recorded version or something close to it or not?!
 
i love ghost.. hehehe i mean the series yer. the lead role, cheryl and naz make a perfect combination also all the supporting roles, memang best cos the acting so natural.

credits to sumer2 yang involved in this series.. memang gempak & best :) keep it up the good works.
 
love the show soooo much. please upload in utube k, as im only depends to my laptops. nice drama. love u bang naz =)
 
Post a Comment



Google
WWW dzof.org