Vietnam Deel 2

Preserved body, organ exhibition raises eyebrows in Ho Chi Minh City

One hundred and thirty-one preserved bodies and organs are currently on display in a months-long exhibition at the Youth Culture House By Uyen Nguyen / Tuoi Tre News Contributor

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This photo combination shows two preserved body samples on display at an exhibition in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Tuoi Tre


A months-long exhibition of preserved human bodies and organs in Ho Chi Minh City is receiving a mixed reception from audiences as well as a call for review from Vietnam’s culture watchdog. The expo, “Mystery of the Human Body,” runs from June 21 to December 31 at the Youth Culture House in District 1, with permission for the event granted by the municipal Department of Culture and Sports.

However, the arts, photography, and exhibition department of the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism sent a dispatch to the Ho Chi Minh City culture department on Wednesday, calling for a review of the event to be submitted by July 10. The order came after the exhibition was criticized as being too creepy for the public, despite feedback from attendees regarding it as “amazing” and “humanistic.”

According to organizers, the exhibition aims to allow visitors the opportunity to discover the mysteries of the human body, in terms of body structure, pathology, physiology and anatomy, through the vivid specimens of real bodies and organs preserved with advanced technology.
A total of 131 specimens preserved with plastination, a technique involving replacing water and fat in human bodies by certain plastics, are on display.

Plastination yields specimens that can be touched, do not smell or decay, and even retain most of the properties of the original sample.

The exhibition also juxtaposes organs of smokers with non-smokers and alcoholics with non-drinkers to raise health awareness and encourage healthy lifestyles within the local community.

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Visitors watch preserved human organs at an exhibition in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Tuoi Tre


Scary and graphic
Pham Thi Kim An, a District 7 resident, toured the exhibition earlier this week and left the venue frightened. “It was scary to be among dead people. I was particularly freaked out by babies being kept in liquid-filled glass jars and lying tables,” she told Phap Luat Thanh Pho Ho Chi Minh (Ho Chi Minh City Law) newspaper. An said that after her own experience, she does not have any plans to take her two sons to the exhibition. “I’m afraid they will have nightmares after seeing all of these things,” she declared.

While “Mystery of the Human Body” is open to the public, An shared her belief that it isn not for the faint-hearted, young children, and pregnant woman who could be psychologically affected by the preserved bodies and organs. “The exhibition would have been better off being viewed by students or for medical research purposes rather than being open to the public,” she concluded.

Huynh Dao Thanh Viet, who traveled from Thu Duc District to visit the exhibition, was more concerned about the origins of the body samples. “I heard that these samples are from South Korea, but I’m still wondering if those body donors, or their parents and family members, knew that the preserved bodies would one day put on public display?” Viet said.

Viet added the exhibition seems to be more about attracting people’s curiosity than providing knowledge about the human body. “It would have been more suitable to incorporate lessons about life and death into the exhibition rather than just displaying human bodies and organs,” he underlined.

Impressive and amazing
But not all visitors left the exhibition with such negative impressions.

“This is the first time I have seen an exhibition of human bodies,” Tran Thi Hong Phuc, a visitor from Tan Binh District, exclaimed. Phuc praised the organizers for displaying the preserved bodies in positions, such as cycling and throwing discs.“The organs don’t look scary at all,” she said.

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Visitors watch preserved human organs at an exhibition in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Tuoi Tre


Phuc said the display of visual images of the human body and organs helped her to understand what really happens inside the body, something she had only previously seen in books. “I was impressed and amazed at how well the blood vessels, treated with the plastination technology, were woven into each other,” she said. “I was quite surprised with the samples of fetuses from a few weeks to eight months, it made me treasure the sanctity of life.”


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Een paar zinnen vielen mij op: Met name
“The order came after the exhibition was criticized as being too creepy for the public”
en
“I was particularly freaked out by babies being kept in liquid-filled glass jars”
heb ik hoofdschuddend zitten lezen.

Commentaar wat mij betreft overbodig.

En ongetwijfeld was het zien van “The exhibition also juxtaposes organs of smokers with non-smokers” voor het onnoemelijk aantal rokers hier in Vietnam ook iets teveel van het slechte… O-)


Morgen daarom het –misschien niet eens zo- onverwachte vervolg.
 
En dan te bedenken dat wat zij s'avonds op hun bord hebben, precies diezelfde organen zijn... hoe bedoel je hypocriet....
 
Ho Chi Minh City temporarily closes controversial expo of ‘plastinated corpses’

The review by the municipal culture watchdog found out that the exhibitor had some violations upon organizing the event By Bao Anh / Tuoi Tre News

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A visitor watches a preserved body sample at an exhibition in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Tuoi Tre


Ho Chi Minh City’s culture watchdog has decided to put a months-long exhibition of preserved human bodies and organs to a temporary halt after a review, conducted following the mixed reception the event received from audiences, found multiple violations from its organizer.

Khai Thien – Big Bang Co., the organizer of the “Mystery of the Human Body” expo, was informed of the temporary closure order from the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Culture and Sports on Friday night. The event, initially scheduled to take place at the Youth Culture House in District 1 from June through December, has been requested to temporarily close from Saturday, pending “more specific announcement” from the culture department.

The Ho Chi Minh City culture department has reviewed the organizing of the exhibition following a directive from the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, after the event was criticized as being too creepy for the public.

It was the Ho Chi Minh City culture department that granted the license for the expo, which aims to allow visitors to discover the mysteries of the human body, in terms of body structure, pathology, physiology and anatomy.

A total of 131 specimens preserved with plastination, a technique involving replacing water and fat in human bodies by certain plastics, are on display in the project co-organized by Khai Thien – Big Bang and its South Korea partners.

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The joint review, conducted by inspectors from the municipal health department and the city’s Forensic Medicine Center, discovered several violations from the organizers. Particularly, while the organizers stated in its license application that the expo would be held from November 1, 2017 to September 1, 2018, it actually attempted to keep the event open from June 21 to December 31, 2018.

The organizers also said only plastic samples would be on display, while they in fact showcased real human bodies and organs treated with plastination, according to the Department of Culture and Sports.

In addition to the temporary suspension of the exhibition from July 7, the department also requested the exhibitor to provide legal records by competent authorities to prove the origins and materials of the human and organ specimens. Earlier, an official from the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism said at a press conference on Thursday that the exhibition is licensed and would not be halted “just because of public pressure.”

Samples of human organs and bodies preserved with plastination can be touched, do not smell or decay, and even retain most of the properties of the original sample.

While many visitors found the samples, including babies being kept in liquid-filled glass jars or adults in cycling and throwing-disc positions, creepy, others praised the exhibits for helping them to know more about the human body and treasure the sanctity of life.



Bron: TEMPLATE | HOME


Tja…

Wat mij hier dan weer opvalt is dat men de oren laat hangen naar een paar klagers, die blijkbaar op school niet hebben opgelet tijdens de biologielessen en die daarom volstrekt natuurlijke zaken creepy vinden.

Waarom geen groot waarschuwingsbord bij de deur wat met kan verwachten, zodat dit soort beperkte lui geen reden hebben om te klagen.

Mischien ook een paar flessen drank met een complete slang erin naast de baby’s zetten? Zie voor de slang De 9 vreemdste alcoholische dranken in de wereld | Skyscanner punt 5.

Zoek de verschillen… O-)
 
Maar voor mij –en bijna iedereen op internet- gaat dit over een ter dood veroordeelde. En dan vind ik het toch “wat minder geschikt voor de gelegenheid”.

De originele versie van Brel gaat over een verbitterde, stervende man die nog een sneer geeft naar de minnaar van zijn vrouw - er wordt in het midden gelaten of zijn dood een keuze was of niet.

De latere versie van Terry Jacks is anders, maar geeft ook geen uitsluitsel over de doodsoorzaak.

Als de Vietnamezen aannemen dat het gewoon over iemand die sterven gaat handelt (wellicht interpreteren zij de tekst zo) dan is dat toch prima?
 
Video of Vietnamese couple receiving wedding money via payment device goes viral

The bride and groom also allowed guests to scan a QR code to transfer the money in the blink of an eye By Bao Anh / Tuoi Tre News

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The couple waits for a guest to type in the amount of money in this screenshot captured from the video.


Giving the bride and groom with money is part of the Vietnamese wedding culture, and a couple in Hanoi has added a touch of technology to the practice, accepting the gift via a payment device and a scannable QR code in lieu of conventional envelopes.

A video has surfaced on Facebook earlier this week of the one-of-a-kind wedding, where a couple happily instructed guests to send them wedding money via a mobile payment terminal with their bank cards, or scan a QR (Quick response) code with their smartphones. One only needed to type in the amount of money on the groom’s smartphone and insert their card to the payment device, according to the video seen by Tuoi Tre News. The groom would then process the next steps of payment on the same smartphone and have the guests sign on the device’s screen to complete the transaction. The couple was standing next to a table, where two cards with the QR code were placed for guests to scan with their smartphones and complete the money gifting process in less than 30 seconds.

As per the tradition, guests will place cash in envelopes and put them in a box at the entrance to the wedding venue. Many guests to the ceremony were apparently surprised by the new but strange way of giving the money gift, while some were confused, not knowing how to use the payment device.

Even though the video only went viral on the Internet earlier this week, the bride and groom, Tu and Ha, told local media that their wedding actually took place in March. They also confirmed the authenticity of the video.

According to a friend of the bride and groom, the couple only wanted to make use of the payment device equipped in their shop on the wedding day, believing that their friends, most of who work in the financial sector, would find the payment method familiar.

In addition, the young couple also prepared a wedding card box for those who wanted to follow the traditional way of gifting.

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A guest scans the QR code to gift money to the bride and groom in this screenshot captured from the video.


The footage has suddenly attracted hundreds thousands of views on several Facebook pages in the past few days.Many social media users have showed support to the use of technology in such a traditional practice for its quickness and convenience. Some even revealed that they already have a habit of electronically transferring money to the bride and groom before the wedding, instead of bringing the envelopes. But many also said that the scene of people using their cards to make a transaction before entering the wedding venue makes it look like they are paying for a meal.

Critics say the Hanoi couple has ‘commercialized’ their wedding, and “it is quite odd that the bride and groom will immediately know how much the guest gives them with such a way of gifting,” one Facebook user commented. The viral video also reminded people of another clip of guests swiping their cards to transfer money gifts at the wedding of a Chinese couple, which also caused controversy on social media.



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In FredVN in "Vietnam" en FredVN in "Vietnam" staat beschreven, hoe de “normale” gang van zaken is en dat de bedragen min of meer vaststaan en ook (achteraf) bekend zijn.

Mijn keus zou dit trouwens niet zijn.
 
Hello,
Am Mr Thanh . Am a man with a great testimony I live in Viet Nam.
Awesome article! I want people to know just how good this information is in your article. It’s interesting, compelling content. Your views are much like my own concerning this subject. I Love to read your blog, Waiting for more updates and I already read your recent posts. Thanks for sharing this wonderful article with us.
 
Watertoren 1

Al eerder sprak ik de wens uit dat ik graag nog eens wat foto’s vanaf de top van de watertoren zou willen maken. Die wens is een stuk sneller in vervulling gegaan dan ik had verwacht.

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Ik ging eigenlijk die kant op om i.v.m. wat problemen met mijn camera opnieuw testfoto’s te maken vanaf dezelfde plek als de vorige keer om zo wat beter te kunnen vergelijken. Het was wel zwaar bewolkt.

Die toren was een toegift. Nu was er alleen een bewaker. Aardige vent. Oh, en de twee al eerder genoemde keffertjes als security team.

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Het kostte eigenlijk geen enkele moeite. Gewoon vragen ehh… wijzen of ik naar boven mocht en ik kreeg onmiddellijk toestemming.

De ingang van de toren met alleen een grendel aan de binnenkant. Er valt dan ook niets te jatten daarbinnen. O-)

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~...

... discovered several violations from the organizers. ... would be held from November 1, 2017 to September 1, 2018, it actually attempted to keep the event open from June 21 to December 31, 2018.

The organizers also said only plastic samples would be on display, while they in fact showcased real human bodies and organs treated with plastination, according to the Department of Culture and Sports.

In addition to the temporary suspension of the exhibition from July 7, the department also requested the exhibitor to provide legal records by competent authorities to prove the origins and materials of the human and organ specimens. Earlier, an official from the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism said at a press conference on Thursday that the exhibition is licensed and would not be halted “just because of public pressure.”
...


Tsja, ze hebben het toch echt aan zichzelf te danken. Op het moment dat je smokkelt in je aanvraag moet je niet piepen als ze vervolgens de tent sluiten vanwege het niet voldoen aan diezelfde aanvraag.

Overigens denk ik dat de 'legal records by competent autorities' het grootste probleem opleveren. Waarschijnlijk is het helemaal niet moeilijk om die documenten van Zuid Korea te krijgen (oorsprong van het tentoongestelde materiaal) echter zijn ze in Vietnam erg makkelijk met het 'niet erkennen' van de organisatie die de documenten verstrekt.

Zou me niks verbazen als een Vietnamese 'behulpzame' organisatie straks de documenten legaliseert en de expo weer open kan.
 
Watertoren 2

Het is wel een hele nauwe buis (ruwe schatting ergens tussen de 1:80 en 2 m. op basis van mijn eigen lengte) naar boven, zeker met een stel fietsschoenen met plaatjes eronder.

De voet van de toren…

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…en een blik omhoog in de toren.

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Het was helaas zwaar bewolkt en ik had verder niets bij me van fotomateriaal, alleen de camera. Maar ja, nu kon het dus niet aarzelen en die mogelijkheid meteen grijpen..

Boven op de toren heb ik een paar foto’s van de bewaker gemaakt en hem wat foto’s beloofd. Inmiddels heb ik hem een mapje gebracht met de foto’s van de afgelopen dagen + die van hemzelf.

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Het was de moeilijke klim meer dan waard.

Bij het laatste stukje bovenin, een loodrechte ladder met veel lucht onder de voeten, kwam mijn rotsklimervaring goed van pas. :+

Morgen de laatste serie vanaf het dak.
 
Watertoren 3

Het feit, dat ik onmiddellijk toestemming kreeg om naar boven te gaan betekende niet, dat de bewaker zijn taak verwaarloosde. Gedurende de gehele shoot was hij continu binnen twee meter aanwezig. Was ook altijd oplettend of hij niet in de weg liep voor een opname. Een professional.

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Dit zijn de filters, waar ik al eerder bovenop ben geweest. Het verhaal van “gewoon toestemming vragen aan iemand, die er niets over te zeggen heeft en het ook geen barst interesseert. Hier was het een kerel, die de muur stond te schilderen.”

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AAAAHHHHGGGGRRRR!!!!

Even een slecht-nieuws-mededeling… :(

Bij gebrek aan inspiratie wil ik nog wel eens een artikel plaatsen van een Engelstalige Vietnamese nieuwssite, mits dat past binnen hetgeen ik zelf mee bezig ben of gewoon leuk en/of interessant is.

Alweer (geschat) een week of twee geleden stond er een artikel, dat ze vanwege “foutieve voorlichting” drie maanden geen nieuws mochten plaatsen. Ik had het artikel opgeslagen, maar omdat de site gewoon verder ging heb ik het artikel maar weer verwijderd.

Te snel. :(

Een paar dagen geleden stond er een mooi groen scherm met de tekst:

“Tuoi Tre News is down for maintenance. Thank you for reading us! We hope for your continued support. We'll get back on October 17, 2018.See you then!”

Dus toch.

Mijn commentaar: helaas, alleen terras en Dalat-wijn.

Ik heb nog een paar artikelen op voorraad maar dan is mijn hulpbron voorlopig opgedroogd. Het zal ongetwijfeld betekenen dat er onderwerpen wat meer worden uitgemolken en er niet iedere ochtend een post is. Maar ik zal mijn best doen om dan minstens een plaatje van de omgeving te tonen. O-)

Xin Loi!

Gelukkig is er ook weer wat inspiratie in aantocht: mijn geliefde Looking Forward. O-)
Binnenkort komt de halfjaarlijkse nieuwbrief weer op het forum: hij is al naar de sponsoren gestuurd. Dat is de eerste bron. Met groot nieuws: het vertrek van manager Hiep. Ik gok “dat ze meer tijd aan de kleinkinderen wil besteden”. Of deze gok juist is zal ik uiteraard laten weten, evenals mijn echte gedachten daarover.

En vanaf eind augustus worden de leerlingen weer bezocht en de reisverhalen zullen ongetwijfeld ook nu weer een bron van onuitputtelijk plezier en informatie vormen.

Tot die tijd zal ik het met mijn duimen moeten doen… :t
 
Laatst bewerkt:
Voorspoedig!
Alles zit inmiddels netjes in een kast (zwakke punt van de gemiddelde amateur O-) ), frontplaatje ervoor (ik zal dit weekend een foto maken), kwestie van kabels aansluiten (de installatie staat nog steeds boven en ik hang de kabels op om de ratten geen gelegenheid te geven) en het werkt.

Inmiddels ook een AutoHotKey-script gemaakt om de ontvangen beelden wat gemakkelijker te kunnen aanpassen. Ik zal binnenkort weer wat schrijven.
 
Turning 60 in Vietnam

I’ll be 60 years old on June 30th. So now I’m struggling to work out if I’m middle-aged, which means utterly nothing or a senior citizen, which gets you lots of goodies in Australia By Stivi Cooke / Tuoi Tre News Contributor

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Stivi Cooke (L) and a professional colleague in Ho Chi Minh City


You know you’re getting old when you use a laptop in the coffee shop instead of a smartphone.

I always thought I’d never make it pass the next seven years. So at seven I imagined in blood-soaked horror that my 14th birthday would never happen. At twenty-one, I couldn’t envisage my battle-weary survival to twenty-eight and so on.

I’ll be 60 years old on June 30th. So now I’m struggling to work out if I’m middle-aged, which means utterly nothing or a senior citizen, which gets you lots of goodies in Australia. Pretty much everything I do from now on is a bonus. But I’m not complaining – I’m not one of those “whining expats”…

They say that you get between 2 and 4 billion heartbeats in a lifetime. After that, you should contact the Queen to let her know to put that 100th birthday champers on ice. However, like most people, I’m just thrilled to have a heartbeat.

Now I’m a fat, old, jaded, colonialist expat who lives alone with his plump Vietnamese dog who refuses to obey my orders to get the beer from the fridge for me. He knows there’s no money in it for him. Pfft! But 60 in Vietnam? Fabulous. It’s pretty selfish of me to snigger on my veranda as I drink another beer and think of all the down-trodden middle class people in Australia that I left behind, still arguing about penalty rates, the state of the government and spending hours trying to get home on Australia’s rust-bucket train system. While I’m kicking back in shorts and I don’t have to do a single thing tomorrow, I’m doing quite nicely. Thanks, cheers!

But being an old foreigner in Vietnam is not quite as easy as it seems. Unlike Thailand, there’s no ‘retirement’ visa, meaning you can’t stay long-term without leaving to renew visas. If you’re married to Vietnamese, you buy land and build a house via your wife and family. You can get permanent and temporary visas for a few years which help off-set living costs and time-consuming visa runs as well. Since it’s quite hard to buy a house here (basically…you can’t), yet you can buy an apartment (confusing), the no-retirement visa makes it a lot harder, particularly for older expats to stay and savor Vietnam.

I think it’s a shame as many older retired expats contribute hugely to the work of the non-government organizations across the country and often stay for years yet despite proving their worth to the community, the paperwork doesn’t get any easier or less expensive.

Amazingly, I’m still in reasonable health. Sure, health care in Australia is great but for a retired expat, it costs a fortune to head home. We know Vietnam’s health system isn’t the best however living in Hoi An, I’m only thirty minutes from three good hospitals in Da Nang and I have Bao Viet insurance – that’s a good position. Also health insurance in Vietnam is reasonably priced for the most part.

Many of my Vietnamese friends tell me I should ‘get’ a wife to look after me when I’m older. Well…I’m too selfish for full-time relationships and I like my ‘man’s cave’ existence. I’m not gay and I adore the beauty of Vietnamese women but I’m just lazy! I blame my dog for all of this but he says that’s not plausible and I should get a life.

My eleven years here have calmed me down a lot (except the traffic) and the Vietnamese around me are fairly tolerant of my Western weirdness. So hopefully I’ll get to use a few more of those heartbeats. Dietary-wise – I’ve got into using a lot of the local herbs in my cooking and I think there’s some point to all of that. Hey, I follow trends, you know? That’s why Facebook loves me…

But the healthiest part? The young cheerful Vietnamese. Every morning when I sit down at the coffee shop, the waitering kids all giggle and smile like they’re on drugs. It’s refreshing. Last time I was in Sydney, the coffee shop staff looked like zombies with their hearts torn out by evil politicians preying on their votes. But it could have been something in the coffee and I was just imagining that…

I guess the best part of 60 in Vietnam is the feeling of leaving the rat-race. I meet a lot of older expats here doing work with charities, doing art and writing, pursuing their own dreams. I’m growing my hair again as I did when I was twenty-one. Heck I’m thinking about dyeing it pink and orange…again.

When you’re older and you do silly stuff, the great thing is nobody cares. Just do it! So to anyone thinking of retiring here – do it. It may be hard at first but ultimately it’s less stressful and a lot of fun. The adventure is no longer about status, wealth or prestige.

Why? Because living at 60 in Vietnam feels like being 21!

Even my dog agrees with that…



Bron: TEMPLATE | HOME


Vooral de opmerking bij de foto dat Stivi de linker persoon is... :+

Ik kom over een paar dagen nog even op Stivi terug.
 
No more ‘hot girls’, bikini on World Cup shows on Vietnamese TV

The ‘hot girls’ have been absent from commentary programs of VTV and the K+ emcee no longer appears in two-piece swimsuit, By Bao Anh / Tuoi Tre News

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This screenshot shows an emcee in pretty sexy bikinis in a program on Vietnamese pay TV K+.


State-run Vietnam Television (VTV) and pay TV K+ have apparently taken public opinion into serious consideration when they decided to stop having scantily–clad female guests offer ‘commentary,’ and bikini-donning emcee to host a pre-match prediction, in their respective World Cup shows, following widespread criticism.

VTV has received a groundswell of criticism for its plan to feature 32 women, who appear to have little to no knowledge of football, to its pre-, half time and post-game commentary sections during the 2018 FIFA World Cup. Many of the female guests have appeared on air in revealing outfits, and some of them even made ridiculous remarks about football. Confusion seems to be a common theme amongst VTV viewers, who can’t help but getting confused by the bland and outdated commentary offered by what social media users dubbed ‘hot girls.’

Similarly, the satellite television station K+ missed the mark when they chose to air a pre-match program featuring a seal which predicts the score of each match, alongside an emcee, who appeared in some episodes in her miniscule bikini. Both the programs have been heavily criticized as using women to draw attraction of viewers to increase ratings.

No hot girls, no bikini
In the wake of the controversy surrounding its World Cup program, VTV has aired the show without any of the ‘hot girls,’ since Friday matches. But during the Sunday match between Japan and Senegal at 10:00 pm, one pretty girl was found among the guests. This case, however, can be deemed an ‘acceptable exception’ as the girl is an insider of the sport industry. She is dance sport master Phan Nguyen Quynh Huong, 19, who has won viewers’ heart not only with her beauty but also what is considered as ‘decent knowledge’ about football and commentary skill.

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VTV's Friday commentary features only male guests.


While the change in the guest list was clearly noticeable, the state broadcaster has remained quiet on the issue. VTV has never given any official comment, neither on the controversial female guests nor the recent change.

K+ has also followed suit in tweaking its pre-match prediction, “Tien Tri Nuoc Nga” (Russian Prophet), with MC Thu Hang no longer donning a two-piece swimsuit in her latest episode of the show on Sunday night.

In the video posted on the Facebook page of K+, the emcee was seen in a diving suit when she prepared to see ‘Molly the seal’ make her prediction for the Japan - Senegal clash. The video, garnered only 23,000 views, received modest engagement from users, with a mere 128 likes, 39 shares and 49 comments. The last video where Hang hosted the program in her swimsuit fielded nearly 1,000 shares and 255,000 views.

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This screenshot shows emcee Thu Hang in a black long-sleeve trainer’s swimwear in Sunday’s episode of “Tien Tri Nuoc Nga” on pay TV K+.


Not all users are pleased
Many K+ users have shown their disappointment and objection to female host’s outfit change, saying they really prefer to see Hang in bikini.
“Oops! I wait for this show every day only for the MC,” one user commented.
“Those who took the bikini, return it to Thu Hang. Please!” the ‘most liked’ comment reads.

Another chimed in, criticizing those who voiced their objection to the bikini, something he said is normal given the program is always filmed next to a swimming pool. “It is beautiful to wear bikini at swimming pool, but you criticized it. Now I understand your tastes!” he wrote.

An online poll by Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper asking its readers for their opinion about the emcee wearing bikini to host the World Cup program last week also received an open view from viewers. Most readers responded in favor of the emcee, saying her choice of outfit is beautiful and sexy.


Bron: TEMPLATE | HOME


Goh, het zijn dus niet alleen de gridgirls bij de F1, die moeten verdwijnen. O-)

Ik heb zelf een abonnement op K+, maar geen bikini te bekennen. :( We moeten het bij de F1 in de studio als co-hosts doen met Alex Yoong. Alex Yoong - Wikipedia en bij de MotoGP met Matteo Guerinoni Jangan Sedih Tanpa Matteo, Mari Bangga Untuknya een voormalig motorracer en nu restauranthouder in Jakarta en Bali.

Hoewel, de host bij de F1 is Paula Malai Ali Paula Malai Ali (@paulamalaiali) | Twitter en die weet vrij goed waar ze over praat. Te zien in de link met de twee co-hosts in de studio. Van Alex Yoong begin ik zachtjes aan een beetje moe te worden: die hoort zichzelf wel heel erg graag praten.

Voor de rest vind ik de commentarorploeg voor de F1 met David Croft, Martin Brundle, Ted Kravitz, Matthew Marsh en gasten Antony Davidson en in iets mindere mate Paul DiResta geweldig goed. De meesten hebben op hoog niveau geracet en weten waar ze over spreken.

Het commentaar bij de motorraces vind ik vaak toch wat minder. Al zijn ze wel erg goed in het volledig uitspreken van de naam van de fiets, waar de rijders opzitten. O-)
 
Rectificatie

In de post van 21 juni is een fout geslopen. Dit betreft de periode waarna het visum verlengt moet worden, Dit is inmiddels officieel een half jaar, waarbij je ook het land uit moet.

Ik heb het originele artikel aangepast.
 
Heen...

Op weg naar …

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.. zwaaide de passagier..

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…terwijl de bestuurder strak voor zich uit kijkend doorkachelde naar…

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O ja, er is hier een helmplicht...
 
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