Community Section - Thai Embassy and Consulates
Transcription
Community Section - Thai Embassy and Consulates
P7 Community The history of Louisville Slugger, or how a woodworker’s hunch became a baseball cult in America. P16 Community Doha had its very own book exchange and interaction as part of the Book Lovers Day, Thursday, August 11, 2016 Dhul-Qa’da 8, 1437 AH DOHA 32°C—44°C TODAY LIFESTYLE/HOROSCOPE 11 PUZZLES 12 & 13 The other Thailand That it is the world’s premier tourist hotspot is a given, but it is also a land where Muslims enjoy state patronage and are proud to be its citizens. P4-5 IN THE FRAME: Thai Muslim women celebrating Eid. Girls dresses in various patterns • Women wear • Men’s readymade • Kids wear • Textile material for male / female • Ladies & Gents Tailoring Fecilities • Accessories • Western wear • Toys • Perfume • Bags • Cosmetics • Foot wear • Jewelry • Watches LOCATION : Old Airport road, Next to Qatar Airway Tower 1 2 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY ROUND & ABOUT PRAYER TIME Fajr Shorooq (sunrise) Zuhr (noon) Asr (afternoon) Maghreb (sunset) Isha (night) 3.43am 5.05am 11.39am 3.08pm 6.15pm 7.45pm USEFUL NUMBERS EVENTS Emergency 999 Worldwide Emergency Number 112 Kahramaa – Electricity and Water 991 Local Directory 180 International Calls Enquires 150 Hamad International Airport 40106666 Labor Department 44508111, 44406537 Mowasalat Taxi 44588888 Qatar Airways 44496000 Hamad Medical Corporation 44392222, 44393333 Qatar General Electricity and Water Corporation 44845555, 44845464 Primary Health Care Corporation 44593333 44593363 Qatar Assistive Technology Centre 44594050 Qatar News Agency 44450205 44450333 Q-Post – General Postal Corporation 44464444 Humanitarian Services Office (Single window facility for the repatriation of bodies) Ministry of Interior 40253371, 40253372, 40253369 Ministry of Health 40253370, 40253364 Hamad Medical Corporation 40253368, 40253365 Qatar Airways 40253374 ote Unquote u Q The best preparation for good work tomorrow is to do good work today. — Elbert Hubbard Community Editor Kamran Rehmat e-mail: community@gulf-times.com Telephone: 44466405 Fax: 44350474 Aspire Splash and Dash DATE: Every Sunday and Wednesday TIME: 7pm-9pm VENUE: Aspire Dome The athletics track and swimming pool will be open for 50 participants aged seven years and above per session and facility. Swimming skills are mandatory for registering at the swimming sessions with a limited number of 50 participants per session. The event is open to public registration on-site from 6 to 7:45pm. Doha Toastmasters Meet DATE: August 20 TIME: 7pm-9:30pm VENUE: Holiday Villa Doha Toastmasters, the pioneer club of Qatar, trains individuals in communication and leadership skills. Transform yourself into a confident public speaker and a strong leader. Acquire this vital skill in a friendly and supportive environment. For more details, call 77036696. information between the girls, establish the spirit of cooperation between them, and to advance their characters through learning. It features several educational programmes, workshops, courses, camps, festivals, skills, and trips. For enquiries, please call at: 44789392. Doha Sightseeing DATE: Until September TIME: 9am-9pm VENUE: Around Doha Doha Bus is Qatar’s first Hop-on Hop-off sight-seeing bus tour, providing both local residents and visiting tourists a flexible way to discover the country’s vibrant past, present and future. Each Doha Bus tour highlights a variety of interesting locations throughout this fast changing landscape including Souq Waqif, The Pearl, Villaggio as well as The Museum of Islamic Art. Doha Bus enhances the sightseeing experience with seven different language options to choose from as well as group discounts, private coach tours and corporate outings. Doha Bus is a fun, interactive and highly education experience for every traveller. Qatar Summer Festival at The Pearl DATE: Until August 27 TIME: 6:30pm VENUE: The Pearl-Qatar The Pearl-Qatar will host several entertainment activities and roaming musical acts and parades at dedicated locations in Porto Arabia as well as Medina Centrale from 6.30 pm to 9.30 pm on August 12, 13, 19, 20, 26 and 27. Barzan Girls Center’s Summer Programme DATE: Until August 25 TIME: 6pm VENUE: Barzan Girls Center Barzan Girls Center is organising its summer programme, which continues for a month and targets girls aged 15 years and above. For registration, you can visit the centre’s headquarter at 6pm. The programme aims to exchange experiences and Mall Cinema (1): How to be yours (Tagalog) 11am; Rustom (Hindi) 1pm; The BFG: Big Friendly Giant (2D) 3.30pm; The BFG: Big Friendly Giant (2D) 5.30pm; The BFG: Big Friendly Giant (2D) 7.30pm; The BFG: Big Friendly Giant (2D) 9.30pm; The Shallows (2D) 11.30pm. Mall Cinema (2): Suicide Squad (2D) 11am; Mohenjo Daro (Hindi) 1pm; Ice Age: Collision Course (2D) 3.45pm; Ice Age: Collision Course (2D) 5.30pm; The Shallows (2D) 7.15pm; The Shallows (2D) 9PM; Mohenjo Daro (Hindi) 11pm. Mall Cinema (3): The BFG: Big Big Friendly Giant (2D) 9pm; Rustom (Hindi) 11.15pm Royal Plaza Cinema Palace (2): How to be yours (Tagalog) Friendly Giant (2D) 11am; Kill 11.45am; Mohenjo Daro (Hindi) Command (2D) 1pm; Suicide 2.15pm; Suicide Squad (2D) Squad (2D) 3.15pm; Rustom (Hindi) 5.15pm; How to be yours 5pm; The Shallows (2D) 7pm; (Tagalog) 7.45pm; Kill Command Mohenjo Daro (Hindi) 8.45pm; (2D) 9.45pm; Kill Command (2D) The Shallows (2D) 11.30pm. Royal Plaza Cinema Palace 11.30pm. (3): Suicide Squad (2D) 11am; Royal Plaza Cinema Palace (1): The BFG: Big Friendly Giant Rustom (Hindi) 1pm; Kill Command (2D) 3.30pm; The (2D) 11.15am; Ice Age: Collision Legend Of Tarzan (2D) 5.30pm; Course (2D) 1.30pm; Ice Age: How to be yours (Tagalog) Collision Course (2D) 3.15pm; 7.30pm; The Shallows (2D) The BFG: Big Friendly Giant (2D) 5pm; The BFG: Big Friendly 9.30pm; Kill Command (2D) 11.15pm. Giant (2D) 7pm; The BFG: Thursday, August 11, 2016 BOOKS 10 3 COMMUNITY ROUND & ABOUT top GULF TIMES MOVIES 1.Me Before You by JojoMoyes 2.Girl On The Train by Paula Hawkins 3.Lost Ocean by Johanna Basford 4.Selp-Helf by Miranda Sings 5.Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs 6.Girl Online: On Tour by Zoe Sugg 7.The Bamboo Stalk by Saud al-Sanousi 8.Tropical Wonderland by Millie Marotta 9.Querkles Masterpieces by Thomas Pavitte 10.The Amazing Book Is Not On Fire by Dan Howell and Phil Lester 1.Reasonable Doubt 2.Hunger Games Mockingjay 3.Red 4.Good As Dead 5.See No Evil 6.Need For Speed 7.Stuck In Love 8.Big Year 9.Last Stand 10.Java Heat MUSIC TV-SERIES 1.Cougar Town S2 2.Private Practice S5 3.New Girl S1 4.Happy Endings S1 5.Burn Notice S4 6.Glee S2 7.Raising Hopes S1 8.Doll House S2 9.Footballers Wives S3 10.My Name Is Earl S4 1.Various Artists: Now 94 Db 2.Maher Zain: One 3.Ariana Grande: Dangerous Woman Del Ed 4.Rogers Kenny: 21 Number Ones/The Ultimate Collection 5.Various Artists: Chilled House Ibiza 2016 Bx3 6.Claude Challe: Select Viii 7.Various Artists: Now Edm After Party 2014 8.Justin Bieber: My Worlds The Coll Db 9.Seal: 7 10.Bruno Mars: Doo-Wops & Hooligans Courtesy: Virgin Megastores, Landmark and Villaggio Mall Combination of Sun, Sand and Surfing DATE: Ongoing VENUE: Aqua Park For the first time ever in Qatar, it will be possible to ride up curved sidewalls at 90 degrees to the direction of the water flow. Giving visitors and especially surfing fanatics an amazing experience available at only one place in Qatar Aqua Park. Come join us and also take advantage of the extra free ticket you get anytime you buy two Stingray Tickets. QSports Summer Camp DATE: Until September 1 TIME: 8am-1pm VENUE: Al Jazeera Academy Registration for QSports Summer Camp 2016 is now open. QSports summer camps are committed to providing a safe, fun and skillbased experience for kids between the ages of four and 14. We have a dedicated team of specialist kid’s coaches and classes and activities are safe, planned, progressive, active, creative, inclusive and designed to maximise participation of all children by offering a variety of activities. Summer Programme for School Students DATE: Until August 21 VENUE: Virginia Commonwealth University Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar is organising its summer programme for all school students aged six years and above. They can choose from a variety of programmes designed for various age groups, with the aim of learning new skills and making new friends during the summer holidays. Qatar Summer Festival 2016 DATE: Until August 31 VENUE: Doha Exhibition and Convention Center Enjoy with your family the Qatar Summer Festival, organised by Qatar Tourism Authority throughout the month of August under the theme ‘Color Your Summer’. It will include a wide range of summer entertaining events and activities, art zones, shopping promotions, in addition to a unique entertainment city. Garage Gallery DATE: Until Nov 1 TIME: 8pm VENUE: Spaces at the Fire Station The Artists in Residence exhibition is a culmination of an intensive nine-month programme, featuring works by 18 local contemporary artists who have been working in the artist’s studios and spaces at the Fire Station since September 2015. The exhibition showcases new work and projects created by the artists during their residency period, shedding light on the development of their New Bootcamp Abu Hamour DATE: Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday TIME: 6pm VENUE: Doha British School Located just minutes from Villaggio and a walk away from Ain Khalid Gate the Doha British School campus is our newest Bootcamp location. The training takes place on the main grass playing field surrounded by an athletics track. There are showers available and changing rooms. Pottery workshop for kids DATE: Every Monday TIME: 5pm-6pm Kids will learn a new hand building technique for creating and finishing artworks in clay. For more, call 44865201. Sketching with pencil and charcoal DATE: Sunday and Wednesday TIME: 5pm- 6:30pm If you can hold a pencil, you can draw… Discover techniques to make your drawing more realistic. Every Saturday and Wednesday from 5pm-6:30pm. innovative ideas and diverse studio practices. Photographic, sculptural, and installation based artworks fill the Garage Gallery and showcase these talented artists. Vacation Competition DATE: Until September 21 VENUE: FCC Office Women’s forum of Friends Cultural Centre has announced competitions for Qatar-based Malayalee students of grades IV–XII. There are two competitions including Avadhikkalath an article on vacation experiences and Avadhikkalakazhchakal, on photography. Article on vacation experiences should be prepared in Malayalam or in English with a minimum of 500 words. Photographs for the competition should be printed on A4 size art paper or photo paper. Pictures should not have been published before and should not be downloaded from internet. Entries for competitions need to be submitted to FCC Office on or before 21 September 2016. More details can be obtained by contacting telephone number 44661213. Cake Decoration Classes DATE: Morning and evening VENUE: Tavola Royal Plaza, Al Saad Street Tavola offers a range of cake decorating and kitchen skills classes. Tavola is the only authorised Wilton method provider in the Middle East. Yamativo Salsa Classes DATE: Every Monday TIME: 7pm VENUE: Radisson Blu It’s always fun and always challenging. Let’s meet and learn some moves every Monday night. You don’t need to do anything, just join us. Level 1 (intermediate level) 7pm and for beginner level 8pm. Be there at Raddison Blu Hotel Cabana Club. Fitness Training DATE: Sunday, Tue, Thu TIME: 6pm-7pm VENUE: MIA Park There are fitness classes in the park on Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday nights at 6 and 7pm. Open to all levels of fitness. Bootcamp is an intensive and fun way to train and also meet new people in the open and friendly group atmosphere. More information, from Bootcamp, Qatar or info @ bootcampqatar.com. FOODIE CHOICE RESTAURANT: Aceite LOCATION: Melia Doha The type of cuisine you get here is traditional Spanish food that magnificently blends traditional recipes with surprising contemporary touches. Compiled by Nausheen Shaikh. E-mail: gtlisting@gmail.com, Events and timings subject to change 4 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY COVER STORY Faith in Thailand The Muslim connect remains a less explored subject and one that holds a special interest in the context of growing ‘Islamic tourism’, Thailand’s halal industry expertise and, last but not least, medical tourism. Kamran Rehmat reports from the Land of Smiles GRAND: The palatial office of the Sheikhul Islam in the suburbs of Bangkok. T he jury is still out on exactly how many muscles it takes to smile, and frown, and which one pips the other. In Thailand, regardless of the muscle tussle, smiles take the miles! No wonder, it’s dubbed the Land of Smiles. It is hard not to wilt with that constant appearance wherever you go — right from the immigration desk out to the market place. While there’s little that has escaped the roving eye of a keen traveller to Bangkok or the more popular tourist resorts in terms of their allure, there is this other — more formal — side to the Thai kaleidoscope that held its attention for me on a recent study tour to the country. It should be of particular interest to travellers from the Middle East, and closer home, the Gulf. The Muslim connect remains a less explored subject and one that holds a special interest in the context of growing “Islamic tourism”, Thailand’s halal industry expertise and last, but not least, medical tourism. Sek Wannamethee, DirectorGeneral, Department of Information, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, puts liberty and tranquillity at the heart of Thai societal fabric. “The peaceful essence of Islam coincides with Buddhist teachings. In Thailand today, Islamic teachings and prayers are broadcast on Thai television network. The Azaan can be heard from as far away in the north, through the central plains of (the former capital) Ayutthaya all the way to the south, where Islamic family law is practised,” he says. It says a lot about the high values Thais place on tolerance and religious harmony when you consider that the very term “minority” is abhorred. The idea is to accord the same level of Photo by the author “We have the Islamic Bank of Thailand (a state enterprise with 26 branches across the country), and a dedicated 24hour cable TV, which should say something about the rights we enjoy in this land” — Sheikhul Islam’s representative HOLDING FORTH: Assistant Professor Abdullah Numsuk, Representative of the Sheikhul Islam. Thursday, August 11, 2016 Sheikhul Islam “Muslims enjoy full liberties and rights in our country, and it is all constitutionally mandated,” Assistant Professor Dr Abdullah Numsuk, Representative of the Sheikhul Islam, says. Outlining the salient features of state backing, he informs that under constitutional obligation, the monarch has to lend his support to every religion and that is also reflective in his continued patronage of Islamic activities in Thailand. “The king has an important role in supporting Islam and has authorised translation of the Holy Book into several languages at state expense. He is a regular presence in our midst,” he points out. “We have the Islamic Bank of Thailand (a state enterprise with 26 branches across the country), and a dedicated 24-hour cable TV, which should say something about the rights we enjoy in this land,” Sheikhul Islam’s representative emphasises. Explaining the raison d’etre of the office, the representative says it is the highest Islamic authority in the land whose decisions are binding for all Muslims. The appointment is made by the king himself and it follows an intense participatory process with 39 provincial committees across the country involved in the selection. He is also sanguine about the role played by Muslims in the country’s development. “Our fellow brethren continue to contribute meaningfully to nation-building. There is exemplary coexistence amongst various religions and even sects of Islam here. Indeed, we remain very proud of being Thai citizens,” Numsuk says, emphatically. Responding to a question about the number of mosques in Thailand and how and where Muslim children acquire religious education, he puts the number at 3,700 — majority of these in the south — and says they learn at Islamic schools run by Muslims, but also private educational institutions. The Islamic schools are also subsidised by the government. According to a Ministry of Thailand estimate, there are 800 Islamic schools in the country, most of which are concentrated in the southern border provinces. 5 COMMUNITY COVER STORY recognition to all religions and ethnicities. GULF TIMES He parries a question about imams (prayer leaders) — who are elected — holding political opinion like elsewhere in the world, but says they remain free to give sermons, which aren’t censored or monitored by the authorities. About their origins, he says, Muslims in Thailand have deep roots with ethnic Malay, Arab, Iranian, Pakistani, Indian, Siamese, Chinese and Cambodian Cham ancestry. “Even though there are people hailing from different sects of Islam, there has never been any conflict,” he claims. Another noteworthy domain of the office of Sheikhul Islam concerns the certification of halal products, a task that is undertaken by the Central Islamic Committee that has members from provinces across the country. The certification is endorsed by the government. The Foreign (Office) factor L ike with other countries, the Thai government is reaching out to expand the relationship with the Islamic world, particularly the Gulf. There is a strong Muslim connect here which has perhaps, not been explored enough for its range and depth. Suvat Chirapant, Deputy Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs — one of four such high ranking positions in the ministry — is himself a Muslim and informs that Thailand has had a foreign minister, who served as the secretary-general of Asean; parliamentary speaker, who was also the deputy prime minister and interior minister; and even a commander-in-chief of the army from the same faith. He says the country, which has the highest Muslim population of all Asean countries, has much to offer to potential trade partners in the Middle East and Gulf — not in the least trade in its certified halal food industry. With its significant Muslim population (approximately, 5.8 million of the nation’s 67 million), Thailand also sits on the Organisation of Islamic States (OIC) with an Observer Status, enjoying observer membership of the Islamic Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (ISESCO). The Thai Islamic Trade and Industrial Association, too, is a member of the OIC Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Explaining the role of the Foreign Office, Chirapant, who has served in Qatar for three years, says, it works in close co-ordination with Sheikhul Islam, whose role he likens to that of a counsellor to the king in Islamic affairs. The government has a longstanding policy of providing financial support for the construction or renovation of mosques. Thai Muslims are allowed to practice and dress according to their faith in public places, POSITIVE ROLE: Suvat Chirapant, Deputy Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The deputy permanent secretary (above) — one of four such high ranking positions in the ministry — is himself a Muslim and informs that Thailand has had a foreign minister, who served as the secretary-general of Asean; parliamentary speaker, who was also the deputy prime minister and interior minister; and even a commander-in-chief of the army from the same faith including schools and government offices. The Foreign Office official also hails the role played by Thai Muslims in the development of the country, and says he, along with his colleagues, regularly visit provinces across the country to interact with the Muslim population — 30 per cent of which is concentrated in the south — and inquire after their well-being. Currently, it is engaged in coordinating the first batch of Haj pilgrims to Saudi Arabia. Annually, the government facilitates 13,000 Thai Muslims to undertake the pilgrimage with a one-stop service for documentation and medical exams. zSee also Pages 8 & 9 6 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY Pakistan embassy brings forward passport dates for early delivery By A Staff Reporter I n order to facilitate Pakistani nationals, the Pakistan embassy has further streamlined procedures for passport renewals. “All those who have appointments after September 30, 2016 may visit the embassy to get new dates,” an embassy official told Community yesterday. These appointments will be brought forward up till September 30. In recent days, the embassy has made concerted efforts to address rising demand for the mandatory Machine Readable Passports (MRPs). The embassy has been reported to have sought extra staff from the government back home to meet the application rush even as it has already increased its working hours to meet the burgeoning demand as much as it can. Reportedly, the capacity for issuance and renewals of MRPs has been tripled, of late, with an additional four hours of work daily. The issue gained traction recently, and more resonantly, during an open house the mission held recently to address the complaints of the expatriate citizens. Eight books to make you laugh in these dire times By Laurie Hertzel T he first funny book I remember reading was James Thurber’s My Life and Hard Times. I read it over and over, and it never failed to make me laugh. (The Night the Bed Fell. The Day the Dam Broke. The Night the Ghost Got In. All hilarious.) This has been a dire summer. The news is crushingly bad. We need to laugh. Here, to the rescue, are recommendations from some of the critics who review for the Minneapolis Star Tribune. Prepare for belly laughs. Muriel Spark’s Loitering With Intent, published in 1981 but set in 1949, is a sinister comedy in the mode of her 1959 Memento Mori. It’s drolly narrated by Fleur Talbot, a cash-strapped literary secretary and aspiring novelist whose plot points start coming to life. Like all of Spark’s best novels, it’s an ingeniously constructed book, unsentimental but not cold, hilarious but never frivolous. —Dylan Hicks The Dog of the South by Charles Portis. Portis is best known for True Grit, but he also produced five other novels. The Dog of the South will propel you from melancholy to jubilation in exactly one page flat. Ray Midge’s wife, Norma, has run off with a sorry character called Guy Dupree, taking Ray’s beloved Ford Torino and leaving him Guy’s 1963 Buick Special “standing astride a red puddle of transmission fluid.” What follows is a road saga of exquisite deadpan humour and almost surreal bathos. —Katherine A Powers A Man Called Ove, by Fredrik Backman, had me laughing out loud. Ove is a curmudgeon’s curmudgeon, and the humour as he grumbles and judges his way through old age is dry but dead on. —Mardi Jo Link Where’d You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple. When the world seems insane, and depressingly so, it’s good to laugh and better yet to get away. “Family trip to Antarctica!” Fifteen-year-old Bee’s parents promise her anything if she aces her report card, and that’s what she wants. But first she takes us on a nightmarishly hilarious journey through the story of her disappearing mother, neighbourhood intrigues, school politics and high-tech romance via e-mail, FBI reports, memos and letters. —Ellen Akins Jimmy Breslin’s Can’t Anybody Here Play this Game? is a wry look at the unsuccessful 1962 New York Mets, and it’s surely one of the funniest sports books ever written. “They lost an awful lot of games by one run, which is the mark of a bad team,” Breslin wrote. “They also lost innumerable games by 14 runs or so. This is the mark of a terrible team.” His most likable character is “Marvelous” Marv Throneberry, the mistake-prone first baseman, who once hit what appeared to be a triple, only to be tagged out after missing not one but two bases on his way to third. Said Throneberry, “Things just sort of keep on happening to me.” —Kevin Canfield In My Korean Deli: Risking It All for a Convenience Store, Ben Ryder Howe gives us a behind-the-scenes peek at the subculture that props up most New Yorkers, his time working at the Paris Review under George Plimpton, and what it’s like for a Caucasian guy to marry into a Korean family. Hilarious and heartwarming with lots of laugh-out-loud moments. —Meganne Fabrega A good antidote to the vitriol swirling around social media these days is the reliably funny prose of Lorna Landvik. There is no venom in her writing, just big-hearted observations by hilarious characters making their way in a world that is sometimes tragic but always hopeful. Landvik’s 1997 novel, Patty Jane’s House of Curl, about a hairstylist and her escapades around Minneapolis — particularly West River Road, Seward and the Chain of Lakes — is a great place to start. —Christine Brunkhorst —Star Tribune/TNS How to find a good personal trainer By James Fell T here is a scene in the Arnold Schwarzenegger movie The Running Man in which “Captain Freedom’s Workout” comes on TV, and Jesse Ventura yells, “Are you ready for pain? Are you ready for suffering?” If your trainer behaves like that, start running — away. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are over 250,000 fitness trainers and instructors in the US. That’s a lot to choose from. Some of their clients have horror stories; others refer to personal trainers as lifesavers. First, some horror. “I have club feet, and my trainer tried to get me to do things that were impossible for me,” said Sara Ross, 34, a small-business owner in Lawrenceville, N.J. She’d had surgery as a child to synthetically lengthen her Achilles tendons and was looking to improve her body’s functionality and flexibility. But the trainer at a country club gym wasn’t a good listener. “I told her my ankles didn’t have the flexibility to do a full squat,” she said. The trainer pushed her to do it anyway, with added weight. Ross heard a pop in her Achilles. The trainer asserted it was all in her head. Ross stormed out of the session, never to return. She had trouble walking for weeks. “Training is something you do for someone, not to someone; You’re looking for a facilitator, not a dictator,” said Florida-based trainer Nick Tumminello, who was named the 2016 Personal Trainer of the Year by the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA). He warns people away from “push through the pain” – type trainers. His description of a good trainer? “They make it about you. Good listener. Someone who asks you questions about what you want rather than say what they want to inflict on you.” A trainer needs to understand a client’s goals and devise the safest and most effective method of reaching those goals, he said. Beware of the hard sell. Monica Weber, a 39-year-old midwife in Ontario, Canada, said it happened to her twice. She’d had a membership at the GoodLife Fitness chain since 2002, doing basic workouts on her own. In 2010, she inquired about hiring a trainer. The introductory sessions, she said, “were all a big sales pitch. He made me feel like I had a lot of problems he needed to fix. It would take a year and a half and cost $10,000.” She balked at the cost and said no thanks. Three years later, she tried another GoodLife trainer. “She gave me an even harder sell,” Weber said. Again, it was $10,000 to “fix” her. GoodLife Fitness personal training divisional manager Kelly Musovic said the average personal training package costs $4,000 and a single session can be had for $39. “If they say no to a particular option, we would advise them of other options,” said Musovic, who was dismayed to hear about Weber’s story. “We don’t want anyone to feel harassed.” Weber insisted both trainers made her feel as though it was the $10,000 route or nothing. She ended up leaving the gym. Marie Rousseau, 39, is a retail worker in Bryce Canyon, Utah. She recalled a trainer who was pushing her toward a smaller dress size. At the time, the 5-foot, 4-inch tall Rousseau weighed 93 pounds and was recovering from an eating disorder that had almost killed her. Her goal was to gain muscle and strength and go up a few dress sizes, but the trainer told her she should drop to a size 6. Said Rousseau: “He insisted I had some fat to lose” — a dangerous thing to say to someone who’s battled an eating disorder. Even though the trainer knew about her condition, he “pushed no carb.” Rousseau said. “I told him right off the bat that nutrition coaching was unnecessary because I was under the care of a registered dietitian.” The trainer also pushed supplements — ones he wanted to sell her. Rousseau bailed after three sessions. Richard Cotton, who is national director of certification for the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), said his organisation “does not support any supplement sales within the client-trainer relationship.” He added that trainers should refer to a registered dietitian when it comes to clients’ meal planning. The horror stories make personal training seem like the Wild West. But Cotton said it’s not as wild as it used to be. “There has been self-policing to improve standards and develop best practices,” he said. Most trainers have some form of certification — ACSM and NSCA are two well-respected groups — but that doesn’t guarantee quality. Both Tumminello and Cotton recommended seeking out a trainer with relevant experience. Seniors, for example, should look for someone who understands how to work with older adults. Cotton is a big fan of word-of-mouth referrals. That’s how Ross finally landed a good trainer: from her cousin’s recommendation. Her new trainer had the relevant physical therapy experience. “He adapted the exercise to my ability,” she said. Tumminello warned against any trainer who insists exercises be done a certain way, saying it shows a lack of understanding of variations in human movement. “He told me I didn’t need to do squats,” said Ross, who’s been with her current trainer for three years. “He’s so knowledgeable and nice to work with.” Rousseau found a better trainer too. “He would push me just enough where I would gain confidence,” she said. “He was more about good form. Working out is more about feeling good now.” And that’s the ultimate goal of working with a trainer: to feel good. —Chicago Tribune/TNS Thursday, August 11, 2016 GULF TIMES 7 COMMUNITY OFFBEAT Louisville Slugger: How a woodworker’s hunch became cult in America By Johannes Schmitt-Tegge L egend has it that it was one Pete Browning who became the first player to hit a baseball with a “slugger” after his own baseball bat got broken. The year was 1884, and a young man handed him a new wooden bat after his own was broken during a game. The new instrument was the prototype of the bat which became known as the “Louisville Slugger” and which, over 130 years later, is almost synonymous with Major League Baseball (MLB) itself. The curious thing about it was that Frederick Hillerich, the German immigrant from whose woodworking shop in Louisville the bat came, was actually busy making other things — bed posts, stair railings, bowling balls and pins, butter churns — for the folks of the state of Kentucky. But making money to supply those guys wearing knickerbockers and batting a ball around in this new-fangled field game called baseball? — No way. Hillerich thought the game was a fad, one pursued by drinkers and womenchasers. Hillerich’s son Bud had a different hunch. Learning the woodworking trade in his father’s shop, it was he who made the first bat for Pete Browning, and he was insistent on making more. Soon, more and more players were ordering his bats made of hickory wood. The hand-made “Louisville Slugger” would go on to fame that came with being used by the legendary stars of the game — Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson, Joe DiMaggio, Lou Gehrig and Mickey Mantle, to name only a few. Today, the Hillerich & Bradsby company produces 1.8 million Louisville Sluggers a year for all 30 MLB teams as well as for minor league teams, colleges, and schools around America. “We helped to write a lot of baseball history,” comments Anthony Sciotti, taking visitors on a tour of the plant. Machinery is humming and unfinished bat dummies are piling up. The air smells of fresh wood. Today, machines carve in 30 seconds what workers once did by hand, and the wood is now ash and maple wood supplied from forests near the Niagara Falls and in Canada. Each day, 4.5 tonnes’ worth of wood shavings are produced and are shipped to a turkey farmer in the nearby state of Indiana for use in his turkey pens. By the company’s own account, 60 per cent of all MLB players use a Louisville Slugger. But it has many competitors, with dozens of other makers supplying many players. The company Marucci, founded in 2002, now claims to be the number-one bat maker. “We also faced competition from brands that were part of much larger publicly-traded corporate conglomerates,” Hillerich & Bradsby spokesman Rick Redman said. “(These were) FINISHING TOUCHES: A factory worker dipping a baseball bat into finish at the Louisville Slugger factory in Louisville, US. 1.8 million baseball bats are produced at the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory. Visitors can learn about the history of the company in the museum next door. A factory worker holding a professional baseball bat at the Louisville Slugger factory. companies that were multi-billion dollar entities that had greater resources for product development, marketing, and sales than a modest-sized family-owned business.” A recall action for a defective softball bat also did not make business any easier. These bats, made of aluminium and permissible for use in the lower leagues, were initially produced in California, and after 2008, in China. Ultimately there came the sad day in March 2015 when the Hillerichs sold their stake in the brand for 70 million dollars. It now is owned by the sporting goods company Wilson, that itself is part of the Finnish concern Amer Sports. As tough as it was, the Hillerich family realised that the time had come to sell their iconic American brand to new owners who had the experience and means to bring it to new heights, Redman said. Fifty-two employees, almost one-fifth of the work force, were put out of work. The Slugger is still produced in Kentucky, but control over business matters is now in the hands of a publicly-listed company that gradually went on to surpass the Hillerichs. All this is of little concern to fans who come to visit the Louisville Slugger Museum. Kids pose for pictures with bats autographed by their idols. Visitors admire one bat owned by Babe Ruth that had notches carved into it for each home run he hit. Museum shops offer Sluggers where visitors can have their own names etched into the wood. It is hard to miss the museum itself, what with a giant bat outside made of 30 tonnes of steel and towering five storeys high. It seems to be saying, many more home runs will be hit with the Louisville Slugger. —DPA 8 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY TOURISM What makes Thailand tick By Kamran Rehmat I n recent years, tourists have flocked in their thousands for reasons other than partaking merely the enthralling Thai night life. In particular, Muslim tourists find an immediate appeal in its growing “Islamic tourism” potential, with halal hotels, food and the opportunity to see the lifestyle of Thai Muslims. The other eyeball grabber is medical tourism, where one hospital particularly offers a fascinating insight. Bumrungrad International Hospital Cliched as it sounds, the name says it all. Pronounced bahm-roon-RAHT — meaning “care for the people” in Thai — Bumrungrad is a virtual onestop medical facility that attracts you immediately for its calm un-hospital like ambience. In fact, I’m prompted to ask the flawless fact-reeling PR guide, the secret of its lack of hospital smell; she tells me it is a regular drill with helpful chemicals to keep the odour at bay. Hospitals of the world, take note! An engaging session with the director, marketing officials, doctors and nurses leaves one with plentiful adjectives for what makes the Stock Exchange-listed Bumrungrad one of the best in the business. Since medical tourism has taken on a new sheen, it is just as well. To cut to the chase, the 21-storied 580-bed Bumrungrad with 55 specialty centres, 19 operating theatres, internationally certified lab and pharmacy, clinical research centres, advanced imaging facilities and automated labs onsite is the largest private medical facility in Southeast Asia. Also with one of the world’s largest private sector outpatient clinics, Bumrungrad has long enjoyed the coveted US-based Joint Commission International accreditation, the first in Asia, in 2002. Talking of medical tourism, Bumrungrad was also the first to receive Award for Excellence in healthcare tourism category in 2008; the first to grab “Thailand’s Most Innovative Company” award in 2008; and take the top position for “Best Website for International Medical Travel” at the 2008 Consumer Health The figures at a glance. DISTINGUISHED: Dr Erik Fleischman, an American physician who has worked with infectious diseases in over 20 countries throughout Asia, Africa, the Americas and Eastern Europe and is the Assistant Medical Director-International at Bumrungrad, during an interactive session, with an Iraqi co-ordinator by his side. Photos by the author World Awards, USA among a slew of similar distinctions. If figures alone tell the whole story, which would not do much justice to be honest, it is pretty imposing. With 1,400 physicians, over 1,000 nurses and an American-led international management team that oversees 4,800 employees, Bumrungrad treats over 1.1 million patients every year, including both outpatient and inpatient. Of these, nearly half are international patients from more than 190 countries. In 2015, it saw the second highest number of patients from the Middle East region (144,772), including more than 15,000 out-patient visits from Qatar, after Southeast Asia. The year-to-date (June 2016) figure is over 7,600 visits. When asked about the specialties Qatari patients seek, Duangrudee Somboonruangsri, Manager, International Marketing, points to five areas, namely; (a)preventive medicine, (b)gastroenterology and hepatology, (c)obstetrics and gynaecology, (d) general surgery and (e)cardiology. Overall, patients coming from the Gulf mostly seek treatment for cancer, spine surgery, robotic joint replacement, cataract surgery as well as paediatrics and neurology. Bumrungrad also made news for successfully treating Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (Mers) patients from Oman in the last two years despite their advanced age (both in their 70s). Interestingly, a large number of Americans themselves come here for treatment “because it costs 70-80% cheaper”, according to Sudi Narasimhan, Corporate Director of Marketing and Business Development. Overall, he says, it costs a third of what it would in the rest of the world. He also claims that the large turnover is thanks to Bumrungrad’s success rate of treatment being “twice as good as any other international hospital”. Asked if it is the most expensive option in Thailand given its stature, Narasimhan says, “Actually, there are five hospitals which are costlier in Thailand itself!” It has international representative offices in several countries, including Qatar (Souq Waqif, Doha). In recent years, the influx is notable and what drives the patients, especially those coming from the Gulf is HELP DESK: Language isn’t a barrier at the medical facility. confidentiality. The patients are called out by codes than name. To facilitate patients who may have language issues, there are 150 interpreters, international/airport concierge service, embassy assistance and visa extension counter. For Muslim patients, there are prayer rooms and halal food on offer. What’s endearing to see are the specially made out paediatric facilities. The PR guide tells me it is configured in a way as to distract the kids from any fear of medical procedure with even the nurses wearing colourful uniforms with cartoon characters. It almost seems like an indoor playground! Thursday, August 11, 2016 GULF TIMES COMMUNITY VISTAS Spurt in halal tourism HALAL FOOD: Putting Muslim tourists at ease. HALAL HOTEL: The Al Meroz in Bangkok. Dining at Al Meroz Hotel in Bangkok is a fascinating experience, not in the least because it is reckoned to be Bangkok’s first fully fledged halal hotel. This should be of considerable interest to Muslim travellers, who worry about certain aspects of touring, particularly food. For the uninitiated, it is important to understand that halal does not stop at merely food — as is commonly perceived — although that in itself is of paramount importance to Muslims. There may be other hotels offering halal food to cater to them, but not all of these strictly adhere to the Islamic regimen. Practicing Muslims care a great deal about restrooms with a bidet sprayer — called the shataff in the Middle East, for instance. They would appreciate having a prayer mat and knowing the direction facing Makkah for prayers as well. All these things contribute to the overall halal experience. There is an increasing awareness about what has come to be known in common parlance as “Islamic tourism” and according to one estimate, globally it will soar to a whopping $181 billion market by 2018. The recently opened Al Meroz Muslims would appreciate having a prayer mat and knowing the direction facing Makkah for prayers as well. All these things contribute to the overall halal experience has much to gain by catering exclusively to this very large segment of the tourist population coming to Bangkok — as acknowledged by its CEO Rausak Mulsap. “There is no halal-certified hotel to cater to Muslim travellers in Thailand, so this is a huge opportunity (for us),” he says, and adds, “All rooms are built in the direction of Makkah, and have a prayer mat and a copy of the Holy Qu’ran. How green is my hideaway! PICTURE PERFECT: The eminently green setting of the Koh Klang community. Quite the highlight of the visit, one was initially less inclined to go the whole hog mistakenly assuming it to be a run-of-themill affair. Instead, what greets me following a boat ride only a few minutes to a hideaway island away from the famed Krabi resort is an exhilarating tuk-tuk ride into a fresh breeze, lush green expanses on either side of the road, paddy fields, chirping birds and wandering goats with village folks going about their work with lazy calm. Coconut trees and banana orchards are plentiful. Against the quiet village surrounding, the sign of free Wi-Fi on the way makes it even more interesting. I think I could move from all the humdrum of a chaotic urban life to this tranquil village setting at a short notice! Some 70 per cent of Koh Klang’s 5,000 inhabitants tend to agriculture, growing some of the highly coveted varieties of rice. Fishing obviously comes naturally to them with members of the predominantly Muslim community using ingenious methods to catch fish, crabs and shellfish. The island itself is surrounded by mangroves with great bird-watching opportunities. I strongly recommend getting up, close to take in the relationship between the islanders and the sea in all its glory! TREE OF LIFE: 200 years old and counting. Shade enough for a goat on the hideaway from Krabi. 9 10 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY INFOGRAPHIC Thursday, August 11, 2016 GULF TIMES 11 COMMUNITY LIFESTYLE/HOROSCOPE Five organising tips to help tame back-to-school chaos F rom school supplies and first day outfits, to lunch boxes and carpool schedules, back-to-school stress and to-do lists can seem endless. This time of year, moms and dads are feeling the pressure to get organised, no matter their natural tendency: neat freak, hopelessly messy or anything in between. Back-to-school time is the perfect opportunity for parents to shift gears and reorganise. It all comes down to your cleaning personality type on how you handle it. Here are some expert tips for every type: Neat freak: Messes go against your very nature, and this time of year can put your temperament to the test, not to mention your cleaning skills. Instead of stressing over where to stash the keepsakes your kids will surely come home with this year, plan ahead and create colour coded files for each child. Send glue, glitter and other mess-making supplies to school in clear baggies. Stash a stain-removal stick in the backpack of older kids to pre-treat ink stains and make laundry less stressful. Closet stasher: A closet stasher may look ARIES March 21 — April 19 Even if you feel like quitting and giving up completely on something or someone today Aries, keep on keeping on. You know you want it to happen and with your energy and determination it will. CANCER June 21 — July 22 The Moon spends yet another day in Scorpio, your fellow water sign and romance and fun zone. This is the time for you to be particularly happy and ready for anything and anyone if you’re single. LIBRA September 23 — October 22 Sometimes you need to tend to your own 'garden’ Librans – make sure everything is right with you before tending to others and their various needs and wants. CAPRICORN December 22 — January 19 With the Moon in Scorpio today, your eleventh house of hopes, wishes and friendship, this is the perfect time for you to reach out to someone you might not have spoken to in some time and check in. like a neat freak, but don›t be fooled - their messes are hiding in the closets and under the bed. Take time to dig into storage areas and cabinets to create an organized space for the family. Use plastic bins or baskets with labels on the front to divide the games from the books, and create a special shelf where extra pens, paper and other school supplies can be kept handy throughout the year. Busy bee: When you're juggling work, homework, after-school activities and home cleaning, some days it's tough to even find matching socks. While the back-to-school season can heighten the chaos, it's also a perfect opportunity to take control of the time you have. For example, have the kids put in the laundry while dinner is cooking, or encourage the kids to clean the dishes as you finish preparing dinner. Create a family calendar to keep track of everyone's schedules, and place a whiteboard by the door to remind you — and your kids — of important things to take with you before heading out the door. usually waits till the last minute to kick backto-school prep into gear. For you, it's best to prioritise a to-do list, and check things off one by one. It's OK not to get to everything right away, but keep making progress until your entire list is complete. Overwhelmed by getting your house in order and tackling that to-do list? Don't be. Call a professional to help with the deep cleaning, so you can focus on getting the school year off to a great start. Team player: From preschoolers to high school students, everyone is involved in getting the home ready for the new school year. Have the kids switch it up a little and take on each other's chores, try something new or take on more responsibility. As kids get older, they are able to take on more challenging roles, from just folding towels to actually doing the laundry, or from setting the table to loading and unloading the dishwasher. With the right attitude and approach, you can make back-to-school time less stressful for the whole family. Summer straggler: As vacation time comes to a screeching halt, a summer straggler TAURUS April 20 — May 20 Sometimes you simply have to know when to stop and give up. Or at least give up and give things a rest for a while and then maybe pick up where you left off later on in the year. LEO July 23 — August 22 Don’t get caught up in something that you may later regret Leos. With many of the planets lined up in your self–esteem zone, you might feel as if you need to prove yourself to others around you. SCORPIO October 23 — November 21 If you could you would undo something you did recently, wouldn’t you? However that ship has sailed and all you can really do is make the best of the situation and move on. AQUARIUS January 20 — February 18 Be wary of getting too caught up in something that doesn’t really involve you Aquarius. Instead, make sure you are doing everything in your power to focus on YOU and what you need from life right now. © Brandpoint GEMINI May 21 — June 20 Don’t get it twisted twins. You know exactly what you need to do and when it needs to be done, so now’s the time to get moving and just do it. VIRGO August 23 — September 22 With the Moon in Scorpio, your communications zone, this is the best chance you have to say what needs to be said and not get too caught up with the words and meanings behind them Virgos. SAGITTARIUS November 22 — December 21 With Mercury, Venus and Jupiter all lined up in your career and ambitions zone right now, you should really focus on that part of your life. Even if it means working weekends or longer hours. It will be worth it. PISCES February 19 — March 20 If you can manage to sidestep some sort of drama unfolding around you, that’s great Pisces. Drama isn’t something the majority of you enjoy being caught up in after all. 12 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY Wordsearch Adam Pooch Cafe At Court AUDIENCE BARON COURTIER CROWN DUKE EARL ENVOY EQUERRY ERMINE FLUNKY FOOTMAN KING KNIGHT LIVERY LORD MAJESTY NOBLE ORB PALACE PRINCE PROTOCOL QUEEN ROYALTY THRONE VISCOUNT Codeword Puzzles courtesy: Puzzlechoice.com Every letter of the alphabet is used at least once. Squares with the same number in have the same letter in. Work out which number represents which letter. Garfield Sudoku Bound And Gagged Sudoku is a puzzle based on a 9x9 grid. The grid is also divided into nine (3x3) boxes. You are given a selection of values and to complete the puzzle, you must fill the grid so that every column, every anone is repeated. PUZZLES/CARTOONS Thursday, August 11, 2016 Quick Clues 3. Secede (5,4) 8. Cupid (4) 9. Quick random examination (4,5) 10. Cloak (6) 11. Birds (5) 14. Din (5) 15. Be effusive (4) 16. Nonplus (5) 18. Roman robe (4) 20. Brown pigment (5) 21. Pouchlike hat (5) 24. Rural (6) 25. Possession (9) 26. In this place (4) 27. Fast car (9) 13 COMMUNITY PUZZLES ACROSS GULF TIMES Colouring DOWN 1. Put an end to (9) 2. Measurements of water depth (9) 4. Thick cord (4) 5. Following (5) 6. Giving pain (6) 7. Curved structure (4) 9. Fruit of the blackthorn (5) 11. Injury (5) 12. Person getting a tan (9) 13. Personality (9) 17. Built (3,2) 19. Additional building (6) 22. Fertile spot (5) 23. Exchange (4) 24. Annoy greatly (4) Cryptic Clues Answers Wordsearch ACROSS 3. Passes on very easily? (5,4) 8. Trick to get a constituent returned? (4) 9. Near thing made by salesman on the telephone? (5,4) 10. Jabber to annoy? (6) 11. Something valuable about “21” (5) 14. Cheats on the board? (5) 15. Punctuation mark done in a hurry? (4) 16. Not a blunt note (5) 18. Row about rite? (4) 20. One transaction that’s perfect (5) 21. Some people stand for them (5) 24. Force firm politician to take on the Spanish (6) 25. Thoroughly dismissed in both innings (3-3-3) 26. Weapons of Mars, perhaps (4) 27. Politicians from America? (9) Codeword DOWN 1. No particular speed, whatever happens (2,3,4) 2. Make some jottings when plagiarising music? (4,5) 4. Competent as a seaman (4) 5. You should be patient when taking them (5) 6. Got down to see the birdman? (6) 7. Volition needed to make bequests? (4) 9. Caught a girl with the pupils (5) 11. Gather for a service (5) 12. Be in the play and pull it to pieces? (4,5) 13. Not contributing to schools (9) 17. Flier involving one in scheme (5) 19. Repudiate in a trance, perhaps? (6) 22. Possibly sited under the moon’s influence? (5) 23. Kick a boat (4) 24. Copper given to engineers as a remedy (4) Yesterday’s Solutions QUICK Across: 1 Dumb; 3 Specimen; 8 Sane; 9 Surround; 11 Incandescent; 13 Create; 14 Staple; 17 Insalubrious; 20 Eligible; 21 Bomb; 22 Pretence; 23 Fete. Down: 1 Distinct; 2 Manacle; 4 Pruned; 5 Caricature; 6 Mourn; 7 Nude; 10 Initialise; 12 Feasible; 15 Promote; 16 Public; 18 Naive; 19 Keep. CRYPTIC Across: 1 Owns; 3 Hanger-on; 8 Save; 9 Duologue; 11 Recrudescent; 13 Essene; 14 Butter; 17 Scout-masters; 20 Landlady; 21 Stag; 22 Annotate; 23 Less. Down: 1 Observed; 2 Novices; 4 Amulet; 5 Golf-course; 6 Regan; 7 Need; 10 Quintuplet; 12 Presages; 15 Theatre; 16 Amidst; 18 Canon; 19 Flea. 14 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY REVIEWS Just nominally about motherhood By Katie Walsh FILM: Mother’s Day CAST: Julia Roberts, Jennifer Aniston, Kate Hudson, Jason Sudeikis, Britt Robertson DIRECTION: Garry Marshall I t seems there’s no stopping Garry Marshall’s terrifying cinematic rampage on America’s treasured holidays. Having ruined both Valentine’s Day and New Year’s Eve with his star-packed omnibus projects, the director has burned his way through the calendar, landing on Mother’s Day as his next victim. This time around, Julia Roberts, Jennifer Aniston, Kate Hudson, Jason Sudeikis, Britt Robertson, Margo Martindale, Timothy Olyphant, Aasif Mandvi, Sarah Chalke and Shay Mitchell, among others, are subjected to the inter-connected, fake heartwarming holiday themed story. It claims to be a tribute to the idea of maternal love, but it’s not even heartwarming or about mothers so much. Sure, most of the characters are parents, but it’s only nominally about motherhood. Mother’s Day is far more concerned with exploring the ideas of marriage, careers, single dads, the military, prejudice, jealousy, grief and clown wisdom than it is about motherhood. There are a few tossed off lines about the irreplaceability of a mother’s love, but nothing feels sincere. The script is credited to no less than four people, and is a shoddy mishmash of product placement for a bizarre selection of brands; there’s blatantly spoken exposition and personal psychoanalysis, terribly edited bits of dialogue stuffed in to make everything more painfully obvious — I have abandonment issues, a character needlessly explains. For the humour, Mother’s Day relies on a hearty dose of generational and gender panic. The characters panic about social media and texting. In the film, the actual holiday of Mother’s Day ends up being a pretty terrible day for all involved, including two ER trips and a runaway RV chase. It’s possible the day is OK for two of the characters, who possibly get married on that day, but it’s impossible to tell because there is no logic to the space and time of this film. Someone takes an Uber from Las Vegas to Atlanta in seemingly a matter of minutes. We are also granted one of the most surreal moments of recent cinema when single dad Bradley (Jason Sudeikis) wildly overcorrects his initial lack of enthusiasm for the holiday due to his wife’s death. Stuffing the house full of flowers and balloons, he gives his teen girls a car and a karaoke machine, with which he performs a rousing rendition of the classic hip hop tune The Humpty Dance. He dances with his teenage daughters. While singing The Humpty Dance. At a Mother’s Day party. -Tribune News Agency A comic gangster FILM: A Stand Up Guy CAST: Danny A Abeckaser, Annie Heise, Nick Cordero, Luke Roberston, Jay R Ferguson DIRECTION: Mike Young M ike Young’s A Stand Up Guy is an unfunny movie about a gangster who sets the world on fire with his ostensible comedic gifts. Danny A Abackaser plays a Brooklyn swindler named Sammy who gets planted “somewhere in Wisconsin” by the witnessprotection programme. Renamed Derek Hesh by the Feds, he winds up performing at an open-mike to impress a local barmaid (Annie Heise’s Vicky). He does what comes naturally, which is spout third-rate insult comedy at nearby bar patrons, and the yokels eat it up. Meanwhile, a couple of hoods set out to track Sammy down before he can testify against their boss. They cross paths with lawmen played by Ethan Suplee and Michael Rapaport. The only member of the cast who just about survives with his dignity is Mad Men’s Jay Ferguson, who as the head of a biker gang gets to affect a deadpan disdain for the stupid posturing around him. -JD (DVDs courtesy: Saqr Entertainment Stores, Doha) Thursday, August 11, 2016 GULF TIMES 15 COMMUNITY SHOWBIZ My struggles are getting harder: John Abraham By Durga Chakravarty A ctor John Abraham, who started out as a model before venturing into the Hindi film industry in 2003 with Jism and now even produces movies, says his struggles in showbiz have become harder with time as he has become tougher on himself. Every newcomer, especially those with no backing of a film family, faces hardships in the competitive industry. Was it the same for John when he forayed into filmdom? “I still face struggle. Even today, after Dishoom, I struggle, but the struggle is of different kind. The struggles are getting harder today because I am getting tougher on myself. The struggle is about being fitter, stronger and faster,” John told IANS over phone from Mumbai. “The struggle is about finding better scripts ... It’s about reducing the probability of failure, so the struggle is of a different kind. I really did not find that (entry into filmdom) much of a struggle,” added the 43-year-old, who, however, found being the best in the modelling industry a tough nut to crack. “I had to prove that I can sustain in the modelling industry,” said the star, who is gearing up for his next release Force 2. Once that struggle finished, he went on to act in movies like New York, Kabul Express, Zinda, Taxi No. 9211 and Garam Masala, after which he became a producer with the National Award winning entertainer Vicky Donor. Then, he says his struggle shifted to how to up the “quotient of quality of films” that he was doing. “The struggles keep going on in my life ... The struggles are never going to end. I am always going to be a struggler,” said the actor. What has been tougher — being a model, actor or producer? “I think being a model was the easiest thing to do,” he said and added: “As a model, I was ‘John Abraham, the model’. I was a clothes hanger. You give me any clothes, my job was to make it look good.” For him, being an “actor is tough, but fun”, and being a producer is the “most difficult”. “As an actor, I’m open to working with different producers. Someone I deeply respect and love is Aditya Chopra. Someone who is my really close friend and I really like working as a producer with is Karan Johar,” added John, who finds it “daunting” to find scripts to produce under his banner John Abraham Entertainment. “I think people like hard-core quality content-driven films, and I feel it is my production house that looks out for the best. I think it’s very daunting to find the next best script that will entertain the audience,” he added. In his over-a-decade long career in Bollywood, the actor’s filmography boasts of adrenaline rushing actioners, power-packed dramas and rib-tickling comedies. Is there any other genre John would like to explore? “I think the genre that I would like to attempt and re-attempt is in the space of No Smoking. I love that space. A lot of people tell me that ‘if you do No Smoking today it would do fantastic business and I tell them that whether I do something 10 years too early or five years too early, that’s the space I would like to re-explore.” — IANS LONG JOURNEY: John Abraham I know people call me a false modest person, says Bachchan Megastar Amitabh Bachchan feels there are a lot of people who find him falsely modest, but he makes no bones about it saying that even though there are new faces in his upcoming film Pink, they will catch the audience’s attention with their “exceptional” work. “As an actor, I have been in this line for 45 years. Most of them (actors in Pink) are new faces in this film and you have not seen them before. But once you see the film, you will not see me you will only see them,” the 73-year-old said at the film’s trailer launch. “It’s exceptional work that they have done, and I say this from the bottom of my heart. I am not being modest. I know a lot of people call me a false modest person, but this is the honest truth,” he said. The movie, directed by Aniruddha Roy Chowdhary, also features Taapsee Pannu, Kirti Kulhari, Andrea Tariang in key roles. “I have never worked with such an exceptional actors. They are so committed. You cannot believe the kind of performance they have given. They are so natural and it’s an inspiration for me,” he added. Pink is a film set in Delhi, and stars Amitabh as a lawyer. The trailer suggests it is an unconventional thriller. How does producer Shoojit Sircar plan to promote it? “I feel after watching the trailer, people decide whether to watch the film or not. I have done this many a times. This film doesn’t have song and dance or an item number to promote. “All my films are purely content and character driven. There are songs... and we are introducing a singer from Pakistan. So you all will get to hear her.” — IANS MAKING A POINT: Amitabh Bachchan Priyanka Chopra to be on Heidi’s Project Runway Indian actress Priyanka Chopra’s international portfolio seems to be turning stronger by the day. After TV show Quantico and Hollywood film Baywatch, she is set to be seen as a guest judge for season 15 of American TV series Project Runway, hosted by supermodel Heidi Klum. Priyanka will join the series as one of the few guest judges on the show, which will air from September. The show focuses on budding designers who are given an opportunity to create a collection for New York Fashion Week. Priyanka took to Instagram, where she shared a photograph of herself along with Klum as well as the show’s other judges Nina Garcia, Zac Posen and Georgina Chapman. “Namaste!! On Project Runway. Coming soon. Project Runway Season 15, September 15th! Nina Garcia, Zac Posen, Heidi Klum, Georgina Chapman,” Priyanka captioned the image. The former Miss World made inroads into foreign showbiz first when she launched her international single In my city, a track she collaborated for with Will.i.am. That GOING PLACES: Priyanka Chopra set the stage for her to do bigger things in the West. For Quantico, which stars her in the lead role as FBI agent Alex Parish, she won the Favourite Actress in a New TV series award at the People’s Choice Awards 2016 earlier this year. That also opened the doors to Hollywood for Priyanka, who landed a negative role in Baywatch — the big screen version of the globally popular TV series — starring Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron. – IANS 16 GULF TIMES Thursday, August 11, 2016 COMMUNITY Bonding over books Doha had its very own book exchange and interaction as part of Book Lovers Day, bringing in people of diverse backgrounds on a common platform. By Anand Holla A s bibliophiles in various parts of the world celebrated Book Lovers Day all through Tuesday, Doha had its very own book exchange and conversations gathering. Amidst a flurry of food, beverages, hardcovers and softcovers, a dozen book-lovers bonded over their passion for the written word at Nando’s in Hyatt Plaza Mall. The clue to what made the Book Swap Tweetup event special lay in the name – it was a book swap instead of the usual book-lovers meets. Everybody had to walk in with a book that they were willing to swap with another, whilst explaining what is special about the book they had brought. Animated discussions over books, authors and characters went on for long, and all the attendees left the venue with smiles on their faces, new books in their hands and also having made new friends. Layal Kobti, Marketing Manager, Nando’s, told Community, “Book swap events are terrific opportunities for like-minded people to meet and Nando’s is the ideal place to gather in an informal setting where you are encouraged to be yourself, laugh out loud, and of course, dig into our favourite Nando’s dishes while having a great time with friends. We, at Nando’s, have always supported Doha Tweetups events but this is the first time we hosted the book swap and it went really well.” Community spoke to Doha’s bookworms who had gathered at the venue about what they had to share about the event: ON THE SAME PAGE: A glimpse into the gathering at the Book Swap Tweetup held at Hyatt Plaza Mall. communities here, and in one place, we get to interact with various nationalities, how they work, their culture, their lifestyle and get to know them on a personal level. So, in that sense, it’s a really good event because I got to meet somebody from Sri Lanka or Lebanon or India. It’s good to see the multi-cultural, diverse set of people of Qatar come together. People who enjoy books a lot and share the same feelings about books is becoming rarer now in Doha. Generally, people today are moving away from reading books as there are so many things that they are getting Natalie Wherlock: Doha Tweetups is basically an online community to organise offline events. Many complain that there’s nothing to do in Qatar so we at Doha Tweetups are trying to find different interests; be it books or food or organising a tweet-up at the international airport before it was opened to the public, and make people meet over it. This tweetup, like our other tweetups is to add value to the community and get different members of the community together. Salman Surti: This was a different event in that when people usually meet up, there isn’t a specific idea or a topic to talk about. But when it’s about books, for instance, the discussions get very intense. It’s at such tweetups that you get to find people with interests similar to yours; like I met someone who, too, like me, jumps from one genre of book to the other. It’s fun to chat over such things as it’s hard to find people who share similar reading patterns as yours. Ferras Mohssen: The book swap is something that we should do more of. It brings book lovers together and spreads what they have learnt from these books. We need to get not only us but also the younger crowd involved in reading and appreciating books because they are so absorbed in technology that they are unaware of what books can teach them. We, too, keep forgetting that the greatest invention mankind ever made was the written word. And we need to keep that alive. Hamza Ahmed: It’s good to see that we are having such events here in Doha. We are getting to know a lot of different preoccupied with. So an event of this sort is certainly a good break from the routine. Some of the books that were swapped among the attendees. Ketaki Doshi: Book swaps are important events for Doha. The city has people from different cultures and such events bring them together. For me, as a writer, such an event is a great opportunity to not only meet likeminded people but also to listen and share a variety of stories.