The Voice

The Voice of Frank Sinatra
The Voice of Frank Sinatra (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
The VoiceTV Singing Competition

The demised legendary singing sensation, Frank Sinatra, known solely as “The Voice”, probably lend its name to the new television singing competition.

It’s a reality talent show which saw its initiation in the Netherlans & is now catching the world by storm. Its version, adopted & adapted globally, can differ from country to country, but its basic format is a blind audition, a battle phase & live performance shows.

Created & launched in 2010 by John de Mol, the owner of the production company called Talpa, its incredible success in the Netherlands has now caught on in China, where its own version of the show kicked off in July 2012.

The Voice comes with a “format bible,” which records every detail of the original TV program, such as lighting, theatrical design, stage setting and even standards for choosing the contestants.

The Voice has become a brand and television companies that want to produce it must pay a license fee to use the intellectual property.

“The success of the Voice worldwide can be explained by the positive energy that the show sends out. The coaches, the blind auditions and the fact that audience can play along add to this positivity,” said Maarten Meijs, managing director of Talpa Distribution.

It is fair to say The Voice is successful in another aspect: it earns a lot of money through advertising and televoting.

At a time when the consumers have their own ways to skip advertising, by recording programs or watching television on demand, advertisers are looking for new ways to incorporate publicity within shows. The Voice provides them with an opportunity.

An important element of the talent show is the color red. In the Netherlands, this element subtly refers to the main sponsor of the show: Vodafone, while in China, the color reminds the audience of the local main sponsor Jiaduobao drink.

Chinese audiences are drawn & attracted to the show because of the inherent nationalism theme, stressing on the concept of “living homogeneity”, quite apart from the commercial potential of product advertising & using digital media in the show.

By & large, The Voice renders people who live in obscurity the opportunity to become famous, stimulating celebrity mania.

It’s a known fact that some of the best talents, because of the lack of opportunity, lack of exposure, the natural fear of failure & rejection, become sadly missed, going to their graves with the best music interred with their bones.

So, let The Voice be heard & captivate!

If you have a gifted voice, sing to the world

Let your hidden singing gem be uncovered!

 

Source: CCTV/Xinhua

Source: Xinhua

World’s Shortest Woman

WORLD’S SHORTEST WOMAN Jyoti Amge was recognised by The Guinness Book and Limka Book of Records as World’s Shortest Girl. She celebrates her 18th birthday on 16th December 2011 and become the Shortest Woman in the World. She measures 62.8cm (2ft 0.7in) tall and she weighs only 12 lbs (9 lbs more than she did at birth).

On 14 Sep 2012 – The 18-year-old, who is just 2ft 0.7in tall, has already appeared in a Bollywood movie and says she now plans on pursuing a career in Hollywood.

I would like to be an actress and win an Oscar.”

She was named the world’s smallest woman last year, but Jyoti Amge has no intention of allowing her size to prevent her from fulfilling her dreams.

I am proud of being small,” she said during an interview with The Sun. “I have the same thoughts and the same dreams as you.”

More Pictures in Slides

 

AUSTRALIA – A Poem

 

 

View of beach at Surfers Paradise with skyline.

 

 

AUSTRALIA

A United Society Transmitting Righteousness And Love In AbundanceParliament House Canberra

Australia, the country of our choice

We hold you in great joy

May you ever be

A country for the free.

Australia, a united society

We stand in complete unity

May we not divide

Despite our differences wide.

Australia, transmitting righteousness

We hail you in fearlessness

May you always be fair

To everyone in your care.

Australia, a land of abundance

We greet you with substance

To make this a greater land

We must all render our hands.

Australia, a land of love and cheer

We shall always hold you dear

Let’s make this a better place to be

Towards this end will be our destiny.

 

 

 

© Paul Chong 

A Chinese by Descent . . . An Australian by Consent.

Monday, 21 July 1991Sydney Opera House

Forgive and Forget (Poem/Song)

Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.” – Colossians 3:13

To forgive is divine

To forget adds more shine!

O Lord, cleanse our hearts

Let us not judge people apart

Help us to show your great love to all

Whoever at our door shall call.

Christians should never hold grievances

Nor should they entertain preferences

Not just between their fellow believers

But be an example among non-believers.

Let us help lift a fellow man’s plight

When it’s more than he can bear

And his burden may be made light

If you can prove to him that you care.

Restore one another as God restores us

Forgive and forget all the hurts and the slight

Just as it’s more blessed to give

We must give more than what we receive.

Music by: Wendy Pierson

Poem/Lyrics By: Paul Chong

Copyright 1992. All Rights Reserved

Hear and you forget; see and you remember; do and you understand . . .”

 

PSALM 103 (Bridge Over Troubled Waters)

English: Bridge over Troubled Waters. The foot...
English: Bridge over Troubled Waters. The footbridge over Hurst Brook, which runs through Glossop golf course. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Praise the LORD, O my soul,

all my inmost being, 

praise his holy name.

Praise the LORD, O my soul,

and forgets not all his benefits-

who forgives all your sins

and heals all your diseases,

who redeems your life from the pit

and crowns you with with love and compassion,

who satisfies your desires with good things

so that your youth is renewed like the eagle.”

(Verses 1 – 5)

In this beautiful Psalm above, there are seven meaningful verbs, well chosen to instil a process of hope and positiveness . . . forgets, forgives, heals, redeems, crowns, satisfies and renewed.

When hurts roar, let your hope soar.

Your heart might be breaking,

A million pieces shattering.

Feeling’s such a delicate thing

It’s hard even with gentle mending.

A process and period of grieving

Is essential for healing.

The heart may grieve for all eternity

That’s when understanding can lift it but not pity.

Troubled waters roar with great muddy swells

Bridging it requires skill to break the spell.

For despair and despondency creep

Even while you sleep.

Your whole being becomes so engrossed

Nothing stimulates, enthusiasm’s lost.

A soothing word, a gentle hand

A listening heart and patience spent

Will calm the roar in the end.

To forgive is divine

To forget exceptionally fine.

Christ heals to redeem

Crowns and satisfies to extreme

Renewed spirit sets to spring.

© Paul Chong

Sunday, 30 May 1999

English: Bridge over non troubled waters The I...
English: Bridge over non troubled waters The Italianate gardens of Renishaw Hall. http://www.sitwell.co.uk/ (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Andy Williams’ Last Performance

Get Together with Andy Williams
Get Together with Andy Williams (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 Born: December 3, 1927       Andy Williams died on Sept. 25 after battling bladder cancer.

I remember Andy Williams hosting ‘The Jackson Five (Michael Jackson), Donny & Marie Osborne on The Andy Williams Show before they became famous. His velvet voice & boyish smile would always be well remembered.

He maybe gone, but his songs & music will live on.

His signature tune “Moon River” happens to be my wife’s favourite, and we used to share this beautiful pleasure.

Andy Williams has died at 84 after a long battle with cancer. The iconic singer’s rep confirmed Williams’ death to Lifeline Live. He died Tuesday night (25 September 2012) at his home in Branson, Mo., after battling bladder cancer for almost a year. Williams was diagnosed with cancer in November 2011 but still continued to perform at his Moon River Theater in Branson even after his devastating diagnosis.

According to the host of NBC’s “The Andy Williams Show” from 1962 to 1971, Williams is known for lending his voice to timeless songs like “Moon River” and “Can’t Help Falling In Love” — songs that led President Ronald Reagan to dub him “a national treasure.” Over his 75-year span in the business, Williams has earned 17 gold and three platinum records.

Would you believe that Williams initially struggled as a solo act and was so broke at one point that he resorted to eating food intended for his two dogs?

“I had no money for food, so I ate it,” he recalled in 2001, “and it actually was damned good.”

Williams is survived by his wife, Debbie, and his three children (his children, Robert, Noelle and Christian), are the product of a previous marriage to French dancer Claudine Longet).

His forever green song “Moon River” is best heard accompanied by Henry Mancini at the piano, and here it is:

 http://youtu.be/0xnCoo7vYqI

Andy Williams would say: “When I hear anybody else sing it, it’s all I can to do stop myself from shouting at the television screen, ’No! That’s my song!’” Williams wrote in his 2009 memoir, titled, fittingly, “Moon River and Me.”

Once dubbed as a “national treasure” by President Ronald Reagan,

retirement was not on his schedule. Williams told the AP in 2001: “I’ll keep going until I get to the point where I can’t get out on stage.”

Now, this great iconic entertainment idol is finally gone!

To be The Servant of God . . .

Swaggart's confession
Swaggart’s confession (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Pastor Kong Hee

 

Know the truth & the truth shall set thee free.

The American faith in God has been eroded & destroyed, until their tens of thousands of churches with different “branches and denominations” are for the most part little more than Sunday circuses and their televangelists and top protestant mega preachers were more than happy to sell out their souls and flocks to be on the “winning” side of politics & the devil. Their flocks may complain, but when explained on the “winning” outcome, religion is no longer “politically correct”. Religion is now out of schools, public places and out of Congress.

Yet ironically, on the back of the American dollar notes, it clearly says:

In God We Trust.

Fake . . . Fraudulent . . . Fallen

(Involved in Scandals)

Take not the name of our Lord in vain . . .

In God we trust but what of men?

The past & present day religious landscape could be described as such above with the like appearance of snake oil salesmen, carpetbaggers all making the scene for the great killing. This is not only happening in America, but we are not spared either.

Yoido Full Gospel Church,Seoul

Televangelists like Jim & Tammy Bakker (conviction of bilking followers out of millions of dollars in1986 & 1991), Jimmy Swaggart (sex scandal) & now Benny Hinn (2012) – have fallen all intoxicated by money & power. They may have started out doing honourable work of saving souls, however, “the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak.”

Spaceship-like Calvary Convention Hall, Damansara Hts. Kuala Lumpur

Others like Pastor Kong Hee of City Harvest, Singapore (misappropriation of S$24 Million plus a further S$26.6 million), Tan Sri Dr Sr Pastor Prince Guneratnam of Calvary Church in Damansara Heights, Kuala Lumpur, Dr David Yonggi Cho, (formerly Paul Yonggi Cho), Yoido Full Gospel Church, Seoul, South Korea (2011), who pastored the biggest church in the world . . . all victims of GREED & lure of high living. The global list of offenders is longer than your arms.

Dr David Yonggi Cho (Formerly Paul Yonggi Cho)

The ones named above are familiar by their frequent appearances on Australian Sunday TV Channels.

In God we Trust

Do we give the same due respect for human?

Mass perception, captive audiences . . . being gullible . . . Christian followers are like sheep to be led to be slaughtered.

Faith healer . . . or fake healer

Benny Hinn – Televangelist & Faith Healer

Here’s A CBC documentary on Benny Hinn 
released in YouTube on May 31, 2012 by ‪cpmcd2000: http://youtu.be/ZlNTALOChRc.

Who can be like John Wesley, a great evangelist of the 18th Century, Christ personified – a humble person well worthy to qualify to be in the service of God :

Born in 1703 was one of the great evangelists of the 18th Century.

In 1731 he began to limit his expenses so that he would have more money to give to the poor. In the first year his income was 30 pounds and he found he could live on 28 and so gave away two.  In the second year his income doubled but he held his expenses even, and so he had 32 pounds to give away (a comfortable year’s income). In the third year his income jumped to 90 pounds and he gave away 62 pounds.

In his long life, Wesley’s annual income advanced to as high as 1,400 pounds . But he rarely let his expenses rise above 30 pounds. He said that he seldom had more than 100 pounds in his possession at any one time. This so baffled the English Tax Commissioners that they investigated him in 1776, insisting that for a man of his income he must have silver dishes that he was not paying excise tax on. He wrote them, “I have two silver spoons at London and two at Bristol. This is all the plate I have at present, and I shall not buy any more while so many round me want bread.”

When he died in 1791 at the age of 87 the only money mentioned in his will was the coins to be found in his pockets and dresser. Most of the 30,000 pounds he had earned in his life had been given away. He wrote, “I cannot help leaving my books behind me whenever God calls me hence; but in every other respect, my own hands will be my executors. In other words, I will put a control on my spending myself, and I will go beyond the tithe for the sake of Christ and his kingdom.”

Such was John Wesley – a man of “poverty”, humility, downright honest & sincere to be a shining example for the likes of Benny Hinn, Tan Sri Dr Sr Pastor Prince Guneratnam, Dr David Yonggi Cho and last but not least our Singapore neighbour Pastor Kong Hee.

In God’s service, be established & accomplished

To thy own self be diminished

Contributing/Co-Writer: Pastor Charles Christano (Retired, Indonesia)

Reminiscing & Reflecting

 

Life is worth the living

Though it may be fleeting

Three scores or more would slip you by

Rejoice in the Lord always as the years go by.

Kids say the most refreshing things in their own ways to make

you realise interestingly of their innocence.

My young grandson, Nathanael (4), asked me once upon wishing me Happy Birthday. He asked me how old I was, and I told him, 74. My grandson was quiet for a moment, and then asked,”Did you start at 1?”

Yes, one day, one week, one month, one year . . . but where did all the years go? Is our life’s journey merely a doomed destination? Were we born to die? Realistically, from the womb to the tomb, there’s but one room – 3 by 6 by 6 . . . it’s a dreaded hole for most to inter our flesh & bones. But then, we can look ascendingly unto Heaven to meet our Maker & God. Be prepared for that glorious day when we all must bid farewell to our loved ones & friends.

If you are not sure of your age, as old people tend to become forgetful, listen to this. “Look in your underwear, Grandpa,” my grandson would advise “Mine says I’m 4 to 6.” That is, if you are still wearing underwear!

Talking of birthdays, the more you have . . . the longer you are going to live. We should rejoice and celebrate as the years go by & let our doctors worry about our chronological age . . . it’s just a number.

Funny, we seniors are beginning to attend more funerals than birthday or wedding parties. It’s a morbid thought. It’s so sad to see your loved ones & buddies go when the use-by date expires. There’s no coming back. It’s a journey of no return. AsEtienne de Grellet (1773 – 1855) would say: “I shall pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, I can do or any kindness that I can show to any fellow creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer nor neglect it, for I shall not pass this way again.”

There’s enough of dying as it is without having dominant world leaders adding it on with senseless wars. What does war achieve?

 

Stop the wars!

Stop killing one another

To what end & purpose?

Let’s all live harmoniously

&

Appreciate what God has given us!

All nations can survive & prosper without having to dominate!

China’s Rural Medical Health-Care Reform

   


China with more than 1.3 billion population must be commended for its effort in providing health care even to the remote rural areas.

It’s by no means an easy task, reflecting the care & consciousness of the Central Government to do their utmost for the people who had contributed much to the victory of the Communist Party.

Now, it’s the political will & desire and financial resources, which China has plenty of, to bring about this needed medical reform of its health-care system for millions of rural folks.

 In the early years, China’s rural medical scene was covered by teams of “Barefoot Doctors”. Such doctors were in fact farmers who received minimal basic medical and paramedical training who worked in rural villages in the People’s Republic of China. Their purpose was to bring health care to rural areas where urban-trained doctors were reluctant to go. They promoted basic hygiene, preventive health care, and family planning and treated common illnesses. The name was derived from southern farmers, who would often work barefoot in the rice paddies.

In the 1930s, the Rural Reconstruction Movement had pioneered village health workers trained in basic health as part of a coordinated system, and there had been provincial experiments after 1949, but after Mao Zedong’s healthcare speech in 1965 the concept was developed and institutionalized. In his speech, Mao Zedong criticized the urban bias of the medical system of the time, and called for a system with greater focus on the well being of the rural population. China’s health policy changed quickly after this speech and in 1968, the barefoot doctors program became integrated into national policy. These programs were called “rural cooperative medical systems” (RCMS) and strove to include community participation with the rural provision of health services. Barefoot doctors became a part of the Cultural Revolution, which also radically diminished the influence of the Weishengbu, China’s health ministry, which was dominated by Western-trained doctors.(Wikipedia)

The New Rural Co-operative Medical Care System (NRCMCS) is a 2005 initiative to overhaul the health-care system, particularly intended to make it more affordable for the rural poor. Under the NRCMCS, the annual cost of medical coverage is 50 yuan (US$7) per person. Of that, 20 yuan is paid in by the central government, 20 yuan by the provincial government and a contribution of 10 yuan is made by the patient. As of September 2007, around 80% of the rural population of China had signed up (about 685 million people). The system is tiered, depending on the location. If patients go to a small hospital or clinic in their local town, the system will cover roughly 70-80% of their bill. If the patient visits a county clinic, the percentage of the cost being covered falls to about 60%. If the patient requires a specialist in a modern city hospital, the plan would cover about 30% of the bill.(Wikipedia)

The Government’s effort is further augmented by non-profit organisations, individuals & doctors themselves who undertake to provide free service. 

Receiving expensive medical treatment is a challenge for many people, particularly those from rural areas. Many have to travel from village to town, to big city hospitals in search of medical care. It’s both time-consuming and costly, besides not being able to find the right needed expert help.

But now, with this new ‘Doctors for Rural Areas’ initiative, doctors and other medical experts come to their communities. There are no fees and no waiting lists. The doctor-patient relationship is simple and direct.

A patient says, “The great thing is that, for us ordinary people, getting to see a doctor is easy. We’re happy because we don’t have to go to the towns or cities. But there are too many people here!”

Liu Yong, the founder of the ‘Doctors for Rural Areas’ scheme, also deputy director of the department of medical oncology, came up with this idea two years ago which won support from the hospital. He says providing practical help is a doctor’s duty.

Liu says, “I am concerned about health conditions at the grassroots. I work in a large city hospital, and although we see some farmers, the majority of rural people, especially in rural areas, don’t always get access to the treatment they need.”

After seeing a patient, a doctor will often give them their phone number so they can keep in contact. This isn’t a hospital requirement, the doctors do it out of care for the patients.

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Liang Jun of “Doctors for Rural Areas” scheme, says, “I’ve found that by providing these free clinics, we ensure people overcome the often expensive and difficult problem of getting to see a doctor. For me, it is a glorious thing.” Liu also says, “This work is helping me find a clinical focus for my future work. By combining my specialty with the needs of the people, I hope that I can really apply what I have learned. “

Zhang Peiying, president of Xuzhou central hospital, says, “We run ‘Doctors for Rural Areas’ in order to get medical care direct to the people. It’s also good for the doctors. It gives them a real sense of providing service to the community.”

Seeing a doctor in the rural areas is no longer a problem or a major challenge. The free clinics, medical staff are also bonding in a way that seldom happen in a doctor-patient relationship.

Crucial medical reform is truly happening

With professionalism & dedication growing!

Canton Tower (Guangzhou TV Tower)

‪中文(简体)‬: 在建中的广州电视观光塔(2008年)
‪中文(简体)‬: 在建中的广州电视观光塔(2008年) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

When I first visited Guangzhou in May 1989, it was like an “gigantic village” – dirty, ugly & teeming only with people & bicycles. It wasn’t a pretty sight except for White Swan Hotel, a five-star splendour, where we stayed. To attract foreign tourists five-star hotels were being first built.

Then what greeted me in the late 1990s and 2000s is staggering & beyond my widest imagination. Simply unbelievable!

There weren’t many places of interest in the old days except the Five Rams’ Statue, Dr Sun Yat Sen‘s Memorial, the zoo which housed some Panda bears & shopping mainly at Friendship Store. However, we had the taste of the famous Guangzhou cuisine & it was good. In a word, we were totally unimpressed as first time visitors.

Today, Guangzhou is different!

In line with the Stratosphere Casino Hotel Tower in Las Vegas, the world’s ‘highest’ Ferris wheel‘ is set to open for business on top of a 1,480ft tower in Guangzhou China – with passengers riding in see-through pods. As compared, this development may not be as daring & adrenaline-pumping as with the Stratosphere’s. (Refer: Stratosphere Casino Hotel Tower, Las Vegas on Wed. 19 Sept. 2012).

Built on the 450-meter-high Canton Tower, known as the Guangzhou TV Tower, the amazing wheel consists of 16 pods holding a total of 96 fearless thrill-seekers.

Each capsule is just over three meters wide, and built using a special macromolecule material which allows a 360-degree crystal clear view.

Just think about this – 15 years ago some of the leading business journals scoffed when Coca-cola announced they were going into China and one remarked “How can the Chinese afford to drink Coke when a can of Coke would cost the equivalent of a week’s salary?”

Chinese companies are now competing with the likes of GE, Westinghouse, ABB etc to build power plants and massively sophisticated infrastructure – and beating ALL of them hands down!!

NOBODY CAN COMPETE WITH CHINA!!

Countries and companies that align with Chinese companies will become super powerful as China and Chinese companies have a long tradition of “Guan-Xi”. In Australia, BHP-Billiton is one such company that is laughing all the way to the bank, for China is building one Sydney-sized city every five days. Did you know that by the year 2025, China will have 219 cities with more than one million inhabitants, compared with 35 in Europe today and 24 cities with more than five million people. Also, 40 billion square meters of floor space will be built – in five million buildings. 50,000 of these buildings could be skyscrapers – the equivalent of ten New York Cities.

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