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Archive for October 15th, 2007

Vietnamese Attire

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Harper, APEC leaders to don traditional Vietnamese attire

By Allan Woods, CanWest News Service

HANOI - Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been the target of repeated joshing over his family-guy fashion sense, but if there is any silver lining around the dark design cloud that could gather above him this weekend in Vietnam it is that the Conservative party leader will be in good company.

The closing ceremonies of the two-day Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meetings, which begin Saturday, will see each of the 21 world leaders throw off their power suits in favour of local attire made to measure by one of the country’s top fashion designers.

The ao dai is the traditional silk tunic-and-pant costume worn by the Vietnamese, though, these days, only for special functions like weddings. Nevertheless, Dang Thi Minh Hanh, director of the country’s Fashion Design Institute in Ho Chi Minh City and the country’s “ao dai ambassador” has hand-crafted one for each of Harper and his colleagues. They will pose for the traditional group photograph wearing the outfit, which is worn with a black velvet turban.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is seen at the Vietnamese Prime Minister's Cabinet Office in Hanoi on Nov. 17, 2006.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is seen at the Vietnamese Prime Minister’s Cabinet Office in Hanoi on Nov. 17, 2006.

“For the past eight months we have worked day and night,” Hanh told VietNamNet, an online news service. “Some elder people told me that, in the evening of Nov.19, billions of people in the world will watch the dress wearing ceremony of APEC leaders through television and through which they will partly see the Vietnamese soul so I’m nervous.”

To make the costume requires a tailor with the skills of a mathematician, factoring in more than 20 different measurements to created the perfect tunic. But what may worry the prime minister is that the outfit is said to flatter the fit and trim, and punish the rest.

It would not be the first time that Harper has endured stories about his dietary habits and his fashion bona fides, however.

As opposition party leader, he faced something beyond ridicule when he showed up at the Calgary Stampede wearing a cowboy hat, bolo tie and a leather vest that was clearly a better fit for his young son, Ben.

And for his first foreign outing as prime minister - a March meeting in Cancun meeting with his physically fit counterparts from the U.S. and Mexico, George W. Bush and Vicente Fox - Harper opted for a green fishing vest rather than the cooler - and - white cotton shirt, worn untucked and loose at the neck.

The special Vietnamese dress for the photo-op is just one of a number of steps that are being taken by Vietnam’s socialist government to demonstrate that the country population and economy are thriving as it transforms from a third-world to free-market economy.

The centrepiece of the two-day summit is the National Convention Centre, a grand, $300-million building constructed on 64 hectares of land that used to be a rice field. Built of marble, with a wave-like roof, it was built in two years but has no clear purpose beyond the APEC meetings, though Vietnam hopes it will attract international events in the future.

Local business is also using the event to market and sell their wares. A coffee company has produced 10 tonnes of coffee for the summmit, while Vinamit, a Vietnamese food company has sent 500 kilograms of dried fruit to the event, according to Vietnamese media.

Vinamit officials say the presence of their product at APEC, which is dried using a special process to preserve the fruits’ colour and flavour, sends a strong message about the state of the country’s agricultural economy.

“Only Vietnamese products of high quality and prestige are selected for the APEC Summit,” said an APEC official.

Fox Business Channel

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch’s Fox Business Network made its debut at 5 a.m. EDT on Monday, aiming to expand the audience for business news beyond Wall Street viewers and take on incumbent cable business news leader CNBC.

Big-name guests on the new network’s first day include U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, in a taped interview, and British entrepreneur Richard Branson, founder of the Virgin Group.

FBN wasted no time tweaking the competition. In a dimly lit street across from CNBC’s headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, Fox Business stocks editor Elizabeth MacDonald delivered morning business news updates.

“Who would’ve thought anyone could cover the stock markets out there — but here we go,” MacDonald quipped. “It’s hunting season, and we hear that peacocks are in season.”

A multicolored peacock is the corporate logo for CNBC and parent NBC Universal.

Some two years in the making, News Corp’s Fox Business Network will air to a little over 30 million homes in the United States, or under a third of CNBC’s reach, from studios at its New York headquarters.

Murdoch said he is considering launching versions in other countries and plans to invest $300 million over the next three years, by which time he hopes FBN will have beat CNBC in ratings, according to a Fortune report on Monday.

Playing David to the industry Goliath is a familiar role for Fox News President Roger Ailes, who oversees Fox Business.

Ailes ran CNBC until he was poached by Murdoch to launch Fox News in 1996. A staple of brash and opinionated talk shows made Fox News entertaining and helped it beat Time Warner Inc’s CNN in ratings ever since its fourth year.

FBN kicked off its first programming day with “Fox Business Morning,” hosted by former Forbes.com reporter Jenna Lee and ex-Bloomberg anchor Nicole Petallides.

They moderated discussions on fast-food chain stocks, such as McDonald’s, interspersed with weather and sports updates.

Ahead of the launch, Fox Business said little about its lineup, citing competitive concerns. Just one day after CNBC announced a new segment on its “Fast Money” show that will take place inside a bar, Fox Business said it has been developing a show since July called “Happy Hour,” which will also take place inside a bar. The news leaked after it began rehearsals.

What Fox Business has said is that it will seek to demystify Wall Street, helping regular viewers connect global business trends to ordinary people’s lives.

“A lot of people who don’t have a lot of money (will) appreciate the fact that we’re not speaking over their heads,” Neil Cavuto, the network’s managing editor, told Reuters recently. “That’s a way of ensuring going beyond the typical Wall Street crowd.”

The network will have its own equities index, the FOX50, which includes large-cap stocks with a heavy consumer interest such as AT&T Inc, FedEx Corp, Johnson & Johnson and Microsoft Corp.

The launch is part of Murdoch’s plan to dominate global business news coverage on air and in print, and follows News Corp’s $5 billion deal to buy Dow Jones & Co Inc, publisher of The Wall Street Journal.

Even before the deal’s anticipated closing in the next few weeks, Fox Business executives are already drawing comparisons.

“It’s pretty analogous to The Wall Street Journal,” Cavuto said, describing how business world developments will be connected to general news. “There’s a column there for the latest business developments and there’s a column for the latest news developments and they live fairly harmoniously together.”

FBN reporters were heard saying on-air, “The Wall Street Journal tells Fox Business,” when referring to stories they picked up from the paper.

What the channel won’t have at launch is actual Wall Street Journal business reporters. A 15-year agreement between General Electric Co’s CNBC and Dow Jones prevents Journal business reporters from appearing on Fox Business until the contract ends in 2012.

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