Edisi 30 Juli 2014 | International Bali Post

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Entertainment

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Duchovny sparks controversy with patriotic Russian ad Agence France-Presse

MOSCOW - US actor David Duchovny has stirred up a storm of debate in Russia by appearing in an ultra-patriotic beer ad in which he fantasises about being Russian. The “X-Files” and “Californication” star appears in a glossy ad for a Russian beer brand that is inspired by his eastern European origins. “There is another country, where I got my family name from, and sometimes I wonder, what if things turned out differently, what if I were Russian?” the actor says in the ad posted Friday on YouTube. Duchovny has said in interviews that his father had Polish and Russian roots but recently wrote on Twitter that he is in fact Ukrainian. In the ad set to Soviet rock hits, the actor is shown as a ballet choreographer, a cosmonaut, a rock star or an ice hockey player and experiencing Russian traditions such as the banya, or steam bath. “Being Russian, I’d have many things to be proud of,” he concludes in the ad. Deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin, who oversees defence, posted a link to the ad on Twitter, saying: “If you forget about what it is advertising,

as a whole it’s made with love.” But US news site Globalpost.com slammed Duchovny for appearing in what it called a “poorly timed, nationalistic ad” released shortly after the Malaysian airliner was downed in Ukraine. Rossiya-24 state television in turn criticised Duchovny for appearing in the ad after calling himself a Ukrainian. “That didn’t stop the actor from appearing in an ad with a huge budget about pride in the Russian motherland,” a Rossiya-24 newsreader said acidly. In April Duchovny wrote on Twitter: “I grew up thinking I was Russian only to find recently that I’ve been Ukrainian all along. Never too late to change.” Much of present-day Ukraine was part of the Russian Empire. The ad was one of the top trends on Russian Twitter over the weekend and has been viewed more than 900,000 times on YouTube. Some viewers said they found the ad

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Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Avoiding plane crashes as air traffic doubles

Bayern Munich goes Green for U.S. Tour

US: Russia violated 1987 nuclear missile treaty

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Officer vaccinated a dog with anti-rabies vaccine. Anti-rabies dog cull that took place in Bali spark controversy around the world as a 16-minute video posted on YouTube. Although the footage was first posted in April, a repost this week sent the video viral, with 40,000 views in three days.

IBP/Net

moving but others criticised Duchovny for taking part. “Has David Duchovny gone completely mad? Maybe he’ll be next to get a (Russian) passport after Gerard Depardieu,” wrote one Twitter user, Tatyana Samosudova. Duchovny is not the only Western star to appear in made-for-Russia ads. Bruce Willis advertises a bank while Depardieu has promoted a bank and a kitchen chain since gaining Russian citizenship in 2013.

DiCaprio raises $25 million at French charity gala Agence France-Presse

IBP/Net

NICE - Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio has raised more than $25 million (18 million euros) at a charity gala in France for his foundation which aims at protecting the environment and endangered species. The fundraiser recently in the chic Riviera seaside resort of Saint-Tropez included an auction of Hollywood and rock and roll memorabilia and works by Damien Hirst and Pablo Picasso. It also included DiCaprio’s Harley Davidson motorbike bearing the signatures of Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro and a guitar belonging to U2 frontman Bono. DiCaprio told the 500 guests -- who included stars ranging from US soap star Joan Collins to French actress Marion Cotillard -- that animal and flora species were rapidly disappearing on a scale last seen when dinosaurs roamed the earth. Guests shelled out between $7,000 and $130,000 to attend the event. A sculpture by British artist Damien Hirst was snapped up for $6 million by Russian-born billionaire Len Blavatnik, while South African tycoon Patrice Motsepe paid $1 million for a Picasso drawing.

IBP/File Photo

Anti-rabies dog cull to continue amid controversy Agence France-Presse

DENPASAR - Anti-rabies dog cull that took place in Bali spark controversy around the world as a 16minute video posted on YouTube. Although the footage was first posted in April, a repost this week sent the video viral, with 40,000 views in three days. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) strongly condemned the “inhumane slaughter” in a statement received by AFP. “Local animal welfare groups have run successful

vaccination programmes and the number of humans becoming infected with rabies has fallen dramatically,” it said. The government too has carried out a programme,

with more than 300,000 dogs vaccinated. Since 2008, 147 people have died after contracting rabies on Bali, but the numbers have declined rapidly over the years, with 10 deaths reported since 2012. PETA warned that “many compassionate people worldwide will avoid travelling to Bali” after learning of the practice, while a petition on Change.org calling for an end to the culling has attracted more than 20,000 signatures. Continued on page 6


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