Charmaine Fong Lost & Found Live!

There is still some live music taking place locally, Charmaine Fong sold out the HK Coliseum for three nights with her Lost & Found concerts.

Many celebrities and fellow musicians including Rubberband enjoyed what felt like a night from a different time.

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Wong Ting-ting Takes Bronze at Tokyo Paralympics

Seventeen-year-old Wong Ting-ting won table tennis bronze, Hong Kong’s first medal at the Tokyo Paralympics.

Competing at her first Paralympics Wong won the first game of her TT11 singles semi-final 11:9 but then lost the next three (5:11, 6:11, 8:11) to 50-year-old defending champion Elena Prokofev.

Images: Hong Kong Paralympic Committee

Rugby League World Cup 2021 Rescheduled to 2022

Rugby League World Cup 2021 (RLWC2021) have confirmed that the men’s, women’s and wheelchair tournaments will now take place in 2022 from 15 October – 19 November.

RLWC2021 also announced that the opening match and the men’s / women’s doubleheader finals will be played, as originally planned, at St James’ Park, Newcastle and Old Trafford, Manchester respectively.

The tournament starts one week earlier than the 2021 dates so that RLWC2021 falls between the 2022 Commonwealth Games and the 2022 FIFA World Cup this change will allow all 61 games to be televised live.

Tickets for the 2021 tournament will be valid for the same fixture in 2022.

Proposed Amendments to Film Censorship Ordinance Announced

In June, the Government introduced amendments to the Film Censorship Guidelines for Censors to provide censors with clearer guidance to consider the implications of a film on national security, so as to decide whether the film is suitable for exhibition and its classification.

The proposed amendments [to Cap. 392 Film Censorship Ordinance] announced today are ‘designed’ to quote “enhance the film censorship regulatory framework, with a view to ensuring more effective fulfilment of the duty to safeguard national security as required by the Law of the People’s Republic of China on Safeguarding National Security in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, as well as preventing and suppressing acts or activities that may endanger national security.”

Unveiling the new bill, Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development Edward Yau Tang-wah said there would be NO appeal mechanism for bans issued on security grounds.

Yau continued “Amendments giving the Chief Secretary power to revoke the certificates of approval previously issued for films, there is a chance that past movies could be banned from public screening,”

In response to the question: How do you define a movie as ‘contrary to interests of national security? Yau answered ” NSL is the main reference New ordinance also goes into more details covering what might endorse/support/promote/glorify/encourage/incite such act/activity which might endanger national security”

The key proposals in the new Bill are:

(a) to set out explicitly that a censor should consider whether the exhibition of a film would be contrary to the interests of national security, so as to provide clear statutory backing for a censor to give due consideration to national security when making film decisions;

(b) to empower the Chief Secretary for Administration to direct the Film Censorship Authority to revoke certificates of approval or certificates of exemption previously issued for films if their exhibition would be contrary to the interests of national security;

(c) the Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development (SCED) may grant extension of time for a period of no more than 28 days each time for a censor to make a decision where the Authority is of the opinion that the exhibition of the film might be contrary to the interests of national security, allowing sufficient time for the censor to deal with cases that may involve national security considerations and to seek legal advice; and

(d) to disapply [remove] the relevant sections that empower the Board of Review (Film Censorship) to consider requests for review of the decisions of the Authority or a censor, for decisions made on national security grounds.

With no appeal now allowed against the censors decision, has the government killed off both Hong Kong’s film industry and it’s cinemas?

Other amendments to the current law the government wants to make include:

(a) to specify that a censor can request the addition of a specific notice to a film, to serve as a reminder to viewers (or their parents) to mitigate potentially undesirable effects;

(b) to empower the Authority [OFNAA] to require the holders of certificates of exemption or certificates of approval to provide information about the exhibition of their respective films, such as the date, time and venue, and to empower an inspector authorised by the Authority to enter and search any place with the authority of a judicial warrant in order to enhance the inspector’s ability to take enforcement action;

(c) to impose heavier penalties for exhibiting films that are not exempted or approved, raising the maximum penalty to imprisonment for three years and/or a fine of $1 million;

(d) to remove the specified number of non-official members to be appointed, as well as to empower the SCED [Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development] to appoint a public officer as his representative to attend and vote at the Review Board meetings, in order to allow greater flexibility to determine the composition of the Review Board.

Illustration: Derek Zheng

Taste x Fresh Opens in Kowloon Bay

Shoppers in and around Kowloon Bay have somewhere new to spend their consumption vouchers with the opening of Taste x Fresh, a new supermarket partnership on the first floor of Amoy Plaza.

How does it differ from a ‘traditional’ Park’n’Shop Taste… The store is split into sixteen zones with the Taste areas pretty much as you’d expect; full (too full) of a wide range of products from across the globe, with multiple product promotion areas to encourage you to taste, try and buy.

Fresh have turned the regular fruit and vegetable section into an air-con premium version of a Hong Kong market. Instead of regular fruit and veg, there are Korean and Japanese versions. Instead of local meat, it’s tasty American, Australian, Japanese beef, pork and chicken imported and served chilled and sliced. 

Something a little different to many supermarkets is that you can, as it was explained to bc, buy your meat or seafood and then have it cooked how you like it at one of the surrounding cooked food ‘stalls’. Unfortunately, the store was a little packed on opening day to test this process – but the theory is sound. And having it in a shopping centre is nice if you’re feeling a little peckish and/or lazy.

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The store is an interesting experiment/collaboration and probably offers people in the area access to products and tastes that perhaps they haven’t been exposed to before.

But, and there’s sadly a massive BUT to give all this overseas food a premium look and to keep it fresh it’s bundled and covered in tons of plastic and packaging with not a mention of recycling to be seen.

Sadly it’s not something limited to Taste x Fresh, it’s a problem that’s been slowly smothering Hong Kong supermarkets for a few years. It’s just disappointing for a brand new partnership to see that so little thought appears to have gone into reuse and recycle. There are shops in Hong Kong where you can for example bring your own containers for dried goods.

Park’n’Shop and Uni-China Group have looked to offer something new, and if you live close you’ll find an expanded range of products – sadly they’ll be smothered in multiple layers of plastic…

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Taste x Fresh
1/F, Phase 1, Amoy Plaza, 77 Ngau Tau Kok Road, Kowloon Bay.
Opening hours: 8 am to 10:30 pm.

 

Uber Buys Local StartUp HKTaxi

One of Hong Kong’s first legal ride-hailing apps HKTaxi, founded in 2014 by Kay Lui and Maff Wong has been bought by Uber.

When it originally launched the HKTaxi app replaced many of the existing phone-based hailing systems. Now you can use the app to pay by Octopus or e-wallet, tip the driver in advance to encourage them to take your booking etc…

Kay-Lui-and-Estyn-Chung-hk taxi

“HKTaxi has been able to transform the Hong Kong taxi industry by turning the traditional phone call taxi into a taxi booking app, allowing riders to easily find drivers and vice versa, and enabling electronic payment in the Hong Kong taxi industry. All these features and services greatly improve the overall user experience,” said backer Lap Man.

Uber Hong Kong General Manager Estyn Chung said of the deal “It is an honour to partner with them in bringing greater innovation and growth to the taxi industry. When people think of Uber they increasingly think of taxis, and this deal only emphasizes the importance we place in the sector, in both Hong Kong and around the world.”

images: HKTaxi, transitjam, bcmagazine

Disney+ To Launch In Hong Kong This November

Disney+ the streaming home for films and television shows from Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, Star and National Geographic will launch locally in November.

Currently available in 61 countries and 21 languages globally as well as classic series and films Disney+ releases lots of original content; recent shows include Marvel Studios’ WandaVision, Loki and The Falcon and The Winter Soldier; Star Wars’ series The Mandalorian; Pixar’s Luca, National Geographic’s Secrets of the Whales.

There has been no announcement of the local cost or if programmes will be available with a Cantonese soundtrack or subtitles. In the US Disney+ is US$7.99/month, $79.99/year.

disney plus mandelorian