Category: Regions

  • Spanish titles sell to Turkey, Middle East

    Spanish titles sell to Turkey, Middle East

    By Pamela Rolfe

    Sept 23, 2008, 10:22 AM ETSAN SEBASTIAN, Spain — In a first for Spanish product, Turkish production house Altioklar has picked up format rights to the hit Spanish series “7 Lives” for digital platform Digiturk, while Minema Media will make a Turkish version of “My Adorable Neighbors,” Spanish sales outfit Imagina International Sales announced Tuesday.

    Additionally, Imagina announced groundbreaking sales in the Middle East, with Sabbah Media picking up “Countdown” for Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Oman.

    All the shows are Globomedia productions, as are “Boarding School” and “Countdown,” which Vietnam’s VTC9 channel picked up ahead of MIPCOM to start airing in September.

    Source : The Hollywood Reporter

  • Italy: Solve Cyprus before Turkey joins EU

    Italy: Solve Cyprus before Turkey joins EU

    ATHENS, Greece: Italy’s president says the island of Cyprus must be reunited before Turkey is allowed to join the European Union.

    President Giorgio Napolitano made the remarks while on a three-day official visit to Greece.

    Rival Cypriot leaders are currently holding reunification talks on the Mediterranean island which has been divided since a Turkish invasion in 1974.

    Napolitano holds a largely ceremonial post. He made the comments Tuesday after talks with Greek President Karolos Papoulias.

    » Save up to 72% on morning home

    Italy: Solve Cyprus before Turkey joins EU – International Herald Tribune.

  • Istanbul-Berkeley

    Istanbul-Berkeley

    REVIEW When veteran Istanbulite Orhan Pamuk received the Nobel Prize in literature two years ago, the committee complimented his “quest for the melancholic soul of his native city.” Melancholic? The world’s third largest city has one big, melancholic soul? I think Pamuk, of all people, would disagree. The 10th International Istanbul Biennial, which was curated by über-busy San Francisco Art Institute faculty member Hou Hanru in 2007, took a more caustic if not realistic theme: “Not Only Possible, But Also Necessary: Optimism in the Age of Global War.” The organizers of the “Orienting Istanbul” conference at Berkeley this week have produced a truly interdisciplinary (and free to the public) conference that cuts through the jargon and confronts big ideas head-on. Nonetheless, I’m glad they snuck in some actual art, including “Istanbul-Berkeley,” Hanru’s selection of video works from the biennial.

    Much of Hanru’s curatorial work has focused on urbanization and living, breathing cities. The chosen videos do not disappoint. They address spatiality in radically different ways.

    San Francisco Bay Guardian : Article : Smuin Ballet.

  • Syria’s love affair with Livni

    Syria’s love affair with Livni

    Over the next 42 days, Livni will have a tough time wooing rivals on the left and on the right who want to extract as many concessions as they can before they agree to join any Livni-led coalition.

    But the foreign minister who is a few steps away from becoming the second woman to ever lead Israel is getting some support from an unlikely place: Syria.

    In an editorial titled, “Tzipi – Israel’s new bird” (a reference to the fact that her full name – Tzipora – means “bird” in Hebrew), Syria’s state Tishrin newspaper praised Livni as a “Mossad beauty,” according to Israel’s Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper.

    (Livni spent two years in her early career working for the Mossad in Paris. While the nature of her work during her short duration with the Israeli spy agency is unknown, The Times of London wrote a questionable story in July that suggested that Livni was a young “terrorist hunter.” The story, which probably helped boost her thin security credentials and credibility among some Israelis, received a lot of attention, especially in the Arab world.)

    “International commentators describe Livni as a dove among hawks,” the editorial states. “If this ‘Mossad dove’ wishes to repent for her crimes and the crimes of her family, and if she truly wishes to secure peace, she will get peace. If she doesn’t want that, the region will remain in a state that is neither peace nor war, while facing a tense and unstable atmosphere.”

    Ok, it might not be a genuine love letter, but it does show a level of intrigue in the Arab world in Livni’s rise to power.

    Meanwhile, The Jerusalem Post reports that Israel’s ultra-Orthodox newspapers won’t even publish Livni’s photograph so as not to violate cultural sensitivities.

    “For us, the newspaper is an educational device that not only informs but also teaches people how to behave,” an anonymous editor at the Haredi newspaper Hamodia told The Jerusalem Post. “If it detracts from yiddishkeit (Jewishness), it won’t be in our paper.”

    The editor did concede that papers published Golda Meir’s photos when she was Israel’s prime minister.

    But.

    “Golda was an institution,” the editor said. “She was a respected figure with decades of political experience before she became prime minister. But in recent years there has been depreciation in the level of politicians.”

    But, don’t take it personally, Tzipi!

    Welcome to the highest echelon of Israeli politics!

    You’ve got 42 days before the carriage turns into a pumpkin.

    Dion Nissenbaum covers the Middle East as Jerusalem bureau chief for McClatchy Newspapers. E-mail him at dnissenbaum@mcclatchydc.com.

    To read more of this writer’s blog – as well as those of other McClatchy foreign correspondents – go to

    Source: www.kentucky.com

  • Turkish Foreign Minister to Visit Atlanta for ‘Year of Turkey’ Program

    Turkish Foreign Minister to Visit Atlanta for ‘Year of Turkey’ Program

    Phil Bolton – Publisher
    Atlanta – 09.22.08

    Kennesaw State University’s “Year of Turkey” is to officially open on the week of Oct. 6 with the arrival in Atlanta of Kursad Tuzmen, the Turkish minister of state in charge of foreign trade and customs.

    Mr. Tuzmen will be arriving with a delegation of Turkish businessmen and politicians who will attend a variety of programs including a dinner at the Istanbul Center in Midtown and a breakfast at the Southern Center for International Studies in Buckhead.

    Tarik Celik, executive director of the Istanbul Center, told GlobalAtlanta that Turkish business and government leaders were focusing on Atlanta and the Southeast U.S. as a prime region with which to develop relations.

    Georgia is one of six states the Turkish government is targeting for increased investment.

    “This is the longest program they have ever had in the U.S.,” he said. The Istanbul Center was established in 2002 to improve relations between Turkey and the Southeast.

    The Istanbul Center, the Turkish American Chamber of Commerce and Kennesaw State have developed 60 programs to take place over the course of this academic year.

    Daniel S. Papp, president of Kennesaw State, traveled to Turkey with Mr. Celik to meet with academic, cultural, government and political leaders to set the agenda.

    Among the officials with whom they met were Hayati Yazici, Turkey’s deputy prime minister, and Kadir Topbas, the mayor of Istanbul.

    A series of meetings will be held with the visiting Turkish officials and business leaders with the possibility of one-on-one meetings.

    The programs scheduled at Kennesaw State over the course of the year are to include wide ranging cultural, economic and political presentations.

    But, according to Dr. Papp, a highlight of the year is to be a conference that is to be held with the support of the United Nations at the end of January.

    The Alliance of Civilization conference is to explore current conditions in Turkey as an example of how cultural and historical conflicts don’t have to degenerate into violence.

    Kofi Annan, the former U.N secretary-general, established the Alliance of Civilization initiative to provide practical recommendations for addressing the roots of polarization between societies and cultures.

    The U.N. program was launched in 2005 at the recommendation of the governments of Spain and Turkey.

    Mr. Tuzmen is a member of the Turkish parliament and has been serving as minister of state since 2002. Among the former positions he held are undersecretary and deputy undersecretary of foreign trade and general director of free zones.

  • Orthodox patriarch backs Turkey’s EU bid

    Orthodox patriarch backs Turkey’s EU bid

    BRUSSELS, Belgium: The spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians urged the European Union on Wednesday to take on Turkey as a member if it improves democratic and human rights standards.

    “Europe needs to bring Turkey into its project,” Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I told the European Parliament.

    “What I and the majority of the people of Turkey wish is full integration, full membership of the European Union, on condition that the criteria and preconditions that apply to all candidates are abided by,” he told a later news conference.

    Bartholomew, who is based in Istanbul, Turkey, is the spiritual leader of hundreds of millions of Orthodox Christians worldwide.

    He appealed to the EU not to make religious or cultural differences an obstacle to Turkish membership. Turkey’s population of 70 million is predominantly Muslim.

    Orthodox patriarch backs Turkey’s EU bid – International Herald Tribune.