صـــفـــحــة الــمـــقـــالات
إشرايكم بالتصميم الجديد لصفحة المقالات بجريدة القبس؟
أنا شخصياً أشوف انه ما له سالفة
Labels: Media
RANDOM THOUGHTS, GOSSIP & GENERAL NONSENSE FROM KUWAIT
Labels: Media
قال الشيخ فهد سالم العلي ان مسابقة سمو الشيخ سالم العلي الصباح للانترنت استطاعت ان تحقق النجاح للسنة السادسة على التوالي، مؤكدا ان فكرة المسابقة ودعمها كانت نابعة من سمو الشيخ سالم العلي ومن الاخ الشيخ علي جابر العلي.
واضاف فهد السالم ان المسابقة انتقلت هذا العام إلى مستوى اكبر واوسع بين شرائح المجتمع الكويتي وهذا بفضل الدعم اللامحدود لإنجاح هذه المسابقة، والذي توج بحضور سمو امير البلاد لتكريم الفائزين في المسابقة السادسة، مؤكدا ان هذه المبادرة من سمو الامير تأتي تشجيعا من سموه لابنائه من اللجان المنظمة والمشاركين والفائزين بالمسابقة
Labels: Media
كلمة ولو جبر خاطر ولا سلام من بعيد... ولا رسالة يا هاجر بيد ساعي البريد
The playlist returns after a hiatus in which December didn't have much on offer and I somehow forgot to post my Best of 2006 list (too late now). The past few weeks have just been lazy, but we'll kick off with a track I recommended last year waaaaaay before its official release and now it's a big hit. Can I call them or what?!
Labels: Music
I'm no fan of DJ Linda on RKFM 99.7, but, God bless her, there she is every morning, getting up at the crack of dawn to drive all the way from Jahra to the radio station to be her (excessively) perky self on the radio. Yes I have issues with her music selection which barely seems to change, but I can't get too worked up over it that early in the day.
Labels: Media
Labels: Entertainment
Remember "Little House on The Prairie"? Canadian TV channel CBC is now showing a parody of that classic, annoyingly wholesome show in which a Muslim family settles in the plains of Saskatchewan, Canada and struggles to fit in with the local devout Christian population.
Zarqa Nawaz, creator and writer of the groundbreaking show, insists she's an equal-opportunity satirist taking dead-aim at both Muslim and Canadian stereotypes in a post-September 11 world.
"I expect both groups will be wondering if the other finds the show funny," says Nawaz. There are predictable jokes about Muslim beliefs clashing with Canadian traditions. In one scene, a father wearing a kufi, or a knitted cap worn by devout Muslims, protests that his Canadian-born daughter wearing a revealing tank top looks "like a Protestant."
"Don't you mean prostitute?" the daughter asks.
"No, I meant a Protestant," the father replies.
In another scene, a young man of Middle Eastern origins with a Canadian accent is heard in an airport check-in line telling his mother via cell phone that his father shouldn't think his choosing to stop being a Toronto lawyer to become an imam in Saskatchewan amounts to career "suicide."
"This is Allah's plan for me," the young man says in passing, before an arresting cop appears suddenly and tells the surprised lawyer that he won't be making that appointment in Paradise.
Labels: Media