A
woman hires a drifter as her guide through New Orleans in search of her
father, who has gone missing. They discover a deadly game of cat and
mouse behind his disappearance in the process. full summary | add
synopsis John Woo's Return to Asia: They Have Confidence in Me, Unlike
Hollywood...
Why would Gig-ya create an application which in almost a year of experimentation to successfully sign in with your useless box to any of my Blogger Blogs from various sites ranging from Dailymotion to Photobucket...the list is long, during which time having tried every possible combination and permutation of possible fuck-ups that might account for Gigolo's singular and exceptional failure in what is its increasingly large putrescence on the Internet, I have finally became resigned to the inevitability that this problem along with the absolute void of remedy and/or links not provided by Gig-ya or its third-party clients, leaving the host site as helpless as its user and both at the mercy of a big blue shiny beta toy impersonally designed, unmanned and unmaintained whose one function as proxy between sites unfortunate enough to utilize its service and users unfortunate enough to encounter their inadequacies are both left stranded and mutually mute in their brokered out mistake.
Thanks Gigyafor all the happy times sharing videos, photos and happy thoughts which although well-intended are useless, or should I say, useless and irredeemable.
Happy Holidays,
Keep up the bells and whistles, maybe no one will notice the bones.
TAIPEI - The man behind Apple Daily's controversial animated news in Taiwan has hit back at critics after a week-long row over the cartoons. Jason Chan, CEO, NextMedia Animation, told Media: “Apple Daily is regarded as 'evil' but popular in Taiwan. Taiwan's media industry may feel threatened by it or fear it, I guess.” Apple Daily received a barrage of complaints from concerned parents after broadcasting explicit, erotic and violent content on its animated news channel on Nextmedia.com. Apple Daily launched its animated news website in Hong Kong and Taiwan on 26 November. The site received 120,000 clicks on the first day of its launch in Taiwan, with viewer numbers increasing by 60 per cent. However, the site was also boycotted by elementary and junior high schools and the Taipei City Council which found its content offensive.