THE QUESTION

For the spring holidays, a lighter question: What's the most popular TV show where you live, and what effect does it have on viewers?

Posted by David Ignatius on April 9, 2007 12:16 PM

FROM THE PANEL

Daoud Kuttab is a Palestinian journalist. He was born in Jerusalem in 1955. Presently he is a visiting professor at Princeton University in the United States. Mr. Kuttab is the former director of the Institute of Modern Media at Al Quds University in Ramallah, Palestine and the founder of AmmanNet, the Arab world's first internet radio station. His personal web page is www.daoudkuttab.com

Scantily-Clad Arab Reality TV

People often joke about the Lebanese Broadcasting Network by pronouncing it's initials like the Arabic word for "get dressed" -- in reference to scantily dressed women on the network's shows. It seems Arab television copies the West in more ways than one.

Daoud Kuttab Princeton, NJ | 22 COMMENTS
Apr 10, 2007 at 4:53 PM
Annie Wang is a journalist, public speaker, and author who specializes women’s issue. She has published eight Chinese books and two English novels. Her English debut, Lili - A Novel of Tiananmen, (June 2001 Pantheon Books) published internationally to critical acclaims. A multi-layered novel, Lili, is a story of a "bad girl's" maturation and adventure in the Post-Mao Era leading up the Tiananmen Student Movement in 1989. Her most recent English novel, The People’s Republic of Desire (Harper Collins 2006) is a hilarious satire and an insightful portrait of China’s MTV generation, urban women, and cross-cultural relationships. It has been hailed as a cross between Sex and the City and Joy Luck Club. A child prodigy in her native China, Annie Wang studied mass communications at UC Berkeley and won the Berkeley Poetry Contest in 1996 with two poems, "Speaking to Mao Tse-tung, Tongue-in-cheek" and "A Woman from a Mountain Area". She has worked for high-tech companies in Silicon Valley, and then served in the Washington Post's Beijing bureau and the US State Department. In 2004, she returned to China and ran a fashion magazine in Shanghai. Currently, she lives with her husband and son and divides time between the U.S. and China.

Emperors, Concubines and Politics Today

Annie Wang Shanghai, China | 8 COMMENTS
Former Washington-based columnist for The Hong Kong Standard, The New York Sun, and Insight on the News, an online weekly published by The Washington Times. Covered economic and political relations between the United States and East Asia, with an emphasis on China, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Former chairman of the Hong Kong Journalists' Association. Currently a business executive at a Chinese-language newspaper in Hong Kong.

Two Kids, A Blackberry, And No TV

Kin-ming Liu Hong Kong | 17 COMMENTS
Miklós Vámos is a Hungarian novelist, screenwriter and talk show host. He is one of the most read and respected writers in his native Hungary. He has taught at Yale University on a Fulbright fellowship, served as The Nation’s East European correspondent, worked as consultant on the Oscar-winning film Mephisto, and presented Hungary’s most-watched cultural television show. Vámos has received numerous awards for his plays, screenplays, novels and short stories, including the Hungarian Merit Award for lifetime achievement. The Book of Fathers is considered his most accomplished novel and has sold 200,000 copies in Hungary.

On TV, Hungary Is a Village of Love Affairs

Miklos Vamos Budapest, Hungary | 4 COMMENTS
Endy Bayuni
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» MikeB | Now, I'm a Democrat, so this is not something I take lightly, but where is Barak Obama in the Don Imus mess? He is supported by and appears in public ...
» Salamon | TV takes the place of the Roman Emperors dictum: food and circus for the "unwashed", and TV is the latter. Tv is also a major wealth transfer agent, ...
» berry, ecuador | There is a DirecTV anthena sitting on my house's roof, but the service was discontinued several months ago. I cancelled my membership, tired of the pe...
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