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Chronology
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LONDON

A decade in the making, Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom sequel “Love Never Dies”, opened this week in London to some decidedly unfriendly reviews. Later this year, it will transfer its “magic” to New York City.

This time around there is no heart-stopping chandelier crash, no underground gondola beneath the Paris Opera. Why? Well, because the Phantom has taken up residence in Coney Island, New York City’s venerable seaside amusement park. Really. “The Phantom of the Opera” has been on stage on the West End, on Broadway and pretty much everywhere else since 1984. In the preceding 25 years it has been seen by more than 100 million people – and that doesn’t include the film version. You might have thought that after such career-defining, mega-success, composer Andrew Lloyd Webber would have let the Phantom retire… More

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Tibet

On March 10 1959, Tibetan nationalists rose up against their Chinese occupiers in a revolt that was quickly crushed. During the week of March 10 to March 14 2008, the Tibetans exacted a bloody revenge. It’s an anniversary the world now watches closely.

Exactly two years ago, on March 10 2008, three hundred or so monks from Drepung Monastery made their way slowly toward the centre of Lhasa, about eight kilometres to the east. It was the anniversary of the failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule, and as in previous years, the expectation was that the monks would calmly call for Tibet’s independence before retreating. Instead, they came with specific demands – one being that the Chinese authorities release five monks imprisoned in October 2007 for celebrating the US’s award of the Congressional Gold Medal to the Dalai Lama. The monks were stopped… More

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Global event

It's a bad joke, but we'll repeat it anyway. Q: How do you tell Chuck Norris's age? A: Cut him in half and count the rings. The man who almost beat Bruce Lee in battle is seventy-years-old on Wednesday, would you believe. We at The Daily Maverick wanted to be the first to wish him happy birthday.

There are way more than two websites that celebrate the sophisticated ouvre of Chuck Norris, but only two seem to do it with the zeal and professionalism of the man himself. The first is chucknorrisfacts.com and the second is chucknorrisjokes.net. On the first you have biographical details like "According to Einstein's theory of relativity, Chuck Norris can actually roundhouse kick you yesterday," "Chuck Norris sleeps with a pillow under his gun," and "Some people wear Superman pyjamas, Superman wears Chuck Norris pyjamas." On the second you have one-liners like "Chuck Norris does not wear a condom because there is no… More

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UK

Poland's Ryszard Kapuscinski was once voted the greatest journalist of the twentieth century, even though the factual ambiguity in his books had long been debated. A new biography appears to confirm the great writer's blurring of the divide between reportage and fiction. Should we think less of him?

An exercise: read the following extract from Another Day of Life, Ryszard Kapuscinski's non-fiction account of the atmosphere in Luanda after the Portuguese exodus of 1975, and try to remain unmoved: "When the army left, the dogs began to go hungry and slim down. For a while they drifted around the city in a desultory mob, looking for a handout. One day they disappeared. I think they followed the human example and left Luanda, since I never came across a dead dog afterwards, though hundreds of them had been loitering in front of the general headquarters and frolicking in front… More

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Los Angeles

The most commercially successful movie of all time ($2.5 billion and counting), Avatar, was not a match for a small little independent movie about the US Army explosive ordnance disposal team during the Iraqi War, which was made on a shoestring budget. There is still justice in this world.

The Hurt Locker director, and James Cameron's former wife, Kathryn Bigelow has shattered one of the last remaining glass ceilings, becoming the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Director. The Hurt Locker won six Awards, including the most important ones, for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay. It also took the gold statuettes for Best Sound Mixing, Best Sound Editing and Best Film Editing. James Cameron was decidedly not the king of the world this time. Avatar did walk away with three Oscars, but they were mostly for mastery of film science, where they really… More

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Johannesburg

South Africa's longest-running soap opera is to air for the last time on Tuesday, March 2nd. What, if anything, has the show done for the country? And is this really the end?

The cliffhanger is to storytelling what the goal is to football: if you don't have one, the match is short on melodrama. Not to say that you can't have a fine game of football without either team scoring; maybe a superb battle for possession takes place in midfield, or the keepers steal the show with a flawless display of their craft. Still, what the punters come to see are goals. The equivalent of a scoreless game in storytelling might be a work of literary fiction or cinema verite - the sort of thing elitists enjoy while everyone else is bored… More

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New York

ABC News is the last of the traditional big-three US news networks to implement cutbacks. On Tuesday last week, the Disney-owned organisation announced plans to retrench a quarter of its 1400-member staff. It can't be good for journalism, but the upside is that the days of the Ron Burgundy-like anchorman may finally be over.

The 1987 movie Broadcast News was a tough film to sit through for a range of reasons: the script was tedious, the acting was mediocre at best, and the narcissistic travails of the central characters weren't exactly the stuff of gripping drama. As Adam Mckay's 2004 film Anchorman proved, what goes on behind the scenes at news networks is way more interesting when it's presented as comedy. Like, who can forget the following exchange between Ron Burgundy (played by Will Ferrell) and Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate): Ron: I don't know how to put this but I'm kind of a big… More

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World

“After playing Chopin, I feel as if I had been weeping over sins that I had never committed, and mourning over tragedies that were not my own,”  Oscar Wilde.

Born exactly 200 years ago, on 1 March 1810, Frédéric Chopin was the half-French symbol of Polish nationalism; a co-creator of the new idiom of musical nationalism while he himself lived as a wandering expatriate through most of his life; he was the musical revolutionary who ironically willed that a work written some 60 years before his death, Mozart's “Requiem”, be performed at his funeral. Passing away from tuberculosis at just 39, he had achieved a prolific creative life, composing nearly 200 piano works including two concertos, sonatas, scherzos, and almost 200 other preludes, etudes, nocturnes, waltzes, polonaises, mazurkas and… More

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US

It was a truck that Arnie took out of the Iraqi war zone and deposited on America's streets around the time of Terminator 2. "I'll be back," you hear the Hummer say? Fat chance.

The system that most motor manufacturers use to measure and publish the total weight of a vehicle is known as "curb weight". Usually, the measurement refers to a car's mass when it's carrying all the standard equipment, a full tank of fuel, and no passengers or cargo. The curb weight of the Hummer H2 is 2,700 kilograms. Not only does this make the vehicle illegal on some city streets, it also sort of compromises its economy rating. On the open road, a Hummer H2 needs 17 litres of fuel to travel 100 kilometres; in the city, the same distance requires… More

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South Africa

Imagine this: You have only one parking space, an unlimited budget and the need to purchase a car. Immediately. If that sounds simple enough, then consider the following criteria. Your vehicle should reflect your current, elevated station in life, but it can’t be too flashy, in case someone demands a lifestyle audit. (Are you listening, Julius?)

Your ideal car needs to offer enough space for a family holiday (even if you prefer to fly), but should still be compact enough to negotiate the narrow, leafy lanes of Constantia, Houghton or Bryanston without brushing centuries-old trees, lamp posts or unsuspecting cyclists. Because you fancy yourself as a bit of a Michael Schumacher, your new wheels need to be rapid. But you also need to be able to negotiate potholes the size of small lakes, cross swollen rivers and deal with rutted road surfaces – and that’s just to get to your driveway. Forget your Aston Martins, Porsches… More

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UK

A collection of files made available to the British National Archives on Wednesday, courtesy of the Ministry of Defence, contains thousands of reports of UFO sightings between 1994 and 2000. For British media, it’s Christmas all over again.

Prince Harry hasn’t been photographed wearing a swastika armband. A businessman hasn’t been caught in a peerage-for-payment scheme. Nobody is (yet) baying for the national football coach’s blood. But still, British media is shouting with one voice today. Why? Because files belonging to the Ministry of Defence were released by the National Archives on Wednesday, February 17, and in them are documents so utterly compelling that their re-publication is sure to bolster newsstand sales from Land’s End to John O’Groats. “Several witnesses insisted that they saw a UFO over [former Home Secretary Michael Howard’s] home less than two months before… More

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Solar system

On 18 February 1930, 23-year-old junior researcher at the Lowell Observatory in Arizona, Clyde Tombaugh, discovered Pluto. Hailed as Planet X that humanity was for some reason desperate to find, it was the stuff of dreams and pure romance. Today it drifts forgotten and unexceptional. How things change.

The work was, how shall we put it, boring. Clyde Tombaugh was a mostly self-educated young researcher who was making up for his lack of academic achievements by being what every good astronomer in those days needed to be: a patient, methodical fella. By February 1930, he’d already clocked-up a whole year of working with blink comparator, a truly clever machine: two photos of the same portion of the sky, but taken at intervals of several days, were inserted into it and the victim, er, scientist, would flip from one to another. As stars are, for all intents and purposes,… More

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US

Walter Isaacson, the man who has been chosen to write the authorised biography of Steve Jobs, has a life-story that reads like a romance novel. Can we expect the ‘Book of Jobs’ to read like a romance too?

It’s hard to get more mainstream, more of-the-establishment, than Walter Isaacson. The guy has a resume God would be proud of, if God were a leftist American journalist. Which is to say that Isaacson would not be plausible in a serious novel – only real life, or Mills & Boon, could come up with something as sublimely perfect as this son of New Orleans, Louisiana. The sanctity of the life was apparent early. After graduating from High School, Isaacson gained entry to Deep Springs College, a private all-male affair that’s amongst the most prestigious undergraduate colleges on Earth. From there,… More

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South Pacific

Stevie Smith’s famous poem about the man thrashing about in the sea could easily apply to the island nation of Kiribati. Ten years ago it was the first country to celebrate the new millennium; now it looks like being the first casualty of rising sea levels.

In late October 2006, Anote Tong, the president of the Republic of Kiribati, sent a warning to the governments of Australia and New Zealand. Tong told the two most developed nations in the South Pacific, the same geographic region in which his island country is located, that within the next decade they could expect a massive influx of his fellow citizens. "If we are talking about our island states submerging in ten years time, we simply have to find somewhere else to go," he said. Tong was speaking at the annual South Pacific forum in Fiji, where a key item… More

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US, World

Can you believe it's only five years old? In half a decade YouTube has changed the nature of online infrastructure, nearly caused a catastrophic policy change in the USA and given Google near-total dominance over an entire category of advertising. Now for its next trick: forcing standards-based video streaming on reluctant parties – like Microsoft.

The numbers on YouTube are just silly. In terms of users there is nothing to compare it with except the Google search engine, or Facebook, or Wikipedia. But those sites deal mostly in serving text or a couple of hundred million still images. YouTube streams well north of a billion pieces of video every day. That makes for an outrageous amount of data. Which is how YouTube nearly killed the interweb – twice. First by suffocation, as more and more people started streaming its videos over infrastructure that, five years ago, couldn't handle the load. Lines and connections that were… More

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South Africa

Anthony Fabian’s portrayal of the life of Sandra Laing is not an easy movie to watch. But for that reason, it’s essential – a tale that cuts to the very heart of what it means to be South African.

In many ways it’s the metaphor of the country, a story so profound and disturbing it’s difficult at times not to watch through your hands. In case you don’t know yet, Skin, the feature film directed by Anthony Fabian, is the dramatisation of the life of Sandra Laing, a black woman born to white parents. The film is disturbing because it’s an authentic version of somebody’s tragic truth; profound because twenty years after Mandela’s release, it suggests that our deepest questions have not yet been answered. Sandra, the real person, was born in 1955 to Abraham and Sannie Laing, conservative… More

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UK

The co-founder and erstwhile front-man of Genesis was always destined to be way more than a pop icon. On his sixtieth birthday, we look back on the full and extraordinary life of a performer, innovator and humanitarian.

Rolling Stone magazine aren’t big on understatement, but something about the opening paragraph of their online Peter Gabriel biography doesn’t quite cut it in terms of scale. “Since leaving Genesis in 1975 to begin a solo career, Gabriel has revealed a new array of guises,” the magazine notes, “including pop star with a distinctively mellifluous voice, soundtrack composer, social activist, and world-music aficionado as well as benefactor, music-video innovator, and multimedia artist.” By all accounts it’s been an incredibly large and diverse life, and you can’t really blame Rolling Stone for the limited perspective – to properly articulate the story,… More

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Cape Canaveral, Florida

After three wind delays on Wednesday, Nasa gave the go-ahead for the Atlas-V rocket to blast off from Cape Canaveral on Thursday evening SA time. This awesome piece of equipment will open the secrets of our own star like never before.

The Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) mission "will determine how the sun's magnetic field is generated, structured and converted into violent solar events like turbulent solar wind, solar flares and coronal mass ejections", says Nasa. The solar wind fills the solar system with charged particles and magnetic fields, while solar flares are explosions in the Sun's atmosphere equalling billions of Hiroshima-sized nuclear bombs. And coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, are high-speed eruptions of solar material into space, where, well, the Earth is. The data gathered may provide us with the ability to predict when these nasties will happen. Strangely enough, it… More

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US

According to America’s paper of record, which likes to make pronouncements about new Ages in human history – and sometimes even pronounces right – the electric car is finally a viable reality. Why have they said this now? Because they’ve test-driven SA-born Elon Musk’s new Tesla.

Like JM Coetzee and Dave Matthews, Elon Musk doesn’t talk much about his origins. Best known as the co-founder of PayPal, the online micropayment company that according to The Daily Maverick will soon be coming to South Africa, Musk left the land of his birth for Canada in 1989 so that he wouldn’t have to serve in the apartheid government’s military. Since then, he’s done moderately well for himself. In 1995 he sold a software firm called Zip2, which he started with his brother, to Compaq’s AltaVista for $340 million; in 2002, as the largest shareholder, he sold PayPal to… More

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FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA and at least 200 million TV sets

The Saints won the Superbowl. And if you don't understand why that is important – financially and psychologically – you really need this quick education on the sport, the game, and the all-important advertising.

The highly-favoured Indianapolis Colts, guided by their all-star quarterback Peyton Manning, faced America's sentimental favourite the New Orleans Saints, in Sunday’s Super Bowl – and the Saints came marching in as the unexpected victors: 31-17. The Saints narrative was compelling even before this upset win. The team almost left its home city four and a half years ago, when New Orleans was battered by Hurricane Katrina in late 2005 and its home stadium became a half-ruined shelter for homeless victims of the hurricane and the flooding that came with it. In the aftermath it played the entire following season as… More

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LONDON, LOS ANGELES

Here at The Daily Maverick we have spotted a new political campaign trend. Create truly awful, enhanced reality ads to ensure your candidate is remembered – even if for the wrong reasons.

Months before an actual election, ads in the UK and US reduce their own candidates to ridicule. A UK poster for David Cameron features air-brushed better-than-ever skin while a California TV ad for Carly Fiorina offers a man dressed as wolf in sheep’s clothing - with spooky day-glow eyes and weird organ music. The first example comes from the UK where a thoroughly airbrushed poster has already made David Cameron a figure of ridicule. Cameron, that bland-looking toff with pretty reasonable chances of unseating Gordon Brown and becoming the next prime minister, appears on his party’s newly unveiled poster with… More

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UK

Some say he’s the messiah who saved motoring journalism from a painful, boring death. Some say he is the Devil’s spawn and should be sent back to Hell, immediately if possible. All we know is his name is Jeremy Clarkson.

And if you think we’ve gone overboard on the hatred, think again. The full list of Clarkson enemies would be too long to publish, but here are some of the madder ones: Hyundai, after he mentioned that its staff had eaten a dog; Malaysia’s parliament wanted him banned for calling their pride and joy, the Perodua Kelisa, the worst in the world and subsequently setting fire to it; the Germans complain consistently about his crude WWII jokes. Then there are environmentalists and politically correct groups of all colours and persuasions, as well as almost the entire British Labour government. Then… More

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South Africa

What’s the answer? We don’t quite know, and neither do Die Antwoord, South Africa’s new global music phenomenon, but we do know the question – why’s everyone loving our creative artists right now?

At Oppikoppi 2009 – the insane music festival in the veld, which last year was branded “Smoorverlief” – the craziest night by far was the last one, when Afrikaans zef-rap outfit Die Antwoord hijacked the stage. I was standing near the back of a crowd that easily numbered six thousand; all the way to the front there were arms pumping the air and people screaming in off-the-hook abandon. On stage were two tall white men and a diminutive blonde chick, who was swearing at everyone. The standout track was “Wat kyk jy”, which has Watkin “Waddy” Tudor Jones aka the… More

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Los Angeles

While millions of desperate Haitians cling to life and Nigeria is breaking out in inter-religious rioting, many Americans are hypnotised by a titanic struggle over who will be on the NBC TV airwaves “right after your local news”. That should clarify what is really important on this planet.

The Tonight Show has been a fixture on American television since there was light on the screen. In the beginning there was Steve Allen (who sometimes played the piano and who interviewed the chimpanzee, Jay Fred Muggs, on TV). Then Steve Allen begat Jack Paar (the host who sometimes cried at his guests’ stories). Jack Paar begat Johnny Carson, who ruled the electronic landscape for nigh unto thirty years, aided by his intensely loyal second banana, Ed McMahon. And it was good, very good - for NBC, its stockholders, the show’s advertisers, and its affiliate television stations throughout the land,… More

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UK

Sixty years ago today, George Orwell, author of Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, died of tuberculosis. Seeing he bequeathed his surname as an adjective to the English language, it’s probably worthwhile considering his life and legacy.

In four hyphenated words, published in 1937 in The Road to Wigan Pier, Eric Arthur Blair said all there was to say about his family’s social class – and as an intended consequence said a whole lot more about the nature of British class structure in general. The Blairs were “lower-upper-middle-class” he wrote; the implication being that they were not to be confused with the slightly (but perceptibly) more refined members of the middle-upper-middle-class, or, heaven forbid, the infinitely less aristocratic upper-middle-middle-class. The Blairs, you see, stretching back to Eric’s grandfather, had served the British crown in imperial India; while… More

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US

In the annals of men who came second, Buzz Aldrin is arguably the most famous of them all. On his 80th birthday we look back on his life, and consider why idiotic talk-show hosts clamor to interview him.

“Buyakasha! Check it out, I is here with none other than my main man Buzz Aldrin.” Ali G’s legendary interview with former astronaut Buzz Aldrin got right at the nub of things in the opening few seconds. “I know this is a sensitive question, but what was it like not being the first man on the moon? Was you ever jealous of Louis Armstrong?” Clearly, Aldrin hadn’t been exposed to the straight-faced society-upstaging humour of Sasha Baron-Cohen before. “It’s Neil Armstrong,” he said, “and no I wasn’t jealous. He was a very, very qualified person.” As with most of Baron-Cohen’s… More

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World

Had Elvis Presley lived, today would have been his 75th birthday. Of course, there are still those who say he didn’t die, but they’re now getting really old, if not dying themselves. Question is: can Elvis appeal to the next generation?

In early 2003, a few months after the 25th anniversary of Elvis Presley’s death, renowned rock critic Greil Marcus wrote a long, thoughtful piece about the waning influence of The King in popular culture. At the time, it seemed to Marcus that “more than two years after the last interesting Elvis impersonator, Bill Clinton, had left his stage, the real story was the evaporation of Elvis Presley in American life.” Today, January 8th 2010, would have been Elvis’s 75th birthday – and Marcus’s observation seems more pertinent than ever. Google News may offer you 575 related articles from around the… More

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Antartica

The game between whalers and anti-whalers turned dangerous on Wednesday when at least one activist was injured and an entire $2 million, Batman-styled ship banged up. Now it’s just a matter of time until one side or the other goes too far, and triggers real public outrage.

The ship that had its bow sheared off on Wednesday, the Ady Gil, was especially modified to be hard to spot, is far more manoeuvrable than the vessel with which it collided and was actively looking for trouble. The Shonan Maru 2, which ran it over, is part of the security detail of the reviled Japanese whaling fleet, which uses a barely-legal loophole to hunt for financial gain animals that are generally agreed should be protected. In the public relations game, that makes for stalemate. There is enough ambiguity to reinforce the pre-existing bias (either for or against the annual… More

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Berlin

What is the idea of Berlin, the city that has just celebrated twenty years of liberation from division? Let us take you on a journey.

Some cities are famous for the things they are made of – think of New York City and recall the Empire State Building, Wall Street, Central Park. Rockefeller Center’s stylish ice rink immediately triggers hopes for urban romance; skyscrapers trigger memories of King Kong; Wall Street triggers images of, well, Gordon Gecko perhaps. Central Park and Broadway help define romance, sophistication and an urban, urbane lifestyle. From afar, the New York City skyline and the bridges into Manhattan, as in films like “Working Girl,” “On the Waterfront” or “At the Edge of the City,” whisper of aspirations for the good… More

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Detroit

Of all the legendary US record labels, there’s one that stands head and shoulders above the rest. Motown Records started 50 years ago in the heartland of the industrial country; it was destined to capture the American heart and soul and serve it ever-hot to the grateful masses.

The black kids got it first, but its infectious rhythms, drawing on soul, R&B and lush orchestration, tambourines and a driving bass, magnificent harmonies and drill-team crispness captured us all eventually. We heard the music on TV, on shows like “American Band Stand” and “Soul Train” and then the “Ed Sullivan Show” variety hour on Sunday nights. At that time, there were only three television networks, no Internet, no MTV or Channel O, no cable and no audio streaming, and so Ed Sullivan really was the apogee of American popular culture - at 8pm on Sundays across the country. And… More

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