Saturday, 18 October 2014

ENTERTAINMENT LOST OF ICON: Former 'American Idol' contestant Joanne Borgella dies at 32

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Singer and model Joanne Borgella, who competed on "American Idol" in 2008, died on Saturday at age 32 after a battle with cancer, her family said on her Facebook page.



"With heavy hearts, we are deeply saddened to announce the passing of our beloved Joanne," the family said in a statement, which did not say where Borgella had died.



The Long Island, New York-born Borgella made it to the top 24 on "American Idol" in 2008, three years after she appeared on reality series "Mo'Nique's Fat Chance" and won its contest to find the ideal plus-sized model. In recent years, she had modeled professionally and launched her own clothing line.



Borgella last year shared a video with her fans to say she was diagnosed with cancer and that it had spread to her chest. She had since chronicled her treatment on her Facebook page.



(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Robert Birsel)





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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: 'Buffy' star Nicholas Brendon arrested in Idaho

(Reuters) - "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" actor Nicholas Brendon has been arrested in Idaho on multiple charges, including resisting arrest, according to a police report.



Brendon, 43, starred on the hit show as Xander Harris, along with Sarah Michelle Gellar, who played the series' title role over seven seasons.



According to an Ada County, Idaho police report, Brendon was charged with malicious injury to property and resisting or obstructing Boise police officers on Friday night.



Media reports said Brendon was in town to attend a comics convention and got into a drunken dispute with hotel staff and broke a decorative item.



Police took him into custody when he tried to leave the scene, the reports said.



Brendon has also starred on "Criminal Minds" and "Private Practice," among other television series.



(Reporting by Chris Michaud; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)





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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS: Inarritu leaps off the ledge with 'Birdman'

By Michael O'Boyle

MORELIA Mexico (Reuters) - As Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu neared his 50th birthday, he took stock of his string of acclaimed, dark films, and decided to do something really scary: confront his own struggle with being an egomaniacal filmmaker, in a comedy, in a single shot.

"Fear of the unknown is a great creative partner," Inarritu told Reuters at the Morelia International Film Festival. "It makes you more aware and open to circumstances that you haven't planned for. It lets you make advantages from your limitations."

What emerged from his own mid-life crisis is "Birdman," his fifth film and an absurd comedy-drama that explores how modern identity suffers from what Inarritu calls the "disease of popularity" spread by social media and a culture of celebrity.

The film, which opened in limited release this weekend, is being hailed by critics as a masterpiece, a perfect fusion of form and content. Using what appears to be a single take, it tracks the breakdown of a has-been movie star who is trying to reinvent himself on the Broadway stage.

The Academy award-nominated Inarritu broke from his previous style seen in "Amores Perros" and "Babel" of deploying multiple storylines and juxtaposed time frames in bleak tales of fatal accidents that intertwine the lives of strangers.

"It was liberating to do comedy," the Mexican director said. "It felt like playing in a jazz band."

The film is still steeped in existential angst, but it comically portrays the actor's obsession with fame.

"In the times we now live, we have empowered the rest to tell us who we are," Inarritu said.

"Now is a time where there are so many social networks, such need for validation ... you don't have to be a star or a politician to want to have likes or dislikes. Now there is a disease of popularity in the whole society."

The camera, run by Academy-award winner Emmanuel Lubezki, weaves from dressing rooms, through hallways and out onto stage, following Riggan Thomson, played by Michael Keaton, as he rushes toward an opening night set for disaster.

All the time, Thomson is trying to escape the foul-mouthed voice in his head of Birdman, the feathered superhero character from the franchise he abandoned years earlier before his career sank into obscurity.

On top of the virtuoso camera work, a jazz drum soundtrack drives the film, acting as the frenetic beating of Thomson's erratic heart as scenes move between reality and his imagination, where he has telekinetic powers and can fly.

The film could be seen as a satire of actors like Keaton, who himself walked away from playing Batman, but Inarritu says he was exploring his own ego and creative process, while also skewering the superheroes of the Hollywood machine that produces "junk food" just to make money.

"I had this idea based on my own personal experience of hearing my voice torturing me ... elevating me to heights and then sending me to hell," he said. "I thought it would be very interesting to explore the nature of that internal battle that we all have."

Keaton's performance and Inarritu's direction are already stirring Oscar buzz, which could mark two-years running for Mexico after Alfonso Cuaron took best director this year for "Gravity," which also won Lubezki an award for cinematography.

"It makes me feel like Riggan. My wings are really spreading, saying 'you are the greatest,'" he jokes. "No. I think I am very aware (the Oscars) are very subjective. And the film is about that. It is ephemeral and it is nice, but it is not the important thing."

(Editing by Simon Gardner and Grant McCool)



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BUSINESS NEWS: Companies look for more fairness as China eyes legal reforms at key meeting

By Ben Blanchard and Sui-Lee Wee

BEIJING (Reuters) - China is set to unveil key legal reforms this week that will try to limit the influence local officials have on court cases, a move being closely watched by company executives who hope it will make the legal system more impartial.

The announcement is expected at the end of an Oct. 20-23 meeting of the ruling Communist Party elite, which has made the "rule of law" the theme of the gathering. The meeting, called a plenum, comes at a time when slowing economic growth in the world's second-largest economy is raising the prospect of more commercial disputes.

The business community, in particular Chinese private firms and foreign investors, have long complained about the difficulty of getting a fair hearing in court because judges usually answer to local governments and party organs, which often have their own interests to protect.

Chinese media has recently carried reports on local companies suing each other when a dispute arises, with the parties lodging separate cases in courts in their home provinces, which then inevitably find for the home firm.

In April, Knowles Corp (KN.N), a New York-listed maker of advanced micro-acoustic products, said its lawyers had been blocked by a provincial court from attending a patent infringement case involving Chinese group GoerTek.

Ahead of the plenum, a meeting of the roughly 370-member Central Committee that usually takes place annually, state media has noted that the key goals are to temper the influence of local governments in courts and to make judges more professional and not tools of the party.

This would involve "reforming the judicial system to prevent local officials from interfering in court decisions", a source with knowledge of the plenum agenda told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

However, while the party may be seeking to limit the influence of officials on courts, there is no suggestion China is about to set up an independent judiciary, and for sensitive cases, such as high-level corruption or for prominent dissidents, the party will remain firmly in charge.

While the legal reforms are also aimed at quelling some of the roots of China's growing unrest by giving people a sense of fairness in the justice system, there is a strong economic rationale for the measures.

Writing in the party's official People's Daily newspaper last Wednesday, Li Shuguang, a professor at the China University of Political Science and Law, said there could be no economic growth without a sound legal system.

"Protecting intellectual property and contracts are the preconditions for economic development and growth," Li wrote, adding that the current system was "not working properly" as it gave the government too much scope to abuse its power.

"For healthy future economic growth, the rule of law will play an even more important role in China's market economy."

When drawing up contracts, many foreign companies seek to include clauses to enable arbitration in places such as Hong Kong in the event of a dispute.

SCEPTICISM ABOUT CHANGES

At the party's last plenum in November, President Xi Jinping announced ambitious economic reforms that signaled a shift in China's economy from infrastructure- and export-fueled growth towards a slower, more balanced and sustained expansion.

The government has since carried out a handful of economic reforms, although some critics argue that implementation has not been fast enough.

"They have recognized that without improved rule of law, economic reforms they want to deliver will not succeed," said a Beijing-based European envoy.

James Zimmerman, managing partner of the Beijing office of law firm Sheppard Mullin and a former chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce China, said removing the influence of the party on court cases was vital.

"We are already seeing a vast improvement in the quality of the written opinions and decisions. But they need the political monkey off their back in order to do their jobs professionally, independently and with transparency," he said.

"Can we anticipate real change? Probably not. I say this because the party is unlikely to let go of the courts and lawyers. The messages are conflicting as to how far they will go with reform."

The president of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, Joerg Wuttke, added it was vital that companies could challenge the rulings of regulators in court.

None of the recent barrage of anti-trust cases against foreign companies operating in China are known to have been challenged in local courts.

Separately, the government has begun trial programs in a few parts of the country, including the business capital Shanghai, to simplify court bureaucracy, and more details about how this could work nationally should come after the plenum.

The new programs allow judges to make judgments without getting approval from the court's chief justice, who may not have had anything to do with the case.

Courts will also be funded by the province or even the central government rather than from local-level budgets as part of the trial.

"When the courts' coin bags are held by the local governments, their independence will be affected, as they are prone to the lobbying of local officials," Tang Xiaotian, deputy head of the Shanghai Law Society, told the official Xinhua news agency in July.

(Additional reporting by Benjamin Kang Lim, Michael Martina, Matthew Miller and Beijing newsroom; Editing by Dean Yates)



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BUSINESS NEWS: Tesco accounting black hole to be less than originally stated: Sky

LONDON (Reuters) - The world's third largest retailer, Tesco, will state next week that it overestimated earnings by less than the 250 million pounds which it previously announced, Sky news reported on Saturday, citing an unnamed banking source.



Sky said on its website that when the firm reports its delayed first-half results next Thursday, the gap would fall "somewhere close to the middle" between 200 million and 250 million pounds ($322 million and $402 million).



Tesco was not immediately available for comment when contacted by Reuters on Saturday.



The 95-year-old supermarket chain is suffering its worst ever crisis after issuing three profit warnings in 64 days this year. It said in September that an accounting mistake had over-valued first-half profits by 250 million pounds.



The firm is expected to update the market on Thursday into the progress of its own investigation into the error being conducted by auditors Deloitte and law firm Freshfields.



Over the last year Tesco's big out-of-town stores have lost favor as shoppers buy more produce locally and online, while discounters Aldi and Lidl and upmarket chains Waitrose and Marks & Spencer squeeze the middle ground.



Sky also reported, without citing its sources, that Tesco had asked the investment bank Greenhill to field offers from parties interested in buying assets, including the customer data specialist Dunnhumby.



Greenhill was not immediately available for comment when contacted by Reuters.



On Friday, CEO Dave Lewis told staff in an internal e-mail seen by Reuters that he expects to be able to give a "clear and accurate indication" of the impact of the accounting mistake when the company reports its results later this week.



He also told staff that the performance in its core food business would be "one of our strongest for a very long time".



Tesco's interim results on Thursday will cover the six months to Aug. 23.



(1 US dollar = 0.6214 British pound)



(Reporting By Costas Pitas; Editing by Stephen Powell)





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SOCIAL MEDIA NEWS: Twitter lets users stream music, audio via SoundCloud tie-up

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Twitter Inc (TWTR.N) will allow users to play podcasts, music and other audio clips direct from their timelines, or message feeds, via a new feature designed in partnership with Berlin-based audio-streaming service SoundCloud.



The online messaging service introduced on Thursday what it called "Audio Card," through which users can listen to a variety of content whilst browsing their timelines.



For starters, Twitter has promised audio from SoundCloud's partners, which include such diverse sources as NASA, the Washington Post, CNN, David Guetta, Coldplay and Warner Music.



But it's trying to snag more content partners in future, Twitter said in a blogpost on Thursday.



Twitter didn't say how Audio Card might evolve, except to stress that it offers musicians a chance to post exclusive clips.



"Many more musical artists and creators will be able to share exclusive, in-the-moment audio to millions of listeners on Twitter," the company added.



Twitter's new feature comes after rivals from Apple Inc (AAPL.O) to Google Inc (GOOG.O) have jumped into the business of music-streaming, considered the fastest-growing segment of a music market dominated by iTunes.



Twitter had reportedly been in discussions to acquire audio-sharing website SoundCloud, which has been called the Youtube of music, as far back as June.



(Reporting by San Francisco newsroom; editing by Andrew Hay)

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BUSINESS NEWS: Morgan Stanley, armed with cash from fixed income dump, goes shopping

By Lauren Tara LaCapra

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Morgan Stanley (MS.N), which has spent three years throwing out bad apples from its fixed income trading portfolio, now wants to put the freed up money into businesses that bear healthier fruit.

It is reinvesting capital previously held against unprofitable trades into areas like municipal bonds, credit and securitization, where it sees opportunities for boosting profit, senior executives at the bank said on Friday.

This step represents a turning point in the bank's efforts to shrink to the point where it can make money again in bond trading. New regulations put in place after the financial crisis have made the business more expensive for big banks, forcing them, for example, to use shareholder money to finance their trades instead of cheaper debt. As trading becomes more expensive, many banks have to be choosier about which trades to do.

"We've been very focused on 'what is the return on equity in the business?'" Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat said in an interview on Friday, referring to a measure of profitability.

The bank's risk-weighted fixed-income trading assets have shrunk to $190 billion, close to its target of $180 billion by the end of next year, giving Morgan Stanley more room to reinvest in the business again, the executives said.

At this stage, Morgan Stanley's bond trading business sits in a gray zone - not as big as JPMorgan Chase & Co's (JPM.N), nor as profitable as Goldman Sachs Group Inc's (GS.N).

The bank's executives have sometimes been inconsistent in their statements about where the business is headed.

In 2010 and 2011, management said the bank was committed to growing revenue in a range of fixed-income trading businesses, and pledged to increase market share by 2 percentage points. One focus was growing trading in interest-rate driven products like Treasuries, a business that generally requires a big balance sheet to be successful.

The bank quietly scrapped that plan as regulations evolved, and after the person it had hired from Goldman Sachs to expand that business was unsuccessful and left.

Morgan Stanley executives later told analysts that the fixed-income trading unit just needed to reach an average quarterly revenue of $1.75 billion to be profitable. But more recently, executives have said that goal is no longer relevant because they are just focused on improving returns.

In the third quarter, Morgan Stanley produced $1 billion in adjusted fixed-income trading revenue, beating analysts' average forecast of $885 million.

Analysts and investors said the results show that size does not matter for fixed-income trading overall, but does in areas that a bank excels in.

"You don't have to be the biggest in FICC; you have to be the biggest in what you do in FICC," said KBW analyst Brian Kleinhanzl, referring to an acronym commonly used for the Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities business. "That goes all the way back to corporate strategy 101. Let's figure out what we do well and do that and stop trying to be all things to everybody."

(Reporting by Lauren Tara LaCapra; Editing by Dan Wilchins and Richard Chang)



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