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Park Jin Young paid Rain’s mother’s hospital bills before she passed away

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Seoul — Korean superstar Rain reflected on the most fateful moments of his life thus far during the latest episode of SBS’s My Ugly Duckling.

Rain appeared as a special MC on the Sunday (Jan 3) broadcast of the reality show, where host Shin Dong Yup asked him to name what he feels are the three most life-changing opportunities he had received.

His mentor Park Jin Young was mentioned, and that he was the one who discovered Rain 20 years ago and debuted him as JYP Entertainment’s first new male artiste in 2002.

In 1998, Rain first debuted under a different agency as a member of the boy group Fanclub. He made his solo debut with the stage name Rain under Park Jin Young’s wing in 2002. Fanclub was not well-known to the public and it disbanded within two years.

“The first [big] opportunity of my life was meeting [Park] Jin Young,” said Rain. “I think everyone knows this, but my family experienced a lot of hardship. Back in about 1997 or 1998, I didn’t have the money to pay my mother’s medical bills. I really turned to so many people and places for help, but not a single person would help me.”

Rain went on, “The situation was such that if she were just able to go to the hospital, she would be able to survive. It was the end of the year, and I still remember it. I think it was Christmas Eve or the day before that, but I made a phone call to Jin Young and asked him, ‘Hyung, please save me. I don’t have the money to pay for my mother’s hospital bills, so she’s currently unable to go to the hospital.’”

Park Jin Young was there for Rain when he needed help. Picture: YouTube

“Park Jin Young suddenly cancelled his entire schedule and came to my house, and together, we carried my mother to his car,” recalled Rain. “He drove us to the hospital, where he signed the legal guarantee [that he would pay her hospital bill]. That’s how she was finally able to be admitted to the hospital, and it was thanks to him that she was able to live two or three more weeks.”

Rain grew visibly emotional as he continued, “Recently, while practicing and eating together with [Park Jin Young], there have been times when I thanked him for making it possible for me to live like this. For making it possible for me to earn a living.”

“When I was young, I would look at kids who were able to go into pizzerias and eat pizza, and I would feel so envious,” he went on to share. “Or when I saw kids getting out of nice cars, dressed warmly in coats and holding hands with their parents as they went into family restaurants, I’d think, ‘How are those kids so lucky? When my life is so hard.’”

“But the person who offered me his hand in that kind of situation,” he continued, “was Jin Young.”

As for the second life-changing opportunity of his career, Rain shared, “My second [big opportunity] was meeting the Wachowski directors. That’s how I was able to first experience the U.S. market.”

“The third,” he continued, “was meeting my wife [Kim Tae Hee]. That was the finishing touch [on my life].” /TISG

Malaysian influencer spends RM168,000 at Japanese restaurant

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Malaysian influencer Cathryn Li is known to enjoy a lavish lifestyle. The influencer recently uploaded a series of throwbacks when she and her family visited Japan a year ago.

Cathryn showed in her Instagram Stories the time when she went to a restaurant named Kawamura in Ginza, Tokyo where her bill came up to a whopping RM168,000 (SGD55,000)! Cathryn told Hong Kong publication HK01 that she and her family had been on the restaurant’s waiting list for three years.

The high-end restaurant is apparently an intimate clubhouse for beef connoisseurs, according to 50 Best Discovery. The tasting menu is said to start from RM8,200 (SGD2,600). Kawamura is famous for its black abalone and wagyu. The influencer pointed out that the food served by the chef was top-notch.

“We ordered 2 extra wines worth 1 million yen each (~RM39k),” she added. When asked about the jaw-dropping bill, the influencer told HK01 that her credit card has no spending limit so money wasn’t an issue.

Cathryn Li is a fitness influencer. Picture: Instagram

Last year, Cathryn came under fire when she posted on Instagram saying that M-sized girls are fat. She has since apologised for her insensitive remarks.

“It was a highly offensive and insensitive post, and I am deeply sorry for the hurt, anger, and disappointment I have caused you,” Cathryn wrote in the post, which has amassed over 35,000 likes since Monday, October 7, 2020.

Cathryn publicly apologised in the following two weeks after she said that anyone above size M is “as sinful as obesity”. The influencer said it was not her intention to make such a sweeping statement and that it was meant for her model friends.

“The post was intended for my model friends who like me, despite being of a healthy weight in the past, has (sic) previously unable to secure a modelling job due to the size criteria imposed,” she said.

Cathryn explained that she was trying to motivate her friends and herself to hit the gym so that they could meet the size standard set by the modelling industry.

“Looking back, I now realise how that was a mistake at many levels (sic),” she continued.

“Not only was the tone of my message offensive, I was encouraging friends to conform to an unhealthy beauty standard, which I have imposed also on myself.”

 

Vaccinated and non-vaccinated travellers still subject to same border measures: Lawrence Wong

Singapore — The first parliamentary session of the year, which was live-streamed on Monday (Jan 4), heard updates on the Covid-19 pandemic.

Education Minister Lawrence Wong, co-chairman with Health Minister Gan Kim Yong of the Multi-Ministry Task Force on Covid-19, said that whether or not the vaccines will have a considerable effect in curbing the spread of infections is still being studied.

So, for the time being, travellers who have been vaccinated are still subject to the same border measures and stay-home requirements as non-vaccinated travellers.

However, the Government will consider relaxing stay-home measures for travellers who have been vaccinated when more data becomes available.

He added that the biggest advantage the vaccine brings is to protect those who have received the doses, which means the spread of the virus is likely to be reduced, although how extensive this reduction will be is yet to be determined.

Mr Gan answered a question from Mr Melvin Yong (PAP-Radin Mas SMC) regarding the effectiveness of the vaccine against the new Covid-19 strain discovered in the United Kingdom last month, which has been shown to be more easily spread.

Mr Gan said that there is no proof at present that available vaccines are less effective in tackling the new strain, citing statements from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. He added that the Ministry of Health will asses new data and information as it comes.

He added that those who have been vaccinated in Singapore will have both a physical and online record, noting that almost 60 per cent of those surveyed said they would avail of the vaccine, and another third said they want to wait for more data before making a choice as to whether or not to get vaccinated.

In an answer to a question from Mr Louis Chua (WP-Sengkang GRC), the Health Minister said that people will not be able to choose a particular vaccine as this would “unnecessarily complicate the already complex vaccination programme”.

At this point, he added, only the vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech has been approved for use in Singapore.

Mr Gerald Giam (WP-Aljunied GRC) asked Mr Wong how the Government is managing the risk of arrivals to Singapore, especially for children aged 6 and under.

Mr Wong replied that of the 12,000 arrivals to Singapore from Nov 18 to Dec 27, 2020, from higher-risk countries or regions who came to the country without pre-departure tests, about 100 individuals, or .85 per cent, have tested positive for Covid-19.

The majority of the arrivals are Singapore citizens and permanent residents, and none of those found positive have caused local transmissions, he added. Citizens and permanent residents are not required to take pre-departure tests.

He also noted that some countries may not readily offer Covid-19 testing for young children, adding “but through the Stay-Home Notice (SHN), we ensure that community transmission risks are minimised, even in the absence of a pre-departure test”.

Mr Wong noted that the Covid-19 vaccine is not a silver bullet. He emphasised that the number of infections around the world is continuing to grow, which is why Singapore cannot get complacent.

He added:

“We cannot afford to relax and let our guard down… The global situation continues to escalate rapidly.

“With the virus raging around the world, we clearly cannot afford to freely open our borders at this time.

“But neither can we close ourselves completely from the world, and simply stop all flights or ships coming to Singapore.

“Trade and travel are our lifeblood. This is an existential issue for us because we do not have the luxury of a hinterland to depend on.” /TISG

Read also: Former Singapore diplomat criticizes livestreams of Parliament sessions within minutes of it starting

Former Singapore diplomat criticizes livestreams of Parliament sessions within minutes of it starting

Teen who got 15-year-old schoolmate pregnant sentenced to 15 months of probation

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Singapore – A teenage boy who impregnated his 15-year-old schoolmate was sentenced to 15 months’ probation on Monday (Jan 4).

The boy, who was 17-years-old at the time, was said to have pressured his underage girlfriend into having sex with him.

According to a CNA report, the two teenagers began dating in March 2019, with the boy asking the victim if she wanted to have sex with him. When she declined, the teen would often “express his disappointment” towards her after getting rejected.

In May 2019, the couple went to a staircase in West Mall where the teen asked the victim again if she wanted to have sex with him. The court heard that she decided to agree to his request, “as she did not wish to reject him anymore”.

They had protected sex at the staircase before leaving. In December 2019, the couple was at the offender’s home when he initiated sex. This time, he did not use protection. They ended their relationship a few days later.

In May 2020, the victim’s mother noticed that the girl had not been using sanitary pads and that her stomach had grown bigger. When she took the girl to a hospital, the underage pregnancy was discovered and the police were subsequently informed.

After the baby was born, neither the victim’s family nor the accused’s family wanted to raise the child and it was put up for adoption.

The teen, now 18, will have to perform 60 hours of community service.

For sexual penetration of a minor, he could have been jailed for up to 10 years, fined or both. /TISG

Prince William and Prince Harry’s future relationship may be clearer when they meet later this year

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Prince William and Prince Harry’s relationship has been rocky for some time now. News of this nature is usually based on speculation and comes through anonymous reports but the royal siblings have addressed their issues head-on.

Prince Harry shared that he and his brother were “on different paths” during an October 2019 interview for the ITV documentary Harry & Meghan: An African Journey. 

“Part of this role and part of this job and this family being under the pressure that it’s under … stuff happens,” he told ITV News at Ten anchor Tom Bradby at the time. “But look we’re brothers. We’ll always be brothers.”

Still, Harry was hopeful about the future of his and William’s relationship, elaborating:

“We’re certainly on different paths at the moment but I will always be there for him and as I know he’ll always be there for me. We don’t see each other as much as we used to because we’re so busy but I love him dearly. The majority of the stuff is created out of nothing but as brothers it’s just as I said, you have good days, you have bad days.”

Prince William and his brother Prince Harry may reconcile. Picture: Instagram

Harry and William are expected to reunite face-to-face later this year after spending most of last year on different continents due to the travel restrictions put in place due to the pandemic. Harry and his wife, Meghan relocated to California last year. Royal insiders say that Harry and William will reunite this summer and how they interact then will determine the future of their relationship.

“Will the family be reconciled?” royal correspondent Rebecca English questioned in a recent column for the Daily Mail. “The litmus test will be the Duke of Edinburgh’s 100th birthday in June, which is followed by the planned unveiling at Kensington Palace of the long-awaited memorial statue to William and Harry’s late mother, Princess Diana, Covid permitting.”

Prince Harry’s attendance is expected at both occasions if at all possible, and royal insiders will be paying close attention to how he and William are together. “If the two brothers can make that work, then we have hope,” a royal source explained.

Fingers crossed that Will and Harry do more than just “make that work.”

Parliamentary questions: Ex-WP politician appreciates clarification from Speaker

Singapore — A former Workers’ Party (WP) politician has apologised after being corrected by the Speaker of Parliament regarding questions for the sitting on Monday (Jan 4).

Mr Bernard Chen, the WP candidate in MacPherson SMC in the 2015 General Election, wrote in a Facebook post on Monday that, according to the Order Paper for the parliamentary sitting on Jan 4, Aljunied GRC MP Leon Perera had asked a question similar to that of MacPherson MP Tin Pei Ling.

He had asked: “Why is it that Ms Tin’s question deserves the right of answer by the Minister and the accompanying media coverage, while Mr Perera’s question is relegated to that of a ‘written question’ (page 18 of the Order Paper, Qns No. 20 of ‘Questions for Written Answer’), which will be nicely tucked away?”

These were the questions:

Mr Perera: To ask the Minister for Communications and Information (a) when will the livestream of parliamentary proceedings for the public commence; and (b) how will the public be able to access the livestream of parliamentary proceedings.

Ms Tin: To ask the Minister for Communications and Information whether he can provide an update on the plan for live-streaming of Parliament proceedings and how this can be implemented in a way that mitigates concerns about its potential impact on the quality and tone of debates.

In a prompt reply on his own Facebook page the same day, Mr Tan said that Mr Perera had filed his Parliamentary Question as a written question. He explained that if Mr Perera had filed it as a question for oral answer, it would have been grouped with Ms Tin’s question.

“Given his role as a politician, I thought that the person who posted this would understand this or to have checked how it works before posting. It seems clear what he is trying to insinuate. In any case, hope this helps,” he added.

In subsequent updates to his post, Mr Chen expressed appreciation of the Speaker’s response and clarified that he was no longer a “politician” involved in politics.

/TISG

Mel B tempted to tell bandmates that she is taking part in The Masked Singer

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Former Spice Girl Mel B shared that she was tempted to tell her fellow bandmates that she was joining The Masked Singer.

The 45-year-old was the second celebrity eliminated from The Masked Singer on Saturday night’s episode when she was unmasked as Seahorse. Mel did not tell anyone that she was participating in the competition but when she was asked if she was tempted to tell her bandmates, she replied: ‘Well, yeah!’

‘I didn’t tell any of them. I didn’t tell anybody, not even my mum and my mum’s a big gossip so I definitely wouldn’t have told her.’

During a talk with host Will Njobvu on The Masked Singer’s spin-off show Unmasked, Mel said that she found singing in costume ‘nerve-wracking’ and that she tried hard to disguise her Leeds accent.

Mel B did not tell her bandmates that she joined The Masked Singer. Picture: Instagram

She said: ‘It’s a bit nerve wracking because with this mask on you can’t see and it’s very constricted – so it’s literally like singing with someone’s hand in your face so that bit was a bit daunting but when the music starts you just get into it.

‘I thought I did quite a good job not sounding so northern. To be quite girly and soft with no accent was hard work actually.’

Despite Mel trying to hide her true identity, judges Davina McCall, Rita Ora and Mo Giligan all correctly guessed that Mel was the star behind Seahorse.

Asked what she learned from the show, Mel said: ‘What I’ve taken away is – apparently I have a distinctive walk and a distinctive voice and I’m never going to get away with it.’

Asked if she will miss her costume, the singer joked: ‘No, because I’m stealing everything. I’m taking everything with me!’    

While the three other judges correctly identified Mel, fourth judge Jonathan Ross was sure that it was not Mel as he had ‘heard Mel singing up close’ before and he guessed that it could be chat show host Trisha Goddard. When she was revealed, the singer then tried to disguise herself by changing her voice and the way she sang. Mel B performed Kylie Minogue’s Can’t Get You Out of My Head on the show and tried to throw the judges off the scent by singing differently than she normally would.

After being unmasked, Mel said: ‘I thought I disguised myself pretty well with my voice and accent and trying not to be like me. I’m very shocked that you guessed me.’

To which Mo, who had insisted he would put money on it being Mel from the start, replied: ‘You just have such a distinctive twang. The way that you speak.’

Davina revealed it was Mel’s pronunciation of ‘show’ which gave it away. Whilst Rita added: ‘Sometimes when you’re too iconic, you’re too iconic.’

A clue that was given in order to guess that it was Mel behind the mask was that the Seahorse had stolen a toilet roll from a legend’s home.

Explaining what had actually happened, Mel said: ‘Well we went to Nelson Mandela’s house, we all got invited and our hair and make up team actually said to bring something with you.

‘So I took a toilet roll and kept some for myself so we all had a token [from the day].’

Asked by host Joel Dommett what the other Spice Girls would think of her appearance on the show, Mel said: ‘They’ll probably be annoyed I didn’t tell them!’

This episode comes after Sophie Ellis-Bextor was unmasked as the Alien on the premiere episode of The Masked Singer on Boxing Day. The Murder On The Dancefloor hitmaker admitted she was fortunate she did not stumble in her costume.

After the show, she said: ‘I was on a platform and couldn’t see too well. I thought I might fall off.’

On having an advantage as a singer, she continued: ‘I felt like a gymnast who had a cool routine with jumps and twists, who then left after their first comedy somersault. But it’s cool.’

Cabby returns hand phone immediately, refuses to accept S$50 reward

Singapore — With so much bad news these days, some good news about the kindness and decency of strangers is always welcome, as one man has found out.

Mr Julius Ho’s Dec 31 Facebook post about a ComfortDelGro taxi driver has gone viral, getting shared over 2,200 times.

He wrote his post because “I strongly feel that we should share our experience”.

He and a friend used the ComfortDelGro app to book a trip from Kallang Wave Mall. A cabby by the name of Mr Lim Hong Herng took the booking.

Mr Ho said that, on arrival at their destination, Mr Lim got out of the taxi and offered to help them with their groceries even though they could manage them.

There was nothing much to say about the trip. After they had alighted, however, they  discovered that one of them had left a hand phone in the taxi.

“We panicked.

After desperately calling your hotline and being on hold for more than 5 minutes, we decided to head up to the apartment so that we could use an online app on a laptop to find the phone and make it ring and also using the one phone we have left to call the lost phone.”

Mr Lim answered immediately and, even though he was far away, he said he would return to where he had dropped off Mr Ho and his friend.

The cabby arrived so quickly that they had to run to him. He handed them the phone but would not accept the S$50 they tried to give him as a reward or thank you gift for his quick response.

Mr Ho pointed out that this experience was different from those in the past when drivers asked for payment for having driven back, “sometimes before driving to the owner of the phone as if holding the phone as ransom”.

This cabby, he wrote, “made his way back to us as soon as possible (we could see from the tracking app), returned our phone, and refused payment. He refused to accept even a lower sum of money. This went on for a few minutes and after a spirited back and forth, we conceded that he would not accept a cash reward for returning the phone that we had carelessly misplaced”.

Mr Ho added that it has been recently difficult for taxi drivers because of the pandemic as well as the rising number of private hire vehicles, and acknowledged that in a way, they are indebted to Mr Lim.

“I am sure Mr Lim has suffered some loss of income and maybe even anxiety over the challenging year that is 2020. And yet he refused to take any form of cash reward for returning our phone.

“In fact, we owe him. His petrol/diesel it took to drive back to us, his time which could’ve been used to do 1 or more trip(s), the fixed daily rental of his taxi, time he could have spent with his family.”

He ended his post with words of praise for the cabby.

“It is heartwarming to know that even in these sometimes bleak times that there are angels amongst us. Mr Lim if you see this, I want you to know that you are generous and a truly decent human being, and you made this ending of 2020 more sweet than one could hope for. I wish you a blessed life!” /TISG

Read also: 2 babies born in Comfort DelGro taxicabs in the same week during CB

2 babies born in Comfort DelGro taxicabs in the same week during CB

Ho Ching: We can face 2021 with optimism and caution

Singapore—Madam Ho Ching, the Chief Executive Officer of Temasek Holdings and wife of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, took to social media on Monday morning (Jan 4) on a note of “optimism and caution” for the beginning of the year.

Mdm Ho used the phrase “optimism and caution” more than once across several posts, especially since vaccinations have already begun to be administered in Singapore.

And the Temasek Holdings CEO also used her posts to help educate others regarding how soon a person’s immune response kicks in, since “immunity or vaccine protection is NOT instantaneous,” as she pointed out.

Mdm Ho explained that for the vaccine from Pfizer, which is being used in Singapore, 50 per cent protection occurs within 10 to 14 days after the first dose, and then the second dose four weeks later brings immunity up to 95 per cent.

“So all in, we would need to wait for about 2 months from 1st jab to about 2-3 weeks after the 2nd shot, to have protection against serious infection for 95% of the vaccinated folks,” she added.

In her next post, she wrote, ”Stay safe in school and at work, as we start the year with hope and care.

With the vaccines starting to be available, we can face 2021 with optimism and caution.”

Mdm Ho warned that vaccinating all of Singapore would likely take until the end of this year. Moreover, while the vaccine “can greatly prevent serious illness from Covid-19,” this does not mean nobody will have a serious illness any longer.

“However, low serious illness rates does not mean zero serious illness. So our optimism must be paired with caution.”

It is unknown, she added, whether a person who has received the vaccinations can still be highly infectious.

“In other words, when we are vaccinated, we may ourselves be protected against serious illness from Covid. But we may still carry a high enough viral load to infect others.”

Therefore, mask-wearing is still necessary in order to protect others.

“We can think of the function of our masks as follows: Cover up our nose to protect ourselves; Cover up our mouth to protect others.”

Mdm Ho also commended “some thoughtful ladies” who wore face shields while exercising, even if they did not wear masks.

“Kudos and double thumbs up! They are protecting others from their own large droplets as the face shields catches most of the large droplets right upfront.

Keep safe, and deep thanks to everyone who takes Covid precautions for themselves, their families, their friends and strangers in our midst.”

—/TISG

Read also: Ho Ching posts about “the most efficient healthcare system in the COVID era”

Ho Ching posts about “the most efficient healthcare system in the COVID era”

 

Former Singapore diplomat criticizes livestreams of Parliament sessions within minutes of it starting

Singapore — Barely minutes into the first livestream of a Parliamentary session on Monday (Jan 4), a former Singapore diplomat criticized the move, calling it “a mistake”.

In a Facebook post on his own page, Bilahari Kausikan wrote that the move “is a mistake. It will undoubtedly be hailed as a step in the direction of ‘transparency’. But the real effect will not be genuine transparency”.

In a press release on Monday (Jan 4), the Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI) said that Singapore will begin livestreaming Parliament sessions from that day.

Members of the public can tune in to the original and translated versions of the proceedings in real time on the ministry’s YouTube channel.

During a Parliamentary sitting in September last year, Minister for Communications and Information S Iswaran said that the Government had agreed “in principle” to livestream parliamentary sessions.

The intial push for the move for Parliament to be live-streamed came from former nominated MP Anthea Ong and Workers’ Party MP Leon Perera.

In his post, Mr Kausikan said that the immediate effect of having the sessions livestreamed “will be to promote playing to the gallery”.

“To think that playing to the gallery will be recognised as such by the general public, is to expect far too much of human nature. In the long run, it will change the political dynamic in such a way as to incentivise a certain sort of personality to enter politics and not the kind who ought to be a political leader”, he added.

Along with Mr Kausikan, the move was also initially opposed by former Leader of the House Grace Fu, who said that there were other ways for people to go through these sessions, including videos of speeches and exchanges on CNA’s Parliament online microsite. /TISG