Government of Canada Honours Parks Canada as the World's First National Park Service

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

BANFF, ALBERTA–(Marketwire -01/27/12)- The Honourable Peter Kent, Canada‘s Environment Minister and Minister responsible for Parks Canada, today commemorated the importance of the Creation of the Dominion Parks Branch and the birth of Parks Canada as an event of national historic significance.

“Since it was established a century ago as the Dominion Parks Branch, Parks Canada has worked tirelessly to protect Canada’s diverse national heritage and encouraged Canadians everywhere to appreciate, experience, and enjoy all of Canada’s national treasures,” said Minister Kent. “The plaque formally recognizes Parks Canada’s ongoing contributions to Canada’s heritage year after year as well as its own historical significance as the world’s first national park service.”

The designation commemorates Parks Canada’s 100 years of world leadership in conservation and tourism. Founded on May 19, 1911 as the Dominion Parks Service, Parks Canada now manages one of the most extensive networks of protected national heritage places in the world, encompassing 167 national historic sites, 42 national parks and four national marine conservation areas.

The plaque will be located in the Cascades of Time Garden on the grounds of the Parks Canada Banff Administration Building in Banff National Park.

“As the Minister for Parks Canada, my objective is to enable all Canadians to have meaningful opportunities to connect with Canada’s treasured places in order to build a stronger Canada, now and into the future,” said Minister Kent.

Created in 1919, and supported by Parks Canada, the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada advises the Minister of the Environment regarding the national historic significance of places, persons and events that have marked Canada’s history. Parks Canada manages a nation-wide network of national historic sites that make up a rich tapestry of Canada’s cultural heritage and which offers visitors the opportunity for real and inspiring discoveries.

For additional information, please see the accompanying backgrounder at www.parkscanada.gc.ca under Media Room.

Premier unveils Camperdown's patched-up poet

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

SCOTLAND’s cold and misty highlands and Victoria’s south-west are a world apart in climate and geography, but the Caledonian spirit was evident in Camperdown yesterday.

The strident sound of bagpipes reverberated across the town centre, several spectators donned their best tartan and the poetry of Robert Burns was evoked with gusto.

Even Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu affected a Scottish accent during his speech, amusing the crowd who gathered to celebrate the re-unveiling of one of the town’s old treasures.

More than 250 people gathered to see the town’s Robert Burns statue for the first time since its $85,000 restoration and witness the official opening of the Corangamite Shire’s civic centre.

Vandals attacked the historic statue in the town’s botanic gardens two years ago, damaging the hat of the famed Scottish poet and his dog Luath’s legs.

Mr Baillieu told the crowd he was particularly keen to see the restored statue, given his family’s connection to the region and his Scottish heritage.

“Being an architect, or a former architect really, I appreciate how the new (civic) building harmonises with the historic architectural qualities of Camperdown,” he said.

“The Burns statue is one of the best monuments to Scottish immigration in Australia as well as a magnificent piece of art.”

Descendants of Scotsman John Greenshields, who sculpted the statue in 1830, and Australian William Taylor, who secured the statue for Camperdown in 1883, were present yesterday.

The restored statue will sit behind the front window of the new civic centre and be illuminated at night.

To cap off the ceremony, the Premier handed Corangamite Shire mayor Matt Makin a bottle of scotch whisky from the Robert Burns Birthplace Museum in Ayrshire.

Mr Baillieu later met shire councillors to discuss local issues and also checked out Derrinallum plumber Gary Poole’s 1951 Holden car, which is expected to be part of the Monte Carlo Rally across Europe next year.

Two Major Routes to Yosemite Remain Open to Visitors

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

MARIPOSA, CA–(Marketwire -01/27/12)- Two of the most popular routes for visitors traveling into Yosemite National Park remain open, allowing easy access to the area despite a rockslide that has closed Big Oak Flat Road on Highway 120.

Visitors can travel on all-season Highway 140 from the west, which passes through the historic town of Mariposa and along the Merced River into Yosemite’s West entrance that leads directly to the Valley floor, while Highway 41 provides access to the Park from the south. Both routes also offer a variety of overnight accommodations, shopping and dining options.

“Last year, we experienced record visitation in Yosemite and many of those travelers came into the region on one highway corridor and left using another largely because of the convenience and the scenery each has to offer,” said Jeffrey Hentz, Executive Director of Yosemite/Mariposa County Tourism Bureau. “Many people don’t realize that there are a variety of ways to get in to Yosemite, especially in the winter, that provide easy access into the Park.”

Visitors to Yosemite National Park can also take Highway J132 from Modesto, which was named the John Muir Highway last year, into Coulterville and then follow Highway 49 south to Highway 140. For more information, visit the Yosemite/Mariposa County Tourism Bureau at www.homeofyosemite.com or call 1.866.HALF.DOME.

About Yosemite & Mariposa County
Located in the heart of California and home of Yosemite National Park, Mariposa County is a world class destination for all seasons, all nestled within the awe-inspiring surroundings of natural monuments, lush vineyards and notable landmarks. Combining the rich history of California’s gold rush with its engaging events and welcoming locals, it’s no wonder Mariposa County, which boasts a variety of more than 3,500 accommodations, attracts millions of travelers from all over the world each year. For more information, visit the Yosemite/Mariposa County Tourism Bureau at www.homeofyosemite.com or call 1.866.HALF.DOME.

14th century stone road found in central Vietnam

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

Local archaelogists have announced the discovery of a 14th century stone pathway at the southern gate of Ho Dynasty Citadel, a World Heritage Site in the central province of Thanh Hoa.

The pathway, approximately two kilometers long, runs across the gate to connect Vinh Tien and Vinh Thanh communes with Vinh Loc District in the province.

Dr Tran Anh Dung, head of the excavation team from the Archaelogy Institute, was quoted by Lao Dong Newspaper last week as saying “the unearthed road is Vietnam’s most beautiful ancient road so far.”

According to historical records, Ho Dynasty Emperor (Ho Quy Ly (1336-1407) used the royal road to travel from the inner citadel to Don Son Mountain, where he held ceremonies to heaven and earth, praying for peace and prosperity to the country and people.

Dr Do Quang Trong, Director of Ho Dynasty Citadel Preservation Center, said that the excavation project in an area of 1500 square meter around the site is expected to unearth the citadel’s original road and base.

The International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) has included the 2-km royal entry into the heritage listing as the most imposing, spectacular road in Southeast Asia.

The Vietnamese archaelogists also expect to unearth three-span, five-span and seven-span abutments around 100 meters away from the southern gate.

Trong added that the project also aims to answer the question of how the emperor traveled in and out of his citadel and if it was used as merely a military building or a royal capital in the past.

In addition to the stone pathway, Dung’s team has also unearthed several artifacts, including ancient weapons made of stone and iron, and ceramic objects dating back to the Le Dynasty (1428-1528).

Excavation work will be carried out on either side of the gates and structures inside the palace.

Trong said that the excavation would affect daily activities of local people, it requires collarboration and coordination between the government and several departments.

“In order to unearth the whole underground road, it is necessary to build a new road nearby to replace the old one which is used for travelling at present,” said Trong, “Then, the ancient road should be promoted as a heritage road to protect the surrounding environment and develop tourism.”

The Ho Dynasty Citadel, located in the two communes of Vinh Tien and Vinh Long in Vinh Loc district, was built in 1397 and was recognised by UNESCO as a World Cultural Heritage site in June, 2011.

In September, a rock site at the An Ton mountain area of around 25,300 hectares in the province’s Vinh Loc District was discovered as an excavation site used for constructing the citadel, which is nearly two kilometers away.

Pocono Raceway's Mattioli remembered as visionary

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

Dr. Joseph Mattioli, the man who built Pocono Raceway into one of the top tracks on the NASCAR circuit, died Thursday after a lengthy illness. He was 86.

Affectionately known as “Doc,” Dr. Mattioli ran the facility in Tunkhannock Twp. with his longtime wife, Dr. Rose Mattioli, until August when he announced his retirement during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series weekend at the track. He turned over all of the operating duties to the three oldest of his seven grandchildren: Brandon Igdalsky, Nick Igdalsky and Ashley Igdalsky.

Pocono is the only family-owned and -run track on the Sprint Cup Series schedule.

“I remember him saying last year that he put the racetrack in the grandkids’ trust. They can’t touch it; they can’t sell it; they’re going to learn how to run it or starve,” NASCAR driver Brendan Gaughan said during an interview on SiriusXM’s “Speedway” show. “That was one of the greatest quotes I’ve ever seen. I respect the hell out of a guy like that. It’s sad to see him go. He was a great, great promoter and great man for our sport.”

Not only was Dr. Mattioli well-respected in the racing world, but the community as well. He served on numerous boards of directors in Northeast Pennsylvania and made many contributions to local civic organizations, hospitals, schools and charities. In 2009, he received the Philanthropic Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association of Fundraising Professionals.

He also made Pocono Raceway a leader in the renewable energy and environmental fields when, in 2003, he constructed a solar energy farm on 25 acres of the track’s property, making it the largest solar-powered sports facility in the world.

“Doc and Rose have been great assets to their community,” legendary driver Mario Andretti said. “They’ve been very generous in so many ways. He touched many lives.

It’s a great loss.”

In a statement, the Mattioli family said Doc was a leader in every sense of the word.

“As a visionary, he brought an unknown sport into an alien place, where he along with his unstoppable will and undeniable tenacity built one of the biggest monuments of sports. His passion for his projects was only overshadowed by his deep love for his family, which he gave to all of us hand over fist.”

Born April 14, 1925, in Jersey Shore, Dr. Mattioli was raised in Old Forge. After graduating from high school in 1943, he joined the Marines, but was assigned as a Navy medic in the Pacific during World War II.

When the war ended, Dr. Mattioli moved to Philadelphia and enrolled at Temple University to study dentistry. It was there that he met Rose, who was a podiatry student. The two married in 1948.

Dr. Mattioli wound up having a thriving dental practice in Philadelphia. But it was so successful that he became burned out, so he stopped taking patients. With all this time and money now on his hands, he became involved in real estate in the Pocono Mountains.

He also learned how to fly. One day in the early 1960s, he flew with two of his four children to Mount Pocono for lunch. While there, he was approached by a man who told him they were looking for investors to build a race track on an old spinach farm in the area.

Even though Dr. Mattioli knew nothing about racing, he bought in to the plan.

Over time, however, he clashed with the other investors over how the project was progressing. So he eventually bought them out and developed the track by himself.

But trouble followed.

In October 1968, the first race at Pocono Raceway was scheduled to be held on its ¾-mile track. But rain, snow and fog forced its cancellation.

When the first race was finally held in 1969, driver Troy Ruttman was killed in a crash.

Undaunted, Dr. Mattioli pressed on and continued to build a 2.5-mile superspeedway that was shaped like a triangle.

On July 3, 1971, Pocono hosted its first 500-mile IndyCar race – the Schaefer 500.

Dr. Mattioli told The Times-Tribune in an interview last summer that tears rolled down his face when the race began.

“We had planned that race for so long and planned to build the track for so long; there was such a buildup,” Dr. Mattioli said. “It was such a very important day in our life here.”

For seven years, the IndyCars competed at Pocono. Then, in 1978, Dr. Mattioli was dragged into the middle of a feud between the United States Auto Club and Championship Auto Racing Teams that put him on the brink of bankruptcy.

He almost sold the track. That’s when NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. came to the rescue.

NASCAR had begun racing at Pocono annually in 1974, and Mr. France set up a meeting to convince him not to sell. During that meeting, Mr. France wrote this simple message on the back of a business card: “On the Plains of Hesitation, lie the bleached bones of millions who when within the grasp of victory, sat and waited. And waiting died.”

That convinced Dr. Mattioli not to sell. And in 1982, after Ontario, Calif., Speedway, closed, Pocono gained a second NASCAR date on the schedule, in essence saving the track. It has hosted two races a year since – 68 total – and has been a big part of the sport’s tremendous growth and popularity.

“Doc’s relationship with my family reaches three generations, all the way back to my grandfather,” NASCAR chairman and CEO Brian France said in a statement. “His passion for the sport will live on in the hearts of his family and our friends. His contributions to our sport are widespread. We have lost a great leader – and a great person.”

One of the final honors Dr. Mattioli received came in December when he was awarded the 2011 Myers Brothers Award, presented by the National Motorsports Press Association for outstanding contributions to the sport of stock car racing.

“I admired how he stayed on and survived everything that was thrown at him along the way,” Mr. Andretti said. “His commitment and passion for the sport ultimately won. He kept on building and kept on improving to what it is today.”

In addition to Rose, Dr. Mattioli is survived by his daughters, Louie and Michele, a son, Joseph Mattioli III, seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

Plans for service arrangements have not yet been announced.

Contact the writer: swalsh@timesshamrock.comJoseph R. Mattioli, D.D.S., 1925-2012

Kathmandu architect chronicles a dying culture

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

by Frankie Taggart

KATHMANDU, January 27, 2012 (AFP) – It is said that the medieval era never really ended in Nepal, its historic towns and architectural jewels blessed by an unbroken continuity of life and ritual that links the present with the past.

The lasting image for tourists flying out of Kathmandu is of the multi-roofed pagodas of palaces and temples and the 16th century courtyards, which were once the basic unit of city planning.

But much of the capital’s ancient architecture will soon be no more than a memory, according to one of the world’s leading authorities, Niels Gotschow, as haphazard urbanisation and a desire for modernity change Kathmandu.

“To put things into a book is an act of preservation because one day this will be the only way to remember,” says Gutschow, who has dedicated the last four decades to chronicling and preserving Nepal’s architectural treasures.

Gutschow, 70, has pulled up countless floors and chipped endlessly at concrete to reveal the long-lost craft of the Newars — the Kathmandu Valley’s indigenous inhabitants renowned for their striking brickwork and wood carving.

The Hindu and Buddhist monuments of the three cities of the valley on which the German national has worked — Bhaktapur, Kathmandu and Patan — were collectively designated as the first Asian UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979.

But every year bahal courtyards with richly-carved doors are demolished, balconies and lintels removed, and cornices and roof struts pulled down to make way for new homes in the fast-expanding capital.

Significant monuments, monasteries, temples and historic houses across the valley are being lost in their entirety.

“Until ten years ago a person did not even need a demolition permit,” says Gutschow. “So you’d demolish your house, even in the so-called World Heritage Sites.

“An amendment of the law now requires a demolition permit but that doesn’t mean much. There’s no enforcement because no municipality can ask the (authorities) to send a policeman to enforce the law. It’s a lawless country.”

Born in Hamburg, the son of an architect, Gutschow studied architecture at the University of Darmstadt and spent time as an apprentice carpenter in Japan in the 1960s.

He came to Nepal in 1971 to volunteer on the restoration of the Pujari Math Hindu monastery in Bhaktapur, a Newar city around 13 kilometres (eight miles) east of Kathmandu where he made a home with his wife, Wau.

Gutschow’s stock-in-trade is rescuing historical buildings from ruin with a holistic approach that takes account of ancient rites and building techniques, relying on old photographs and historical detective work.

His latest project is on the restoration of the Patan Royal Palace and the Bhandarkhal Archaeological Garden, a trove of buried archaeological treasures dating back to the 12th century.

But local communities, preoccupied with moving towards a decent standard of 21st century living rather than preserving medieval character, are not always appreciative of his work.

He recalls the at times violent resistance to his conservation efforts, particularly over the Itum Bahal, one of the largest Buddhist courtyards in Kathmandu, where his workers were attacked with hammers.

He says his work is about documenting a period which is largely beyond salvation. But while the last Newari house may be gone in a generation, he is trying to preserve the “key monuments” of Kathmandu.

“Architecture of Newaris”, Gutschow’s three-volume labour of love 40 years in the making and the latest in a canon of work stretching to more than a dozen books, was published at the end of last year.

It is the “ultimate” chronicle of Newari building techniques, says Gutschow, but it may soon also be the only record of an age consigned to history by the thrust for modernity.

“I do not get depressed,” he says. “It’s part of life.”

Ricochet: Politics and the perseverance of faith

Posted on 27th January 2012 in The monuments of world

The verbal tussle that erupts seasonally between government people and Church leaders is  a minuscule example of the conflict that has sometimes characterized the relationship between civilian and clerical leadership over the ages.

An example was the bitter exchange between Archbishop Fernando Capalla and former Mayor Rodrigo Duterte over the mandated prayer or “oratio imperata.”

In world history, the conflict between English King Henry VIII and Pope Leo X over the king’s divorce with Queen Catherine of Aragon (which the Pope refused to grant) and Henry VIII’s marriage to Anne Boleyn (which Leo X refused to tolerate) resulted in the schism that gave birth to the Church of England.

Henry VIII simply appropriated all the properties – churches, land and all – of the Roman Catholic Church in England and declared himself the head of the new and ‘reformed’ Anglican Church.

Of course, there was, too, the revolt of Augustinian monk Martin Luther supported by the German nobles against the ‘power and efficacy of indulgencies’ declared by the same Pope Leo X. The pope granted indulgencies which allegedly shortened one’s stay in purgatory in exchange for money paid. Well, reminiscent of the impositions of faith that priests force upon the faithful nowadays.

But this conflict sometimes results in beautiful monuments for posterity. One such example is a conflict that occurred 750 years ago, but this one resulted in the construction of one of the most beautiful and elegant churches in the United Kingdom.

Old Sarum was one of the earliest settlements in England, with evidence of human habitation as early as 3000 years before Christ, at about the same time that the stone circles known as Stonehenge was built and used by the early inhabitants.

Old Sarum was among the oldest seats of military and political power. It was an important station of the Roman Empire which occupied Britain between AD 43 to AD 410.

When the Romans left, the Anglo Saxons took over, and the place became one of the most important towns in the Western Kingdom under Cynric, King of Wessex.

The French King William of Normandy , also known as William the Conqueror, drove away the Anglo Saxons, brought in Christianity, built his castle and church, and called the place Sarisburia, from which the name Sarum and Salisbury are derived.

To Sarisburia, William gathered the nobles, knights, and prelates to pay homage to him.

Sarisbury was an important seat of military and ecclesiastical power under the Norman rule; a cathedral and bishop’s palace were built in the site under the prelature of Bishop Osmond.

But the contrast and conflict between military and ecclesiastical power in Old Sarum was stark. Writer Peter of Blois in 1200 described Old Sarum as “barren, dry, and solitary, exposed to the rage of the wind; and the church stands as a captive on the hill where it was built, like the ark of God shut up in the profane house of Baal.”

By 1219, the contrast became open conflict. The place proved too small to hold both cathedral and castle. The King’s men held captive the churchmen of Bishop Richard Poore, and the bishop begged the king to have the cathedral relocated to another site two and a half miles away, where it stands to this day in the township of Salisbury .

The Salisbury Cathedral, built in 1220 and completed in 1258, is one of the most imposing churches in the world. It was constructed with a single, consistent architectural style, Early English Gothic. Originally known as St. Mary’s Church under the Catholics and before the Protestant Reformation, the statue of the Virgin Mary and Child sits above the massive church door.

I was in Salisbury Cathedral at about this time three years ago.

Walking inside the church is like walking through the corridor of dark-lit, incense-filled centuries. All around one sees medieval frieze, chapters of an enduring faith captured in stained glass.

All around are scenes from the books of Genesis and Exodus; captured in colored glass are portraits of Adam and Eve, Noah, the Tower of Babel , Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Jesus with the Apostles.

Displaced behind protective glass inside the cathedral is one of the best preserved copies of the Magna Carta, the charter of liberty and rights granted and signed by King John in Runneymede in June 1215. (Another copy is at the Holy Trinity Church in Stratford upon Avon where William Shakespeare is buried.)

One item of great curiosity is the cathedral clock. It is the oldest working clock in the world, dating back to medieval times, circa 1386. It stands in a corner of the church nave, ticking the hour as it has done for over 600 years. The clock has no face, only its exposed mechanism, and it gives the hour by tolling the church bell.

In the heart of Salisbury Cathedral is a huge marble holy water font with water ever-flowing down the four spouts at its sides. The water is as clear and placid as glass and the font is always full.

A middle-aged British woman dips her fingers in the water and makes the sign of the cross. I follow her gesture of faith.

The sign of the cross is a gesture that ties the two of us – Catholic and Anglican – in a common bond.

And the holy water flows serenely down, constant as faith.

In original Internet shows, hints of coming change

Posted on 26th January 2012 in The monuments of world

NEW YORK (AP) — After years of experimenting, the top video destinations on the Web are suddenly flush with original programming: documentaries, reality shows and scripted series.

Over the next few months, YouTube, Netflix and Hulu will roll out their most ambitious original programming yet — a digital push into a traditional television business that has money, a bevy of stars and a bold attitude of reinvention.

The long-predicted collision between Internet video and broadcast television is finally under way.

No one is suggesting that the quality on the Internet is close to that of broadcast TV, but it’s becoming easy to imagine a day when it will be.

And even though critics question whether new media can rival a business that’s been around for about 70 years, the video sites have sought partnerships with seasoned professionals. And they benefit from the different economics of global Web-based entertainment.

Either way, what’s happening now is just the first wave.

“This convergence is now,” says documentary filmmaker Morgan Spurlock, who created “The Failure Club,” a series about people trying to do the things they’ve always feared, for Yahoo, and “A Day in the Life,” a series documenting 24 hours of someone’s life, for Hulu.

He says the quality still varies, but viewers will soon see talent and production values begin to change.

On Feb. 6, Netflix will premiere its first scripted show, “Lilyhammer,” in which Steve Van Zandt (“The Sopranos”) plays a New York mobster in witness protection in Norway. Later this year, it will release “House of Cards,” a highly anticipated adaptation of the British miniseries produced by David Fincher and starring Kevin Spacey. Next year, it will debut new episodes of the cultish comedy “Arrested Development,” which originally aired on Fox.

Hulu plans a Feb. 14 premiere for “Battleground,” a mock political documentary. The site will later release “Up to Speed,” a six-part documentary by Richard Linklater about “monumentally ignored monuments of American cities.”

Hulu, which has some 30 million monthly users and 1.5 million for its monthly subscription service Hulu Plus, is co-owned by the parent companies of NBC, Fox and ABC.

Yahoo has sought to capitalize on its enormous search audience of nearly 180 million unique monthly visitors by drawing viewers to its original programming, including a slate of women-focused shows launched last fall and comedy programming planned for February. Its first scripted entry will be “Electric City,” a futuristic animated series produced by Tom Hanks, who will also voice a character.

YouTube recently launched an entire catalog of original programming, spending $100 million on the gradual rollout of more than 100 niche-oriented channels.

The channels don’t have the pressures of a 24-hour schedule and instead focus on short-form, on-demand programming. Partners vary from the Wall Street Journal to World Wrestling Entertainment to Madonna.

At the recent consumer electronics trade show CES, YouTube’s global head of content predicted that by 2020 about 75 percent of channels will be transmitted by the Internet. And video will soon be 90 percent of all traffic.

“Over time, you will see more and more television properties, television channels distributed over the Internet,” Robert Kyncl said. “Everything in its due time.”

Internet delivery allows programming that is “much harder to fulfill through traditional distribution means…because we have a global scale,” Kyncl added.

And online systems can serve niche audiences that would be difficult to sustain any other way, and do so at lower cost.

YouTube plans to expand to hundreds of Internet channels, just as television went from a few networks to dozens of cable channels. In the next few years, “most of your interests will have channels on YouTube,” Kyncl predicts.

Netflix, which streamed 2 billion hours of video in the fourth quarter of 2011, is already operating under the assumption that video networks — whether streaming or televised — are converging. Just as Web video is undertaking original programming, TV networks are experimenting with systems such as TV Everywhere, which allows viewers to watch channels on the Web and on mobile devices.

“You can think of us as a cable-TV network, but we like to think we are at the center,” says Reed Hastings, CEO of Netflix. “We are an Internet TV network, and then they are going to become like us. But it’s the same thing, really.”

Hastings offers a comparison between Netflix and HBO: “We are becoming more like them in doing some originals, starting that journey, and they are becoming more like us in creating an on-demand interface like HBO Go,” which allows viewers to watch channels on the Web and on mobile and tabulate devices.

HBO declined to comment.

Production schedules will vary widely at the sites, but Netflix plans one notable difference: All its episodes will be released at once.

James McQuivey, an analyst at Forrester Research, says the fact that Hanks is making a series for the Internet shows how the traditional TV system is “ready to unravel.

McQuivey says the disruption in video will “unfold in front of us like a slow-mo replay of an accident.”

“The new content won’t be as good as what you watch Thursday nights from 9 to 10 p.m., but it’s going to get closer to that quality,” he adds. “And it’s certainly as good as what you watch on Thursday from 3 to 4 in the afternoon or Saturday morning from 10 to 11.”

Hulu and Netflix both want to use original content to entice viewers to their much larger libraries of older content. For Netflix, that’s movies and old TV; for Hulu, that’s last night’s TV and older series. Hulu executives say any new original series has to be match up to traditional content.

“If you’re ever going to do anything original, it’s got to stand up to that,” says Andy Forssell, senior vice president of content at Hulu. “That can’t be ‘Web video,’ it’s got to be TV quality.”

Original content remains a small percentage of the budget for Hulu, which plans to spend $500 million on content in 2012.

Erin McPherson, head of original programming at Yahoo, likes to call Yahoo “the fifth network.” Its Yahoo Studios production house in Los Angeles produces as many as 30 originals a month, often partnering with production companies such as Reveille (NBC’s “The Office”). Its original programming attracted more than 26 million unique visitors in November, according to comScore.

“The time is right,” says McPherson. “We’re finally here.”

___

AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report

Insight: India's “Dalit queen” faces polls

Posted on 26th January 2012 in The monuments of world

LUCKNOW, India (Reuters) – By her own standards, Kumari Mayawati‘s birthday celebrations were low-key this year.

After driving through a red-carpeted tunnel of plaster elephant tusks in an Ambassador, India‘s retro-looking national car, the chief minister of India’s largest state swept past a coterie of her party’s workers, who bowed and touched her feet.

Diamonds adorned the diminutive figure of “the Dalit Queen,” encrusting her necklace, a bracelet, her earrings, a nose-ring and her watch, as she accepted a few bouquets of flowers and marched about briskly in the marigold-draped party headquarters.

But the huge crowds of gaping admirers were missing this year; there was no garland of banknotes, no upper-caste Brahmin on hand to symbolically pop a morsel of birthday cake into the mouth of an “untouchable” who has risen from the bottom of India’s social pile to become one of the most powerful women in the world.

That’s because election campaign rules are now in effect for staggered polls to be held in February and March in Uttar Pradesh.

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Graphic: Uttar Pradesh growth http://link.reuters.com/jef36s

SPECIAL REPORT: Gandhi dynasty http://r.reuters.com/rur93s

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Mayawati is far from a sure bet to win another term as chief minister of the northern state whose population of 200 million would rank as the fifth-most populous in the world if it were a country.

If she doesn’t, it would be a blow to her undisguised ambition to one day become prime minister of India, a goal that looked reasonable back in 2007 when she won a huge mandate from the state’s voters by appealing to a rainbow of castes, which still define the socio-economic status for many of India’s 1.2 billion people.

Launching the seventh, gilt-edged volume of an autobiography that runs to thousands of pages and is printed in Hindi and English, Mayawati bemoaned Election Commission rules that obliged her to row back on her usual birthday beneficence.

“Normally, my birthday is an occasion to give away thousands of crores in welfare schemes for Dalits and other backward castes, but because of the election code of conduct we could not do that this year,” she said. A crore is 10 million rupees, or $188,000.

Mayawati’s nemesis in the election is Rahul Gandhi, scion of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that has ruled the country for most of its six decades of independence. A relative greenhorn in the hurly-burly of Indian politics, Gandhi has staked his future on the performance of the venerable but troubled Congress party in Uttar Pradesh.

A TRADITION OF EXTRAVAGANCE

Although she presides over one of the most poverty-plagued states of India — its per-capita income is just above 50 percent of the national average — Mayawati’s extraordinary personal extravagance preserves a tradition set over the centuries by a succession of rulers in the plains of the river Ganges.

In the five years since she took office, she has blanketed hundreds of acres of prime real estate in the state capital Lucknow and elsewhere in pink marble and sandstone monuments.

Statues of marble elephants and icons of the lower castes, including a dozen of herself, occupy memorial parks created on a scale not seen in India since the British built New Delhi in the fading days of their empire.

A federal government report found that Uttar Pradesh lavished more than $400 million on such projects between 2007 and 2009 alone — and the building continues.

“She’s taken it straight out of the pages of the Mughals and the first British Viceroys who built huge statues. These are abiding icons that the Dalits always hankered after but never had themselves,” said Ajoy Bose, author of a biography of Mayawati.

Like the Nawabs, descendents of Persian courtiers who governed the region in the 18th century, Mayawati likes to flaunt her wealth. On paper, she is India’s richest chief minister, with declared assets of $16 million that include a shopping mall in New Delhi and $169,000 in jewelry. But unlike many of her peers in other states, she is open about her income and pays taxes on it.

A U.S. diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks last year recounted how she once sent a private jet to fetch a pair of sandals from Mumbai, 1,000 km (620 miles) away. According to the

cable, one minister was forced to do sit-ups in front of Mayawati as a punishment for a minor offence; those wanting to become election candidates for her Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) had to pay tens of thousands of dollars for the privilege.

But, unlike her aristocratic Mughal, Nawab and British predecessors, she hails from India’s “Dalit” castes, who were marginalized for centuries on the bottom rungs of Hinduism’s social ladder. Still today, the idea that a Dalit could become prime minister is as outlandish for many Indians as the thought of a black president once was in the United States.

“FIRST-RATE EGOMANIAC”

One of nine children of a poor government clerk, Mayawati grew up in a Delhi slum and became a school teacher before launching into politics. Aides say she’s a news junkie, who obsessively watches the many all-news channels now available in India.

She is often ridiculed by urban middle classes for her monumental personality cult — the U.S. cable described her as a “first-rate egomaniac” — and yet Mayawati still has many supporters in Uttar Pradesh, where economic growth has picked up and law and order have improved on her watch.

Mayawati’s aides point out that she has spent far more on building roads and joining villages to the electrical grid than she has on the icons to herself and the Dalit people.

“Once you get the infrastructure on the ground, Uttar Pradesh will grow on its own,” said a senior official in her inner circle, who asked not to be identified.

Sympathetic analysts even liken her park-building spree to that of the Nawab of Lucknow, Asaf-Ud-Dowlah, who employed 20,000 people to build a shrine during a harsh 1784 famine, a project some historians call an example of pre-Keynesian economics.

That might be a stretch, but electrification and rural welfare projects have undoubtedly contributed to economic growth, which at seven percent annually in her first four years of office, was the state’s fastest-ever rate.

A report by the central government’s economic Planning Commission last year said Mayawati’s pro-Dalit policies had begun to improve the dire nutrition situation in the state, where 42 percent of children under five are underweight.

Even critics admit crime has fallen noticeably since she took over as chief minister in 2007 from Mulayam Singh Yadav, a former wrestler many remember for presiding over a surge in gang violence, with gun-wielding goons threatening shopkeepers.

POLICE ON THEIR SIDE

In the mainly Dalit village of Bhaddi Kheda, an hour’s drive from Lucknow, families have been given grants to build modest new houses to replace mud-walled hovels. New toilets improve sanitation, and muddy lanes have been paved.

Most importantly, said villager Saptruhan Das, Dalits who for generations were terrorized by higher castes now feel protected because the police are on their side.

“Yadav people would come and misbehave with the women,” Das said, referring to former Chief Minister Yadav’s caste. “In some places, they’d give us work but beat us. Now with Mayawati in power, nobody dares.”

According to an opinion poll conducted in Uttar Pradesh for India Today magazine last November, 69 percent said that Mayawati had fulfilled the expectations of Dalits.

But nearly 9 out of 10 voters said competence mattered more than the chief minister’s caste, two-thirds wanted a change of guard, and the poll showed that Yadav was more favored than Mayawati as the best person to lead the state.

Indeed, Yadav’s Samajwadi Party could well emerge from the election with more seats in the 403-member state assembly than Mayawati, though probably not enough for a majority, forcing him to ally with Gandhi’s Congress for a return to power.

ELEPHANTINE AMBITIONS

It is too soon to write off the wily Mayawati. She has outwitted every opponent who has crossed her path since the 1990s, first forming several short-lived coalition governments and then storming home with a single-party majority in 2007.

She still pulls in crowds of easily 100,000 at election rallies, far more than her opponents, including Gandhi. And she has a knack for turning adversity into advantage.

Take the flap over the life-sized elephant statues Mayawati had erected in a sprawling Lucknow park, which she opened in 2008 and named after the untouchable leader who wrote India’s constitution, Dr. B.R Ambedkar.

The Election Commission this month ordered all statues of Mayawati and of elephants — her party’s electoral symbol — to be covered during the campaign. So now, dozens of hulking elephant statues are clad in yellow plastic sheeting, and plyboard boxes have been built around bronze Mayawati statues.

“I thank the Election Commission for this order,” she said. “It is going to benefit the party and has given us free publicity.”

Despite her bravado, Mayawati is likely to lose the votes of millions who believe that corruption has gone from bad to worse and the fruits of economic growth have been unevenly spread both across the sprawling state and its castes.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, one businessman in the state described a well-organized system of bribe-paying to bureaucrats and constant harassment of companies for pay-offs.

“You have to be really desperate to do business in Uttar Pradesh. You have to pay for virtually everything,” he said. “Since you have to pay out even if you follow the law — why follow the law?”

NO INDUSTRY, NO JOBS

Apart from a couple of companies seen as close to her administration including Jaypee Group, which built the track used for India’s first Formula One race last year, Uttar Pradesh has missed out on India’s industrial growth of the past decade.

Construction, particularly state-funded building of roads, has been the main driver of the state’s economy, along with agriculture. Manufacturing has stagnated, hobbled by regular power cuts, high taxes and corruption.

Dalit villager Chote Lal, 28, says life has improved for his caste under Mayawati, but he still does not have enough food to feed his seven children properly. “There are no jobs, no factories — she should have brought in industry,” he said.

This may be Mayawati’s undoing: not the statues and the personal extravagance, but the sense she has not done enough to lift living standards evenly across so vast a population.

“Overall, her performance is a mixed bag,” said Bose, her biographer. “She has clearly been disappointing. She had a great chance to do more.”

This is especially felt among higher castes and Muslims, whose votes helped propel Mayawati to power with a majority in 2007 but who now feel her pro-Dalit policies have not taken them into account.

“We want a government that works for development, not one that works for one particular caste or religion,” said Mohammed Ahmed Khan, a Muslim farmer in the village of Dharai Mafi.

(Additional reporting by Alka Pande and Sharat Pradhan; John Chalmers reported from New Delhi; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

10 of the best places to stay and visit in Verona

Posted on 26th January 2012 in The monuments of world
  • Amanda Ruggeri
  • Verona from Castel San Pietro
    Verona, seen from the Castel San Pietro

    Few cities could be more romantic or beautiful than Italy’s Verona, the setting for Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet – one reason why Lonely Planet’s new 1,000 Ultimate Sights book pegs it as one of the world’s best places to fall in love.

    But there’s much more to Verona than star-crossed lovers, or even stars themselves (Madonna is the latest to house-hunt here). A city that dates back to the Romans, Verona today is a delight of medieval palaces, winding streets, ancient ruins and elegant churches. And, since it’s only a one hour and 20 minute train ride from Venice, it makes a superb day trip … or even an alternative (far less crowded!) base.

    Il Sogno di Giulietta


    Il Sogno di Giulietta, Verona

    Although Romeo and Juliet were fictional creations, Verona’s romance is real – and there’s no better place to experience it than at the “Juliet’s Dream” guesthouse. Located in a medieval palazzo right on “Juliet’s courtyard”, the 16 rooms seduce with gold-threaded duvets, antique rugs and ornate bed frames (in one suite, there’s even a particularly ethereal-looking canopy). Nearly all of the rooms boast a balcony, and three overlook the famous “Juliet balcony” itself. All of that romance seems to pay off: entries from couples who became engaged while staying here fill the guestbook. And when the film Letters to Juliet was filmed, the cast’s stars slept here.
    Via Cappello 23, +39 045 8009932, sognodigiulietta.it, a two-night stay from 13-15 Feb, room-only, costs from €369, up to €3,200, depending on the room

    Corte delle Pigne


    Corte delle Pigne, Verona

    You can’t get more tranquil than this brand-new B&B tucked into a side street which, despite being a five-minute walk from Piazza delle Erbe, one of the main squares, is frequented by few. Inside, the rooms feature a palette of soothing creams and taupes and romantic details, such as wrought-iron bed frames and French armoires. Guests can have breakfast in bed, the courtyard or, if they prefer, at the small, shared bar, where they can get advice on sights from the B&B’s sweet (English-speaking!) owner, Elisabetta.
    Via Pigna 6/A, +39 333 758 4141, cortedellepigne.it, B&B doubles from €90

    Hotel Gabbia d’Oro


    Gabbia d'Oro composite, Verona

    Located on Verona’s loveliest street, one bookended by the ancient Porta dei Borsari and Piazza delle Erbe, the Gabbia d’Oro is as elegant as it is charming. The ivy-covered, 16th-century palazzo’s rooms exude antique-chic, with splashes of bright colours, complementary prints, and quaint details handpicked by the owner, like a vintage lace canopy or framed engraving. Curling up in an Imperial-style sofa against the parlour’s 500-year-old stone wall, you’ll feel as if you’ve just fallen into an elegant and slightly eccentric noble’s home.
    Corso Porta Borsari 4A, +39 045 800 3060, hotelgabbiadoro.it, a two-night break in a double from 13-15 February costs from £316 B&B

    Piazza delle Erbe


    Piazza delle Erbe, Verona

    Although tourists flock to the Arena di Verona’s famous Piazza Brà, Piazza delle Erbe represents the real heart of Verona. Once the site of the ancient Roman forum, today the piazza, ringed with medieval and Renaissance architecture, might just be Italy’s most stunning. During the day, a market sells produce, souvenirs and clothes; at aperitivo hour, youths (and tourists) pack the piazza’s cafes and bars. Leave the square via the Arco della Costa, with its hanging whale rib (legend says the bone will fall on the first person to pass under it who has never told a lie) to take a peek at the Arche Scaligeri, among Italy’s most elaborate gothic funerary monuments.

    Basilica di San Zeno Maggiore


    San Zeno, Verona

    If you have time, buy a single-ticket biglietto unico (€6), which gives you admission to four of Verona’s churches – they’re all gems, but San Zeno is probably the best. The basilica was founded in the fifth century in honour of Verona’s patron saint; the current building, which dates back to the 12th, is one of Italy’s finest Romanesque churches. Don’t miss the extraordinary 12th-century bronze panels on the doors, which depict biblical scenes and the saint’s miracles with drama and ferocity, or Mantegna’s lush, vibrant altarpiece, one that established the 15th-century painter as one of the most important artists in Renaissance Italy.
    Piazza San Zeno, +39 045 8006120, chieseverona.it, entrance €2.50 or €6 for biglietto unico

    Caffé Tubino

    Just down the street from Piazza delle Erbe, this little cafe serves up coffee with a twist: as well as classic blends, caffeine jolts come in creative flavours including chestnut, ginseng, and chocolate orange. Although it’s been a favourite spot since its 1969 opening, there’s no name outside, so look for a brightly coloured sign with cut-outs of coffee cups, a flower, and a smiling sun – and a list of offerings, from coffee with guarana to coffee with gelato.
    Via Porta Borsari 15/D, +39 045 803 2296, coffee from €1

    Veronese views


    Giardino Giusti, Verona
    Giardino Giusti. Photograph: Alamy

    While Verona’s most famous (and convenient) view is from the 84m Torre dei Lamberti, just off Piazza delle Erbe, it’s not your only option. For the same €6 fee, enjoy one of Italy’s finest Renaissance gardens and a gorgeous city panorama at Giardino Giusti. Or take the short walk up to Castel San Pietro; from the piazzale (large square), you can see the sweeping city skyline … for free. Or, for the price of a €3 spritz, sit on the terrace at Cappa Caffé, enjoying the lovely view across the River Adige to the Roman amphitheatre.
    Torre dei Lamberti, Via della Costa 1, +39 045 927 3027; Giardino Giusti, Via Giardino Giusti 2, +39 045 803 4029; Cappa Caffé, +39 045 8004516, Piazzetta Brà Molinari 1

    Opera at the arena


    Aida at the Arena di Verona
    Aida at the Arena di Verona

    Although opera, ballet and symphonies take place year-round in Verona, in the summer, operas move to the city’s most atmospheric venue: the ancient Roman arena. The summer opera festival, which has starred such greats as Maria Callas, kicks off its 90th season on 22 June with Don Giovanni; other favourites on the roster include Aida, Carmen, Aida, Turandot and, of course, Roméo et Juliette. While there’s nothing like seeing the classics performed in the 2,000-year-old arena beneath the moonlight, just be warned: if you get the cheap seats, bring or buy a cushion.
    • +39 045 800 5151, arena.it, seats from €21

    Al Pompiere


    Al Pompiere, Verona

    Located a stone’s throw from the Casa di Giulietta, Al Pompiere should be swamped with tourists. But, trilingual menu aside, it remains the kind of trattoria where friends chat, businessmen dine, and waiters in chefs’ hats scurry about. Start off your meal with one of a lengthy list of speciality meats (including six kinds of prosciutto crudo), and don’t miss the thick, creamy pasta e fagioli or the risotto, both regional specialities. There are 300 wines to choose from, too.
    • Vicolo Regina d’Ungheria 5, +39 045 803 0537, alpompiere.tv, main courses from €10

    La Fontanina


    La Fontanina, Verona

    You can’t get more elegant or romantic than this Michelin-starred restaurant, located just around the corner from the arena. The osteria, which has been around for more than 200 years, serves up a variety of traditional dishes with a nouvelle twist, like venison carpaccio with a terrine of foie gras, berries and candied citron or squid-ink pasta with calamari, zucchini and sea urchin. For the full experience, tasting menus start at €45. Just be aware that there’s a €5 cover charge and a 10% service fee.
    •Portichetti Fontanelle 3, +39 045 913 305, ristorantelafontanina.com, main courses from €16