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Disney has done the frozen Nordic princess, the Chinese warrior princess and many others in between. But a Korean princess? Not so much.

Harvard University student Julia Riew has set out to fix that. The 22-year-old Korean American senior wrote “Shimcheong: A Folktale” — a full-length musical inspired by a Korean folktale with a decidedly Disney movie vibe — as her senior thesis.

She’s been releasing snippets of it on TikTok since January, and has quickly amassed a passionate following with the short videos that show her transforming into an animated Disney princess as she belts out her songs.

Riew has even sparked interest from Hollywood and theater producers, while supporters have taken to creating visuals and animations to help bring her story to life.

“It honestly still feels like I’m dreaming,” she said recently. “It’s been heartwarming to see the reaction, especially among the Korean American community.”

Riew, who grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, before her family moved to New York City and then Connecticut, hopes the musical follows the same trajectory of others successfully workshopped and crowdsourced on TikTok in recent years.

“Ratatouille: The TikTok Musical” debuted in 2020 as a benefit concert featuring Adam Lambert, Wayne Brady and other stars after the idea percolated for months on the social media platform among musical theater fans and out-of-work performers.

Last year, the female duo known as Barlow & Bear went viral on TikTok with a song inspired by the soapy Netflix period drama “Bridgerton.” That led to “The Unofficial Bridgerton Musical,” a 15-song album now up for a Grammy — a first for a TikTok collaboration.

Riew’s musical draws on the Korean folktale “The Blind Man’s Daughter,” about a young woman who tries to restore her blind father’s sight but ends up in the faraway Dragon Kingdom.

In Riew’s version, the young Shimcheong spends years growing up in the magical realm before setting out on an epic journey home. Along the way, truths are revealed, obstacles are overcome and there’s no shortage of laughs and catchy songs.

Julia Riew poses outside Lowell House, on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 16, 2022.

Julia Riew poses outside Lowell House, on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 16, 2022.

If that sounds like the plot for many of Disney’s most beloved works, that’s the point, says Riew, who grew up on a steady diet of Disney and Broadway soundtracks and began writing her own songs and musicals at a young age.

“What stood out to me is that it’s a story about a young woman who goes on an adventure,” she explains. “There aren’t too many stories in Korean folklore about women, especially ones where they go on adventures.”

Disney has historically struggled to reflect the diversity of its audience, falling back on stories featuring predominantly white characters and stereotypical depictions of non-white cultures, says Jana Thomas, a media and communications professor at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas, who researches social media and has also written about representation in Disney films.

But the entertainment giant has responded to calls for more representative works and found success, from 2016’s Moana to Coco, Soul, Raya and the Last Dragon, and last year’s hit Encanto, she said. Turning Red, an animated film Disney’s Pixar studios is set to release next week, features a teenage Chinese-Canadian protagonist.

“Julia’s use of TikTok to build a fanbase and attract the attention of Disney was a well-executed move,” Thomas adds. “She used a social media platform preferred by a user demographic that support her goal to increase representation within media and entertainment. I’d love to see Julia’s story be an example for others who want to maximize the proactive and positive power of social media.”

Spokespeople for Disney didn’t respond to an email seeking comment this week. But even if the film studio doesn’t come calling, Riew is optimistic Shimcheong will live on after she graduates and embarks on a career as a musical composer and lyricist. She’s already hired an agent to help navigate some of the early discussions.

“It seems at this point the project will be moving forward,” she said. “Not sure yet if that means as a stage production, as an indie film or something else, but there definitely has been some interest.”

Riew says she’s long toyed with the idea of a musical drawing from her Korean heritage but only seriously started working on it after the coronavirus pandemic hit and she ended up moving back home because campus was shuttered.

Riew admits she struggled at times to write the story and questioned if it was appropriate for her, as a third generation Korean American, to tell it.

“There were moments where I tried to quit, when I felt like I was a fake Korean,” she said. “But I realized over the process that we can only really represent our own story, and that’s totally okay. There’s no such thing as one way to be Korean.”

Putting the videos up on TikTok hasn’t just helped generate buzz for the project — it’s also helped her refine it.

Riew says she changed the character of Lotus, Shimcheong’s sidekick and the story’s comic relief, from a dragon to a gumiho — a mythical nine-tail fox in Korean folklore — based on feedback from supporters.

“It’s been reinvigorating,” she said of putting out her work to the sometimes critical eye of social media. “It’s been eye-opening to realize how many people would love to see this come to fruition.”

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Homicide Barranquilla

Reference image.

The projectile, detonated during a gang fight, hit the 50-year-old woman in the head.

A 50-year-old woman died after being the victim of a stray bullet while sitting in the doorway of her house. The events took place in the El Viso neighborhood, in the municipality of Campoalegre, Huila, where its inhabitants asked for the capture of those responsible and for justice to be done.

The victim of this tragedy was Dany Quimbaya Martinezwho unfortunately died in the middle of a gang dispute when she was hit in the head.

“It was a stray bullet apparently fired by criminal gangs who were shooting at each other. The lady was at the door of her home and was surprised by a bullet,” said residents of Campoalegre.

Another 22-year-old citizen who was passing the scene on a motorcycle was also hit by a stray bullet and was injured, for which he is being treated at a health center.

The affected man told the authorities that on Calle 30 with Carrera 11 he heard several shots of a firearm, so he accelerated his motorcycle to get to his house, where he realized that he had been slightly injured, for which he was taken to a center. assistance.

The authorities try to identify and capture those responsible.

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Motorcycle taxi drivers strike in Cartagena: 18 Transcaribe buses have been vandalized

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U.S. financial regulators have fined the New York branch of the National Bank of Pakistan (NBP) more than $55 million for anti-money laundering violations and compliance deficiencies.

The fines by the Federal Reserve Board and the New York’s Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) led to a 7% drop in NBP’s shares Friday.

NBP’s “banking operations did not maintain an effective risk management program or controls sufficient to comply with anti-money laundering laws,” the U.S. Federal Reserve Board said in a statement Thursday.

Pakistani authorities have said the fines were agreed upon through a settlement with U.S. regulators and that there has been no “willful misconduct” at NBP’s New York branch.

Under the settlement the NBP will be required to offer a plan “detailing enhancements to the policies and procedures of the Bank’s BSA/AML compliance program, its Suspicious Activity Monitoring and Reporting program, and its customer due diligence requirements,” reads a NYDFS statement.

The government of Pakistan owns more than 75% of the NBP.

In June 2018, the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an international anti-money laundering watchdog, put Pakistan in its “grey-list” because of concerns the country was not doing enough to counter money laundering and terrorism financing.

The Pakistani government is expected to inform the FATF in February 2022 of its progress in tackling financial loopholes which benefit terrorist groups.

Terrorism Concerns

Pakistan’s military and intelligence services have long been accused of maintaining links with and using terrorist groups to further strategic objectives in neighboring India and Afghanistan.

“At the core of such money-laundering penalties lies serious concerns about repeated non-compliance with terrorism financing enabled by Pakistan’s state-owned entities,” Javid Ahmad, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, told VOA.

“It’s a slap on the wrist, but Pakistan, like a corporation, has certain financial obligations to its elaborate network of militant shareholders, so it will find other creative ways like the use of cryptos to circumvent banks and stay semi-compliant with [the] AML regime,” he added.

Pakistani authorities deny any involvement with terrorism and contend that the country has suffered immensely from terrorist attacks over the last two decades.

“Pakistan made limited progress on the most difficult aspects of its 2015 National Action Plan to counter terrorism, specifically in its pledge to dismantle all terrorist organizations without delay or discrimination,” the U.S. State Department said in its 2020 Country Report on Terrorism.

An inflation gauge that is closely monitored by the Federal Reserve jumped 6.1% in January compared with a year ago, the latest evidence that Americans are enduring sharp price increases that will likely worsen after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The figure reported Friday by the Commerce Department was the largest year-over-year rise since 1982. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, core inflation increased 5.2% in January from a year earlier.

Robust consumer spending has combined with widespread product and worker shortages to create the highest inflation in four decades — a heavy burden for U.S. households, especially lower-income families faced with elevated costs for food, fuel and rent.

At the same time, consumers as a whole largely shrugged off the higher prices last month and boosted their spending 2.1% from December to January, Friday’s report said, an encouraging sign for the economy and the job market. That was a sharp improvement from December, when spending fell. Americans across the income scale have been receiving pay raises and have amassed more savings than they had before the pandemic struck two years ago. That expanded pool of savings provides fuel for future spending.

Inflation, though, is expected to remain high and perhaps accelerate in the coming months, especially with Russia’s invasion likely disrupting oil and gas exports. The costs of other commodities that are produced in Ukraine, such as wheat and aluminum, have also increased.

President Joe Biden said Thursday that he would do “everything I can” to keep gas prices in check. Biden did not spell out details, though he mentioned the possibility of releasing more oil from the nation’s strategic reserves. He also warned that oil and gas companies “should not exploit this moment” by raising prices at the pump.

A separate report Friday showed that orders for long-lasting factory goods rose sharply in January, led by a rise in demand for airplanes. The figures indicate that many companies are willing to invest more in industrial equipment and other goods, a sign of confidence in the economy.

“Overall, the real economy appears to be in stronger health than we feared,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, a forecasting firm.

Russia’s invasion and the likely resulting rise in inflation have increased pressure on the Federal Reserve, which is expected to raise interest rates by a quarter-point as many as five or six times this year beginning in March. The Fed’s delicate task — to raise rates enough to restrain inflation, without going so far as to tip the economy into recession — has now become more difficult.

Fed officials are acknowledging that the invasion of Ukraine has complicated the economic outlook, but say that so far they are sticking with their plans for rate hikes.

Loretta Mester, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, said Thursday that she supported a series of rate hikes beginning in March. But she said the Fed should remain flexible: Faster rate hikes might be needed, she said, if inflation hasn’t begun to fade by mid-year, or more gradual increases if inflation is slowing.

“The implications of the unfolding situation in Ukraine for the medium-run economic outlook in the U.S. will also be a consideration,” she said. Other Fed officials have offered similar remarks this week.

Late Thursday, however, Fed governor Christopher Waller said he would support a half-point rate hike in March if inflation remains high.

Fed officials want inflation to fall back to its 2% target, as measured by the Commerce Department’s gauge, released Friday. A separate measure, the consumer price index, released two weeks ago, showed that inflation reached 7.5% in January from a year earlier, also a four-decade high.

In December, Fed officials projected that inflation would decline to just 2.7%, according to their preferred measure, by the end of this year, which most economists see as increasingly unlikely. The Fed will release updated projections at its March meeting.

January’s data show inflation was already picking up before the invasion. From December to January, prices rose 0.6%, up from 0.5% in the previous month.

There are early indications that consumer spending has stayed healthy, boosted by the rapid fading of the omicron wave of the coronavirus. JPMorgan Chase said that spending on its credit cards for airline tickets, hotel rooms, and restaurant meals rose in the first half of this month.

The JPMorgan Chase Institute also recently released data showing that cash balances remain elevated among their customers, including those with lower incomes. Bank account balances for Americans with less than $26,000 in income were 65% higher at the end of last year than they were two years before.

Americans’ paychecks are rising steadily. Average hourly earnings rose 5.7% in January compared with a year ago. Unless companies can offset their higher labor costs with greater efficiencies, most of them will likely charge their customers more. This would send inflation higher.

The combination of higher pay and enhanced savings suggests that Americans may be able to keep spending at a solid pace in the coming months, thereby sustaining the economy’s inflationary pressures.

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Attack on Ecopetrol

The explosive device hit the Campo 25 village tonight.

Photo:

Twitter @lorenzolizazo

The explosive device hit the Campo 25 village tonight.

An explosive device impacted and affected soil and vegetation.

This February 13 a explosive device hit the infrastructure oil company from the La Cira Infantas field in the jurisdiction of the Campo 25 village in the El Centro corregimiento, in Barrancabermeja, according to a statement from Ecopetrol.

Preliminary information indicates that the explosion occurred specifically on line 703 of water and crude oil that reaches station 7 of the La Cira field, which affected the soil and vegetation in the area.

No one was affected in the incident. However, Ecopetrol proceeded to close the valves and suspended the operations of seven oil wells.

In addition to launching a Contingency Plan, “at this time there are personnel from the public force, anti-explosive technicians and the cordoned off area to review the area. Tomorrow a new inspection will be carried out with personnel specialized in wildlife rescue,” according to the statement.

“Ecopetrol calls for an end to these crimes against infrastructure that put people’s integrity at risk, generate serious consequences for the environment and affect the activities of communities and the oil industry,” the organization indicates.

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Attack on Ecopetrol

The explosive device hit the Campo 25 village tonight.

Photo:

Twitter @lorenzolizazo

The explosive device hit the Campo 25 village tonight.

An explosive device impacted and affected soil and vegetation.

This February 13 a explosive device hit the infrastructure oil company from the La Cira Infantas field in the jurisdiction of the Campo 25 village in the El Centro corregimiento, in Barrancabermeja, according to a statement from Ecopetrol.

Preliminary information indicates that the explosion occurred specifically on line 703 of water and crude oil that reaches station 7 of the La Cira field, which affected the soil and vegetation in the area.

No one was affected in the incident. However, Ecopetrol proceeded to close the valves and suspended the operations of seven oil wells.

In addition to launching a Contingency Plan, “at this time there are personnel from the public force, anti-explosive technicians and the cordoned off area to review the area. Tomorrow a new inspection will be carried out with personnel specialized in wildlife rescue,” according to the statement.

“Ecopetrol calls for an end to these crimes against infrastructure that put people’s integrity at risk, generate serious consequences for the environment and affect the activities of communities and the oil industry,” the organization indicates.

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RPTV NEWS AGENCY team:

Journalist: Yomari Benavides

Camera and Edition: John Reyes

BOGOTA COLOMBIA). Friday, February 11, 2022 (RPTV NEWS AGENCY). Rafaella Chávez, Marbelle’s daughter, is the subject of all kinds of criticism after she was denounced on social networks by a woman who accused her of beating her when she asked her to wear a mask.

“Unheard. Today going to work I ran into Rafaella Chávez Ramírez nothing more and nothing less than the daughter of #Marbelle. I asked him to put on the mask and I received a blow that left me incapacitated. Who can help me? SOS ”, wrote Ana María on her twitter profile accompanied by several images in which she shows a laceration on her upper lip.

The queen of the tecnocarrilera spoke out and responded to the complaint with a message with two messages. The first with a two-sided message laughing at the complaint and the second tweet said: “You will have news soon.”

Finally, the woman who denounced the alleged recording by Rafaella, indicated that she fears for her safety and that of her family, and announced that she filed a complaint with the Attorney General’s Office against Marbelle’s daughter for physical and verbal abuse.

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2021




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Shopkeepers of Barranquilla

The bars protect the shopkeepers of Barranquilla from criminals.

The bars protect the shopkeepers of Barranquilla from criminals.

Many small businesses are already announcing the closure of their businesses.

About 400 small traders from Barranquilla and its metropolitan area will meet to define what actions they will take against the scourge of extortion of which they are victims and which has many on the verge of closing their establishments.

(Also: Uniatlantico and Unicartagena work in treatment against leishmaniasis)

These are stores, bakeries, sundries, neighborhood restaurants that are victims of extortion ranging from a bottle of rum to cash.

The complaint is not new, as assured by the vice president of Undeco Orlando Jimenez who informed the media that the organization’s general assembly has already elected a committee that is currently analyzing the issue.

(Also read: Doctor run over while riding a bicycle leaves the ICU)

On February 24 they will meet again and decide if some establishments will permanently close their premises due to the extortion of which they are victims.

(Be sure to read: They report alleged sexual abuse of an inmate at the Soledad Police Station)

The Police Gaul ensures that it maintains surveillance and control operations in neighborhoods and sectors such as the Center from Barranquilla.

BARRANQUILLA

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A rare and severe snowstorm has swept across parts of Greece and Turkey, leaving motorists stranded on motorways and forcing the evacuation of thousands of people.

Storm Elpida hit Greece on Monday, covering Athens in snow in a rare event, with overnight temperatures plummeting to -14 degrees Celsius.

Meanwhile, flights in Istanbul were also suspended, while over 4,000 people were left stranded on roads across Turkey after snowfall began late last week and has been picking up in recent days.

The city of Antalya, on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast known for its beach resorts, saw its first snowfall in 29 years.

(…)

A record number of visitors flocked to Yellowstone National Park last year despite fewer hotel rooms and campsites being available because of the coronavirus pandemic and construction projects.

About 4.86 million visits were tallied in 2021, breaking the prior record set in 2016. It’s a million more people than visited in 2020.

Known worldwide for its wolves, bears and other wildlife and thermal features such as the Old Faithful geyser, Yellowstone will mark its 150th anniversary in 2022. It straddles the borders of northwestern Wyoming, southern Montana and eastern Idaho.

Visits to national parks across the U.S. have been trending up in recent years. Others such as Utah’s Zion National Park also set new visitor records in 2021 as tourism bounced back from the shutdowns imposed during the early days of the pandemic.

At Yellowstone, a rush of people from May through September last year strained employees and park services. It came as the park was understaffed through the summer because of worker housing caps and difficulty recruiting new employees, park officials have said.

There were also 20% fewer campsites and hotel rooms in 2021 compared to previous years. That meant hundreds of thousands of visitors left the park at night and would re-enter after staying elsewhere. Each time they entered the park counted as a separate visit.

Park officials said they are trying to find a way to differentiate between new visits and people who enter the park multiple times on the same trip.

Yellowstone’s road corridors and parking lots can get crowded, but they make up less than one-tenth of 1% of its 8,903 square kilometers (3,400 square miles) — an area about 150 times the size of New York’s Manhattan Island.

Most visitors stay within a half-mile of those roads, according to park officials. Park crowds drop sharply during winter when much of it is inaccessible except by snowmobile or skiing.

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