Friday 18 May 2012

Bactidol IDOL Promo!







Bactidol Idol : The Best Performances from the 


12-hour Sing-a-thon





Last March 31, Bactidol hosted a 12-hour Sing-a-thon at Red Box at Eastwood Libis.  The 12-hour Sing-a-thon invited teams of 8 - 12 people and belted them out with each other.  The 21 teams that joined all lasted the 12-hour Sing-a-thon and all of them won cash prizes!  While enjoying free snacks, drinks and bottles of Bactidol to get the show going.





The excitement is not yet over!  Who says only they can win prizes?  You my readers may also win prizes from Bactidol.   But first before that we need to vote online to determine who among the 21 teams is the Bactidol Idol. 





There are 2 categories for Bactidol Idol.  The Solo performance and the group performance.  Voters must view the performances online via http://www.youtube.com/bactidolphils and vote by liking the videos of the finalists posted in the Bactidol You tube channel.





Then, with that in mind, type in on the comments section below as to who your bet/guess will win in the Solo and group performance categories.  All users who submit the correct answer will get a chance to win Bactidol gift packs. 


 



So get going and hope you guys win!  Let's win some Bactidol gift packs!  Voting ends May 25, 2012.



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Win with Trend Micro - week 25







Want to win a Php 1,500 Gift Certificate from SM Supermarket, Brother's Burger or Bench?



This week, Trend Micro is giving you a chance to pick from the following choices:


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Win with Cobra Energy drink








Cobra Tunay na Lakas promo

Prizes to be won:


  1. Feature Story of the Day (Metro Manila) - Cobra Gift Pack & P1,000 (60 winners)

  2. Feature Story of the Day (Provincial areas) -Cobra Gift Pack & P500 (540 winners).

  3. Weekly Winner via radio– Cobra Gift Pack & sack of rice & P3,000 cash (120 winners)

  4. Weekly Winner via Facebook submission– Cobra Gift Pack & sack of rice & P3,000  (12 winners)

  5. Monthly Winner – Cobra Gift Pack & sack of rice & P8,000 cash (9 winners)

  6. The People’s Choice Winner -- Cobra Gift Pack & sack of rice & P50,000 cash (1 winner)

  7. Grand Prize Winners – P100,000 cash (3 winners)


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Get FREE Entrance to Superb SuperSale!







Shop your heart out at Superb SuperSale at SMX!


May 23 - 27, 2012









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Māori – Rock art on stamps…

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Date of Issue : 6 June 2012

Matariki is celebrated throughout New Zealand, but in the south, Puaka (Rigel, part of the Orion constellation) appears in the sky at the same time as Matariki, and is widely acknowledged.

Māori rock art is visible throughout New Zealand’s and the stamps in this issue depict examples of rock art documented in Te Waipounamu (the South Island) where more than 500 sites have been recorded to date.

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Rock art is applied to a variety of stone types, and while the common perception is that rock art was created using a burnt stick, the majority of the ‘drawings’ in Te Waipounamu appear to have been applied as pigment in solution. The style of Māori rock art is similar to that from wider Polynesia, suggesting that it was a practice brought to New Zealand by its earliest people.

Māori rock art gives a glimpse of New Zealand’s history and culture, and the drawings included on the six self-adhesive stamps in this issue portray animals now long extinct, representations of everyday life and depictions of the supernatural.

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The rauru (spiral design) on the stamps pays respect to Rangi and Papa, and the light and knowledge that came about from their separation. The colours used in the rauru reflect the land and environment, and the koru represent growth and life and pay respect to the past, present and future.
to find out more.

70c - Pouākai, Pareora

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Pouākai or ‘birdmen’ are partbird, part-human subjects that occur widely in Māori rock art in Te Waipounamu and wider Polynesia. The small birds on the outstretched wings of this figure are rarely depicted, and have so far only been recorded in two other sites.

70c - Tiki, Maerewhenua

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At more than a meter high, this work is drawn on the ceiling of a small limestone shelter and depicts a seated tiki figure, drawn in profile. Profiled tiki figures such as this are sometimes placed back to back, the figures joining to form the frontal view of a single human figure.

$1.40 - Mōkihi, Opihi

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This drawing is thought to show two people on a mōkihi, a water craft made from raupō (bulrush) used to navigate the fast-flowing rivers of the southern regions. Rock art sometimes depicts everyday activities, giving us rare glimpses into the lives of the ancestors.

$1.90 - Te Puawaitanga, Waitaki

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This unique figure is commonly interpreted as a kiwi chick within an eggshell. Copied from a site on the banks of the Waitaki River, this image is one of the most frequently re-used rock art designs in contemporary Ngāi Tahu culture.

$2.40 - Tiki, Te Ana a Wai

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Tiki figures may symbolise the people of the time, their ancestors or perhaps the generations to come. This drawing features one of the classic design elements in southern Mäori rock art - the blank central space in the body and head of the tiki.

$2.90 - Taniwha, Opihi

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Drawings capturing supernatural taniwha can be found at a number of rock art sites in Te Waipounamu. This figure is one of two large interlocking taniwha. The entire composition is more than four metres wide, drawn on the ceiling of a shelter near the Opihi River.

New Zealand Post is the principal sponsor of the Auckland and Wellington Matariki festivals - visit www.nzpost.co.nz/matariki .

 

Thursday 17 May 2012

TV's hipster doofus / FRI 5-18-12 / 1997 #1 hit with nonsense title / Ticker with cachet / Retail giant mascots Red Ruff Blue Mews / Cartoon character who cries You eediot / 2006-08 heavyweight champion Maskaev

Constructor: Allan E. Parrish

Relative difficulty: Medium



THEME: MR. RAKE — anagrams thereof

Word of the Day: OLEG Maskaev (60A: 2006-08 heavyweight champion Maskaev) —

Oleg Alexandrovich Maskaev (RussianОлег Александрович Маскаев; born March 2, 1969, inZhambylKazakh SSR) is a Russian professional boxer and a former WBC heavyweight champion. He is an ethnic Mordvin. [...] Oleg is known for his powerful right-hand punch: he has knocked out former WBO heavyweight challenger Derrick Jefferson, contender Alex Stewart, and twice knocked out former WBC heavyweight champion Hasim Rahman. However, he is also noted for a weak chin that was evident in his knockout losses to contenders Oliver McCallDavid TuaKirk JohnsonLance WhitakerCorey Sanders and journeyman Nagy Aguilera. (wikipedia)
• • •

Flimsy excuse for a theme. Do a real themed puzzle or do a themeless? This puzzle's kind of stuck in no man's land. The cluing on it is very good, though, and tough in places. I wouldn't like "scrapper" or "bugger" in a grid, probably, but in the clues they were interesting, in that I wasn't quite sure at first what they were going for (11A: Many a bugger = SPY; 28D: Scrappers put them up = DUKES). I had no idea the cat and the dog in the PETCO logo had names (49D: Retail giant with the mascots Red Ruff and Blue Mews)! Clue on SPEECH, good (4D: Word chanted at a celebratory party); clue on ROLEX *killed* me, but it's good (40A: Ticker with cachet); I had the "X" but thought it must be some kind of exchange like NASDAQ ... only ending in "X." NYNEX? Is that something? Hmmm, a former northeastern telcom ... no, not what I was thinking. Anyway, that SW corner was the toughest for me by far. Had AVIA for MCAN (37A: Big name in footwear). Blew the ROLEX answer. Found clue on CALORIES remarkably hard (34D: What water lacks). Big issue down there was actually annoying cluing on all the short answers. I'm not big on clues where I know instantly what the clue is getting at but don't have enough information to make a choice. So, I knew instantly that it was UIE ... or UEY (58A: It's often illegal to hang one). Not "hard," just ... annoying. Same with the NL West clue (55A: N.L. West team, on scoreboards). I can name every team in in the NL West, but with no crosses ... I just wait. No way to get it otherwise. And again, with LES (61A: Article in the Louvre?)—I know all the "articles" in French, but ... there are several that are three letters long, so ... wait. Difficulty by clever cluing is better than difficulty by annoying vagueness, especially clustered annoying vagueness. To be clear, this is different from the vagueness of a clue like, say, [Point] (is it a dot? is it a location? the gist of something? what a free throw's worth? a verb meaning to indicate with the finger?). That kind of vagueness can be maddening, but also interesting. But the vagueness in the SW has no mystery, no surprise. I instantly surmise a limited set of possible answers, and then just wait around to figure out which one it is. UIE can't really be fixed, but ARI and LES could've had more specific clues.


Theme answers:
  • 20A: It may be acknowledged with a slap (OFFENSIVE REMARK)
  • 34A: TV's "doofus hipster" (COSMO KRAMER) — I was thinking of Bob Denver's character on "Dobie Gillis," who I now recall was named MAYNARD G. KREBS
  • 51A: Bad tool for a toddler to find (PERMANENT MARKER)
I don't see how a SIDE TRIP is a "bonus" (63A: With 14-Across, cruise bonus). Did you not pay for it? Was it unexpected? That was odd to me. I messed up several answers initially, including PUTS down for MOWS down (5D: Routs, with "down"), and MMVI for MMII (6D: When the Salt Lake City Olympics took place). Wanted MACARENA for 5A: 1997 #1 hit with a nonsense title, but it wouldn't fit ("MMM BOP"). Had trouble getting from [Wish] to PLEASE and [Watch it] to SPECTATE, but there was nothing truly mysterious except *all the names in the SE corner*—never heard of any of 'em, not COLIN (50A: "9 to 5" director Higgins) or SARA (57A: Ramirez of "Grey's Anatomy") or OLEG (60A: 2006-08 heavyweight champion Maskaev). Yeesh. Still, managed to work it out in reasonable time.


That is all.

Just a reminder about the Crosswords LA tournament puzzles:

P.SFor anyone with an interest in solving the puzzles from this year's Crosswords LA tournament, they're now available online at http://alexboisvert.com/xwla/. They are certified Fantastic—I test-solved all of them.

For $5, you get six tournament crosswords (by Donna Levin, Aimee Lucido & Zoe Wheeler, Todd McClary, Trip Payne, Brendan Emmett Quigley, and Byron Walden), two bonus crosswords (by Andrea Carla Michaels and Doug Peterson), and a clever team game (by John Schiff). As always, proceeds from puzzle pack sales are donated to charity.


Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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