Leonardo DiCaprio as a white Rumi? Twitter isn't having it


 
A biopic on Sufi mystic Jalaluddin Rumi is in the works, and Hollywood is behind it.
Gladiator writer David Franzoni and producer Stephen Joel Brown (Se7enThe FujitiveA Perfect Murder) have signed on to the project. Both insist that the film will challenge Muslim stereotypes in western cinema, reportsThe Guardian.
Not everyone is convinced that the film will live up to its lofty goals. Why?
For starters, Franzoni and producer Stephen Joel Brown have actors like Leonardo Di Caprio and Robert Downing Jr in mind for the roles of Rumi and Shams of Tabriz.
Twitter is having none of this whitewashing.

Some people are just plain outraged:

Others are pointing out the obvious: #RumiWasntWhite:

Some others believe that the biopic will do more damage than good vis-à-vis the goal of 'challenging Muslim stereotypes':

A few just think that that Hollywood is overstepping:

Here's hoping the producer doesn't make it any worse:

Hefner sells Playboy Mansion to billionaire neighbour Twinkies chief

LOS ANGELES: The Playboy Mansion, the legendary party house where Hollywood's elite cavorted with scantily-clad "bunnies", is being sold to the billionaire Twinkies owner who lives next door, a spokesman said Monday.
This file photo taken on May 11, 2016 shows the swimming pool at the Playboy Mansion on in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, California. ─ AFP
This file photo taken on May 11, 2016 shows the swimming pool at the Playboy Mansion on in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, California. ─ AFP
Hugh Hefner, the 90-year-old owner of the Holmby Hills estate in southern California and founder of Playboy Magazine, will be permitted to continue living there for the rest of his life.
The buyer is Daren Metropoulos, a 32-year-old business tycoon who lives on the property next door to the mansion, which he bought from Hefner in 2009 for $18 million.
In this May 1, 1997, file photo, Victoria Silvstedt poses with her 1997 Porsche Boxter in front of the Playboy Mansion in Beverly Hills, Calif., before a lunch reception to announce her as the 1997 Playboy Playmate of the Year. ─ AFP
In this May 1, 1997, file photo, Victoria Silvstedt poses with her 1997 Porsche Boxter in front of the Playboy Mansion in Beverly Hills, Calif., before a lunch reception to announce her as the 1997 Playboy Playmate of the Year. ─ AFP
"We can confirm that the Playboy Mansion is in escrow with Daren Metropoulos as the buyer," a Playboy spokesman told AFP. "Due to confidentiality restrictions, we are not able to comment on any specifics, including what contingencies need to be cleared to close the sale."
Metropoulos is a principal at private-equity firm Metropoulos and Co., which co-owns Hostess Brands, the maker of Twinkies, an iconic American snack.
This file photo taken on May 11, 2016 shows a peacock walking across the lawn at the Playboy Mansion in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, California. ─ AFP
This file photo taken on May 11, 2016 shows a peacock walking across the lawn at the Playboy Mansion in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, California. ─ AFP
He intends to connect the two estates into a combined 7.3-acre compound once Hefner dies, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The paper quoted Metropoulos as saying the mansion's heritage "transcends its celebrity" and that "to have the opportunity to serve as its steward would be a true privilege". He declined to disclose the purchase price, although the estate was valued at $200m when Playboy Enterprises put it up for sale earlier this year.
Built in 1927 and bought by Hefner for $1m in 1971, the property was emblematic of Hollywood's excess, hosting its infamous pool parties with a lingerie-only dress code for the female guests who cavorted in the caved grotto.
In this Wednesday, May 11, 2016 file photo, Eugena Washington, Playmate of the Year, poses at Playboy's 2016 Playmate of the Year Announcement held at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles. ─ AFP
In this Wednesday, May 11, 2016 file photo, Eugena Washington, Playmate of the Year, poses at Playboy's 2016 Playmate of the Year Announcement held at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles. ─ AFP
Elvis reportedly slept with eight Playmates at once at the 12-bedroom stately home, while John Lennon once burned a Matisse original with a cigarette.
The sale comes soon after the magazine's recent relaunch as a mainstream publication with no full-frontal nudity, and with the parent company on sale for an estimated $500m.

Messi could return for second game: Argentinan Coach

SANTA CLARA: Argentina coach Gerardo Martino expects Lionel Messi to be fit for his team's second Copa America Centenario fixture this week — even if he is satisfied that the two-time world champions are adjusting to life without their injured superstar.
Martino was a happy man after watching the Argentina open their Group D campaign with a convincing 2-1 win on Monday over reigning Copa America champions Chile, a result that should ease their passage into the quarter-finals.
Goals from man-of-the-match Angel Di Maria and Ever Banega secured the points for Argentina, who left the injured Messi on the substitutes bench at Levi's Stadium as he recuperates from an injured back.
Martino revealed the 28-year-old FIFA World Player of the Year could be fit to return for Argentina's second group game against Panama at Chicago's Soldier Field on Friday.
“He has continued working here, he's kicking the ball better now,” Martino said.
“We expect in four days he'll be in a condition to play. So we're thinking we will be in a better position by then.”
Although Messi's replacement, Benfica's Nicolas Gaitan, performed well on the right side of Argentina's front three, Martino is not discounting the importance of their absent talisman.
“We're always a better team when Messi is in the team,” Martino said.
“Our chances of winning the Copa are always going to be higher when he's playing.”
Argentina struggled in their first three 2018 World Cup qualifying matches last year when Messi was absent with a knee injury, posting a loss and two draws.
Martino however believes his team is learning how to adapt in their captain's absence.
“It's important to respond the right way when he's not there,” Martino said.
“Today we came with 23 players and all of them contributed. We showed virtue as a team.”
Meanwhile, Chile coach Juan Antonio Pizzi shrugged off suggestions that his team was in a slump after what was a third consecutive defeat following recent friendly losses to Jamaica and Mexico.
“During the course of the game I did not notice a big difference between the two teams,” Pizzi said.
“What happened is that we made crucial mistakes and they cost us two goals.”
Pizzi is confident that Chile's star-studded team will be able to recover and qualify from Group D, which also includes Panama and Bolivia.
“I trust in my abilities and the abilities of the team and we're going to get up and get back to winning,” he said.
“We believe we're going to get into the next round. I know we have difficult games ahead of us. We're going to continue working and we have the belief to move to the next round.”

McCullum calls for 'more professional' ICC

LONDON: Brendon McCullum said Monday he stood by the evidence he gave against New Zealand great Chris Cairns as he urged the International Cricket Council to be more “professional” in dealing with players alleging match-fixing.
Former New Zealand captain McCullum, delivering the MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture at Lord's, also questioned whether handing out life bans to players such as former team-mate Lou Vincent, who acknowledged their wrongdoing, would encourage others to come forward.
McCullum, then still an active international cricketer, gave evidence against Cairns in a perjury trial in London which ended with the acquittal of the former all-rounder in November last year.
Charges were brought against Cairns after he sued Indian Premier League chairman Lalit Modi for libel in 2012 over a 2010 tweet in which the administrator accused him of match-fixing.
McCullum, as he had done in court, said “former hero” Cairns had approached him to fix matches —allegations Cairns denies.
“I think it is appropriate, standing here at 'the Home of Cricket' (Lord's), to confirm that I stand by everything said in my statements and the evidence I gave at Southwark Crown Court,” McCullum, 34, said.
Players are told that failure to report an approach is almost as serious as any offence itself.
McCullum added he did not report Cairns's approach until 2011 because he felt “scared”, and was later taken back by the “very casual” manner in which his allegations were noted, but not recorded, by a member of the ICC's anti-corruption and security unit (ACSU).
McCullum then made two more statements, another to the ACSU and to London's Metropolitan Police.
Recalling he was “hammered” by Cairns' lawyer for making three statements, McCullum said someone at the ICC should have realised his evidence might one day be used in court.
“I think players deserve better from the ICC and that, in the future, the evidence gathering exercise has to be much more thorough, more professional.
“In my opinion a person taking a statement should ensure that the witness is advised about what may occur.”
McCullum's evidence was then leaked to Britain's Daily Mail newspaper.
“How can the game's governing body expect players to co-operate with it when it is then responsible for leaking confidential statements to the media?,” he said Monday.
Vincent, who also gave evidence against Cairns, was banned from cricket for life in 2014 after he admitted his involvement in spot-fixing — where players deliberately under-perform to help stage a betting coup. “Perhaps the worst part is that Lou is unable to go to a cricket ground anywhere in the world,” said McCullum. “He can never watch his children play at any level.
“I struggle with the severity of this when a player has cooperated fully and accepted responsibility.
“It is vital that players found guilty of offences having acknowledged wrongdoing are shown a degree of clemency — failing which there seems to be very little incentive for them to come forward.”
McCullum led New Zealand to the final of last year's World Cup and bowed out of international cricket by scoring the fastest-ever Test hundred, off just 54 balls, against Australia at Christchurch in February.
He was also praised for the sporting way in which he captained New Zealand, with the team abandoning “sledging” — verbal abuse of opponents — under his leadership.
“In changing the way we approached the game, and respected the opposition, we wanted to be true to our national identity,” McCullum said. “In terms of that, New Zealanders identify with strong silent types.
“Perhaps our greatest hero is Sir Edmund Hilary — the first person to climb Mount Everest. He never spoke boastfully about his remarkable achievements.
“We wanted to be a team that people could be proud of; and if in doubt we wanted to play the game aggressively, not fear failure.
“I have been given too much credit for what we achieved...Everyone brought into it and lived it and breathed it. “

US returns precious artefacts to India

WASHINGTON: The United States (US) returned more than 200 precious artefacts to India on Monday in a ceremony with visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Justice Department said.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stands with three statues during a ceremony marking the repatriation of over 200 artifacts to the Indian government, in Washington, Monday, June 6, 2016. ─ AP
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stands with three statues during a ceremony marking the repatriation of over 200 artifacts to the Indian government, in Washington, Monday, June 6, 2016. ─ AP
The items included religious statues, bronzes and terra-cotta pieces some of them 2,000 years old which were recovered in an operation involving several US government agencies.
"The United States is committed to ensuring that no nation is robbed of the objects that inform its identity, shape its traditions and inspire its citizens," Attorney General Loretta Lynch said at the ceremony.
"Today, as part of that ongoing commitment, more than 200 antiquities and cultural artefacts that speak to India's astounding history and beautiful culture are beginning their journey home."
Attorney General Loretta Lynch and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi look at three statues during a ceremony marking the repatriation of over 200 artifacts to the Indian government, in Washington, Monday, June 6, 2016. ─ AP
Attorney General Loretta Lynch and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi look at three statues during a ceremony marking the repatriation of over 200 artifacts to the Indian government, in Washington, Monday, June 6, 2016. ─ AP
The pieces included a statue of Saint Manikkavichavakar, a Hindu mystic and poet from the Chola period, stolen from the Sivan Temple in Chennai, India, which is valued at $1.5 million.
Also included in the collection is a bronze sculpture of the Hindu god Ganesh estimated to be 1,000 years old.
Most of the artefacts were confiscated in Operation Hidden Idol, an investigation that dated back to 2007.

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