Elizabeth Tai

Digital Content Specialist and freelance writer, editor and proofreader based in Adelaide

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Covering Life of Pi

I had the privilege of visiting the Life of Pi set in Taiwan and was in the water tank set to witness how scenes like this (sans tiger) were filmed.

My articles, Bringing Pi Into Being and Rough Voyage, came out last November in The Star.

It brought back great memories – visiting lovely Taiwan, meeting Ang Lee and being in a huge water tank (the world’s largest water tank set or something like that) to watch the great genius at work. Life of Pi holds a special place in my heart because it was the last movie I covered before resigning from The Star and moving to Australia.

Ang Lee, at first glance, is like the uncle next door. He may be soft-spoken, quiet and humble, but beneath all that is a creative genius. I was simply impressed by the Taiwanese director’s drive and attention to detail.

I visited the set around  May last year. It was located at Taiwan’s abandoned Taichung airport. Sadly, by then, the tigers were already flown back, but the production was in full swing.

Ang Lee on the set of Life of Pi.

We were shown around the set and I saw a team of people meticulously working on props such as journals, clothes, furniture, debris, plastic fish … but the best part was seeing how Ang Lee and his team put together such an ambitious film. We even saw the 3D mock-up film of the amazing sinking ship sequence that you see in the trailer.

There’s an astounding amount of careful planning that went into the film to ensure that the film stayed on budget; Ang Lee lamented a few times that he wished he didn’t have that burden on his shoulders, so I’m really glad that Life of Pi received mostly positive reviews from critics. In fact, it’s nominated for an impressive 11 Oscar Academy Awards and 3 Golden Globes! Good going, Ang Lee!

PS: Which is why I should really watch the movie soon … yes, these days I’m really not up-to-date with my movie watching. I used to be so good at this! Heh.

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Hello, Reading Revolution!

I just started writing a new column for The Star’s iPad edition – Editor’s Choice. It’s called Reading Revolution and it’s about one of my biggest passions: e-books. I will be writing about how to get started reading e-books, issues concerning the ebook industry and I will also be interviewing e-book authors.

I was really excited to be given the chance to write this column. I mean, a reason to go on and on about the thing I love? What joy!

Anyway, you can download the Sept 26, 2012 Reading Revolution (in PDF format) column, but it reads so much better on the iPad or tablet, so download The Editor’s Choice by visiting http://thestar.com.my/ipad. It’s free!

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Collection of my articles on ebooks

I recently discovered a free service called Issuu, which enables you to create your own magazines and distribute it around the world. It has been a lovely tool to showcase my work. (I am particularly thrilled by how I can ‘flip’ the pages.)

This issue contains the following stories:

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How to blog a book

Publishers have been compiling blog posts into books for some time now. However, veteran journalist Nina Amir says that “blogging a book” is a different thing altogether.

“Blogging a book means composing your manuscript on the Internet using blog technology. Basically, you write, publish and promote your book one post at a time on the Internet,” says the California-based Amir via e-mail.

Do read my article, Blog a Book, which is about the concept and on Amir’s book How to Blog a Book.

So, just how do you go about this? Nina gives a few tips:

1. Choose a topic. By this I mean a topic you feel passionate about. You are blogging a book, but you will need to blog about the topic long after you have completed the manuscript. You can’t just stop blogging after the book is published. So choose your topic carefully.

2. Hone your subject. After you choose your topic, compare the idea for your book and your topic to the other books already published on your topic and to the blogs being written on your topic. Make sure the book you plan to blog will be unique in the blogosphere and in the online and brick and mortar bookstores.

3. Map out your book’s content. Actually do what is called a mind map and come up with all the content for your book. You can also simply outline your book. When you are done, you should have a complete table of contents and be able to write a chapter-by-chapter synopsis. This becomes your writing guide.

4. Break your content into post-sized pieces. For nonfiction books, you will write posts of 250-500 words. While most books have 5-10 subheads, yours will have 10-20. Each of these represents a blog post. If you are writing fiction, you need to figure out if you can find a way to break up the action in your chapters logically. (This may or may not work with preplanning.) Memoirs could be written with vignettes later pulled together in the second draft. Prior to writing, though, you will want to plan this small content chunks out as much as possible.

5. Create a business plan for your book. The book proposal aspiring authors turn into an agent or publisher is, for all practical purposes, a business plan. While you don’t need a proposal to begin blogging a book, you do need to look at your book idea through the lens of a proposal. (And if you plan on trying to land a traditional publishing deal, you’ll eventually need a book proposal.) So, I suggest you look at your idea through the eyes of an agent or publisher and go through what I call the proposal process and accumulate all the information necessary for a proposal. This will help you see the big picture of your blogged book idea. When you are done, you’ll know if the idea is a marketable one—one that has a chance of success in the market or in your niche online as a blog and offline as a printed book or even as an ebook. You’ll also know if you are cut out to be an author—to be a good business partner for a publisher or to do what it takes to successfully self-publish a book.

During the proposal process you ask questions like:

Does what I have to say add value?
Is there a market for this book?
Who are my readers?
What is my competition?
Is my topic or approach to the topic unique?
How will I position myself in the market?
How will I promote my blogged book to attract readers?
What content will I include in my blogged book?
How will I organize the book (and, thereby, my blog)?

6. Set up a blog. This is pretty obvious…

7. Learn how to promote your blog. Your business plan must have a promotion plan built into it. This includes promotion online through social media and offline through speaking, media appearances, writing for publications, etc.

Tomorrow: Interview with Nina Amir

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Sustainable Fashion

My article on sustainable fashion appeared yesterday, and it was the cover of Star2, the feature section of the Star.

Here’s my article, Dressing for Earth page one and two in PDF format.

Writing this article was quite a challenge as I had to learn a lot about sustainable fashion in a very short time.

I discovered that sustainable fashion isn’t just about using “organic” fabrics – fabrics that are eco-friendly. Instead, it involves every aspect of the designing, sourcing and manufacturing process. It’s quite an arduous process and I salute the few designers and companies in Malaysia that are bravely embracing this philosophy rather than go the much easier route of “fast fashion”.

In fact, consumers should be educated in how they consume fashion too. I have to confess that I have a lot to change in that aspect, being a consumer of “fast fashion”, and updating my wardrobe to such an extent that my Mum complains that I have too much clothes!

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Suicide Attack

Popculture Vulture
By ELIZABETH TAI

Originally published in The Star on April 18, 2010.

What made South Korean celebrities suicidal?

THEY seem to have everything: fame, beauty, wealth, and adoration. So why are so many South Korean celebrities killing themselves?

Actor Choi Jin-young, 39, joined the lamentable statistics on March 29 when he hung himself in his home.

What made his death particularly tragic was that his sister, veteran actress Choi Jin-sil, had taken her own life less than two years ago. She was 40 when she died on Oct 2, 2008.

Actress Choi Jin-Sil was battling depression when the vicious Internet rumours began. She killed herself in 2008.

Jin-sil, dubbed the “nation’s actress”, killed herself a month after 36-year-old actor Ahn Jae-hwan, her close friend, gassed himself in his car.

Online allegations that she caused Ahn’s death by pressuring her debt-ridden friend to repay her her money were said to have been unbearable for the actress. She was apparently struggling with depression at that time.

A police probe later found the rumours to be unfounded.

Although there have been suicides among South Korean celebrities, an alarming number of them closely followed suit after Jin-sil’s death.

Read More

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Reality TV with a heart

Popculture Vulture
By ELIZABETH TAI
Originally published in The Star on April 4, 2010.

Those shows that people watch with train-wreck interest have remarkably taken an altruistic turn.

I JUST don’t have the constitution for reality TV shows. I don’t know how you guys do it, but watching them turns me into a ball of nerves.

Seeing those singers on American Idol stand in line waiting for the vote that will squash their musical dreams? Stressful!

 

 

 

 

Jamie Oliver sets up a community kitchen in Huntington, West Virginia, where he teaches families and kids how to prepare healthy meals.

And surely there’s something better for the nerves than Amazing Race, where jet-lagged contestants race from one continent to another, sniping at each other while they’re at it. I feel jet-lagged just watching them.

How about a show about a bevy of women trying to win a bachelor’s heart by saying what he wants to hear? Yuck. Watching Type-A personalities win Donald Trump’s favour by outscheming each other? Hey, the last thing I want to do after leaving the office is to witness more backstabbing and office politics.

Okay, I’m a marshmallow. Looking at people’s dreams being dashed on TV reduces me to tears, and nasty people on TV, like the ones in real life, make me ill. Why are reality shows entertaining, again?

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Interview: Troy Chin

Starting this week, Worlds of Wonder* will run weekly to explore more graphic novels. We kick off with Singaporean Troy Chin’s works.

By ELIZABETH TAI, April 2, 2010

Three years ago, Troy Chin was living the life many can only dream about.

In 1998, he left Singapore to study business at The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, in the United States. After graduation, he headed to New York City to get into the music industry. He managed this and more – by 2006, he was a music executive who ran a successful division at Sony BMG.

Yet, he felt “too successful, too content”.

“If everything is going so well then something is wrong – you’re getting complacent and something needs to change,” said Chin, 32, during a phone interview from Singapore recently.

So, in 2007, he packed his bags and went home to Singapore.
If that wasn’t radical enough, Chin decided to try a new career: as a comic book artist.