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A Lebanese Blog

Month: January 2014

  • Wrecking Ball – Cover by JLP

    JLP is a Lebanese band of five guys who perform at several places around Beirut. You can check more about them on their Facebook page.

  • Video game for peace inspired by Lebanon

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    “Search for Common Ground”, a multinational NGO in Lebanon, has been developing a new video game called “Cedaria: Blackout” that aims to promote conflict among teenagers in order to hopefully achieve a sustainable peace someday (sounds more like an impossible mission).

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    The game is set on a fantasy island called Cedaria – a reference to Lebanon’s national symbol, the cedar – at the end of the 19th century. Players begin by returning to the island after an absence of some years, having heard tales of the country’s wealth and the power of the Phoenix, a unique machine capable of providing the entire island with wireless electricity.

    When they arrive, however, they learn that someone has sabotaged the Phoenix, scattering the pieces across the island’s 14 zones, and that the island has been without electricity for months.

    In the darkness, enmity begins to grow between the island’s four clans. Players must gather the pieces of the Phoenix and figure out who destroyed it and why. The choices they make along the way may help to reconcile Cedaria’s inhabitants or drive them further apart.

    Players can set out to solve five different mysteries, each requiring them to complete 10 missions. Each choice they make has unique consequences, encouraging them to play multiple times to find out how each decision affects the final outcome.

    “They can choose the wrong response,” Jacquard says, “but then they will face the consequences of their actions. They’ll realize that they may have saved time [by doing things] the wrong way, but if they had thought twice about it and tried negotiation as an alternative to violence then they would have gained more points and achieved their goal more easily.”

    The game aims to promote virtual collaboration while engendering real-life tolerance and teamwork. “Because it’s a multiplayer game [on] Facebook, players will have to build alliances with people they don’t know,” Jaquard says, “who might not come from the same sectarian or socioeconomic background. So they will have to overcome all those stereotypes and prejudices.

    While the game steers clear of physical combat – though characters are able to fight – players face challenges such as corruption, inequality, racism, crime, monopolization of resources and blackmail.

    “The game was inspired by situations like those we experience in Lebanon,” Jacquard says, “like loss of electricity and sectarian issues.”

    It can’t get any more Lebanese than this! Although the game plot sounds somehow interesting, the graphics don’t seem very appealing so far. But anyway, we will judge when it will be released in March this year.

    For more information about Cedaria: Blackout, you can check this Daily Star article about it, as well as the official website www.cedariagame.com.

  • The Wolf of Wall Street no longer censored in Lebanon

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    You probably already know that The Wolf of Wall Street has been censored in Lebanon since whoever imported it thought we will not have the attention span for a three hours movie, and therefore it was cut down to two hours and thirty minutes!

    However, it was announced on Radio One Lebanon this morning that the movie will no longer be censored and the full version will start showing as of today. I really hope this will be true because I was preferring to wait for the DVD release to watch the full movie!

    For more about The wolf of Wall Street, you can read Anis Tabet’s review about it here.

  • Wiam Wahab’s sa7sou7!

    Let’s hope this won’t become a trend among Lebanese politicians! Anyone knows who’s the man who was hit?

  • Bernard Khoury’s penthouse in Beirut

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    Bernard Khoury, the Lebanese famous architect who’s known for many projects like B018, Centrale, and many other places, had his penthouse featured in The Wall Street Journal last month.

    This spacious penthouse in Beirut is owned by 45-year-old Lebanese architect Bernard Khoury. He chose a home with its hodgepodge city view over the more sought-after romantic sea view. It happened by circumstance, when his friend, Marc Doumit, a developer, bought the land on Damascus Road at a low price in the late 1990s after it had been sitting deserted for nearly a decade following the end of the 15-year civil war. Mr. Khoury’s family moved in last year.

    The penthouse is 400 square meters with 5 bedrooms, 7 bathrooms, a swimming pool and an awesome view over Beirut and the mountains! You can check more photos of it here.

    Bernard Khoury penthouse

    via @LaCeline

  • New Year celebrations around the world

    While most of the world cities celebrated New Year with some spectacular fireworks display, Dubai chose take it a bit further this year and succeeded in breaking the world record for the largest fireworks display. They crushed the record previously set by Kuwait by firing more than 400,000 shots in around six minutes!

    Meanwhile in Lebanon, assassinations right before the new year’s eve, explosions everywhere in the country, stupid clashes every now and then, and of course, douchebags here can’t but celebrate with firearms. Yet, we’re excellent at pulling jokes at the Khaleejis. OK.

    Anyway, make sure to check this article on BuzzFeed for a glimpse of how the rest of the world celebrated last night.

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    Paris

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    Copacabana

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    New York