Vittana

July 29th, 2011

Kiva successfully pioneered the very simple idea of crowd-sourced microloans.  If you are unfamiliar with Kiva, I wrote about them before here.

You donate very small amounts (eg US$25) via the website towards someone’s enterprise in a third world nation: someone for whom a total of $300 would make a huge difference.  And you get your original ‘donation’ back.

Ingenious.  You don’t need to be Gates or Buffet and raise billions to make a difference, but a little bit of help from many really can go a long way.

Where Kiva helped small businesses and enterprises, Vittana sets out to use the same model to help learning.

Still fairly new, Vittana features students who need relatively small amounts to complete their education – $300, $500… as a lender, you choose how much you put in – from $25.

While the list of countries is still fairly small, it will grow as Vittana develops.  Right now 3 Asian countries are listed: Mongolia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

Nyamsuren needed $270 to finish her degree in Otgontenger University in Mongolia.  She got the money from 9 lenders through Vittana, and has since repaid it.

With a degree, Nyamsuren’s monthly income will go from $120 to $620 per month.

Just imagine – your $25 investment propels someone who’s hungry to learn and to build a better life, achieve that.

And you get your original $25 back.

It’s a beautiful thing.

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Tell it your way

July 27th, 2011

Gifted story tellers are magicians.

I’m not fussed if the stories are short, or long, but the ability to weave a spell, transport you, take you from beginning to end, hold your attention, capture your imagination -- that’s a wonderful talent.

Philips recently ran a competition in conjunction with Ridley Scott to find filmmakers who are adept story tellers.

The rules were that entries must have exactly 6 lines of dialogue, and could be no longer than 3 minutes.

Here’s the grand prize winner -- Porcelain Unicorn by Keegan Wilson.

Compelling, moving, and complete.

Check out the other winning entries here

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Frostbite

July 21st, 2011

It’s so hot here in Singapore these days that I’m sorely tempted to cut all my hair off and just sit in a tub of ice.

Then I remember I always regret it when I cut my hair off.

I blame this heat for my excitement at hearing about Frostbite, a little shop that makes and sells gourmet/artisanal popsicles.

photo courtesy of Frostbite

It’s a little outlet in Toa Payoh Central and is pretty bare-bones: a simple,  barely-decorated store that sells flavoured ice lollies, in distinctive flavours – White Peach with Lavender, Raspberry-Cranberry, Watermelon-Lemon, Grapefruit-Passionfruit, Mango-Lychee, Chocolate-BloodOrange… you get the idea.

My favourite is Calamansi SourPlum.

I don’t know how they make it so the flavour is so full and comes alive in your mouth with each slurp.

It’s not overly sharp, sweet or sour – they’ve managed to get the blend of all three just perfect.  The texture of the ice is perfect too – it’s soft, not too crystalline, and the flavours soaked in enough so you get a few good slurps out of it.

It’s fruity, with bits of sour plum through it, and has none of the bottle/store flavour – fake and sickly sweet – that turns me off a potentially lovely flavour combo.

Each lolly is $2.50.

It’s my new favourite thing.

All the flavours I’ve tried so far are punchy and fruity, without being overly sweet.  They taste like the best version of homemade fruit popsicles.  Flavours are intense, and drenched through each ice crystal!

Surely surely there’ll be some kind of cola lolly, and of course, a gula melaka lolly, soon?  A calamansi-cola lolly for me please.

If you buy one to eat they thoughtfully give it to you with a napkin to catch the sticky drips if you’re a slow eater.  If you buy in bulk, they give you your lollies in bags of ice.  But bring a chill bag anyway, and stock up!

Remembering iceballs of the past – shaved ice on a bit of newspaper with coloured syrups through it – bought from a little shoppy during an afternoon’s play – I realise how sophisticated we’ve become that a neighbourhood store doesn’t sell iceballs, but gourmet popsicles.  (by the way, those iceballs were 10 cents, and it wasn’t THAT long ago)

The store is a little hard to find – the address is Blk 178, #01-546 Toa Payoh Central.  It’s right behind the HDB Hub, facing Ya Kun and Polar.  Look for the flashing fairy lights.

A couple of young entrepreneurs with a great idea and a passion to succeed.

I love that, and I hope it succeeds.

ps:  just tried the Mango.  It’s very rich and mango-sweet.  If you love the intensity of a really ripe mango, this is one for you!  Grapefruit-Passionfruit has a lovely, rich bite, tangy but passionfruit-y (!) and Chocolate-Caramel is just delicious – rich and chocolatey, with the texture of a Paddle Pop.

pps:  Suntec outlet: facing Carrefour

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Amazeballs!

July 6th, 2011

Check out this animated short.  It’s so creative, so well-done, so…sweet as well.

Not sure it explains the meaning of life (as has been claimed) but it’s a lovely morality tale.

One of my favourite films this year was Mary and Max, another stop-motion animation out of Australia.  They seem to be breeding great animators down under…

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Priscilla Ahn

July 3rd, 2011

Not just a kewpie singer, Priscilla Ahn is a talented singer-songwriter.

I love these lyrics from Dream

Long walks in the dark through woods grown behind the park

I asked God who I’m supposed to be

The stars smiled down on me, God answered in silent reverie

I said a prayer and fell asleep

Now I’m old and feeling grey

I don’t know what’s left to say about this life I’m willing to leave

I lived it full and I lived it well, there’s many tales I’ve lived to tell

I’m ready now, I’m ready now, I’m ready now to fly from the highest wing

I had a dream

Of the ilk of other folksy, indie heart-barers like Rachael Yamagata and Natalie Walker, Ahn will be playing at the Esplanade Recital Studio on August 2.  Expect an intimate evening.

Half Korean and half American, her voice is a little twee -- but her package of singer-songwriter and musicianship take her out of the pop-twee brigade.

If her music sounds familiar, that’s because you’ve heard her in the background of My Sister’s Keeper, Grey’s Anatomy and The Ghost Whisperer.

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