The Moulin Rouge Dancer from Crete

Antonis Kosmadakis was born in Crete, Greece. He started dancing at the age of 18, at the School of Classical and Contemporary Dance of Klaire Giouavanaki.

According to Kosmadakis’ statements to ellines.com network, his immersion in dancing occurred by chance. He had been involved with artistic gymnastics for 12 years and had received numerous distinctions across Greece.

Dancing became part of his life after a friend of his had invited him to attend a dance seminar, where Kosmadakis met a choreographer from Paris, Bruno Agati.

Agati proposed that Kosmadakis travel to France and audition for a public dance school in Montpellier, where he could continue his dance studies.

Kosmadakis followed the advice of Agati and excelled by receiving a scholarship from the dance school (he was one of three recipients). His former experience in artistic gymnastics proved valuable and helped him reach the top.

At the end of his studies, Kosmadakis worked as a dancer in Disneyland. Afterwards he worked at a Paris cabaret “Paradis Latin”, at “Lido”, and for the Opera, taking part in several plays, such as “La Vie Parisienne”, “Faust”, “The Merry Widow”, etc.

The hard work and effort he put in dancing the 3-minute-long solo part of French Cancan dancer “Valentin le Désossé” (i.e. Valentin the boneless), was Kosmadakis’ ticket to the worldwide famous cabaret of Moulin Rouge.

Antonis Kosmadakis won the Guinness Award with Moulin Rouge last year for a dance move called “serpillere”.

EU Pressures Vodafone to Cancel Greek Merger

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Vodafone Group decided to abandon an attempt to merge its Greek unit with rival Wind Hellas after facing European Union regulatory opposition.
Vodafone and Largo Limited, the sole shareholder of Wind Hellas, “agreed to terminate discussions relating to a potential business combination between Vodafone Greece and Wind Hellas,” the British phone company said in a statement today.
A successful merger would have reduced the number of full-service mobile-phone companies in Greece to two, compared with four in France, Italy, and Spain. It would have allowed Vodafone to reduce costs and better compete in the country with Hellenic Telecommunications Organization SA, or OTE, which is controlled by Deutsche Telekom AG (DTE).
Vodafone Greece, which has about 4 million customers, has been a burden for the Newbury, England-based company. In November, Vodafone booked an impairment loss of 450 million pounds ($710 million) for its business in Greece, citing lower cash flow and an increase in discount rates. During last year’s sales period, Vodafone had already lowered the value of its Greek operations by 800 million pounds.
Wind and Vodafone are struggling against cell phone market leader Cosmote, a unit of former state monopoly OTE, which has almost half of Greece’s mobile phone market, with Vodafone and Wind distant runners-up.
However, the source cited by the FT said the argument of difficult market conditions was unlikely to be acceptable under competition rules.
People with knowledge of the talks, cited by the FT, said the two companies could carry on talks to share networks, which is more likely to be permitted by European regulators and would still allow some cost savings.
(source: Bloomberg, Reuters)

Superbowl XLVI: The Greek “Players” of the Game

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Kelly Clarkson sang the national anthem and John Stamos starred in the half time commercial for Dannon at the Superbowl XLVI.

Clarkson, backed by a children’s choir, belted a capable and lyrically-correct version of the song. Prior to Clarkson’s Super Bowl performance, country music power couple Blake Shelton and Miranda Lambert paired up for a duet of “America the Beautiful.

She is the third and youngest child of Jeanne Rose, a first grade English teacher of Greek descent and Stephen Michael Clarkson, a former engineer of English descent.

Watch Kelly Clarkson’s performance below:

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John Stamos was the face of the first ever yogurt commercial to air during the big game. Dannon decided to collaborate with the Greek-American actor, in order to promote their Oikos Greek Yogurt brand. The funny commercial aired during the 3rd quarter of Super Bowl XLVI. Watch it below:

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Giants won the Super Bowl XLVI beating the Patriots 21-17.

 

Hip Hop Organizer Tolis Aristeidou Returns to LA

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Tolis Aristeidou

Tolis Aristeidou of Greece will return to Los Angeles February 22-26
as part of the U.S. Department of State’s International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP) Gold Stars’ Tour. The International Visitors Council of Los Angeles (IVCLA) arranged his initial visit to Los Angeles in 2009 as an IVLP participant, making connections that included meetings with Justice by Uniting in Creative Energy (JUiCE) and DVA Media + Marketing.

During his return visit to Los Angeles, Aristeidou will reunite with some of the connections that made an impact on his work back home, as well as meet with new professional resources in Los Angeles. In addition, he will visit local high schools to talk about his important work bringing hip-hop to underprivileged youth throughout Greece and the Balkans.

Aristeidou is the director and exclusive organizer of the Balkan Break Dance Competition “Battle of the Year – Balkans.” Aristeidou is well-connected to the youth community in Greece and urban street culture phenomena. He understands and connects to young people, often underserved and inner city groups,
through new and innovative ways. He organizes events to bring together young people from all over the Balkans, promoting mutual understanding and tolerance for other cultures. In his role as director, he is the main developer for break dance events and festivals in Greece and the Balkans. His office also organizes dance seminars, film screenings, dance-theater events, hip hop concerts, graffiti exhibits, and other events related to the hip hop culture.

The counterparts he met in the U.S. in 2009 have almost all become close contacts that he reaches out to for events and ideas. In particular, his meeting with the representative of Hip Hop International (the organizers of the largest and most prominent international Hip Hop dancing competition in the world) resulted in an immediate partnership between the two companies. Within a year after his return to Greece, Tolis organized the first Hip Hop International – Greece competition in Athens, with a record 25 dance groups participating and competing – this included groups from across Greece as well as Cyprus. With the support of the U.S. Embassy in Athens, Tolis brought top American Hip Hop dancers Eddie Styles and King Saso to judge the competition. The top two groups went to Las Vegas last summer to represent Greece for the first time in the Hip Hop International competition. This came just six months after he brought top U.S. breakers Bboy Ronnie and Rockadile to judge a national Greek breakdance contest and lead a workshop that also promoted healthy, drug-free living. His IVLP program also connected him with some of the top Hip Hop impresarios in the U.S. leading to a constant stream of American talent being invited to participate in his events.

The Gold Stars’ Tour is for alumni of the IVLP who made an impact in their community or on the world as a result of their experience in the United States. Aristeidou has been selected as one of two gold star alumni among thousands of nominated individuals. Through this special initiative, IVLP gold star alumni are recognized for their excellence as citizen diplomats through IVLP-inspired initiatives abroad and for demonstrated leadership in their local communities.

About the International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP)
The International Visitor Leadership Program is the U.S. Department of State’s premier professional exchange program, connecting current and emerging foreign leaders with their American counterparts through short-term programs to build mutual understanding on foreign policy issues. Nearly 200,000 distinguished individuals have participated in the program, including 330 current and former Chiefs of State and Heads of Government, and thousands of leaders from the public and private sectors.

About the International Visitors Council of Los Angeles (IVCLA)
IVCLA has been working since 1980 to increase international understanding and communication in the Los Angeles area by arranging personal exchanges between emerging international leaders and the citizens of the Los Angeles region. IVCLA coordinates programs for participants in the U.S. Department of State sponsored International Visitor Leadership Program, as well as other publicly and privately sponsored international visitors. The programs provide the visitors with insight on how we live and work,
and local Citizen Diplomats with a better understanding about the rest of the world.

With Greece on “Razor’s Edge”, Lenders Insist: Comply or Default

Greece's interim leader Lucas Papademos has a tough sell trying to convince his coalition partners to accept more austerity measures

ATHENS – As Interim Prime Minister Lucas Papademos tried to keep leaders of his coalition together in a desperate attempt to win a consensus on reforms needed to keep international aid coming, the government was told it has no choice now and must comply, or no more money will be coming and Greece will have to default next month. Papademos was trying to win over ministers from the holdover PASOK Socialists that were in power until three months ago, as well as get support from the bitter conservative New Democracy rivals and the marginal far Right-Wing LAOS party, whose leader is balking at demands from lenders that include 25 percent pay cuts for private sector workers, 35 percent slashes in auxiliary pensions, and more of the austerity measures that have put the country in a death spiral recession of 19.2 percent unemployment and led to the closing of more than 100,000 businesses.
Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos of PASOK, who has administered waves of tax hikes that have failed to slow Greece’s slide toward insolvency,  said after 12 hours of talks with officials from the Troika of the European Union-International Monetary Fund-European Central Bank (EU-IMF-ECB), who are providing Greece with $152 billion in rescue loans and offering $169 billion more on the condition that Greece follow its orders, that the country’s fate was in the balance. “The moment is very crucial. We are on a razor’s edge,” he said, despite his frequent optimism that the negotiations would go well. Greece also is nearing completion of a deal to write down 70 percent of its debt with private lenders and wants the ECB to also take big hits.
Eurozone chief Jean-Claude Juncker said lenders are exasperated with Greece’s failure to implement reforms in a fast and effective manner and drew a line in the sand, although the lenders have previously made similar complaints and backed down in fear that if Greece defaults it could bring down the entire financial bloc. Still, he said, the eleventh hour is approaching for Greece. “If we were to establish that everything has gone wrong in Greece there would be no program and that would mean that in March they have to declare bankruptcy,” he said, in comments to the German news weekly Der Spiegel. Greek insiders confirmed that the possibility of bankruptcy loomed larger than at any other time, the British newspaper The Guardian reported.
“The Troika is not negotiating, it’s dictating,” an insider said. “When you negotiate you expect both sides to move, but they’re like a rock. They’re basically saying it’s this or default. Our sense is that they would prefer the shock of a Greek default than throwing money into a country they have come to see as a bottomless pit. The problem is the measures are so hard, so painful, that it is hard to see how all three leaders will accept them.”
If Greece does not keep getting loans, the country – already technically broke and surviving on foreign aid – could go into a disastrous disorderly default unless it can meet a $19 billion loan repayment.
“Crucial issues which concern the future of the country and the Greek people remain (unresolved), Venizelos said late on Feb. 5. “The distance separating the procedure being completed with success from stalemate … is very small. It’s a very fine line.”
He said the patience of lenders, both from the Troika and the other 16 countries of the Eurozone that use the euro as a currency, had run out because they believed the country would not implement more reforms, although there were reports the government has agreed to speed up privatization of state-run entities and sell or lease state-owned properties, and would use $131 billion of a second bailout to pay lenders and give the rest to Greeks banks to recapitalize them.
He said a phone conference with his fellow finance ministers in the Eurozone had not gone well, as it seems the lenders were locking arms and putting the heat on Greece to comply or go bust. “There is great impatience and great pressure not only from the three institutions that make up the Troika but also from Eurozone member states,” he added. Addressing reporters over the weekend, Venizelos said the “hour of truth” had come for the political leaders backing Papademos’s interim national salvation government. “We are at the point where they must decide and commit,” he said.
That’s the problem, as Papademos has to try to convince the coalition to administer more of the same medicine critics said has destroyed the economy, not helped it, and persuade ministers to adopt more unpopular measures, even as elections loom in two months and they would rather not be associated with them; ministers fear more of the same kind of protests, riots and strikes that brought down PASOK and drove former Prime Minister George Papandreou out of office, although he still heads his party. New Democracy is headed by Antonis Samaras, who has said he won’t go along with more pay cuts, tax hikes and slashed pensions, while LAOS leader George Karatzaferis was even more demonstrative in his opposition to austerity.
“If it doesn’t suit us and the Troika doesn’t budge we will not take the package,” he said, before heading into the meeting with Papademos. “We will not give in to ultimatums.” Greece’s leaders are in a spot as if they go along with the Troika demands, it could worsen the recession and create more social unrest, and if they don’t, the country will go broke quickly.
The government has said cutting the two months of annual bonuses that private sector workers get is non-negotiable, and they want measures that would boost competitiveness instead of constantly putting punishing measures on Greek workers, although the economic crisis was created by generations of PASOK and New Democracy leaders packing public payrolls with political hires in return for votes. They are also resisting Troika demands to fire 150,000 workers over the next few years, about 15 percent of the workforce, and shut down more public organizations.  Party leaders, trade unions and employers’ associations have predicted social upheaval if the measures are applied.
(Sources: Kathimerini, AP, DJ, The Guardian)

 

Torrential Rain Floods Prefecture of Ilia in Greece

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Due to torrential rains that fell in the Ilia prefecture of the southwestern Pelopponnese on Saturday, four streams had overflooded the area allowing an alarming volume of water to rush through the village, as reported by ‘Keep Talking Greece’.
The storm broke out at midnight, flooding streets, houses, shops and agricultural fields, sweeping away animals and cars. Familes with children, drivers in their cars, patients in hospitals, and nuns in monasteries were all threatened by the torrential rains flooding the area. As rescue efforts are under way, desperate citizens call the fire brigades and the police to send rescue teams and untrap them from their flooded houses.
Greek media reports that in some houses the water has risen up to 70 centimeters. There is a big rescue effort underway with the participation of Puma helicopters, firefighters and policemen due to landslides in Lanthi village.
Local media reports a last-minute rescue of a woman and her little children that were trapped in the waters of the river Ennipeas in the region.
Meteorologists say that this has been the biggest storm to hit the area in the last five years.
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Author Michalis Michael Expresses New Ideas Concerning Conflict of Cyprus

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Those looking for a new read on the Cyprus conflict might be interested in Resolving the Cyprus Conflict, presented this week at the University of Nicosia.
Michalis Michael, the deputy director at the Centre for Dialogue in Australia’s La Trobe University, presented his book on Monday with guest speakers AKEL MEP Takis Hadjigeorgiou, DISY MP Christos Stylianides and the head of Nicosia university Nicos Peristianis.
He told the Cyprus Mail that the politicians described his book as a “must read” and Peristianis said it was “compulsory reading”.
The author said the book was “ethnically blind” but this “doesn’t mean I don’t have a perspective”. Why choose then to start with 1974, which brings to mind the Turkish invasion and the loss of Greek Cypriots’ homes and properties, rather than go back and include the troubled years of 1963-4 where Turkish Cypriot loss was more prominent?
Michael said that he has dedicated a chapter to pre-1974 events looking into the British administration of the island onwards. But 1974 “imprints division in a demographic, social, political and physical way”.
Michael refers to the “crisis of 1963-1964” as a time where “contentious issues” emerged, each testing “the effective functioning of the constitution” dating back to 1960. Those issues include an integrated Cypriot army, public service quotas, tax legislation, separate municipalities and communal chambers, Michael writes.
“The sectarian and divisive provisions of the 1960 arrangement constituted the seeds that led to its collapse three years later.”
So what’s led to the Cyprus conflict? “Insecurity,” Michael said, for both the Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots, though he added no one could narrow down the conflict to one single cause. What is lacking and is needed is to be able to synchronise different tracks: internal, external, political, civil society. Currently, debates focus “too much on the process and not on substance,” Michael said.
(Source:Cyprus Mail)

Unions Plan 24-Hour Strike Against Austerity

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Greece’s two major labor unions plan a 24-hour strike on Tuesday against austerity measures and reforms demanded by international lenders in exchange for a new bailout package, union officials said on Sunday.
“We are planning a one-day strike on Tuesday,” Ilias Iliopoulos, secretary general of public sector union ADEDY, told Reuters. “Despite our sacrifices and despite admitting that the policy mix is wrong, they still ask for more austerity.”
ADEDY and its private sector sister union GSEE represent about 2 million workers or roughly half the country’s workforce. They have staged repeated strikes since the country first resorted to bailouts from foreign lenders in 2010.
A GSEE official said the two unions would finalize plans to strike on Monday.
(source: Reuters)

Critical Greek Bailout Talks to Resume Monday

Crisis talks on a debt deal for Greece among the three leaders of parties supporting the coalition government were suspended and will continue on Monday.
The three party leaders held a five-hour meeting late Sunday with Prime Minister Lucas Papademos to hammer out a deal with debt inspectors representing eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund, but failed to reach an agreement.
An announcement from Papademos’ office said the three had agreed on measures to cut spending in 2012 by 1.5 percent of gross domestic product — about €3.3 billion ($4.3 billion) — improve competitiveness by cutting wages and non-wage costs, such as social security contributions, reduce auxiliary pensions and re-capitalize banks without nationalizing them.
But the three leaders — socialist George Papandreou, Antonis Samaras of conservative New Democracy and Giorgos Karatzaferis of the right-wing Popular Orthodox Rally — differed as to what this would mean in detailed proposals. All three have called meetings of their party executives to consider the proposals.
Samaras said upon leaving the talks that Greece’s creditors “are asking for more recession which the country cannot bear. I am fighting, with all my means, to prevent this.”
“I will not contribute to the breakout of a revolution by the new poor that will consume the whole of Europe,” Karatzaferis said.
Papandreou objects to cutting actual wages and wants the state to take over banks, at least temporarily.
“Political party leaders are obliged to provide a first response to the proposals by” Monday morning, socialist party spokesman Panos Beglitis told reporters after the party leaders’ meeting with Papademos.
Papademos has resumed talks with representatives of the “troika” of Greece’s creditors later on Sunday and will be joined by Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos and Labor Minister Giorgos Koutroumanis.
(source: AP)

International Survey Reveals Greece's Bad Payment Behavior

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The 10th edition of the Atradius Payment Practices Barometer focuses on Greece, examining the primary aspects of the country’s trade credit supply and management, as well as the payment behaviour of its international and domestic trading companies.
Greece’s volatile economic and financial situation shows through clearly in this survey, which demonstrates how a relatively strong inclination for trading on credit terms can generate a series of protracted payment delays when the trading environment loses its stability.
Greek companies undoubtedly share the preference for trading on credit that charactises other Southern European countries: most notably Italy and Spain. Survey respondents made 66% of B2B transactions on credit terms, a little above the European and survey averages, but also showed caution where necessary. 86% of trade credit went to the domestic market, while 59% of respondents offered no credit terms at all to foreign customers.
41% of domestic receivables were paid past due date and 17% of export invoices fell overdue. A very large 18% of domestic invoices remained unpaid after 90 days, three times the European average. Export delinquencies were reported to be 7.4%. 44% of invoices held by services and medium/large firms fell overdue.
The overwhelming reason for domestic payment delays was an insufficiency of available funds. This was cited by 84% of respondents. Inefficiencies of the banking system and complexity of the payment procedure were highlighted with far less regularity.
At the year’s halfway point, Greek companies were also holding the second highest day sales outstanding in Europe, indicated by respondent data to be some 70 days. Although the manufacturing sector reported a very low DSO, the overall trend was the most unstable in the survey during the first half of 2011. A worrying 46% of the Greek respondents reported an increase in their DSO (Days Sales Outstanding),double the survey average, with pockets of industry including medium/large and micro-companies faring the worst.