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Asia in 3 minutes: good job news for Korea’s nut rage heiress, Japanese Hooters staff, Pakistani transgender TV anchor

Meanwhile, AirAsia staff are being told to kiss passengers’ bags ...

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Pakistan's first transgender newsreader Marvia Malik. Photo: AP

Pakistan’s first transgender anchor hails ‘unprecedented support’

A Pakistani TV channel has put the country’s first transgender news anchor on the air, a watershed cultural moment for the marginalised community in the deeply conservative country. Marvia Malik, a former model who appeared on the Lahore-based private broadcaster Kohenoor for the first time, said she has received “unprecedented love and support” since landing the job. “My family never accepted or owned me,” she said, adding that the rift drove her to seek a better future in Lahore, Pakistan’s cultural capital. “Here I received unprecedented love and support from everyone that I never got from my own family,” she said, adding that the positive response only escalated once she went on air for the daily broadcast.

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What next? Malik, who declined to confirm her age but is reportedly around 21, said she hoped to use her platform to urge people to treat one another as human beings first, without discrimination. If she becomes “financially sound”, she added, she may even seek to establish her own TV channel.

Hooters staff at the Tokyo store. Photo: Hooters Japan
Hooters staff at the Tokyo store. Photo: Hooters Japan

Hooters offers co-working spaces alongside scantily clad staff

Think of Hooters and the two things that immediately come to mind are: the signature Hooters girls and famous hot wings. But Hooters in Tokyo is taking it up a notch by bringing one more thing to the table: co-working spaces for rent. Hooters has teamed up with Spacee, a Japanese space rental app, to make the most of the available space during off-peak hours from 1pm to 7pm. The Ginza outlet began workspace rentals on March 23, for a small fee of 50 yen (US$0.47) for every 30-minute block. It’s free for students if they are accompanied by a legal guardian. Spacee said in a statement that it believes working in an unconventional space encourages “new discoveries” and “innovative ideas”, reported Travel + Leisure magazine.

What next? While there is no minimum spending imposed on the workspaces, Hooters has thoughtfully slashed prices on selected drinks on the menu exclusively for tired Spacee users. Workspaces come with a desk and internet access (bring your own laptop) and are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Korean Air heiress Cho Hyun-ah, known for her ‘nut rage’ tantrum that sparked national uproar four years ago made a comeback to management, a spokesman said. Photo: AP
Korean Air heiress Cho Hyun-ah, known for her ‘nut rage’ tantrum that sparked national uproar four years ago made a comeback to management, a spokesman said. Photo: AP

South Korean ‘nut rage’ heiress returns to management position

A Korean Air heiress known for her “nut rage” tantrum that sparked national uproar four years ago made a comeback to management, a spokesman said. At a shareholders meeting, Korean Air subsidiary KAL Hotel Network approved Cho Hyun-ah, 44, as its president, the spokesman said. Cho, a daughter of Korean Air chief Cho Yang-ho and then the company’s vice-president, erupted into a tantrum when a stewardess served her macadamia nuts in a bag rather than in a bowl on a Seoul-bound flight at New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport. She and the male cabin crew chief were forced to kneel and beg for forgiveness, before Cho struck the woman with a service manual and ordered the aircraft to turn back to the gate.

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