Tag Archives: caribbean

Johnny Depp – Die skurrilsten Fakten über Johnny Depp

Ausnahmeschauspieler Johnny Depp wird 50. Er ist bekannt für seine eigenwilligen Filme, doch auch abseits der Leinwand gibt es einige merkwürdige Geschichten über den Star zu erzählen. Spot on news stellte einige davon vor.

Johnny Depp gehört zu den außergewöhnlichsten Schauspielern Hollywoods. Zwar hat er ein Faible für Rollen als verschrobener Einzelgänger, doch allein schon in diesem Fach legt er ungeheuer viele Facetten an den Tag. Genauso groß ist auch das Spektrum seiner Filme: Vom kauzigen Anti-Western

„Dead Man“

bis zu den Blockbustern der

„Pirates of the Caribbean“

-Reihe, Depp ist ein Mann für alle Fälle. Ebenso ungewöhnlich ist aber auch das Privatleben des exzentrischen Stars, der heute seinen 50. Geburtstag feiert. spot on news hat interessante Tatsachen ausgegraben.

Mit 15 Jahren schmiss Depp die Schule, um Rockmusiker zu werden. Mit seiner Band „The Kids“ brachte er es immerhin zu Auftritten im Vorprogramm von Iggy Pop, Duran Duran und The B-52´s. Als er seine erste Frau Lori Anne Allison heiratete, musste ein richtiger Job her, so wurde Depp Verkäufer für Kugelschreiber.

Wer noch mehr erfahren möchte über den US-Star Johnny Depp, sollte einfach in diesem Buch schmökern

Lori, die als Make-Up-Künstlerin arbeitete, läutete auch Depps Hollywood-Karriere ein: Bei einem Besuch in Los Angeles stellte sie ihn Nicolas Cage vor. Der empfahl Depp die Schauspielerei und vermittelte ihn an seinen Agenten, der ihm die erste Rolle besorgte: Depp gehörte zu den Opfern von Freddy Krueger im Horrorklassiker „Nightmare – Mörderische Träume“ .

Die Liebe zur Musik hat er sich trotzdem bewahrt. Unter anderem war Depp zwei Mal mit der Band Oasis im Studio. Auf dem Song „Fade In-Out“ vom Album „Be Here Now“ (1997) spielte er ein Gitarrensolo ein, da Noel Gallagher selbst zu betrunken war.

Mit der Serie „21 Jump Street – Tatort Klassenzimmer“ (1987-1991) wurde Depp zum Teenie-Star. Mit einer Reklametafel, auf der er in seiner Rolle als Tom Hanson zu sehen war, war er dennoch nicht zufrieden – und begann prompt, sie zu übermalen. Ein Sicherheitsmann stoppte Depp zunächst, ließ ihn dann aber gewähren, als er bemerkte, wer da am Pinseln war.

1994 wurde Depp in New York verhaftet, weil er ein Hotelzimmer verwüstet hatte. Depp beschuldigte ein Gürteltier, das im Schrank gehaust habe. Das habe ihn angegriffen und randaliert, bis er es aus dem Fenster warf. Auch privat war Depp gut mit „Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas“ -Autor Hunter S. Thompson befreundet. Nach dessen Tod half er bei der Erfüllung des letzten Wunsches des Exzentrikers – seine Asche sollte aus einer Kanone geschossen werden.

Auch wenn man es vor allem angesichts der oft morbiden Filme, die er mit Kultregisseur Tim Burton („Corpse Bride“ ) gedreht hat, kaum glauben kann: Depp fürchtet sich vor Clowns, Spinnen und Geistern.

Als Depp mit Kollegin Winona Ryder verlobt war, ließ er sich „Winona forever“ auf den Arm tätowieren. Leider war ihre Beziehung doch nicht für immer, weshalb er das Tattoo in „Wino forever“ ändern ließ. Die Liebe zum Wein ist tatsächlich etwas dauerhafter, der Schauspieler besitzt sogar eigene Weinberge in Frankreich.

Sein gutes Herz bewies Depp, als er das Pferd Goldeneye, auf dem er im Film „Sleepy Hollow“ ritt, adoptierte, und es damit vor dem Schlachter rettete.

Nach einer Aufnahmesession mit Depp wurde der britische Sänger Stephen Jones 2010 in Los Angeles überfallen: Ein Mann bedrohte ihn mit einer zerbrochenen Flasche, und verlangte seine Geldbörse. Depp eilte zu Hilfe, indem er dem Räuber einen strengen Blick zuwarf. Der ließ mit der Bemerkung „Ich stehle nicht von Captain Jack“ die Flasche sinken und verzog sich.

Wie auf den meisten Fotos zu erkennen ist, liebt Depp Hüte und trägt oft reichlich verwegene Exemplare. Laut „The Sun“ soll seine Sammlung 2011 zwei Zimmer in der Pariser Wohnung seiner damaligen Freundin Vanessa Paradis (40) in Beschlag genommen haben. Als er eines Tages mit einem Hut ankam, den er einem Obdachlosen abgekauft hatte, wurde es ihr zu bunt: Depp musste für die Kopfbedeckungen eine neue Bleibe suchen.

Originally posted here: 

Johnny Depp – Die skurrilsten Fakten über Johnny Depp

Netflix nets Disney and Pixar titles for the UK & Ireland, including Ratatouille, Wall-E and Dumbo

WallE 520x245 Netflix nets Disney and Pixar titles for the UK & Ireland, including Ratatouille, Wall E and Dumbo

Netflix has announced it’s adding a slew of Disney and Pixar films to its online streaming service in the UK and Ireland, including Ratatouille, Wall-E, The Chronicles of Narnia, and Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl. The deal also sees Disney classics such as Dumbo and The Aristocats added to its roster.

While these titles are available now, Netflix has also announced that it will be adding a selection of “exclusive” titles from Disney, Marvel and Dreamworks SKG (whose films are marketed and distributed by Disney) in the coming months, including The Help, War Horse, People Like Us and Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. From next year, it will also add Marvel’s Avengers Assemble, John Carter, and The Muppets.

While this is no doubt good news for existing Netflix subscribers, particularly those with children, this may not be the most compelling of propositions to lure new bodies on board. For example, earlier this year, BSkyB announced its first co-branded linear channel for Disney and Pixar flicks (in addition to Sky’s existing Disney Channel), which will see the satellite service air a number of big-name Disney titles first, once their cinema run has ended.

Meanwhile, over in the US, Netflix has already scored a major scoop by gaining exclusive access to Disney’s first-run films in a multi-year deal, though admittedly this doesn’t kick-off until 2016. But as we said at the time, this really brings video-streaming into the next era.

“We are delighted to be able to offer our members an incredible variety of fantastic family films, from recent hits like Marvel’s Avengers Assemble to beloved classics like Mary Poppins,” said Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos. “We aim to make Netflix better all the time and hope members enjoy the rich offering of films we are making available from the Disney studios.”

Given that this deal includes older classics and ones that will be a few years old by the time Netflix gets them next year, this news will be met with mixed feelings. Ultimately, however, for those already subscribing to Netflix, having access to a broader selection of Disney, Pixar, Marvel and Dreamworks titles can only be a good thing.

Netflix claims more than 36 million members in 40 countries, and has been moving increasingly towards original TV shows in recent times, including horror series Hemlock Grove which first aired last month.

Feature Image Credit – AFP/Getty

Originally posted here - 

Netflix nets Disney and Pixar titles for the UK & Ireland, including Ratatouille, Wall-E and Dumbo

Der rbb beim 18. Karneval der Kulturen: …

Der rbb beim 18. Karneval der Kulturen:
am 19. Mai vier Stunden “Radioeins in Farbe”, Livestream im Netz und abends die schnsten Bilder im rbb Fernsehen

|

Berlin (ots) – Berlin zeigt Farbe – am Pfingstsonntag, dem 19. Mai 2013, steigt der Karneval der Kulturen zum 18. Mal. Auch in diesem Jahr berichtet der rbb live und vielseitig ber Berlins grtes Open-Air-Event. Allen voran Radioeins und das rbb Fernsehen als langjhrige Partner.

Radioeins vom rbb sendet ab 14.00 Uhr “in Farbe” – diesmal vier Stunden lang. Andreas Mller meldet sich aus dem Radioeinsbus am Sdstern. Als Reporterinnen und Reporter sind Julia Vismann, Gesa Ufer und auch P.R. Kantate unterwegs.

Die Radioeins-Internetseite www.radioeins.de zeigt den bunten Umzug mit Akteuren aus aller Welt von 14.00 bis 18.00 Uhr im Video-Livestream. Es moderieren Tom Bttcher und Marco Seiffert.

Das rbb Fernsehen berichtet aktuell in der “Abendschau” (19.30 Uhr) sowie in “rbb aktuell” (21.45 Uhr) ber den Karnevalssonntag. Moderatorin Hadnet Tesfai kommentiert ab 23.00 Uhr einen einstndigen Rckblick auf die schnsten Bilder des Tages. Den kompletten Radioeins-Video-Livestream sendet das rbb Fernsehen in der Nacht vom 19. zum 20. Mai (2.10 – 6.10 Uhr).

Der Tag klingt aus mit der offiziellen Karneval-der-Kulturen-Aftershowparty “Caribbean Invasion & Radioeins Vlkerball”. Reggae, Dancehall und Soca stehen auf dem Programm. Radioeins prsentiert die Party mit karibischer Note. Los geht es am 19. Mai um 22.00 Uhr im Klub YAAM am Stralauer Platz. Vorher legen Admiral Tuff und P.R. Kantate in einer Sondersendung von 18.00 bis 21.00 Uhr ihre besten Caribbean Beats auf die Plattenteller.

Honorarfreie Pressefotos stehen unter www.ard-foto.de bereit.

Alle weiteren Informationen unter: http://presseservice.rbb-online.de/presseinformationen/unternehmen/2013/05/20130502_karneval_der_kulturen.phtml.

Pressekontakt:

rbb-Presseteam, Telefon (030) 97 99 3-12 101, 
E-Mail: rbb-presseteam@rbb-online.de 

See the original post:

Der rbb beim 18. Karneval der Kulturen: …

Trouble at sea for another cruise ship

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Carnival Legend is having technical difficulties
  • Carnival Dream had problems Wednesday
  • This week’s troubles come after Carnival Triumph became crippled last month

(CNN) — First it was Triumph, then Elation, Dream and now Legend.

While they are happy names for cruise ships, some passengers say they’ve had experiences recently that belie those names.

In yet another setback, Carnival Cruise ship Legend is having technical difficulties that are affecting its sailing speed, the latest in a growing list of woes for the travel company.

The Legend was on the last leg of a seven-day Caribbean cruise that departed Tampa on Sunday. Within a span of a month, three other Carnival Cruise ships have reported problems.

Carnival Dream lost power and some toilets stopped working Wednesday, and no one was allowed to get off the vessel docked at Philipsburg, St. Maarten, in the eastern Caribbean. Carnival says it is flying the more than 4,000 passengers back to Florida and will give them discounts.

Carnival Elation had to be escorted by a tugboat Saturday because of a malfunction in its steering system, the cruise company said.

My trip on the Triumph: From joy to misery

And in the most publicized case, last month, an engine room fire left the Carnival Triumph crippled and adrift in the Gulf of Mexico with more than 4,200 people aboard. That scheduled four-day cruise stretched into eight days as tugs pulled the vessel into port in Alabama. Food was scarce and passengers sweltered in the heat with no air conditioning.

Passengers losing patience

Because of the problems on the Legend, Carnival said it had canceled a scheduled stop in Grand Cayman and the ship will make its trek back to its scheduled ending destination in Tampa, Florida.

Even though the vessel is expected to arrive on schedule Sunday, some are losing patience, passenger Rob Bonenfant said.

“Passengers are now really pissed off,” Bonenfant said via e-mail. “Mood on the ship is getting worse among passengers, captain is giving limited information.”

Carnival has promised to refund $100 to passengers and give them other refunds and discounts.

See where things are inside a cruise ship

“Carnival Legend is experiencing a technical issue with one of the ship’s Azipod units that is affecting the vessel’s sailing speed,” the cruise company said. “The ship’s safety systems and hotel services are all functioning normally.”

The Azipod, a crucial part for steering and propelling a vessel, was the same issue that hampered the Carnival Elation on Saturday.

“Carnival is really screwing this up,” Bonenfant said. “Many have already said they will not book again with Carnival.”

“Mike watching the first tugboat setting up to pull us,” writes Chase Maclaskey on Instagram. The 4,229 passengers and crew aboard the Carnival Triumph have been stuck on the ship since fire disabled the vessel on Sunday, February 10. Click through to see passengers’ photos from on board.

Moments from aboard the ship

Moments from aboard the ship

Moments from aboard the ship

Moments from aboard the ship

Moments from aboard the ship

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Photos: Triumph passengers share photosPhotos: Triumph passengers share photos

The crippled cruise liner Carnival Triumph limps into port late Thursday, February 14, in Mobile, Alabama. Passengers had endured five days aboard the stricken ship with little power and few toilet facilities after a fire knocked out propulsion and other systems on Sunday, February 10. The crippled cruise liner Carnival Triumph limps into port late Thursday, February 14, in Mobile, Alabama. Passengers had endured five days aboard the stricken ship with little power and few toilet facilities after a fire knocked out propulsion and other systems on Sunday, February 10.

Triumph cruise ship docks

Triumph cruise ship docks

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Photos: Triumph cruise ship docks in Alabama Photos: Triumph cruise ship docks in Alabama

Stuck in the Caribbean

Some passengers on Carnival’s stricken cruise ship Dream are also complaining.

Although power has been restored and facilities were functioning again, passengers still have to be flown back to Florida after the ship malfunctioned in the eastern Caribbean.

Cruise passengers received a letter from the captain, according to a passenger who e-mailed a photo of the correspondence to CNN.

Capt. Massimo Marino told passengers they will be booked on flights to Orlando or another destination. Passengers with cars at Port Canaveral will be bused from Orlando to the facility about an hour away.

The letter also offers passengers a three-day refund and a half-price cruise in the future.

The captain said passengers could “enjoy another day in beautiful St. Maarten” or stay onboard for a “full schedule” of activities.

“We sincerely apologize for the disappointment this unexpected change has caused and regret we were unable to provide you with the fun and memorable cruise vacation we had in store for you,” he wrote.

In a statement, Carnival said the ship’s emergency diesel generator failed. The ship’s next voyage was canceled, the cruise line said.

Carnival spokesman Vance Gulliksen said Thursday that 4,300 guests were aboard the Dream along with about 1,300 crew members. Carnival’s website puts the ship’s capacity at 3,646 passengers, but that’s based on only two people per cabin, and some cabins hold more, Gulliksen explained.

There are also three- and four-person cabins aboard.

On Tuesday, Carnival announced it was conducting “a comprehensive review” of all of its 23 ships after a fire last month that crippled one of its ships in the Gulf of Mexico, leaving passengers stranded for days while the vessel was towed back to land. Carnival President and CEO Gerry Cahill said the probe will focus on the prevention, detection and suppression of fires, engine room redundancies, and what additional hotel facilities might be provided and might run off the emergency generators.

‘Human waste all over the floor’

After the problems began Wednesday, CNN was contacted by passengers describing the conditions.

Gregg Stark, who is traveling with his wife and two young children, said the conditions are deplorable.

“There’s human waste all over the floor in some of the bathrooms and they’re overflowing — and in the state rooms,” Stark said. “The elevators have not been working. They’ve been turning them on and off, on and off.”

Triumph: Icky jobs fell to ‘amazing’ crew

An announcement over the ship’s public address system said the crew was trying to fix the problem and was working on the generators, according to Stark. A few hours later, another announcement said the problem was worse than originally believed.

“We are not allowed off of the boat despite the fact that we have no way to use the restrooms onboard,” Jonathan Evans of Reidsville, North Carolina, said in an e-mail Thursday. “The cruise director is giving passengers very limited information and tons of empty promises. What was supposed to take an hour has turned into 7-plus hours.”

But Thursday afternoon, Carnival told CNN that based on conversations with the ship’s management team, a look at service logs “and extensive physical monitoring of all public areas, including restrooms, throughout the night, we can confirm that only one public restroom was taken offline for cleaning based on toilet overflow and there was a total of one request for cleaning of a guest cabin bathroom.

“Aside from that, there have been no reports of issues onboard with overflowing toilets or sewage. The toilet system had periodic interruptions yesterday evening and was fully restored at approximately 12:30 a.m. this morning.”

‘This needs to change’

Last month, an engine room fire left the Carnival Triumph crippled and adrift in the Gulf of Mexico with more than 4,200 people aboard.

That scheduled four-day cruise stretched into eight days as tugs pulled the vessel into port in Alabama. Food was scarce, and passengers sweltered in the heat with no air conditioning. People aboard also reported overflowing toilets and human waste running down the walls in some parts of the ship.

A class action lawsuit was filed against Carnival Corp. in the aftermath.

5 things we’ve learned about cruising

The Triumph is still undergoing repair at a shipyard in Mobile, Alabama, Carnival spokeswoman Joyce Oliva said.

“We are now focused on the lessons we can learn from the incident and also what additional operational redundancies might be available,” Cahill said this week.

Another ship, the Carnival Splendor, had a fire in 2010 due to “a catastrophic failure of a diesel generator,” said Cahill, the Carnival president.

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the chairman of the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, sent a letter Wednesday to Micky Arison, the chief executive officer of Carnival Corp.

“The Coast Guard has responded to a string of 90 marine casualty incidents with passengers onboard Carnival ships in the last five years,” the West Virginia Democrat wrote. “It seems that Carnival has failed to take any meaningful course of corrective action after these continual incidents. This needs to change.”

CNN’s Dave Alsup, Jake Carpenter,Chuck Johnston, Tina Burnside and Marlena Baldacci contributed to this report.

Branded rebel: Cricket’s forgotten

Fast bowler Colin Croft was one of the West Indies players who accepted a place on two Fast bowler Colin Croft was one of the West Indies players who accepted a place on two “rebel tours” of apartheid-era South Africa in the 1980s. The West Indians were granted “honorary white” status so they could access cricket clubs.

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‘Honorary whites’

A life-changing decision

The fall of a rising star

The rebels

The Wanderers Club

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Editor’s note: “World Sport presents: Branded a rebel” screens Saturday March 9 at 0900 GMT (0400 ET) and 2000, and Sunday 0200 and 1000, on CNN International. What questions do you have for its presenter Don Riddell? Tweet to @donriddellcnn or add them to the bottom of this story. We’ll publish his replies on CNN.com/WorldSport next week.

(CNN) — It is a Sunday night in Bridgetown, Barbados.

Here on this Caribbean island, and on the others that make up what’s known as the West Indies, life revolves around one thing — cricket.

On this night, locals gather at historic Kensington Oval, which hosted the 2007 World Cup final. There are no national teams on display this time, but there is a local trophy up for grabs.

It’s enough to draw a large crowd of boisterous fans. In the concourse, a familiar face makes his way through the crowd.

He is Franklyn Stephenson, and he is the best to have never played for the West Indies, all because of one decision he and his teammates made 30 years ago.

It left each of them — forever — branded a rebel.

In 1983, the West Indies cricket team was on top of the world. Team captain Clive Lloyd, from Guyana, had led them to back-to-back World Cup victories in 1975 and ’79.

Contact ‘Branded a rebel’ presenter Don Riddell on Facebook

Overflowing with talent, the islands of the West Indies could have fielded at least two teams of world-class players. But with all the hype and success, money did not follow. Playing international and club cricket was not enough to earn a living.

At the same time, a world away, South Africa was deep in the heart of apartheid. Its government’s policies had split life into different classifications for whites and so-called non-whites.

Such oppression against the non-white population intensified into violence, landing young protesters like Nelson Mandela in jail. Thousands more were arrested or killed.

Read: Sporting mercenaries or crusaders for a cause?

As the world tried to pressure South Africa’s leadership, sanctions were applied, and sport was no exception.

In 1970, the International Cricket Council banned South Africa from international competition, leaving the country’s cricket-mad fans deprived of the sport they loved, and their cricketers of the careers they dreamed of.

“You’re always optimistic,” said former South African cricketer Clive Rice. “The stupidity that existed would change and South Africa would change much quicker, and we’d be back playing international sport. But it hung on and hung on.”

‘Rebel tours’

To save cricket in South Africa, the sport’s administrators knew something had to be done.

So, in secret, they began planning “rebel tours” — inviting various teams from around the world.

It was a bold move to defy the ICC’s ban by offering lucrative contracts. In March 1982, the first rebel team from England arrived in Johannesburg.

“From our point of view, we knew we had the best cricketers in the world,” said former South African Cricket Union president Joe Pamensky, one of the rebel tour organizers. “We wanted to show them off to the world so they would see it the same as we saw it.”

Later that year, a team from Sri Lanka followed.

And it wasn’t long before many began suspecting South Africa was also targeting a team from the West Indies, the dominant force in world cricket.

“You heard a lot of whispers around the place that perhaps these guys were going to South Africa,” recalled broadcaster Tony Cozier.

“But at that time, we couldn’t believe that they could assemble a team of West Indies players given the whole background to the anti-apartheid movement.”

Many big-name West Indies stars were outspoken in their refusal to play in apartheid South Africa.

Captain Clive Lloyd said no amount of money could get him there. Future captain Viv Richards called it “blood money.”

But other players were tempted.

The offers from South Africa were more than they would likely see in their lifetimes — estimated to be between $100,000 and $150,000 per player.

It was enough to draw in names like batsmen Lawrence Rowe and Alvin Kallicharran, fast bowler Sylvester Clarke and wicketkeeper David Murray — one of the best in the game.

Also agreeing to take part was Collis King, hero of the 1979 World Cup.

“I made the decision because I wasn’t getting treated right as far as the West Indies (team) was concerned,” said King. “And I said to myself, ‘Well, cricket is my job. You’re not picking me, I’ll go play cricket someplace where people will see proper cricket.’ And that’s why I went.”

More than just cricket

Rising star Stephenson was only 23 in 1983, with a promising career in front of him. He had repeatedly turned down offers to play in South Africa.

But the day the team left, Stephenson had a change of heart.

“I knew the tour was more important than being just cricket,” Stephenson said. “I believe that cricket can make a difference, and I’m going to be a part of that team.”

On the plane, Stephenson recalled, some of the players began having second thoughts. But it was too late — they were on their way to South Africa, to face apartheid head on.

“When we got to South Africa, I realized that separation, and it wasn’t only black and white,” he said. “It’s the language that you speak, the area that you live in, and it’s what you’re allowed to do, and where you can go. So the divisions were very real when we got there.”

Unsure of how they’d be received by the country’s mainly white fanbase, the West Indies rebels prepared for their first Test match.

But their worries soon proved unfounded — in droves, crowds came out to see the famous cricketers.

“We packed them in,” said Murray. “We turned out 20,000 in Pretoria, the heart of apartheid.”

As the tour went on, the players began to believe something more important than just cricket was taking place.

Young kids — white kids — were begging them for autographs. It seemed South African fans couldn’t get enough of the black cricketers from the West Indies.

“For the first time, they were seeing blacks beating whites,” said newspaper writer Al Gilkes, the only journalist from the Caribbean to go to South Africa.

“Here was a country in which no black man had ever seen a black person in competition with a white person, and beating them. To me, that was where the real victory was.”

‘Destroyed as cricketers’

But critics of the tour disagree. They say the presence of a team of black men in South Africa did not help end apartheid, but instead strengthened and supported it.

Even within the country itself, non-whites protested the West Indies rebels.

Back home in the Caribbean, the reaction was worse. A deep sense of betrayal cut through the Caribbean. Cricketers who were once viewed as heroes were now seen as sellouts.

When the month-long tour was over, the rebel players knew they would have to face the repercussions of their decision back home.

“I felt sorry for them,” said Gilkes, “because I knew that they would never outlive what they were returning to.”

The fate of their cricketing careers rested with the West Indies Cricket Board of Control.

The players were aware they might face a ban — after all, England’s rebel team had been banned for three years; Sri Lanka’s was banned for 25 years.

But they did not expect to be banned for life.

“Many of them were destroyed as cricketers,” said University of West Indies Professor Hilary Beckles. “Their cricket careers came to an end.”

Murray, once a star, is now drifting, unable to hold a job in Barbados. In the years after the tour, he eventually lost more than just his career.

His wife gave birth to their baby daughter in Australia, while Murray was playing in South Africa.

They faced being deported from Australia for his role in the rebel tours, and were unwelcome back in the Caribbean, too. They had a newborn, and nowhere to go.

“They didn’t want me to return,” Murray said. “Politics got into it.”

When asked if his current situation resulted from his decision to go, Murray answered: “Most likely.”

Mercenaries?

For Stephenson, the once-rising star, his cricketing past is behind him. He is now a golf instructor at a country club in Barbados.

But he still finds a way to connect to the sport he loved at the cricket and golf academy he started near his home.

There, a photo of his rebel team sits proudly on the shelf. It is not the memories of the tour he wants to forget, but what came after.

“Nobody looked out for us,” Stephenson said.

For the players, their lives defined by this single moment in sport history, each day is a reminder of what they lost by going to South Africa.

But they gained something, too — strong bonds forged on a tour condemned by the rest of their world, cherished by the participants.

And to this day, they hold strongly to the belief that being in South Africa in 1983 made a difference in disbanding apartheid, less than a decade after the West Indies players were there.

Gilkes wrote a seven-part series about the tour. In the last article, he stated the trip might have started with the players being viewed as mercenaries, but he saw them as missionaries “who converted white South Africans to accepting that blacks were their equals.”

“I know I went there as a missionary,” King said.

Murray agreed. “I don’t see the mercenary part of it or whatever. We were just professional cricketers. You’ve got work to do.”

“What do mercenaries do?” Stephenson asked. “They go and fight somebody else’s cause.

“Well, yes I was a mercenary for black people’s cause, because wherever I’ve been, I’ve been an ambassador for my country, my race and the game of cricket. So if that’s being a mercenary, then yes I was.”

Sporting mercenaries or crusaders for a cause?

Collis King, hero of the West Indies' 1979 World Cup victory, reflects on his participation in the 1982-84 Collis King, hero of the West Indies’ 1979 World Cup victory, reflects on his participation in the 1982-84 “rebel tours” in apartheid-era South Africa. His participation ended his international cricket career.

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Fallen hero

Doing a job

A career curtailed

Making a difference

Recording the rebels

Island paradise

Humble beginnings

The next generation

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“World Sport presents: Branded as a rebel” screens Saturday March 9 at 0900 GMT (0400 ET) and 2000, and Sunday 0200 and 1000, on CNN International. What questions do you have for its presenter Don Riddell? Tweet to @donriddellcnn or add them to the bottom of this story. We’ll publish his replies on CNN.com/WorldSport next week.

(CNN) — Can you remember what you were doing 30 years ago? In 1983, Bjorn Borg retired from a glittering tennis career, the Nazi Klaus Barbie was officially charged with war crimes and the final episode of M*A*S*H was breaking TV records.

More importantly, for the purpose of this exercise, millions of black and “non-white” South Africans were living — and dying — in misery under a brutal apartheid regime.

Whatever you were doing back then, I would think it unlikely that any single decision you made has shaped what has become of your life since.

That’s not the case, however, for the young black cricketers that left the Caribbean to play in South Africa. For them, everything changed the day they boarded a plane for Johannesburg.

They are the focus of CNN’s documentary “World Sport Presents: Branded a Rebel.”

In 1977, the Commonwealth nations added a sporting ban to their campaign against apartheid in South Africa. By isolating the country’s teams and starving passionate and influential South Africans of their beloved sport, it was hoped their government would be forced into changing policies that discriminated against a majority of the population.

As a result, cricket’s “Rebel Tours” were highly controversial, unofficial, international matches that were organized in defiance of those sanctions.

It was an issue that split the world’s cricket community right down the middle. The invited players that declined, such as England’s Ian Botham and West Indian Viv Richards, took a strong moral stance in opposition.

Contact ‘Branded as a rebel’ presenter Don Riddell on Facebook

But, whether from England, Australia or Sri Lanka, the massive financial inducements were often too much even for some of the sport’s biggest names to refuse.

For each of the seven tours, there was outcry, but it was the West Indies’ role that provoked the most outrage.

These men didn’t steal anything — they certainly didn’t kill anyone — and they didn’t break any laws, but their “crime” was almost worse.

They were condemned for supporting an abhorrent, racist regime; effectively betraying their own race.

Ironically, it was they who were isolated. They were banished from playing international sport and shunned by their peers and communities; many were forced to relocate abroad. Only one ever played for the Windies again.

Read: Cricket’s forgotten men

Hardly anything has been written or broadcast about their two tours between 1982-84, a period which has been described as one of the darkest chapters in the history of cricket.

Whatever views have been articulated are typically negative, damning and highly critical of the players and those who funded and organized the matches.

The common narrative is that they were mercenaries, traitors and rebels. But while the players can’t deny that many were influenced by the money — some were paid in excess of $100,000 for a month of cricket — some would prefer to be known as missionaries. Pioneers. Crusaders.

I knew it wouldn’t be easy getting them to talk about their experience, just tracking them down was hard enough. For obvious reasons the West Indies Cricket Board, which had banned them, wasn’t much use. Some of the players like Herbert Chang and Richard Austin — known to have struggled with substance abuse — have effectively fallen off the grid.

Trying to forget

Of those we tracked down, it soon became clear very few had any interest in reliving the experience.

It wasn’t the tours that they didn’t want to revisit, but the judgment and condemnation they had endured since.

Some players flatly declined, others wanted to be paid outrageous sums; CNN’s policy is not to pay for interviews.

Over a period of several weeks, myself and our producer Samantha Bresnahan had a series of exhaustive exchanges with the team’s captain Lawrence Rowe, a talented batsman who was forced to leave Jamaica and settle in Miami.

We really thought he was close to giving an interview but ultimately he declined. I know he desperately wanted to tell his side of the story, a side which has never been heard before, but he was concerned his involvement would only reignite the controversy. He just couldn’t take the risk.

I would say that the players who did speak with us had mixed reasons for giving their interviews. Franklyn Stephenson is known as the greatest player never to have played for the Windies, but he is proud of his involvement.

He still treasures his tour blazer and the team photo sits proudly on his shelf. He genuinely believes that the tours helped to change attitudes in South Africa, claiming that for the first time in their lives, white fans were able to see that the black race was at the very least equal, if not superior, to theirs.

Of all the rebel teams, the West Indies were the only one to win a Test match in South Africa.

West Indian society’s ‘running wound’

Collis King, a hero of the Windies’ 1979 World Cup final victory, felt the same. He was still angry at his treatment and we didn’t have to scratch too far beneath the surface to find the bitterness still simmering.

I believe that both men and the former wicketkeeper David Murray talked to us because they didn’t have anything else to lose — whatever the tour had once cost them, being associated with it could no longer hurt them.

That’s not the case for the likes of Emmerson Trotman. Even if he had wanted to share his story with us and a global audience, he has been “rehabilitated” as the current coach of the Barbados national team.

That status could have been jeopardized by reminding everyone he was once a “rebel.” As the regional historian Professor Hilary Beckles put it, the rebel tours still represent a “running wound” in West Indian society.

Stephenson, King and Murray all told me they had no regrets. King was very clear that he would never say sorry for going to South Africa.

Others have apologized, in the hope the controversy would be laid to rest.

It will be interesting to see the reaction to our program; whether hearing a different perspective will change perceptions of the fateful decision these players made 30 years ago.

And it makes you wonder, if you were ever put in their position, what would you do?

Cruise ship drifting after fire off Philippines

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EDITORS:

Please note that an important change was made to the 4th Ld-Writethru of Philippines-Cruise Ship Fire. The Costa Concordia’s parent company is Carnival Corp., not Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.

The AP

Associated Press

Original article: 

Cruise ship drifting after fire off Philippines

2 US men arrested on gay cruise in Caribbean

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(AP) — Two California men on a gay cruise of the Caribbean were arrested Wednesday in Dominica, where sex between two men is illegal.

Police Constable John George said police boarded the cruise ship and arrested the two men on suspicion of indecent exposure and “buggery,” a term equivalent to sodomy on the island. He identified the men as John Robert Hart, 41, and Dennis Jay Mayer, 43, but did not provide their hometowns.

George said the men were seen having sex on the Celebrity Summit cruise ship by someone on the dock.

The two were later charged with indecent exposure and are scheduled to appear before a magistrate Thursday morning. If found guilty, they could be fined $370 each and face up to six months in jail.

The ship carrying about 2,000 passengers departed Puerto Rico on Saturday and arrived in Dominica on Wednesday. It departed for St. Barts without the men, who are being held in a cell at police headquarters in the capital of Roseau.

The cruise was organized by Atlantis Events, a Southern California company that specializes in gay travel.

President Rich Campbell, who is aboard the cruise, said in a phone interview earlier that he thought the two men would be released. He later said in an email that the company has organized many trips to Dominica and would “happily return.”

“Many countries and municipalities that gay men visit and live in have antiquated laws on their books,” he said. “These statutes don’t pose a concern to us in planning a tourist visit.”

Campbell said he expects the two men to be released on Thursday and that they only face misdemeanor charges.

“The guests’ actions were unfortunate but minor in this case and have no bearing on our overall guest experience,” he said via email.

The pastor of Dominica’s Trinity Baptist Church, Randy Rodney, praised the police for their intervention.

“I am very pleased that the police were called in and have arrested the people in question. I have warned about gay tourism and its implications for Dominica,” said Rodney, who is a vocal critic of homosexuality and lesbianism.

The presence of gay cruises in the Caribbean has riled several conservative islands including Jamaica and Grenada, where anti-sodomy laws are enforced with strong backing from religious groups.

According to Cruisemates.com, no gay cruise lines sail to Jamaica or Barbados for fear of homophobia and possible violence. It said other places like the U.S. Virgin Islands welcome gay cruises.

In 2010, the Cayman Islands rejected the arrival of an Atlantis gay cruise amid protests from religious groups even though homosexuality is legal on the archipelago.

Don Weiner, a spokesman for Atlantic Events, referred all questions to Campbell, including why the company organized a trip to Dominica and whether it knew about the island’s anti-sodomy laws.

Elizabeth Jakeway, a spokeswoman for Celebrity Cruises, referred all questions to Atlantis.

The last time authorities in the Caribbean intervened on a gay cruise was in February 2011, when agents with U.S. Customs and Border Protection arrested a California man aboard the Allure of the Seas, which had docked in St. Thomas. The man, Steven Barry Krumholz of West Hollywood, pleaded guilty to selling ecstasy, methamphetamine and ketamine to fellow passengers.

___

Associated Press writers Danica Coto and Ben Fox in San Juan, Puerto Rico contributed.

Associated Press

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2 US men arrested on gay cruise in Caribbean