Thursday 08 January 2004, 2:56 Makka Time, 23:56 GMT
A new reality TV programme, "Star Academy," in which female and male Arab teenagers live together for a talent contest is proving a big hit among the young in the Middle East, despite sharp criticism from conservative circles. The show, a copy of a French programme of the same name and launched last month by the private Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation International (LBCI), groups 16 young people selected from around the Arab world. Aired on a 24-hour channel carried on Arabsat, it is a first for the region, where private lives are taboo subjects and sexual segregation remains the norm. Each week, one of the candidates is voted out following training sessions in singing, acting and dance choreography. Pan-Arab participants The stardom-seeking candidates come from Lebanon, Syria, Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and are housed in a villa in Adma, in the hills northeast of Beirut. According to the Stat-Ipsos statistics institute, the ratings of Star Academy have reached 80 per cent among Lebanese viewers aged between 15 and 25 years old.
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But the popularity of the show does not please everyone in Lebanon and the Arab world. "It is indecent to make young Arabs, girls and boys, live together. The devil may be there," said Muslim shaikh, Samir Zaini. And political analyst Khaldun Sulh said such programmes were "not so innocent." "They are meant to keep Arab youth away from national causes at a time that Iraq is occupied by imperialism and when Palestine continues to bleed," he said.
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But many youngsters in Lebanon shrug off the criticism. "Is it wrong to watch young people sing, dance and get to know each other?" wondered 16-year-old Elsa. "I used to think that all young Arabs from the Gulf were fundamentalists. I realised that they are like us. They are open to the world but it is forbidd en for them to express themselves at home," she said. "This programme for the first time has given Arab youth the chance to vote for other people than the dinosaurs who govern them," added Umar, 24. AFP
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