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Visit Tibet’s ‘Roof of the World’ Without Breaking a Sweat

The Tibetan Potala Palace sits beneath the enormity of Mt. Everest. Photo: Xinhua News Agency / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Taking in the beauty and charm of Tibet no longer requires an arduous journey thanks to technology, which makes it possible to sample in comfort from a world away.

Lhasa’s picturesque Potala Palace, the towering Himalaya and the culture of the Tibetans will be viewable and visitable at an upcoming art exhibition that will make use of immersive, 360-degree video to create the sensation of being there.

Almost 100 images will be shown with 50 photos displayed on screens, along with other interactive technologies to take the exhibition off the wall and into the hearts and minds of visitors. Through an application, audiences will be able to listen to the stories behind the images.

The Chinese government is behind the project, and the photographs are provided by state media outlet Xinhua News Agency.

The exhibition will be held 10am to 10pm from Dec. 21 to 25 in the Lifestyle Hall on the second floor of the Siam Paragon shopping mall, accessible via BTS Siam exit nos. 3 and 5.

Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency
Photos courtesy: Xinhua News Agency

 

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Take a Swing at Thailand’s Custom Piñatas (Photos)

Maneeporn Puangpla with her completed and in-process piñatas at her residence in Bangkok’s Bang Khae district.

BANGKOK — Unicorns with rainbow manes, a giant sugar skull, and even a smiling penis are among the Maneeporn Puangla’s piñata creations.

Maneeporn Puangpla is one of few custom piñata makers in Thailand. She has been practicing her craft for a decade now, mostly creating special orders for her foreign clientele.

Maneeporn, 33, started making piñatas when a Canadian friend suggested she try her hand at the craft.

“I’d never heard of them before, so I had to search on the Internet how to make them,” she said.

Piñatas are a decorated paper container filled with candy or other treats. Associated with Mexican culture but also popular throughout North America, piñatas are hung at parties where people put on blindfolds and try to hit the piñata to release the sweets inside.

As Mexican restaurants and Spanish-speakers in Bangkok proliferated, so did her orders and client base.

“Ten years ago, there was only one Mexican restaurant, Sunrise Tacos. They were my first and only clients for a long time,” she said. “They’d buy some piñatas to decorate their shop and maybe resell to some customers.”

At her lotus pond-ringed, paper-filled quiet house in Bang Khae, Maneeporn hangs piñatas-in-progress from sticks and rafters to dry in the Bangkokian sun. “They take really long to dry in the rainy season,” she said, gesturing to a drying horse piñata.

A meter-tall sugar skull can take days to make, while smaller pieces can be completed within a day, drying time notwithstanding.

Her work even won the endorsement of the top Mexican in the kingdom.

“Once my piñatas decorated an event the Mexican ambassador went to,” she said. “He told me they weren’t bad!”

Her biggest clients are parents and children from international schools, who purchase princess and cartoon-shaped ones for birthday parties and the like. Maneeporn sells her piñatas without candy, since her clients are often particular about their sweets.

Disney princesses, Pokeballs and Pikachus rank among her top-requested piñatas recently.

“Sometimes children cry when the princess piñatas are smashed at birthday parties, though,” she said, laughing. “So when someone requests a ‘Frozen’ princess, I recommend they get an Olaf piñata instead.”

Maneeporn decided to make piñatas full time about six years ago.

“At first, I used balloons as the frame, but that limited me to making round piñatas. Now I know how to create my own frames,” said Maneeporn, who prides herself on making virtually any shape requested.

But a lack of crafting resources in Thailand still limits her creations.

“Overseas, they sell hundreds of shades of paint, but here there’s only seven that I can use. Mixing the colors myself ends up losing profit,” she said.

Also, the crepe paper Maneeporn decorates the outside of her piñatas with are only available in a limited number of colors.

“One client needed a Totoro piñata, but there was no gray crepe paper available, even though I searched all over for it. They ended up bringing me crepe paper from Japan so I could complete their project.”

Holiday piñatas are popular, such as ones for Halloween, Christmas and birthdays. She has also received requests for erotic piñatas, which she happily supplies.

One of her most memorable orders was placed by a wealthy Sikh man who, she said, ordered a bundle of penis-shaped piñatas for an adult party. Another order was a crotch and butt piñata with a specific request for extra hairiness. One time a Western woman ordered a naked man piñata, with a “large bulge” requested.

“I don’t really get it, but I guess they’re for some adult parties,” she said, laughing. “But I make any shape that is commissioned.”

Her Thai clients are people with international school children who are familiar with piñatas. However others are unfamiliar, and cultural misunderstandings ensue.

“Some Thai clients don’t get what a piñata is, that it’s not supposed to be completely neat and perfect,” she said. “My client just rejected a completed order for a Barbie doll because she said all the details weren’t there.”

Depending on the size, she sells small pinatas for 200 baht, with larger creations going for 900 baht or higher.

Maneeporn sells her creations online at Manee Piñatas.

Correction: The headline of an earlier version of this story mistakenly indicated Maneeporn was the only custom piñata-maker in Thailand. In fact, Jantasuda Jamjod, owner of Que Pasa Mexican Restaurant in Nonthaburi has been doing so since 2003 and sells them at Arya Piñata.

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So ‘Surreal,’ Merriam-Webster Says of 2016

This Saturday Dec. 17, 2016 photo shows the "surreal" entry in a Merriam-Webster's dictionary in New York. Photo: Bebeto Matthews / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Was 2016 a dream or a nightmare?

Try something in between: “surreal,” which is Merriam-Webster’s word of the year, unveiled Monday.

Meaning “marked by the intense irrational reality of a dream,” or “unbelievable, fantastic,” the word joins Oxford’s “post-truth” and Dictionary.com’s “xenophobia” as the year’s top choices.

“It just seems like one of those years,” said Peter Sokolowski, Merriam-Webster’s editor at large.

The company tracks year-over-year growth and spikes in lookups of words on its website to come up with the top choice. This time around, there were many periods of interest in “surreal” throughout the year, often in the aftermath of tragedy, Sokolowski said.

Major spikes came after the Brussels attack in March and again in July, after the Bastille Day massacre in Nice and the attempted coup in Turkey. All three received huge attention around the globe and had many in the media reaching for “surreal” to describe both the physical scenes and the “mental landscapes,” Sokolowski said.

The single biggest spike in lookups came in November, he said, specifically Nov. 9, the day Donald Trump went from candidate to president-elect.

There were also smaller spikes, including after the death of Prince in April at 57 and after the June shootings at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida.

Irony mixed with the surreal for yet another bump after the March death of Garry Shandling. His first sitcom, “It’s Garry Shandling’s Show,” premiered on Showtime in 1986 and had him busting through the fourth wall, speaking directly to the audience and mimicking his real life as a standup comedian, but one who knew he was starring in a TV show.

“It was surreal, and it’s connected to the actual original meaning of surreal, which is to say it comes from Surrealism, the artistic movement of the early 20th century,” Sokolowski said.

Which is to say that “surreal” didn’t exist as a word until around 1924, after a group of European poets, painters and filmmakers founded a movement they called Surrealism. They sought to access the truths of the unconscious mind by breaking down rational thought.

It wasn’t until 1937 that “surreal” began to exist on its own, said Sokolowski, who is a lexicographer.

Merriam-Webster first started tracking lookup trends in 1996, when the dictionary landed online. In 2001, after the 9/11 terror attacks, the Springfield, Massachusetts-based company noticed plenty of spikes in word lookups. The most enduring spike was for “surreal,” pointing to a broader meaning and greater usage, Sokolowski said.

“We noticed the same thing after the Newtown shootings, after the Boston Marathon bombings, after Robin Williams’ suicide,” he said. “Surreal has become this sort of word that people seek in moments of great shock and tragedy.”

Word folk like Sokolowski can’t pinpoint exactly why people look words up online, but they know it’s not only to check spellings or definitions. Right after 9/11, words that included “rubble” and “triage” spiked, he said. A couple days after that, more political words took over in relation to the tragedy, including “jingoism” and “terrorism.”

“But then we finally hit ‘surreal,’ so we had a concrete response, a political response and finally a philosophical response,” Sokolowski said. “That’s what connects all these tragic events.”

Other words that made Merriam-Webster’s Top 10 for 2016 due to significant spikes in lookups:

BIGLY: Yes, it’s a word but a rare and sometimes archaic form of “big,” dating to around 1400, Sokolowski said. It made its way into the collective mind thanks to Trump, who was fond of using “big league” as an adverb but making it sound like bigly.

DEPLORABLE: Thank you, Hillary Clinton and your basket full of, though it’s not technically a noun.

IRREGARDLESS: It’s considered a “nonstandard” word for regardless. It’s best avoided, Sokolowski said. Irregardless was used during the calling of the last game of the World Series and its use was pilloried on social media, he said.

ICON: This spike came after Prince’s April 21 death, along with surreal. “It was just a moment of public mourning, the likes of which really happen very seldom,” Sokolowski said.

ASSUMPSIT: At the Democratic National Convention, Elizabeth Warren was introduced by one her former law students at Harvard, Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy III of Massachusetts. He described how on his first day she asked him for the definition of assumpsit, which he didn’t know.

“She said, ‘Mr. Kennedy do you own a dictionary?’ so everybody looked it up,” Sokolowski laughed.

For the record: It’s a legal term with Latin roots for a type of implied promise or contract. Kennedy didn’t define it when he told the story.

FAUTE DE MIEUX: Literally, this French phrase means “lack of something better or more desirable.” Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg used it in a brief concurring opinion in June to support a ruling that struck down a Texas law that would have closed all but nine abortion clinics in the state.

IN OMNIA PARATUS: A Latin phrase for “ready for all things.” Curiosity surfaced when Netflix revived “Gilmore Girls” recently, including reference to this famous chant during an episode in the original series where Rory is talked into leaping off a high platform as part of the initiation for a secret society at Yale. It became a rallying cry for fans of the show.

REVENANT: Leonardo DiCaprio played one in a movie of the same name, sending people scurrying to the dictionary. It describes “one that returns after death or a long absence.” It can be traced to the 1820s and while it sounds biblical, it is not, Sokolowski said.

FECKLESS: It’s how Vice President-elect Mike Pence described President Obama’s foreign policy when he debated Democrat Tim Kaine. It means weak or worthless.

Story: Leanne Italie

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China Smog ‘Red Alert’ Closes Plants, Stops Cars

A security guard wears a mask Saturday in Beijing. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

BEIJING — Chinese cities are limiting the number of cars on roads and have temporarily shut down factories to cut down pollution during a national “red alert” for smog.

State media reported Monday that more than 700 companies stopped production in Beijing, and that traffic police were restricting drivers by monitoring their license plate numbers. Dozens of cities closed schools and took other emergency measures after a “red alert” was issued from Friday night to Wednesday for much of northern China.

Authorities in northern Hebei province ordered coal and cement plants to temporarily shut down or reduce production. Elsewhere, hospitals prepared teams of doctors to handle an expected surge in cases of pollution-related illnesses.

China’s long-standing air pollution is blamed on its reliance on coal and emissions from older cars.

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Reward Offered For Hooligans Behind Thai Football Firestorm

BANGKOK — Thailand’s football association offered a reward Sunday for information leading to the arrest of hooligans who lit flares, filling part of Rajamangala National Stadium with smoke and fire during a weekend match.

The flares were reportedly ignited by a hardcore fan group called Ultras Thailand each time Thailand scored during the match against Indonesia on Saturday at the AFF Suzuki Cup.

Team Thailand secured their position as Southeast Asian champions for the fifth time after defeating Indonesia 2-0. But the flare incident could cost Thai football fines upward of 700,000 baht and possibly other punishments by FIFA, according to the Football Association of Thailand.

Police were still gathering information in order to seek warrants for those related to the incident, Maj. Gen. Nanthachart Suppamongkon said Monday

Igniting flares in stadiums, which happens at football matches worldwide, is illegal in Thailand.

Nanthachart said the gang could be charged with causing a public disturbance, which carries a maximum punishment of one month in jail and a fine of 10,000 baht.

Football Association President Somyot Pumpanmuang said Sunday he would give a 30,000 baht reward for information about each person involved.

Somyot said the association had photos and videos of the incident which would be used to help identify suspects.

Many photos and footage were also shared online by other fans who were upset and blamed Ultras Thailand.

Somyot, a former police chief, said he sought help from current National Police Chief Gen. Chakthip Chaijinda to bring the group to justice. He also urged anyone injured by the flares to file complaints with the police.

In addition to a large fine, the association said Thailand risked being banned from hosting home games or see its fans barred from entry.

It wasn’t the first time Ultras Thailand was caught up in conflict. The group was behind previous flare incidents at matches between Thailand and the Philippines in the same competition in December 2014.

In response to the outrage, the group said in 2015 it would knock it off. Ultras Thailand has yet to respond publicly to the latest incident.

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Death Sentence for Wife of Slain Olympic Shooter

An undated file photo of Jakkrit “Ex” Panichpatikum. Image: Voice TV

BANGKOK — The wife of professional shooter and star athlete Jakkrit “Ex” Panichpatikum was sentenced to die Monday for plotting her husband’s 2013 assassination.

In their verdict, Criminal Court judges said Jakkrit’s wife, physician Nitiwadee “Nim” Pucharoenyos, hired a middleman to pay a hitman to kill Jakkrit as he sat in his Porsche at a Bangkok intersection on Oct. 19, 2013. The court handed death sentences to both Nitiwadee and the middleman, while the gunman and his getaway driver were sentenced to life in prison.

They rejected the public claim of guilt by Nitiwadee’s mother, Surang, who a month after Jakkrit’s murder made a dramatic televised confession. She claimed to have arranged for the 40-year-old athlete’s death because he was as serial wife-beater.

“It was in the court’s view that she wanted to take the blame for her daughter,” said Boonrueng Uthairat, the attorney representing the slain athlete’s family.

He said her confession fell apart in court.

“She kept changing her testimony back and forth,” Boonrueng said. “Let me respectfully spell it for you here: the court is not stupid.”

The two condemned defendants are expected to file appeals. Under the law, executions can only be carried out after an appeal is heard by the Supreme Court.

After the verdict was read, Jakkrit’s mother, Boonkid Panichpatikum, said she was satisfied and has forgiven those who plotted her son’s death.

“Personally I have forgiven their trespasses long ago. I want Ex to go peacefully, so I forgave them,” Boonkid said tearfully. “Now I’m only worried for the future of my two grandchildren.”

A colorful athlete known for his maverick personality and rocky relationships with his peers, Jakkrit’s death came as he was embroiled in allegations of domestic violence. He once confessed to firing a handgun in anger at his home during a heated argument. He also spent a week in prison four months prior to his death for beating her.

Jakkrit’s killing and the subsequent revelations that Nitiwadee was implicated in his death dominated news coverage and served as tabloid fodder for weeks. Upon surrendering herself to police, Nitiwadee’s mother Surang said she could not stand Jakkrit’s behavior.

“I could not endure seeing my daughter being hurt,” Surang said in November 2013. “A mother hurts many more times than her child.”

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Two More Dead Workers Found in Collapsed Bangkok Building

A rescue worker enters the rubble of a collapsed building Sunday in Bangkok’s Soi Sukhumvit 87.

BANGKOK — Rescue workers pulled the bodies of two more workers Sunday from a collapsed building on Soi Sukhumvit 87.

The retrieval at about 10am of the bodies of Boonjang Letla-ong, 46, and Phrai Kanoonrum, 38, brought the death toll to four in Friday’s accident, which saw the eight-story Thaiyarnyon Mitsu Ltd. building come down as it was being illegally demolished, according to the authorities.

“Before, it was a rescue mission. But after we found out they were dead, it became a mission to retrieve the bodies,” Theerayut Phoomisak, a public disaster official said.

Theerayut said rescue workers had to drill through layers of collapsed concrete in order to remove the bodies. Two had been recovered soon after the collapse on Friday.

After the bodies were exhumed, officials inspected the wreckage to make sure it was safe to enter. The bodies have been returned to the victims’ relatives.

All four victims had been working on the building. No more people are believed missing inside.

Developer Krittatchaya Sriwanna and engineer Kittiphong Yootairomboon face criminal charges for defying an order to halt the demolition out of safety concerns.

As of Monday, Kittiphong had turned himself in while Krittatchaya was still unaccounted for, according to police Maj. Samneang Sothorn.

Samnaeng said Kittiphong would likely be charged with recklessness resulting in death, which carries a maximum of 10 years in prison and a 20,000 baht fine.

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Parting Words from Bangkok’s Reigning King of Vintage

Prasong Kanhasura may not be a household name in the fashion industry, but when it comes to vintage male clothing, the 44-year-old known as Pat Bangklyn is a towering figure. The man played an instrumental role in giving birth to Bangkok’s best-known annual vintage flea market, Made By Legacy, before becoming alienated by its overt commercialization.

He runs a small vintage clothes near the Hua Chang Bridge in the Ratchathewi district where his goods and style are sought by Western buyers, some of whom work closely with well-known designers in the West. He also makes his own very limited line of male clothing inspired by vintage Western clothes from the 1930s onward.

In his shop one can find things like an old Ralph Lauren tote, a few vintage items from Prince Charles’ preferred brand Turnbull & Asser, and some of Prasong’s own reproduction vintage trousers.

But it’s soon the end of the road for his shop, Bangklyn (yes, a portmanteau of Bangkok and Brooklyn) which will close down in April after 10 years. Prasong has decided to move to New York to open a Thai restaurant. Leaving a few sartorial observations about male fashion and vintage clothing would only be apt, as Prasong has yet to pen a style guide – yet.

Asked if high-waist trousers should be preferred to low-waist ones, Prasong ended up giving a brief lecture on the history of Western trousers.

“No matter what, low waist can’t be as comfortable,” said Prasong, stressing that high-waist trousers evolved from military uniforms, which were designed for utility, functionality and comfort. “The matter has been well thought out.”

Prasong is into vintage clothing not just because it’s less common but because he believes the quality and styles of decades past are better and more enduring. He is passionate about this. He said fabrics and workmanship used to be better, and labor less expensive.

Today’s expensive new selvage jeans, for 5313867005105example, can’t compete with old pairs from the 1970s or earlier, when less pesticides soaked the cotton fields and denim affectionados could tell the difference in the feel and look of the fabric. The same can be said of the quality of workmanship of the past, which often trumps the present. Prasong’s fascination with vintage clothing also includes old metal button flies, blazer buttons and the lived-in look of old clothes.

Prasong searched for new old stock fabrics and old tailors to make some of his vintage-inspired clothes on top of the real vintage clothes that he sourced from flea markets and rural areas in the United States and Japan.

Prasong, who confessed that vintage clothing is in his blood, pointed out that today’s cost-cutting and profit maximization means even expensive brand-name clothes are of moderate quality compared to those of decades past. On a personal note, Prasong said that back in 2011 he turned down an offer to open a shop in a posh new shopping mall in Bangkok not far from his humble rented shophouse, because he felt big malls extinguish charm and uniqueness. While selling American and Japanese vintage clothes at Bangklyn, the Northeastern country sounds of morlam and Cambodian songs are standard background music.

“What I sell has a sentimental value. You can buy stuff, but if buyers don’t get it then there’s no point. I opened [a stand-alone] shop because I think my customers are like-minded. I forage for goods, and I like to think my customers enjoy searching out my shop too. Anyone can buy, but to be able to use your goods properly requires cultivation.”
5313865534384Quality clothing is just half of the equation, however. The other half is how one wears one’s clothes and whether they suit one’s character.

“The difference between looking cheap despite wearing expensive clothes and looking expensive while wearing cheap clothes is taste,” Prasong said.
While not a Sapeur of Brazzaville, Prasong nevertheless is never seen in public dressed without attitude or panache. His cultivated character always exudes something unmistakable through his clothes.

“You simply can’t put on an Ivy League look with a K-pop hairdo,” Prasong said.

It’s also imperative, said Prasong, that the clothes you wear reflect your character and who you are.

Fashion for Prasong however, isn’t an end in itself.

“With passion for fashion comes an understanding about life. The principle of fashion is like life, it’s about balance,” he said. “If you wear a 10-million baht watch or put on a 30,000 baht pair of trousers but wear a shirt with plastic buttons, then something is amiss.”

5313868577218As Prasong prepares to embark on a new chapter in life in the Big Apple, where he lived earlier from 2000 to 2006 as a cook in a Thai restaurant, he offers a caveat that not all vintage clothes are desirable.

“Vintage clothing is like vintage wine. On some years it doesn’t turn into a good vintage. I have faith and appreciate people who value qualities, however,” he said.

The interview was interrupted by a Western client who had been browsing around for a while. He finally requested a bespoke pair of trousers in vintage style and fabric from Prasong while he sought some sartorial advice.

“You have to wear a character,” Prasong instructed, in English. “It’s more than clothing.”

Wearing a classic white American jumpsuit, he continued:

“We must understand that lifestyle, culture and fashion are one and the same thing.”

Bangklyn is open 1pm to 8pm on most days, depending on Prasong’s mood and commitments to his wife and two children. It’s located at 121/118 Phayathai Road, a short walk from BTS Ratchathewi.

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Indonesian Police Arrest Dozens Ahead of West Papua Protest

A West Papuan protester shouts slogans as he and others are taken away on a police truck during a rally calling for the remote region's independence, Dec. 1 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Dita Alangkara / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Indonesian police have detained dozens of people ahead of a West Papua independence protest on Monday.

At least 200 people were arrested in several cities in Papua and Java, said Veronica Koman, a lawyer for Papuan independence activist Filep Karma.

Monday is the 55th anniversary of the official declaration of an Indonesian military campaign to take control of Papua from the Dutch.

Koman said several people were arrested last week when they applied for demonstration permits.

She said the headquarters of the pro-independence National Committee for West Papua in Jayapura, the capital of Papua province, was vandalized during a police raid on Monday.

The Dutch colonizers of the Indonesian archipelago held onto West Papua when Indonesia became independent after World War II. It became part of Indonesia following a U.N.-supervised referendum in 1969 criticized as undemocratic.

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Zsa Zsa Gabor, Jet-Setting Hungarian Actress, 99

An undated monochromatic photo of Zsa Zsa Gabor.

Zsa Zsa Gabor, the jet-setting Hungarian actress and socialite who helped invent a new kind of fame out of multiple marriages, conspicuous wealth and jaded wisdom about the glamorous life, died Sunday at her home, her husband said. She was 99.

The middle and most famous of the sisters Gabor died of a heart attack at her Los Angeles home, Frederic von Anhalt said.

Gabor had been hospitalized repeatedly since she broke her right hip in July 2010 after a fall at her home. She already had to use a wheelchair after being partly paralyzed in a 2002 car accident and suffering a stroke in 2005. Most of her right leg was amputated in January 2011 because of gangrene and the left leg was also threatened. Her misfortunes were duly reported to the media by von Anhalt.

The great aunt of Paris Hilton and a spiritual matriarch to the Kardashians, Simpsons and other tabloid favorites, she was the original hall-of-mirrors celebrity, famous for being famous for being famous. Starting in the 1940s, Gabor rose from beauty queen to millionaire’s wife to minor television personality to minor film actress to major public character. With no special talent, no hit TV series such as her sister Eva’s “Green Acres,” Zsa Zsa nevertheless was a long-running hit just being Zsa Zsa — her accent drenched in diamonds, her name synonymous with frivolity and camp as she winked and carried on about men, dahling, and the droll burdens of the idle rich.

She was like popcorn for the public and, for sociologists, the seeming fulfillment of the mindless future imagined in Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World,” a creation made possible by mass, electronic media; her words and image transcribed and beamed into theaters and living rooms, on the Internet and the shelves of newsstands and supermarket checkout lines.

Her secret, in part, was being in on the joke, once saying about a 1956 TV role, “I play a fabulously rich woman who has just bought her fifth husband; she is very unhappy. I won’t tell you who it’s supposed to be.” Ever game for a laugh, Gabor spoofed her image in a videotaped segment on David Letterman’s “Late Show,” which had the two stars driving from one fast-food restaurant to another, sipping sodas and digging into burgers like they were slabs of wedding cake.

Amid all the trivia, she had a peripheral part in two big scandals of the early 21st century: the death of Anna Nicole Smith (von Anhalt claimed to have had an affair with her) and the alleged financial scam of Bernard Madoff (a lawyer said she might have lost $10 million through him). And she was in the spotlight for a dustup from the late 20th century: “The slap heard ’round the world.”

In June 1989, Gabor smacked Paul Kramer, a police officer, on a Beverly Hills street, after he pulled over her Rolls-Royce Corniche convertible for a traffic violation. She was convicted of misdemeanor battery on a police officer, driving without a driver’s license and having an open container of alcohol in the car. She served three days in jail, performed community service at a woman’s shelter and paid $13,000 in fines and restitution.

When she was freed, she told reporters the jailers were kind but “at first I was petrified. They even took my makeup away.”

Gabor kept up the act in the advice book “How to Catch a Man, How to Keep a Man, How to Get Rid of a Man,” and in the exercise video, “It’s Simple Darling,” in which she banters and stretches with a pair of muscular young trainers. Her memoir, “One Life Is Not Enough,” came out in 1991 and dished about everything from her virginity (gone at 15) to the endless men who came on to her (She would claim that William Paley of CBS promised Gabor her own show if only she would spend an afternoon with him.)

Gabor had one child, Francesca Hilton, from her marriage to hotelier Conrad Hilton. (She would allege the child was conceived after Hilton raped her.) In later years, Gabor, von Anhalt and Francesca battled in court over family finances. Francesca Hilton died of an apparent stroke in 2015.

Story: Hillel Italie

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