Damascus Bids Farewell to Director Hatem Ali

A general view of the funeral procession for Syrian director Hatem Ali in Damascus, Syria, on January 1. (EPA)
A general view of the funeral procession for Syrian director Hatem Ali in Damascus, Syria, on January 1. (EPA)
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Damascus Bids Farewell to Director Hatem Ali

A general view of the funeral procession for Syrian director Hatem Ali in Damascus, Syria, on January 1. (EPA)
A general view of the funeral procession for Syrian director Hatem Ali in Damascus, Syria, on January 1. (EPA)

Damascus bid farewell to Hatem Ali, one of the city’s most prominent directors, on Friday. The funeral procession was held after his casket’s arrival from Cairo, where he had died of a heart attack on Tuesday.

The Syrian capitals’ Al-Hassan Mosque was filled with mourners, some holding up his picture. As soon as his casket was taken out of the mosque, the crowd began to applaud, cry out in prayer and chant his name.

Dozens of cars took part in the funeral motorcade that passed through the streets of Damascus before he was buried in the Bab el-Saghir Cemetery.

Syrian and Arab social media was brimming with messages of mourning over director, who had worked on many of the past two decades’ most renowned television series.

His sudden death inside his hotel room in Cairo came as a shock, especially since he had not been showing any signs of illness before his heart attack.

A rare sight since the Syrian conflict began, the Syrian people, loyalists and opponents of the regime, were unanimous in celebrating his journey and legacy. He was mourned by dozens of artists outside of Syria, some of whom are vocal activists opposed to the regime, and others who remained inside the county.

The Syrian Artists Syndicate only announced Ali’s death on Tuesday, highlighting some of his works without formally mourning him, a move that was widely criticized on social media.

The director’s membership, alongside that of around 200 other Syrian artists, was revoked in the summer of 2015 under the pretext that they had not paid their membership fees, which the syndicate had said it would only accept to receive from the artists in person. This was not an option for many of the artists who had left the country during the conflict.

At the time, many artists and activists drew a link between the artists’ expulsion from the syndicate and their political positions, as they were either openly opposed to the regime or had abstained from declaring their support for it.

Born in 1962, Ali began his career as an actor, working with director Haitham Haqqi on the series Circle of Fire in 1988. He moved to directing television series in the mid-1990s, during which he worked on many feature TV films.

He has directed a number of series, some of the most notable include Maraya, Four Seasons, Al Zeer Salem, Salaheddine Al Ayyubi, Al Taghribiyya Al Filistiniyya, King Farouk, and Omar.

Cairo-based prominent Syrian actor and opposition figure, Jamal Sulieman, who had collaborated with Ali on several projects, mourned his death on Facebook.

“Your sudden departure was a grave shock and left in grief not only your family, friends and all of those who enjoyed working with you during your career, but people throughout the Arab world,” he wrote.



Netflix Shares Rise as Rosy Outlook Calms Investors’ Nerves amid Tariff Fears

In this Nov. 4, 2017, file photo, the logo of entertainment company Netflix is pictured in Paris. (AP)
In this Nov. 4, 2017, file photo, the logo of entertainment company Netflix is pictured in Paris. (AP)
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Netflix Shares Rise as Rosy Outlook Calms Investors’ Nerves amid Tariff Fears

In this Nov. 4, 2017, file photo, the logo of entertainment company Netflix is pictured in Paris. (AP)
In this Nov. 4, 2017, file photo, the logo of entertainment company Netflix is pictured in Paris. (AP)

Netflix shares rose about 3% in premarket trading on Monday as the streaming giant's upbeat annual revenue outlook reassured investors that it could withstand any economic downturn amid a tariff laden economic climate.

The company's co-CEO Greg Peters noted that the entertainment sector, and Netflix specifically, had proven resilient during previous downturns.

Peters said they had not seen any significant shifts in customer behavior, after the company reported first-quarter earnings above analysts' expectations on Thursday.

Netflix also reaffirmed its 2025 revenue forecast of between $43.5 billion and $44.5 billion.

These remarks offered some respite to investors who were worried that President Donald Trump's tariff policies could likely lead to a recession, forcing consumers to rein in spending on streaming services.

"Even in a global recession scenario, Netflix is likely to be highly resilient given the price-to-value of the service remains very attractive," said Jeffrey Wlodarczak, an analyst at Pivotal Research Group, who is five-star rated for both estimate accuracy and recommendation performance, as per LSEG data.

"Their advertising business should demonstrate strong growth in any scenario given its nascent state," Wlodarczak said.

The lower-priced, ad-supported tier accounted for 55% of new sign-ups in countries where it is available, Netflix said.

"While advertising is a small portion of the business today, the longer-term prospects are notably robust...while investments in ad-tech capabilities should drive healthy growth for years to come," BofA Global Research analysts said.

Earlier this month, the Wall Street Journal reported that Netflix aims to double revenue from $39 billion in 2024 and earn about $9 billion in global ad sales by 2030.

The company has upped the ante on delivering steady revenue growth as it ceased reporting subscriber data from this year, leaving Wall Street with fewer metrics to gauge its health.

Peers Walt Disney and Warner Bros Discovery shares were down under 1% each in premarket trading.

At least seven brokerages raised price target for Netflix following its results, bringing the median target to $1,147.50, according to data compiled by LSEG.