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File:OK magazine.jpg 30 August, 2011 cover, featuring Kerry Katona |
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Editor | Lisa Byrne |
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Categories | Celebrity |
Weekly | |
First issue | April 1993 |
Company | Northern & Shell |
Country | United Kingdom, Ireland, US/Canada, Mexico, Middle East, Australia, Russia, Thailand, Malaysia |
Website |
Official OK! Magazine website OK! on Twitter OK! on Facebook |
OK! is a British weekly magazine specializing in celebrity news. Originally launched as a monthly, its first issue was published in April 1993. In September 2004, OK! publishers Northern and Shell launched in Australia as a monthly title – the magazine went weekly in October 2006. In 2005, a US version was launched, followed by an Indian edition in May 2006, a Spanish-language version in Mexico in 2006, a Bulgarian-language version in 2007 and a Spanish edition in 2008. OK! is the world’s biggest celebrity lifestyle magazine, with more than 30 million readers worldwide, and now appears in 20 countries (Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, China, Germany, Greece, India, Ireland, Malaysia, Mexico, Middle East, the Philippines, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, the UK, the US, Venezuela and Vietnam).
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OK! is best known for its coverage of celebrity nuptials. OK! was awarded £1,033,156 in a lawsuit, but lost it when the case came to the court of appeal.[1] OK! had exclusive rights to the wedding of Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas, but its rival Hello! magazine, published pictures as well, so OK! sued.
In October 2005, three celebrity weddings took place on the same day - Katie Price and Peter Andre, Kate Garraway and Derek Draper, and Samia Ghadie and property developer Matthew Smith. OK! covered them all over separate issues. The biggest wedding of the three (Jordan and Peter) was covered over two bumper issues.
The same happened for the wedding of Ashley and Cheryl Cole as well as Christina Aguilera's wedding. OK! devoted an issue with photos of Tony Parker and Eva Longoria's wedding.
Other weddings covered by OK! are:
Prior to Jade Goody's cancer-related death in March 2009, OK! sparked controversy by publishing an 'Official Tribute Issue' with the front-page captions 'In Loving Memory' and '1981-2009', even though Goody was still alive at the time of going to press.[2]
Several months later in June 2009, OK! again caused outrage by running another tribute issue, this time for Michael Jackson displaying a front cover picture which the magazine claims inside is 'his lifeless body', further images inside purportedly show scenes of his attempted resuscitation, with Jackson's mouth covered by an oxygen mask and strapped to a hospital stretcher.
OK! TV is an early evening magazine programme, broadcast on Channel 5 as a brand extension of celebrity title OK! Magazine. It had replaced Live From Studio Five in February 2011, and is presented by Jenny Frost and Jeff Brazier who replaced Kate Walsh and Matt Johnson in August 2011.
OK! Insider is a weekly vodcast about the current issue of the magazine. It is written and presented by Layla Anna-Lee, produced by Simon Withington and available to view on the OK! UK webpage.
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Ok, sometimes spelled Oak or Ock, is an uncommon Korean family name, a single-syllable Korean given name, and an element in some two-syllable Korean given names. It is usually written with a hanja meaning "jade".
The 2000 South Korean census found 22,964 people with the surname Ok. They belonged to a single bon-gwan, Seonryeong (宣寧), in what is today Hongseong County, Chungcheongnam-do, South Korea. In a study by the National Institute of the Korean Language based on 2007 application data for South Korean passports, it was found that 84.8% of people with this surname spelled it in Latin letters as Ok in their passports, while another 9.0% spelled it as Ock. Rarer alternative spellings (the remaining 6.2%) included Oak and Ohk.
People with this family name include:
OK is the debut release of tabla player and music producer Talvin Singh, and it was nine months in the making. The title was chosen because of the universality of the word "OK", which can be understood almost anywhere in the world. It is mostly a reinterpretation of Indian classical music with flute, sitar, and tabla. The album won him the Mercury Music Prize for 1999, but has sold only 90,000 copies in the United Kingdom, charting at #41, making it one of the smallest sellers in the award's history.
The Japanese version of the album has one bonus track.