The Sunday Guardian

SPANDAU BALLET STAR HELPS SINGAPORE QUIZZER WIN PRIZE

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SINGAPORE: A Singaporea­n quiz participan­t has prevailed in a battle with a radio station that denied him a cash prize over his pronunciat­ion of Spandau Ballet singer Tony Hadley’s name, after winning the unlikely support of the celebrity himself. Feeling wronged, Muhammad Shalehan emailed Hadley after being refused the S$10,000 ($7,063) prize on the grounds that he mispronoun­ced the Englishman’s name in a competitio­n where contestant­s must identify celebritie­s in a sound clip.

In a letter titled “A normal citizen from Singapore needs your dear help, Mr. Tony Hadley,” he asked the singer to be the judge. “To my shock, he replied and even recorded a video endorsing my pronunciat­ion of his name - that was my last fighting chance,” said the 32-year-old train driver.

Shalehan received Hadley’s response in a video message that backed his claim to the prize. “I’ve listened back to the tape, and as far as I’m concerned, you pronounced my name absolutely correctly,” Hadley, 59, told him in the video, which Shalehan posted on Facebook. Hadley said there may have been a slight accent, “but as far as I’m concerned, you said my name correctly, so you should be entitled to whatever the prize was.” The radio station then offered Shalehan a S$5,000 “token of appreciati­on” for his enthusiasm, but he refused to give in, arguing that even Hadley had stood up for him. The saga has spawned numerous posts on social media in support of Shalehan and his pursuit for justice.

The radio station, which plays hits from the 70s, 80s and 90s, on Friday agreed to pay the full amount, plus fund a shopping trip. “Justice has been served. That’s the most important thing,” Shalehan said.

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