(2003 wasn't so bad either! Click HERE if you want to see all the 190 model galleries from last year!)

In 2004 we had our most productive and diversified year so far. Hundreds of ladyboys from all over Asia appeared on the site. Below are (nearly) all the model galleries for 2004. (There are over 250 of them!) This doesn't include the hardcore galleries and also the hours and hours of downloadable video. This has been our best year so far here at AsianTS.com! In our short four or five year life we have literally grown in leaps and bounds!

As usual at this time of year we look back on the past year at the events that shaped our world...

January
Nasas Mars rover lands safely on the red planet.

After a seven month voyage from Earth the US space agency's probe Spirit landed safely on the surface of Mars. Within hours of arriving it sent back its first images of the red planet's barren rock strewn landscape.
Lord Huttons report into the events surrounding Dr David Kellys death is released.
Lord Hutton's report into the circumstances surrounding the death of UK weapons scientist Dr David Kelly was highly critical of the BBC. He said that BBC reports of claims that Downing Street "sexed up" a dossier on Iraq's illegal weapons were "unfounded". In its wake the BBC chairman and director general both resigned.

Died in January - Spalding Gray (actor/writer) Suicide (drowning.) Born June 5, 1941. Wrote and starred in Swimming to Cambodia, disappeared on Jan 10, and likely died the same day, but his body wasn't found for two months. Uta Hagen (actress/teacher) Born June 12, 1919. Won a Tony for playing Martha in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Helmut Newton (photographer) Car accident. Jack Paar (TV host) Born May 1, 1918. Early talk show host. Joe Viterelli (mob actor) Born March 10, 1937.

February
US lifestyle guru Martha Stewart is convicted for lying to investigators over a suspicious shares deal.

Martha Stewart who earned millions from a business empire based on selling domestic items and lifestyle advice was found guilty of lying to federal investigators about a suspicious sale of shares in the drug company ImClone. She was subsequently sentenced to five months' imprisonment.

Died in February - Julius Schwartz (comic editor/agent) Born June 19, 1915. Edited many DC comics for many years, including Superman. Carl Anderson (actor/singer) Leukemia. Born February 27, 1945. Judas Iscariot in Jesus Christ, Superstar. John Randolph (actor) Born June 1, 1915. Many movies including Prizzi's Honor and the Vacation movies.

March
Bomb attacks on four Madrid commuter trains kill 191 and injure hundreds more.

An Islamic group with links to alQaeda carried out a series of near simultaneous bomb attacks on three stations in the Spanish capital Madrid. The powerful explosions occurred just days before the country's elections. The poll went ahead as planned and in a shock result Spaniards voted out incumbent Prime Minister Aznar replacing him with Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero.
Four US civilian contractors are killed and mutilated by a mob in Falluja Iraq.
Four contractors working for the US army were ambushed and killed as they drove through Falluja. The city in Iraq's socalled Sunni Triangle had been a hotbed of insurgent activity. However footage of the contractors' bodies being dismembered and strung up on the main bridge in Falluja caused widespread revulsion.

Died in March - William H. Pickering (rocket scientist) Pneumonia. Born 1910. Manager of the Mariner missions to Venus and Mars in the '60s. J. J. Jackson (DJ/VJ) Heart attack. Born April 8, 1941. The first VJ on MTV. Jan Berry (singer.) Born April 3, 1941. Part of the early '60s duo Jan and Dean who brought you "Little Old Lady from Pasadena." Jan Sterling (actress) Strokes. Born April 3, 1921. Star of many '50s dramas, Oscar-nominated for The High and the Mighty. Art James (game show host/announcer) Born July 11, 1929. Hosted shows such as The Who, What, Where Game, longtime announcer for Concentration. Peter Ustinov (actor/writer) Heart failure. Born April 16, 1921. Spartacus, wrote Monsieur Rene, good will ambassador for the UN. Alistair Cooke (radio commentator/author) Born November 20, 1908. Retired from doing a weekly radio show for the BBC after doing it for over 60 years weeks before he died; host for Masterpiece Theater for over 20 years.

April
160 people die and 1300 are injured when two fuel trains collide in North Korea.

The devastation caused when two fuel trains collided in the town of Ryongchon North Korea caused the secretive Stalinist state make a rare appeal for international aid. Many were burned or blinded in the blast.
Photos of US soldiers allegedly abusing Iraqi detainees in Abu Ghraib prison emerge.
In late April a series of photos emerged showing US forces allegedly abusing Iraqi detainees at the Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. The graphic images showed naked prisoners being terrorised with dogs and forced to simulate sex acts. The guards involved with the alleged abuse face prosecution but some have questioned whether personnel further up the chain of command also knew what was happening.

Died in April - Norris McWhirter (Guinness World Records curator/commentator) Heart attack. Born August 12, 1925. For the first 50 years of his life, shared an almost identical biography with his brother and frequent collaborator Ross. Pat Tillman (soldier/pro football player) War (killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan). Born November 6, 1976. Football player who gave up the game to go into the Army. Estee Lauder (entrepreneur) Cardiopulmonary failure. Born July 1, 1906. Created and marketed high quality, expensive cosmetics.

May
10 new countries join the European Union bringing its membership to 25.

At midnight on 1 May the 15 old European Union members welcomed Cyprus the Czech Republic Estonia Hungary Latvia Lithuania Malta Poland Slovakia and Slovenia to the bloc. The historic expansion was marked with celebrations across member states.

Died in May - Alan King (comic/producer) Lung cancer. Born December 25, 1927. Borscht belt comic who was a common figure on TV, particularly on Friar's Club roasts. Syd Hoff (cartoonist/children's book illustrator.) Pneumonia. Born 1913. Cartoonist for The New Yorker, later did a number of childrens books. Tony Randall (actor) Died May 17. Born February 26, 1920. Best-known for the television version of The Odd Couple's Felix, great as many characters in The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao, became a first-time father at 77. Ramona Trinidad Iglesias-Jordan (formerly world's oldest person) Finally died May 29, 2004. Born August 31, 1889.

June
The funeral of former US President Ronald Reagan takes place in Washington.

After a long battle with Alzheimer's Disease former US President Ronald Reagan died in June. Joining current President George W Bush at the funeral service in Washington's National Cathedral were ex-presidents and leading figures from abroad including former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
The US formally hands back Iraqi sovereignty.
At a lowkey ceremony in Baghdad which took place two days ahead of schedule to wrong foot any possible insurgency US administrator Paul Bremer transferred sovereignty to an Iraqi judge. Iraq's interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and his cabinet ministers were officially sworn in later that day but even this oath taking was held in secret.

Died in June - Ronald Reagan (actor/president/governor) Pneumonia/Alzheimer's disease. Died June 5. Born February 6, 1911. Helped America "to believe in itself again" while ignoring America's flouting of international law during the Iran Contra scandal. Ex-husband of Jane Wyman and helped to bring Alzheimer's out of the closet. Ray Charles (blues legend/bit part actor) Born September 23, 1930. Cultural icon, singer, pianist. "Georgia on My Mind." Danny Dark (voice) Born 1940. Voice of Superman in the '70s and '80s, did voiceovers for NBC and Bewitched.

July
The US commission investigating the 11 September attacks publishes its report.

The US commission investigating the 11 September attacks in Washington and New York in which nearly 3000 people died blamed US leaders for failing to comprehend the gravity of the threat posed by al Qaeda. The commission charted how al Qaeda was allowed to develop into a real danger to the US and recommended a wide-ranging overhaul of US intelligence services.

Died in July - Marlon Brando (actor) Died on the 1st. Born on April 3, 1924. Played iconic characters including the Godfather and Stanley Kowalski, born on the same day as Doris Day! Syreeta Wright (singer.) Cancer. Died July 5, 2004. Born February 28, 1946. The only woman Stevie Wonder ever married, she later sang with Billy Preston in "With You I'm Born Again." Paul Klebnikov (journalist) Assassinated on July 9. Born 1963. Forbes writer dedicated to exposing corruption in Russian businesses. Isabel Sanford (actress.) Born August 29, 1917. Louise Jefferson in The Jeffersons and other bit parts. Laurance Rockefeller (venture capitalist and philanthropist) Pulmonary fibrosis. Born May 26, 1910. Helped arrange financing for companies like American Airlines and Apple Computer, founded the American Conservation Association. Jerry Goldsmith (composer) Cancer. Born February 10, 1929. Wrote the score for Planet of the Apes, won an Oscar for The Omen. Jackson Beck (voice over actor) Born July 23, 1912. Performed Bluto in '40s and '50s Popeye cartoons, did "It's a bird, it's a plane, it's Superman!" for many Superman cartoons.

August
The Olympics get under way in the city of Athens Greece.

Athens welcomed the world on 13 August 2004 with a spectacular opening ceremony. For Greeks the Games were overshadowed by the drugs controversy surrounding local sprinters Kostas Kenteris and Katerina Thanou. But despite this cloud and pre-Games fears about the Greeks being under prepared the Games proved a huge success.
Edvard Munchs iconic painting The Scream is stolen from the Munch Museum in Norway.
Stunned visitors at the Munch Museum in Norway watched as armed robbers pulled The Scream and another painting Madonna off the wall and escaped in a waiting car. The museum said the two stolen paintings were among its most valuable worth an estimated 19m pound10.4m together.

Died in August - Alexandra Scott (young philanthropist) Neuroblastoma. Died August 1. Born January 17, 1996. Starting running lemonade stands as a way to raise money to fight her rare form of cancer when she was four years old, she helped to raise over $700,000 before she died. Rick James (Singer) Born February 1, 1948. Early '80s hit "Super Freak". Paul "Red" Adair (Oil well fire expert) Born June 18, 1915. Famous before the Gulf War - John Wayne played him in 1968's Hellfighters. Fay Wray (actress) Born September 10, 1907. King Kong. Julia Child (French Chef) Kidney failure. Born August 15, 1912. Early PBS star who popularized French cooking in America. Elmer Bernstein (composer) Born April 4, 1922. Oscar nominations for movies including To Kill a Mockingbird and Far from Heaven, won for Thoroughly Modern Millie. Laura Branigan (singer) Aneurysm. Born July 3, 1957. "Gloria" and "How Am I Supposed to Live Without You?"

September
Over 300 people more than half of them children die as the Beslan school siege ends in violence.

For three days Chechen militants held more than 1000 parents and children hostage in the gymnasium at School Number One in Beslan. Then suddenly on the morning of 3 September the school was rocked by a series of explosions and gunfire. In the carnage that followed hundreds of people most of them children died.
A Fathers 4 Justice campaigner dressed as Batman breaches Buckingham Palace security.
A campaigner for Fathers 4 Justice scaled the fence at Buckingham Palace and climbed up to a ledge near the palace balcony where he staged a fivehour protest. It was the latest in a series of highprofile stunts by the group who are fighting for fathers to be given increased access to their children. The security slip shocked many and provoked a debate on the use of armed response to security breaches.

Died in September - Caitlin Clarke (actress/teacher) Ovarian cancer. Born May 3, 1952. Valerian in Dragonslayer, played a supporting role in the Broadway show Titanic and spent much of her life teaching drama to young people. Fred Ebb (lyricist) Heart attack. Born April 8, 1933. Professional partner of composer John Kander, he wrote the words for musicals like Caberet and Chicago. Katharina Dalton (doctor/writer) Born 1917. Doctor who coined the phrase pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS) and wrote about its treatment. Russ Meyer (maker of busty movies!) Pneumonia. Born March 21, 1922. Vixen movies and many other "uplifting" flicks!

October
The SpaceShipOne rocket plane claims the 10m Ansari XPrize.

SpaceShipOne rocketed into the history books when it became the first private manned spacecraft to fly to the edge of space and back twice in less than a week. The stubby rocket plane shot to an altitude of more than 100km to claim the 10m Ansari XPrize.
Afghanistan holds its first ever presidential election.
Hamid Karzai the man who had been leading Afghanistan since the fall of the Taleban won Afghanistan's first presidential election. Analysts say Mr Karzai will try to use his new mandate to unite a country still riven by ethnic religious regional and tribal rivalries.
Scientists discover a new tiny species of human that lived in Indonesia.
Scientists announced the discovery of a new species of human that lived in Indonesia at the same time our own ancestors were colonising the world. The onemetre 3ft tall species dubbed quotthe Hobbitquot lived on Flores Island until at least 12000 years ago. Experts say the finding the remains of LB1 or IHomo floresiensis I will likely alter current thinking about human evolution.

Died in October - Janet Leigh (actress) Vasculitis. Born July 6, 1927. She didn't take a take a shower for years, once married to Tony Curtis, mother of Jamie Lee Curtis.  Gordon Cooper (astronaut/businessman) Born March 6, 1927. Flew on Mercury and Gemini spacecraft. Rodney Dangerfield (comic) Born November 22, 1922. Finally getting respect? Christopher Reeve (director/actor/advocate) Systemic infection/heart failure. Born September 25, 1952. Superman, Somewhere in Time, became an activist for paralysis research after his 1995 accident. Pierre Salinger (journalist/political press officer) Born June 14, 1925. Kennedy's press secretary, he later went to work for ABC. John Peel (DJ) Heart attack. Born August 30, 1939. Legendary British DJ and voice-over presenter.

November
US President George W Bush wins a second term in office.

After an election campaign that was too close to call George W Bush defeated challenger John Kerry in US presidential elections to win a second term. Mr Bush secured a strong mandate from the American people by winning not only the Electoral College vote but the popular vote too.
Tens of thousands of Ukrainians protest against the presidential election result saying it was rigged.
Opposition supporters rallied in Ukraine's cities to protest against the result of the country's presidential elections. Officials had handed victory to Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych but many believed that the true winner was his challenger Viktor Yushchenko. After a two week campaign of civil disobedience involving thousands Ukraine's Supreme Court ordered a new round of voting by 26 December 2004.

Died in November - Howard Keel (actor, singer) Colon cancer. Born April 13, 1919. Kiss Me Kate, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Yasser Arafat (Political leader/former terrorist) Blood disorder. Born August 24, 1929. PLO then Palestinian leader. Margaret Hassan (humanitarian) Murdered by terrorists. Born 1945. Director of Care in Iraq who'd worked in country for 30 years until she was abducted. Terry Melcher (record producer) Melanoma. Born February 8, 1942. Wrote "Kokomo" , produced albums for many '60s groups, Doris Day's son. Larry Brown (writer) Born July 7, 1951. Wrote Big Bad Love, won Southern Book Critics Circle Award. Arthur Hailey (writer) Stroke. Born April 5, 1920. He wrote big bestsellers like Hotel and Airport, wrote for TV in the '40s, '50s and '60s.

December
Commentary... The winds blew unrelentingly through 2004, and not just the tempests that smashed the Atlantic and Gulf coasts again and again. Gales of war and suffering battered Iraq and the Sudan; political gusts beat up America and the Ukraine. And countless baseball steroid scandals, flu vaccine gone AWOL, Janet Jackson's bare right breast left many people feeling rather dishevelled!

But 2004 was a weird year in nearly every way. Rarely have so many people been so overwhelmed, in so many places. At Camp Kounoungo in Chad, where Mohammed Aziber recalled the moment when his son was gunned down by a helicopter that circled overhead, and how his family then fled their village joining the accursed 1.8 million refugees from the Sudanese insurgency and counterinsurgency. "Every day, I see my son lying under that tree," said Aziber, tearfully.

In the Russian town of Beslan, where 34-year-old Georgi Kozarev recounted his part in a mob that lynched one of the terrorists who had launched the bloodbath at a local school, leaving more than 330 dead. "How does one understand this? How do you forgive it?" he asked.

In Omaha, Neb., where Shane Kielion's high school sweetheart, April, gave birth to their first child just hours after the Marine rifleman died in the battle for Fallujah. His family's hearts were stretched from exultation to sorrow. Can you imagine that?

Americans showed their support for the troops by affixing magnet ribbons to their SUVs, even as they were appalled by pictures of jaunty GIs humiliating naked Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. The war against terrorism entered its fourth year, and Iraq's rising death toll was not the only bad news. Iran and North Korea flirted with nuclear capabilities and Osama bin Laden, still at on the loose, vilified the United States via video tape. In March, in Madrid, 191 died when four commuter trains blew up almost simulaneously bombed by militants linked to al-Qaida.

And yet, President Bush could tell the Republican National Convention that "freedom is on the march," and he may have had a point. Even as Iraq tottered shakily toward a Jan. 30, 2005, election, Hamid Karzai became Afghanistan's first popularly elected president. Yasser Arafat's death opened the way to Palestinian elections, tantalizing strife-weary Israelis and Arabs.

In Ukraine, defiant thousands wore orange and blockaded government buildings to protest an election that they and international observers said was rigged. The country's highest court agreed, ordering a new vote and setting off a national celebration. "We have proven that we are a nation that could defend our choice," opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko told the masses in Independence Square. "Justice and freedom are coming back to Ukraine thanks to you, real heroes."

The American election was not nearly as dramatic. There was no reprise of 2000, no 11th-hour court decision anointing a new president. But it wasn't pretty, either. The 2004 election, said political analyst Norman Ornstein, was "the nastiest in our lifetimes. It doesn't maybe equal the 19th century but it's hard to watch this without getting an upset stomach if you care about politics."

And then the Bush campaign took Kerry apart, painting him as a flip-flopping liberal who wanted to submit American decisions to some kind of global test. The Republicans got a lot of help from the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth and their commercials questioning Kerry's heroism during the Vietnam War. The Democrats, meanwhile, were aided by Bush-bashing cadres like MoveOn.org and by Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11."

Even aside from the independent 527 groups, Bush and Kerry raised a record $689 million. They unleashed that bonanza in a torrent of ads and appearances in battleground states, interrupted by three televised debates (it was widely believed that Kerry "won" them, and widely rumored that a suspicious bulge in the president's jacket was some sort of radio receiver). In the end, more Americans voted than in any election ever. Bush and Dick Cheney won 286 electoral votes; Kerry and John Edwards won 252. After losing the popular vote by 500,000 in 2000, Bush won by 3.5 million votes this time.

The electoral map was a sea of Republican red, with islands of Democratic blue in the Northeast, upper Midwest and West Coast. The GOP picked up four votes in the House of Representatives and four in the Senate, and knocked off Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle. Did Americans just not warm to Kerry? Did they better trust Bush to guide their country through the shoals of Iraq and terrorism? Or, as many suggested, was their vote for Bush a reflection of the moral values of a country that this year mourned the passing of its conservative lodestar, Ronald Reagan, at age 93?

Clearly, many oppose gay marriage. Voters in 11 states were asked if they wanted to ban it; in all 11, they said yes. Their zeal was stoked by a Massachusetts high court decision, giving gay couples the right to marry; clerks there issued more than 4,200 marriage licenses to same-sex couples. The mayor of San Francisco married 3,995 same-sex couples, too, before the California Supreme Court ruled the weddings invalid. "It gave me a feeling like you were kicked in the stomach," said Margot McShane, who was married briefly to Alexandra D'Amario.

It is a feeling shared by domestic diva Martha Stewart, who went to jail (but not by basketball star Kobe Bryant, who didn't). It is a feeling shared by the suffering people of Haiti, for whom 2004 was a year of almost unrelenting misery first, a violent revolution, and then a tropical storm that killed thousands.

And it certainly shared by the people of Florida, buffeted by hurricanes that came and went with the regularity of a cross-town bus, killing 117 Floridians and causing damage in the billions. Ominously, experts predicted intense storm patterns for the next 30 years, or more.

Then, just as the year was thought to be coming to a calm closure, came the Tsunamis...

Reggie White (NFL football player)  Heart attack. Died December 26th. Born on December 19, 1961. One of the all-time sackers in the NFL. No more soup for me, Ma! Actor Jerry Orbach died of prostate cancer at age 69. Orbach played the sardonic cop Lennie Briscoe on TV's Law and Order. Innovative guitarist Hank "Sugarfoot" Garland, who played on recordings by Elvis, Hank Williams and Patsy Cline, died of a staph infection at a hospital in Orange Park, Florida. He was 74 years old.

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(2003 wasn't so bad either! Click HERE if you want to see all the 190 model galleries from last year!)