Miscellany

Jan. 22nd, 2009 11:41 pm
flameraven: (Default)
HR drama has settled down, just a little bit. Enough where I'm no longer quite so bitter and regretting a little bit my choice to leave, even though that won't be for a while yet. But I think I'm going to have to stick with it, mostly on principle but also because it really will help me if I channel that urge to writewritewriteomg into something more independent.

Lots of cool links that I've found lately, so here we go:

-The Next 5,000 Days
Video lecture basically talking about the future of the Internet. It's fascinating stuff. Did you know that the Web as we know it is less than 5,000 days old? This guy speculates on what will happen in the next 5,000.

-26 Geeky Cakes
This link got me craving cake all morning. Really impressive stuff. It's also worth checking out Debbie Does Cakes (flickr set). Not only does she do a couple of the geek cakes, but she has like 20 pages of other amazing cakes. (Including two or three which might be just slightly nsfw for body parts. You are fairly warned.)

-A really neat collection of all the newspapers after Inauguration Day

Speaking of Obama, damn but that man is just working overtime now that he's actually in office. I have not had a chance to read everything, but from what I hear he's done some pretty major stuff, largely in the areas of increasing government transparency, making huge steps forward in the awful mess that is Guantanamo, and making it harder for Bush to hide his records. :D
There's a pretty good summary of all this here, as well as links to the executive orders themselves and some more details here.

In addition to calling members of Middle-Eastern countries to try and work towards a solution to the Gaza disaster, and re-doing his oath of office so the crazy right-wingers can't try to claim that he's "not really President" because one word was out of place. The man does not mess around. :O Color me impressed.

Oscar nominations are also up. This actually looks to be the most boring year in Oscars I've ever heard of, probably because I haven't seen anything besides WALL-E and Dark Knight. However, I'm pleased that WALL-E got more than just the Best Animated nomination, and also that Oktapodi is in the running for Best Animated Short! Much as I love Pixar and think that "Presto" will probably win, it's nice for them to have some competition for once.

EDIT: Courtesy of [livejournal.com profile] klibingly_jivl, we also have Obama action figures (OBAMA VS DARTH VADER! ROUND ONE STARTO!) and a manga about the election WTF JAPAN.
And that's it for now.

WRF

Dec. 20th, 2008 03:12 am
flameraven: (Big damn hero)
So John came over tonight, and after a quick perusal of the theatres to see what was available (read: nothing besides Bond) we went to Blockbuster and rented terrible action movies instead.

First up was Equilibrium, which had Christian Bale and was like Fahrenheit 451 meets The Matrix, and is the movie that invented Gun Kata*. Christian Bale gets a puppy and goes from a badass unfeeling assassin to a badass feeling assassin who kicks much ass For Great Justice. (Remember kids, in this world feeling is a crime! Preventing us from having emotions will prevent us ever having wars again! No we're not making any parallels to Nazi Germany, we promise. Just ignore our dictator making speeches in front of a red and black flag. And ignore those clips of Hitler we showed right next to them.) It was actually a decent film, partly because Christian Bale is awesome and partly because Gun Kata rocks.

And then we watched... Sukiyaki Western Django. It's a western film full of Japanese people. Also Quentin Tarantino. The dialogue ranges from fairly well-said to full Engrish, and manages to hit just about every western and Japanese movie cliche that exists. Includes priceless gems of crack like:

"You are the second cunning wolf I have wanted to draw iron at."

And

"Have the roses bloomed yet?"
"What are they named?"
"Love."


And let's not forget

"This is sukiyaki, not a damned lollipop!"

The plot? Well, the plot is a "war of the roses" between two gangs, white and red (Heike and Genjis) over some gold/treasure. Both are led by a bishounen master (one of whom decides to be called Henry from Henry VI). Of course a mysterious stranger comes along to settle the difference. In the end the only one left alive is the half-breed boy Heihachi who's left alone with a huge treasure box of gold standing in the middle of a town buried under a foot of snow, as the Mysterious Stranger rides off. The credits tell us that Heihachi went to Italy and became Batman "a man named Django."

None of this movie makes any sense. However, because it's a Tarantino film there is unexpectedly pretty cinematography and actually a really nice soundtrack. Which I might have to acquire.

It is a total crack film and is also kind of brilliant. My mind was broken, but in a good way.

I rate this movie WRF. It is beyond even WTF and into pure craziness. Good craziness.

Clearly, I need to watch awful kung fu movies more often.



*Kung Fu, but with guns. LOTS OF GUNS.
flameraven: (Default)


So, with an absence of really interesting things happening lately, I’m going to start writing about some of the weird (or unexpected) things I’m seeing here in Japan.

The first thing I’ll talk about is something that’s giving me a bit of trouble—namely, the cost of food, particularly produce. Normally, produce is all I eat. Fruits and veggies, bread and pasta, that’s most of my diet right there. Here… that’s not really an option.

Fruit is the worst of it. The most obvious expense are the melons—a watermelon (suika), which is only half the size of one you’d find in the US (about the size of a basketball), goes for a cool $30. I’m told they’re not in season yet, and when they are, they go for about $15. Because that’s… such an improvement. Watermelons in the US are what, maybe $5 in the summer? And they’re a lot bigger than the ones you find here. Cantelopes are about $8 or $9 each as well, and there are a few other melons which I’m less familiar with, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen any go for less than $8 each.

The melons are infamously expensive (if you bring a melon to someone’s house as a gift, you’re a seriously generous person), but the rest of the fruit is just as bad. Apples may be huge here, softball-sized instead of the ones you see at home, but they’re also almost $4 each. The cheapest apples I saw were a pack of five for about $5, and they bruised ridiculously fast. A pack of strawberries are $5 or so each. The station grocery recently got American cherries in stock—they run $5 for less than a pint, and $8 or so for a full pint. Japanese cherries (sakuranbo), though, are almost $10 (980yen) for the same amount. And on the same scale as the melons, I saw a single mango selling for nearly $24. (See the pic above.)

Even if you do splurge and buy some of the fruit, it doesn’t keep for more than a day or maybe two. Keleih has spent more on food than I have, but she’s been complaining that when buying bananas, she gets a bunch for about $5, but that they don’t stay good long enough for her to eat them—they bruise and brown almost immediately.

Vegetables aren’t quite as bad, but if you don’t want to spend a fortune, you have to buy Japanese-grown veggies only. A daikon the size of a baseball bat is only $2, but that same $2 will only buy you a handful of peas or green beans—a problem for me, as I’d originally planned on buying veggies to mix in with pasta. However, I won’t spend the $8 or more it would take to get a pound of vegetables, and as far as I can tell, they don’t do frozen vegetables. At least, I haven’t seen any.

I talked to Yuuhei about this, because he asked what surprised me in Japan, and this was one of the biggest things. (I mean, I knew that fruit was expensive when I came here the first time, but I wasn’t the one paying for groceries then, so it didn’t really sink in as much.) His response was that the Japanese like to have the best fruits possible. And I mean, this is true, the fruits are delicious if you buy them. You are getting great fruit for your money.

However, I’m still not sure the trade-off is worth it. The labor involved in getting this perfect fruit is apparently huge—I’m no expert on the subject, but I’ve seen the apple trees which are bent into perfect T-shapes so that the fruit gets more sun and can grow bigger. Brian tells me that they actually cut off all the smaller apples so that the ones left can grow even bigger. And the watermelons are apparently hand-rotated so they’re perfectly round. (I think square watermelons were also considered, since they’d be easier to ship.) Add that to the fact that Japan has to import a lot of the fruits, and you get these ridiculously high costs.

Yuuhei didn’t seem bothered by the cost of produce, and seemed content with this idea that it’s better to pay more and get the best fruits possible, but then, the Japanese don’t seem to eat much fruit anyway. I still remember my first time here—Mia and I were both starved for fruit. I ate mikans by the handful in the winter, and both of us would gobble down as much fruit as we could whenever we were at a party or whatever that would have plates of mixed fruit… and the Japanese would watch us in amazement. Mia said that one of her host mothers tried to stop her from eating more than one mikan a day, because it was “bad for her,” and I got a similar response from one family I stayed with. When I requested orange juice to drink, my host mother refused, saying it had “too much sugar,” and it wasn’t good for me. So maybe if you don’t eat more than a few sliced pieces of apple at a time, it doesn’t bother you that you can’t buy, you know, three pounds of cherries and eat them all at once. But it bothers me, and all I can say is that when I get home, I might be going a little crazy in the produce section.

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