Month: September 2010

  • Top 5 & fashion this week

     1) I got two tickets to see Lady Gaga this April!  I could not be more excited.  I got them on the "special access code" member pre-sale 25 minutes after it opened and most of the tickets were already sold out (all the cheapest ones).  Amazing.

    2) I just bought this coach bag for $25 last night-- I think now my outfit for the October wedding I mentioned earlier is complete.  The bag, meh, we'll see.  I just didn't have anything to go with brown.
    I want to do a separate post about said outfit with some photos.  I think I'm proud of myself.  Satisfied at least.  Sadly, it has been a long time since I've felt proud about an accomplishment.

    3) Speaking of fashion, this site is sooooo fun: http://social.macys.com/findyourmagic/#/intro/fashion
     
    You create your own look every day and people can vote.  (Vote for me!  Search justgotspaid@yahoo.com)

    VERY fun thing to do at work

    4) I saw The Town earlier this week.  IT WAS AWESOME.  One of my favorite things about the movie besides and ending and the amount of gunfire, was that all the dirt went down in the FLOWER SHOP!  Just like real life ha ha ha ha.  Go see this.  I have a new respect for Ben Affleck.

    5) It looks like Kim Jong Il's youngest son will ascend the "thrown."  Damn.  I don't know much about the kid, but I'm betting this isn't going to bring about a lot of positive change for the people of NorKor.  Though, at this point, it seems like any change at all would be good for the country.  ....waiting.....

  • Boeing Boeing

     I had a pretty good weekend.  Nothing too much to write/ comment on.  I just feel like I should write more "personal" posts.

    Friday night I was forced to get a new cell phone.  I really hate changing/ updating technology.  I probably had the last model since 2005, so this was a big step for me.  Its not too bad.  Then, Kyohei and I were up 'til 4am.  We attended a welcome party for a friend's new roommate from Japan.  I felt like I was in college again.  It was good fun until I spent all weekend trying to recover from my lack of sleep.  Dude, when did I get so old!? 

    Saturday I worked at the flowershop and then tried to sleep through the outrageously loud football game and fans.  Woke up and walked a block to buy a hotdog from a drunk street vendor who called me "sugar," "babe," and "sweety" one too many times.  It was worth it.  I love street food.  He did give me his business card.  Question: can one refer to oneself as a caterer if all you do is run a hotdog cart?

    Sunday Kyohei and I went to a cafe before church.  It was lovely.  If I wasn't so desperate to get every possible second of sleep that I can I would suggest breakfast dates more often.  Got together with Tara and Ed (all of us former full-time flowershop employees) and went to the theater to see Boeing Boeing.  It was hilarious.  I'm sure the three drinks I had prior/during the show didn't hurt.

      taken with my new camera phone-- not so great because it was dark.

    I did start to break in my new orange boots.  I bought them to wear to the wedding next month where I will face my demons.  With these awesome shoes, I will have to confidence to succeed.  I got lots of comments on them.  Pictures of the outfit will come later.

  • Kim Jong Nam

     A fun article about the ridiculously luxurious life of Kim Jong Il's oldest son.  After being exiled from NorKor for an embarrassing incident in Japan, this "prince" is forced to live off a paltry $500,000 a year stipend.  Apparently, he is helping the economy in his many ports of call.  Why the hell would you want to have Kim Jong Il's job when you can live like this in exile.  right!?

    See article. 

  • What happens when you put a NK defector behind the wheel of a new car?

    That question is being answered in an ongoing web video series being put out by Ford Motor Company.  Two videos are up now with more to come in the near future.

    The defector in question is "Danny," who left North Korea for China in 2005 and who eventually found his way into the United States with the assistance of Liberty in North Korea (LiNK).  LiNKis an America-based organization that aims to assist North Korean refugees hiding in China and raise awareness of the ongoing humanitarian crisis in North Korea and the problems facing North Koreans in China.  I have been an admirer of the organization since 2004.

    Danny is one of a relative handful of North Korean refugees who have made it the the USA.

    While the "give one guy a car" bit may seem trivial, the series is useful in reminding people that there are hundreds of thousands of people who have escaped the brutal regime in Pyongyang.  The first two episodes also address some of the difficulties faced by refugees who make it to the USA.

    Note:  When Danny refers to his "church pastor," in the video he is clearly not talking about about his life in North Korea.  There are only a couple of official churches in North Korea and the pastors there are government officials who would certainly not have helped him escape the country.

    This is such a cool story.  Definitely go and check out the videos.  They are really short and this guy is really cute/ friendly-looking kinda fellow.

    Also, worth a look is this group, LiNK, which is devoted to helping NorKor refugees.  I will be poking around that site as soon as I post this.

  • oohh how I love vending machines.  They were (literally) a life saver on the pilgrimage.... and I'm sure other times in Japan.

    Japan's vending machines sell cool bananas, read minds

    Posted: 24 September 2010 0014 hrs

     
     
    Photos 1 of 1


    A vending machine that sells fresh bananas in Tokyo, Japan.

       
     

    TOKYO: They sell umbrellas, flowers and cooked meals, cough up cool drinks after earthquakes and even try to read your mind: they are Japan's five million vending machines.

    Scattered across the country, the automated stores are about as ubiquitous as traffic lights and offer an ever-widening, dizzying palette of goods.

    Thanks to Japan's low crime rate, companies have placed them everywhere, from neon-lit city centres to the icy summit of Mount Fuji, with little risk of them being burgled and relieved of their rich coin vaults.

    "They are so convenient, I wish I had one in my room," said 18-year-old Tokyo resident Hibiki Miura, who like many Japanese finds it hard to imagine modern civilisation without the handy helpers.

    Japan has 2.5 million vending machines that sell just beverages - about one for every 50 people. They generated a staggering 27 billion dollars last year, says the Japan Vending Machine Manufacturers' Association.

    Machines that sell other miscellaneous goods - from cigarettes to toys, flower bouquets and even printed oracles at Shinto shrines - raise the total to more than five million, according to industry estimates.

    In the world's most saturated vending machine market, providers are competing ever more fiercely to be noticed above the machines' neon-glare and the clatter of change with novel new offerings.

    Dole Japan Ltd turned heads when it set up a banana vending machine at a Tokyo train station in June, selling chilled bananas for 130 yen (US$1.50) each or a bunch of about five for 390 yen. (that IS a good deal!)

    "You can buy bananas at convenience stores or supermarkets, but people seem to find it fun to buy them from a vending machine," said Dole spokeswoman Hiromi Ohtaki. "People think it's fun to watch, fun to buy and fun to eat."

    Some machines provide added social functions, such as news flashes and baseball scores on electronic display boards.

    Coca-Cola (Japan) Co. says 5,100 of its 980,000 machines will roll out drinks free in the wake of major earthquakes and other disasters. [NICE!]

    Most recently, a machine provided 680 bottles of beverages to people who fled their homes in the northern prefecture of Hokkaido when a quake in distant Chile triggered a tsunami alert for Japan in February.

    At the other end of the Japanese archipelago, in a remote village of subtropical Okinawa island, Coca-Cola says it supports a nature survey with vending machine-mounted microphones that record chirps of rare birds.

    The very latest in high-tech vending machines even attempts to make the consumer's choice for them, using a camera and software that recognises a person's sex and 10-year age band with about 75 percent accuracy.

    Using the point-of-sale data, the machine at Tokyo's Shinagawa train station may look at a person and suggest a sports drink or a chilled can of espresso based on its accumulated marketing wisdom.

    Trying the machine recently, Hidemi Mio, 48, said that after scrutinising her with its digital brain for a second, it recommended three drinks on its 47-inch touch-screen display, including a flavoured tea.

    Happily, the machine guessed correctly, picking one of her favourites, she said, adding that she would take on board the machine's suggestions again in future, especially "when I can't make a decision".

    Payments can be made with swipe cards and cellphones as well as cash.

    To protect consumers' privacy, images are deleted immediately, but data on sex, age and purchasing choice is accumulated, said Toshinari Sasagawa, general manager for sales at JR East Water Business Co, which operates the machine.

    "We've got data on what was sold, where and when. On top of that, we'll get information on customer attributes, which we hope to use for a better product line-up and development," he said.

    The machine has been a hit since it was set up last month, said Sasagawa. Its sales are triple that of any of the other 50 vending machines in the same station, he said while declining to disclose exact sales volume.

    JR East Water Business, wholly owned by the giant railway operator, plans to set up 500 units of the "next-generation" machine over the next two years.

    In future, vending machines may increase their "communications with people," Sasagawa said. "We want customers to experience and enjoy a purchasing process that is different from simply buying from a vending machine."

    - AFP/de


    a photo from my pilgrimage days.... a coca-cola vending machine graveyard... er.... garden.

  • Top 5 in line

     Imagine my delight when I found this article today.

    The top 5 possible successors of Kim Jong Il.  Because there is a conference coming up (the first of its kind in 44 years), there is speculation that KJI will name his successor.  Who do you want to win?

    5. Gen. Kim Kyok-sik

    Gen. Kim Kyok-sik, in charge of troops in the southwest of North Korea and deemed a total loyalist, is believed to have personally masterminded and ordered the attack in March on the South Korean Navy corvette, the Cheonan, in which 46 South Korean sailors died.

    “He may be one of the most trustworthy generals,” says Kim Tae-woo, a senior fellow at the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses . He’s also one of the youngest, though still in his 60s. Analysts suggest that he might adopt a more independent course once Kim Jong-il steps down – and may not want to support Jang Song-thaek.

    General Kim is a former Army chief of staff and was somewhat “demoted” to his present post, but clearly has support where it counts.

    4. Kim Jong-un

    Although Kim Jong-un is assumed somehow to be in line to succeed his father, neither his name nor his photograph have appeared in public until recently.

    Kim Jong-un, who is 27, might be chosen as a front for others. He is the second son of Kim Jong-il and Ko Young-hee, a dancer who passed away in 2004. It is reported widely that he got a secondary education at a private school in Bern, Switzerland, where he was apparently a fan of the National Basketball Association. He is said to speak English, French, and German, and to be a hard competitor.

    When he returned to North Korea, he was educated at Kim Il-sung University, named for his long-ruling grandfather, and has reportedly been given a mid-level post as an “inspector” at the National Defense Commission, the center of power in North Korea that is chaired by his father, Kim Jong-il.

    Though he is thought to have been educated abroad, he is also considered to be an inexperienced, untested young man. Kim Jong-un may become a secretary of the Workers’ Party, of which Kim Jong-il is general secretary, or be given a minor post to suggest he’s training for bigger things.

    3. Kim Kyong-hui

    Kim Kyong-hui, Kim Jong-il’s younger sister, married to Kim's unofficial No. 2, Jang Song-thaek, is also a strong contender for power in her own right. Jang and Kim Kyong-hui reportedly met at university in North Korea and studied together in Moscow. In charge of light industry for the party, she’s been photographed with Kim Jong-il, as well as her husband, on frequent visits to industrial cities and military bases over the past year or two.

    A member of the central committee of the party, she has a close relationship with Kim Jong-il and is assumed to have been instrumental in her husband’s renaissance as an important figure. It’s possible that Jang and his wife might wind up in senior party posts, but analysts wonder if military leaders might object to power falling into the hands of people who have never had significant military experience.

    2. Jang Song-thaek

    Jang Song-thaek is often cited as a possible “regent” if Kim Jong-un rises to a top post after Kim Jong-il passes on. Jang owes his power in large measure to the influence of his wife, Kim Jong-il’s younger sister, Kim Kyong-hui.

    Mr. Jang rose through the ranks of the Workers’ Party but disappeared from view for several years. Then in 2006 he came back on the radar after the death of Kim Jong-ill's wife, Ko Young-hee, who may have viewed him as a threat to the rise of her son Kim Jong-un.

    Jang, however, was not known to have had military experience when he was named to the national defense commission and then to the post of commission vice chairman in June. Now viewed as the second most-powerful man in the country, he accompanied Kim Jong-il to Beijing in May when both of them met China’s President Hu Jintao.

    1. General O Kuk-ryol

    General O Kuk-ryol, a former air force commander, is sometimes said to be the second most-powerful man in North Korea after Kim Jong-il, whom he has known from his youth.

    In his late 70s, he has served as chief of the staff of the Army. He lost out in a dispute with another top general, then bounced back as head of the defense bureau of the Workers’ Party, a post that may make him a key player in the upcoming party conference.

    Personally, I hope Kim Kyong Hui, KJI's little sister gets the job.  It would be a nice step for women (smirk) and hopefully she would bring a softer touch than a military man or inexperienced rich kid.  Just saying.

  • "Running over the same old ground. What have you found? The same old fears." -Pink Floyd

     Oh shit! Why does a bad break-up that happened 10 years ago still continue to haunt and taint happy memories of my life today.  NEVER, EVER, EVER date someone in your friends-group.

    I've whined, cried and bitched about this situation before on xanga and this time I really pray that it is that last.  I'm just going to have to be very, very brave, put on my big-girl panties and DEAL WITH THIS SHIT AGAIN.

    re-cap: My friend, AR and I used to be SUPER close.  That is, until she started dating her now-husband when I graduated and left for Japan.  This guy (her now-husband) and I had a very, very, very bad break up my Jr. year of college.  Same old story:  best friend turns boyfriend then mysteriously stopped talking to me and told all our friends these really nasty lies about me (this is before I started dating lots of guys-- so I was still a good girl), I come back from a semester abroad and wonder if I have any friends left.  It wrecked me for like a whole year.  Then he started dating AR and she stopped talking to me (no-show at my wedding, etc etc etc).  I lost two best friends on that deal and I don't even know what I did wrong or why.

    NOW: The reason AR and I became so close is because we were both in Dance Company together in college.  We spent hours together every day.  AR and her husband and I have all these mutual friends-- so I keep finding out about their life even though I don't want to.  I can't escape their haunting memory. 

    Now, one of my favorite people the whole world-- my ballet prof from college is getting married.  The only other person I know who is invited to the wedding-- that's right.  AR and husband.  I won't even have Kyohei because he has to work and will not be making the trip to Ohio with me.  I will be alone, staring at two people who are rich and happy, who I used to love, and now hate me.  The hatred is kinda mutual. 

    I want to run and cry.  I can't very well tell the only person I can think to confide in because she was not invited to the wedding- I think that will hurt her feelings.   Should I just tell her anyway?  I just wish I wasn't going there alone.  At least I could talk about them in Japanese to Kyohei all night....  sigh.  Never marry a chef.

    What would you do? 

  • Kanye's big redemption

     Two thumbs up for Kanye West's performance at the MTV VMAs two nights ago.  Unlike many hiphop performances and videos that tend toward over-sexed dance and costumes for the women performing, Kanye featured beautifully clothed women performing lyrical and modern dance.  How refreshing not to see women's bodies objectified!  Good job Kanye.  I'm still a big fan and I can't wait for your next tour. 

    Love,
    justgotspaid

  • surprising good news

     This really is somewhat heart-warming.  Synapsis: This American POW witnessed horrific things Japanese soldiers forced on him and his fellow POWs, survived, came back to the States, had a Japanese exchange student (from Matsuyama!!), and recently set in motion a Japanese-sponsored trip for some American POWs to go to Japan and hear an apology.  AMAZING.  The news article is a bit long, but worth the read.

    Unusual bond heals wounds over Japan's WWII POWs

    ELLIOT SPAGAT - Associated Press Writer - Associated Press
    Manufacturing.Net - September 11, 2010

    Lester Tenney was stunned to receive a call that Japan's new ambassador to the United States would see him. He had tried for years to seek an apology from Japanese officials for the atrocities he witnessed and endured as a prisoner of war during World War II.

    His letters and calls seeking justice and reconciliation were routinely ignored.

    Then, on Veterans Day 2008, more than 63 years after the end of the war, Tenney was visiting Arlington National Cemetery when word finally came. The Japanese embassy was closed for the holiday, so Ichiro Fujisaki invited the former POW to his home. The two men and their wives sipped tea. The ambassador asked how he might help.

    The unexpected rapprochement led to friendship, and to Sunday's trip to Japan by a group of American POWs, including Tenney. Although Japan has hosted former POWs from other nations since 1995, it will be the country's first ever sponsored trip aimed at reconciling with American POWs.

    Tenney says he plans to bow to the Japanese out of respect and courtesy for the first time as he meets with lawmakers and foreign ministry officials, not out of fear as he did during the war.

    "It's going to mean we're finally treated like first-class citizens," Tenney said at his home in a gated retirement community near San Diego, a fountain gurgling in his small Japanese garden.

    At 90, Tenney remains a barrel-chested raconteur with a booming voice and sharp wit.

    Fujisaki, 63, was born two years after the war ended. He had been on the job only five months, but knew that Tenney had not received any response from Japanese officials.

    "This request came and we thought, 'Why not, if this gentleman wants to meet us?'" the ambassador said in an interview with The Associated Press.

    The conversation had been welling in Tenney since April 9, 1942, when the United States surrendered on the Philippines' Bataan Peninsula, ending a four-month battle. Thousands died walking for days in tropical heat to prison camp.

    Tenney doesn't remember how many prisoners he saw beheaded, killed by bayonet or shot to death on the infamous Bataan Death March — dozens, perhaps more than 100. Many more died in the next few weeks from disease.

    He told the ambassador that he saw a Japanese guard order two Americans to bury a malaria-stricken mate alive because he was too weak to stand. When they refused, the guard shot one dead. The next Americans pulled from the line buried both soldiers — one dead, one alive and screaming.

    "When you have to watch your own friends get killed and you have to stand there and can't do a thing, it is awful," Tenney said in a later interview, his voice shaking with emotion. "It stays with you forever."

    For three years, Tenney worked 12-hour days in a Japanese coal mine, watching men die in droves from disease. He ate only three small bowls of rice a day. He remembers an American medic who amputated limbs with a steak knife, without anesthetics.

    Tenney told the ambassador that afternoon that he had three wishes: an apology from the Japanese government, an apology from Japanese companies that enslaved the POWs, and a government-paid trip to Japan for American POWs.

    After darkness fell, Fujisaki opened the taxi door for the Tenneys. The ambassador's wife kissed them goodbye.

    As the men exchanged letters over the next few months, Tenney began pressing the ambassador to say a few words at the last annual convention of American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor in May 2009. The group was disbanding after 63 years because too few veterans remained.

    Fujisaki wavered until the last day. He said he decided to go only after Tenney stopped insisting that he deliver good news to the former POWs, that his presence would be enough.

    The ambassador wrote his remarks on the flight to San Antonio. He brought a copy of a 1995 speech in which Japan Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama acknowledged widespread damage that the Japanese military caused during the war. Fujisaki thought he could quote Murayama's speech directly, even though it did not mentioned POWs.

    "You're entering a lion's den," Tenney told the ambassador as they neared the podium.

    The speech that followed was unprecedented,

    Fujisaki said Japan's regrets over World War II extended to its treatment of POWs, including those captured in Bataan. It was the first — and still the only — time that a Japanese official has explicitly apologized to POWs.

    The ambassador, who spent a year of junior high school in Seattle and attended Brown and Stanford universities, said he consulted no one in Tokyo about the remarks.

    "I felt that we should not miss that opportunity," he said.

    About half the audience of 500 people — 70 POWs and the rest descendants — gave him a standing ovation, while others jeered or stayed silent, according to Tenney.

    After lunch in his hotel room, Fujisaki told Tenney that he was trying to arrange a trip to Japan for the POWs. Foreign ministry officials say Fujisaki was instrumental in getting Japan to earmark 18 million yen ($213,000) in March for the visit.

    Japan has previously hosted POWs from Britain, Australia and the Netherlands. Fujisaki says he has no idea why it took so long to invite the Americans. Tenney suspects resentment over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki contributed to the delay.

    Tenney, who taught accounting and finance at San Diego State and Arizona State universities after the war, worked with the U.S. State Department to pick the 14-member delegation. The first 10 POWs he called were unfit to travel, so he created a raffle.

    The final count for the eight-day trip starting Sunday is six POWs and six of their relatives, plus two daughters of POWs who died.

    After a short time in Tokyo, each POW will travel to a city of his choice. Some will visit the factories, docks or mines where they worked.

    Tenney and his wife of 50 years, Betty, won't visit his old mine or the former employer who has ignored his requests to meet. The mine operator, formerly Mitsui Mining Co. and now Nippon Coke and Engineering Co., did not return calls seeking comment.

    Fujisaki, who isn't going on the trip, said he cannot force Japanese companies to participate — the only one of Tenney's three wishes he didn't satisfy.

    The Tenneys will instead visit the grave of a Japanese man in Matsuyama who stayed with them as an exchange student in San Diego in 1968 and became a close friend. The Tenneys went to Japan for the man's wedding in 1988 and joined the newlyweds on their honeymoon.

    The first thing that Fujisaki mentioned when asked to recall his initial meeting with Tenney was how the former POW described his friendship with the Japanese man, Toru Tasaka, who was dying of cancer at the time.

    "My wife was very moved and had tears in her eyes," the ambassador said.

    Tenney says his friend taught him not to hate the Japanese people, but he still resented the government.

    The former POW thought of a prison camp officer who shouted that Japan would treat the American prisoners like dogs for the rest of their lives.

    "Over the years asking for a meeting and asking for different things and getting nothing, it made me feel that the Japanese still felt the same way," Tenney said, "that we were lower than dogs and we were cowards."

    Next week's visit, though, means that change has at long last come.

    "By going there next week, it's an indication that I'm going to go with my head held high."

    ___

    Associated Press writer Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed to this report.

  • brew fest!

     Some photos from the brewfest this past weekend:

    We decided to take a group photo before we all started drinking.  I'm the dork in the yellow 2009 Brewfest hat.  Yes, I did think I was cooler than everyone because I had last year's hat.

    This year, they didn't have all the stickers and swag that they usually do.  To compensate, I took a lot of beer photos.


    This Limited release Woodchuck is amazing.  Life-changing even.  Too bad I cannot find it in any stores around here.  If you have an opportunity to get this-- do it!

    not too bad for a fruity beer actually.  I was surprised.  It was perfect for the hot, hot weather.


    Always a great beer quote for the t-shirts.

    I don't know these people.  They let me take a picture because I promised myself to remember to make these pretzel necklaces next year. 


    I DO like a Belgian style beer.  But IPAs are my favorite.


    Cool pirate swag at the Laugunitas stand.

     
    Dogfish Head bringing it with four flavors! whhoohooo.

    what it is like to be me at brew fest


    I DO appreciate a fancy bottle

      
    We went to this brewery/restaurant for dinner afterward too.  I love it!

       I'm not sure how I missed getting a shot of this, but I was VERY happy to see my old friend there.  This has fueled much fun in St. Patrick's Days of 'yor in Molly McPherson's, Savannah, GA.  (yor = 2007 and 2009)


    so.... this is what I look like when I laugh.


    The 'after' slightly drunken group shot.

    Let it be known that justgotspaid is pretty much a straight-edge non-participant when it comes to fun things like tattoos, riding in open-air transportation and mood-altering chemicals.  However, the transportative properties of hops are fine by me.  Definitely my drug of choice.  After I lost count of how many servings of hop-laden IPA I had, I was in some sort of happy place that is hard to find.  I think I even started to believe in the goodness of humankind and held onto some sort of optimistic hope for us all at some point.  It was amazing. 

    This hoppy-optimism blossomed into a love for all and life itself.  When I suddenly remembered my mortality, a wave of sweet sadness washed over me.  Sad that I would have to leave all these beerfests behind someday.  I got a drunk text to myself at my work address that read, "

    Sometimes i just want to remember everyone like this. so happy. i will die. what will everyone look like when they hear the news? will they remem...." then it cuts off.

    Seriously, what is wrong with me?  Maybe I should limit how much I drink. 

    nah

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