Archive for August, 2006
Nice Hey Ya Cover
Saturday, August 12th, 2006Whoa! Twister in the middle of a soccer game…
Friday, August 11th, 2006The Worst Korean Fashion Advice
Saturday, August 5th, 2006Digital Chosunilbo (English Edition) : Summer Fashion No-Nos and How to Avoid Them
The hot summer days are not a good time to dress respectably: any extra piece of clothing is likely to get drenched in sweat, and exposing too much of your body can embarrass others if it doesn™t embarrass you. The Chosun Ilbo singles out the no-nos and offers advice on how to avoid them.
No: A prominent panty line inside a pair of tight skinny jeans, black polka-dot panties visible outside a white skirt, lace panties visible over a pair of low-rise pants — plus, for good measure, some excessive flab around the tummy.
Yes: Thongs or seamless panties can avoid showing off what you are wearing underneath. When you wear a pair of low-rise pants, match them with low-rise panties.
No: Exposing worn colored bra straps, adjusting bra straps in front of others, wearing clothes that expose too much of your body and are only suitable for the beach; and for men, wearing T-shirts with armpits soaked or discolored with perspiration.
Yes: When you want to expose your shoulders, wear strapless bras. If you sweat heavily, you can wear half-sleeved underwear or T-shirts inside your outer garments. There are sweat-absorbing pads to be attached around armpits available on the market.
No: Wearing sleeveless tops without waxing your armpits properly or wearing sandals without trimming your toenails, with hardened skin visible on the soles of your feet.
Yes: Hair removers for women that pull out the hair at the root are available in the shops. Apply scrub to wet feet to rub off the hardened skin and use foot cream, and get a pedicure to make your feet look neat and clean.
No: Wearing a pair of noisy flip-flops working in the office or on the subway.
Yes: Prepare an extra pair of slippers for the office when you find sandals other than flip-flops too uncomfortable to wear. Better slippers than flip-flops.
No: Wearing white socks inside sandals; matching shorts with black dress socks while running on the treadmill; wearing shirts so tight they show the shape of your nipples; wearing just a vest without anything inside it.
Yes: Sandals are worn with bare feet, for heaven™s sake. If you must wear socks, choose footlets: at least they don™t reach the ankle.
No: Chic and cheap, matching designer clothes with farmyard manners. Spitting in Prada, baggy hip hop pants on short legs, designer bags and dirty old shoes¦ that is taking the mix-and-match principle a step too far.
Yes: The basic principle is good manners. Then strike a balance among different items, rather than focusing on a single one, and the summer is yours.
No: Wearing shorts in a fancy restaurant or high-heeled shoes at outdoor pools, staggering around in 10 cm wedge heels when you can™t cross the street in time, coming out in you underwear in the name of a lingerie look: all these just betray your total ignorance of fashion.
Yes: Grow your ability to adapt fashions to your own style. When you try a new style, do it by halves just to be on the safe side.
People Are Messed Up!!!
Saturday, August 5th, 2006Digital Chosunilbo (English Edition) : Shallow Girls and the Men Who Love to Hate Them
Controversy surrounds an Internet-born neologism for terminally shallow women, “doenjang-nyeo.” Doenjang is of course the soy bean paste that is one of the cornerstones of Korean cuisine, and -nyeo is the female suffix. But the true origin of the term, it seems, was not the unoffending paste but in the exclamation “jyaenjang” used to express dissatisfaction and roughly translating as “Damn!” But this was softened to the more palatable culinary reference.
One Netizen’s satirical account of a day in the life of a doenjang-nyeo runs as follows. “Gets up at 7:30 a.m. to the sound of the cell phone alarm, even though her first class doesn’t start till 10, and heads for the bathroom. To give her hair the Jeon Ji-hyun-look, she refuses to use cheap shampoos… she can’t eat breakfast because she™s too busy doing her makeup, so she heads for the Dunkin Donuts in front of her school.
“For diet reasons, she orders a straight Americano — no sugar, no cream — but then eats donuts crammed with jam and sugar. Same for lunch. Because the doenjang-nyeo knows how precious she is (just like the L’Oreal commercials, she says to herself, ‘Because I’m worth it!’) she can never be seen eating with the rest of the students at the cafeteria or the student center. The three just don™t mesh.
The doenjang-nyeo blows in one sitting the amount a regular student spends on food for a week. Some feel the depiction is more than just a send-up: there is rage there too. Women students say that replies to postings on the topic and copying and reprinting are just perpetuating the dispute.
The Chosun Ilbo wanted to know if there is a grain of truth in the account, asking 249 university students, “Are there so-called ‘doenjang’ men or women at your campus?” Some 37.4 percent admitted there are plenty of both, and a bitter 18 percent said basically all female students would fit into that category. The emotions some people, specifically men, feel when they encounter these types can sometimes translate into self-torment. Proof is in the emergence of another stereotype, the “Gochujang-nam. Gochujang is the red pepper paste that is also indispensable in every Korean meal, and -nam is the male suffix.
The hapless gochujang-nam clearly exists at the other end of the economic scale from the unattainable doenjang-nyeo. “To save a mere W300 (US$1=W965), he takes the neighborhood bus instead of the city bus. Eating at the school cafeteria is a waste of money, so he heads to the nearest convenience store. A Netizen called Lee Da-hye demands on a website, “There are plenty of guys out there that are wrapped up vanity too. Why are they only attacking the women? I’m concerned that we may now be seeing the emergence of neo-chauvinist thinking.”
Ji Mi-ran (22) is a third-year student at Ewha Woman’s University. “I have a couple of friends who are obsessed with their looks, but they™re definitely a minority, she says. These days female university students are sticking to the trends, and it’s not healthy to ridicule them in a cruel caricature.”
Some feel it is Korean men’s “army complex” that is at the heart of the doenjang-nyeo hoo-ha. “While we are struggle through two years in the military, girl students go on backpacking vacations, or study foreign languages, complains Kim Jae-won, who has finished his military service and returned to his studies. It seems it™s borne out of feeling among men that they are being treated unfairly because women get to enjoy campus life more.” In other words, it could be linked to a sense of reverse discrimination after employers started to abolish extra points for male applicants who had served in the military. In our survey, 46.3 percent of male students agreed that reverse discrimination is starting to emerge both on campus and in society as a whole.
Grumblings cover all aspects. “After coming back from the Army, it’s hard to get serious about studying again. On top of that, we don’t even get bonus points any more,” says one respondent. “There is a common room for women in every department of universities, but none for men,” complains another. A third sums it up: “Why is ‘ladies first’ the unquestionable way?” Women’s studies scholar Min Ga-young of Hongik University admits, “It™s true that both the doenjang-nyeo and gochoojang-nam exist on campus, but the problem is in extrapolating that all female students are that type and attacking them on that basis.” Essentially, the doejang-nyeo debate is not about gender but about economics. “But instead of taking their fight about the burden of military service to the defense or labor ministries, they take it out on the opposite sex,” Min adds.
Prof. Kim Jeong-un of Myongji University™s Department of Leisure Management diagnoses the problem as stemming from the realities of youth unemployment and associated stresses. “It™s common for people who are unhappy to construct an imaginary enemy, Kim says. Once an object has been identified, a consensus starts to crystallize and mass rage, hostility and illogicality are born.”
Sung Young-shin, a psychologist at Korea University, says, she is concerned that the doenjang-nyeo controversy will rekindle old views of all women who care about their appearance as dim. “Male and female students in their 20s, who need a more mature perspective on each other, have instead been galvanized along gender lines by this black-and-white logic, she adds. Perpetuating these misconceptions will be bad for both sides.”
Osaka January 2004 Panorama
Saturday, August 5th, 2006Tons of hilarious reviews for milk sold on Amazon.com
Saturday, August 5th, 2006This is probably the funniest thing I have ever seen on digg…
“I love this milk. Nothing like coming home after a long day’s work, getting my wife to pour me a glass of this milk, and then punching her right in the jaw. MMM MMM GOOD!” - P. Gibson, review from Amazon.com


