Wednesday, December 31, 2008

The year in pictures

What better way to end the year than by taking a step back from everything and unwinding with the people who saw me through the last 24. While I reflect, here's a look at some of my favorite pictures from 2008.


Shitennōji Temple, January


Sapporo Snow Festival, February


ALT musical, March


Tsukiji Market, March


Kho Phangan, April


Miyajima, May


Umeda Sky Building, July


Naruto fireworks, August


Todoroki Falls, September


Kobe Nankin-machi, October


toasting to Obama, November


Mt. Fuji, December

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Witnessing history

What kinds of emotions accompany watching a team go 0-16 in a season? Mostly sympathy. But when you're five MGDs deep at Lambeau and your team is winning for the first time in six weeks, there's a bit of jubilation thrown in as well. Here's what a perfect Sunday back in Wisconsin looks like.


the frozen tundra


the boys


close to sealing the deal


after the win

Friday, December 26, 2008

A holiday tradition revisited

This year I decided to have a little fun with the Christmas album and go with a 2-sided cassette approach. I can't guarantee everyone will like it, but I can promise you it won't get eaten up in your car deck.



Side 1: Osaka Nights
1. MGMT - Time To Pretend
2. Kings of Leon - Sex On Fire
3. The Ting Tings - Keep Your Head
4. Vampire Weekend - Mansard Roof
5. Keane - Better Than This
6. Rod Thomas - Same Old Lines (James Yuill Remix)

Side 2: Kyoto Mornings
7. Coldplay - Now My Feet Won't Touch the Ground
8. City and Colour - The Girl
9. OneRepublic - Come Home
10. Ryan Adams & The Cardinals - Crossed Out Name
11. Bon Iver - Wisconsin
12. Ray LaMontagne - Let It Be Me

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Christmas plans

Hi everyone. I've never before gotten the urge to rob a bank, but if I did, I would wear this.



Merry Christmas.

Friday, December 19, 2008

What's in a name?

Just hours after I was told that one of my seventh grade students has been inexplicably given the nickname "Nicholas Cage," I found this awesome tidbit while killing time at my desk.

From Yahoo! Sports:

I nominate Stylez G. White for best NFL name change of '08
By MJD
Greg White doesn't have the high profile of Bengals receiver Chad Ocho Cinco, formerly known as Chad Johnson. But I do think he's pulled off the best name change of this NFL season.

Buccaneers opponents will no longer be blocking Greg White. They will be blocking Stylez G. White. He made it official in court today.

And for what reason? Because he liked the character Stiles from "Teen Wolf". From The Bucs Report:
White said he picked his new name from a character in the 1985 movie “Teen Wolf,’’ starring Michael J. Fox.

“That was his best friend’s name,’’ White said. “I always liked that name. It’s not that I don’t like Greg White.’’

In the movie, Fox’s friend is named Rupert “Stiles’’ Stilinski. White changed the spelling and adopted the name as his own.
That's fantastic. Normally I'd question the self-esteem of a guy who changes his name to that of a sidekick in a movie, but I'll make an exception if it's Stiles. He's an '80s icon. Not as much as the Teen Wolf himself, but you can't really name yourself Teen Wolf, can you?

If he could find a way to be introduced at home games, and ride into the stadium on top of a van, he would be my hero.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

In the spirit

After orphanage visits on Saturday and a Christmas party Saturday night, a trip to Kobe for the Luminarie proved the perfect way to unwind and sink into the Christmas spirit. The Japanese may not buy into the real story behind Christmas, but they sure do know how to light things up.






12.14.08

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Quantum leaps

I began packing tonight, which means I now have two large empty suitcases sitting on my floor staring vacantly at me. To say that the thought of collecting my things to come home for vacation is slightly strange for me would be an understatement.

I've read that the first signs of reverse culture shock come within the first twenty-four hours of being home, but I say they happened when it took me and three of my friends ten minutes last night to remember that thinly-latticed American wheat crackers are called Triscuits. For better or worse, this is sure to be a long strange week.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Holiday perks

Bruce Wayne has Batman, Peter Parker has Spiderman, and once a year every December, I transform into a raggedy Santa-san. Hide your children.


before


after

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

After revision

Twelve months later, this is what my heart and head look like pre-2009.



A bit more crowded, to be sure, but I've found that I'm better at compartmentalizing these days. Here's hoping I can continue to refill the cabinets that have been collecting dust in the coming months.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Smarter than the computer

A bit of snobbery bred from rainy day boredom at work...

(click to enlarge)

Really Yahoo??

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Plug and play?

My good friend and Melburnian Josh put me on to this earlier today:
Bonus content for fans on USB-stick albums



The Australian music industry is getting behind a new locally developed music format that will allow consumers to access an ongoing stream of bonus content and listen to their collections from any computer or mobile phone.

From this week albums from Sneaky Sound System, Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu and local indie acts Grafton Primary and Skipping Girl Vinegar will be sold on USB sticks featuring new "DDA" digital album technology.

People who buy the albums register with an online locker system that not only makes a back-up of the songs - which can then be accessed from any other computer or mobile phone - but also provides access to a swathe of bonus content provided by the artist on an ongoing basis such as photos, videos, lyrics, artwork, new tracks and even concert tickets.

Read the entire article here.
While I'm always excited about people coming up with inventive new ways to bring music to the masses, I have to admit I'm a little concerned. Bonus features are great, but they make an artist lazy. Instead of buying the fourth re-release of a record, why can't we just pay four dollars extra for an EP of new material? It's not that I'm against new technology, it's just that...

My parents' old Beatles LPs are timepieces. They look like they did forty years ago, they sound like they did forty years ago, and they contain the same songs as they did when they were first released. What happens when you put that album on a flash drive? Maybe all of a sudden one day the songs are re-mastered. Maybe someone goes in and touches up the cover art file. Perhaps Paul's bridge on "A Day In The Life" is replaced with a guest performance by Jay-Z. When does an album as we know it seize to be an album?

Call me old fashioned, but I think it's worth a think through anyway.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Review - Chinese Democracy

When I was in the fourth grade, my elementary school had “Dress As Your Idol Day.” While other students came to school dressed as Cal Ripken Jr. or Emmitt Smith or (how cliché) their father, I took the high road: I dressed as Axl Rose. Why my parents not only allowed to this happen but also helped to handcraft a Guns N’ Roses t-shirt for me I’m still unsure of, but I think the reasons for my choice were justifiable. Namely, that when Axl Rose was confronted with adversity, both personal and musical, he simply pressed on with a fiercer determination and even grander bombast. In other words, he quite literally marched to the beat of his own drummer – who he then fired. At nine, I found this to be admirable.

Seventeen years later, not much has changed. Chinese Democracy is an album of retribution, a not-so-quiet “f you” to those who’ve questioned Rose over the years, and even perhaps to those who didn’t. At 71 minutes, it’s a monster of a record that just may be the most preposterous of the new millennium. Taking a look at the liner notes alone, 11 musicians are given allowances for thank yous, 8 different engineers are credited with supplying the record’s “pro tools,” and 9 of the album’s 14 songs feature at least four different guitar players. And in spite of all of this, or perhaps because of it, the album also happens to rock.

Despite early reports that the album would carry an industrial sound, there’s quite a bit here that sounds like the Guns N’ Roses of old. “Street of Dreams” could easily take its place alongside “November Rain” and “Estranged” in the band’s catalogue of ballads, “Riad N’ The Bedouins” would comfortably find a home on one of the Use Your Illusion albums, and the bluesy “I.R.S.” sounds more like Appetite era Guns than anything the band has put out since 1990.

And yet for all this, it’s the fresher-sounding material that really makes the album go. “Better” is the record’s lone masterpiece, a gritty stomper of a rock song that effortlessly blends genres while carrying along its waves a classic Rose melody. The ballad “This I Love” is even more surprising if not as impressive. Here, Rose howls about love on the rocks accompanied by the kinds of emotive piano and string arrangements that made Evanescence an international powerhouse nearly five years ago. It’s clear by the time the synths fade on Democracy’s last track that the singer never lost his penchant for writing a good tune, but also that like all things in the Guns N’ Roses universe, nothing is that simple.

The true debate over Chinese Democracy will inevitably focus not on the music as a singular piece but rather on whether or not it warrants the two decades of production and millions of dollars spent making it. Indeed, one of the few frustrating things about listening to Chinese Democracy is hearing the moments where Axl very apparently strove too hard to make up the time. While the absurd number of audio samples in “Madagascar” (Martin Luther King Jr., Cool Hand Luke, Braveheart, and Seven, just to name a few) ultimately make the album more outlandishly Axl-like, songs such as “Catcher In The Rye” and “There Was A Time” suffer as they twist and turn one time too many, turning promising melodies into meandering opuses. The songs become “what could have beens” for a band all-too-familiar with such scenarios. Still, you can hardly blame the guy for trying.

What makes the record a triumph, for me, is that nothing on it feels tentative or half-assed. Despite his oft-reported preoccupation with public perception, it’s clear that Axl made the record that he set out to make long ago. Chinese Democracy is a grand, imperfect, and best of all, interesting rock record, and for someone who’s had that adjective used pejoratively towards him so many times before, Rose deserves to hang his hat on that.

Grade: B+

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Happy turkey day

You may be just waking up today to pie in the oven and John Madden on TV, but here in Tokushima Thanksgiving came two weeks early courtesy of The Meat Guy and my good friend Balazs in Kawashima. Friends and dirt field football may never replace the comfort of family, but that doesn't mean I wasn't able to still find plenty to be thankful for.


the table takes shape


the most important part of any Thanksgiving feast


digging into the Thanksgiving guac


vegging out after the feed

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Something tangible

It was 1991 and George Bush Sr. was still in office when Guns N' Roses last released an album of new music, so it seems fitting that 17 years later the Bush era is being brought to a close with the release of Chinese Democracy. I never would have guessed when I was in fifth grade that I would be teaching in Japan the next time I touched a fresh GN'R record, but like the marinating time between consecutive viewings of The Goonies or trips to Disney World, I've found the wait has done little to diminish my excitement.

Full review to come later this week.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Deep in writing

This is where the magic happens.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Office coffee and the interconnectivity of things

Oftentimes when I find myself dumbstruck by the power of modern technology, I put myself on time-out until the shame passes. I must remind myself that most consumer electronics these days are being created and marketed for my generation, and that in truth it just doesn't sound that cool to hear a 24-year-old marveling over the picture quality of an HD TV. However, today when my vice principal pulled up Google maps and had me point out exactly where my house was in Wisconsin and what it looked like, I was happy to don my "gee whiz" look sans embarrassment. There in the teachers room, we - myself, vice principal sensei, and a handful of other teachers - looked at the car sitting in my driveway and discussed the idea of neighborhoods and why mine was so full of trees. Together we strolled down Capital Drive, lauded the impressive outdoor sports facilities at Brookfield East High School, and counted the small airports around the town. And while the technology has been there for several years, we didn't look at it because of its novelty or because the satellite image looked cool; we did so because it was convenient.

I couldn't tell whether my vice principal was talking about my home or the map when he leaned back and remarked, "It's pretty great," but I'm positive that my answer (to either) was resolute: I think so too.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Playing small ball

After going for broke in Tokyo two weeks ago, I decided it was time to shut down for the month and narrow my lens - namely, on studying for my Japanese test in December, and on writing the 2009 Tokushima English-language musical. While the fruits of my labor remain to be seen, a couple of things have happened in the interim: 1) it got cold, and 2) I got around to watching I Survived a Japanese Game Show. And while I don't have much to offer in the way of an actual program review or analysis, I will present the following for consideration:

If the primary result of American reality shows (if not the primary aim) is the satirization of the general population by means of manipulation, is a show like the one mentioned above really necessary? That is, if reality shows produced stateside are already effective in highlighting the often ridiculous nature of those who choose to broadcast themselves to the world, are the secondary cast members and live audience of I Survived a Japanese Game Show actually needed for contrast?

Call it food for thought, and consider me entertained.

Monday, November 10, 2008

500 Miles to Indy

A good friend of mine recently pointed me in the direction of Mortified, a literary nostalgic trip of a website that allows grown men and women to confront their pasts by sharing the stories, poems, and videos they created as kids. I'm thankful for the recommendation for a number of reasons, but mostly I'm just happy to have found 500 Miles to Indy.

When he was 15, Jason Smith wrote and began filming what he considered to be his opus, a movie about car racing that was as much a love letter to his father as it was shoot-for-the-stars piggy bank blockbuster. Unfortunately, shooting on the film ended after only a few days, and 500 Miles to Indy never left the pit. Until now, that is. Thanks to the people at Mortified, a now 30-year-old Smith was able to put his screenplay into action with the help of Hollywood actors the likes of Elijah Wood and James Denton. 15 years later, this is what's become of Mr. Smith's opus:

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Stepping up

Three days post-election and I'm absolutely thrilled. I watched the results roll in from my desk at work, and with tears in my eyes I recalled, of all things, the night we learned that Princess Diana was dead. I had just started the eighth grade and I remember vividly my mother's own tears as the networks reported the news. At the time I couldn't comprehend why she was crying for a woman she neither knew nor was represented by, but as I've grown older, and as I watched Barack Obama walk out into a sea of 100,000 people in Grant Park on Tuesday night, I think I've begun to understand that apart from the obvious tragic circumstances of that death, there was something else at play - something bigger. History. The realization that something has happened in the space of a minute or a day or several hours that will forever change life as you know it. I'm just projecting of course, but I think Mom cried that night because she encountered a moment in which the scope of the event trumped that of her own life. I hardly think I'm alone in saying that I shared one of those moments on Tuesday night.

More than that, though, today I'm proud to be young and imperfect and American. After being told repeatedly throughout the course of your life that your generation doesn't measure up (and did you hear about JFK and Beatlemania?!?), it's easy to simply accept the disappointment. Only this time, we didn't. I read this on the Huffington Post with a healthy measure of pride and humility:
Around 2.2 million more young people voted on Tuesday than did in 2004, accounting for 18 percent of the electorate -- a slight uptick from 17 percent in 2004. But they overwhelmingly voted for Obama: 66 percent to 32 percent - a 34-point spread. That's 25 percent more than the 9-point youth vote advantage Kerry had over Bush.

Patrick Ruffini at The Next Right drills it down further:
Had the Democratic 18-29 vote stayed the same as 2004's already impressive percentage, Obama would have won by about 2 points, and would not have won 73 electoral votes from Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, or Indiana. So, to clarify here: Obama's youth margin = 73 electoral votes."
I think that's pretty cool. But perhaps the most encouraging sign I took from Tuesday's events was the manner in which we celebrated. Not with our thumbs to our noses or with arrogance or a sense of entitlement, but for once with unbridled hope! Amidst the Facebook proclamations of "kill Obama" and the bitterness of a few, there was in fact a real celebration; dignified, joyous, and with gracious appreciation, the way in which we should celebrate every day. For at least a day, the youth of America could at once be proud while making others proud of us. And while we may not yet fulfill the hopes of our parents, who danced to Hendrix and put a man on the moon and helped usher in civil rights, I promise you we'll someday get there.

Yes we can, and yes we will.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Declare yourself, today

No more words. A new day starts tomorrow.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Must see TV

This is exactly the kind of thing I want to see less than a week before the election. These kids are amazing like Michele Bachmann is fucking crazy. If you watch any video in the next five days, make it this one.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

The small beach

Most of my posts as of late have consisted of rehashed news stories and viral videos concerning the election and have generally had nothing at all to do with Japan. While I can't say this check-in exactly breaks the mold in terms of disrupting the former of those conditions, it does at least put the focus back on my current home.



Welcome to Obama, Japan, population 32,000 and just about the only place in the world not yet sick of hearing about the upcoming election. While you may have already heard the story of this small town and their fascination with Obama (Barack, that is), what you probably haven't heard is how appropriately the phenomenon speaks to Japanese pride and regional identities.

For a quick anecdote, let me take you with me on a drive I took not long ago down route 192 in Tokushima. Now Tokushima ranked near last in a 2006 survey of the most desirable prefectures in Japan, but you'd never know it from the advertising here. As my friends and I drove from East to West, we first passed a sign for a shop selling "famous" Tokushima ramen. Despite being just one of a multitude of ramen types sold in Japan (fyi: ramen is actually Chinese, but don't point that out), anyone in Tokushima will swear to you that their prefecture's is totally unique and amongst the country's finest. Of course, after filling up on the noodles, we then had the choice of heading north to the "world famous" Naruto whirlpools, or to go west and check out one of "Japan's 100 most scenic waterfalls." How this ranking is significant in a country roughly the size of California is puzzling, but regardless it never seems to be omitted from the various guidebooks and pamphlets that can be picked up along the road.

I say all this because I firmly believe that Japan is a place where regional pride and identity means everything. And if that's true, then the city of Obama has found the mother of all hooks to hang their hat on. Despite the fact Obama the politician has no actual ties to the Obama the place, the city's residents have nevertheless adopted him as their man, stamping everything from chopsticks to t-shirts to sweets with the senator's likeness, and even setting up their own support club. Clearly, the connection is something the people in this fishing village take seriously.


members of the "Obama Girls" dance troupe show their support


a city official proudly displays a letter from the senator himself


Obama residents cheer as they watch campaign coverage at a rally

Obama may mean "small beach" in Japanese, but at least in one town the word denotes something much bigger.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

8 years later

If in another eight years, we find little to look back on and thank Barack Obama and John McCain for, we can at least credit them with inspiring the revival of one of the all-time great TV ad campaigns. Well worth the wait, if you ask me.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Mailing it in



With my ballot completed, quadruple checked, sealed in an iron box, and officially mailed off, I feel I at least deserve to print out my own sticker. Several months ago, I envisioned this day and imagined the need to justify my vote for Obama. Like the rest of America, I anticipated a tight race and polling places as divided as the constituents themselves. With roughly a week and a half to go before the actual election day, clearly anything can still happen, but the past month or so has, in the least, all but negated my need to put the reasons for my decision into writing. I say this not because I feel that common sense should prevail, but because so many others, including a good number of republicans, have done so already for me. I do, however, feel the need to explain exactly why I feel Obama and this election is so important to my generation. And since it is my blog after all, I ask that you please allow me just this one indulgence.

The first time I saw Barack Obama speak, it was on the Late Show With David Letterman. I have absolutely no recollection of what was spoken about, but I remember being struck by Obama's charisma. I knew very little about politics at the time (as opposed to my mere "limited" knowledge now), but I knew enough to surmise that elections were about roughly 15% policy and facts, and 85% presentation. By my calculation, if the guy with the funny name was indeed going to run for president (as was rumored at the time), I figured he had a pretty good chance of making a real run at it. The more I read about Obama from that point forward, though, the more I realized that there was more than a fair bit of substance to match his style. His views as a social liberal seemed to match up with mine, and I truly appreciated his ability to think critically about issues in a level-headed way. And so I began to do my research, and I watched his speech from the 2004 Democratic Convention, and like so many other young Americans, I was inspired. For the first time in my life, I was actually inspired by a politician. And while it probably shouldn't be, I find that to be amazing. Regardless of what people say about voters my age and our propensity to drink the kool aid for young, eloquent, intelligent black presidential candidates, the fact remains that Mr. Obama was able to motivate and mobilize an entire generation of voters who may not have been active before. And I think that's pretty cool.

My fear then, as we approached the final push not two shorts months ago, was that all that inspiration would somehow end up for naught. If Obama were somehow to lose the election, particularly in a means similar to that of 2000 (and again, anything can happen), I feared that the impact on twenty-somethings and our political engagement would be catastrophic. It now seems, fingers crossed, that that's not going to happen. I want to return to an America that's looking up, even through struggles, and to a leader who inspires us with optimism rather than fear. I want my kids, God willing I have them, to grow up as part of generation that is less cynical about their country than mine. And while I don't know what's going to happen in twelve days, I at least know that I won't be the only one my age holding my breath. After today, it's quite literally out of my hands.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Mind-boggling



Could somebody please explain to me what the hell is going on here? This guy needs to be fired immediately. Inexplicably stupid.

Putting out an APB

What: Debate watching party
Where: Matsumoto Bldg. rooftop
When: Friday, October 24, 7 PM
Why: democracy, terrorism


"Because I'm a maverick, and mavericks like to party"

Monday, October 20, 2008

Conscientious viewing

On the recommendation of a good friend I set aside two hours this past week to watch the PBS Frontline program entitled "The Choice 2008." Not only was the show one of the most objective (and noticeably optimistic) media pieces on politics I've ever seen, but watching it I got the sense that PBS truly cared about educating, and not just entertaining, the general public. Indeed, it would seem that PBS spared no expense in obtaining interviews from some of the campaigns' foremost voices, and in my mind the network earns even more points for publishing a list of journalistic guidelines, as well as a teacher's guide, on the program's website. Details about the issues themselves were somewhat lacking - in reality, if one wanted to hear about the candidates' positions on particular issues, he or she might be wise to look elsewhere - but from a human interest and historical perspective, I have to believe that you'd be hard pressed to find a more illuminating and comprehensive film on the election at present.

Please do yourself a favor and have a look if you get the chance. You can stream the entire program on both the PBS Choice 2008 website and YouTube, or you can download the show free from iTunes.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Zorbing

The "sport" is called zorbing, and it turns out that there are few greater thrills in Tokushima. I spent a good part of yesterday afternoon hamster-balling my way down a hill in Miyoshi, and although I can't share the rush with you, I can at least offer up some of the sights and sounds via my camera. Check it out:


ascending in the zorb express


view from the top


inside the sphere


the ride


another view

At 700 yen a roll, you can bet I'll be back again.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

The world's oldest running joke

I was 10 years old when this was first reported - needless to say, I'm cautiously optimistic. From RollingStone.com:
It’s a day many Guns N’ Roses fans thought would never come: Chinese Democracy, the album Axl Rose has labored over for more than a decade, will finally hit stores on Sunday, November 23rd (a departure from the normal Tuesday record release day). The album will be sold exclusively in Best Buy stores and online at Bestbuy.com and iTunes. A music video is in the works, and the band — in which Rose is the only remaining original member — is expected to tour in 2009, according to a source close to G N’ R. “The music is well worth waiting for,” says Gary Arnold, senior entertainment officer for Best Buy, which began negotiating the deal in 2007. “We’ve all heard the stories about this album, and now everybody gets to hear that it’s real.”

The album’s 14 songs include the poppy “Better,” rocker “Shackler’s Revenge” (featured in the new Rock Band 2), the power ballad “If the World” (which plays in the new film Body of Lies), the anthemic title track and a song called “Scraped” that was previously unknown to fans. “It’s going to be a great rock Christmas,” Arnold says. “I just hope it doesn’t take 14 years for the next one.” BestBuy.com has a listings page up that isn’t taking pre-orders yet but does have the full track list and suggests that there will be several different versions of the album available (or at least a few different covers).

Friday, October 17, 2008

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Uh oh...

Keith Olbermann is pissed.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The view from the trees





Arashiyama, Kyoto, 10.10.08

Politics for the lazy

What I really heard during the second presidential debate:

Get the latest news satire and funny videos at 236.com.

Monday, October 13, 2008

A sunny day in Kyoto

Just a few photos I took in the nation's old capital this weekend. It'll be getting colder here soon, but at least for one October Saturday, it was perfect.


Kiyomizu-dera


exploring the temple grounds


the bamboo forest


giant torii


in the gardens at Heian Jingu