Archive for May, 2004

May 29 2004

Technorati Meetup

Published by michael under Life in Japan

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Dave Sifry of Tecnorati was in town yesterday to discuss the beta version of his search site and pontificate on the direction of new media and nanopublishing. The discussion was attended by Joi Ito (who I concluded looks much larger on the web than in person) and the rest of the Tokyo bloggerati. The discussion was good, and I was fortunate to meet a number of interesting people. I was also pleased to see that the Japanese community was well-represented there, as blogging is really beginning to take off here as well.

Having heard Dave’s talk on Technorati I can say that, while I don’t know much more about Technorati than I did yesterday, I am more enthusiastic about meeting more people in the blogging community and doing more with my own site. Having done this for about 8 years now (i.e. - way before the term “blogging” was coined) I have to admit that the thrill has worn off a bit recently. However, now that the tools have improved so much and so much intergration and aggregation is taking place I have to admit things are becoming interesting once again.

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May 21 2004

Now I Get It

Published by michael under General

The more I follow the news of the war in Iraq and watch Bush on television, the more his high approval rating–though slipping now–amazes me. I have a difficult time believing that even 10 percent of the population–or whatever percentage includes Dittoheads, xenophobes and radical conservatives–can still support him and his administration after so much wrongdoing, deception, and scandal have come to light.

The reason for this must be that I’ve fallen so out of touch with my country of birth, and don’t properly grasp the broad, grass roots support behind the high figures. However, having something like this forwarded to you by a well-meaning but tragically misguided friend in Texas puts things back into perspective.

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May 16 2004

Start saving now

Published by michael under Life in Japan

…if you want a pet in this city. This little kitty will set you back about a thousand bucks (!!!), and that doesn’t even include kitty litter.

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May 12 2004

Samurai.FM

Published by michael under General

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“Featuring the freshest sounds from the international scene as well as the finest home grown talent from Japan,” SAMURAI.FM acts as a portal for Japan to the rest of the world and the rest of the world to Japan.

Some of the best electronica and club music in Tokyo can now be enjoyed in the comfort of your own Internet. Check out my boyz DUBSTRAKT and other Japanese artists like “Zenbient” DJ Hideyo Blackmoon, streaming now…

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May 10 2004

Totally Lost in Tranlsation

Published by michael under Reviews

lit.jpg I know it’s a bit late in the game to be talking about Lost in Translation, but it only arrived in Japan three weeks ago and is therefore firmly back on the local culture radar. At least this time around we have the actual movie to consider and not just the reviews of film critics and bloggers overseas who enjoyed its initial release.

We’ve been looking forward to the movie with much anticipation, of course, set as it is so close to home and the object of both rave reviews and sharp criticism. Add to that Sophia Coppola’s screenplay Oscar plus a slew of other awards and, well, you can just imagine our excitement when the film finally arrived in theatres here. (And if you can’t, well… pretty damn excited.)

So you know the story, right? Bob Harris (Bill Murray) comes to Tokyo to shoot a whisky commercial. Jet-lagged and adrift in all the foreignness he bides his time amid the comfortable familiarity of whisky and westerners in the hotel bar. There he meets Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson), also staying at the Park Hyatt and equally estranged from familiar life thanks to her photographer husband’s work schedule and the vast unknown that is Tokyo. They become friends, talk for hours, have fun, that sort of thing.

Now, if you read the reviews (I did, and many of them) chances are good that you respond to the film one of two ways. Either you call the film a masterpiece of subtly that evokes a broad range of emotions through the depiction of the two main characters as they find a special closeness and understanding of life through their shared immersion in the non-reality of Tokyo, OR you (as an Asian-American) hate the movie because it depicts the Japanese as buffoons or simple caricatures.

In my own case, however, I couldn’t help thinking that I had just watched a different movie. Although I was looking hard, I totally failed to find either those things praised as exceptional nor those denigrated as despicable. Instead, I felt as though I had just enjoyed a good but unremarkable movie whose most redeeming quality was Brian Reitzell’s excellent musical production and arrangement.

Although the acting is good, I thought the characters (”both of them,” you might say) were as ephemeral as must of the movie’s soundtrack. Bob Harris is no more three-dimensional than his whisky ads that grace the sides of buses and buildings, and while Bill Murray’s portrayal of him is certainly superb I felt no desire to connect with this walking, talking mid-life crisis of a man. It was as if his dissatisfaction with life rubbed off on me as a viewer, making me wish he was “doing a play somewhere” instead of bumming me out here.

Scarlett Johansson is similarly thin in her role as Charlotte. For all the time she spends staring out the hotel window (onto my old neighborhood, by the way) and at “traditional” Japanese settings she seems not to find anything there to pique her interest. I mean, is it so foreign that she is incapable of even the briefest sense of wonder? Interest? She cries on the phone to her friend that she went to a temple and “didn’t feel anything.” Was she expecting enlightenment to hit her then and there because she overheard some chanting? Hoping for some deep sense of awe as she stood amid the centuries-old monuments of Kyoto? Perhaps I wouldn’t have, either, but if she can manage to walk around the streets of Shinjuku or Shibuya without experiencing even a little of either–which I still manage to do after five years here–then I think she’s a character strongly in need of development.

Character development is one of the key complaints of the film’s detractors, who cite the stereotypical depiction of Japanese in the film as blatant racism. This review from the Asian American Revolutionary Movement Ezine complains that the film employs stereotypes for comic fodder. “They’re short! They’re wacky! They can’t pronounce their Rs!” The only problem with this type of complaint–never voiced by the Japanese I know, yet often expressed by Americans of Asian descent–is that it patently ignores the reality of the country in question: Japan. Fact is, Japanese are short(er). That elevator scene with Bill Murray surrounded by shorter Japanese? I can relate to it because (here in Tokyo) I experience it on a regular basis. Wacky? Of course the television personality Matthew (an actual performer, mind you, not some contrivation) is wacky. That’s his shtick. So are many other TV personalities here. Pronunciation? Sorry, folks, but that, too, is a fact of life here, and although it was exaggerated to ill-effect in the scene with the escort, it too falls squarely into the realm of Life in Tokyo.

In fact, putting aside that particular scene, I wasn’t able to see much of anything that denigrated the Japanese at all. Quite the contrary, when it comes to the clash of cultures, I think it was the two leads, especially Bob, that were depicted poorly. Typical “ugly American” abroad, Bob expects everyone to speak his language, know his culture, treat him like a big shot. And when they can’t or don’t, he responds with either derision or sarcasm. If Sophia was hoping to insult anyone with this film, it would have to be people like him.

Anyway, what did I like about the movie? Not much, actually, but that’s probably because it had been built up so much in my own mind that I was expecting something much better. I liked that the film was set so close to home, and presented a semi-accurate picture of what Tokyo looks like today. The music was also very good (Squarepusher! Death in Vegas!) and helped the movie maintain a very low-key feeling of being disconnected and set adrift.

Finally, I appreciated that the friendly relationship between Bob and Charlotte remained just that, and that Coppola didn’t bow to the formulaic pressure of having them end up in the sack. That final kiss and inaudible whisper I think kept the film true to it’s underlying idea that what Bob and Charlotte take away from their brief time together is exactly what they brought to it, plus some newfound understanding of what they as individuals really are. Well done, that.

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May 10 2004

Gray Magic

Published by michael under Japlish

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May 08 2004

May

Published by michael under Fambly Life

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May 04 2004

Get Your War On

Published by michael under The Culture Wars

 

David Rees discusses the war in Iraq and other political Bushhaps in this syndicated comic strip.

 

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May 03 2004

Kusatsu Onsen (草津温泉)

Published by michael under Life in Japan

Kusatsu Onsen lies deep in the mountains in Japan’s Gunma prefecture, two-and-a-half hours by express train northwest of Tokyo. Rie and I spent a couple of days there enjoying hot springs and fabulous weather. We stayed at the Hotel Ichii, a mid-range ryokan located in the center of the town proper, and where you can still get two meals served right there in the room, a luxury increasingly hard to find at more and more cash-strapped innes.

 

The hot springs at Kusatsu have been attracting visitors since the early 1200s, and was introduced to the rest of the world by a German physician teaching here at the time. The water is highly sulphuric, and with a PH of between 1.7 and 2.1 is said to be extremely effective as a treatment for a variety of ailments, both internal and of the skin.

 

The source of all the local onsen water is the Yubatake (湯畑), located in the center of town (right in front of our hotel, in fact). Glowing brightly yellow and green, the water passes up through the ground and over stained rocks and stones at a rate of over 5,000 liters per minute, making it the highest-volume hot spring source in Japan.

 

We managed to make five trips to different baths and outdoor rotenburou (露天風呂) during our short stay there, and the combination of piping hot water (45 degrees!), blue skies and cool mountain air offered us a much-needed respite from the Tokyo grind.

 

The source of the Kusatsu Onsen

The Rotenburo at Sai no Kawara Park

The Yubatake at night

One end of the Yubatake

 

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