i had a crazy night last thursday which had me leaving my backpack at a bar overnight. when i went to pick it up. my sunglasses were taken from the bag while my ipod was left unscathed. it's tragic, cuz it's not about the money, it's about the head.

i have a big head. and with a big head comes a big face. and with a big face comes the troubles of buying sunglasses. for years i resisted the temptation of buying uber cool sunglasses at the risk of symmetrical creased temples and small-specs-fat-face-look. that is until i found this pair of shades that fit my head!

and now they're gone. *sniffle*



update....i found these today....

IC BERLIN SUPERFINE CASH~


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thanks mama lee!

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how many of u girls out there don't want to have kids because you're afraid to get fat?


sometimes with so much buzz going on about a specific world event or controversy, i find it hard to blog upon the issue as gajillions of other writers have already beaten me to the punch.  i'd then need to peruse through everyone else's comments before finding my own personal perspective.  but today, while staring at the massive 10 year old girls-choir during the closing ceremony of the olympics, it hit me like a ton of bricks. 

i will now blog on the olympics along with some other topics.

for me, going to hostess ktv, is an occupational hazard.  an occupational requirement.  an occupational edge.   i find myself frequenting these service-oriented beverage-induced establishments quite frequently and internationally.  whether it's a brothel out of a chow yun fat movie or a victorian style ktv ala rush hour 2, whether it's in china, or indonesia or in singapore or in macau...these women that line up for 'service' are all from mainland china, imported on visitor visa's working night in and night out.  it's funny cuz everytime u ask where in china they are from, it's always "da lian"....so it had me thinking

what if you took a trip to da lian.  would it turn out to be like the matrix?  human farming for the sole purpose of ktv chicks?  if u went straight to the source, would she end up being a hot slutty mom wearing a high slit qi-pao genetically engineered for obedient and aesthetic pedigree breeding?  as there is no chinese translation for "human rights" in china, it doesn't sound too far fetched does it?  if da lian went IPO, would you buy it?  seriously, what scenario would cause this stock tumble?  it could easily perservere through a credit crunch.  it could easily persevere through a monetary crisis....but what if there was an "OUTBREAK"

that's when the next topic comes to mind.

i spent a good amount of time reading up on carbon trading over the weekend.  that led me to do some research on the world of "weather trading".  weather derivatives are created by financial institutions for companies adversely affected by weather to hedge that risk.  essentially, there will always be someone on the other side willing to take that bet.  (it just so happens that my buddy's sister is the one creating all sorts of weird scenario's for derivative trading)....so how about this one? 
"if obama was elected and visited china, and swung through da lian, how would that change china's ktv industry knowing asians prefer light skinned petit chinese girls."  HAHAHA.

seriously, how does one get into this kind of derivative scenario group?  how does one get into non-mainstream occupations?  do you sit there and watch the olympic highlights and wonder, what in blazes drove u to get into synchronized swimming?  how do you get into dancing with a bowling ball on the gymnastics floor?  i mean, with all your choices out there, how does drive and determination and 43 billion dollars of beijing olympics equate to lifelong training of artistic water treading?


PS.  i know im going to hell.  i correlate girls choir with hostess ktv.  outta control.

it's been a few years since i've had to sit in a class to learn.  throughout my academic career, my attendance and attentiveness in class weren't correlated to my grades and nothing has changed since....

i sat in complete boredom today, finding every excuse to sms under the table, leave for bathroom breaks, take extended coffee breaks etc.  day one accomplished nothing other than a refresher couse in singlish. 

just thinking about day 2 and 3 makes me cringe.


 


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it's almost as if i live in taiwan.  but i don't.  i live in singapore.  that's where alice had her birthday.  @ margarita's @ dempsey in singapore.  however, she wishes she celebrated in mexico.  cuz she wishes she was mexican.  and it's not just her love for tortilla's, salsa and the peso.

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yes...hi five alice, u look fantastic!

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eric thought it was his birthday too....

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the normal bottle costs 950NT, the limited edition cost 1100NT.  it was a no brainer.  the beauty of a streamlined black johnny walker black.   i think it even tasted better...HAHAHA.

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it was disgustingly hot....and people still sat outside watching, cheering, screaming for their national baseball team.  

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unfortunately, they lost...

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chip flavors in taiwan aren't that good....

but they're DAMN FUNNY THOUGH!!!

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wouldn't you think "台客" should taste like betel nut?  or stinky tofu? rather than clams?

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and shouldn't this one taste like watermelon? fried chicken? rather than mozzerella sticks?

racial stereotyping is all kinds of weird in taiwan.
i haven't blogged in a lot of days...and this entry isn't flowing so easily either...been having a bit of personal stuff on my mind which isn't that kosher to share online....just ask in person....but before i forget....

1. congratulations dora and mike! i want to see wedding pics!!!!! hope you ann and my sister enjoyed the drunk call....

2. im not coming back to ny in september. 2 more missed weddings. sorry connors/jenn, sorry wonderbread/vivian.

3. happy belated birthdays:

my sister KIMBO!!! - u better get your gift asap or im gonna go rampage on singpost

chomo:: i owe u miami and vegas all in one shot. the prodigal son will return soon...and historically i bring the winds of change...haha...

disco: HOOOOOH......ear tug....

benny: babooon....i'll bring back an extra girl from the kampong for u....and an extra ji pa ban (rupiah!)


u know taiwan's economy is in the shits when salesmen are asking for deposits on 5,000 NT ten ren tea purchases. 

relax buddy, i'll be back tomorrow.  just ring up the bill then.



Oogway:
Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. That is why it is called the present.




i saw kungfu panda in a big group.....where after the movie louisa and i couldn't stop doing kung fu moves to each other.....

"immature couple" alice remarked....

and now that this movie is showing on planes....i switch back and forth btwn kung fu panda and iron man and the occassional food documentary....

i like iron man better than batman.  agreed heath ledger was awesome, but the batman movie was a bit long and more importantly, the fact that batman has EARS is more noticeably cheesy because the dark knight moved the comic superhero storyline into a more realistic drama genre....not to mention, cocky robert downey jr in a cool hot rod red titanium alloy suit driving an r8 just seems soo much cooler.



this is what i get in the mail every few days by you facebook voters....maybe i wish arrogance compounded with ingenuity was my strength

Your friends have voted on your strengths and weaknesses:

STRENGTHS:

funniest
craziest
best room-mate

WEAKNESSES:

most absentee
most tech-savvy
i've been to 3 companies (1 is publically listed) this month where they still punch in time cards....

bewildering to me, esp in this day and age, where communication, technology, hard work, ambition, efficiency and bottom line don't correlate to time spent in the office....

they say "it's the japanese culture"
Bia And Branca Feres Are Into Synchronized Swimming, Synchronized Spooning




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@ the hotel imperial right now. 

everytime im in malaysia...i've always got all these rhetorical questions/comments/conversations about the backwardness of this country -- to try to fully decipher the inner workings of the people, of the culture and the differences between this developing nation and it's other neighbor counterpart - indonesia.  (this time i question why the chinese of malaysia aren't as aggressively exploitive of their developing nation as the indo-chinese are)...of course that conversation goes in circles re-iterating what we discussed the last time we were here...and well...that was that..and dinner was dinner...

and the petronas towers is still amazing.


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a view from the bathtub....

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i got a msg this morning saying i look like this guy....what do you guys think....







"who has time to check on a friend's doings on any given afternoon? and who really cares what you just had for lunch?"

"how many blogging servcies does the world actually need?"

"enter the aggregators: one stop web sites that let you see what ur friends are up to in their various web travels"

"how long before some enterprising developer builds an aggregator that aggregates the aggregators?"

-newsweek



imagine a world where u're alienated for being able to speak a language properly.  then u'll understand the frustration i deal with everyday living in the land of the sterile.




How English Is Evolving Into a Language We May Not Even Understand

By Michael Erard   06.23.08


Photo: Mauricio Alejo
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The targeted offenses: IF YOU ARE STOLEN, CALL THE POLICE AT ONCE. PLEASE OMNIVOROUSLY PUT THE WASTE IN GARBAGE CAN. DEFORMED MAN LAVATORY. For the past 18 months, teams of language police have been scouring Beijing on a mission to wipe out all such traces of bad English signage before the Olympics come to town in August. They're the type of goofy transgressions that we in the English homelands love to poke fun at, devoting entire Web sites to so-called Chinglish. (By the way, that last phrase means "handicapped bathroom.")
But what if these sentences aren't really bad English? What if they are evidence that the English language is happily leading an alternative lifestyle without us?
Thanks to globalization, the Allied victories in World War II, and American leadership in science and technology, English has become so successful across the world that it's escaping the boundaries of what we think it should be. In part, this is because there are fewer of us: By 2020, native speakers will make up only 15 percent of the estimated 2 billion people who will be using or learning the language. Already, most conversations in English are between nonnative speakers who use it as a lingua franca.
In China, this sort of free-form adoption of English is helped along by a shortage of native English-speaking teachers, who are hard to keep happy in rural areas for long stretches of time. An estimated 300 million Chinese — roughly equivalent to the total US population — read and write English but don't get enough quality spoken practice. The likely consequence of all this? In the future, more and more spoken English will sound increasingly like Chinese.
It's not merely that English will be salted with Chinese vocabulary for local cuisine, bon mots, and curses or that speakers will peel off words from local dialects. The Chinese and other Asians already pronounce English differently — in both subtle and not-so-subtle ways. For example, in various parts of the region they tend not to turn vowels in unstressed syllables into neutral vowels. Instead of "har-muh-nee," it's "har-moh-nee." And the sounds that begin words like this and thing are often enunciated as the letters f, v, t, or d. In Singaporean English (known as Singlish), think is pronounced "tink," and theories is "tee-oh-rees."
English will become more like Chinese in other ways, too. Some grammatical appendages unique to English (such as adding do or did to questions) will drop away, and our practice of not turning certain nouns into plurals will be ignored. Expect to be asked: "How many informations can your flash drive hold?" In Mandarin, Cantonese, and other tongues, sentences don't require subjects, which leads to phrases like this: "Our goalie not here yet, so give chance, can or not?"
One noted feature of Singlish is the use of words like ah, lah, or wah at the end of a sentence to indicate a question or get a listener to agree with you. They're each pronounced with tone — the linguistic feature that gives spoken Mandarin its musical quality — adding a specific pitch to words to alter their meaning. (If you say "xin" with an even tone, it means "heart"; with a descending tone it means "honest.") According to linguists, such words may introduce tone into other Asian-English hybrids.
Given the number of people involved, Chinglish is destined to take on a life of its own. Advertisers will play with it, as they already do in Taiwan. It will be celebrated as a form of cultural identity, as the Hong Kong Museum of Art did in a Chinglish exhibition last year. It will be used widely online and in movies, music, games, and books, as it is in Singapore. Someday, it may even be taught in schools. Ultimately, it's not that speakers will slide along a continuum, with "proper" language at one end and local English dialects on the other, as in countries where creoles are spoken. Nor will Chinglish replace native languages, as creoles sometimes do. It's that Chinglish will be just as proper as any other English on the planet.
And it's possible Chinglish will be more efficient than our version, doing away with word endings and the articles a, an, and the. After all, if you can figure out "Environmental sanitation needs your conserve," maybe conservation isn't so necessary.
Any language is constantly evolving, so it's not surprising that English, transplanted to new soil, is bearing unusual fruit. Nor is it unique that a language, spread so far from its homelands, would begin to fracture. The obvious comparison is to Latin, which broke into mutually distinct languages over hundreds of years — French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian. A less familiar example is Arabic: The speakers of its myriad dialects are connected through the written language of the Koran and, more recently, through the homogenized Arabic of Al Jazeera. But what's happening to English may be its own thing: It's mingling with so many more local languages than Latin ever did, that it's on a path toward a global tongue — what's coming to be known as Panglish. Soon, when Americans travel abroad, one of the languages they'll have to learn may be their own.
Michael Erard (author@umthebook.com) wrote about the spread of the Chinese language in issue 14.04.