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The great freckle debate

I was walking down the street the other day and I overheard two guys talking ....

Bro 1 : "She was hot man!"
Bro 2 : "Yeah, but I can't get past the freckles."

To him I say ....


If my coffee wasn't so delicious I would have shared it with your shirt.

Poll results for September 2010

The question for September: After Korea, what's next? (up to three choices allowed)

--

Teach English in another country
45 (35%)
Get a Master's, Doctorate, or another piece of paper
54 (42%)
Two words: TEFL certification
14 (11%)
Back home to do something else
31 (24%)
Keep on traveling or refusing to grow up
54 (42%)
After Korea? I plan to retire here
25 (19%)
Dude, I have no clue
23 (18%)
I think I'll join the circus next - teaching kids has prepared me well
12 (9%)

--

More education or more traveling seem to be the favorites, although no one choice would've made it without a runoff. I was rather surprised by a couple of results: those that plan to retire here (that many, huh?) and those that have no clue what's next (that's it, huh?).

Total votes cast: 127 - people allowed to vote for up to three responses. Not a scientifically-based survey.

The poll question for October: Have you ever pulled a midnight run?

Chris in South Korea runs a new poll every month, starting at the beginning of every calendar month. If you have an idea for a future poll question, e-mail me at chrisinsouthkorea AT gmail DOT com. If it's clever, it's likely to be used - with credit for said cleverness going to you, of course.

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010

This post was originally published on my blog,Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.


 

October 2010 events



Author's note: There's bound to be updates to this month's events - keep checking back for more information and new events! If you have an event you'd like to plug, comment on this post with all the details. Please follow a few guidelines for the maximum benefit.

August 27 - October 10
: Folks, it's time - time to get your Rocky Horror Picture Show on. This isn't just a showing of the movie - the original cast of the stage musical will perform the cult classic IN ENGLISH (a Korean narrator will be around). Tickets range from 66,000 to 110,000 won - reserve them on the appropriately-named website. No word on whether callbacks and throwing things will be part of the festivities - but I'd bet more than a few people will come dressed... correctly...

September 24 - October 3: The Andong Maskdance Festival - one of the best reasons to see the city of Andong. Take an Important Intangible Cultural Property and make a festival out of it. For more information, check out the appropriately named maskdance.com.

September 24 - November 7: The 5th Theatre Olympics - this is a great month for theatre lovers. 44 works from 13 countries will set the stage for plenty of drama and action. Check it out across town - from Namsan Arts Center to the National Theater of Korea to the Myeongdong Theater. For more information - and the programme - check out the official English-language site.

September 28 - October 17: The Bucheon World Intangible Cultural Heritage Expo (BICHE) - an excellent way to learn and experience some of the area's intangible assets. Emphasis should be on the word 'experience', because there will be ample chances to do said activities, including making crafts, flying kites, and the like. Last year's event was one of the many canceled because of the swine flu, but this year holds no such problems. For more information, check out an excellent post on London Korean Links, or the official website.

September 30 - October 20: Seoul International Dance Festival - with dancers hailing from at least a dozen countries, there's plenty of international flavor to this festival. Check out the official dance schedule, and note the multitude of other programs available. See sidance.org for more details.

October 1 - 12: Jinju Namgang Yudeung Festival - call it a floating lamp event if you like. The story claims that people in Jinju Castle put up wind lamps to communicate with the troops outside the castle. These days, the lamps condole the 70,000 people who died defending the city during the 1593 Japanese invasion of the city. This official website may have some up-to-date information before the event, though as I type this description, the page is stuck in 2008.

October 2 - 10: The autumn Hi Seoul Festival - the first this year after the spring version was postponed. Expect plenty of performances from groups of many different countries, based around the Han River parks in Seoul. Start by checking out the opening ceremony on the 1st around the Yeouido Han River Park at 8pm. For more information, check out http://english.hiseoulfest.org, or see these old posts related to previous Hi Seoul Festival events.

October 2 - November 14: the 10th annual Seoul Performing Arts Festival. If you love the thea-TUH, this is the festival worth making time to see. 28 works performed by companies from 8 countries scattered across much of Seoul's performing arts areas, including the Arko Arts Theater, the Seoul Arts Center, the Sejong Center Yeouido Park, Gwanghwamun Square, and more. For more information, check out www.spaf.or.kr.

October 2 and 9: It's back! The 3rd 'Night of 1,000 Plays' produced by the Seoul Players involves very short plays (no more than three minutes long each) and plenty of them. 39 plays, produced by eight different amateur groups, and the plays are different each night. 10,000 won admission per show (15,000 won for both nights), doors open at 7pm, show starts at 8pm. Roofers in Itaewon (Itaewon station, line 6, exit 3, after Dunkin' Donuts, turn right. Walk about 2 minutes up the street. Look for Roofers across from King Club.)

October 3: The leaves are changing! The leaves are changing. Anecdotally speaking, I've been told that today is when the weatherman says the leaves will start changing color.

October 9: Hangeul Day - don't know your ㅔ (eh) from your ㅖ (yeh) or your ㅒ (yae)? Now's the time to learn more about hangeul, the Korean alphabet these people are so crazy about. It's not a legal holiday (e.g. no time off), but if your students expound on the legacy of King Sejong, this would probably be the day you'll be hearing about it.

October 9: In case celebrating Korea's alphabet doesn't sound appealing, how does a little Fatboy Slim sound? He's the headliner at Global Gathering, happening at the Nanji Hangang River Park (near World Cup Stadium). Plenty of bigbeats and other genres of music to get you dancing. Find more information at Interpark, or refer to this Korea Gig Guide post for more information.

October 9: Time for the fall version of the Hae Bang Cheon (HBC) Fest. Easily the best opportunity to see dozens of expat musicians in one place, on one day, with plenty of beverages and food to keep you around. More than a few friends and people I've interviewed (among others, Shaun Southway, Shotgun Mascara, Josh Roy, and Roger Peacock come to mind) are on the bill, which stretches across six venues in the HBC area. Get there via Seoul's subway system - the Noksapyeong station on line 6, exit 2, to be exact. For more information, check out http://www.deeleebob.com/HBCArtists.htm

October 9: As if there wasn't enough going on already, the Seoul International Fireworks Festival will be celebrated near the 63 Building, near Yeouido or Yeouinaru station on line 5. Get there by 7:30pm for some good seats. For more information, check out http://www.bulnori.com/

October 10: Rufus Wainwright comes to Seoul. It seems every month brings the city at least one relatively well-known Western musician, and this month is no exception. The concert will support All Days are Nights: Songs for Lulu which hit stores in March earlier this year. Americans may not know the name well, but his previous album went gold (500,000+ CD's sold) in Canada and the UK. 99,000 won admission - see Interpark's website or call (02) 563-0595.

October 12: Opening day for an exhibit of Goryeo Buddhist paintings at the National Museum of Korea in Seoul. Not everyone's cup of tea, but certainly fascinating to some. Ichon station, line 4, free admission. For more information, look up the National Museum of Korea's website

October 21 - 23: The Cheolma Bulgogi Festival - if there was a prize for holding random festivals throughout the year, Korea would win 1st prize. Think Korean cow, not far from Busan in southwestern Korea. See
www.cmhanwoo.com/ for more information.

October 21 - 24: The Icheon Rice Cultural Festival - in case you're looking for a reason to come to the city. Head over to Seolbong park in Icheon city to enjoy this traditional harvest festival. The Rice Festival's website is in English.

October 21 - 27: The Korean Food Festival in Jeonju. Just in case you haven't had your fill yet, here's another chance to participate in an interesting event. 500 companies from 18 countries are coming to participate in the Korean. Food. Festival. Think about that one for a second. See the official website in English for more. For what it's worth, the Kimchi Culture Festival is happening around the same time (the 23rd - 27th) not far away (Gwangju). Here's the official website, or check out Brian in Jeollanam-do for a report from the 2009 event.

October 22-24: The 1st Formula 1 Korean Grand Prix ever - see f1korea.go.kr for more. Expect ticket prices to be through the roof, if you can even get your hands on one.

October 23 - 24: The Grand Mint Festival - one of the last big rock music festivals of the year. Check out grandmintfestival.com for more on the artists and the four stages pumping out decibels.

October 23: Time for a fundraiser! Support breast cancer research, throw on a pink glove, and appear in a video - the 'Pink Glove Dance' event will be held at Yongsan Family Park (Ichon station, line 4, exit 2, near the National Museum of Korea) from 2pm to 4pm. From the press release:
Several representatives from the Korean Breast Cancer Foundation will be on hand at the event to give out information and to show both men and women how to give themselves self breast examinations.

...

Groups who wish to showcase posters, banners, or t-shirts with their group or organization name or logo on it so that they can get free advertising through their participation in the video, can feel free to do so.
For more information e-mail onlyonemitzi AT gmail.com or check out the Facebook page.

October 28 - November 3
- Get your dressage and jumping competitions on - the 9th World University Equestrian Championship comes to Sangju in Gyeongsangbuk-do. Worth checking out if you enjoy watching horses jumping on ESPN, or really want to watch something new. Check out the WUEC website in English for more information.

October 30: POLTER HEIST - an expat-driven murder-mystery Halloween-based dinner-theatre. Is that enough hyphens? Who knows. If you're down in Daegu - or up for a weekend out of Seoul - this looks like the perfect place to go. 15,000 won admission, doors open at 6:30pm. MUST BOOK IN ADVANCE by e-mailing
kristinmyers19 AT hotmail.com - no door tickets available. More information available on the event's Facebook page or the Daegu Theater Troupe's page.

October 30: Seoulite Halloween Party - Join Seoulite (a Seoul-based community group) for a dinner party and costume contest at UTSAV, a trendy South Asian bistro in Hongdae. Cash and other prizes will be awarded for the best costumes, and after dinner we can show off our outfits at the clubs. Please RSVP on Seoulite's Facebook page.

October 30: Ka-Brew and craft beers in Itaewon - featuring Josh Roy as a performer. Plenty of fun stuff happening at Los Amigos starting at 10pm. For more information, check out the Facebook page.

October 30: Sticky Fingers, VJ's, and fire barrels - what more can you ask for? Halloween party over at Roofers in Itaewon. Expect the Sticky Fingers to cover the Rolling Stones and the VJ to take requests (folks, that's pretty rare). 5,000 won admission after 9pm; includes 1 free drink. More information: Facebook page.

October 31: Halloween - that day of dressing up and acting like someone else is celebrated within the expat community - and some of the locals! Expect Hongdae and Itaewon in Seoul to be two areas filled with people in costume on the 30th as well.

October 31: If getting dressed up isn't your thing, try heading to "10 Good Reasons Not To Go Home" - a play put on by Probationary Theaters. (No idea who was on probation at one point or another.) From the press release:
The show is written and performed in English, and takes a smart and cynical look at the annoying characters that plague us in our hometown and muses optimistically on why maybe it’s better to stay at overseas just a little longer.
Tickets must be reserved via e-mail, but can be picked up and paid for the night of the event. Performances at 4pm and 7pm at the RUF Theater (Noksapyeong station, line 6). Tickets cost 15,000 won; reserve them by e-mailing probationarytheatre AT gmail DOT com with your name, which time, and how many tickets. For more information, check out the Facebook page.

Disclaimer: Chris in South Korea provides this monthly calendar as a service for you, the readers. No payment was received for event placement, and payment is not accepted for event placement.

Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010


Yes, Old Korean People Have Sex Too…

( Source )

But perhaps as you’d expect, they’re generally not using protection. A quick report from The Daily Focus on Wednesday:

Number of STD Cases Among Old People Rising

While the national total number of STD cases has dropped overall, the numbers of people aged 65 and over contracting STDs has risen sharply, it emerged on the 28th.

The Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service presented its “Current Situation Regarded STD Treatment Recipients” report to Assemblywoman Son Sook-mee of the National Assembly Health Welfare Committee, according to the data of which the number of cases of people aged 65 and older receiving treatment for STDs was 44,000 in 2007 and 64,000 in 2009, a rise of 43% in just 2 years.

In 2007, people 65 years and older accounted for 4.0% of all cases of people treated for STDs, but this has risen to 5.5% as of March this year.

Little information to go on unfortunately, but Seoul residents may be interested in placing that into the context of the prostitution culture around Jongmyo Park in Jongno, which caters to the thousands of male retirees that spend their days there. From story #13 in a “Korean Gender Reader” post from March last year:

Prostitution Answers Sexual Needs of Senior Citizens?

The first time I visited in Jongmyo Park in Seoul in 2000, naturally I remarked on the hundreds of mostly male retirees there to my friend visiting from Japan, who rightly pointed out that they “didn’t particularly have much to do nor anywhere in particular to do it,” so why not play Korean chess all day there? In hindsight though, many would much rather be doing something else, and it’s almost surprising that it took so long for prostitutes to encroach on this captive and – let’s call a spade a spade – somewhat desperate market.

Here, the Korea Times reports on the ensuing problems of unsafe sex, the sale of fake Viagra and “men’s stamina” products, and the general increasing seediness of the area. You can also read discussions about it at ROK Drop and The Marmot’s Hole.

One surprising omission in the Korea Times article though, was the fact that the area between Jongmyo and Tapgol Park is also “packed full with gay bars and hotels catering to gay clients”, as noted by regular commenter Gomushin Girl.  Still it does end with the pertinent point that:

…the social atmosphere of viewing senior citizen’s sexual desire as a nasty matter has worsened the situation. “Sexual desire is a desire not only shared among young people but also old people. But our society is sill stuck in the obsolete Confucian-based perception that labels desire as an undesirable state, playing a major hurdle in setting a sound sexual culture for the aged,” said Prof. Lim Choon-sik at Hannam University’s social welfare department.

( Source )

And accordingly, probably the most notable if not the only “recent” Korean film to depict the sexuality of the aged – Too Young to Die (죽어도 좋아; 2002) – was heavily censored. As noted at KoreanFilm.org:

The filmic career of this independent digital feature about an elderly couple in love has followed an unusual arc. It began at the pinnacle of respectability, being selected to screen in the Critics’ Week section at the 2002 Cannes International Film Festival. After receiving a number of very positive reviews, it went on to be selected for the Toronto International Film Festival’s showcase of Korean cinema, and then received a special grant from the government-supported Korean Film Commission to help finance the film’s transfer to 35mm film for a release in Korea. Then, alas, the film was submitted to the nation’s Media Ratings Board, where it was judged unfit for public viewing and banned from release in ordinary theaters.

Too Young To Die is based on the true story of Park Chi-gyu and Lee Soon-ye, a man and woman in their early seventies who met, fell in love, and then rediscovered sex. The couple, who play themselves in the movie, seem little different from a couple in their twenties. They tease each other, fret about their hair, take snapshots of themselves, argue over trifles, and leap into bed with unabashed frequency. Indeed, watching them forces you to rethink all your stereotypes of what it is to be old.

In particular, as Gomushin Girl mentioned in the context of the excessive censorship of women’s sexuality in general:

…the key scene of fellatio was darkened and shortened significantly before it could be released. I would suggest that it was not just the fact that the couple was elderly that made the sex scenes so controversial, but the gusto and relish that the woman took in the acts.

Which raises the question of if there have been any other depictions of aged sexuality in Korean popular culture in the past 8 years (positive or otherwise), as perhaps that experience put directors off? If you know of any, then please let know, but regardless I’d wager that we’re likely to see more soon; after all, with Korea rapidly becoming the most aged society in the world, then audiences (and rating boards) can only become more sympathetic to the subject over time.

In the meantime, can anyone think of any areas in other Korean cities where retirees and prostitutes regularly meet?

Share


Filed under: Contraception, Korean Demographics, LGBT, Prostitution, Sex Education, Sexual Relationships, STDs Tagged: 죽어도 좋아, Jongmyo Park, Jongno, Tapgol Park, Too Young to Die
  

 

Go support some fellow expats at the Filipino market


It's a little disheartening to read "Seoul’s Filipino market to be cut in half" because of 'complaints from local residents'. So says the Joongang Daily:
Seoul’s Jongno District Office said yesterday in an interview with the JoongAng Ilbo that the size of the market will soon be cut to half, partially because the stalls interfere with pedestrian and vehicle traffic and also because of complaints from residents nearby.

“We plan to expel unauthorized vendors, but will allow 15 shops that have been in business for the past 15 years to remain,” said Choe Seong-min, the director of the district’s construction management division. “We know the place is a meeting spot for Philippine nationals in Korea, but the stalls cannot be legalized and residents have voiced lots of complaints about the market.”

The stalls cannot be legalized? Mighty strong words there, you know - 'cannot' seems to imply an impossibility or an unwillingness to do so. My guess is that it's the latter - disguised as a couple trumped-up complaints that legitimize the forced removal of a market that's been around longer than most things in Korea have. And don't tell me that the numerous street vendors using dirty tarps and ancient wooden 'tables' are legal if the clean tables and kitchen-like setups are 'illegal'. I've written about this forced relocation / move of the Filipino Market before, and I have really enjoyed my previous visits to the Filipino Market.

Let's not forgot about the 'shoe shine / repair booths' - those ugly, gray bathroom-sized boxes found across Seoul. The hundreds or thousands of booths were once as temporary as the vendors they're not trying to kick out. They started out illegal, arguably, and were legitimized with the construction of rentable, taxable property.

Recently, the district office had white lines painted on the marketplace grounds to demarcate the stalls, allowing four square meters (43 square feet) for each one.

Vendors who cross the line will face consequences, the district office said.

“District office officials said if we cross the designated line, we will lose some of our merchandise,” said Park Il-sun, the leader of Hanbihoe, an association of Philippine merchants in Korea.

So you've painted lines on the sidewalk for the illegal / not-legal vendors to follow? This is, of course, a country that considers sidewalks an extra lane of traffic, where stopping at a red light seems more like a suggestion than a requirement, and where the line for cars to stop is barely used. Either drivers' eyes need to get checked again, or Jongno might want to step out of that glass house it's been living in. Oh, and that bit about losing merchants' merchandise? Has the concept of due process of law completely been forgotten about?

The market sprang up after a Filipino priest began conducting mass in Tagalog - the main spoken language in the Philippines - at Hyewha Cathedral in 1996, drawing a number of foreign nationals to the area. Today, the area is both a market and meeting place for Filipinos, Koreans and other expats.

The market is already half of its original size - it used to be 100 meters (328 feet) long. It will be cut in half again after the district’s plan is implemented.

Well done, Korea. You've managed to shoot yourself in the foot yet again. You've taken what could have been a nice attraction for tourists - and locals! - and made them feel like law-breakers taking up precious sidewalk space. Foreigners - who by law have almost no ability to get involved in politics - find themselves 'not allowed' to do something that has been deemed illegal, while locals do the same thing just around the corner with little worry about legality.


Creative Commons License © Chris Backe - 2010

This post was originally published on my blog,Chris in South Korea. If you are reading this on another website and there is no linkback or credit given, you are reading an UNAUTHORIZED FEED.


South Korea Adventure #14- The DMZ

To be honest I am not a big fan of Tours. I usually try to avoid them at all costs, unless there is no choice. The best tour I have ever been on is the one to Alcatraz. If you go to San Francisco you have to go, it is just awesome. My first tour in Korea was to the DMZ. Obviously it is something to go to if you spend time in South Korea. It is a one of a kind of experience. I can best describe it as surreal. On the one hand it is a tour. So you have expected to go to some run of the mill tourist attraction. That is where it gets surreal; there is no tourist attraction, only the border. On the other side one of the least known countries in the world. Most of the tour you realize that you are going from places of sadness to sadness. The 4km wide border that cuts Korea in half is this ongoing scar and reminder of unresolved issues and lot of destruction. It is hard to know what to feel or think, being in the middle of it. They take you into the Joint Security Area which has guards from both sides. In one of the buildings you are able to step onto the North Korean side, across the Military Demarcation Line. During the tour they tell not to point to North Korea or wave at North Korean Guards. They also tell you where you can and can't take pictures. Overall I would recommend the tour and not to miss it if you come to Korea.


For more info on how to book a tour:
http://asiaenglish.visitkorea.or.kr/ena/SI/SI_EN_3_6.jsp?cid=309692

For more info on the DMZ: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Demilitarized_Zone


SONGPA STOMPERS #1

A few Saturdays ago the newly minted bicycle/shutter crew took a leisurely ride across the urban expanse of Seoul. From concrete thickets to surrounding hills we filled viewfinders and exposed frames in between peddling. The expedition was a success. Here’s some of the documentation from the bottom of my tires and soles.

Seoulcycle
vivitar ultra wide and slim, superia 200, Han River Path
...
vivitar ultra wide and slim, somewhere near Sinseoldong
...
vivitar ultra wide and slim, Bukhansan foothills
Cheongyecheon tunnel
vivitar ultra wide and slim, Cheongyecheon stream
Cheongyecheon Reload...
Minolta Srt-100, Cheongyecheon reload
Junk seller's alley
vivitar ultra wide and slim, junk seller’s alley
Ajosshi park, Jongno
Minolta Srt-100, Ajosshis playing GO, Jongno
overexposed chi
Minolta Srt 100, Overexposed Chi, Jongno
...
vivitar, ultra wide and slim, up a hill, Northern Seoul
...
vivitar ultra wide and slim, down a hill, Gyeongbok Palace
...
vivitar ultra wide and slim, Gyeongbuk Palace
...
vivitar ultra wide and slim, royal guard
KING SEJONG
vivitar ultra wide and slim, King Sejong
...
vivitar ultra wide and slim, being foreign
...
Minolta Srt 100, Cheongyecheon
...
viviatar, urban decay
...
vivitar, urban decay
...
Minolta Srt 100, dude, are you weird?
...
Minolta Srt 101, the remains of the day


Filed under: 35mm, Film, minolta srt, photos, South Korea, Travel Tagged: Analog Korea, bicycles, fuju superia, minolta srt 100, photography, seoul, songpa stompers, vivitar ultra wide and slim

Cambodia through the eyes of a *fish*

One of our previous posts was about Farmboy's new toy, which he proceeded to take for a spin on our recent (and absolutely awesome!!) trip to Cambodia  :) More pics and such to come, but for the meanwhile, heres a little taste of our time there, through the eyes of his fisheye camera!

one of our many Tuk Tuk experiences :0

Koh Rong Saloem Island, aka Lazy Beach, or "Paradise!" 





This little girl was walking around with a pet lizard on a string...creepy?

The boat ride to Koh Rong Saloem Island, aka Lazy Beach



Ta Prohm Temple (the one which Tomb Raider was filmed in!)

Banteay Srei Temple, one of the smallest but most beautiful ruins, about an hour out from Angkor Wat.

The gorgeous landscape


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