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I have found some cool things in my neighborhood just by walking...









I have found some cool things in my neighborhood just by walking the dog. For example, I live by the fortress site of Jwasuyeong, which has a few historic buildings, a 500 year old tree and a great view of Suyeong.

About 

Hi, I'm Stacy. I'm from Portland, Oregon, USA, and am currently living in Busan, South Korea. Check me out on: Tumblr, Twitter, Instagram, Lastfm, and Flickr.

 

Yoon Sang-eun at the Busan Modern History Museum

My wife and I visited the third of five museums in Busan, the Busan Modern History Museum. Of special interest for both of us was this special exhibition, due to close next week, about Cheongwoon Yoon Sang-eun (1897-1984). The founder of Gupo Bank, and a civic leader in business, dinance, and education, Yoon’s life spanned the old world of Joseon and the modern post-Park era. The exhibition, which blames the demise of Gupo Bank during the Depression in the 20s on the Japanese, includes personal artifacts and documents related to his various activities in Busan.

However, there’s some controversy about the cause of Gupo Bank’s demise.

The predecessor of the Gupo Bank was the Gupo Savings Inc., which was established for accumulation of trading capital by Korean people. We can understand the character of the Bank exactly by studying the change of its stockholders and management formations.

The Bank’s founders were as a whole landowners, merchants, and influential persons of Gupo and its region. The Bank name changed to the Gupo Bank in 1912, when Busan merchants on a large scale took stock in the Bank. And then, 1915 the main office moved to Busan in the name of the Gyeongnam Bank. After that, most customers were Busan merchants. Moreover, many landowners from Gyeongnam took stock in the Bank in order to do business corporations as a momentum of the amalgamation of the Japanese Bank to Korea in 1918. Those who were the large stocklholders and the managers of the Bank aimed at raising funds without a hitch in managing their corporations. However, they failed in bussiness by depression early in 1920s and quitted their business in Busan, so that they could be no longer stockholder. On the other hand, the big landowners from Milyang, Daegu, and so forth nearby Busan took over the reins of management as a large stockholder by raising the stocks and getting their membership of stockholder.

The Bank had some distinctions in management as follows. The Gupo Savings Inc. made a business of loaning to merchants and landowners of Gupo and its region. After being the Gupo Bank, the main business of the Bank was discounting a bill for traders from Busan. In profit of the bank, the business took a great position. And in saving account a current deposit was much more than a fixed deposit.

However, by depression and decline of Korean merchants early in 1920s, the Bank management became worse. As a result, the Governmemt-General and the Joseon Bank united the Daegu Bank and the Gyeongnam Bank in force. the Gyeongsang United Bank established the main office in Daegu and the branch office in Busan on 31. July, 1928.

A man whose career straddled a tumltuous century deserves an exhibition

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Filed under: Business/Economy, Korea Tagged: busan, busanmodernhistorymuseum, Korea, southkorea

Letter to Chepe Escondio


East LA Painting by Chepe Escondido                                  Brothers cycling in Kampot, Cambodia

MY brother is NOT impressed with YOUR swaggy homegown, Chepe Escondido!!!!

Joke Only! 

Muchas gracias por su generosidad!  It's actually really tasty; it just burns up so quickly. 
I'm not complaining, merely commenting.  Critiquing the latest harvest, that is all.  Ah shit!

Give it up for being legal while others are criminalized for doing the same thing.
 
Did you enjoy the Dengue Fever show?  I sure did.  Dengue Fever, an East LA Band of Cambodian ancestry.  All further photos come from my travels to Cambodia.  All further words about the show.



Koh Kong Cambodia, bordertown to Hat Lek Thailand
You can read more about this town in my opus CULTUREBOOK MMX Book Two

Funny thing.  Minutes from your door, Chepe sitting at a red light, I had a thought, OH MY DOG!
"Free show, Park setting, East Los / Cambodian Band?"  I'd be a fool not to go there and set up shop. 

I had no idea where the show was.  I've been to Pasadena maybe 5 times in my life.  4 of them with YOU! 
I planned to hit Old Town, get an LA Weekly, but I didn't have to.  GOD was on my side.  I was listening to my Rai Ko Ris CD, my punk rock friends from Nepal, while driving up the Arroyo Hwy thinking -- I thought about Olivier, the 50 year old Mohawk wearing French drummer of Rai Ko Ris, if HE were ME, a writer with a book for sale, HE would totally (LET'S) GO DOWN TO THE PARK TODAY and try to sell books.  Why the fuck not?!?  Thanks Aubrey for the song with the same title, co-written with Flavor Flay and John Compus and Fleff.  It was very fitting.  I guess I should thank Erica cuz SHE REQUESTED IT!  Funny thing, the store clerk recommended it!  Shakolov Shoplifing Berkeley  Fleff knew 3 different Sokolovs in 3 semesters!  What are the chances of that?
 
Also, RAI KO RIS is basically Drums and Bass/Guitar both played by Oli's Nepalese wife.  When they sing together, they sound kind of like EXene and John Doe, but because RKR's sound quality is not TIP TOP, they sound a little like Tonio singing alongside Chrissy in Beef Church. Rai Ko Ris got me amped.
 
And, also because of the beauty of Dengue Fever's lead female vocalizations, it all kind of adds up to the proposition that:  Perhaps a female singer IS the way to go for, US and our Coffee Stains.  I think a woman singing my song Zsa Zsa Gabor would be a lot like NIKO and the VU, minus Andy Warhol.  Like Hole. hunky dory bowie 

Just a thought that we can roll with. 
 
And Coffee Stain was Chepe Escondido's Sports News Guy character in our old Vid.
 
I found the park, found parking across the street, was told by organizers that I couldn't NOT set up shop.  I did anyway.  I sold TWO whole books, talked to a lot of people.  Met the band, gave a signed copy to Nemol, Dengue Fever's hot, well endowed, Cambodian singer, whom I rapped with for a long time.  She said, "We play UCLA late September."  I said, "By then my book will be famous.  You have one of the first copies."  That's what I told Nemol as I gave her a signed copy with my electronic digits.  "This book is going to be very well known in short time."  I told her convincingly.  She asked him knowingly!  
 

This is NOT Nimol.  This is some other girl of Cambodian  ancestry whom I know, in Phnom Penh. 
She's older than she looks!

If NImo had made a plug of my book while on stage, I'll bet at least 30 people would've bought one.  AND I could've sold each for $12.  That'll be the price when me and the Gabors have our STORE on Venice Beach next week. 

Have his kids be hawkers -- they are 1/4 - 1/2 Mexican/Filipina.  They'll DRAW people in by sitting around drawing with us and being noticeable.  We'll probably bring a guitar and some percussive as well.  Sodas, food, and umbrella for the sun, swim suits.  Make a day of it.  Zsa and Isis don't go back to school till mid Sept. and their father has no job.  Now he does!
 
Let the product sell itself, but employ the Gabors draw in people.  And they get their cut, as promised.  With me ALONE I can easily get muscled out or harassed AND I can't even leave to go buy a lemonade!  But, more importantly, I can stay true to my word of employing St Tommy.  That PROMISE was bent on the whole warehouse premise.  Now a new  bender is needed.

It's like my mom and our cleaning woman.  I used to say to my mom, we don't really need her EVERY week and my mom's reply, "She NEEDS the money!" as if THAT were my mom's chief purpose in hiring her.  Funny, but true.
 
We ARE all in this together.  The sooner people realize that, the better for all.  I'm glad my mom has been my biggest teacher of all my teachers in this lifetime.  I would never want to discount Townsend's influence on me.  I'm listening to him right now.  Pictures of Lily.  Happy Jack.  A Quick One, while he's away

I arrived at the Pasadena free show BEFORE Dengue Fever took the stage and that entire show was supreme.  Thanks for the idea.  Did you see me there?  If I'd had a phone, I MAY have texted you.  Did you get my ...burrito? 
 
Got my plan all worked out now.  Tom will go to work for me. His first job is to make my sign and station.  He's an artist.  He's good at that stuff.  I'll design it.  BUY A BOOK    FILL YOUR HEART WITH LOVE TODAY bowie
FILL YOUR MIND      LAOS, CAMBODIA, PHILIPPINES, THAILAND, SOUTH KOREA, JAPAN
US ARMED FORCES and TEACHING ENGLISH IN ASIA                         WHAT IS SEX TOURISM ANYWAY?
 
Something to that effect
 
Homeless dudes in urine soaked pantaloons panhandling alms
Me selling my book
What's the difference

Spread the word.





The Streets of Phnom Penh circa 2008

The First Busan Expat Film Festival (제1회 부산 외국인 영화제) 2010

Held next week from Thursday the 26th to Sunday the 29th, all tickets to the 1st Busan Expat Film Festival (제1회 부산 외국인 영화제) are free, so you have few excuses for not attending!

For the details, see the theater website for the location of the theater and movie schedule, and the Facebook page for movie synopses. Unfortunately, I’ll be working on Friday afternoon myself, and even be out of town visiting a friend on Saturday too, but I’ll probably at least see “Section 1″ and “Section 2″ on Thursday night. Any readers that will also be there then and would like to meet up, please give me a buzz!^^

Update: For those of you not on Facebook, Busan Haps also has a page on it here.

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Filed under: Busan, Korean Movies Tagged: BEFF, Busan Expat Film Festival, 부산 외국인 영화제
  

 

Habanero – Taco Truck in Hongdae

I’ve been dying to write about a Taco Truck for ages. Last month I almost had my wish. El Camion is a Korean Taco joint Inspired by the Taco Truck scene in the US. It does a decent enough line of Korean inspired Tacos, but as a bricks and mortar establishment it doesn’t really count.

Habanero Taco Truck, Hongdae, Seoul

On Saturday, however, I came across the real thing. Habanero in Hongdae sits on four wheels (I checked) and serves a menu of Burritos, Tacos, Quesadillas and  Salsa Bibimbap. Unlike El Camion, this is a dyed-in-the wool street food operation; the truck is run by a crew of one and is strictly standing room only.

I really like to see care and personality going into food and this is exactly what chef EJ Chun achieves. Burritos, Quesadillas and Tacos come in a basic beef or chicken, but it’s the personal touches that make him stand out:  he is proud of his own blend salsa (very spicy,) finishes each burrito off with a mini blowtorch and he’s not interested in Korean-style tacos. He also strives to set his food apart from the main taco chains, which he considers much too greasy. The result is food that feels very lovingly crafted.

I went for the beef burrito and Sarah opted for a quesadilla. Both were big, filling, tasty and spicy. While other places can get bogged down in cramming as many different ingredients as they can into their burritos, Habanero takes a fairly minimal approach of cheese, meat, rice and salsa. At 3000 won a piece they were also criminally affordable.

As such, Habanero is a welcome addition to Seoul’s streets. The attention to detail, personal service and good food make it well worth the visit.

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Leaving the ROK Behind

Gallup’s Potential Net Migration Index isn’t good news for Seoul, Hong Kong, or any underdeveloped state. “About 700 million people worldwide want to migrate permanently.” A non-trivial percentage of them are South Korean, resulting in a net loss of 8%.

But, don’t tell The Korea Herald about that. In a triumph of spin, Asia‘s gain is South Korea’s, too.

A new poll shows that Korea is in the second tier of the most desired destinations for those that want to migrate to another country.

The Gallup poll shows that between 5 million and 25 million people consider Korea their top desired destination country to migrate to. The group also includes Japan and Russia, among others.

(…)

On the flip side, people living in Asian countries have the least desire to migrate internationally. Only 10 percent of the population said they would like to move permanently to another country.

Not to trample on anyone’s dream, too, but a 219% increase in immigrants rushing into Singapore would turn the tiny island city-state into a logistical mess. But, that’s just one problem with this Gallup poll on the groundless dreaming of a random sample of possible immigrants about their destination preferences. Just what the natives think – and do – when aspiring citizens come knocking is grist for another poll entirely.


Filed under: Immigration, Polls, South Korea (ROK) Tagged: gallup, hong kong, singapore, the korea herald

The Kimchi is Coming!

Look who came to visit!
Time to get your tourist on ...


... and now for something very delicious...


We stopped by an organic winery called Ravine Vineyard

... oh how I missed cheese ...





... and now ...
on to the County ...

A recurring message this year

That message is that the most important factor in a child’s education is the teacher.  Having a good teacher is far more important than a high-tech classroom, for example.

The LA Times gets specific and names names.  Some teachers have egg on their face.  One of the examples given is for ‘John Smith’ which sounds like a pseudonym, but apparently is not.

From my new blog-crush, Marginal Revolution:

After a single year with teachers who ranked in the top 10% in effectiveness, students scored an average of 17 percentile points higher in English and 25 points higher in math than students whose teachers ranked in the bottom 10%. Students often backslid significantly in the classrooms of ineffective teachers, and thousands of students in the study had two or more ineffective teachers in a row…

I don’t blame the unions for being up in arms and I feel for the teachers, for some of them this is going to be a shock and an embarrassment. We cannot simultaneously claim, however, that teachers are vitally important for the future of our children and also that their effectiveness should not be measured.  As systems like this become more common students will benefit enormously and so will teachers.


Korean Gender Reader

( Source )

1) Subways and culture

Yesterday, Busan Mike saw an attempted groping incident on the subway for the first time, and in full sight of a half-full carriage at that. Fortunately, I’ve yet to ever see anything like that myself, but I imagine that just like in his case, I too would find it difficult to know what to do about it exactly. After all, it was only an attempt, and Mike and his wife weren’t sure that the man and woman weren’t a couple until the latter switched seats.

Have any readers also ever seen or experienced anything like that in Korea? What did you do?

Update: By the way, what is “groping” in Korean exactly? My wife says it is seong choo-haeng (성추행), and that certainly did produce a lot of articles on Korean search engines. But according to the dictionary, that term actually covers a multitude of sins, including “sexual molestation, sexual assault, sexual harassment, and rape” and so on. Any ideas, or is it just academic really?

Meanwhile, Gord Sellar ponders what to do about the vocal minority of elderly Koreans who shout and swear at pregnant women for sitting in “their” subway seats (see #5 here for the original story), in the Korean case a traditional Korean deference to old people buttressing the universal human impulse not to get involved.

2) Everything you wanted to know about room salons

Provided by a former addict in an interview by The Three Wise Monkeys. On the bright side, no condom means no sex in any “second rounds” that occurred later in a hotel, unlike for the vast majority of Korean women who seem to feel that they have a virginal reputation to maintain.

Meanwhile, see Korea Beat for more on the perspective of the room salon workers themselves.

3) Female economic activity lowest in 10 years

Unfortunately, these latest dismal figures are quite predictable: not for nothing have I repeatedly described the post-1997 period as a “lost decade” for Korean women (see here, here, and here), even before they were overwhelmingly targeted for layoffs in the recent financial crisis.

4) Dressing up as a Korean woman

Last week, I learned that not only it is so important for Korean women not to show their bare faces in public that even their fiances may not have seen them without make-up, but also that, counter-intuitively, many married women will get up extra-early to ensure it stays that way; see #6 here, and it also has rather ominous implications for their sex lives. Now, HiExpat also has a list of what else they must do in the morning if they want to look hot, but far from being particularly Korean, is it really just a matter of degree rather than difference? And why do it in the first place? Pondering the latter question over at Sociological Images, one sociologist answers:

…I would argue that the reason women, on average, spend more time on their appearance is because (1) the bare minimum for looking presentable is different for women than for men and (2) the social costs for neglecting their appearance is greater for them than it is for men.  It is not biology, nor socialization, but the realities of social interaction that draw women out of bed earlier than men.  We learn that our appearance matters to others and that others — strangers a little bit, friends more so, and bosses and lovers especially — offer rewards and punishments related to how well we conform to their expectations.  So we make a measured choice.  We primp and preen not because it’s natural, or because we’re socialized robots, but because it’s worth it or, conversely, we don’t want to pay the cost accrued when we do not.

With apologies for quoting so much of that short post, but there is also much to be learned from the 91 comments!^^

5) Every band has a “cute” member

Having so many members in Korean bands these days does mean that few of them get to actually sing, but then that’s not really the idea anyway, and on the plus side the more members, the more chance fans have of identifying with one of them (see #5 here). Which by coincidence, I’ve just read is also the case for Japanese bands, and probably provided the model. As AKB48 members Rino Sashihara and Tomomi Nakatsuka explain in Japanese School Confidential:

“There aren’t just lots of girls in AKB48, there are lot’s of different types of girls,” Rino says. Tomomi, decked out in a tracksuit and sneakers, chimes in. “Yeah, there are cute girls, beautiful girls. Everybody is different. I think that’s really what makes the group unique.” Tomomi, for example, likes manga and video games, and Rino’s hobby is eating udon noodles. Scan the profiles of other AKB48 members and you’ll find girls into professional wrestling, horror movies, or anime. It’s an idol smorgasbord where fans can find at least one idol to his or her taste. The music might be what draws folks in as listeners, but it’s the girls who turn them into fans. (p. 34, emphasis in original)

And hence as allkpop explains:

cute members of female groups tend to generate widespread interest and bump up a group’s popularity singlehandedly. Every member has their own individual role in the group, and every group has a member in charge of being the ‘cute’ one. In Korea, fans call this certain member “Kui-yo-mi (귀요미),” meaning “the girl with the cute image (귀여운 이미지를 가진 이).”  This member is in charge of garnering fanboy love with her cute/lovable/girly charm, which will result in a bigger fanbase for the group.

6) Actor finds empathy in homosexual role

If I had been worried about my image I wouldn’t have taken this role. I hope that the lives of homosexuals will be acknowledged and be a little bit happier through this drama of ours

See The Korea Times for an interview of Song Chang-ui (송창의), currently playing one of the first ever homosexual roles in Korean television (see #8 here for some background).

7) Yes, unmarried Koreans sometimes have children too

With the news that YG Entertainment head Yang Hyun-seok (양현석) has just had a daughter with long-time (secret) partner Lee Eun-ju (이은주) of the ex-girl band Swi.T, I’ve decided that I’ll no longer report on the fact that Koreans are generally fine with couples of marriageable age having premarital sex, with the important proviso that the participants do actually have plans to get married. Hardly an enlightened modern attitude either, it’s actually been that way for centuries too: see #5 here for more information. (source, right)

8) Officials in Japanese community play Cupid online

As explained at The Boston Globe:

The coastal region of Fukui has Japan’s biggest share of dual-income households, the highest ratio of working women, and the lowest unemployment rate. What it does not have is enough babies.

This month, the provincial government is starting the Fukui Marriage-Hunting Cafe, a website for singles, to help stem the falling birthrate. Couples who agree to marry will get cash or gifts, said Akemi Iwakabe, deputy director of Fukui’s Children and Families division.

“Many of our single residents were telling us that they wanted to get married, but couldn’t because they weren’t meeting anyone,’’ she said.

Japan’s first online dating service organized by a prefectural government follows national measures to extend parental leave that have so far failed to convince women to have more children…

Hey, it certainly can’t harm, and is positively inspired compared to the Korean Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs (보건복지가족부), in charge of raising the country’s birthrate, insisting earlier this year that its employees go home at the shockingly early 7pm on the third Wednesday of each month, all the better to have sex with their partners and have more babies.

9) “One of the most radical feminist performers working today”

Popmatters has a long article on Korean-American performer Margaret Cho.

( Source )

10) André Kim and attitudes to LGBT in Korea

Michael Hurt ponders the recent passing of Korean fashion designer André Kim (앙드레 김) at Scribblings of the Metropolitician, in passing mentioning public attitudes to his homosexuality:

There is the constant denial of his gayness — which anyone who interacted with him closely knew to be a fact, and not a vicious slur or accusation, but a mere fact — which continues today. In the end, it is additionally a tragedy that someone who was obviously gay, or at least someone out-of-sync with a cultural of heavily enforced heteronormativity, was never able to “come out” lest he pay a heavy social price. He was never able to see a Korea that would accept him for whom he truly was, however he might have defined that identity-wise. Or perhaps he was quite lucky, in that he fit well inside the stereotype of the harmless gay male fashion designer, which allows everyone to kinda “know” but not have to talk about it in polite company.

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Filed under: Korean Gender Reader Tagged: André Kim, 성추행, 송창의, 앙드레 김, 양현석, 이은주, Lee Eun-ju, Song Chang-ui, Yang Hyun-seok

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