Tag Archive for 'Chris Cotter'

A New Baby, Beer and Other Sundries

Baby Rowan

Congratulations to old pal Rik Abel and Adrienne Copithorne on the birth of their new baby Rowan Alexander on March 19th, which coincidentally also happens to be Rik’s birthday. Hurrah!

Deep Kyoto is back!

It’s spring and time to bring Deep Kyoto out of hibernation with a new article on Cafe Proverbs [15:17], the new vegan phoenix that has risen from the ashes of Cafe Peace. I went down there at the end of last month and having mentioned my blog, was introduced to the owner, one Marre, a charming fellow and quite a Rennaisance man (that’s him on the right with his wife). While talking to Marre I was overheard by another customer, who was courteous enough to introduce himself as a reader of Deep Kyoto by the name of Thomas Bertrand. As it happens, Thomas also writes a blog on Kyoto by the name of la riviere aux canards (Kamogawa sounds awfully romantic in French, don’t it?) which he has been writing for a good three years now and as a result he has been employed by a French publisher to write a travel guide to the city. It just goes to show what’s possible if you stick at something… Anyway, his blog is worth a look if your French is up to it. Or like me, you could just look at the pretty pictures. LINK

The 12th Japanese Beer Tasting 2008

Paul Sparks held his twelfth and final (?) Japanese beer tasting at Chez Sparks in Ichigaya, Tokyo last Saturday evening, thus ending a long run of enjoyably exhausting parties that first began in Fukushima-ken back in 1995. 48 beers were tasted, blind taste-testings held, quizzes quizzed, buzzers buzzed and a heck of a lot of cheese was consumed. I love cheese with beer! As usual, my old friends Chris Cotter and Graham Chave were also present as well as a host of other regulars : drool-worthy Mayumi of Beer Bar Bitter, big Mark of the massive leather jacket, some newer good-characters such as Henry and Sean who I hadn’t met before and my team-mate Rei who was a total star in the quiz. And my team won! Amazing. I forgot to claim a prize in the end but I don’t really care, it was so much fun. And I got two taste tests right too (!) - correctly identifying four beers each time in a blind tasting. As Paul took pains to point out I’ve always been utter crap at these in the past so I was super pleased with myself on this occasion. I shall miss the annual beer tastings, they were a great event and a good opportunity to catch up with old friends, and I shall miss Paul too, one of my oldest friends in Japan (I first met him in a Tengu izakaya in Koriyama city back in 1997), he has gradually gained status over the years as one of my bestest (and most supportive) mates. He and his wife are moving back to Australia later this year so I think I a wee Lambe-tour of Australia may be on the cards in 2009! Anyway, a big お疲れ様 to Paul and Kaori, they obviously worked super hard to make the beer-tasting a really great night. Here’s some piccies (the one of big Mark making team-mates Rei and I look like hobbits is worth waiting for), there’s some commentary on most of the pics if you hover your mouse over them, or you can click on them for a closer look.

BubbleShare: Share photos - Powered by BubbleShare

UPDATE (March 21st): Just got a mail from Paul today which reads: Absolutely poptastic having you stay for a couple of nights. Sunday night was very natsukashii. Baeren’s winter ale Ursus, which is a weizen bock won with 14.2 points and Sankt Gallen’s barley wine came second with 14.1. Those points are out of 20. Paul told us on the night that Baeren’s future is in doubt however as there was an explosion at the factory recently during which the owner was killed, and prompting me upon tasting the beer to declare it “dead good”.

Holy Crap

I saw this video on the imminent collapse of the U.S. dollar today and thought “Holy Crap!”. “U.S. balance of payments deficits is so strong and irreversible, that we must accept that at some future date there will be a run against the dollar. Probably the kind of disorderly run that precipitates a global financial crisis.” Dr. Paul A Samuelson (Nobel Prize winner in economics) said that in 2005. Obviously some big changes lie ahead…

GOOD.

Sayonara! Sayonara! Sayonara!

Wednesday I had my last classes with 3:4 and 3:2 and so naturally took some pictures of which you can see below. (下の写真をクリックしたらもっと大きく見えるよ!)

BubbleShare: Share photos - Delicious Christmas Recipes.

In the evening I met up with Chris Cotter in Umeda. Chris was over in Kansai on business and so we spent a very pleasant evening chatting and imbibing and covering various topics from bookish (The Best American Short Stories), to nerdish (the five best scenes from Doctor Who). And Chris told me that I look especially Irish when I’ve just come out of the Gents. So that was nice.

Finally, here’s a link to a twenty minute animation called The Story of Stuff. It’s very good, but to save me the bother of explaining it to you, here’s a synopsis from the web-page.

From its extraction through sale, use and disposal, all the stuff in our lives affects communities at home and abroad, yet most of this is hidden from view. The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It’ll teach you something, it’ll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.

Oim ‘ere to kill your monsta!

Things that have happened lately that I have neglected to blog about… Hmmm. Let’s see… It got colder…

Seriously, I’ve watched “It’s the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown” 13 times with my students (a palpable hit!) and have only 3 viewings to go…

Amusingly, I was chased down the street by a policeman last Tuesday morning (yes - CHASED!) and questioned as to the ownership of my bicycle AGAIN (that’s about 12 times since September). They like to claim it’s simply because I have “the wrong type of lock” but I think the fact I am white and have a big nose has something to do with it too. I think they think “Oh Jimminy! It’s a foreigner! He’s bound to be up to no good!” and then come galloping along in their excitement only to be met by my scowling face asking them “What’s your name and the name of your police station?” as I whip out my notebook and take down their details. Table-turning see. Role-reversal. Yeah. (Doesn’t work though).

Foolishly, I woke up late for my job at the clinic this Saturday (AGAIN!), jumped in a taxi and mailed K___-san to say I would be late. She then immediately replied, pointing out it was a national holiday and I had the day off anyway. So that felt a bit silly.

Nepotistically, I’ve put a link up in the blog-roll to Chris Cotter’s “Heads Up English!” - an English teaching resource site that looks pretty snappy.

Sadly, Luka’s bar Pagode is closing down on Saturday and you can read about that and about the final live music performance this Friday (Nov. 9th) and about a possible Pagode resurrection up in the mountains up on the sister-blog at Deep Kyoto.

Regrettably, tonight I managed to wind-up one of my (adult) students by being just plain rude. Thing is, I’m not naturally the most patient person (bad trait in a teacher I know) and he is one of my more mind-bogglingly obtuse students. He has a habit of sinking into his own little world, and staring at the page or the ceiling whilst muttering to himself in Japanese and holding up the class for twenty to thirty minutes at a time. After ten minutes of him doing this while his partner tried to get him to respond with endless unanswered questions I decided to intervene and spur him on a bit. Which was the right thing to do. But I was less than diplomatic in doing so. And I have to be dimplomatic. Because he is a customer. And for better or for worse, for the time being, that’s my job. Sigh. Oh well, I shall just try to be nicer next time and hope he forgives me…

And finally… to explain tonight’s title. There’s an amusing post by Neil Gaiman up on his website today on a press junket for the new Beowulf movie. He makes brief mention of two of the stars of the movie; Angelina Jolie (turns out - she’s a human being!) and Ray Winstone, who, quite delightfully, is very much Ray Winstone. And I’m not going to give you a link to that you lazy gits - just type in “Neil” on google and be totally awe-struck by the fact that he is the most popular Neil in the entire google-verse.

And there I was not blogging for the last couple of weeks because I thought I had nothing to blog about.

Infinity in the back of beyond…


Another fresh post up today on Deep Kyoto of strange but cool Hachihachi Infinity Cafe.

And after writing all that I’m beat, so I shall leave you with another video from Satoko’s performance at Togatoga last week as I want to try out this new blogger video icon… Ah, look how incredibly long it’s taking… Maybe I’ll just embed it from youtube before I fall asleep on the keyboard. Ah, look it won’t let me embed youtube videos anymore. Wow, that took forever. This one goes out two-finger-style to my good friend Chris “I hate videos on blogs” Cotter.

One last thing: here is a link to a fossilized walrus baculum that was sold at auction a few days ago in Beverley Hills. The final bidding? $8,000. The expression on the face of the guy holding it? Priceless. BACULUM.

Kudos For Kumar


This picture is dedicated to Kumar Sivasubramanian as he liked my hair so much in a picture I posted a week or so ago.
I got a mail from Kumar recently which read as follows:

There’s an interview over at geek fanboy site Ain’t It Cool News (a.k.a AICN) with Dark Horse editor Philip Simon about the manga EDEN, which I am translating. In it, he talks a little bit about me and the work I am doing. (It’s kind of near the bottom, but it’s worth reading the whole interview if you are interested in this kind of thing.): http://www.aintitcool.com/display.cgi?id=24422

So there you have it. Looks like an interesting manga alright. Lots of kudos for Kumar.

Here are some more links I want to get shot of:

Chris Cotter sent me this amusing beer commercial (parental advisory on this one): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7c2KLWEvsbI

That notorious group emailer Anne Kobayashi also sent me this wacky 9/11 conspiracy theory (be warned it’s a bit long and the guy’s voice is kind of whiny):
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5946593973848835726

Here’s another theory; could it be that George W. Bush et al are deliberately fostering these wacky theories in order to distract attention from their more obvious lies, war crimes etc. and to discredit all opposition to their policies?

No, probably not.

I have another couple of links to go but first it’s time for

TASTIEST FISH OF THE WEEK!

This week’s TASTIEST FISH OF THE WEEK is the Largehead Hairtail (also known as the Cutlass fish) or in Japanese “Tachiuo” (太刀魚 - literally “Fat/Blade/Fish”). This chrome colored fish is a favorite of both the Japanese and Koreans who eat it either grilled or raw as sashimi. This is what it looks like before cooking:


And this is what it looked like last night after a good grilling:

The flesh is soft and tender and parts easily from the bone. Very nice with Yebisu Lager and Yebisu Black mixed half & half stylie.

Anyway, my final links tonight are both from youtube. One of the nice things about youtube is that you can find stuff you saw years and years back and thought would never see again. Here is a very nice late ’80s video of Peter Gabriel (with a mullet) and Yossou N’Dour “Shaking the Tree”:


And here’s a classic video of Talk Talk going nuts in the woods back in 1986:


I liked it back then, and I still like it now.

おやすみなさい。


Lots of News

Anyone see Japan play Australia last night? I tuned in for the last (and most important) 15 minutes and what a funny game eh? I especially liked the scenes after the match of the delighted dancing Aussie fans and the speechless Japanese. Today, at school, I kept accidentally dropping the name “Australia” into different contexts. Tee-hee.

Last week, (Monday June 5th) Hyon Joo, Yu Gyong and I went up to Hiezan and had a lovely day. Here’s a picture of me looking gay among the poppies at the Hiezan Garden Museum.

I’ve been meaning to get up to Hiezan for the last two years but have somehow never managed it - until now. Anyway, last week the weather was perfect. You can see more pictures of flowers and temples and other recent stuff (sakura and so forth) if you click to my Flickr site here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/46253270@N00/sets/72157594164482825/

As it turns out that’ll be the last Monday I have off for a while as there’s been a major upheaval at my main place of work. Leilani has had to quit her full-time job so she can go home to New Zealand and look after her sick mum. As a result, my hours have increased from 12 to 19 a week… and though I’m a lot busier, it does mean a big increase in my monthly wage. And I still finish no later than 2 o’clock (and sometimes 12). It’s a shame to see Leilani go but good news for my bank balance.

Here are some pictures you won’t see on my Flickr site of Paul Spark’s 10th Beer tasting party held last Saturday at his Tokyo pad. Once again Mr. Sparks excelled himself, getting all the beers, keeping us all fed and well imbibed and funtertaining us with his impossible quizzes. Sadly he was so busy running in and out of the kitchen I didn’t get any pictures of HIM. Still, thanks for another good night Paul!

Below, left to right: Graham Chave, My Clam, and Chris Cotter.
We’s tasting the beers, innit.
Graham looking coy…

True Chave comes out and finds new uses for chocolate “Pocky” sticks.