Global Nanpa

Mär 31

moby.jpg

Today I came across that funny pic below and it reminded me again of how difficult the situation is for nerds in the western world to find a decent girl.
In school and university nerds often get taken advantage of and usually don’t get many chances for dating.
I know that first hand from my time at MIT, the ultimate nerd bastion. My time there was deeply inspiring and I met my best friends for life.
I would estimate that at least 90% of the students there can be considered real nerds. The girls were totally hot assets, even just mediocre looking ones.
The people there were the most friendly and smart ones I ever met.
Probably quiet a bit of nerdiness is inside of myself.

What I recognized during my travels is that nerds are popular among the girls in Asia. I saw a lot of nerds being in company with pretty girls and it didn’t always looked like it was about money only. Of course in general a girl always prefers a handsome guy more than an ugly guy. But if the nerd is in ok physical condition, got a good job and decent behavior, he will mostly win against the California beach boy type guy in Asia.
Moreover nerds are like most Asians very peaceful people and not as aggressive as maybe a large percentage of the imperialistic type of farangs, bule, gaijins, etc…
A lot of the girls I had met closer in Asia mostly told me that they look for “good heart” and a stable nerd is probably also less likely to butterfly around.

I think most nerds in the western world simply don’t know about the fact that they could be popular among girls in Asia. I would recommend every nerd to take a vacation there and explore that new territory. They will probably get snatched away by the girls quickly.

nerds.jpg

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Mär 24

From the ITravelnet blog :

The slow decline of the US Dollar as a global currency continues with the tailors of Bangkok now advertising their rates in Euros.
bkk_tailor-usd.jpg

bkk_tailor-euro.jpg

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Mär 22

watergate_berlin.jpg

This weekend Berlin is packed with people wherever you go. Restaurants and clubs are full of people. Tonight i went to the Vietnamese restaurant Cuno with my friend Benjamin and afterwards we went to Watergate. We had to wait 1 hour in line to get in and 1 hour to get out again later. It was so crowded that it wasn’t possible to step 1 meter forwards, backwards or sideways without touching someone. I am glad that we hammered ourselves with several drinks at the restaurant bar before. I am also happy that I wasn’t finishing my last drinks at the club. My brain cells will thank me for that when I wake up.
I also included a video of the Weekend club which I shot 2 weeks ago. I would have liked to include a video from the club Berghain/Ostgut/Panoramabar, but it is strictly forbidden to bring in cameras there, so I am not able to share the atmosphere with you. Berghain is maybe the most famous club in Berlin. Everyone probably remembers his/her first time there. The bouncers there look scary, the large painting in the entrance is simply amazing and when you enter the club over the stairways you feel like in the movie Matrix 1 : you see purple/green neonlight, the rooms are just huge, very high ceilings and it looks raw and brutal. When you walk up the stairs you feel the bass hitting your chest hard, the whole steel stairway is vibrating. Gays are dancing on the platform in the main room and you face a surrealistic situation right from the beginning.
When the sun rises again, sunblinds are going down and the party is just about to really begin.
Anyone visiting Berlin has to experience it at least once.
Lucky Star is my local chinese restaurant, very close to my apartment. You will find me there often.
I am very happy that I can sleep now long and recover…..

Lucky Star restaurant :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ws6bSwGqAbM

Cuno restaurant :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xamHbRG-f_w

Weekend club :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3Z9Lm92CWU

Watergate club :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HSDvraPzA5Q

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHj6acvOaEI

Berghain / Panoramabar (one of the few existing videos) :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BkrH3Hu2ipI&feature=related

A bouncer of Berghain/ Panoramabar (don’t mess with that guy…) :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Pu0bSbwjXU&feature=relatedberghain.jpg

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Mär 16

ferrari_china.jpg

China is the most extreme country when it comes to status symbols. It is already a big market for luxury sports cars and continues to grow fast.

A friend of mine actually just bought an apartment in Beijing. Property price levels climbed much in the past years. A well located apartment in Beijing already costs the same like in Berlin, Germany (about 3000 Euros per square meter). Shanghai and Hong Kong are even a lot more expensive.

Miss China, Ferrari model :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Clhk3TBRcA

Ferrari owners driving in northern China :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBFKJ-6BcZA

Chonghing car show :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxCxlXMwt3M

Someone being happy about his F 430 :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8CMDLI2NJE&feature=related

Better have some fun with the Enzo in Prague :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjzlHSQH1UE&feature=related

Meet Dennis - a young dutch guy racing with the cars :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NjUB8gzl5e8&feature=related

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Mär 14

kogal_1.jpg

Text from Wikipedia

Kogal :

Kogal (kogyaru) is a subculture of girls and young women in urban Japan, one of several types of so-called gyaru. They are characterized by conspicuously displaying their disposable income through distinctive tastes in fashion, music, and social activity. In general, the kogal “look” roughly approximates a sun-tanned California Valley Girl, and indeed, there are even some linguistic similarities between these Western groups and Kogal. Both subcultures have derived entire sets of slang terms (such as “Kogalese” (kogyaru-go). Kogals are not to be confused with the ganguro subculture, although they are similar.
Kogals are known for wearing platform boots, a miniskirt, copious amounts of makeup, hair coloring (usually blonde or brown), artificial suntans, and designer accessories. If in school uniform, the look typically includes skirts pinned very high and loose socks (large baggy socks that go up to the knee). Kogals’ busy social lives and desire for new material goods lead them to be among the first consumers of Japanese mobile phone technology, and their taste in clothes tends toward Burberry scarves and Louis Vuitton handbags. Kogals spend much of their free time (and their parents’ income) shopping, and their culture centers on the Shibuya district of Tokyo, in particular the 109 building, although major Japanese cities are sure to have a small population. During the summer, kogals may sometimes be seen at the beach. They are generally not seen in high-end department stores.
Critics of the Kogal subculture decry its materialism as reflecting a larger psychological or spiritual emptiness in modern Japanese life. Some kogals support their lifestyle with allowances from wealthy parents, living a “freeter” or “parasite single” existence that grates against traditional principles of duty and industry. More may engage in the practice of “compensated dating”, or enjo ksai, which may at times border on quasi-legal prostitution. Internet-based usage of this term has led some Western observers to the mistake of believing that “kogal” means “prostitute”.
The kogal phenomenon emerged in the mid-1990s and its effects can still be seen today in its numerous off-shoots of sub-categories, although conservative tastes in dress and hair color seem to be on the upswing. The Gothic Lolita aesthetic has been described as a reaction to the kogal look, since it attempts to reclaim childhood innocence, though skeptics point out that most Lolita merely model after J-rock cosplay and spend just as much, if not more money on their appearance when compared to kogals.
The term’s etymology is disputed. The most common theory is that it was derived from the Japanese word for “high school”, or k?k for short, although others claim that it comes from ko, the Japanese word for “girl” or “child”. The “gal” originates from English. See gyaru.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNpEqKgonwM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w15j4rKKoBo

kogal_2.jpg

Ganguro :

In ganguro fashion, a deep tan is combined with hair dyed in shades of orange to blonde, or a silver gray known as “high bleached”. Black ink is used as eyeliner and white concealer is used as lipstick and eyeshadow. False eyelashes, plastic facial gems, and pearl powder are often added to this. Platform shoes and brightly-colored outfits complete the ganguro look. Also typical of ganguro fashion are tie-dyed sarongs, miniskirts, and lots of bracelets, rings, and necklaces.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_0xOXqK4MQ&feature=related

ganguro_girl.jpg

Yamanba :

Yamanba, is a newer term often used to describe extreme practitioners of ganguro fashion. Yamanba feature darker tans and add white lipstick, pastel eye makeup, tiny metallic or glittery adhesives below the eyes, brightly-colored contact lenses, plastic dayglo-colored clothing, and incongruous accessories to the ganguro look. Some yamanba wear stuffed animals as decorations. The male equivalent is called a “center guy” Sentaagai, Center Street), a pun on the name of a pedestrian shopping street near Shibuya Station in Tokyo where yamanba and center guys are often seen. Yamanba is often referred to as the outdated version of Mamba.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyK66UHcrY4

Lolita :

Lolita (roriita fasshon) is a fashion subculture in Japan that is primarily influenced by Victorian children’s clothing as well as costumes from the Rococo period. Lolita has made this into a unique fashion by adding gothic and original design elements to the look. From this, Lolita fashion has evolved into several different sub styles and has created a devoted subculture in Japan. The Lolita look consists primarily of a knee length skirt or dress, headdress, blouse, petticoat, knee length socks or stockings and rocking horse or high heel/platform shoes. Often to emphasize the childlike look, teddy bears and dolls such as Super Dollfies may be carried.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krj7u9npOYI

lolita.jpg

Gothic Lolita :

Among English language fandom, the term Elegant Gothic Lolita was originally used to describe a sub-set of Lolita fashion that was either all black, or mostly black with white accents. However, there are many subsets within ‘Gothic Lolita,’ including, but not limited shirorori (white lolita), kurorori (black lolita), gurorori (Gory or grotesque lolita), and punk lolita. Black (kuro) and white (shiro) lolitas wear all black and white respectively, guro lolitas are often defined by bandages and an “injured” appearance, and punk lolita adds a punk touch to lolita fashion. There are fashions similar in feeling to gothic lolita but they are not regarded by the gothic lolita community as authentic, rather “lolita-styled”.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_p8OwnHxUQo

gothic-lolita.jpg

Maid :

Meido (Japanese phonetic of maid) is also a jargon term amongst some otaku to refer to a type of stock female character in manga and anime. The characterization can have a cute or ecchi connotation depending on the writer. Most address their employers as goshujinsama or ojousama (especially the former. The latter is generally used for the employers’ daughter).
The character differs from the traditional image of a typical housekeeper in being young, highly attractive, and usually wearing a maid outfit vaguely similar to a classic English or French design . In shnen and seinen the outfit is almost universally fetishized: low-cut to show off the legs and chest, excessively colorful and/or frilly, and usually with white apron of variable length.
Meido are often written in a comedic light, having employers with variably subtle embarrassing personality quirks which they put up with, having completely different personalities when “off the clock”, or reprimanding their masters like children.
Many bishojo shows which contain scenes of characters in large households or doing spring cleaning inevitably produce art with the characters in these sorts of outfits. The maids are often dressed in a combination of french maid-styled uniforms in attempt to look “moe”. They also behave in a “cute” and “moe” manner. Sometimes, the maid outfit is augmented with cat or bunny ears. At maid cafes, most service staff members are female, and male jobs are typically limited to bar-backing and janitorial duties. Some homepages of maid cafés offer pictures and profiles of the maids.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSSqJZmn3AE&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctIfNZIuP9o

maid_1.jpg

So, which type is your favorite ?

2 pretty good overall videos :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UG3VMH7LeSQ&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oy0HlyXvuwE

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Mär 14

sad_pinay.jpg

From the Asia Times Online :

BANGKOK - Although prostitution is illegal in the Philippines, sex remains a thriving industry both domestically and abroad. Many Filipinas ply the world’s oldest profession in an attempt to overcome crushing poverty and the oppressive economic crisis gripping their homeland. Even Filipinas who work overseas legally - as maids, nannies or in other legitimate occupations - often find themselves turning to the sex trade to supplement meager incomes and to send money home to the Philippines to support impoverished family members.

The Philippines has a bustling sex trade with much variety. Small bars and clubs serve locals - often taxi drivers, laborers and even local teenagers looking to solve their virginity - and employ women from poor rural areas who “service” clients for as little as 200-400 pesos (US$5-$10). More glitzy establishments cater to foreigners, especially in areas such as Makati, Pasay, Ermita or Angeles City where GRO’s (Guest Relations Officers) can be known to charge as much as 2,000-3,000 pesos ($50-$75), even for a “short time” experience.

A recent visit to Makati, the business district of Manila, found bars packed with scantily clad girls, many adorned in thong bikinis or lingerie and gyrating enthusiastically to Western pop music. Several were equally enthusiastically about grinding their nearly naked bodies against male customers’ in hopes of enticing a business arrangement. The enticement is obviously doubled when two girls set upon a customer, but the 6,000 pesos or so required to take them out can have a cooling effect.

More “off the beaten track” places can be found throughout the Philippines, especially any place catering to foreign tourists, which is just about everywhere. Prices in these venues range from 1,000 - 2,000 pesos ($25-$50), but the price tag is often enough for an overnight companion.

Prices aside, the sheer volume of sex workers in the Philippines is staggering. The most recent report by the International Labor Organization (ILO) estimated that as of 1998 there were as many 500,000 women working in the sex trade.

The ILO report also estimated that some 150,000 Filipinas were working in Japan as “entertainers”. In a 2005 interview with the Philippine Star a woman explained the realities of working there: “I used to work in Japan. I was there only six months. We enter as entertainers, but most of us have to earn through prostitution”.

The Japanese Government was placed in Tier 2 in the 2007 United States Department of State’s Trafficking in Persons Report for not fully complying with the Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking, but making “significant efforts” to do so. Japan’s significant effort appears to be largely based on a few arrests and limiting the number of entertainer’s visas to about 80,000 - 100,000.

The Philippine government’s own policies regarding overseas contract workers (OCWs) only helps to encourage the flow of women working abroad. But the situation in Japan is hardly unique: the popularity of Filipina OCWs is also evident on any Sunday afternoon on the streets and parks of Hong Kong. As Sunday is traditionally a day off for OCWs, hundreds of thousands of Filipinas meet to socialize with their compatriots. While many work as household helpers, a visit to Wan Chai - Hong Kong’s red light district - makes it obvious that some Filipinas are moonlighting in the sex trade.

One such woman told Asia Times Online that she was a domestic helper, but frequented clubs to sell sex to mostly expatriate clients. “Yeah, I come to the bars sometimes to look for some extra cash from the customers for short time sex. In just a couple hours a few days a week I can easily double my salary”, said the 23-year-old, who added that she was lucky to work for an employer who let her come out a few times a week.

“Some girls only get to come out on Sundays, it is not as easy for them. Even then some have strict curfews from their bosses. One girl had an ex-employer who would only let her out on Sundays and then she had to be back by 7pm. When the girl asked the employer ‘why’, the boss said, ‘If you go out to the bars you’ll get pregnant and then I’ll have to find a new maid.’ Can you imagine that?” she said.

“If nothing else I can see some friends and have a beer, maybe get lucky and make some money. It is always good when the US fleet is in town; I have had as many as three customers in one night,” she said, appearing truly pleased by her good fortune.

“I want to send money back to my family in the Philippines and save some for myself. I don’t get much as a maid so this helps me earn more,” she said as she placed her hand on the thigh of an Asia Times Online’ reporter.

The standard proscribed wage for a domestic helper is HKD$3,480 per month (roughly US$450). Working the bars can mean serious income for girls who charge usually a minimum of HKD $1,000 for a “quickie”.

The situation for underpaid domestic helpers is consistent across Asia; not just in Hong Kong, but also in Singapore, Australia and Malaysia. From Shanghai to Dubai, young Asia women, frequently Filipinas, end up featuring prominently in the local sex scene.

The international migration of Filipinos seeking work has been prominent for decades. In the Philippines, labor is the top export; the government has long encouraged the practice by offering assistance in getting overseas jobs. One such perk is that OCWs are given “first grab” at land purchases in certain areas, with mortgages being subsidized by the government at low interest rates.

Asia Times Online reported last month that the Philippines’ central bank estimated that migrant workers would send home at least $14 billion in 2007. This makes the Philippines number three in the world for foreign remittances, behind only Mexico and India. Each year funds sent from abroad represents almost 10% of the country’s annual GDP.

Some portion of the money sent home, while it is hard to calculate to an exact amount, is no doubt coming from exporting Filipinas not only for labor, but also for sex.

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Mär 13

Ferrari fleet in Thailand

by globalnanpa in Lifestyle, News

siamparagon_1.jpg

Where can you buy dream sports cars in Thailand ? Well, Bangkok has at least 3 Ferrari/Lamborghini/Porsche dealerships I know of yet, maybe even more. The largest one is at the shopping mall Siam Paragon on flor 2.
Not even in the larger cities of Germany you will find that many luxury sports car dealerships. But Thailand is nothing when you compare it with China. I wonder where and when they really want to drive these cars ? Germany is the only country in the world where you are legally allowed to drive such cars to the max. If I would be living in Asia and enjoying sports cars a lot, I would rather fly to Europe, rent a car from Elite Rent for example and drive through the Swiss alps for a few days or something like this. I personally like Lamborghinis more than Ferraris but the this posting shall be about Ferrari. The brand Ferrari is also more well-known and most people think of it as the best sports car brand of all.

The cars at Siam Paragon :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8_VSxuDL8I&feature=related

Ferrari on the way to Pattaya (my personal favorite) :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vk7AgvlOog

Porsche GT3 against Ferrari :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sSmisr2hIk

Cruising with a Ferrrari 360 :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1KKwhdvrhY

A Ferrari overtakes a tuk-tuk :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgiAV4ISwf4&feature=related

Gumball in Thailand :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTuJ7ClKXBE&feature=related

Ferrari 456 crushed by Thai customs :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iR8Z_W42sE&feature=related

ferrari-customs_crush.jpg

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Mär 12

ms_bkk_1.jpg

A few weeks ago I came across an interesting Thailand blog. The man behind is actually the current marketing director of Microsoft Thailand and Global Nanpa is the first one to report about it.
Derek’s „Bemused in Bangkok“ blog got a bit inactive recently since he got married. But he also writes quiet long stories and very personal.
It’s funny that he got married with a girl from Sukhothai. My Thai ex girl-friend is also from Sukhothai.
Derek probably is one of the very friendly expats in SEA. Just read a bit of his stuff.

msthailand_coup_2006_derek_and_the_tank.jpg
Here is an extract of some of his writing :

Thai Smile

Reading the expat web discussion board the other day it once again made me feel I’m living in a different Thailand than them – it’s as if I’m Harry Potter and went through immigration gate 13 ½ and ended up in a different place than many of these endlessly whining expats droning on and on about deficiencies in anything and everything. The latest was a rhetorical question asking if the Thai smile in “The Land of Smiles” was real or just hiding something insincere and untrustworthy.
First off there are all the normal kinds of people in the Thailand I live in – some are happy and some aren’t. Some I trust and some I don’t. Everyone has good days and bad days. Life is a tough here as anywhere else. That said, I sure see a lot more authentic happy smiles in my day to day life here – at work (I’m one of two farangs out of one-hundred-fifty+), around Thai friends and family and just in everyday interactions. One of the things that never ceases to amaze me are the smiles and laughter I see around me. Today watching a policeman writing a ticket to two teens on their motorbike, people in the back of pick-ups, construction workers doing backbreaking work in the heat of the sun – all around me I see laughter and smiles bubble up from a gritty and tough day to day life.
There are in fact many recognized Thai smiles. (”yim” in Thai) When I found the list below I read the names out to my girlfriend Meow and she knew everyone and was able to give me an example. Very fun and it had me smiling – and then laughing. Every Thai knows about these smiles – and knows that a smile does not equate with being happy necessarily.

The fact that many of the smiles seem counter-intuitive to the emotion or situation seems to me not to be some sort of insincerity rather I think it reflects something central to the Thai culture. Accepting things like they are and doing the best with the hand you’re dealt. Clearly like any personal or cultural trait there are good and bad sides in how things play out. But here a good life is full of “sanook” (enjoyment) and for the moments and times that aren’t “sanook” you may as well put a brave smile on and make the most of it. Makes sense to me.
Take the example of the “yim haring” smile. There is the Thai equivalent to the resigned, rolling the eyes and exhale look the United Airlines baggage agent will give you when they lose your luggage. And at the core the Thai smile and the American resigned expression are both saying the same thing “I didn’t lose your luggage, I’m doing what I can so don’t give me a hard time”. Whatever culture we come from we learn how to read these expressions quite well. (I’ve heard one of the things that is so difficult for Autistic children is that they can’t read facial expressions and understand the emotions behind them.) It just seems that for some it’s hard to get past the fact that this same message could be delivered in different ways. Or should I say that the delivery of different messages could be conveyed in similar ways. I really can’t say one is innately better than the other but for me the Thai way, the Thai smile, suits me just fine. If it’s a superficial veneer of pleasantness overlaid on top of life’s tough times so be it. What the better alternative – to scowl?
thaismile.jpg

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Mär 8

dr_jekyll_and_mr_hyde_.jpg

Sometimes i read about the double lifes of expats in Asia. They are doing their regular jobs and at the nights and weekends they are living a completely different life, none of their family or even close friends know of.
I am not an expat and I have never stayed longer than a month in Asia during my travels. I am not living a double life, but i am starting to become schizophrenic during travel.
The „evil“ side of my personality is more and more taking upper hand and controlling me. I can exponentiate that situation when drinking alcohol. During my earlier travels I was able to control myself easily. But during the most recent trips, I pretty much felt like transforming into a different person. There were too many temptations and I didn’t wanted to resist anymore.
Next mornings I sometimes couldn’t believe anymore i really experienced what I saw on my camera. I certainly felt a few times like turning from Dr. Jekyll into Mr. Hyde. Knowing that about myself, I am actually quiet glad that I work/live in Europe and not in SEA. That place fucks up a lot of people if you stay there too long, moreover you probably become jaded ( living in the candy factory…) and cannot enjoy it anymore in the same way when you only have timely limited access to all its attractions. As an “outsider” you are more likely to keep some goals/dreams you work for, if you are still far away from retiring.

Watch yourself that you don’t slip into it too deep. Reality checks are neccessary.

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Mär 2

bkkdangerous_22-08.jpg

Here is a trailer of Bangkok Dangerous 2008. The movie gets released on August, 22nd in the USA.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Ny5CbT3bAo
For comparison reasons the link for the trailer of Bangkok Dangerous 2000 :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNgRK7mZCeo&feature=related

Review Summary :
Original Bangkok Dangerous directors Danny and Oxide Pang return to familiar territory with this remake of their own popular 1999 thriller about a ruthless hit-man (Nicolas Cage) who travels to Bangkok in order to carry out four crucial jobs. During the course of his missions, the triggerman falls in love with a pretty local girl while also forming a friendly bond with his young errand boy.

bkkdangerous_1.jpg

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