Friday, February 25, 2011

Inspiration For New K-Drama

While surfing through the JoongAng Daily on-line, it occurred to me that some news stories had the potential to be new plot lines for Korean TV. It’s been some time since I’ve actually followed a new Korean TV drama so excuse me if the following suggestions aren’t trendy, clichéd or plain dull.

First off, here’s an idea for wholesome entertainment, suitable for the whole family – an elementary school somewhere out in the boondocks of Korea is under threat of closure with its shrinking numbers until a young teacher comes along with fresh ideas to turn things around. Start with some conflicts with over-aged students, conservative principal or staff and anxious parents.



Then mix these with some heated debates about whether encouraging creativity undermines discipline. Finally spice it up with pastoral scenes of the children harvesting their own sweet potatoes in their own school vegetable garden and you may have a recipe for a heart-warming though awfully clichéd story that may be a throwback to Sidney Poitier’s To Sir With Love.


Too treacly for your tastebuds? How about this other school-based story with a nod towards Park Chan-wook’s Sympathy For Lady Vengeance? A ex-army retiree has the local eyebrows raised when she volunteers to be a school sheriff. Comic scenes of how she bungles during her training sessions turn into sinister moments as she takes advantage of her placid demeanour and position to do away with the fourth-grade teachers one by one.



Plot No. 3 – An ex- government worker receives a windfall and pursues his dream of setting up a bar. Things go well for him until he comes to the defence of a young employee who’s being bullied by his colleagues to take part in drinking rounds of soju. The underbelly of corporate culture comes under scrutiny here through the eyes of the bartender cum pub owner – to drink or not to drink, is that simply the question?



Plot No 4 – A study of a family business in a barbershop - across three generations. The colourful lives of their patrons like the corrupt politician and head of a chaebol will form the substance of each episode. Woven into this story would be the generational clash between the family patriarch who wants to “keep what is sacred” and his grand-son who wants to move to Gangnam.

Finally, a grim story based on the memoirs of a retired prison guard whose guilty conscience drives him to seek atonement for taking part in the execution of innocent political prisoners. Set against the turbulent politics of the 1950s, we get a chance to see what Seoul was like in the post-war years.

So what do you think? !%$i$(&##%@*^%#@$%

OK , OK - I'm sticking to my day job.


sources:
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2929813

http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2932715
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2931620
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2932556
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2932085

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Expect The Unexpected This Spring

If you're planning a trip to South Korea this spring and wondering what to pack - I'd suggest that you include some winter woollies. Last spring was a bit of a meteorological roller-coaster so be prepared for some unpredictable weather again in 2011.  See below.


Photo on right - 10th March 2010 - Snows fell on spring blossoms ( Yonhap)


From KBS Website:
No Unusual Weather Conditions Forecasted for Spring

"Temperatures in South Korea have been warm this week, but forecasters are predicting the weather to be highly variable into mid-March.The Korea Meteorological Administration predicts that this spring will see similar temperatures to previous years, except for the unusually low temperatures recorded last spring. However, a cold front from the north will expand to the Korean Peninsula around mid-March, temporarily driving down temperatures.Also, the eastern part of Korea will witness low temperatures in April. Precipitation in March and May will be similar to that seen in previous years, but April will likely be relatively dry."

Photo on left: Snow fell in Seoul  on 22 March 2010






Photo on right: Strong winds ravage Seoul on Tuesday, with wind chill temperatures falling below zero degrees Celsius. 27 April 2010



Let's see how accurate this KMA is in its predictions for this year.

sources:
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_Dm_detail.htm?No=79669&id=Dm
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=14619&current_page=16
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=14539¤t_page=16
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=14788¤t_page=14

Free Bus For Tourists From Seoul To Busan

Good news for foreigners who'd like a free ride to Busan. Click here for important update.

From March 2nd, you can hop on a free shuttle bus from Seoul to Busan, if you're a non-Korean .

The service in a 28-seater limousine bus operates each weekday except Mondays.
Wifi access is available on board, alongside DVD players and materials with useful tips on tourist attractions in Busan.



Starting point : outside Dongwha Duty Free Shop in Gwanghwamun
Stops at the Lotte Hotel and Paradise Hotel in Busan

Other info from the KTO website:

Make reservations for the shuttle service through the Visit Korea Year website www.visitkoreayear.com (Korean, English, Japanese and Chinese).
Two tickets are available per reservation. Reservation must be made 10 days in advance to guarantee seating. Remaining unreserved seats will be allotted on a space available basis.

Don't forget your passport!


Click here for info about similar services that ply the Seoul-Gyeongju and Seoul-Jeonju routes.


* For more information: 02-1577-2507, E-mail: visitkorea@chesstours.co.kr

* 1330 call center: +82-2-1330 (Korean, English, Chinese, Japanese)


sources:
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/FU/FU_EN_15.jsp?cid=1214472
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/SI/SI_EN_3_6.jsp?cid=609796

Monday, February 21, 2011

Spring's Here, For Some At Least

Snow on Haeundae Beach, Busan - 14 February 2011

While those in the east coast may still be shovelling snow from their rooftops of their houses and cars or pathways outside homes or shops, those on the west coast of the Korean peninsular seem to be enjoying balmy temperatures already.

Snow-covered roofs in Gangwon-do, 17 Feb 2011

Let's hope this spring will be a mild one and more predictable than last year. The cherry blossoms didn't oblige photographers and enthusiasts by appearing on schedule.  There were also unpleasant surprises for Korean farmers last spring.  



Red plum blossoms have appeared at the UN Memorial Park, Busan

KBS reports: "Spring flowers are beginning to bloom on Jeju Island. Rape blossoms, which are regarded as harbingers of spring on the island, are blooming in some coastal areas. The blooming will be at its peak in March and April. Japanese apricot flowers are also in full blossom, signaling that winter is giving in to spring. The temperature even reached as high as 15 degrees Celsius on Jeju last week. Tourists to Jeju are busy bidding farewell to the severe winter and ushering in spring on the southern island." 
White plum blossoms in Hallim Park, Jeju

sources:
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2932471
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_Dm_detail.htm?No=79584
http://www.korea.net/news.do?mode=detail&guid=53309
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=16025&current_page=
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=16077&current_page=

Friday, February 18, 2011

One Standing Egg with Cat, Broccoli, Bell Peppers and So On





Check out this collaboration between this Korean band and a Japanese animator. Such a refreshing change from girl groups  in short shorts.

Particularly enjoy resting my eyes on  the background of patterned strips of cloth in different shades. Makes me want to go shopping to redecorate the interiors of my home. How long did it take to create the stop-motion video? Kudos to the patience of the designer who made strawberries look like Ethel Merman's group of synchronised swimmers.

BTW, this is the second "La La La" song I've featured on this blog - the first by SG Wannabe is here. Why am I attracted to songs with such lame titles?


Details:
Standing Egg -Debut Mini Album "lalala2010.04.21 RELEASE

My Space http://www.myspace.com/standingegg

Video : Taijin Takeuchi

Very comprehensive posting on this group here.

source:
http://www.allkpop.com/2010/12/unhyped-talent-standing-egg

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Form Versus Substance In Jwibulnori

Ok - call me old-fashioned and a party-pooper, but I find something about the first photo from Yonhap News mildly unromantic. The children here, playing with LED lights, are giving a modern spin on a traditional activity known as Jwibulnori.

The custom is observed on Daeboreum, the first full moon night of the lunar year. It's nice that these children are having fun and continuing some ancient tradition and their parents would probably approve the new devices which are safer and save more energy. The kids can also delight in the wider variety of coloured lights compared to the traditional lit charcoal pieces in a covered tin-can.

Give me the heat, warmth and incandescence of the original anytime.



I also  wonder how many of them were familiar with its cultural roots - the serious practical purpose behind the game?

An excerpt from a source:
"Historically, people played the traditional game named jwibulnori (쥐불놀이) the night before daeboreum. They burned the dry grass on ridges between rice fields while children whirled around cans full of holes, through which charcoal fire blazed. These cans fertilized the fields and got rid of harmful worms that destroyed the new crops."



I'm not sure how much of that custom is based on some old wives' tale and how much of it has any scientific basis. How do the ashes of the charcoal fires help to get rid of harmful worms while sparing the useful or innocuous ones?

It probably means little to urbanites anyway. So many agrarian-based practices are barely observed these days because we don't see the relevance. It would be interesting to see if Koreans living abroad will still have or play jwibulnori.


sources:
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/FU/FU_EN_15.jsp?cid=1200048

http://www.korea.net/detail.do?guid=52832&thiscode=eng010003&mode=popup&TB_iframe=true&height=420&width=700
http://www.lifeinkorea.com/culture/festivals/festivals.cfm?Subject=Jeongwol
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/FU/FU_EN_15.jsp?cid=1197854
http://www.asiarooms.com/en/travel-guide/south-korea/busan/festivals-and-events-in-busan/jeongwol-daeboreum-daljip-(straw-heap)-burning-busan.html
http://www.investkorea.org/InvestKoreaWar/work/ik/eng/nr/nr_01_read.jsp?no=608300001&l_unit=90202&bno=902040007&page=4&sort_num=78
http://www.korea.net/news.do?mode=detail&guid=53151
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daeboreum
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Korea-Daeboreumnal-Full_Moon_Festival-05.jpg
http://samedi.livejournal.com/361102.html
http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Culture_of_Korea
http://www.freewebs.com/tb2korea/Korean%20Festival/Daeboreum.jpg

Monday, February 14, 2011

Snowstorm Statistics

Here's a thumbnail sketch ( painted in numbers ) of the havoc created by a low pressure system south of the Korean Peninsula which created a snow cloud over Gangwondo this weekend, just before Valentine's Day.

An average of 50 centimeters ( 19.7 inches) of snow inundated Gangwondo. Some specific examples: Daegwallyeong - 56.3 cm; Gangneung - 77.7 cm ; , Donghae -100.1 cm; and get this, Samcheok - 120 cm.


 
1,280 residents in 640 households were cut off.

300 people in 100 cars were snowbound for 34 hours.
 293 local bus services were disrupted.

75 buildings ( 67 greenhouses, 7 livestock facilities and 1 warehouse ) collapsed from the weight of the snow piling up on the rooftops.




12,000 soldiers, 11 military helicopters, and 1560 snowplows have been deployed in the battle against the snowstorm.

Estimated damage - 4.5 billion won ( $4 million).

My mind is still reeling from the thought of  120 cm of snow in Samcheok. How on earth are the inhabitants of that town in particular coping? What I'd also like to know is how many poor tourists were caught unawares and how they managed to deal with all the hardships and disruptions to their travel plans. Do they have special phone apps, courtesy of the KMA ( Korean Meterological Administation) or the KTO to give them advanced warning of such ambushes by Nature?

sources:
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2011/02/113_81272.html

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2011/02/117_81290.html
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2932166
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2011/02/14/2011021400320.html
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/news_photo_detail.htm?No=16025

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Korean Car Commercials

I'm not into cars but I do like these car ads.

Kia Soul has a really cute one with hamsters.



Hyundai's "New Thinking, New Possibilities" commercial is also impressive - - can anyone explain how they do it? Is it all CGI?




Also for good measure, have thrown in a parody - how the South Koreans envision what a North Korean car commercial would look like.





Finally, could not resist including the outrageous as usual but oh so entertaining Top Gear episode in which Jeremy Clarkson and James May review Korean cars. (BTW, they've also been equally disparaging about Malaysian cars.)





sources:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfJnqbudMzs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYS7ygCB5IU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qM3UAnCH5IE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzG1x7Ei6uw&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nr2IZHeyczE&feature=related

Monday, February 7, 2011

How To Host A Hallyu Fan Meeting



The following thoughts come to mind after viewing this youtube footage of  a recent signing event arranged by Laneige Homme for Hyun Bin's fans. The session with the Secret Garden star lasted over two hours at Lotte Department store in Myeongdong on the 22nd of January.

1. Timing is Everything

Organisers of signing events don't need to be too successful in getting the word out that a Hallyu star is making an appearance at such a place on such a date. If the publicity details are released too early, you may get a far larger crowd that could easily become an over-excited mob that could be hard to control. Too late and you're wasting your A and P budget.

And the line went round and round - pics from Soompi

So while it seems as if winter is a lousy time for a signing event, it helps to sift out the less dedicated from the die-hard fans who are willing to queue in the freezing cold outside for hours.



How long did these Hyun-Bin diehards suffer near zero temperatures before they could shake their idol's hand?

2. Control The Information Leaks
Not necessary to spend a lot of won or resort to WikiLeaks publicising the event in conventional media - just pass on details of time and place to a well-chosen fan club or well-followed blogger and let nature take its course. If you've picked the right celebrity to be your brand ambassador, then half your job's done.




3. Ask for the Co-operation of the Traffic Police

You want to please your potential customers but at the same time, you don't want to incur the wrath of the drivers, passers-by or shoppers who have no interest in meeting your star and don't want to be inconvenienced by walkways or roads blocked by long lines of fans queuing to meet their idol or get his or her autograph.  Check out the youtube footage between  0:50 and 0:57 the bemused customer trying to get a makeover from a sales assistant at a makeup counter while surrounded by hordes of screaming teens.

4. Hire, Train and Equip Extra Bodyguards

Better to employ many bodyguards with endless patience to control the masses of screaming teenagers. Recruit tall staff members who can tower over the long lines of fans standing earnestly on tiptoe. They would need to have firm handclasps so their natural barricades would not be broken by a wall of teens who surge forward excitedly to touch their favourite Hallyu actor or singer. It's also a prudent move to train them to deal firmly but gently with female supporters who could sue your staff for manhanding or molesting them. Megaphones, queue markers and ear-plugs should form part of the regular arsenal to be handed out to your staff.

5.Monitor the Message Boards

After the event is over, it's worth checking out what the participants have to say about how well or how badly you organised the whole thing - are they satisfied customers who will fork out more won to buy the products endorsed by your chosen star or has your brand image taken a battering with more people disappointed by late and all-too-brief appearances or people who got their toes stepped on far too often or fans who decided the amount of money you got them to pay to purchase an autographed poster wasn't worth all the blood, sweat and tears?

See also
The Meeting with Lee Min-ho That Wasn't


sources:
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2011/01/28/2011012800768.html

http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2011/01/21/2011012101080.html
http://www.laneige.com/brand/model_story2.jsp
http://en.amorepacific.com/about/about_brand_news_list.jsp#88
http://en.amorepacific.com/about/about_brand_news_list.jsp#88
http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/entertainment/enter_chart_detail.htm?No=13974
http://www.soompi.com/news/hyun-bin-holds-an-autograph-session/page/1
http://www.allkpop.com/2009/10/lee_minhos_hectic_day_in_singapore

Friday, February 4, 2011

Sober Seollal

If you're a Seoulite with a bus or train ticket bound for your hometown this Seollal and grumbling about the long queues or traffic jams leading out of the city, spare a thought for some hundred-over employees of the  National Institute of Animal Science at Suwon, Gyeonggi-do.  While most people have the luxury of disregarding the government's call to minimize visits to hometowns which have been stricken with the foot -and-mouth-disease ( FMD), the workers at NIAS have been quarantined in their workplace since January 3.

Caption from source: A day before the Lunar New Year holidays, passengers yesterday line up to board buses at Seoul Express Bus Terminal in Banpo-dong. The Korea Expressway Corp. estimated 680,000 cars had left the capital as of 9 a.m. yesterday and 1.93 million cars would hit the road during the period. [NEWSIS]




Caption from source: Employees at the National Institute of Animal Science wash dishes because only two kitchen staffers are there to prepare meals for more than 100 workers who have to quarantined for fear of spreading FMD. Provided by the institute

Consider the sad example of Shin Sook, as reported in the JoongAng Ilbo:

Shin Sook, 38, who works in the computer room at the institute, walked from the building toward a big steel gate where a JoongAng Ilbo reporter was waiting. That’s how far Shin is permitted to have contact with the outside world. And that includes the Lunar New Year holidays, too. Shin, a mother of two young daughters, lives only three kilometers (1.8 miles) from the institute, but she has only been gazing in that direction for 28 days, unable to go home.“From the office, I can see the windows of my apartment. If the lights are on, I think to myself that my kids are home and when the lights are out, I know that they have gone to bed,” said Shin.
“Everyone treasures all the animals here. We can’t let anything happen to any of them,” Shin said. There are hundreds of priceless livestock at the NIAS, ranging from pigs that were genetically modified to help produce cures for hemophilia to cows used for cloning somatic cells. If the disease infects animals involved in projects that have been conducted for decades - with billions of won in investments - it could shake the foundation of the country’s biotechnology research to its core.


After the NIAS building became off-limits, the only things that have been allowed in are food for the workers and the livestock and oil to heat the facilities. The food is sterilized by infrared light before being carried into the building. And trucks carrying can only enter the grounds after being carefully sterilized. Workers’ family members can only meet them at the steel gate. So, two weeks ago, when Shin’s daughters visited, she couldn’t even hug them. Shin tried to explain the situation to her girls. “The pigs that mom’s company raises are very precious. Mommy can’t go outside or hug you because these pigs might get infected with a dangerous disease,” Shin told her older daughter, a fourth grader, while her younger daughter, 7, cried loudly. Shin said he told her husband not to bring the daughters to visit anymore because she couldn’t bear turning the daughters away as they cried.


Life inside the building is trying. Shin said half of the workers caught a cold after sleeping on the floor with no heating. The air is cold and dry, with the only heat coming from radiators. Employees wash their hair and face in a basin and take turns using the few showers at the institute. But still, Shin said, the conditions are bearable. The unbearable part is being unable to see her daughters. On Jan. 20, Shin spent the whole day sitting absentmindedly at her desk. It was her younger daughter’s elementary school orientation day.


Let's hope we can see an end to the spread of the FMD soon so that people like Shin can be reunited with their families.

sources:
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2931790
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2931798