Archive for March, 2005

The Renovated Face Of Siam

As I was enjoying the relaxing taxi ride to work this morning, my driver took me along the route that goes by Siam Centre and I noticed that they are doing renovations.

Siam Centre has always been the poor cousin of the shopping complexes at Siam and it’s good news that they are fixing it up. With this new development, we now have construction work being done on Siam Paragon and renovation work on Siam Centre. All we need now is something at Siam Discovery and we’ll have a hat trick!

NOTE: For those that don’t know, the above shopping complexes are next to each other.

I’m happy that Siam Centre is being modernised, so long as they put those big cans of Vanilla Coke, that used to sit out the front, back where they were - they’re ever so nice to look at.

underwater debris clean up program

there’s an organized Andaman recovery project called “the Underwater Debris Clean up Program” during March - April 2005.

interested divers are welcome to join the program by downloading the application form here and submit your application to siriporn.m@thaiairways.com. Application is open now - 30 April 2005 and selection is based on a first-come first-serve basis.

Newsline (aka Robots)

If you’re a farang who lives in Thailand and don’t have cable, there isn’t a lot of choice as to which news programs you can watch. The main one I know of is Newsline, which is on Channel 11 late at night and must be the worst attempt at a news program I’ve ever seen in my life. It wasn’t until one of my recent posts got a strong reaction from a reader (and I only mentioned Newsline in passing) that I thought it was time to open the flood gates.

Before I let loose with the criticism, it should be said that of the two women who alternately feature as co-hosts on the show, one of them is good. She acts like a news reader, rarely makes mistakes and when she does, corrects herself in the manner of a professional news reader.

Sadly the female news reader who is good is rarely on and the other one constantly messes up, but doesn’t approach the levels of stupidity reached by the males on the show.

It should also be noted that having come from the western world, my expectations of what a news program should be like are probably skewed against what is available already.
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full moon in bangkok

they’re bringing the full moon back to bangkok.
major partying coming up tonight and tomorrow.

tonight, heineken and chivas are battling it out
on who’s throwing the better party. i think both
are invitation only parties.

heineken’s throwing the green carpet party while
chivas is holding the elektro wonderland. the
chivas one is a warehouse party. both are suppose
to be hush hush. but i think everybody already
knows about it.

for saturday:
i’m not a big fan of H1 at thonglor, but they are
holding, what i hope to be the best theme party,
80’s Palace Night this Saturday. tickets are B300.
(Palace used to be -the- disco in Bangkok back in the day).

if any of you are heading out to the parties, or
want to go, drop me a line! :)

the water pact

i witnessed something fantastic today. (not really).

i was at the top of my soi, waiting for my ride. across from me is a little noodle shop that uses chicken stock, so is highly muslim friendly. i’ve stood across from the shop almost every morning for the past year, whether it be waiting for a cab, or buying cigarettes at the ma and pa store.

next to the noodle cabinet thinger where the noodle maker gets their noodles from is a large red cooler. first i see a tuk tuk pull up. the driver walks straight to the cooler, gets a plastic cup and scoops up what seems like very unhygeinic water. he takes his cup, walks over to the vendor and orders his noodles, and takes a seat at the table. next i see a street hawker. he puts down the crap he’s carrying, gets another plastic cup and scoops up some water. takes a sip, and scoops some more.

is scoop the right word?

whatever. then i see a motorcycle taxi dude do the same thing. scoop, order, sit, eat. and in between the sitting and the eating they go up and get more water. from that cup. from that same cooler. and when they’re done they leave the cup on the table, and the vendor empties what’s left into the cup into the bowl, and puts the cup back next to the cooler.

do these people know what they’re doing? or am i overreacting about shared plastic cups? and communial water holes.

see, i grew up in bangkok. and i grew up eating noodles from street vendors like any other kid. sometimes i’d buy back and eat at home, sometimes i’d eat it right there at the wobbly table set up on the side of the road.

so i’m thinking, am i missing something? some secret code of noodle eaters and drinking dirty water? and the thing is now i’ve noticed this phenomena. i keep on seeing it everywhere, at other noodle stalls. and i wonder how i’ve missed it all these years.

totally am thinking twice next time i order water at a noodle stall. or any stall.

The Pigs Have Flown

Last night when I was watching Newsline (where the robot guy newsreader was strangely absent, but that’s another story), something happened that I thought was impossible, nay - that I knew was impossible and could simply not occur in this universe. It was one of those surreal kind of Twilight Zone moment.

Prime Minister Taksin Shinawatra admitted that he was wrong.

That deserves its own paragraph I think. What it was that he was actually talking about, I have no idea.

Recruiting inspired writers…

Are your fingers itching to hit the keyboard? Do you love living in this city and want to shout out about it? Does this city drive you nuts and you want to scream out about it? Fear not, for you’ve landed at the right place!

Bangkok Metblog is seeking new contributors, if you would like to join our team please leave a comment below with your email address and we’ll be in touch!

Your Birthday? You Pay!

When you live in Thailand as a foreigner, there are times when you think that nothing Thai people do could surprise you anymore. The way that Thai people approach everyday situations that you might expect there would no possible deviation from what you’ve known will constantly surprise you. I find this one of the most interesting things about living in Thailand.

One of the first things I came across was to do with birthdays. In Australia (and, I suspect, the rest of the world) when it is your birthday, it is expected that you won’t have to pay for everything. For instance, if you go out to get drunk - your friends pay!

Not so in Thailand. If it’s your birthday and you go out with friends - you have to pay. It makes me think Thai people must dread their birthdays or spend the preceding months saving for them.

Yes, I am Insane

Lets get something straight. I like IMAX a lot. Maybe I’m putting it too mildly, I don’t ‘like’ anything. I either love it to pieces or hate it. I think the following will make it clear how I feel about IMAX.

I’ve seen Matrix Revolutions and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban at IMAX and they were great! Experiencing Matrix Revolutions at IMAX in particular was far better than at a normal cinema and the standards of Thai cinema are pretty high as it stands. What I don’t understand is why does IMAX in Thailand struggle? Thai people absolutely love films!

I’ve had so many arguments about IMAX and tried to explain how it is a lot better than standard cinema, yet struggle to make others understand the huge differences.

The experience before an IMAX film starts, to see the promotional material they screen to show the immense size of the screen, is an amazing sight to behold. Watching the tiny countdown for a few moments in the centre of the screen only to have a huge sweeping blue line circle the entire screen is something that must be experienced. That single moment was enough to make me see that a film at IMAX was a worthwhile thing.

Allow me to present what I think are the problems facing IMAX (and Digital Cinema to a lesser degree) in Thailand.

DISCLAIMER: I am not associated with IMAX, Panasonic or Major Cineplex (who run IMAX in Thailand). I’m just crazy/nuts about cinema.
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Could it happen again?

Some researchers back in the UK have announced that there has been such a build up of stress in the faults on Sumatra that it could possibly trigger another large earthquake and maybe a tsunami wave too. How devastating would that be? Read more about it here.

How’s the warning system coming along Mr Taksin? Apparently “A tsunami early-warning system will be installed by April at the latest, Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said” according to The Nation

1.5 weeks and counting…

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