― Ratchet (nordicskilla), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:04 (twenty years ago)
― nickalicious (nickalicious), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:05 (twenty years ago)
― gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:05 (twenty years ago)
― latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:15 (twenty years ago)
http://www.setel.com/~ccprek/pics/edominosmodes.jpg
― Dale Panopticalis (cprek), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:17 (twenty years ago)
Bukkake is a the base form of a Japanese verb, but used alone it is a noun meaning to splash or dash. The verb bukkakeru (to dash [water]) can be decomposed into two verbs: butsu (ぶつ) and kakeru (掛ける). Butsu literally means to hit, but in this usage it appears to be an intensive prefix as in buttamageru (ぶったまげる) or butchigiri (ぶっちぎり). Kakeru means to shower or pour.
Bukkake is most commonly used in Japan to describe a type of dish where the toppings are poured on top of noodles, as in bukkake-udon and bukkake-soba.
― gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:19 (twenty years ago)
― why do old people and old users of ILX such bastardos (deangulberry), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:25 (twenty years ago)
x-post
― latebloomer (latebloomer), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:25 (twenty years ago)
and also because of the super-cute spazoid noise bands.
oh, and Beat Takeshi.
(and most of all Kobo Abe, but I don't want anybody to know that I secretly read books when I'm all alone)
― mayo apetrain (mayoape), Monday, 11 October 2004 17:54 (twenty years ago)
― sometimes i like to pretend i am very small and warm (ex machina), Monday, 11 October 2004 18:13 (twenty years ago)
― sometimes i like to pretend i am very small and warm (ex machina), Monday, 11 October 2004 18:16 (twenty years ago)
― JaXoN (JasonD), Monday, 11 October 2004 18:17 (twenty years ago)
― gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 11 October 2004 19:04 (twenty years ago)
― JaXoN (JasonD), Monday, 11 October 2004 19:14 (twenty years ago)
― gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 11 October 2004 21:23 (twenty years ago)
― gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 11 October 2004 21:33 (twenty years ago)
― sometimes i like to pretend i am very small and warm (ex machina), Monday, 11 October 2004 21:47 (twenty years ago)
― sometimes i like to pretend i am very small and warm (ex machina), Monday, 11 October 2004 21:48 (twenty years ago)
― Michael White (Hereward), Monday, 11 October 2004 21:58 (twenty years ago)
― Laura E (laurae55), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 16:31 (twenty years ago)
AMAZING
― Laura E (laurae55), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 16:35 (twenty years ago)
― Helios Creed (orion), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 16:38 (twenty years ago)
― Laura E (laurae55), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 16:59 (twenty years ago)
― Felonious Drunk (Felcher), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 17:06 (twenty years ago)
― hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 17:08 (twenty years ago)
― hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 17:09 (twenty years ago)
― sometimes i like to pretend i am very small and warm (ex machina), Tuesday, 12 October 2004 19:31 (twenty years ago)
― Laura E (laurae55), Wednesday, 13 October 2004 02:07 (twenty years ago)
― (Jon L), Wednesday, 13 October 2004 04:34 (twenty years ago)
UNSWEETENED BOTTLED GREEN TEA.
EF SOBE, EF ARIZONA, EF US SOFT DRINK MAKERS WHO PUMP SUGAR INTO EVERY PRODUCT AVAILABLE.
― gygax! (gygax!), Thursday, 14 October 2004 17:46 (twenty years ago)
― Helios Creed (orion), Thursday, 14 October 2004 19:12 (twenty years ago)
― tokyo rosemary (rosemary), Friday, 15 October 2004 03:29 (twenty years ago)
― \(^o^)/ (Adrian Langston), Friday, 15 October 2004 04:42 (twenty years ago)
RADICAL
― DEEBZ (ddb), Friday, 15 October 2004 16:15 (twenty years ago)
― adam... (nordicskilla), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 16:45 (twenty years ago)
― adam... (nordicskilla), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 16:46 (twenty years ago)
Travel.A good airfare deal will cost around $5-600 from SFO. There are better deals here and there if you are patient, flexible and travel out of season. A 2 week JR Pass which included shinkansen (bullet train) access to Osaka cost about $300. If you are under 25 I think there is a discount.
Hotels.I stayed with my friend in Tokyo so that only cost a few dinners ($300). I also brought gifts ($300). So about $60/night. However, we stayed in a hotel in Kyoto (near Osaka) that was about $100/night ($50 split two ways).
Food.Notoriously expensive to dine out (which I highly recommend, unfortunately), but there are some good deals to be had. Beer can be had for cheap ($2-3 sold in vending machines) but in bars/clubs/live music houses it can be about $8 per.
Shopping.You have no idea. On the plus side, most of the Japanese vintage clothing* and record stores (I have been to probably 30-40 of each) only carry things in Mint/A++ condition. On the negative side, they take cash, credit card, and ultimately your soul. *One store owner saw some vintage jeans I was wearing and offered me an exorbinant sum for them due to the good condition and patina. I politely declined.
Baseball Games.Our tickets cost about $150 for 2... wayyyyyyyyy below face value (courtesy of yahoo! japan auctions). The food was good (bento $15) and there are beergirls who carry ponykegs of beer on their back (3 different brands!) so you don't have to leave your seat to get a beer.
Language.Lastly, more expensive than anything I found was the language barrier. Initially, you will be instantly humbled by the vast divide between western language and the three japanese alphabets and spoken language (both formal and colloquial). Yes, quite a bit of young urban Japanese people understand English, but not quite true to make some assumptions that English will get you by. I strongly recommend taking a class or crash course prior to travelling there. As a last ditch resort, I recommend networking with Japanese fluent in English or Western ex-pats just in case.
― gygax! (gygax!), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 17:25 (twenty years ago)
If you are under 25 I think there is a discount.
Dude, you know how old I am!
― adam... (nordicskilla), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:20 (twenty years ago)
Entertainment.Club shows are like $30-$100 (festivals can be more)Museums are like $10-$25Movies are $10-$15Theater was $25 (one matinee act of Kabuki/Noh)
Taxis are really expensive (the JR trains don't run between 2-6am), like 2xSF/3xNYC prices.
― gygax! (gygax!), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:27 (twenty years ago)
― adam... (nordicskilla), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:28 (twenty years ago)
― TOMBOT 64 (TOMBOT 64), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:33 (twenty years ago)
TOMBOT: According to Mercer (they compile the global cost of living index), why do you know something they don't.
― gygax! (gygax!), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:37 (twenty years ago)
― Allyzay Science Explosion (allyzay), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:38 (twenty years ago)
― gygax! (gygax!), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:38 (twenty years ago)
― TITS.JPG (ex machina), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:41 (twenty years ago)
― TOMBOT 64 (TOMBOT 64), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:44 (twenty years ago)
― adam... (nordicskilla), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:45 (twenty years ago)
all my bf does is grab my boobs.. but im not offended.. does that seem weird?
― Allyzay Science Explosion (allyzay), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:46 (twenty years ago)
watever on bed or not very activelike a man lazy to do something sweet
not too many kisses and sweets things to u
CAN WE INVITE THESE PEOPLE TO THE NOIZE BOARD PLZ
― Allyzay Science Explosion (allyzay), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:47 (twenty years ago)
― Felonious Drunk (Felcher), Wednesday, 1 December 2004 18:47 (twenty years ago)
this guy sure seems to like japan:
Offshore accounting
When I'm traveling I often read The Economist. It's less depressing, more oriented to the present and the future than some sad old Retro Necro rock mag (oh God, is that what Neil Young looks like now?). And since the style press (in the shape of Monocle) is trying so desperately to ape The Economist just now, why not go straight for the real thing, with all those lovely pie charts and graphs (and terrible illustrations)?
The current issue has a 14-page report on business in Japan. According to the various articles in this, Japan's business world is an anomaly combining the stability of the old with the dynamism of the new, Western with domestic models, and capitalism with social values. There's some evidence that Japan's current concern -- reflected in statements by the new prime minister -- is to slow down the rate of Koizumi-style reforms which have only served to increase social inequalities in Japan. The overall picture that emerges is of a return to something we could call "Swedish" in its commitment to social care: with the proviso that Japan is perhaps more "Swedish" than Sweden in this respect.
An article entitled "JapAnglo-Saxon Capitalism" describes how Japanese capitalism is a weird and anomalyous hybrid of capitalist styles: "A lot of Asian countries are saying: 'We hope Japan will succeed, so we have a new model that combines capitalism with social values,'" says Hirotaka Takeuchi of Hitotsubashi University. Does that mean something like the European model? Yes, but not identical, because taxes are lower and the state is smaller in Japan -- and unlike in France, Germany or Scandinavia, companies provide a lot of social support. Another difference with many parts of Europe is that in Japan business is regarded as a respectable pursuit that provides social goods rather than a necessary evil."
That bit caught my eye, because the post-Japan ("Japanized") me is particularly frustrated by the way we in the West continue to designate certain things as "evil", and therefore make them so. We do this because we like to think we're outside certain things, getting our hands dirty touching them only when we have to. We do this with our necessities and our pleasures. Business is "a necessary evil" and pleasure is "guilty pleasure". As a result of this thinking (we call it "critical thinking", marked by "critical distance") we mark almost everything we do with distaste, cynicism and disgust.
Distaste for business in the West might come from a Marxist-Socialist tradition (mine certainly does) or a Calvinist tradition or academia. In all three cases, these traditions depend on "creative accountancy" -- we could call it "offshore accounting" -- to make their cases. They each employ a notional, imaginary space -- a sort of margin outside of current reality -- to justify their distaste for currently-existing material reality. In the case of Marxism, everything in the present is seen from the imaginary space that will exist "after the revolution". In Christianity, of course, it's heaven and hell, the "offshore" places we reach after death. In academia it's the idea of critical distance -- the idea that there's a neutral space you can step into, a sort of cupboard from which you can spy on the world without being a part of it, without being tarnished by its values. And what underpins all three of these ideas is the Platonic message that ultimate reality is both higher than what we see and yet remote from what we see -- true reality is distant, invisible, not-yet-here, "offshore". What's here and visible is low and dirty and contingent.
Although there's some of this asceticism built into Buddhism, my sense is that Japan has never really bought into these forms of detachment, these methods of "offshore accounting", this idea of a neutral margin, or heaven, or revolution which justifies your disgust for what's in front of you. As a result, guilty pleasures or a sense that business is a necessary evil are refreshingly absent from Japanese life. The basic attitude towards business in Japan seems to be summed up by maneki neko, the lucky cat who beckons you to come and buy.
I come from a rather un-businesslike family; we're all teachers, academics, librarians, creative performers. Hisae's family is much more canny; her mum's life is a perpetual business trip, shuttling between China, Korea and Japan buying and selling clothes, running stores in Osaka. Now, I won't say that one of these lives is more ethical than the other. What the Economist article suggests, though, is that in the West ethics comes from outside (from an "offshore" class of teachers, politicians, ministers) whereas in Japan it's much more integrated and structural: ethics comes from business itself, it's built into everyday logistics. Justice is not something you bolt on afterwards, or shout about from some place offshore or outside the daily structures. A Japanese company is a bit like a family; it looks after its own, and thinks about the world (The Economist's symbol for this is the Toyota Prius hybrid car, and Japan's world lead in solar paneling).
I was sitting in Smart Deli reading Hisae bits of the Economist article, telling her my idea that we in the West are undermined by our sense that both business and pleasure must be "evil" in some way. Then I picked up Exberliner, the Berlin English-language listings magazine. It only seemed to confirm my worst fears. Here's a bit from Exberliner's article on shoplifting, for instance:
"Another shoplifter, 32 year-old Christian, has a habit of occasionally nicking shirts and watches from big department stores. "It's fun to beat the system and get away with it," he says. "I never take anything too pricey but whenever I do steal stuff I stick a mental finger up at corporations. Once in a while this materialistic society prompts these things."
Christian (what a perfect name!) only takes material things, it seems, as a protest against people taking material things. His attraction and his disgust are the same thing. He clearly has a basic problem with his relationship to the system of production.
A few pages later there's a piece on "Shopping Addiction" in which "Germany's top specialist" Professor Dr Gerhard Raab says: "Nearly all shopping addicts suffer from low self-esteem. They try to compensate for it with this act of shopping. Said simply, they feel very good for that short period of time. Then they realise that their behaviour wasn't right and they feel low self-esteem and the cycle begins again." Needless to say, this article is full of drug metaphors: shopping is an addiction, need is a needle. Again, there seems to be a fundamental problem in the way we relate to our own need, and to the production system that exists to fill it.
Later still, Exberliner reviews "Loveless" by Japancakes. "One could imagine parts of this album being sold as background in a bank commercial," grumbles D. Strauss. "In New York City," he concludes with sinister darkness, "there's a bank on every corner now". It's clearly a bad review, because it mixes music up with everyday production system stuff like banking. Music is sacred, and mustn't get mixed up in the material world, production, money. It's the sort of guilt-by-association I'd imply myself, probably. But I love how people don't do that in Japan. People don't slight commercial art by pointing out that it's -- gasp! -- commercial. They don't damn something in the consumerist system by pointing out that it's in the consumerist system.
I won't say there aren't oddities of consumption -- anorexic-bulimic patterns -- in Japan. A project like Kyoichi Tsuzuki's photo-documentation of collectors, Happy Victims, shows oddly unbalanced consumption patterns in Japanese too. But at least these people are, as the title says, happy.
There's an interesting interview in Tablog with Nakako Hayashi, who started Here and There magazine and more or less runs it (printing just 1500 copies) singlehandedly. Actually, Hayashi does condemn mainstream magazines for their emphasis on bling:
"Most of the time," she tells Tablog, "I don’t like most magazines. So there is a contradiction, because magazines that you can get the most work from are the magazines for the ‘nouveau riche’. Often they will ask me to do an art story, but it's very strange because I receive the magazine and I don’t like what I see, this strange new rich lifestyle. I feel very bad after reading it. If you buy it, it's expensive, and also makes you feel bad because you can’t have this lifestyle in your daily life, you can’t live like a wealthy Hong Kong mother. It’s strange to spend all this money and feel so bad after reading it."
What Hayashi seems to be worried about there is another form of "offshore accounting" we forgot to list earlier: the whole bling-celebrity thing which substitutes unlikely and unjust concentrations of wealth (in certain super-rich celebrities) for heaven, or academic distance, or the revolution. "When I'm super-rich like they are, all will be right in the world..."
Hayashi has some interesting thoughts, too, on the famous Japanese "lack of critical thinking": "I like it when the editors are really curious, really want to find something out, and I think most of the Japanese are really curious editors. I don’t know if they are more critical, but they just want to show the mood."
This emphasis on curiosity and information rather than critical judgement (the desire to investigate what is rather than what should be) is also, thinks Hayashi, what prevents the Japanese embracing contemporary art: "We see some exhibitions in museums of modern art but I think Japanese people are not ready for the conceptual art scene. They can try to do it but it's not really from the bottom of their hearts. Maybe the Japanese don’t need this conceptual way of thinking or critical point of view so much."
Why? asks Tokyo Art Beat Blog. Is it a kind of discovery without judgment?
"I don’t know," says Hayashi, "I think Japanese people are not so much trying to think in a critical way, they just feel out what’s new, what’s nice, interesting."
But is that a good thing?
"Well I don’t think it’s a bad thing."
I'd like to finish Hayashi's thought. When critical thinking becomes a way to condemn the system of production we depend on, to cast both business and pleasure as "evil", it can indeed be a bad thing: a sort of judgement without discovery. A production system branded as evil begins to operate in evil ways. If you say and I say and everyone says (on the left and on the right) that business is all about the benefit of shareholders and has no social responsibilities, that's the kind of world you, I and everyone else will end up living in. Justify it all you like with offshore or posthumous ideal worlds, but your denigration of reality will lead to a degradation of reality. Maybe "discovery without judgement" isn't such a bad way to relate to the world. Take it from a pirate; stay onshore.
― latebloomer, Wednesday, 5 December 2007 23:59 (seventeen years ago)
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/PinkTentacle/~3/368688327/ ok
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 16:35 (sixteen years ago)
― negotiable, Tuesday, 7 October 2008 01:23 (sixteen years ago)
http://bp1.blogger.com/_z9OnSxr2OHU/R8skv1K9_KI/AAAAAAAAAA4/QmSHfcDIjlE/s320/melon_DYLJ.jpg
^this album is great
― a somnambulist in an ambulance (r1o natsume), Monday, 8 June 2009 16:37 (fifteen years ago)
just flew back from Japan today, had an awesome time out in the countryside (Kodananomori? skiing area in summer where the Taicoclub festival was). One high point: I was served a mountain of sushi in a wooden bucket that had as the piece de resistance a still half-alive fish whose side had been cut open and reorganized into delicious sushi that was stuck back where it had originally been part of the living fish. The fish's mouth was moving and its eyes were goggling around and everyone at the table (20 people, some japanese, most musicians from Europe playing at the fest) were all like 0_o aw fuck so awkward and grotesque and scary and the fish was clearly suffering. Then it died and was taken away by our hosts.
― Neotropical pygmy squirrel, Tuesday, 9 June 2009 04:44 (fifteen years ago)
Not going to let my girlfriend ever witness something like that, she'd get turned off of sushi permanently.
― mh, Tuesday, 9 June 2009 14:17 (fifteen years ago)
something about this reminds me of the only scene in 'the tin drum' that i have failed to repress
― the heart is a lonely hamster (schlump), Tuesday, 9 June 2009 14:37 (fifteen years ago)
but then i am squeamish, and always renege on my idea of buying my vegetables cheaply in chinatown when i see the BUCKET OF WRIGGLING CRABS parked like bollards at the gates of hell
― the heart is a lonely hamster (schlump), Tuesday, 9 June 2009 14:38 (fifteen years ago)
― Neotropical pygmy squirrel, Tuesday, June 9, 2009 4:44 AM (10 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
― s1ocki, Tuesday, 9 June 2009 14:50 (fifteen years ago)
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2435/3614249022_86e8f04ff0_o.jpg
http://i.gizmodo.com/5284821/tokyos-life+s...-about-finished
― cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Wednesday, 10 June 2009 22:01 (fifteen years ago)
dis why:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFA19tfP75A
― michael jatas (r1o natsume), Wednesday, 10 June 2009 22:20 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=87-MUkH3fgU
― jaxon, Wednesday, 29 July 2009 01:20 (fifteen years ago)
stevie wonder = a+
― EVERYWHERE YOU LOOK THERE'S SOME DIFFERENT SHIT POPPIN OFF (latebloomer), Wednesday, 29 July 2009 04:20 (fifteen years ago)
oldie but a goodie
― EVERYWHERE YOU LOOK THERE'S SOME DIFFERENT SHIT POPPIN OFF (latebloomer), Wednesday, 29 July 2009 04:21 (fifteen years ago)
this is the title sequence made by tadanori yokoo for a popular family sitcom in the 70s:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ahr-qsFXK4c
― damo tsu tsuki (r1o natsume), Wednesday, 29 July 2009 14:25 (fifteen years ago)
does a noise dude like japan (band)? i'm obsessed with this band at the moment
― damo tsu tsuki (r1o natsume), Sunday, 9 August 2009 21:48 (fifteen years ago)
tin drum is a bitchin' album
― you guys are Buellers, essentially (latebloomer), Sunday, 9 August 2009 23:22 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oq8xuVnB-Pk&
real answer: okonomiyaki
― ken tynan's spanking buddy (sciolism), Monday, 10 August 2009 00:45 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IM-KQxgtOao
― am0n, Thursday, 27 August 2009 18:56 (fifteen years ago)
xD
― sleep, Thursday, 27 August 2009 19:24 (fifteen years ago)
nobody does adorable and sadistic at the same time quite like the Japanese
― narcissistic late-20s liberal arts grad on ilx right now (sciolism), Thursday, 27 August 2009 19:45 (fifteen years ago)
"sadistic"
― am0n, Thursday, 27 August 2009 19:52 (fifteen years ago)
magicians def on par with dr. mengele
― am0n, Thursday, 27 August 2009 19:54 (fifteen years ago)
going to japan for the first time on the 20th : )
― the turdlike genius of Jeff Tweete´ (M@tt He1ges0n), Thursday, 27 August 2009 20:30 (fifteen years ago)
nice
for work?
― Miss Fitzhenry (s1ocki), Thursday, 27 August 2009 20:34 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Q02weIJD3I
― ♖♕♖ (am0n), Saturday, 6 February 2010 00:46 (fifteen years ago)
wtf is this?
http://www.schmooze-blog.com/?p=2436
― jaxon, Monday, 22 February 2010 00:58 (fifteen years ago)
Takashi Murakami and McG co-directed this video which for the Tate Modern in London last year. It has many guest appearances by the KaiKaiKiKi staff artists in case you were wondering.
― ┌∩┐(◕_◕)┌∩┐ (Steve Shasta), Monday, 22 February 2010 06:30 (fifteen years ago)
ya, but why now(ish) and why kirsten dunst? everything about it feels so late 90s
― jaxon, Monday, 22 February 2010 16:34 (fifteen years ago)
...says the guy who's getting into DJ Garth and Mark Farina in 2010.
― ┌∩┐(◕_◕)┌∩┐ (Steve Shasta), Monday, 22 February 2010 17:15 (fifteen years ago)
lol! lies!
― jaxon, Monday, 22 February 2010 18:56 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5XjEiE32I8
― _Rudipherous_, Saturday, 27 March 2010 12:42 (fifteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETSnFbmVJsY
― jaxon, Friday, 9 April 2010 01:32 (fifteen years ago)
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2702/4522071780_7b04826377_o.png
― _▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 15 April 2010 05:04 (fifteen years ago)
would eat
― fuck in rainbows, ☔ (dyao), Thursday, 15 April 2010 05:14 (fifteen years ago)
bet each hot dog has a mini bottle of thousand island inside
http://img716.imageshack.us/img716/3781/tumblrl2whoayfkh1qzpm4w.jpg
― del griffith, Friday, 11 June 2010 18:46 (fourteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gD8nV8RlPU
― like a guttenberg, strong with your mane (another al3x), Saturday, 12 June 2010 20:51 (fourteen years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/4y15z.jpg
― it's time for the fish in the perculator (Steve Shasta), Tuesday, 17 May 2011 01:36 (thirteen years ago)
otm
― THAT'S LIGHTWEIGHT DICKERY (dayo), Tuesday, 17 May 2011 01:45 (thirteen years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzC4hFK5P3g&feature=player_embedded
such a fkn choon
― missingNO, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 02:19 (thirteen years ago)
video is nutz
― missingNO, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 02:21 (thirteen years ago)
PON PONWAY WAY WAY PON PON WAY PON WAY PON PONWAY WAY PON PON PONWAY WAY PON WAY PON WAY WAY
― missingNO, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 02:22 (thirteen years ago)
PONPONPONPONPONPON
― missingNO, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 02:37 (thirteen years ago)
i feel sick
― Lamp, Wednesday, 7 September 2011 03:04 (thirteen years ago)
everyday pon
every time is pon
― missingNO, Thursday, 8 September 2011 07:09 (thirteen years ago)
that's really not very good
check out the k-pop thread
― dayo, Thursday, 8 September 2011 11:02 (thirteen years ago)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&feature=fvwp&v=wUIWKYzTDvE
― Pizzataco Five (admrl), Thursday, 8 September 2011 14:16 (thirteen years ago)
yah right
kyaru + yasutaka nakata >>>>> k pop (apart from "gee" obvs)
― missingNO, Saturday, 10 September 2011 08:40 (thirteen years ago)
http://i56.tinypic.com/23lbodx.gif
― StanM, Saturday, 10 September 2011 10:03 (thirteen years ago)