Archive for Society
November 17, 2008 at 12:37 pm · Filed under Entertainment, food, Language, Health, Law, Sport, Society
Publishing company Jiyu Kokuminsha has released its annual list of the 60 most popular Japanese catchwords and phrases of the year. This diverse collection of expressions highlights many of the events, trends and people that caught the attention of the Japanese mass media in 2008.
From this list, a panel of judges will select the 2008 Japanese catchphrase of the year (and 10 runners-up) and announce the winners on December 1. The expressions are listed below in no particular order.
* * * * *
1. Guerrilla rainstorm (gerira gōu - ゲリラ豪雨): Sudden, unpredictable rainstorms struck Japan with alarming frequency and intensity this year. Although the expression “guerrilla rainstorm” has been in use for about 30 years, this summer’s abnormally unstable weather really hammered home the meaning.
2. Dumb characters (obaka-kyara - おバカキャラ): “Dumb characters,” a.k.a. “dumb idols” (obaka-aidoru - おバカアイドル), are entertainers loved for their lack of brains. Nobody better embodies […]
Original post by Edo
November 17, 2008 at 12:37 pm · Filed under Entertainment, food, Language, Health, Law, Sport, Society
Publishing company Jiyu Kokuminsha has released its annual list of the 60 most popular Japanese catchwords and phrases of the year. This diverse collection of expressions highlights many of the events, trends and people that caught the attention of the Japanese mass media in 2008.
From this list, a panel of judges will select the 2008 Japanese catchphrase of the year (and 10 runners-up) and announce the winners on December 1. The expressions are listed below in no particular order.
* * * * *
1. Guerrilla rainstorm (gerira gōu - ゲリラ豪雨): Sudden, unpredictable rainstorms struck Japan with alarming frequency and intensity this year. Although the expression “guerrilla rainstorm” has been in use for about 30 years, this summer’s abnormally unstable weather really hammered home the meaning.
2. Dumb characters (obaka-kyara - おバカキャラ): “Dumb characters,” a.k.a. “dumb idols” (obaka-aidoru - おバカアイドル), are entertainers loved for their lack of brains. Nobody better embodies […]
Original post by Edo
October 26, 2008 at 7:59 am · Filed under Society
There is an interesting post (and comment thread) on Kevin Kelly’s blog about the exponential growth of available information. It is quite thought-provoking, but there are a couple of issues I have with it.
First issue is that Kevin took the old adage that “every answer leads to at least two new questions”, perhaps tongue-in-cheek (I hope), as if it was true:
Yet the paradox of science is that every answer breeds at least two new questions. More answers, more questions. Telescopes and microscopes expanded not only what we knew, but what we didn’t know. They allowed us to spy into our ignorance. New and better tools permit us new and better questions. All our knowledge about subatomic particles derived from the new questions generated after we invented an atom smasher.
This was probably necessary for the point he was trying to make, but it is of course not true - […]
Original post by Coturnix none@example.com
September 5, 2008 at 6:13 pm · Filed under Society
Dave Munger does Friday polls calling them “Casual Fridays,” but then, the usual run of posts at Cognitive Daily is a lot more serious than my usual standard. So I’ll call this a “semi-formal Friday” poll, sort of the khaki pants and blue blazer of the online research world.
I’m also too lazy to set up poll software for this, so I’d like to ask you to leave your answers to the following questions in comments:
1) When driving between two places you regularly visit, do you:
a) Always take main roads (highways or major surface streets), even if there is traffic.
b) Usually take main roads, but switch to alternate routes when there is heavy traffic.
c) Always take alternate routes, even if there is no traffic.
Read the rest of this post… | Read the comments on this post…
Original post by Chad Orzel none@example.com
September 4, 2008 at 10:31 am · Filed under food, Language, Art, Wearable, Society
Anata to wa chigau n desu (”I am different from you”). In the few short days since Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda uttered these words to a pesky reporter after his shock resignation, Japan has witnessed the birth of a new buzz phrase online.
At the end of the press conference following Fukuda’s resignation, a Chugoku Shimbun reporter told the Prime Minister that many people thought he often seemed detached when he spoke, almost as if the problems facing Japan were none of his business. The reporter suggested that Fukuda also sounded distant in his resignation announcement and asked what impact he thought his sudden resignation (which comes just one year after previous Prime Minister Abe suddenly resigned) would have on the country. Seemingly perturbed, Fukuda fired back at the reporter: “You said I sounded detached, but I am able to see myself objectively. I’m different from you.”
Fukuda’s jarringly out-of-character […]
Original post by Edo
August 14, 2008 at 6:23 pm · Filed under Asia, Paranormal, Society
Over the next two months, a team of Japanese explorers hopes to obtain indisputable video evidence confirming the existence of the legendary yeti, the mysterious apelike creature long believed to inhabit the Himalayas of Nepal and Tibet.
A 7-member crew of experienced climbers, led by veteran yeti hunter and mountaineer Yoshiteru Takahashi, will depart Japan on August 16. At their destination in the Dhaulagiri mountains in central Nepal, they will establish base camp at an elevation of 4,300 meters (14,000 ft) and set up an array of automated infrared cameras along a ridge. For six weeks, the state-of-the-art motion-sensitive cameras will monitor the area for signs of the yeti.
The expedition is Takahashi’s third attempt to find the elusive creature. The 65-year-old mountaineer first became interested in the yeti while on a climbing expedition in the Dhaulagiri region in 1971, after fellow climbers saw a mysterious humanoid creature covered in […]
Original post by Edo
January 24, 2008 at 2:43 pm · Filed under Crime, Society
A 16-year-old male gamer infatuated with the gothic dress worn by the fictional princess in an online role-playing game has been arrested for hacking into the game company’s servers and scamming a boatload of virtual money.
On January 24, Tokyo Metropolitan Police officers from the “Hi-Tech Crimes Control Center” arrested the high school student from Fukui, Japan and charged him with illegally accessing the website of Tokyo-based game company NEXON and stealing over 36 million yen ($325,000) worth of virtual currency used in the Mabinogi online role-playing game. The money can be used to purchase virtual items in the game, and it can be converted into real-world cash.
Read the full post (231 words, 1 image)
Original post by Edo
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