Tuesday, November 30, 2004

Lingerie Industry to the Rescue

Yamada gave us a ride down to the harbor for the mandatory yearly physical exam. He was complaning about the students again and his problem was panties. One look this fall is jeans worn low on the hips with short tops that show a few centmeters of naval. He cited girls squattng down to smoke in the parking lot or leaning forward in their desks. The jeans ride down exposng a bit of panty-waistline real estate that Yamada found offensive, another sign of the level of students he had to put up with in his business classes.

There was a TV in the waiting room at the health center. As I was waiting for a chest x-ray, a panel of TV personalities were discussing the fashion issues of the day. Suddenly they brought up the panty problem. and announced a solution: the low-rise panty. Models appeared and leaned and squatted in various postures to show that these panties did their stuff. I looked around for Yamada, but he was off in another room having his eye sight checked. Low-rise briefs are also available for men.

Sunday, November 28, 2004

Everything Comes with TV

Last weekend my wife's mother was out of town. Her father came over for dinner and we feasted on chicken nabe with the neighbors and washed it down with Beaujolais nouveau. I'm amazed at how big Beaujolais nouveau has become in Japan. Every supermarket, liquor store, and mom-and-pop grocery seems to be selling the stuff. About a month ago I walked into a supermarket in a small rural town in Shikoku and was greeted by a banner proclaiming, "Only 28 days until Beaujolais nouveau!" Part of the excitement is tied to the time difference meaning that the Japanese are the first in the world to taste the new wine.

The next day we were all up early as we had to take my father-in-law to a Buddhist memorial service downtown. After we dropped him off, my wife, 3 year-old son, and I decided to go out for breakfast. On our way to the restaurant we walked through a cell phone store. AU had cell phones playing TV programs. A monthly fee allows you to turn your cell phone into a TV. These phones had rotating 2.4 inch QVGA LCD screens, 2 megapixel cameras, an FM tuner , 4MB of internal storage and other goodies. I also saw phones that doubled as universal TV and DVD player remote controls. I presume the advantage lies in never again having to search for your remote control.

TV tuners have also become a standard feature on desktop and laptop computers from all the major Japanese manufacturers like Sony, Hitachi, NEC, and Fujitsu. Even Dell Japan runs a lot of promotions for TV-equipped computers. This means you can record TV programs and movies on the hard drive as well as watch your favorite TV show as you go through your email. Next step is feed the audio and video through a wireless network to your big-screen TV and speaker system.