August 12, 2009

  • Photo Shooting

    It was raining the whole day on Mon,  this morning once I woke up it was such a beautiful day, a clear blue sky with a bright sun, fresh air and a cool temperature…..

    So towards the late afternoon I decided to ask a friend of mine to go for a brief photo shooting  around Richmond before going for dinner…

    The first stop was the Richmond Olympic Oval an arena where the  2010 Winter Olympic speed ice skating will take place..

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    After that we drove along the dyke where Vancouver International Airport is located on the opposite..

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    A sea-plance which can fly you to Victora - the capital of British Columbia

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    This is somebody’s bike…….

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August 10, 2009

  • Saturday night, met up with my old schoolmate and his girlfriend and went to have dessert at the Yee Shun Milk Company

    Steamed egg(custard), Iced Red-beans Drinks, and Steamed Milk with Red Beans

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    On Sunday morning went to Tsing Yi for the exhibition of a  famous Japanese cartoon in the 80s Doctor Slump and Arale.  There are people with family taking picture and I notice that those parents around my age are even more excited than their kids……cos we know all the characters from the cartoon!

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    remember tha pooh pooh??

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August 3, 2009

  • From one Hot place to another!

    After spending some hot days in Vancouver, back to HongKong on last Friday morning, actually a place even hotter than Vancouver only with more air-con indoors. The  influence of a Typhoon(Tropical storm) around the South China Sea was very obvious on Sat…I was sweating just standing  on the street without much movement  under shades, Together with the Smog and  air pressure, breathing was a bit of difficult…..no wonder some local reports saying that in Hong Kong there will be no Spring and Autumn within the up coming 5 years because of these man-made global warming..

    Anyway under such a hot temperature,  having different snacks several times a day seems better than have a full meal, and Tsui Wah is one of many locals and tourists favourites HK style cafe

    (picstures taken with a test run with my new DC)

    And this Mini Baugette with butter and condensed milk is my must have item everytime I visit this place

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    Had a meal at the UCC (Ueshima Coffee Company) cafe a Japanese-Western chain restaurnat from Japan who first started out selling coffee…. Anyway back to this meal….acutally for the price I”ve paid really not much compalins, their service is efficient, food quality and taste are  generally acceptable.

    Having a set dinner , you will have one serving from the self salad bar, a soup and an entree with tea/coffee.

    This is my all you can put salad whcih reminds me the Pizza Hut self salad bar which I used to have at teens, same concept you can put as much stuff as you can but only for once, I remember my schoolmates and I tried so many time to stuff a Salad tower and share at the table…

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    too bed this is one of the most blend creme of something soup

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    A baked beef with cheese on risotto( hm….they used the beef stripes usually for Shabu Shabu

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    a spaghetti with mushroom and scallopes

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    Remember th out door Bloc Mickey Moused Exhibition?  I just  found out that there’s is an indoors-section too..

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    If you like Japanese carton(animation) as me during the 80s  you will know the character

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    Arale from the title Doctor Slump

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July 29, 2009

  • Heat Wave in Vancouver…….

    Right after the Thunder-rain on Saturaday night the weather changed dramatically, from  a pleasant, dry summer to a  hot and humid summer, when I walked on the street I felt that I was walking on the street of a desert!….It’s so hot that I could sweat  just sitting in front of the computer  and surfing the net, not talking about I was nearly fainted at the gym after my 30 minutes cardio workout….cold shower, lots of cold drinks,  turning on the fan…..seems not helping at all.

    Then on Mon I decided to go  to the mall with a friend aimed for  cold drink and enjoy the air-con while doing window shopping, eventually I spent more money on a new camera.

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    A Canon G10 a better option for an amatuer photographer like me. Though it’s been out in the market for sometimes, I was quite happy that I paid less than what I’ve expected, the price including tax  here in Canada is even cheaper than in Hong Kong…at least by a few hundreds HKD… who says you always get things cheaper in HongKong this one is an exception for sure…..!

    Tue…….the temperature went up a lot…… taken from my car and it was parked under a covered parking

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July 26, 2009

  • Honglish

    Been talking with different groups of friends lately, expressing why nowadays my fellow co-workers always upset customers. They all have positive attitude when talking but what go wrong is usually the words they choose. My friends suggest that since most of my co-workers are with Chinese  back ground maybe the English they are talking is actually a direct translation from Chinese and known as Chinglish .

    I have  been using or speaking Chinglish  (and I admit it) since my English is a mixture of  British English/ Chinese and with the accent of HongKong Cantonese, but I amd not sure if it is right to say my co-workers are speaking Chinglish, since most of them are actually Canadian Born….and Someone is saying that the defination of Chinglish is different because it is now refering people wth Chinese background  no matter they are either, Canada, America, British or Australian Born….or what kind of accent they are having….

    Then I think from now on I should refer my English as Honglish, because I was born and grew up in the ex-Crown Land of the Great Britain(a.k.a. Hong Kong the Great Britain Dependant Territory), Learning British English, with the influence of HongKong Cantonese culture…..LOL

July 23, 2009

  • How nice…my browser and xanga are working today

    Finally I can do an entry today since the  Xanga Photos function and my browser are working today!

    Last Saturday went to a new restaurant  called CHOP they have a nice indoor decor, very good outdoor dining/Bar area, friendly servers but always drop things, either your drinks, cutlery or even  their serving tray….oh well that’s the Western Canada way ….they usually don’t really care  of fine details

    To start off our dinner we had this CHOP Platter, 5 items but all you need to remember are the Steak Bites and the Saratoga Chips…..The Lobster & Prawn Fritters which looks like the chinese deep fried crab ball but with a funny soap taste, and the Ahi Tuna Pillar tastes really blend even with the dip provided, and finally the Fried Roasted Chix Wings  the meat is soo dried……(see one of the Tuna Pillars fell down too luckily not onto the floor…..)

    Creamy Seafood Chowder and it’s really Creamy,  the texture of the soup is so thick that you can put ‘Dip’  onto the dish name.

    Macadamia Crusted Mahi Mahi, not my dish but my friend said  the best part of this is the Macadamia Crust…

    the Special of the day – Grilled Sword Fish, again not my dish, and my friend  prefered the brown rice more than the fish..

    Chop Salad with Sirloin Skewer, at least all the greens are fresh but I think the steak bites from the platter  is better than the skewer…

    24 layers Chocolate Cake……it’s tall….and it’s just a chocolate cake…..the home made vanilla ice-cream is good though.

    Tuesday in Hongkong meeting up with a friend and eventaully had an after tea at the Excelsior Hotel Lobby Lounge  another forgettable meal within 4 days…..oh well that’s ok the main purpose was to meet a long lost freind and hide from the over heated HongKong outdoor!

     

    Then walked around Causeway Bay when the sun started to go home……and found this Bloc Mickey Mouse exhibition at Time Square

     

    Back in Vancouver on Wednesday and had one of the best Pineapple Bun in town( even better than most of the Bakery Shops in HongKong I remember there’s even an article from the HK  East Magazine talked about it)
    it’s called Lido Cafe Restaurnat in Richmond BC

    At night had a  chinese Birthday dinner

    The Winter Melon Soup…..(came in with half of the Melon as a Bowl.. before being served.)

    hm…..how to describe???? Deep Fried Chix-knee with Soy Paste..

    Stir-fried Lobsters with the Premium Soy Sauce

    Steam Chix with tea leaves

    till then…..wait for another lucky day to update my blog!

July 5, 2009

  • 7 Ways to piss off a flight attendant

    After reading stevew918′s entry I would like to share the following with you guys which I ‘ve read somewhere……just for fun…!

    This article originally appeared in Budget Travel in May, 2009.

    7 ways to piss off a Flight Attendant.

    1. Bring your pet on the plane and then act like an animal. Over the years, I’ve seen a pet on a passenger’s lap, a pet tucked into a seatback pocket, and a pet loose in the aisle (I nearly hit one with my beverage cart). All of this is against federal regulations. People tell me how well-behaved their pet is, but they can’t follow the rules themselves! Your pet must stay in its carrier while you’re on the plane. Yes, even if you’ve paid a “pet-in-cabin” fee.

    2.Shove your bag into the first bin you see and then walk to your seat in the back of the plane. You think you’re clever, I know. You expect to grab your bag on your way out of the plane, but you’re selfishly inconveniencing others. I can’t lie and say we flight attendants don’t take some small satisfaction when we tell you, “We couldn’t identify the bag’s owner, so we sent it to cargo.” It’s a security issue, for real. Carry-ons need to stay near their owners! So don’t look so shocked when we say, “The signs will direct you to baggage claim. You can pick up your bag there.”

    3. Think that because you’re on an airplane you’re off-duty as a parent. Stop expecting us to have spare diapers, formula, medicine, toys, playing cards, or batteries for DVD players or Game Boys. It’s an airplane, not a 7-11. Take your kid to the restroom before you board. Leave the dry cereal and Legos at home and bring snacks and toys for your kids that won’t make a horrible mess.

    4. Drag on an oversize bag that’s too heavy for you to lift by yourself. I won’t be compensated for any injuries I might sustain if I heft your bag into the overhead compartment for you. (And other passengers shouldn’t have to step up and take the risk either.) The guideline is simple: You pack it, you stack it. Try this at home as a test (and this is to you ladies, especially): After you’ve packed your bag, put on the shoes you plan to wear on the plane and see if you can lift your bag and place it on top of your refrigerator. You can’t? Pay the fee and check the bag.

    5. Gripe that you haven’t been seated in a roomy exit-row seat. The exit rows weren’t created as a reward for people who are tall, overweight, or just plain nice. They were designed to help passengers get out of the plane in an emergency. The people seated in an exit row must be able to see and speak clearly, open the emergency door, and help others. I prefer to see uniformed military, firefighters, law-enforcement officers, or off-duty pilots and flight attendants sitting in those seats. While the gate agent may assign exit-row seats first, the flight attendant makes the final determination about who gets to sit in them. And the quality of our choices is one of the frequent concerns of Federal Aviation Administration officials when they audit airlines for safety practices. So please don’t complain. I’m just doing my job.

    6. Act like you don’t know the meaning of the words “under the seat in front of you.” Someday I will be muttering “under the seat in front of you” in the old-age home for flight attendants. What is it that you don’t understand? To be clear, items should not be stowed behind your calves, under your feet like a footstool, in the open seat next to you, or in your lap. It’s under the seat in front of you. And it applies to everything you carry on board. Items stored carelessly can trip others, or dislodge during takeoff and get lost, or inconvenience others. And while I’m on the topic: Please don’t wrap your purse (or umbrella strap) around your ankle to keep from forgetting it. What will happen in an emergency, when every second counts and there’s no time to disentangle yourself from your precious bag? Will you drag it ball-and-chain-style down the aisle of a burning plane?

    7. Whine about the high price of flying. When I hear people complain about coach airfares, I know they’re not keeping up with the news. Fares have rarely been cheaper. In recent years, it’s not uncommon for you to be able to cross the continent for under $130 each way, with a maximum of one layover. It’s a bargain! At that price, you’re barely paying for the fuel to get your body there — never mind the cost of shipping your 50 pounds of gear. You’re already on the gravy plane. People point to first-class ticket holders and want to know why they don’t get the same treatment. Wake up folks: You’re getting a great deal. If you want even more, pay more!

June 26, 2009

  • Generation X

    2 lost icons: For Generation X, a really bad day

    • By TED ANTHONY, AP National Writer Ted Anthony, Ap National Writer Fri Jun 26, 4:04 am ET

    A record-shattering vinyl album and its moonwalking maestro. A paper poster of a golden-haired beauty in a one-piece swimsuit that was gossamer and clingy in all the right places.

    It all seems so quaint now, the fragmented dream memories of a fleeting micro-era that began with words like “bicentennial” and “pet rock” and ended with MTV, Atari and absurdly thin cans of super-hold mousse.

    The man-child named Michael Jackson and the luminous girl known as Farrah Fawcett-Majors jumped into our consciousness at a plastic moment in American culture — a time when the celebrity juggernaut we know today was still in diapers. When they departed Thursday, just a few hours and a few miles apart, they left an entire generation — a very strange generation indeed — without two of its defining figures.

    “These people were on our lunchboxes,” said Gary Giovannetti, 38, a manager at HBO who grew up on Long Island awash in Farrah and MJ iconography. “This,” he said, “is the moment when Generation X realizes they’re grown up.”

    It was a long time coming. Cynical, disaffected, rife with ADD, lost between Boomers and millennials and sandwiched between Vietnam and the war on terror, Gen X has always been an oddity. It was the product of a transitional age when we were still putting people on celebrity pedestals but only starting to make an industry out of dragging them down.

    Its memorable moments were diffuse and confusing — the Ronald Reagan assassination attempt, the dawn of AIDS, the explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger. It had no protest movement, no opponent to unite it, none of the things that typically shape the ill-defined beast we call an American generation.

    These were the people who sent to the top of the charts a song called “We Don’t Need Another Hero,” then figured out how to churn them out wholesale, launching the celebrity obsession that is now an accepted part of American cultural fabric.

    And that was personified nowhere better than in the two people who died Thursday.

    She was, perhaps, the last in a line that began with Betty Grable in World War II — the bathing beauty who seemed kissed by the sun and exuded a potent combination of innocence and sexuality. But her “Charlie’s Angels” jiggle-show image presaged another world entirely. It was the one that would come to be dominated first by Brooke and her Calvins and ultimately, as the hunger grew tawdrier, by American Apparel ads and the celebrity sex videos of Pamela Anderson and Paris Hilton.

    She struggled for credibility after the poster and the Angels. She got it in 1984 with a dramatic turn as an abused wife in “The Burning Bed.” But her last stand — a documentary about the cancer that killed her — was tainted by her run-ins with insatiable paparazzi and tabloids.

    He was another thing entirely — perhaps the most recognizable face in the world, even more so than the pope or Barack Obama. His musical genius and energy seemed boundless for a time. They were rivaled only by his quirks, which consumed him.

    He had a bumpy, extraordinarily public childhood. Then he spent an off-the-wall lifetime trying to get it back, erecting a ranch named after the fantasy land of Peter Pan and inviting children to share his life and his bed — with results that some said drifted into the criminal.

    He caught fire in a Pepsi commercial. He shrouded his children in full-body coverings and dangled one over a balcony to show his fans below. His fabled multiple plastic surgeries turned him into someone almost unrecognizable. Nose sunk into face, cheekbones became caricature, ebony drifted into ivory.

    Yet through it all, even when the years of his quirks outstripped the years of his glory, he remained one of the planet’s most popular figures, selling out shows wherever he went. “Icon,” the Rev. Al Sharpton said, was “only a fraction of what he was.” But icon was, of course, what he always acted as if he wanted to be.

    Today, celebrities aren’t merely created for our consumption. Audiences are passive no longer. We demand a part in creating our icons: Jon and Kate Gosselin and their ilk might as well be publicly held companies, and we all insist upon buying a few shares. Farrah and Michael Jackson were other — above us, maybe, or apart from us. Now, when we crown new icons, we want them to BE us.

    “We want everything right now, and there’s a blurring of reality. When does the celebrity world stop and our world begin?” said Penni Pier, an associate professor of communications at Wartburg College in Waverly, Iowa.

    When Farrah gazed at us in her swimsuit and, a single moment in history later, MJ dared us to moonwalk, they commanded giant audiences. The world had not yet become fragmented into the microcommunities that exist today. We liked them or we hated them, but we shared the experience just as Walter Cronkite told us each night that “that’s the way it is.”

    Today, when Lindsay Lohan Twitters pictures of herself to her legions of followers, the notion that a paper poster bought in a shopping-mall Spencer Gifts could change the celebrity game seems rustic. And the vinyl version of “Thriller,” redolent of raw materials and production lines, is a ghost in the virtual world of iTunes — a world that the generation after X negotiates with the fluidity of natives.

    In the 1990s, members of Generation X would often laugh in bars about how the time of the Boomers was passing — about how the quaintness and naivete that made up the 1960s was, finally, a grave being danced on by Kurt Cobain. Today, members of that same generation sit upon the ground and tell sad stories of the death of kings of pop.

    A sexy poster upon a boy’s wall in which a young woman grins wholesomely. A record album called “Thriller” and its attendant music videos, built upon the notion that sexiness came in the frisson of hints and suggestions rather than in cutting directly to the big reveal.

    In the end, finally, they stand as the relics of a generation — one that struggled to find its place and now, suddenly, while still young, one that must wonder if it is as passe as the paper and vinyl that its icons’ most memorable moments were etched upon.

    We don’t need another hero? After this week, are we sure?

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    EDITOR’S NOTE — Ted Anthony covers American culture for The Associated Press.

    A Chinese Version y the Apple Daily HKG

    X世代一日失兩偶像

    2009年06月27日

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June 25, 2009

  • So Long Michael

    What a day! only half a day of Farrah’s departure, Michael Jackson, the Pop Icon also chose to leave……both of them had such a big influence to the Pop Culture of ….well….. at least my time……Rest In Peace!

  • Bye Farrah!

    It’s been over 30 years since following you in Charlie’s Angels, and today it’s like losing a long time friend. Sad to know you have to leave, however it might be a better move for you to be away from the pain of your illness. Thanks so much for your Sunny smile which was also part of my childhood memories…..