* recommended

* recommended

Engrish sneaks up on you where you never expect to find it.

We went to eat at one of the newer restaurants in Honolulu called Jin Din Rou, a Japanese Chinese chain from Japan.  The food was pretty good but portions were on the smallish side and prices on the higher side.  A small plate of sweet and sour pork (made with black vinegar and sweet potato making the dish pop) was about $9 for the small and $18 for the large.  The prices reflect the Japanese owners sensibility of yen prices at Y900/Y1800.  Makes perfect sense in Tokyo but the Honolulu crowd is used to mass servings (like four scoops rice two scoops mac salad?) for cheap.  Several of the dishes were quiet refine and the tastes were unique and very non-Honolulu Chinatown.  Xiao long bao made with green tea?  Pretty darn good!  Totally lacked massive quantities of MSG, though.

Anyway, as I paged through their menu I fell upon a plate called stir friend pork and jew’s ear….

huh?

wait…jew’s ear….?

I mean I can go on and on about how this is totally not Kosher.  But jew’s ear.  I tried to bug Yukako about this but she was a bit stumped as well.  Seems something got amiss with a possible mushroom.

I’ll ask her again about this tomorrow.

http://jin-din-rou.net/h_menu03.html

ITS EVEN ON THEIR ON LINE MENU!

And its even served with soy sause.

Hmmm…you gotta wonder about Engrish at time.

 

The martini shot

The martini shot

The past few weeks have been slightly tough with work and personally.  My father in law sought refuge with us after the earthquake and tsunami in Japan.  He lives in Tokyo so there was no damage to his house or anything around him.  Minor broken dishes and the likes but life went on.  However, with dwindling food supplies, continuous aftershocks, and the fear of a radiated Godzilla returning to strike Japan, it was best to have him come and sun in Honoruru.  Having a third person in our condo isn’t bad but its not holiday time so work must go on.

As far as the tsunami is concerned, I must say its been tough not going and documenting the drama unfolding has overpowered my desire to travel to the wasteland.  We figured its best not to have a retrospective on my life after going.

Before and during all of this I had a hectic shooting schedule which had me shooting numerous jobs and as it always seems, all at once.  One of the most intensive jobs shooting a travel piece for Delta Sky magazine.  Sky assigned me to travel to several islands and I got to shoot everything from horseback riding to a celebrity chef. The spread was published in their April 2011 issue. I’ve already had a few flying friends send me notes they are seeing the Delta line across the friendly skies…no wait that United.

The pdf spread can be found here.

Sky tasked me to document multiple locations around Hawaii within a short time and lots of freedom.  I got to pick and choose from a list of locations and venues and decide which would make great art versus what could be picked up from hotel stock.  We figured there would be very little value in shooting hotel rooms and beautiful sunsets because most hotels have libraries of that stuff.  So I concentrated on the unique, rather, the more editorial view of most of the locations.

One of my favorite images came out of the Halekulani Resort in Waikiki.  The Resort has numerous gorgeous stock images of their hibiscus signature pool but the images sell corporate beauty, not what its like to actually see it.  You see an idea, a concept, not the reality of a pool filled with tourists.  I scouted the pool before I realized dusk and above would get me a great shot.  I asked the hotel to get me a room above with a balcony overlooking the property.  It didn’t take long to see the images I wanted to capture.

The mag loved it.  They actually wanted to use it as the opening spread but the higher ups wanted a different type of image showcasing Hawaii a bit more.

The opening shot of the spread ended up being, again, at the Halekulani.  I got a really nice room at the hotel and tried to shoot the model, Cindy, slung sexily over a lounge chair with Diamond Head in the background.  Sadly, the sun decided not to cooperate.  We had NO sun…the entire day was cloudy.  At the end when we gave up, we popped a bottle of wine and Cindy went out onto the balcony to enjoy the view from the $7000/night sweet…errr…suite at the Halekulani.  Diamond Head, the night sky, and the beautiful girl drinking wine on the balcony all lined up into a perfect martini shot.  Delta was extremely happy as was I.  This is the second major spread in their magazine in so many years.  I’m fond of this shot and all the work it took to make all of this work out…actually what little work we did to get this shot.

Tsunami Fundraiser

Tsunami Fundraiser

Japan is in bad shape.  Tens of thousands are homeless while more than 20,000 are now presumed dead or missing.  The Japanese economy is struggling.  Entire villages are gone.  Its a tragedy beyond what words can describe.  The effects will surely surely filter down to the West.

Hawaii, with its large Japanese and Japanese American population, is strongly sympathetic with the tsunami and nuclear tragedy and has done much to raise funds for those in need.  Masaharu Morimoto of Iron Chef fame held a fundraiser last night at his restaurant, Morimoto Waikiki.  A sellout crowd of 350 people attended and the event raised more than $100,000.  Sushi, sake, and songs.  A great event all around.

I participated in the live auction by donating two images from my 2010 geisha series.  While working in Japan, I was granted rare permission to go “behind the scenes” with an apprentice geisha, or maiko, to document her transformation from normal Japanese teenage into a traditional Japanese entertainer.  Access to geishas and maikos is very restricted to Japanese and foreigners find it even harder to meet or even see a true geisha/maiko in Japan.  The access allowed me to photograph her applying her makeup, fixing her elaborate hairstyle, and donning a traditional kimono.

Little did I know that this access would help me raise more than $2000 at the auction for the two images auctioned off.

Kristin Jackson, of Jackson Ink, the PR firm which works with Morimotos, holds the the framed image which raised big money last night.

All the proceeds from the event were given to the American Red Cross Japan earthquake and Pacific tsunami relief fund.  I feel very proud to have given so little yet made a difference last night.  Many of us just sit around and facebook or twitter about how sad they feel but few do anything.  We did something.  We helped.

We made a difference.

 

 

 

gurgle gurgle splash splash (pre nuke meltdown)

gurgle gurgle splash splash (pre nuke meltdown)

About a week has past since I started this initial post about our tsunami in Hawaii.  The earthquake and tsunami in Japan has now been surpassed by a nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima plant.  We luckily have gotten a ticket for my father in law to get out of dodge this weekend.  Whether he will escape is a matter of the airlines, the governments, and Godzilla.

Below is my first take on our HNL tsunami:

North East Japan is destroyed.  Video and still coverage of the earthquake and tsunami damage is astounding.  Rather its unbelievable.  When we first saw the initial reports on NHK, we couldn’t believe it.  It seemed as if Godzilla was just down the road smashing all in his wake.  Some images even reminded me of Doolittle’s bombing raid on the once wood and papered Tokyo.  It was, as I said, unbelievable.

Its hard to imagine this natural disaster destroying so much so quickly, yet, Banda Aceh was devastated within 20 minutes of their major earthquake.

Really…its unbelievable.

I’m tempted to get to Japan to take part in covering this disaster but I’ve got nothing to offer.  I’m not a rescue worker.  I could be.  But I’m not.  I can’t do it.  I couldn’t do it in Indonesia and I know I can’t do it now.

The Japanese tsunami hit Hawaii with a wallop.  A small one in scale, but a wallop.  Houses on the Big Island were wiped out, the Four Seasons and the King Kam Hotel, along with many shops and the likes, were hit very hard  Loads of property damage.  Several boat harbors on Oahu were severely damaged and there was damage as well on Maui.  Things turned out well but not that well.  Yet…it wasn’t really a big deal…not like the destruction in Japan.

The waves were scheduled to hit around 3am and Hawaii anxiously awaited their arrival.  3am passes and no major waves.  I (again) stationed myself at the Illikai Hotel and watch the harbor to see if anything takes place.  About 3:30 I run down to the harbor and see loads of boats sitting in the sand.  Water drained out of the harbor and many of the boats were sitting dry out of the water.  That spooked me a bit but I ventured out to the beach catching loads of people sitting around, drinking beer, and getting out into the beach where the water had run out.

I shot these fools and wondered how foolish I am for being with them.  “Who’s more foolish: the fool, or the fool who follows him?  At one point, the water has drained way off the shore, exposing reef, rocks, and whatnot and it quickly floods back in splashing up against a seawall where the guys above were standing.
Once that took place, I knew it was time to boogie outta there.  So after a few more hours of darkness, the sunrise made us aware of the damage that took place in Hawaii.  But its nothing like the devastation of Japan:  thousands of people were killed, entire villages and towns destroyed, and the Japan economic muscle comes to a halt.  What happened in Hawaii pales to the destruction in Japan.

To write any more about Hawaii is really saying too much. We had a few docks destroyed and there was millions of dollars of damage.  Homes were washed out but no lives were lost.   We survived again.

A red umbrella

A red umbrella

Just a quick post on a quick little action shot I found today while doing a bit of a scout on the Windward side.

We went to the Valley of the Temples to check out the location.  The Temple, a replica Japanese style Buddhist temple, is part of this grand, beautifully sculpted graveyard.  It sits in the back of this gorgeous valley, mountains jutting up around it, mist and clouds all around.  Every time I go there I think it would be pretty grand to take that super long nap in such a valley of splendor.

Anyway, this blurb isn’t about some beautiful eternal home but of some small girl with an umbrella.  As we left the (mosquito infested) Temple, there was this long staircase and this girl dressed in some type of Asian-style outfit jumping up and down the stairs as her family stayed above.  I assume it was some type of memorial (we are in a graveyard) and the little girl just decided to fool around while the adults stayed above.

 

The little girl didn’t seem to really notice anyone but herself and the umbrella. It wasn’t really raining but she seemed to use that red umbrella as a parachute.  She was having loads of fun.

Funny thing about the really quick snap of the photos was I didn’t feel I was in the US.  I mean Hawaii is only America on paper…