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.

37,000 plus…and a shaka!

37,000 plus...and a shaka!

37,000 plus images

482.38 gigs to be precise.  I’ve been re editing all the work from Japan.  I’m worn.  I can’t believe I took that many pictures.

So as I edited through some of the outtakes and non assignment locations, I found a few little gems here and there.  I’ll be posting individual images in the next few posts.

After being in Japan for sometime, I got tired of eating Japanese food.  Yeah sure, I eat that all that Japanese food back in Honolulu but I can easily go to get a cheeseburger (not like a Texas burger mind you) and fries anytime I want.  I do have to declare Tanaka Saimin makes a mean cheeseburger with fries.

With that in mind, a month is a long time not to eat, well, as they say, comfort food.  I don’t need that much comfort in food as I am very quick to adapt to the local food wherever I travel to (I mean what is American food?  burgers, pizza, and chicken wings?) so I never have too much of a breakdown.  And besides, Japanese food, including the stuff they make from other countries (Japanese croissants are amazing!!!!!)  is mostly near perfect.  Yes, there are loads of interpretations (pizza with natto?!?!?!)  but we are in a global market so nothing is never or not available.  (yes…double negs)

But its still hard to be in Japan and not have a good grasp of Japanese.  Most menus in Japan are mostly written in….anyone? anyone?  Bueller?  Bueller? …. in Japanese.  If I was by myself, I was resigned to pointing at pictures on the menu to order or sadly dragging a willing waiter/waitress outside to the front of the restaurant where I could point at the little plastic food models.  Ah, my big mouth taking a back seat to my index finger… (T_T)  it is a bit intimidating for me to be on my own and try to get into the swing of functioning in Japanese.  Loads of misunderstood nods, hai’s and wakaranai‘s!  I let on I don’t really understand too much but I’ve gotten better.  Japanese is just a tough thing to learn.

So when I had the quick chance to pop into a McDonalds in Osaka for a quick bite, I knew I’d get something pretty good (if you consider McDonalds good) and the menu would be in Engrish. The meal might come with a side nori (seeweed) but it’d be a good ol’ processed quality controlled food.  Yet, as I read over the menu ( as children and old ladies stare at me from all angles)  I couldn’t help but to stick to the Japanese style food and go for this one item on the meal called the Shaka Shaka Chicken.

Hmmm…What might this be?  Chicken with pineapple?  Chicken wrrapped in spam?  Nothing of the sort.  It was a fried chicken patty served in a little paper bag in which you’d sprinkle a package of this peppery salt into the bag and then then…shaka shaka! (see instructions on bag)  HO…brudda that was way cool and really GOOD. Crispy, spicy, and so American in that unique Japanese way.

I guessed the reference to the shaka was McDonald’s clever way of saying shake shake.  They couldn’t (I assume) state shakey shakey because  Shakey’s Pizza is still alive and well in Tokyo (hmmm….) and using that term would warrant a nice little law suit.  Hence, Micky D’s borrowed the lovable, yet misunderstood,  shaka from the Aloha State’s aloha spirit.

Now if we could only get McDonalds US to adapt something as tasty and cool.

How about a badonkadonk burger?

(that killed me…)

Twins

Twins

This is a small post on twins…no nothing about real twins (but on my photo, I can’t be too sure but nevertheless…) its about two girls I found in Shinjuku.  Two girls with equally obnoxious bows in their hair.  I mean obnoxious…Incarnate Word HS obnoxious.  Yet it was fashion…Doublemint Gum fashion yet they are probably not.

What do I know?  It was hot.  It was a busy day around Shinjuku.  Its a moment.

A quick read and then some!

A quick read and then some!

Sorry I’ve been away…shooting and editing several jobs and sorting through the thousands of images from Japan.  I found this one worthy of a quick, late night blog…

While on the train to Hiroshima one morning, I spied a commuter reading the sports pages of a local paper.  Yukako said the headlines were something like…”when I licked the ice cream stick, it melted…” referring to, well, eating ice cream naked in bed on the back of the sports pages.  Ah, Japan…what covers for news is much more exciting that what we have in the West, no?

Hey…I just noticed a phantom hand on her back.  HEY LEAVE HER ALONE!  THAT’S HER ICE CREAM STICK.

Anyway, a quick note on the bw file and camera used.  I shot loads with a new Panasonic  DMC-LX3 point-n-shoot camera.  It shoots raw files and does a fine job for what its meant to do.  Its crappy low light but does a great job in just about most other situations.  Has a Leica 35mm 2.0 lens and a cute little flash.  Does the trick in a pinch and even does video.  I did lots of stuff in Japan with this camera.  The bw file was a setting in the camera and it isn’t all that bad.  I would hope to one day have a point and shoot that can do really good low light stuff but thats a dream.

Kodak is actually reporting that film is making a comeback with the hip young kids these days.  Maybe I’ll go back to the trouble.  Haven’t shot film in a while.

Next post…Morimoto!

Geisha

Geisha

Blurred images of kimonoed women, alabaster faces, geta shoes clacking down cobblestoned streets.  Red stained lips.  Paper umbrella.  Eyes downcast.  A hint of an ancient past.  A unknown future.

Geishas…also called Geikos in Kyoto are one of Japan’s most iconic symbols.  Once though of as prostitutes in Western minds, a geisha is a highly trained entertainer who sells her craft, often at high prices, to entertainment establishments via her geisha house, or okiya.  During their performances, geishas, or maikos (who are often younger women who are still training) sing, dance, and play traditional Japanese songs using traditional string instruments.  Geishas and maikos also sit with clients helping pour drinks and coyly flirt with customers.

I had a unique opportunity to spend time with a maiko in Kyoto and photograph preparing herself with makeup and getting dressed.  I was helped by the Chika Yoshida at the Kyoto Tourism Federation.  The Federation and Yoshida-san helped me accomplish most of what I set out to do in Kyoto and I owe them a great deal of appreciation for all of her hard work.

Picture courtesy from Chika Yoshida.

I will post more images from my shoot in the future.  The first image is actually from a past shoot but I am still editing my current work.