Friday, October 31, 2003

the CEO of RJR came to talk to us today. felt like he belonged in berkeley with his laugh and the way he talked. in any case, the best comment was probably when the ex-dean of our school asked him "with all the layoffs and the merger that happened the past two weeks, you seem to be pretty relaxed." andrew schindler, the ceo of RJR responded, "it's because i'm on drugs!" that was pretty funny. his laugh made it even funnier.

it's halloween. my costume this year will probably be the most original. i'm going as either an asian ... or better yet, a caucasian.

Thursday, October 30, 2003

spike jonze's DVD came out. he's an awesome director. he made 2 weezer videos :)

every week, i hear the phrase, "this week has been the hardest week yet." the sad part is, it's true. october is usually called 'hell month.' in any case, there is strong correlation between the messiness of my apartment to the amount of work i have to do. in stat terms, the r^2 would be close to 1.0 with a t-score of about.... a million. anyways, i've been saying i'd post pics of my apt for a few months now, so since i've never been so busy, thought it might be a good time.




don't know if you can tell from here, but the tv/vcr isn't plugged in... gosh, i miss tv...
also, notice the boxes. they've been there since august. i have probably sat in my futon a total of 10 times. also, my dining table is stacked with papers, and to maximize utilization, i use my chairs and floor for more space.






my two best friends right now. laptop and desktop, i spend about 95% of my time with awake. also notice the trashcan on the right... has only been emptied once. that reminds me, i should empty my trash can. the stack of CD's you see are all simpsons episodes i burned because my HD space ran out. i watch one episode a day either for lunch or dinner. keeps me sane.





my lovely kitchen. that garbage has been sitting out for about a week.





can you guess which one of these items is NOT expired?
a) milk
b) kimchi (in the back)
c) eggs
d) brita
e) salsa
f) frappucino
g) lightbulb

hint: there are two items.




another view of my living room.

my bedroom. the big walmart bag is clean laundry i have yet to put away... since last weekend. this room also serves as my second walk-in closet.

so after this crazy week, we get yet another crazy week next week. but in any case, i've been driving around on my spare tire for about 4 days now, haven't had time to fix my watch, and my hair is insanely long. like, it is crawling over my ears. i need to learn how to function on 5 hours of sleep. i got it down to 6, but 5 would be good.

Thursday, October 23, 2003

so so so tempting... all of my neighbors have wireless internet connections, making a total of 4 including me. two of them have still not enabled their encryption, meaning i can bum off their signal and return my wireless router and cancel my subscription at the same time. that would save me so much money! as a matter of fact, this blog entry was written using my neighbors connection! so tempting... but so wrong.

okay... back to 20 page paper.

Tuesday, October 21, 2003

who knew that you need to know calculus and stats to solve problems concerning waiting in lines?!?! yes, the kind of lines you wait in the bank, amusement park, gas station, etc. crazy.

Saturday, October 18, 2003

what will they think of next? korea is seriously becoming a joke.

Thursday, October 16, 2003

it's never fun when you spend over 8 hours on one case with pages and pages of spreadsheets, and the professor solves it in under 10 minutes using half the space of a chalkboard.

Wednesday, October 15, 2003

how awesome. someone from Iran visited my website.

15 October 17:15 TCI Telecom Corp. of Iran, Iran

everyone is always surprised to hear that b-school is kicking my butt so hard. they always say, "isn't b-school supposed to be easy?"
yes, b-school is easy. my schedule today, and i won't even go into my schedule for the week cuz trust me, it's much worse:

8-1pm - class(i woke up at 630 to finish my reading and homework for today)
1-130 - meeting with professor
130-2 - go home and heat something up for lunch and race back to school by 2.
2-230 - marketing club website meeting
230-3 - group meeting for two cases due tomorrow
3-430 - association meeting (i also had a marketing meeting from 3-4, but i had to skip it because i already committed to this one)
430-730 - meet back with group to finish case (i don't think they were happy i missed an hour and a half at a meeting while they were working on the cases)
730-8 - get organized and do my take-home quiz
8-10 - study for accounting quiz tomorrow
10-whenever - econ homework (textbook reading, article reading, and two more case readings that are 24 pages each!!!)
whenever-tomorrow - dinner, sleep, maybe do the reading for my other classes for tomorrow.

and it's only wednesday... AND i just got a case back... 50% baby. that sure is gonna KILL my average.
at least i have my trusty old gameday to keep updated with the baseball scores...

Saturday, October 11, 2003

Another front-page article from the WSJ just confirming that asians are idiots.

Pyongyang Place: The Family Saga Of Kim Jong Il

10/10/03
Jilted Mistresses, Relatives In Exile -- and Murder; North Korean 'Sopranos'
By GORDON FAIRCLOUGH
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

SEOUL, South Korea -- First, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il started bringing one of his mistresses -- the mother of two of his sons -- along with him on visits to military bases. Then, last year, the North Korean army distributed a pamphlet praising her as "the respectful mother, who helps the commander-in-chief to carry on the spirit of the revolutionary family."

The message, according to South Korean intelligence analysts: The 62-year-old Mr. Kim, who for years waged a fierce family battle to assure his own rise to power as his father's successor, is paving the way to pass the crown to one of his sons.


As Mr. Kim engages in nuclear brinkmanship with the outside world, he is also maneuvering behind the scenes in Pyongyang in a domestic drama that swirls with allegations of jilted mistresses, exiled relatives and murder. It is a dysfunctional family saga that intelligence analysts and Mr. Kim's opponents say reveals a lot about Mr. Kim and the way he governs North Korea. "These guys are the 'Sopranos,' " says one senior Bush administration official.

North Korea is very much a family enterprise. Mr. Kim's relatives are among his most trusted aides. His sister, Kim Kyong Hui, runs the light-industry division of the Communist Party. And his brother-in-law, Jang Song Thaek, helps oversee the security apparatus that suppresses opponents of Mr. Kim's rule.

The dictator's eldest son, Kim Jong Nam, the progeny of an affair with a well-known North Korean movie actress, spends much of his time in China, according to South Korean intelligence analysts. These analysts allege the younger Mr. Kim has been involved in sales of North Korean missiles and other weapons as well as money laundering and the distribution of counterfeit currency for the regime.

The court of Kim Jong Il also boasts rivalries, dissension and shenanigans worthy of Versailles, or at least Peyton Place.

Mr. Kim's half-brother, Kim Pyong Il, a onetime rival for the throne, has lived in a sort of exile as a diplomat in various Eastern European countries since the late 1980s. He is now North Korea's ambassador to Poland.

ALL IN THE FAMILY







Another of the dictator's relatives, Lee Il Nam, defected to Seoul and wrote a book about his childhood as a member of Mr. Kim's household. In 1997, according to South Korean police, North Korean assassins killed Mr. Lee -- who, fearing retribution, had changed his name and undergone cosmetic surgery to hide his true identity. Mr. Lee was shot in the head and chest by two men waiting for him outside his apartment, according to Hong Sung Sang, a police counterintelligence officer who led the investigation of the case.

The murderers escaped. But a captured North Korean spy later confirmed under interrogation by South Korean authorities that three of his colleagues had been sent from Pyongyang to execute the defector. Mr. Lee was killed on Feb. 15, 1997, eight months after the publication of his memoir, "Taedong River Royal Family," and the day before Kim Jong Il turned 56. "They killed him to keep him from talking about the family," says Mr. Hong. "It was a birthday gift for Kim Jong Il."

North Korea's government-controlled media maintain a studious silence about Kim Jong Il's family life. North Korea watchers outside the country still disagree over how many children he has, what their names are and even where they live.

Mr. Kim himself was born in the Russian Far East, where his mother and his father, Kim Il Sung, spent World War II with a group of Korean fighters at a Soviet army camp. His mother died when he was 8. Kim Il Sung eventually remarried and started a new family.

By the time Mr. Kim was in his 20s, he found himself in a contest for supremacy with his uncle, Kim Il Sung's younger brother. "It was a competition to see who could do the best job praising and glorifying Kim Il Sung and boosting his ego," says Hwang Jang Yop, one of the highest-ranking North Koreans to defect. "Kim Jong Il won."


Kim Jong Il (front, left) and his first-born son, Kim Jong Nam (front, right), with the sister and other family members of a late mistress, in a 1981 photo.


Key to his success was a series of movies he produced lauding his father, including one called "Sea of Blood" that cataloged the elder Kim's exploits fighting the Japanese, according to Sohn Kwang Joo, a research fellow at the Institute of National Unification Policy, a think tank connected with South Korea's National Intelligence Service.

As his father's heir apparent, Kim Jong Il began to consolidate power and intimidate rivals. He also became preoccupied with his own safety, apparently suspecting that his relatives were plotting against him. He recruited a large corps of bodyguards who were told that the most likely threats to Mr. Kim's life would come from members of his own family, says Lee Young Kook, who protected Mr. Kim from 1978 until 1988.

"We were ordered not to tell relatives his whereabouts or allow them into his residences or offices," says Mr. Lee, who arrived in South Korea in 2000. Mr. Kim was especially concerned about his stepmother, who was eager to advance the position of her own son, Kim Jong Il's half-brother Kim Pyong Il. "She had a lot of power and Kim Jong Il thought she was a threat," Mr. Lee says, adding: "He only trusted his sister."

In the early 1970s, Mr. Kim began an affair with Sung Hae Lim, a well-known North Korean movie actress. According to the memoir by the murdered Mr. Lee, Mr. Kim initially hid the relationship from his father. He did so even after he and Ms. Sung had a son, Kim Jong Nam. Also during those years, Mr. Kim married a woman named Kim Yong Suk, with whom he eventually had a daughter. He also began his love affair with Ko Young Hui, a Japanese-born Korean dancer. (Ms. Sung began making a number of prolonged visits to Moscow, where she is believed to have died in 2002.)

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Kim Jong Nam, son of Mr. Kim and Ms. Sung, appeared to have the inside track on succeeding his father. He was looked after by Mr. Kim's younger sister and traveled among his father's villas. At one point, according to Mr. Lee's book, Kim Jong Nam visited his father in his Pyongyang office. He sat in his father's desk chair, while his father told him: "Later, when you grow up, this is where you'll sit and give orders."

After Kim Jong Nam was caught entering Japan with a false Dominican passport in 2001, he was largely cut out of the regime's inner circle, South Korean intelligence officials say. Kim Jong Nam said at the time that he wanted to visit Disneyland. Intelligence officials say Kim Jong Nam frequently visited Japan, where he had a house and enjoyed partying far from the gaze of his father's minions. He was deported to China, where analysts say he continues to spend most of his time.

Kim Jong Nam's fall opened the way for the sons of Ms. Ko, the mistress now in the spotlight with her visits to military units and positive propaganda. Both Kim Jong Chul, born in 1981, and Kim Jong Oon, born in 1983, were sent to boarding school in Switzerland as children and then are thought to have returned to continue their education in Pyongyang. A South Korean intelligence analyst says Mr. Kim appears to favor the younger of the two, Kim Jong Oon.

This week, however, a conservative Japanese newspaper, Sankei Shimbun, reported that Ms. Ko had suffered head injuries in a car accident in Pyongyang last month and was hospitalized. Officials of South Korea's Unification Ministry, which oversees relations with North Korea, said they could not confirm the report. The National Intelligence Service would say only that it is looking into the matter.

Were Ms. Ko out of the picture, that would cast doubt on the political futures of her sons Kim Jong Chul and Kim Jong Oon, and could open another chapter in the Kim family drama.

Thursday, October 09, 2003

...... no comment.

WSJ, 10/9/03

For Asian Women, Weight-Loss Rule 1 Is Skip the Gym

They Shun Hard-Body Look, Preferring Pills, Teas and Gels
By CRIS PRYSTAY and GEOFFREY A. FOWLER
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


Umera Chan recently paid $2,300 to a masseuse who promised to knead a few inches off her 116 pound, 5-foot-5 frame. She also pops diet pills with dinner. But the willowy size-two Singaporean wouldn't dream of going to the gym.

"We all want to be slimmer. But not muscular like Demi Moore," says Ms. Chan, a 28-year-old boutique manager. "I don't think that looks very nice."

Across Asia, already-thin women are downing prescription diet pills, and paying a fair amount of money to join slimming centers that promote weight loss through throbbing electric shocks and pinching "face-slimming" machines. The goal: slim down without exercise. For many Asians, the tanned, buff bodies prized by Americans have an unwelcome air of the working class.

Constance Seck, a 33-year-old Singaporean corporate travel agent, worked out with a trainer for a year after her second child was born but quit the three-day-a-week regimen when friends began to notice her leg muscles. "I looked bulky. Muscles popped out everywhere -- my shoulders, my legs. My body wasn't very feminine," she says.

At De Beaute slimming salon in Singapore, Ms. Seck recently slipped out of a red sweater and settled onto a bed in a dimly lighted room. A technician wheeled over a squat "electro-stimulation" machine, which zaps a mild current that causes muscles to contract, and clamped electrodes to her arms, stomach and thighs. With the press of a keypad, and Ms. Seck's limbs began to twitch. "It's gentle," Ms. Seck proclaimed.


Ms. Seck says she has lost 31 pounds since she joined De Beaute, for which she has appeared in before-and-after photographs. Recently, she became a spokesmodel for the five-year-old company, which runs three salons in Singapore. Cutting carbohydrates from her diet at the same time she started sessions here "may have helped speed things up," she adds.

The traditional Chinese ideal of beauty emphasized not just pale bodies but tiny feet and hands. Today, the feminine ideal of weak and wan remains, even as women gain independence through their jobs. For some, staying slim is a way to reconcile that, psychologists say. In some women's magazines, slimming products and services make up 50% of the ads, according to a new study by the Hong Kong Eating Disorders Association.

Almost half the women in Hong Kong and China who responded to a survey conducted in August by market-research firm Taylor Nelson Sofres felt they were overweight or obese, even though only a quarter actually were, by medical definition. In the past eight years, Dr. Sing Lee, founder of the Hong Kong Eating Disorders Center, has seen a 20-fold increase in eating disorders, including anorexia.

The region's fitness industry is starting to gain ground -- but not nearly as fast as sales of diet pills and gadgets. "No crash diet, no rigorous exercise, no supplements to take," proclaims the Prettislim slimming center in Singapore. Singapore has 70 such centers, but only 30 gyms. In Hong Kong, 36% of women who have tried shedding weight used slimming teas, pills and gels, according to market researcher ACNielsen.

Prescription diet drugs approved and sold in the U.S. and Asia are readily available over the counter in China and Thailand. Even in Hong Kong and Singapore, where doctors dispense as well as prescribe drugs, patients say they can get whatever drugs they want.

Advertisers in Hong Kong spent nearly $24 million on spots for diet pills and slimming products from January through August of this year alone -- a 27% increase over the same period last year, according to Nielsen Media Research.

Public health officials are trying to crack down on health claims made for products available without prescriptions. Last month, Hong Kong's Health Department recommended that the city's legislature overhaul regulations. If the law is passed, police could confiscate products that make any of 25 banned misleading claims, including "promote firm muscle and beautiful body curve" and "excrete excess fat."

Over the past year, Hong Kong secretary Catherine Fung, 42, has tried a range of exercise-free techniques to slim down from 112 pounds to her ideal 102. Most recently, she has been tightening her muscles with a machine that promises a two-hour workout in just 30 minutes by sending small electrical pulses to muscles through a hand-held device -- while she is lying down. "It's like ironing," she says. "You just put it over the places you want to firm."

Outside of the office, she and her friends meet up for dinner or shopping. "We're too busy for exercise," says Ms. Fung. But they do find time to pore through magazine articles on slimming and swap notes on the latest hot treatments. Later this month, she's attending a free lecture that promises to tell her how to get Xenical, a Roche prescription drug for the extremely obese.

A million Hong Kong women are customers at beauty and slimming center Fancl House, whose ads for "Extra Slim-Up" tonic feature the 5-foot-10, 120-pound movie star Gigi Leung. Crashing a bowling ball into a set of pins representing excess weight, Ms. Leung implores women to "break 'n' burn!" away flab.

"It's a very, very competitive market, and slimming centers have a bigger marketing budget," says Selina Short, the marketing vice president for California Fitness, the region's biggest gym chain with 50,000 female members across five countries.

But gyms are making their move. Last month, California Fitness brokered a joint marketing deal with Fancl. The slimming company came up with ads showing people at the gyms drinking Extra Slim-Up, while California Fitness sent invitations for free gym trials to 100,000 of Fancl's frequent customers.

"These women, who are so concerned about image, had never experienced exercise before," Ms. Short says.

you know, with all the technology and special effects in movies that have been so advanced lately, they still have not gotten one thing right: the sounds. namely, the sounds that a computer or a cell phone or a pda. i mean, everyone knows they don't make those beeps and chimes. it annoys the heck out of me because they sound so fake. i mean, you can get bullet time, but you STILL have to add in those stupid corny sounds that PDAs NEVER make? sure, it may sound cooler with those stupid sounds, but honestly, the movie loses its credibility in my book whenever they are used. random thought, but one i have had in my head since the first generation of star trek.

Monday, October 06, 2003

quote of the day:

pjchoi: this is freaking bs
pjchoi: i hate this

(after the A's loss against the BoSox in game 5 of the ALDS)

quick clip of my weekend in atlanta... and yes, i took these pictures... and yes, it is PDiddy and Outkast... and yes, they were at the same club i was at:







a movie (RIGHT-CLICK AND DO SAVE AS...)

but here's the CRAZY part:
a girl was following me at the club!!! i kept running away. i'm such a man. and she was cute too. man, you guys not in the South... missing out big time.

Sunday, October 05, 2003

upcoming:

going up the stairs
sounds of hi-tech stuff in movies/tv shows
partying with p-diddy and outkast

Wednesday, October 01, 2003

quote from CNN today, from Arianna Huffington:

"I'm pulling out and I'm going to concentrate every ounce of time and energy for the next week fighting to defeat the recall because I realize that that's the only way now to defeat [Republican gubernatorial candidate] Arnold Schwarzenegger," the 53-year-old writer and media commentator said on CNN's "Larry King Live." "


PJ is right... they totally hate each other. She's basically jumping political parties just to defeat Arnold!!

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