(BLA-BLA-ing since 2002!)
Intro-LUDE

AdriI'm Adri, a Californian nerdette dwelling at the East of the Golden Gate who loves to blog, take random pics, and make cool web stuff. I dig reading, music, singing, traveling, tea, food, Asian pop cultures, anime, manga, video games, the Golden State Warriors, the San Francisco 49ers, the San Jose Sharks, and the Oakland A's. I am a contributing writer for Technorati, Blogcritics, and KabayanTech. I am also a happy sitter to a family of cats, in which this current blog theme is dedicated to. [Extend →]

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Books I've Read

Little Women
Pride and Prejudice
Sense and Sensibility
Jane Eyre
Angels and Demons
The Da Vinci Code
The Hunt for Red October
The Alchemist
The Hunger Games
Catching Fire
A Tale of Two Cities
The Count of Monte Cristo
Like Water for Chocolate
The Great Gatsby
The Diary of a Young Girl
Outlander
Eat, Pray, Love
Memoirs of a Geisha
The Princess Bride
The Confessions of Max Tivoli


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Culture

General culture-related commentary from local cultures to ethnic cultures.

PSY – Oppa Gangnam Style

Just a few weeks ago, a few of my friends on Twitter have been asking me about the latest viral video and dance craze only known as Oppa Gangnam Style. Thanks to my proficiency in Japanese, I can finally tell which East Asian language is which, and just by the name alone, I already knew it was Korean. The thing about me and K-Pop is this (and I think I’ve mentioned this before in the past). I’m not a huge fan of K-Pop, and even if I did like a few good number of K-Pop songs, I’m still not a huge fan. From the beginning it sounded so similar to J-Pop, plus I guess the whole language barrier thing somehow prevented me from actually getting in to K-Pop. I’m pretty subjective when it comes to songs and the language they speak. If the song sounded good, I would eventually like it, but if I didn’t know and couldn’t understand the message sang through the song and it does prevent me from actually enjoying the song fully. Still… Continue reading

Japan vs. Korea: Buying Popularity?

Here’s the thing. I am a J-Pop fan for over a decade now but I’m not hating on K-Pop. I know how much K-Pop is becoming on the rise among almost every country’s pop cultures, but regardless for me, I can never get in to K-Pop. Maybe because I’ve gotten used to loving my J-Pop that everything I see in K-Pop seems so similar to J-Pop, except for the language. It also makes you think why K-Pop artists would have to make Japanese renditions of their own current/old hit songs in Korea when they can always create original Japanese ones. Anyway.

I stumbled upon this video. Somehow it makes me want to ponder and think about this. For all of you J-Pop and K-Pop fans, what do you guys think?

Cultural Pride at the 2012 Kalayaan Festival

NOTE: This would have been an article for Technorati however they rejected it for no reasons at all. It turned out that I had technical issues with my email (adri@adrimarie.us) and that I wasn’t receiving any email replies from the TR Editors. I figured it out when I forwarded my original email using my Gmail account and eventually they did receive it. However, rather than helping me out with the problem of this article they told me to check my other email account for their replies instead. How was I supposed to check their replies over there when I haven’t receiving them? They refused to at least forward those emails to me using my Gmail account so I just told them to delete the article as I don’t want to bother them with this entire issue. The article is now at the bottom.

Continue reading

A Fresh Look and Listening to the Balagtasan

(first published on Technorati on 10/09/11)

October 08, 2011 – In my hometown of Union City earlier today, I attended my very first Balagtasan Debate forum with my parents. The event was hosted by the City Council of Union City and the San Francisco Bay Area Filipino Community, featuring young Filipino-American spoken word poets on the first event and three prolific poets who flew all the way to the Philippines to hold a Balagtasan forum to Filipino-Americans familiar with the poetic debating and to those who have never seen or heard of a Balagtasan forum, such as myself. I have attended, watched, and listened to poetry events before during my school days, from watching my former high school’s Forensics Club to even listening to local poetry slam sessions at the neighborhood coffee shops. Today was the first time that I attended a type of poetry event that has solid cultural ties to my ethnic roots.

Balagtasan is a form of poetic debating that was founded in the early 20th Century (around early 1920s) during the American colonization of the Philippines. The term was coined from a prominent Filipino poet of the late 19th Century, Francisco Balagtas (1788-1862), often referred to as the Filipino William Shakespeare. Balagtas was known for his collection of epic poetry, most notably Florante at Laura (Florante and Laura), which was considered Balagtas’ poetic masterpiece. His poems were written in Tagalog, which was crucial to the Filipino linguistic identity during that time because the Filipino language back then was written predominantly in Spanish.

Continue reading

Philippine LULZ: El Statement Ultimo de UST

University of Santo Tomas (UST)1, is the Philippines’— and all of Asia’s— oldest university. Established in 1611, this university is 25 years older than Harvard University2 and also a pontifical university in which the university was visited three times by two popes: Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II. This year, UST celebrates its 400-year anniversary of their establishment. 400 YEARS OLD… :???:

Every year, the University of Santo Tomas Faculty Union hold their Santo Tomas Faculty Union Day. With this particular day, their faculty union always makes their statement to their students that they are a true force to be reckoned with. Just the banner alone says it all.

Mark their words, all of you! Your unintelligible sarcasm against their mission statement is absolute futile. The banner towers over you.

(Photo Credits: Richard Marinelle. Thanks dude for sharing! :D)

  1. or for some of you English snobs out there, University of St. Thomas []
  2. established in 1636 []

Philippine LULZ: Dreaming of a Mac

Let’s just face it. Macs seriously cost an arm and a leg, but they’re every person’s dream system, especially for designers. They are never affordable wherever you go, even here at Apple’s homebase.

Anybody— just anybody— would seriously want a Mac. Even I want to have a Mac. I’ll even have to go so far as to having a mock Mac just so I can show the world that even a frugal person like me can also have a Mac. :(

Philippine LULZ: Filipino Spa

In the Philippines. rain or shine, the tropical humidity will always be at a high level 24/7/365.

Apparently, for some Filipinos, it’s not hot enough to enjoy a relaxing day at a spa resort, hot spring, onsen 1, you know the deal.

With all that, this is how they roll. Only in the Philippines.

  1. Japanese hot spring baths. []