Categories
Misc.

11 links

Some Thailand related, some not…

  1. The best documentaries of 2010 — Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times (Thanks to A for the link)
  2. Haïkuleaks — tag line: “Cable is poetry: 65 haikus in 1830 cables”
  3. Citywalk: A Daylong Stroll in BangkokWall Street Journal
  4. Thailand’s antigovernment red shirts gear up for electionsThe Christian Science Monitor
  5. The Afterlife of David Foster WallaceThe Chronicle Review
  6. 100 football blogs to follow in 2011The Guardian (thanks to D for the link). Side note: not included in the list, but should be (for goalkeeping nerds only): Ministry of Glove
  7. Thailand again sullies its human rights record — Amnesty International’s Benjamin Zawacki in the Bangkok Post
  8. Thailand’s Misrule by Law — Thitinan Pongsudhirak in the Wall Street Journal
  9. Gone With the Myths — author Edward Ball, writing in the New York Times, on revisionism and the Southern secession.
  10. Oxford study: What’s the future of foreign reporting? — Nieman Journalism Lab
  11. Video: Extreme Climbing to top of 1768 ft radio tower — Not recommended for those who are scared of heights.

Video above: Hans Rosling’s 200 Countries, 200 Years, 4 Minutes.

Categories
Bangkok Thailand

Thailand street fashion blog: Siam Stylista

2011-01-13_ss.jpg

Those who enjoy street fashion blogs like The Sartorialist may be interested in a new-to-me blog called Siam Stylista.

(Image: Siam Stylista on Flickr.)

Categories
Bangkok Thai politics Thailand

Two takes (one satirical) on the ongoing red shirt protests at Rajaprasong

In the wake of Sunday’s rally, two different takes — one a news account, the other a sendup — on the ongoing red shirt protests at the Rajaprasong intersection.

First, from today’s Bangkok Post:

Red shirt rallies are making us broke, say angry retailers

2011-01-12_bkk_post_raj.jpg

Business operators, vendors and residents at the Ratchaprasong intersection have urged the government to regulate political gatherings, complaining that the shopping malls and other businesses in the area were being badly hit by the red shirt rallies.

About 2,000 business operators, vendors and employees yesterday gathered in front of Gaysorn Plaza shopping centre at 11.30am to oppose the use of Ratchaprasong intersection as a protest venue.

Putting aside the irony of protesting in Rajaprasong against protests in Rajaprasong, the UDD gatherings in the vicinity are a very real concern, and not just for a government that may feel jittery about continued displays of red shirt unity. I’ve spoken with people who work in the area, and the last several red shirt gatherings, while peaceful, have been quite disruptive. And certainly those residing in the nearby areas are feeling nervous, as well.

(Side note: I’ve heard speculation that the government intends to deal with the threat of red shirts blockading parts of the city again by simply not allowing them to mass in the way they did last year: That is, they would nip future Phan Fah bridge or Rajaprasong rallies in the bud, before demonstrators can seal off the areas. But couldn’t one of these Rajaprasong protests, some might wonder, quite easily turn permanent? What would the authorities do if the red shirts refused to leave?)

Then there’s an item today at Not the Nation, an Onion-like Web site that satirizes Bangkok’s English language daily The Nation:

Rajaprasong Vendors Demand Reds Buy More Handbags

2011-01-12_ntn_raja.jpg

Retailers urge penniless protestors to step up consumption of luxuries

After suffering another weekend of lost sales due to large-scale UDD protests, the vendors of Bangkok’s Rajprasong shopping district have assembled for their own protest, demanding that future gatherings of red-shirts promise to buy more handbags, accessories, and high-end fashion items.

Calling themselves the Patriot’s Rajprasong Anti-Demonstration Association, or PRADA, the vendors asked for a “fair balance” between the political rights of the UDD and the mercantile rights of luxury retailers.

“We proudly serve this nation’s richest and most influential people and their need to pay 300% markups on ostentatious designer brands,” said Suksana Meechaiprap, the PRADA spokesperson and co-owner of Zenith watch shop in Gaysorn Plaza. “Our way of life, which is a cornerstone of traditional Thai culture, is under threat.”

On a more serious note, the next Rajaprasong rally is reportedly planned for Jan. 23.

Categories
Thailand

Sven on Thaksin: “He didn’t understand football.”

2011-01-12_sven-thaksin.jpg

Speaking of England, Thailand, and soccer, I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention this BBC story, though it’s not new, having run on Jan. 6:

Sven-Goran Eriksson admits Shinawatra strain at Man City

The former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has told BBC Radio Manchester of his problems he had with former City chairman Thaksin Shinawatra.

The 62-year-old, now in charge at Leicester City, lasted only one year at Eastlands after joining in July 2007.

He said: “His biggest problem was that he didn’t understand football at all and he didn’t realise that.

“He thought football was easy just tell the players to be aggressive and we will resolve all the problems.”

“I think we did well in the whole league more or less until Thaksin decided I had to go at the end of the season,” he added.

“Every time we lost he never spoke to me for a week after but when we won it was dinner and very nice hugs and things, so it’s difficult to work with people like that.”

(Emphasis mine.)

Categories
Sports Thailand

England-Thailand friendly officially cancelled

2010-12-08_becks_england.jpg

The backstory is here. From today’s Bangkok Post:

The England football team has confirmed the cancellation of its friendly match against Thailand in Bangkok in June.

It was to have been the first time the England national side had played in Thailand.

The English Football Association cited scheduling concerns for the withdrawal, but the British press has speculated it is retribution for Thailand’s football boss breaking a “promise” to back England’s bid to host the 2018 World Cup.

The Thailand-England fixture would likely have proved a highly lucrative event and was supposedly agreed in return for the support of Worawi Makudi, president of the Football Association of Thailand (FAT).

But Mr Worawi, also a Fifa executive member, chose another candidate at a Fifa committee members vote on Dec 2.

FAT secretary-general Ong-arj Kosinkha confirmed yesterday the English FA had informed Mr Worawi of the cancellation in a letter dated Dec 22.

In the letter, English FA general-secretary Alex Horne said: “I have been informed by [English FA chairman] Sir David Richards that the England national team is not ready to come to Thailand according to the programme that was set earlier.”

(Emphasis mine.)

Categories
Misc.

See you next week

wendys.jpg

Happy 2011. I’ll be back and blogging the week of January 10.

(Image via.)