Myeongdong Department Store is not a nice place to be on a Saturday afternoon.
It wasn't so much the crowding, as constantly getting jostled.
And not to go for the cheap shot or anything, but... yeah. As it pertains to being jostled when a split second's worth of patience and a hair's breadth of personal consideration could have prevented it... I will go for the cheap shot. See, stereotypes having been taken into account, last time I was in Beijing, the "have manners in public" campaign was still working, and every time we took public transportation, even though the Olympics were half a year past, people STILL waited outside the subway car for those inside to get out, before trying to pile in. Will Seoul need to have ANOTHER freaking Olympics for people to decide to start respecting the personal space of those around them? I was bumped, unnecessarily, a little less than once a minute, the whole time I was in the Lotte underground shopping center, and brothers and sisters, I'm never going back there again, like, ever.
meh. I'm not always this irritable. Maybe it's the yellow dust, or the fact Lotte Department store's food section is underground, and the added claustrophobia of no sunlight + low ceiling PLUS crowding is what set me off, but...
Lotte Department Store Myeongdong is an unpleasant place. Don't go there on the weekend.
Next: Brian discussed the way white males were absent in many ads for English classes, so I wanted to add this photo (for Pagoda) to the collection. (Taken in Myeongdong).
The female could be Korean... but she also could be non-Korean, between her coloration and the ambiguity of eye-shape a profile shot affords. Anyway, in conclusion, Korea is a land of contrasts. Thank you for reading my paper.
Something I saw in China: apparently Korea's not the only country stealing movie poster ideas.
Does this poster for a Chinese movie look familiar to you?
It should.
In other wackiness: in case you really needed a teddybear phone ornament that expressed your love for brand names, the day is yours: not only can you have a teddy dressed up in Louis Vuitton...
You can even choose your colour!
I saw "Old Partner" today with Girlfriendoseyo. It was great. I also saw this movie poster:
I hate when people use that face.
And it's usually only used when somebody wants something. Especially in tv dramas.
Speaking of TV dramas where people make mopey faces, in case you felt like you didn't have enough "Flowers Before Boys" memorabilia yet, you can get these socks.
I was flabbergasted a little while ago, not only to see the "Our boys are prettier than flowers" poster selling Bean Pole clothes in Coex subway station, but to see four Japanese tourists huddling together and ogling it reverentially. I guess they'd reached the goal of their pilgrimage: the land where flower boys sell overpriced clothing!
Went to a really nice spanish restaurant in Hongdae, and the caption selling Sangria to us sounded like it might have been written by the guy who usually works for Tourism Korea.
These cute shoes were at the flea market. They say "Left food" and "right food" - correction: that should be "left foot" and "right foot" -- the dangers of writing in a rush.
4 comments:
I was in Myeongdong on Saturday..boy was it elbow to elbow!
me too....ugh....some Korean girl hit me and then spun around and said "say sorry!" I was quite shocked
Left "food" and right "food"? You mean, like, take foot and place firmly in mouth? *^^*
I wonder if Pagoda told the guy he was going to be plastered all over the city? Years ago, a former co-worker had her photo taken for the cover of Pagoda's monthly magazine, and the next thing she knew her face was hanging from the Gangnam branches offices 5-stories high. No warning they were going to do it and no compensation for using her likeness in the ad.
@Matt
Why do you say "Korean girl?" You're in Korea, right?
If you were in the US and some girl hit you would you say, "some American girl hit me?"
Just sayin'
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