A picture is worth a 1,000 words?

If the great Japanophile debate left you confused, Wikipedia provides some visual material.

Not, ahem, that there’s anything wrong with wearing indigenous clothing, of course.

(HT to Curzon)

15 Comments

  1. Remort your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 2:01 am | Permalink

    Kendou is cool, but please lose the IMPERIAL Japanese flag. :(

    –Remort

  2. Jing your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 5:38 am | Permalink

    Off topic, but whats a “Cheonggyecheon”?

  3. Posted June 15, 2006 at 8:22 am | Permalink

    “Not, ahem, that there’s anything wrong with wearing indigenous clothing, of course.”

    Right, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar - when you’re smoking it yourself at any rate, eh?

  4. Posted June 15, 2006 at 8:49 am | Permalink

    This would be the Cheonggyecheon.

  5. Jing your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 8:58 am | Permalink

    seems like a collosal waste of water and concrete to me.

  6. Posted June 15, 2006 at 9:09 am | Permalink

    Seems like that to a lot of people, but Seoul mayor Lee Myung-bak might might ride it to the presidency. Personally, while the project could have gone a lot better, it’s a huge improvement over what was there before, and in the end, at least he got something done.

  7. davelee your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 10:33 am | Permalink

    that is an awesome picture.

  8. dogbertt your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 11:31 am | Permalink

    After viewing that dork, I must say that you really look quite dashing in your hanbok Robert.

  9. Haisan your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 12:18 pm | Permalink

    I wish the Korean government would stop calling the Cheonggyecheon a “stream” and instead start billing it for what it really is — the world’s longest water fountain.

  10. Poshintang your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 1:22 pm | Permalink

    The ‘restoration’ of cheonggyecheon is a VAST improvement over the nasty concrete jungle that was there before. And Korea has money to waste on stuff like this now, so why not? Better to waste it on something nice rather than yet another bridge or highway.

  11. dogbertt your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 1:40 pm | Permalink

    I love it. I only wish they had made it navigable so I could canoe my way to work.

  12. Haisan your flag
    Posted June 15, 2006 at 1:44 pm | Permalink

    Oh, the fountain is very nice. I quite like it. But it is a fountain, not a stream.

    Anyhow, I really hope the government “encourages” all those annoying hardware stores around Cheonggye 4,5-ga to move elsewhere. It would be a great location for a bunch of cafes, jazz bars, pojang macha and the like. Like the canal area of Fukuoka.

  13. Posted June 16, 2006 at 2:06 am | Permalink

    Cheonggyecheon is pretty much the only respite from all the concrete and care exhaust if you’re in the heart of Downtown Seoul. Otherwise, you have to get out to the nearby mountains…Namsan, Inwangsan, Naktasan, or drive or take the subway to go further afield. It is a huge improvement over the overhead expressway that was there before.

    Anyhow, Cheonggyecheon is actually a natural stream…except that I read somewhere the city has to pump extra water into it to keep it flowing….

  14. Posted June 16, 2006 at 2:06 am | Permalink

    That’s “car exhaust,” not “care exhaust”…. I guess “care exhaust” is what a nurse experiences at the end of a 16-hour shift.

  15. Sonagi your flag
    Posted June 16, 2006 at 11:57 pm | Permalink

    Hear, hear, Boshintang and Sewing. Every downtown needs a little oasis, and Cheonggyecheon is unique.

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