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Thursday, February 14, 2013
JAPAN's Tamagotchi returns: '90s toy becomes Android app
Tamagotchi -- coming soon to an Android near you. The beloved virtual pet of the '90s is coming back as an app.
PRINCESS CRUISES Celebrates Valentine's Day with The Love Boat Sale
SANTA CLARITA, Calif. (February 14, 2013) – Princess Cruises is celebrating Valentine’s Day with a special Love Boat Sale offering cruise deals on Europe sailings. Passengers who book during the February 14-18 event can save up to $1,700 per person, and as a bonus receive as much as $100 in onboard spending money per stateroom. Plus those who book with the Princess eZAir program can save up to $1,000 for two people on their air travel.Cruise passengers can fall in love with some of the most popu...
In SOUTH KOREA, Valentine's Day is all about the men
Unlike most harried men in many other countries around this time each year, Korean men don't have to worry about shopping for jewelry or flowers or writing nice cards for February 14.
RUSSIA: 11 cynical proverbs about love from around the world
1. Polish
First love is like a snake; if it doesn't destroy you, it will paralyze you.
2. GermanYou can suffer without love, but you can't love without suffering.
3. Avar, Russian CaucasusYield to the desires of your body, then endure the disasters that follow.
4. Hausa, Nigeria/NigerWhen the heart gives orders, the body becomes its slave.
5. RussianLove has wings on its shoulders; matrimony has crutches under its arms.
6. Punjabi, IndiaThere are a thousand miseries in one love.
7. ItalianHe that marries for love, dies miserably of anger.
8. RussianLove is like a nettle that stings badly...
More
Valentine’s Day in ASIA: Love and Business
Ahhh….Valentine’s Day. Chocolates, red roses, candlelit dinners, whispered sweet nothings. For those who can’t get enough of this kind of thing, Asia offers myriad variations on the tired clichés of romance.
Adventure weddings in Thailand (saying vows underwater or while dangling off a cliff), mass weddings where thousands of couples tie the knot each year in the Philippines, China’s Mistress Day on February 13 (the 14th is reserved for wives) – in terms of novelty, these Asian variations of the holiday don’t disappoint. In Pakistan, some Muslim students have even taken to the streets to flat-out reject what they perceive as an “un-Islamic” holiday, celebrating Hijab Day instead.
Perhaps the most innovative spins on the day of love are found in Japan and Korea, where Valentine’s Day is offered not once yearly, but twice. On February 14, the date traditionally designated for Valentine’s Day, conventional wisdom is flipped as Japanese and Korean men relax and wait for the ladies to lavish them with chocolates.
However, men don’t get off the hook so easily. There’s White Day, an ingenious marketing ploy to get extra mileage out of a holiday when men traditionally do the wooing. On March 14, men must return the affection with chocolates (or lingerie).
These return-chocolates are expected to cost two to three times more than the gifts the men got in the month prior, making confectionary companies in Japan’s U.S. $11 billion chocolate business very happy indeed.
Korea goes a step further, with April 14 becoming Black Day. As the name suggests, this comparatively grim occasion is dedicated to the single and lonely, who commiserate over bowls of jajangmyeon (Chinese-style noodles with appropriately black bean sauce). The sauce often stains the teeth black, further driving the point home for lonesome diners.
Taking love to the max, South Korean lovers have yet another excuse to shower their darlings with gifts on November 11, known as Pepero Day. These are all part of the country’s whopping list of 13 love-infused days, from Kiss Day (June 14) and Hug Day (December 14) to Wine Day (October 14).
These Valentine’s spinoffs, laced with obligation and unique to Japan and Korea, present an etiquette minefield and raise an interesting question: Who benefits more from these customs, men or women?
While Japanese psychoanalyst Takeo Doi, who penned The Anatomy of Dependence, and Canadian anthropologist Millie Creighton have offered interesting thoughts on the deeper implications of Japan’s complex gift-giving protocols, the answer is not clear-cut.
On one hand, men get to kick back on Valentine’s Day and await “honmei-choco” (“true feeling chocolate”) from women who also give “tomo-choco” (“friends chocolate”) to their girlfriends. That means women buy for more than just a sweetheart. On the other hand, when White Day rolls around, men spend more—or at least that’s how it is supposed to go.
On the surface, then, it would seem roughly a tie. But dig a bit deeper and it’s the women who seem to get the raw deal, at least in Japan. That’s because of “giri-choco” (“obligatory chocolate”). Alongside chocolate for their husbands and boyfriends, as well as girlfriends, female office workers obligingly give a gift to male coworkers: giri-choco. The salaryman recipients, however, are not required to return the gesture.
These rules, however, are not set in stone.
“Usually when I gave giri-choco to men in the past they gave me candy in return on White Day,” said a Tokyo office worker surnamed Yoshinaga, countering the idea that White Day is exclusively reserved for girlfriends and wives.
Another female office worker in Tokyo surnamed Hayashi said, “When I was a student I gave chocolate to boys in my class, but now I don’t follow that custom. Today fewer women want to spend money on chocolate for men they don’t have feelings for. They would rather buy chocolates for their friends.”
According to a survey of 421 female respondents done by the Printemps Ginza department store in Tokyo, as reported by Kyodo News, women are budgeting 3,947 yen on average for honmei-choco this year, up from 3,081 yen in 2012, and will buy an average of 10.4 boxes of giri-choco, up from last year’s 7.6 boxes.
Not only is this a big hit to the pocketbooks of Japanese women, but for those under Cupid’s spell it’s hard to get any less romantic.
Adventure weddings in Thailand (saying vows underwater or while dangling off a cliff), mass weddings where thousands of couples tie the knot each year in the Philippines, China’s Mistress Day on February 13 (the 14th is reserved for wives) – in terms of novelty, these Asian variations of the holiday don’t disappoint. In Pakistan, some Muslim students have even taken to the streets to flat-out reject what they perceive as an “un-Islamic” holiday, celebrating Hijab Day instead.
Perhaps the most innovative spins on the day of love are found in Japan and Korea, where Valentine’s Day is offered not once yearly, but twice. On February 14, the date traditionally designated for Valentine’s Day, conventional wisdom is flipped as Japanese and Korean men relax and wait for the ladies to lavish them with chocolates.
However, men don’t get off the hook so easily. There’s White Day, an ingenious marketing ploy to get extra mileage out of a holiday when men traditionally do the wooing. On March 14, men must return the affection with chocolates (or lingerie).
These return-chocolates are expected to cost two to three times more than the gifts the men got in the month prior, making confectionary companies in Japan’s U.S. $11 billion chocolate business very happy indeed.
Korea goes a step further, with April 14 becoming Black Day. As the name suggests, this comparatively grim occasion is dedicated to the single and lonely, who commiserate over bowls of jajangmyeon (Chinese-style noodles with appropriately black bean sauce). The sauce often stains the teeth black, further driving the point home for lonesome diners.
Taking love to the max, South Korean lovers have yet another excuse to shower their darlings with gifts on November 11, known as Pepero Day. These are all part of the country’s whopping list of 13 love-infused days, from Kiss Day (June 14) and Hug Day (December 14) to Wine Day (October 14).
These Valentine’s spinoffs, laced with obligation and unique to Japan and Korea, present an etiquette minefield and raise an interesting question: Who benefits more from these customs, men or women?
While Japanese psychoanalyst Takeo Doi, who penned The Anatomy of Dependence, and Canadian anthropologist Millie Creighton have offered interesting thoughts on the deeper implications of Japan’s complex gift-giving protocols, the answer is not clear-cut.
On one hand, men get to kick back on Valentine’s Day and await “honmei-choco” (“true feeling chocolate”) from women who also give “tomo-choco” (“friends chocolate”) to their girlfriends. That means women buy for more than just a sweetheart. On the other hand, when White Day rolls around, men spend more—or at least that’s how it is supposed to go.
On the surface, then, it would seem roughly a tie. But dig a bit deeper and it’s the women who seem to get the raw deal, at least in Japan. That’s because of “giri-choco” (“obligatory chocolate”). Alongside chocolate for their husbands and boyfriends, as well as girlfriends, female office workers obligingly give a gift to male coworkers: giri-choco. The salaryman recipients, however, are not required to return the gesture.
These rules, however, are not set in stone.
“Usually when I gave giri-choco to men in the past they gave me candy in return on White Day,” said a Tokyo office worker surnamed Yoshinaga, countering the idea that White Day is exclusively reserved for girlfriends and wives.
Another female office worker in Tokyo surnamed Hayashi said, “When I was a student I gave chocolate to boys in my class, but now I don’t follow that custom. Today fewer women want to spend money on chocolate for men they don’t have feelings for. They would rather buy chocolates for their friends.”
According to a survey of 421 female respondents done by the Printemps Ginza department store in Tokyo, as reported by Kyodo News, women are budgeting 3,947 yen on average for honmei-choco this year, up from 3,081 yen in 2012, and will buy an average of 10.4 boxes of giri-choco, up from last year’s 7.6 boxes.
Not only is this a big hit to the pocketbooks of Japanese women, but for those under Cupid’s spell it’s hard to get any less romantic.
CHINA: Kids cash in as red envelope inflation hits China
The Spring Festival custom of giving children red envelopes, or hongbao, containing small amounts of money is taking a toll on grown-up; pocketbooks, the Shanghai Daily reports. An online survey found that 40 percent of netizens allocated nearly three months salary for hongbao, with 70 percent expecting to spend more every year. [ more › ]
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