Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:Holy shit! That's a girl? I thought it was circa 1970s Elton John....you know, before he had hair.
I am masturbating to your post.
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Samurai_Jerk wrote:What's so cool about her? Her flat ass, stupid glasses, ridiculous style or shitty dancing?
Coligny wrote:Few music video make me want to punch the whole cast in the face...
this is one of them...
Worse than retards with a camera... retards with an audience...
cujojpn wrote:I guess I am one of those retards which need that punching to the face. I thought the video was pretty sweet.
cujojpn wrote:I guess I am one of those retards which need that punching to the face. I thought the video was pretty sweet.
hundefar wrote:[YT]hX3GuoNW0iQ[/YT]
I'd never heard of this guy, but according to his Wiki:Rampage Jackson teaching Japanese people English...
Maybe it's his way of getting back at them for depicting him as being a hobo back in the day.Japan's Pride organization in 2001 marketed Jackson as being a homeless person.
Taro Toporific wrote:Ananada Jacobs vs Tomomi Itano of AKB48
I didn't make it past about 30 sec., but I did check out the blonde twit's web site. Yet another gai-tare no one has ever heard of.Yokohammer wrote:Well, I tried, but the gag reflex kicked in at about 3:00.
I wonder how many days she practiced for that "interview."
Yokohammer wrote:Well, I tried, but the gag reflex kicked in at about 3:00.
I wonder how many days she practiced for that "interview."
Yokohammer wrote:It ain't Japanese culture, it's a freakin' mutation!
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:AKB-48 is far more indicative of contemporary Japan than say, kabuki or noh, or even martial arts or flower arranging.
Traditional culture in this cuntry is meaningless to everyone other than a snobbish tiny minority of the population. Unless, of course, money is involved in some way....
Yokohammer wrote:My argument with that is that it's mostly borrowed or adopted culture. Not culture that's truly native. But that adopted culture is merely a thin veneer that disguises the more traditional underlying culture.
It's a facade. When the inner Japanese pops through that veneer, as it almost invariably does when stress is applied, outsiders who don't understand what's going on inside are truly taken aback. In my op. that's where the "inscrutability" legend comes in ... like "where the f*ck did that come from?"
Japanese culture is on the inside, not the surface.
Sorry to be pedantic, but that's how I see it.
(But of course you're perfectly free to disagree).
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests