Local kid makes good — in Japan

There’s a humorous puff-piece story in The New York Times online about Anthony Bianchi, a former New Yorker from Brooklyn who is now a naturalized Japanese citizen, and who is running for a seat on the Inuyama (Aichi prefecture) City Council. Bianchi, a 44-year old English teacher and diehard New York Yankee fan, appears to be in good position to get elected, and is not hurt by the current interest in the Yankees now that Japanese baseball superstar Hideki Matsui is playing for them. But asked about his core support:

His political base, he said, is the 1,800 students he has taught here since 1988. He joked, “If you run into anyone around town speaking English with a Brooklyn accent, you know who taught them.”

“If I become councilman, I’m going to bust their chops,” says Bianchi, and with respect to his platform, adds,

“I am not going to do the typical foreign clown thing,” he said. “We want to get Council meetings on the Internet, broadcast on cable TV. Citizens don’t find out until things are decided.”

Buried in the article was this amusing nugget, which I think epitomizes Japanese tv:

“If I was a regular 44-year-old schoolteacher running for election, all this wouldn’t be happening,” he said, jerking his thumb toward a Japanese television crew and two reporters doing stories today about an American reporter doing a story about the American running for City Council.

…two reporters doing stories today about an American reporter doing a story about the American…

A round of acknowledgements

I just wanted to publicly thank some fellow bloggers who have helped me this past week:

For helping me get my moblog up and running, I’d like to thank Kevin Cameron (Bastish.net) for his generous and selfless efforts to create Moblogging for Other People, and continued work to make it better for its users, and proselytizing on behalf of moblogging and where it might lead. And all this from someone who doesn’t even own a mobile phone! Thanks also to Jeffrey Wood (snapturtle) who patiently answered my questions about his Moblog and PHP.

Lil (esthet.org) and Jean Snow (jeansnow.net) were extremely helpful in helping me debug a problem I had this week with how my site was displaying on IE for the Mac. Considering I don’t own a Mac nor really know anyone nearby who does, I was reliant on their taking the trouble to QA my site as I tweaked this and that control, and to send me screenshots of the progress. Without their help and suggestions as to how to fix the problem, I wouldn’t have been able to fix it.

Lil also alerted me to a problem with respect to how my fonts were appearing on IE for the Mac, most likely as a result of changing the encoding of this page so it could display Japanese characters. (I will say that one thing I’ve learned this week: if I ever do get a Mac, I’m going to use Safari as my browser!) For help with this problem (I’m not sure in the end that I ever fixed it, but I’ve changed the encoding back and I’m going to leave it as it is for now), thanks go to M (Nippon Daze and Ken Loo (Ken Loo’s World).

Thanks everyone!

Kaika has been SmartMobbed

Screen capture of Smart Mobs web page featuring moblog and Kaika

Stuart Mudie of Blethers.com was nice enough to write me and let me know that my moblog had made an appearance over at Smart Mobs, the site about “mobile communication, pervasive computing, wireless networks, [and] collective action” that accompanies the book Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution, by Howard Rheingold.

As you can see from the above screen grab, Kaika also made it up on the site. I called Naoko over to the computer to show her, and after explaining a bit about the site and who Howard was, she remarked, “boy, Kaika-kun is already becoming famous.” (Hmmn, I can see a headline: “5 WEEK OLD TYKE IN TOKYO ‘MOBBED’ BY FANS AFTER GETTING SMARTMOBBED”. Do they make shades for 5-week olds?)

The mention was occassioned by something Stuart had written a month and a half ago that I stumbled upon while compiling a list of “what is moblogging” article links for the moblog:

It won’t be long before new fathers, instead of handing out cigars, send pictures of their new-born children live to their moblogs from the birthing room. This is also news, of a kind – news that is of interest to a restricted group of people, admittedly, but worthy of record nonetheless.

I wish I had read this when he had published it, it would have hastened the purchase of the new phone, and indeed it would have been great to have moblogged pictures from the hospital.