Saturday June 18, 2:40 p.m.
Ol' Sam made it to my place pretty much in one piece although he was lugging 5 pieces on a rush-hour subway. My childhood friend has become somewhat of a kvetcher in his middle age, somewhat like
a Nikkei Woody Allen. He often starts his opinions with a rueful grin and a slow shake of his head. As we were noshing on
tonkatsu at the neighbourhood
Tonki underneath my subway station, he was complaining about his health, raising a family, the ridiculous crowds of
Tokyo, etc. He's gone out by himself today to get some omiyage and then roam around
Shinjuku and Harajuku. I would've gone out with him but I've already got pre-made plans with MB and The Satyr for
"X-Men: First Class" later today at
Roppongi Hills.
The good thing about having people over is that it does force me to clean up the place, and I was surprised that I was able to get my apartment (relatively) tidy within 2 hours.
Before I started converting my pad into a hotel, I did have The Bass and Swank. The Bass gave a speech on the aftermath of the quake. Like a number of people I know such as the
juku boss,
March 11 hit my drummer student hard in the ledger. A lot of his customers stopped purchasing his wares since they were also in crisis mode. The last statement of his speech was heavy with meaning...we all just have to survive and wait this out and that we are not alone.
As for Swank, it turned out that the library in
Arisugawa Park in
Hiroo was closed for the day due to energy conservation. So, the two of us just made our way to a nearby
Starbucks a minute away from the station where we mostly talked about one of her acquaintances. Neither of us could really call her a friend since she seems to have her nose permanently hooked in the air like an elitist. The way Swank described her sounds like the elitist was just born into money and probably cannot fathom that her statements could be construed as being on the wrong side of snobbish. I then confided to her about my former student, The Lady, and the rich life that I'd been exposed to for several years when I had regularly visited her mansion on Mondays.
Saw a couple of back-to-back shows of
"Piers Morgan Tonight" which clearly showed opposing sides of celebrity life. Saw the whole interview with
Jada Pinkett Smith. It was an exchange that both
Morgan and Smith enjoyed, and it showed a lady who was obviously enjoying life with her career, her family and her even more famous husband despite coming from a very tough background. Considering that Jada was now in the stratosphere, she just seemed very down-to-earth. On the other hand, I saw the last few minutes of Morgan's interview with
Tatum O'Neal the night before, and I could quickly pick up that the interview was definitely not a fun one for either interviewer and interviewee. Ironically, although Tatum seemed to have been born with a silver spoon in her mouth, her life has ended up being one of drugs and abusive behaviour by father and ex-husband. Tatum looked and sounded like she was barely putting on a brave face over some very unhappy issues.