Archive for March, 2008

Beerlicious

March 24th, 2008

There a beer festival happening in August, in Toronto. I think it’s an annual event, and I think it was held near my workplace last summer — or maybe it was another beer festival? Anyway, I’m trying to buy tickets online but the form keeps timing out on me. :(

I guess it might be too early to buy tickets, but I want to make sure that Ams and I get to go for sure. Anyone else going?

Going to Asia in May!

March 15th, 2008

I’ll be heading down to Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea for 2.5 weeks in May, with my buddy from university. We’ve been wanting to go on this trip since we graduated last May, so it’s finally going to happen!

I already have the tickets and everything, and it looks like we can save quite a bit of money by staying with people we know in HK and Tokyo. Hopefully I will be able to blog and upload pictures at some point during my trip. If not I can always do it when I get back.

So exciting!

What is Satire?

March 5th, 2008

In my earlier post, I brought up an anti-Asian “satire” piece that ran in University of Colorado’s school newspaper. I mentioned that the column did not read like a satire to me, but I didn’t fully extend on that. Truth be told, I’m no literary expert, so it’s hard to explain it in technical terms. However, I found a follow-up comment on another blog that goes into better detail on why Karson’s article is not satire.

Taken from Alas, a blog.

satire is a punch in the eye of Power. satire’s anger, its needle, is directed upward - never downward. if it is, then it ceases to be satire and it’s just another way for those in power to bully the powerless or to scream to the public that you’re just another tool of the status quo.

this is satire:

it is a precise literary term (which means you have to have some measure of intellectual weight to pull it off, which Karson doesn’t)
in satire, your target is held up to merciless ridicule that is often very angry, ideally in the hope of shaming your target into reform (what is Karson advocating for reform? asians themselves or the treatment of asians on campus?)

it has a strong vein of irony or sarcasm (parody, burlesque, exaggeration and double entendre are all devices frequently used in satirical speech and writing - again, pointing to intellectual rigor in the person who calls herself a satirist, and while Karson’s piece is certainly full of sarcasm the racial justice angle is completely submerged, thus undercutting any satirical purpose.)

who is the target of Karson’s ire or sarcasm?
certainly not the white power structure that marginalizes a community of color on campus, making them a racial Other.
certainly not asian stereotype - in fact, his piece replicates them and justifies them.

asian students are the target of his clumsy sarcasm and ’satire’ and to what end? there is none, except to vent some feelings of inadequacy. Karson, as part of the white majority, is bullying a racial minority on campus and joking about reeducation camps so that they can be more ‘white.’ how is this column supposed to criticize the marginalization of asians on campus, or the treatment of asians on campus, or anything about racial justice??

it doesn’t do any of those things so it just becomes, perhaps inadvertently, a racist fantasy of forced assimilation.

Study Finds 38% of Gamers are Females

March 3rd, 2008

A study recently done by the Entertainment Software Association (ESA) claims that 38% of American gamers are female. I could no find any links to the actual study, and a Google search returned nothing. The closest I got was a Game Player Data page on the ESA website.

I don’t find anything wrong with the study itself, but the response from people who see the results are a bit moronic sometimes. Just look at the headline for the Kotaku link I have above: Stuff We Already Know About Female Gamers: Now In A Study! Why do people keep saying that women gamers are more casual compared to their male counterparts? Guess what, there are a lot of casual male gamers too! It’s like saying hardcore female gamers are an anomaly, while casual male gamers aren’t that strange at all.

There is a lot more behind the statistics than just numbers. The results of this study definitely should not be interpreted as female gamers mostly play casual games because they are female.