Wednesday 31 December 2008


So I thought the UK's UCAS was complicated. the US' Common Application is something else. After much back-and-forth indecision, I've applied to 3 of the 4 schools I want to go to, the last being UPenn which has a Supplement that only those with enough time can finish. 

I will be sending off 2008 and welcoming 2009 with my classmates, so I'll see you on the other side of midnight. 

Tuesday 30 December 2008


I managed to give 3 of the 4 gifts I had purchased today, along with 2 cards. 1 gift and 2 cards left. Along the way, I also met Chee Jun, Alex Lim, Yew Jin and Matthew.
The day began in town where I met Paul for lunch at Crystal Jade (the regular one out of the 4 in the mall), Ngee Ann City. We then walked over to Celio at Paragon, and while Paul initially thought it was just an ordinary window shopping visit, I had actually been there the evening before and had my mind set on purchasing a belt. So I finally did, settling on one which I think will make a good substitute for the one I've been wearing for a few years now. We then walked around Paragon and The Heeren before meeting Sam and heading to Cineleisure to watch Ip Man. If you like kung fu flicks, you should watch it. And if you've watched Donnie Yen in Flash Point and liked it, just like I did, you should watch this one too. We had tea at the TCC next to the Thai Embassy before parting, them to Forum Galleria, me to Darius' place. There, I won the one game of Mahjong I played on Joel's behalf while he was out taking a call, as well as a game of pool. We headed for dinner at Carl's Jr, Far East Plaza, then to Cineleisure, where we found that both the Guitar Hero World Tour and Rock Band games on the top floor were out of commission, so we settled for drinks at Gloria Jean's downstairs instead. 

Monday 29 December 2008


This week straddles 2008 and 2009, with the dividing point right in the centre on midnight this coming Wednesday/Thursday. More importantly, it's the week where I get to really live it up before a) results, and b) NS. 

I began by meeting Darius and Weige, my NJ IP Debate mates for lunch at Central, Clarke Quay. The three of us together appear to have zero sense of orientation, but we managed to make it to Azabu Sabo's dine-in restaurant. A little jaunt around this relatively new mall later, we made a pit stop at Azabu Sabo's take-away stand for dessert, then on to wander along the Singapore river, finally ending up at Liang Court. We spent an hour or so in Books Kinokuniya, then had tea at Street, a Hong Kong cafe. There, much hilarity ensued in the form of napkin-sized stories written in a mix of English, Chinese and drawings. We cabbed to Takashimaya, where I left for a bit to place an order for a new pair of specs meant for the army, which 3 conditions were that it be a) black, b) plastic, and c) positively ghastly. I rejoined them up at Kino after bumping into Si Qi. There, I met Melodie, with whom I chatted for a while, confirming my attendance at the class shindig this week. Darius and Weige had dinner plans, so we parted, Weige and I wishing each other the best of luck for NS and Oxford respectively. I paid a visit to Paragon for a little window shopping, adding a Muji purchase to the 4 PageOne purchases I made yesterday, which is about all I've bought in the country. Evidently, I'm not the hugest shopper, what with 2 purchases in Manila being the only other things I've bought which are of any lasting quality (that's a bit of a stretch; Krispy Kreme lasted all of 4 days). 

Sunday 28 December 2008

Quite frankly, there aren't enough days left for me to meet up with everyone I want to meet up with. That said, there are still 2 more weeks left, slightly less if you play the numbers game, but in my mind tomorrow is monday, week 1. So I shall be acting a little out of character by trying to get stuff planned instead of just showing up. Let the living begin.

Saturday 27 December 2008

Now for the real 1000th post.
                 
When I began applying for my University studies earlier this year, I did so with few expectations. I just knew that I wanted to study as soon as possible, and a good first step was to start applying. I originally would have applied to every college possible, if not for the fact that it started to get cost and time prohibitive. So I narrowed my focus to just the UK. Suffice to say, it was a stressful endeavor, which has now almost come to a close. Save for LSE, all the decisions have come in. I, quite unfortunately, did not make it into Oxford (see right picture), and adding that to UCL and KCL, leaves just Durham now (see left picture). A dower way to start this post, but something which is necessary for closure. Now, I'll just have to finish the PSC application and begin on the US colleges, especially after finishing both SATs. 

I spent Boxing Day celebrating Christmas. The 05ip04 party was a great chance to see everyone again, and 3 of the 4 of us who left were there. It was a pity I couldn't stay longer, and was soon at the ACS (I) Debate party, where I got to meet some people I've not seen in years. Eventually, there were 5 of us who stayed over, but only Sam, Paul and I remained for lunch. After watching Titan A.E., we left. 

So, for the part that is meant to make this thousandth post significant. As the year slowly made its passage through time, the world as we know it became a bleaker place then when it began. To add to the list of taboo words that had already included terrorism, now the economy, natural disasters, food safety and energy prices also garner similar responses. The prospects for 2009 faded slowly but surely. Yet the year is not completely lost in this deluge of negativity. New leadership, sporting milestones and diplomatic breakthroughs give reason to have hope once '09 dawns. And for that hope alone, I know I'll enjoy my 2009. 

This year, I finished the first portion of my schooling. From here on now, it will be an all new ball game that will last for a duration that is determined by what my eventual professional suffix is. 12 years I've worked towards putting myself in the optimum position to begin this. It has been time well spent. 

In my 18th year, I lived it for the moment. That will continue until I begin the next phase of my life in 2 weeks' time. Then, a new mindset is required. Perhaps it is best summed up with a quote from the first actual book I've read in quite a while: 

"Still on the red road, now three-quarters of the way to the top, Private First Class Paul Berlin did not have the lieutenant's advantages of perspective and overview. Marching automatically, he had the single advantage of hard labor. He felt strong. He felt the muscles working in his thighs and stomach. He did not think about the mountains or the coming battle. For a time he did not think about anything - just the effortless coordination of the march. It was easy. And when the time came, when he made the decision, he would simply stop. But for now his legs kept climbing... He felt a curious quiet. He felt he could stop at any moment, whenever the time came, whenever he told himself to quit... He would simply fall... All this was decided. But the decision did not reach his legs. The decision was made, but it did not flow down to his legs, which kept climbing the red road. Powerless and powerful, like a boulder in an avalanche, Private First Class Paul Berlin marched toward the mountains without stop or the ability to stop."
"Lieutenant Sidney Martin watched him come. He admired the oxen persistence with which the last soldier in the column of thirty-nine marched, thinking that the boy represented so much good - fortitude, discipline, loyalty, self-control, courage, toughness. The greatest gift of God, thought the lieutenant in admiration of Private First Class Paul Berlin's climb, is freedom of will. Sidney Martin, not a man of emotion, raised a hand to hail the boy. But Paul Berlin had no sense of the lieutenant's sentiment. His eyes were down and he climbed the road dumbly. His steps matched his thoughts. He did not notice the heat, or the beauty of the country, or the lieutenant's raised hand. If he had noticed, he would not have understood. He was dull of mind, blunt of spirit, numb of history, and struck with wonder that he could not stop climbing the red road toward the mountains."
From Going After Cacciato, by Tim O'Brien.

I'll think more about that phase of life later. For now, it is enough to have experienced 2008 and experience the next 2 weeks.

Friday 26 December 2008

It should honestly come as no surprise that on MTV's Top 100 Hits of 2008, Leona Lewis' Bleeding Love came up at the #1 spot. Coincidentally, I'm mentioned to some that I'm rather embarrassed to find that it is also the song with the most plays on my Last.fm profile. (The runner-up hits on MTV's countdown are #2: Chris Brown's With You, #3: Rihanna's Disturbia, and #4: Madonna's 4 Minutes. Those on my profile are #2: Dashboard Confessional's Stolen, #3: OneRepublic's Mercy, and #4: Paramore's Hallelujah.)

Year-end posts are for lists, such as Mel's book list. I'm no avid reader nor movie buff, connoisseur or sports critic, but I do have my hand on the pulse of popular music, so to continue the list of my favourite songs and albums which I posted last year, here are the same lists for 2008: 

My Favourite Albums: 
10. Estelle's Shine
British Soul for the contemporary listener. I forgive her the awful dress she wore at the EMAs this year during her duet with Kanye West for the unique sound she brings to my library.
9. James Morrison's Songs For You, Truths For Me
On par with his debut, which is rare. 
8. Mariah Carey's E=MC2
The second best selling album of the year. No where as good as Emancipation though.
7. Madonna's Hard Candy
The lesser selling rival to E=MC2, but with more songs I like. And her Sticky & Sweet Tour is the best selling in history. Who'da thought. 
6. Duffy's Rockferry
In my opinion, a substitute for Amy Winehouse, but with a less refined sound. 
5. Katy Perry's One Of The Boys
The tracks that do stand out really stand out. Catchy. 
4. The Academy Is...' Fast Times At Barrington High
Two monster hits, with more gems after. Fast becoming one of my favourite bands.
3. Britney Spears' Circus
On the bandwagon of songs with lyrics that are so out there that you can't help but like. And 'cos I'm a sucker for artistes I grew up listening to. 
2. John Mayer's Where The Light Is
Still the artiste with the most plays on my Last.fm profile. Only 2 new tracks, but the rest is brilliant.
1. Jason Mraz's We Sing, We Dance, We Steal Things
Sublime, both lyrically and musically. And 'cos he was who I listened to most during the last months leading up to the exams. 

My Favourite Tracks:
10. Fall Out Boy's I Don't Care (Folie A Deux)
9. The Killers' Human (Day & Age)
8. Coldplay's Viva La Vida (Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends)
7. Leona Lewis' Forgive Me (Spirit)
6. Kanye West's Love Lockdown (808s & Heartbreak)
5. The Fray's You Found Me (The Fray)
4. Beyonce's Halo (I Am... Sasha Fierce)
3. 30 Seconds to Mars' A Beautiful Lie (A Beautiful Lie)
2. Ne-Yo's Closer (Year of the Gentleman)
1. The Script's The Man Who Can't Be Moved (The Script)

Thursday 25 December 2008

Christmas for me began when the Eve arrived at midnight a few hours after we returned from Bintan, and will end once the last of the parties comes to a close, somewhere in the wee hours after Boxing Day. Till then, here's a post for the day itself. Happy Christmas 2008 everyone, hope you had a brilliant day =)

Tuesday 23 December 2008

It was probably because I was utterly embarassed or preoccupied with the IB exams that I never posted my SAT score here. Since I just got my Subject Test Results this evening, I might as well put all of them here for posterity.

SAT 1 Reasoning Test: 2110 (out of 2400)
SAT 2 Subject Tests: (out of 800 each)
Mathematics Level 2: 790
Chemistry: 770
Literature: 700

Math was unexpected, and Lit was disappointing. At least this marks the end of my US admissions tests, 'cos I'm definitely not retaking anything.

I'm back from my third trip in less than a month, this time to Bintan with the musketeers and Pet. It was the same location as the first trip, but it was pretty different. We stayed for just 2 nights, in hotel rooms instead of villas, and actually ate all our meals in the hotel's restaurants. Unknown to me, the resort is actually a 5-star hotel, though it's sheen is rusting slightly. Nevertheless, I got to seem more of the luxurious side of the compound this time round.

We met late Sunday morning, whence we were thrown about in a ferry during what must have been the roughest 1-hour ride I've experienced in all the times I've ridden a boat. Crazy choppy. We had three adjacent rooms, 2 of which were adjoining. I roomed with sam and adriel, with pet adjoining and jake and josh 2 doors down. After a lunch stop at the main hotel restaurant, we paid a visit to the lesiure centre, then the field near the beach for touch rugby, and finally the leisure centre pool. We gave dinner a miss 'cos the Singapore-Vietnam game was on, and headed over to Silk for drinks and food and the Arsenal-Liverpool match later.

Breakfast on Monday was actually really decent, a buffet with all the bells and whistles, following which we went to the leisure centre for Laser Quest after a game of Cluedo back in the room, me coming in second to adriel. A few games of pool and table tennis later, we played another round, this time me coming in first. Me, josh, adriel and pet went on an hour-long ATV ride along the coast, then joined sam and jake by the main pool till it was time for dinner, this time room service. Oddly enough, we were all asleep before the day was up.

Post-breakfast this morning, we packed up for checkout, played a third round of Laser Quest to settle the previous day's tie (yay me), a couple of rounds of pool, lunch by the pool, and it was a comfortingly calm ferry ride back.

Because of these back-to-back trips, I've been in this constant holiday mood, which gives me a rather strange perspective of things around me. I find myself more able to look upon the rough edges of the world in a slightly better light, without feeling my usual combination of indifference and contempt at all that is not right. That's not the only thing about these vacations that has stuck with me though. I'm glad to have spent extended periods of time with those who've been with me either through the last 6, 4 or 2 years. Now it's time to spend time with the others back home in Singapore.

All this going away has meant that I've not had the chance to embrace this the most blissful season of the year. Christmas 2008 will surely be one to remember beside all the rest which I've so faithfully recorded in the annals of this blog since '03. Maybe I'll go back to read them before I pen down my thoughts for the next 3 days, from the eve to boxing day, which is usually how long it lasts for me.

Saturday 20 December 2008

So I was mistaken when I said I had reached my 1000th post 2 weeks' back; after some housekeeping of the drafts in my Dashboard, I only have 996, including this one. There's still a chance to make the thousandth post really special.

As I finish the last of the Krispy Kreme donuts, the butterscotch which we all took from the bag Joash was passing around the hotel corridor on our last night, remove the last pesos and sentinos from my wallet and finish tagging the last of the pinoy photo albums, Philippines '08 will be so much more than just a trip in my memory.

Now I gear up for the final trip of the year, back to Bintan again, this time with the musketeers plus Pet. 3 more days out of the country should be enough to satiate my necessary quota of year-end fun. I can't actually remember the last time the 5 of us spent an extended period of time together, not even Phuket '06 since Josh wasn't there. Looking forward to it, and I'll be back for good on the night of the 23rd.

Friday 19 December 2008

Not 48 hours after returning, some of my classmates and I met up again at Joash's place for a Wii party, similar to the one we had before the trip. This time, it was Joash, Mong, Chun Wui, Mel, Cheryl, Elliot and I, plus Justin. We laughed over photos from the trip, discussed the breathability of Singapore air as compared to Manila, ordered in, played Raving Rabbids and Mario Kart, took DSLR pics and uploaded them on Facebook, and left around midnight. 

I probably won't be in the country for the class Christmas gathering, which is a pity. Hopefully there'll be something for new year's. 

Wednesday 17 December 2008

Over these 8 days in the Philippines, I have experienced more than I can put into words. I have seen indulgence and destitution, felt absolutely safe and completely vulnerable, met fear and exhilaration, probed and was rebuffed, was silent and yet part of the script, found joy and devastation, relived flashbacks and made resolutions, lived in fantasy and embraced reality. I lived through 8 days that were all at once an extension of my experience of this year, and yet were a year all to themselves.

Our party of 10 met at the Budget Terminal on the morning of the 9th, each having had different sorts of days prior, but were about to share in the same experience to come. This truly was our first trip abroad alone and together, everything initiated and planned whenever we found breathing space over the academic year. Arriving in Manila, we were joined by Agi, our resident classmate, guide and 11th member of our permanent traveling party.

The Fernandina 88 is a 12-storey hotel in Quezon City, and while sounding like a bad hotmail address, is actually a decent hotel. There were problems with pests, air-conditioning and water heating, but for the price we paid, those 4 nights spent there were well worth it. The main room was the penthouse on the top floor, where 6 of us slept with the 5 others on level 5, me rooming with Agi. For all intents and purposes, it was a bachelor pad in a foreign city.

One level above our penthouse was the rooftop pool. The miniscule size of the pool notwithstanding, the roof offered us a view of Manila that takes your breath away. Manila is the city that I had imagined it to be. It is immense, and yet is denser and more crowded than any I've been to. It is an amalgamation of sprawling mall complexes and consumer centres juxtaposed against gated communities and a dilapidated rural suburbia. It is a city of jeepnies that rule the roads, traffic stretching miles and billboards the size of whole buildings. It is the city of Shakey's Pizzeria, Mercury Drug Stores and Manny Paquiao. It is simply magic. 

We made a pit stop at the local hypermarket for supplies, most notably 30 litres of drinking water. We could have filled a pool larger than the one on our hotel's roof. The first night was spent at Eastwood City, a new complex with shops barely opened, and very closely resembles a bohemian enclave of stores and eateries. Dinner was at Dencio's, with more food that we could even imagine eating, then a short wander around amidst the sounds of live jazz music and ambient lighting. It was a brilliant first night out about the town. 

Agi's Dad introduced the Filipino people as a consumer society. Spot on. We were introduced to all facets of that consumerism on Day 2 at Greenhills, a complex of designer boutiques and small stalls selling alternate versions of the same products, the only difference being how genuine the branding was. I made my first of 2 purchases there, a coffee brown polo tee with a turntable motif which looked oddly familiar, but was not attempting to imitate any brand and was from a small independent label tucked away at the back of one of Greenhills' many buildings. It was a timely purchase too, since I needed something collared for dinner the following evening with Cielo and her relatives. At 450 pesos, it was a steal. Lunch was at Teriyaki Boy. We met Lex halfway through the day, and our presence in his home city was probably one of the more surreal experiences in his day. He was our necessary guide through the meanders of Metro Walk, the location of purchases of great entertainment value. Dinner was at the first of 2 Chicken Inasal joints we visited on this trip. 

Adjacent to our hotel is Ali Mall and Areana Centre, 2 shopping complexes with the quintessential stores like Goldilocks, and our destination of choice for the earlier part of day 3. Lunch was at Max's, and then it was off to Market Market, where we would spend an afternoon playing Laser Tag. We were positively pummeled by a bunch of 9 year olds who spoke accented English, though I managed to top my team's tables in both the games we played. A quick change later, we met Cielo for dinner at a swanky buffet joint with a roving band, after which we paid a visit to Serendra, perhaps the most up and coming strip in all of Manila. It is a huge complex of warehouses displaying huge international brands, though we only went into Fully Booked, a really chic bookstore with an immense graphic novel section. We stepped inside Embassy, the It Club of Manila, for a short while, but detoured over to Cuisine, the neighbouring bar, for that evening's drinks. 

The 11 of us plus Lex traveled a few years back in time to when we were still amused by amusement parks on day 4 when we made the 2-hour drive to Enchanted Kingdom. Quite unlike it's name suggests, it is a place that has seen better days, but still draws a huge number of locals and the odd Singaporean bunch. We began the day with the Space Shuttle, a 90-second long roller coaster ride that was unbelievably scary, including backward loops and 10-metre drops. I sat out the Pirate Ship, then rejoined them for an absurd simulator ride, bumper cars, and finally a few laps around the Go-Kart track, which is second only to the one I tried back in Phuket in '06. Dinner was at Agi's house, where all 13 of my classmates who were in the country were in the same place at the same time, along with our schoolmate Rachel. 

Barely 5 hours later, we were at the airport awaiting our domestic flight to Palawan, where some of us had Ya Kun Kaya Toast of all things. The arrival lounge at Puerto Princesa is really something, and it's the first time I've had my name written in ink on a sheet of paper as part of the immigration process. Old school ftw. The Legend Hotel right smack in the middle of the capital town is quite nice. Small, with few facilities, but excellent service willing to do anything at any hour. It was also the only modern building for a number of blocks. I roomed with Gerald. Palawan has better air and smoother traffic, but it is about 20 years behind Manila in terms of progress. That is part of its charm. Lunch was at Kalui, a nearby restaurant, then a few hours at the pool, and a 3-hour dinner at Salo, accompanied by Videoke. We began the evening with the goal of finishing up the bottle of Vodka which had been traveling with us since Day 1, so with a few improvised rules, we managed to play through two-thirds of a game of Circle of Death before we emptied to bottle, drank ourselves silly and went to sleep. 

Perhaps the copious amount of alcohol downed in such a short time compounded any pathogenic sources I may have come into contact to so far, and I felt horrible on the morning of Day 6. I made the wise decision to give the Honda Bay tour a miss, managing to regain my faculties to enjoy the rest of the trip uninhibited. The photos of that morning at the beach do remind me of those few hours missed, but I'm glad I didn't make any rash moves. The others came back in possession of an actual ball, so our time at the pool that afternoon was slightly better spent, followed by dinner at Salo again. 

Day 7 began with a trip to Baker's Hill, a scenic location with talking Mynahs, brilliant photography lighting and Chihuahua puppies. We moved on to a nearby Hot Spring, which I found incredibly soothing, then lunch at Kalui and an afternoon of lazing at the hotel and its pool. We spent the evening at Capitol Square, eating at a Chicken Inasal joint and walking along the unassuming sidewalks filled with hawkers peddling everything from jewelry to Balut. 

We flew back to Manila in time for lunch at Shakey's, followed by an afternoon at the Mall of Asia, an enormous shopping complex. I made my 2nd purchase of 700 pesos worth of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, much of which has been consumed already since arriving back in Singapore slightly over 12 hours ago. 

It's not so much the things we did on each day that stick with me. It's the time spent in between doing things unplanned that I remember best. The countless card games in Cielo's van, the strange quotes that we would spend days laughing about, the time spent standing around waiting and chatting. I continue to believe that it really isn't about where the holiday is; it's about who those days are spent with that makes it something special. 

So, to Agi, for having the patience to plough through the logistical complexities which sprang up along the way; to Cielo for the convenience of transport; to Lex for the hilarious company. And to Mel, Joash, Mong, Chun Wui, Gerald, Mai, Elliot, Patrick and Cheryl. I don't think we could have come up with a better group to spend these 8 days with. 

Monday 8 December 2008

I think the timing of our trip couldn't be better. Right in the middle of December, it ensures that we do not come back too early and suffer from post-trip boredom. Immediately after the SATs, it ensures carefree leisure. And good thing it's tomorrow, 'cos I don't think I can wait much longer. 

Typically, the blog post before a trip would be about expectations, comparisons and general anticipation. There's usually something before it that shapes my outlook for it. Not for this trip. It doesn't really matter what I think is going to happen. The important thing is that the next 8 days are gonna happen and I'm ready to experience all they have to offer, however great or small. 

Philippines '08, stay tuned for photos and reports next Wednesday. 

Saturday 6 December 2008

I had long forgotten what it means to see the sun rise. Waking up at 2pm daily does that to you. Hence, when I had to drag my sorry butt out of bed at 6ish this morning in order to make it to ACJC on time, it was an entirely novel experience. There were two things about choosing ACJC as my SAT 2 test venue that is worth commenting on. First, something must be said about the inefficiency of the proctors; a mistake during the distribution of booklets led to us starting an hour late (I sighed to myself as I steeled my mind for a long morning ahead), and then to make up time, we weren't given a break between the second and third hours. RELC was miles better. Second, I must have been in the same exam venue as everyone I know taking the SATs. Everywhere I turned I would see someone I didn't expect to; it was kinda cool taking an exam with so many people I know from different schools. One final thing about this set of Subject Tests is that I didn't think I was taking them seriously enough. But then Jake told me he didn't study at all, and Andrew has his doubts about a test which you can redo ad infini. Ronald, the original Darth Pookie himself, can always be trusted to be put it in perspective; "It's hard to take a 1-hour MCQ test seriously." 'nuff said. Though I'm not at liberty to discuss the exam itself, I will say that the poem that challenged me the most was also the poem that I found most enthralling. The imperfect is our paradise

I met Sean at the Ben & Jerry ChunkFest at Fort Canning, where we proceeded to get thoroughly drenched in the rain, get a free B&J umbrella, and spend 22 dollars on specially imported American flavours which were quite brilliant. A hot beverage at Starbucks was in order, though I had to keep my head low and not catch the eye of a number of people I know who passed by, owing to my rather unglam state after the anecdotal rain incident prior. 

An hour or so later, I found myself at Hort Park, a little enclave off Alexandra Road that was the venue of Sophie's 21st Birthday party. My gift to her was the first of 2 bottles of tipple she received, though we didn't break it open 'cos it would have been slightly age inappropriate. Adriel, Jasmine, Rupen and I made up the majority of the people above the legal drinking age, which made for an odd demographic. Adriel would like to think that he injected some spontaneity with his suggestion of a few games. 

As people return and leave the country, it has dawned upon me that I am running out of time to go out with everyone that I should. 

Friday 5 December 2008

As far as class gatherings go, 6 is on the small side in terms of size. Yet it certainly doesn't preclude any of its entertainment value. Tonight was a prime example that all you really need is a Wii to make things better. Joash, Chun Wui, Mong, Jim, Patrick and I have probably had our fill of Raving Rabbids for a while. What was unfortunate was that the people whom this gathering was meant for weren't there. 

I also paid my first visit to Holland Village in a very long while, another sure sign that I'm no longer in school. For all intents and purposes, it was my second school; it was the place I frequented on an unhealthily regular basis, on some weeks 6 out of 7 days. Dinner at Crystal Jade Kitchen was a nice throwback to a time that, frankly, hasn't been that long ago but feels like it is. 

The date on which I enter NS precludes any thoughts of mastering the Highway Code, as any preliminary efforts now would need to be revisited once I'm out and have the luxury of an extended period of time to get a license. That might take a little longer that expected, if I should be so fortunate as to get to study next October. 

Hence the question that is begged - would I have been better off in the April intake rather than the January batch? Though an academic question, I know some would have strong preferences for one or the other. I'm entirely indifferent, and since I know there's no use thinking about what I could gain from April, January does appear to be optimum; the larger proportion of us are on the 6th to 9th, and if plans to study fall through, it means a quick end to 22 months.

There will be no shortage of cameras during Philippines. In all probability, we might end up having a shortage of memory space. The other thing high on our collective agenda besides photo opportunities is the availability of shows. I know I said I would start following again once I found the time; this would be the perfect chance to get all the episodes I want without the hassle of computer files.

Thursday 4 December 2008

Presenting the nominees for the 2009 Grammy Awards, with my choices in bold:

Album of the Year
Coldplay, Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends
Lil Wayne, Tha Carter III
Ne-Yo, Year of the Gentleman
Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, Raising Sand
Radiohead, In Rainbows

Best New Artist
Adele
Duffy
Jonas Brothers
Lady Antebellum
Jazmine Sullivan

Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group
Big Boi (featuring Raekwon and Andrew 3000), "Royal Flush"
Jay-Z and T.I. (featuring Lil Wayne and Kanye West), "Swagger Like Us"
Lil Wayne (featuring Jay-Z), "Mr. Carter"
Ludacris (featuring T.I.), "Wish You Would"
Young Jeezy (featuring Kanye West), "Put On"

Record of the Year
Adele, "Chasing Pavements"
Coldplay, "Viva la Vida"
Leona Lewis, "Bleeding Love"
M.I.A., "Paper Planes"
Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, "Please Read the Letter"

Song of the Year
Estelle (featuring Kanye West), "American Boy"
Adele, "Chasing Pavements"
Jason Mraz, "I'm Yours"
Sara Bareilles, "Love Song"
Coldplay, "Viva la Vida"

Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals
Coldplay, "Viva la Vida"
The Eagles, "Waiting in the Weeds"
Gnarls Barkley, "Going On"
Maroon 5, "Won't Go Home Without You"
OneRepublic, "Apologize"

Best Rock Album
Coldplay, Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
Kid Rock, Rock N Roll Jesus
Kings of Leon, Only by the Night
Metallica, Death Magnetic
The Raconteurs, Consolers of the Lonely

Best Rap Album
Jay-Z, American Gangster
Lil Wayne, Tha Carter III
Lupe Fiasco, The Cool
Nas, Nas T.I. Paper Trail

Best Female Pop Vocal Performance
Adele, "Chasing Pavements"
Sara Bareilles, "Love Song"
Duffy, "Mercy"
Leona Lewis, "Bleeding Love"
Katy Perry, "I Kissed a Girl"
Pink, "So What"

Best Male Pop Vocal Performance
Kid Rock, "All Summer Long"
John Mayer, "Say"
Paul McCartney, "That Was Me"
Jason Mraz, "I'm Yours"
Ne-Yo, "Closer"
James Taylor, "Wichita Lineman"

Best Dance Recording
Daft Punk, "Harder Better Faster Stronger"
Hot Chip, "Ready for The Floor"
Lady Gaga and Colby O'Donis, "Just Dance"
Madonna, "Give It 2 Me"
Rihanna, "Disturbia"
Sam Sparro,"Black & Gold"

Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group With Vocals
AC/DC, "Rock N Roll Train"
Coldplay, "Violet Hill"
The Eagles, "Long Road Out of Eden"
Kings of Leon, "Sex on Fire"
Radiohead, "House of Cards"

Best Alternative Music Album
Beck, Modern Guilt
Death Cab for Cutie, Narrow Stairs
Gnarls Barkley, The Odd Couple
My Morning Jacket, Evil Urges
Radiohead, In Rainbows

Best Female R&B Vocal Performance
Beyoncé, "Me, Myself and I" 
Keyshia Cole, "Heaven Sent"
Jennifer Hudson, "Spotlight"
Alicia Keys, "Superwoman"
Jazmine Sullivan, "Need U Bad"

Best Male R&B Vocal Performance
Eric Benét, "You're the Only One"
Chris Brown, "Take You Down"
Ne-Yo, "Miss Independent"
Trey Songz, "Can't Help But Wait"
Usher, "Here I Stand"

Best Rap Solo Performance
Jay-Z, "Roc Boys (And the Winner Is ... )"
Lil Wayne, "A Milli"
Lupe Fiasco, "Paris, Tokyo"
Nas, "N.i.*.*.e.r. (The Slave and the Master)"
Snoop Dogg, "Sexual Eruption"

Best Rap/Sung Collaboration
Estelle (featuring Kanye West), "American Boy"
Flo Rida (featuring T-Pain), "Low"
John Legend & Andre 3000, "Green Light"
Lil Wayne featuring T-Pain, "Got Money"
Lupe Fiasco (featuring Matthew Santos), "Superstar"

Best Rap Song
Lil Wayne, "Lollipop"
Flo Rida (featuring T-Pain), "Low"
Snoop Dogg, "Sexual Eruption"
Lupe Fiasco (featuring Matthew Santos), "Superstar"
Jay-Z & T.I. (featuring Kanye West & Lil Wayne), "Swagger Like Us"

Tuesday 2 December 2008



One of the restaurants I used to frequent for a number of years, Essential Brew, has rewarded my constant patronage by sticking a picture of me with javier and sean on it's homepage.

And in other news: perhaps I should have saved this, my 1000th post, for a more seminal occasion, but I thought that since every post is in itself unique, there's no reason not to blog.

On further thought, today is pretty significant, for a few reasons I can think of off the top of my head. It's been exactly a week since Bintan, and I think I've more or less recovered from that high, along with the high of the rest of those days after. I think I've also managed to wrap my mind around my new unemployed status (I used to be able to fill in 'Student' in that blank), and as a member of the frictionally unemployed, it has it's perks, most important of which is the lack of any thoughts of study, work or things of that ilk. Today makes it officially a week before Philippines, and I think it was around this period before Phuket last year that I really started looking forward to it, as am I now. I think we'll all find that being around the same folks again will be a good thing, since it's been weird not having seen everyone together, aside from prom, and even then we had to divide our time between so many different groups.

Each night that passes this week marks the end of one prom or another, and I've had the chance to take a look at the photo albums that my NJ IP mates posted. While out yesterday, I bumped into Lex who asked if I was going for their post-prom party, but I wasn't sure then. Ultimately I gave it a miss, though it would have been nice to see everyone again. I'm not sure if my classmates went though, and I asked Cherry and she too wasn't going, and Darius isn't in the Singapore yet, so it would have been a little odd. I also passed by Bugis Street on my little jaunt out yesterday, and two thoughts crossed my mind. The first was that it looked quite a lot like the street stalls which I visited on all my three trips to Phuket, with goods of dubious origin abounding. The second was that I was reminded of my work experience at Raffles Hospital accounting back in '06, when I used to wonder around that area for lunch during the week I was there. That and the MOE thingum late last year are my only 2 experiences of work, which is quite honestly redundant when I think about what I'm applying to read in the future.

So that's my 1000th post, and here's to a thousand more where that came from.

Monday 1 December 2008


If ever there were an appropriate way to begin the month of December 2008, it would be with a post about an Ice Cream Festival. I'll be looking forward to this while doing my SAT 2s in the morning. 

And on a completely random note, it seems that I have written a book on entrepreneurship that I wasn't even aware of. Kidding, but it's pretty cool to have my name pop up on Amazon.com