Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Blogs | Writers | Paid | My Orble | Login

Schoolgirl's special K

March 28th 2009 02:56
eri yoshida
Eri Yoshida, baseball player

Eri Yoshida, a 17-year-old Japanese schoolgirl, stands five feet zero inches tall and weighs 114 pounds (for those who prefer metric measurements, that's: short and light).

In December 2008, it was announced that she had signed a contract with the Osaka Gold Villicanes professional baseball team. The Villicanes are part of the new Kansai Independent League, a long way from the elite levels of Japanese baseball, but professional nevertheless and therefore with a need to do the promotion and marketing thing to get some fans through the gates.


The signing of a 17-yeard old girl was therefore immediately seen as a publicity stunt. They might claim that Eri Yoshida commands a wicked sidearm knuckleball and has dreams of emulating the feats of knuckleball legend Tim Wakefield, but she would never, it was felt, actually take the mound in a real game.

Yesterday, in the ninth inning of the season opener, the manager of the Osaka Gold Villicanes pointed at his young knuckleball pitcher and told her to go out and pitch. The Villicanes were losing 5-0, but that is by no means an insurmountable deficit with an inning to go. Eri's walk to the mound was no token gesture.

Just over 11,500 fans watched with interest.

She started nervously, throwing four consecutive pitches wide of the plate and walking the lead-off batter. That batter then stole second to add to the pressure on the debut pitcher.


Then Eri settled and started to get the knuckleball radar working. Three times she pitched and three times the batter swung, and missed.

That's called a strike-out, but baseball fans just call it a K.

Good pitchers collect Ks. May Eri Yoshida, the first woman ever to play professional baseball against men in Japan, collect many more.
image: www.wunrn.com



34
Vote
   


What's the attraction?

March 20th 2009 20:59
obama city hall

The hottest tourist growth area in Japan is a city of about 33,000 people in south-west Fukui Prefecture.

Just north of Kyoto, the city is about five hours from Tokyo by train. To the south is a mountain range which runs from east to west, dividing Fukui and Shiga prefectures. The climate is mild and clement.

Fishing was the city's main industry before the recent tourism boom.

The tourists buy Wakasa lacquered chopsticks, agate accessories and other crafts made in the area.

They also visit the city hall (pictured above), and they may even stand on the spot in front of the hall where, the city's Mayor announced recently, a statue of an American president is to be erected.

The American president and the Japanese city share the same name. Obama.
en.wikipedia.com; images: wikipedia commons, city.obama.fukui.jp


obama japan map
58
Vote
   


Best nest

February 23rd 2009 19:37
magpie
Black-billed magpie

In what may be a first in the bird world, two magpies have constructed a nest using metal sticks.

The nest, built in a tree among the high-rises in Hong Kong's Tuen Mun district, was built from more traditional materials plus about 40 metal sticks apparently pilfered from a nearby construction site.

Cheung Ho-fai, of the Hong Kong Bird Watching Society, said it was the first time he had heard of a nest being built with metal.

The magpie is already renowned as the only non-mammal known to be able to recognise itself in a mirror. It just added metallurgy and construction engineering to its résumé.

Magpie facts: pairs stay together year-round and for life unless one dies, in which case the remaining magpie finds another mate; they nest once a year, but will re-nest if their first attempt fails; the female lays up to nine eggs, but the average clutch size is between six and seven; only the female incubates, for 16 to 18 days, the male feeding the female throughout incubation; the young fly three to four weeks after hatching, feed with adults for about two months, and then fly off to join other juvenile magpies; the life span of a magpie in the wild is four to six years.
news.com.au, en.wikipedia.org


55
Vote
   


Saved by toilet poetry

January 30th 2009 22:31
toilet instructions
The correct way to read Japanese toilet poetry

The Japanese have a long history of wacky conventions (WC) when it comes to toilet issues, but their latest effort to save toilet tissues may be the wackiest of all.

[ Click here to read more ]
52
Vote
   


Panda politics

December 23rd 2008 11:34
panda giant china taiwan

Things have been warming for some time between Taiwan and the erstwhile bully boys across the strait, but today the relationship got downright chummy.

[ Click here to read more ]
54
Vote
   


United in sport, divided by politicians

December 1st 2008 22:21
india pakistan problems

It's hard to find a more complex set of political and social issues than the Pakistan-India confrontation. The partition and creation of Pakistan in 1947 was politically driven and created more problems than it solved.

[ Click here to read more ]
76
Vote
   


Singapore's fine reputation enhanced

October 14th 2008 14:38
They say of Singapore that it is a fine place. They have a fine for everything.

It became famous for fining people for incorrect disposal of chewing gum, but that fine became extinct in 1992 when Singapore placed a blanket ban on the importation of gum. Chewing gum smugglers (gum runners?) can be gaoled for 12 months and fined US$5,500


[ Click here to read more ]
39
Vote
   


Changing Fortune 500

July 12th 2008 10:21
Goodbye Nike, hello China

Hello China indeed. Our heading summarises the 2008 Fortune 500 list, released last Thursday. The iconic sports shoe maker and eight other American companies fell off the list of the world's top 500 companies measured by revenue, cutting the American presence from 162 in 2007 to 153


[ Click here to read more ]
44
Vote
   


Spend a penny

July 8th 2008 05:52
The great Asian clean-up is gathering pace. I blame the Brits, who started it by changing a deeply embedded cultural tradition a few decades ago when they stopped Hong Kongers spitting in the streets.

Then came the news last week that the authorities in China are aiming to make the same change in time for the Olympics.

[ Click here to read more ]
59
Vote
   


Panda tale of survival

July 7th 2008 03:03
panda birth china
Proud mother: Chinese earthquake survivor Guo Guo carries in her mouth one of two giant panda cubs born on July 6
Picture: Xinhua

The first giant panda cubs to be born in captivity in the world so far this year were delivered safely yesterday (Sunday, July 6) in Ya'an City, Sichuan Province, China. The birth of the twins, a happy enough event in its own right, is in fact the end of a dramatic story which could have been tragic.

[ Click here to read more ]
68
Vote
   


G8 chatfest under way

July 7th 2008 00:38
G8 protest march Japan
Protestors welcome the G8 leaders to this year's meeting
Picture: Reuters

And here is the main news item being reported around the world three days from now: G8 leaders have just concluded a landmark meeting in Japan by signing a series of initiatives which are being hailed as a breakthrough in international willingness to confront climate change.

[ Click here to read more ]
82
Vote
   


Hush flush

July 5th 2008 05:27
toilet paper hat
A fine example of the Japanese art of chindogu

The big news from Japan this week is yet another major invention. From the land which brought us seedless watermelons, cockroach swatting slippers and the hands-free umbrella, comes the soundless toilet.

[ Click here to read more ]
68
Vote
   


Beijing has more of everything

July 3rd 2008 23:15
Chinese anti-terrorist training
Picture: Xinhua

Beijing is planning for the Olympics by, amongst other things, preparing a welcome committee for would-be terrorists, telling the President of France that he's not welcome, and annoying just about everybody seeking a tourist visa.

[ Click here to read more ]
47
Vote
   


Hong Kong environment

October 27th 1999 07:01
hong kong harbour
"Hong Kong, unlike Singapore, never had a mandate for eternity. As a borrowed place in borrowed time, it evoked about as much protective instinct as a hotel room"

I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

[ Click here to read more ]
36
Vote
   


Chris Champion's Blogs

11032 Vote(s)
758 Comment(s)
121 Post(s)
4339 Vote(s)
33 Comment(s)
39 Post(s)
5501 Vote(s)
197 Comment(s)
72 Post(s)
3761 Vote(s)
208 Comment(s)
44 Post(s)
16200 Vote(s)
1590 Comment(s)
242 Post(s)
Moderated by Chris Champion
Copyright © 2012 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]