Friday, May 15, 2009

Beg your pardon please ...

(Two days ago, Airasia was launching their annual 1,000,000 free seats and it was like a Wall Street in my office as my colleagues were busy clicking and booking for their destination. You could easily overheard a string of expletives shooting around as some almost done booking when the 'page not found' error popped up!!
And hearing the words B-A-L-I again, filled me with nostalgia ... odd enough, all that i could remember where these lame stuffs ... *scratching my head*)

... that's my most 'inner heart' question whenever i talked with Balinese, although both Indonesia and Malaysia use Malay language, theirs are somehow .. hhmm ... hard to digestly-understood and worst still when they spoke English, most of the time, i just make a guess ...

Here are some of muntah darah conversations i find suitable to describe this 'chicken talk to duck' feeling i have ... :P


#1: From Airport ... Agus (our driver) introduced himself and ...

Agus: Hi, i am Agus ... nice to meet you ... what's your name?
Me: Call me Choo ...
Agus: oohh ... Tommy Choo ...
Me: (-_-)
Me: Just Choo ... just call me Choo ...
Agus: oohh ...
Me: (phew .. luckily, he didn't call me Justin Tommy Choo ... )


#2: While in van ...

Agus: So .. choo, have you married??
Me: Belum, saya belum kahwin ...
Agus: Ya ya ... kau kena nikah dulu, baru boleh kahwin ...
Me: !?! ... nikah and kahwin, tak sama??
Agus: hahaha ... nikah mean married ... kahwin mean having sex!!!
Me: .. oohhh ... (deng ....)


(Some 'blood-vomitting' converstation with my travel kaki as well ... )
#3: While travelling in van ... where everyone else was fasten asleep ...

Me: Hey Fong ...why don't you sleep ah ...
Fong: No ah ... it's too comfortable liao .. i can't sleep ...
Me: ??? ... what do you mean??
Fong: I will usually sleep in van or car when there is no air-con and very hot!!
Me: ... (-_-) ...
Me: That's not sleeping ... it's called COMA ...

Thursday, May 14, 2009

What's for dinner ...

It's the dilemma i faced daily ever since i left home. All the while, it's my mum decision on what to feed us at exactly 7:30pm for the past 20 years!! Yes, i was a spoiled brat then. Now, with my rather limited culinary skills plus my laziness to venture outside for food; Mamee+Egg, Breads+Kaya and 1300-13-1300 becoming my very best buddies. Until i stumbled upon this ...

http://www.asianfood-recipes.com/

The recipes are simple, clear and easy to follow and what's more they have EGG'S RECIPES!!!

Okay, now, the problem is only partially solved. You know you will only cooked and eat at home when:

1) Your mood are good.
2) You got a lot of food in the fridge that is going to be expired soon (very soon).
3) Your area was flooding and you can't get your ass out of your house!!

So, what's if you got extra-budget in that particular month and you are fed-up with the cheapo-economy-rice. Another issue will popped up - WHERE TO EAT? Thanks to those Penangnites who called themselves 'tuapui' (fatso) ...

http://www.penangtuapui.com/

Those guys really searching high and low throughout Penang (both island and mainland) to locate good food and put them on their blog.

Finally, a full stomach is a happy stomach ...

p/s: i was writing this while waiting for my '1300-13-1300' dinner ... *gu-lu-gu-lu-gu-lu*

Currency Exchange Rate Survery ...

Started to keep tracking the 'foreign money movement' here ...
Ask a few money-changer shop and here are what I get:

RM1 = 9.65 - 9.70 Bahts
RM220 = 1million Dong (while some charge highly at RM1 = 4,400Dong!!)
RM3.56 - RM3.58 = 1USDollar

Upon checking the exchange rate from local press, this is what i found:

RM1 = 8.99 Bahts
RM220 = 1,101,393.3849 Dong
RM3.58 = 1USDollar


Now you know, where are my next destination :D

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

I Don't Expect That ...

... yes, an 'off-the-cuff' speeches from my most respected US first Black President, Barrack Obama ...

How much i do hope that there will be a 'Obama' in Msia ...


THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_________________________________________________________________

For Immediate Release May 10, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENTS' ASSOCIATION DINNER

May 9, 2009

Washington Hilton
Washington, D.C.

9:56 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you, everybody. Good evening. You know, I had an entire speech prepared for this wonderful occasion, but now that I'm here I think I'm going to try something a little different. Tonight I want to speak from the heart. I'm going to speak off the cuff. (Teleprompters rise.) (Laughter and applause.)

Good evening. (Laughter.) Pause for laughter. (Laughter.) Wait a minute, this may not be working as well as I -- (laughter.) Let me try that again.

Good evening, everybody. (Applause.) I would like to welcome you all to the 10-day anniversary of my first 100 days. (Laughter.) I am Barack Obama. Most of you covered me. All of you voted for me. (Laughter and applause.) Apologies to the Fox table. (Laughter.) They're -- where are they? I have to confess I really did not want to be here tonight, but I knew I had to come -- just one more problem that I've inherited from George W. Bush. (Laughter.)

But now that I'm here, it's great to be here. It's great to see all of you. Michelle Obama is here, the First Lady of the United States. (Applause.) Hasn't she been an outstanding First Lady? (Applause.) She's even begun to bridge the differences that have divided us for so long, because no matter which party you belong to we can all agree that Michelle has the right to bare arms. (Laughter and applause.)

Now Sasha and Malia aren't here tonight because they're grounded. You can't just take Air Force One on a joy ride to Manhattan. (Laughter.) I don't care whose kids you are. (Laughter.) We've been setting some ground rules here. They're starting to get a little carried away.

Now, speaking -- when I think about children obviously I think about Michelle and it reminds me that tomorrow is Mother's Day. Happy Mother's Day to all the mothers in the audience. (Applause.) I do have to say, though, that this is a tough holiday for Rahm Emanuel because he's not used to saying the word "day" after "mother." (Laughter.) That's true. (Laughter.)

David Axelrod is here. You know, David and I have been together for a long time. I can still remember -- I got to sort of -- I tear up a little bit when I think back to that day that I called Ax so many years ago and said, you and I can do wonderful things together. And he said to me the same thing that partners all across America are saying to one another right now: Let's go to Iowa and make it official. (Laughter and applause.)

Michael Steele is in the house tonight. (Applause.) Or as he would say, "in the heezy." (Laughter.) What's up? (Laughter.) Where is Michael? Michael, for the last time, the Republican Party does not qualify for a bailout. (Laughter.) Rush Limbaugh does not count as a troubled asset, I'm sorry. (Laughter.)

Dick Cheney was supposed to be here but he is very busy working on his memoirs, tentatively titled, "How to Shoot Friends and Interrogate People." (Laughter.)

You know, it's been a whirlwind of activity these first hundred days. We've enacted a major economic recovery package, we passed a budget, we forged a new path in Iraq, and no President in history has ever named three Commerce Secretaries this quickly. (Laughter.) Which reminds me, if Judd Gregg is here, your business cards are ready now. (Laughter.)

On top of that, I've also reversed the ban on stem cell research, signed an expansion -- (applause) -- signed an expansion of the children's health insurance. Just last week, Car and Driver named me auto executive of the year. (Laughter.) Something I'm very proud of.

We've also begun to change the culture in Washington. We've even made the White House a place where people can learn and can grow. Just recently, Larry Summers asked if he could chair the White House Council on Women and Girls. (Laughter.) And I do appreciate that Larry is here tonight because it is seven hours past his bedtime. (Laughter.) Gibbs liked that one. (Laughter.)

In the last hundred days, we've also grown the Democratic Party by infusing it with new energy and bringing in fresh, young faces like Arlen Specter. (Laughter.) Now, Joe Biden rightly deserves a lot of credit for convincing Arlen to make the switch, but Secretary Clinton actually had a lot to do with it too. One day she just pulled him aside and she said, Arlen, you know what I always say -- "if you can't beat them, join them." (Laughter.)

Which brings me to another thing that's changed in this new, warmer, fuzzier White House, and that's my relationship with Hillary. You know, we had been rivals during the campaign, but these days we could not be closer. In fact, the second she got back from Mexico she pulled into a hug and gave me a big kiss. (Laughter.) Told me I'd better get down there myself. (Laughter.) Which I really appreciated. I mean, it was -- it was nice. (Laughter.)

And of course we've also begun to change America's image in the world. We talked about this during this campaign and we're starting to execute. We've renewed alliances with important partners and friends. If you look on the screen there, there I am with Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso. There I am with Gordon Brown.

But as I said during the campaign, we can't just talk to our friends. As hard as it is, we also have to talk to our enemies, and I've begun to do exactly that. Take a look at the monitor there. (Laughter.) Now, let me be clear, just because he handed me a copy of Peter Pan does not mean that I'm going to read it -- (laughter) -- but it's good diplomatic practice to just accept these gifts.

All this change hasn't been easy. Change never is. So I've cut the tension by bringing a new friend to the White House. He's warm, he's cuddly, loyal, enthusiastic. You just have to keep him on a tight leash. Every once in a while he goes charging off in the wrong direction and gets himself into trouble. But enough about Joe Biden. (Laughter.)

All in all, we're proud of the change we've brought to Washington in these first hundred days but we've got a lot of work left to do, as all of you know. So I'd like to talk a little bit about what my administration plans to achieve in the next hundred days.

During the second hundred days, we will design, build and open a library dedicated to my first hundred days. (Laughter.) It's going to be big, folks. (Laughter.) In the next hundred days, I will learn to go off the prompter and Joe Biden will learn to stay on the prompter. (Laughter.)

In the next hundred days, our bipartisan outreach will be so successful that even John Boehner will consider becoming a Democrat. After all, we have a lot in common. He is a person of color. (Laughter.) Although not a color that appears in the natural world. (Laughter.) What's up, John? (Laughter.)

In the next hundred days, I will meet with a leader who rules over millions with an iron fist, who owns the airwaves and uses his power to crush all who would challenge his authority at the ballot box. It's good to see you, Mayor Bloomberg. (Laughter.)

In the next hundred days, we will housetrain our dog, Bo, because the last thing Tim Geithner needs is someone else treating him like a fire hydrant. (Laughter.) In the next hundred days, I will strongly consider losing my cool. (Laughter.)

Finally, I believe that my next hundred days will be so successful I will be able to complete them in 72 days. (Laughter.) And on the 73rd day, I will rest. (Laughter.)

I just -- I want to end by saying a few words about the men and women in this room whose job it is to inform the public and pursue the truth. You know, we meet tonight at a moment of extraordinary challenge for this nation and for the world, but it's also a time of real hardship for the field of journalism. And like so many other businesses in this global age, you've seen sweeping changes and technology and communications that lead to a sense of uncertainty and anxiety about what the future will hold.

Across the country, there are extraordinary, hardworking journalists who have lost their jobs in recent days, recent weeks, recent months. And I know that each newspaper and media outlet is wrestling with how to respond to these changes, and some are struggling simply to stay open. And it won't be easy. Not every ending will be a happy one.

But it's also true that your ultimate success as an industry is essential to the success of our democracy. It's what makes this thing work. You know, Thomas Jefferson once said that if he had the choice between a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, he would not hesitate to choose the latter.

Clearly, Thomas Jefferson never had cable news to contend with -- (laughter) -- but his central point remains: A government without newspapers, a government without a tough and vibrant media of all sorts, is not an option for the United States of America. (Applause.)

So I may not -- I may not agree with everything you write or report. I may even complain, or more likely Gibbs will complain, from time to time about how you do your jobs, but I do so with the knowledge that when you are at your best, then you help me be at my best. You help all of us who serve at the pleasure of the American people do our jobs better by holding us accountable, by demanding honesty, by preventing us from taking shortcuts and falling into easy political games that people are so desperately weary of.

And that kind of reporting is worth preserving -- not just for your sake, but for the public's. We count on you to help us make sense of a complex world and tell the stories of our lives the way they happen, and we look for you for truth, even if it's always an approximation, even if -- (laughter.)

This is a season of renewal and reinvention. That is what government must learn to do, that's what businesses must learn to do, and that's what journalism is in the process of doing. And when I look out at this room and think about the dedicated men and women whose questions I've answered over the last few years, I know that for all the challenges this industry faces, it's not short on talent or creativity or passion or commitment. It's not short of young people who are eager to break news or the not-so-young who still manage to ask the tough ones time and time again. These qualities alone will not solve all your problems, but they certainly prove that the problems are worth solving. And that is a good place as any to begin.

So I offer you my thanks, I offer you my support, and I look forward to working with you and answering to you and the American people as we seek a more perfect union in the months and years ahead.

Thank you very much, everybody. Thank you. (Applause.)

END
10:12 P.M. EDT

source from : http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Remarks-by-the-President-at-White-House-Correspondents-Association-Dinner-5/9/2009/

Monday, May 11, 2009

Papaya or Betik ...

I was at this Malay fruit stall, and he was just started his business ...

Me: Eehh ... ada BETIK?
Boss: (without looking me, he handed me a pack of JAMBU)
Me: ... hhmm .... BETIK ada?
Boss: (this time, he handed me a pack of GUAVA!!)
Me: ... (-_-) ....

Me: PAPAYA ada jual sini tak?
Boss: (finally handed me a pack of PAPAYA ... with a big grin)

That was happened a few weeks ago, still I am wondering what could have triggered such scenerio. Either everyone of us are getting more advance or exposed to English education or that's the way we communicate nowadays - by Manglish, Cantoglish, Mandaglish or even Indiglish.

Rebirth ...

The day when things started to look better in Perak politic, is the day of my rebirth ... *smug grin*

My previous saruleo blog was unknownly hit by some kind of 'flu' ... hope not by my own 'chu flu' :P

I guess, I will need to kick start 'monkeying around' again ... ngek ngek ngek!!