Tuesday, September 27, 2011

My New FIXIE

So I thought I would practice my Japanese, so this next blog will be in Japanese!
皆さんこんにちわ!
今週、カスタムピスト作りました!
渋谷店で、いろいろなかっこいいピストフレームがある。
僕はピストを買うかな~
メンテナンスは簡単だし、乗りやすいし。。。
僕のロードはたくさんキロメータを走るのでいつもたくさんメンテナンスがいります。
この新しいピストは僕の毎日自転車。ロードはツーリングとかレースの時だけ!
MASIのSPECIALE FIXEDのきれいな色のフレーム買った!!

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IMG_0596.JPGIMG_0596.JPGスタッフに手伝ってもらいました!カスタムホイルの作り方は都築さんと兼信さんから習いました!

デザインはタムタムに手伝ってもらいました!


フレームのヘッドパーツと他の組み立ては水野さんと高岡さんに手伝ってもらいました!


皆ありがとう!





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ピストとロードは全然違う。
ロードよりピストは遅いけどとても楽しい!
乗り方も全然違う。最初から固定ギアはちょっと怖い感じですけど何となくこの新しい乗り方に惚れました!

も一回自転車に惚れました!




この子はMariettaと言います!
イタリア語でマリエッタは女の子の名前。賊子の意味です!可愛いじゃない?

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Building my new bike!

Today I just bought my first Fixie.
For those who don't understand bike terminology a fixie is a fixed gear bicycle or a bike with only one speed. Mainly meant to be raced on tracks, they recently have become very popular to ride around town on.

 Although I am definitely a roadie(a road bike rider), I got curious as to what riding a fixie would be like. Also being that I work at a Y's road fixed gear shop, I see fixed gears all day and have access to unlimited Fixie goods. I bought a Masi Speciale naked frame and will be making my own custom rims to go with it. I will be using a rear hub that only allows for fixed gears so I cant put a free wheel on it. I'm a little nervous about riding it at first so I will probably practice riding a fixed gear in a near by park where they have a wide open black top.
The image I have in mind is to keep the bike looking classy and classic. Many people that ride fixed gears in Tokyo have outlandish neon colors and color schemes that not even a color blind person would make. I will keep the colors pretty neutral but the bike will have an old Italian style to it but with a hint of modernism to it.
I'll post pics as soon as I complete the build! 

Pop Culture and me

So what exactly is pop culture? How do you know what it is?

Well let me tell you. Pop culture is anything and everything that is popular with a group. Pop culture is not something that only "the cool kids" in high school were a part of. If you like something and a group of people like it too then it is pop culture. I love bicycles and things related to that. It may not be popular with you but it's popular with me and the thousands of other cyclists in the world. That means I am part of pop culture!!!

What do you like? If its something other people like as well then it is popular!

There are many popular cultures in the world. Mine is bikes, whats yours?

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Ted Nelson and Cyberwars

I've been reading around on the internet about Ted Nelson and his attempts at revolutionizing the way we use computers and internet. Aparrently people thought he was crazy and after reading his biography he might seem like a shrewd crazy guy who was ignored by his parents and the world but I think he is a genius. Mainly I was interested in his Xanadu project. Basically it is like a new way to view things in 3D on you computer screen. This really interested me because it seems like a cool idea and if you think about it, Hollywood has adopted his idea when in the 90's, Computer hacker movies were all the rage and moving through a 3D space in a cyber world was like the most awesome thing. If anyone reading this remembers Jurassic Park, there is a scene where to find the files for the auto door locks, to find the file they had to actually navigate a 3d world to find it. I thought that was kinda what Ted Nelson is getting at with his idea and personally I think its a cool idea. Why bother looking through files, pages and links with addresses so long and complicated that you can't remember where your stuff is unless you run a search. People navigate their neighborhoods, cities and country based on physical land marks that they can remember. We can find our friends house because addresses are easy to understand. If we want to meet our friends at "the bar", we can all find it no matter how piss drunk we already are because we can remember locations associated with a physical land mark. Well this is all a little past Ted Nelsons idea but MMORPG's like World of Warcraft or any other online game is like a 3D space the Ted Nelson wanted to create. However in WoW you can't really share word documents or Photos, they are kinda on the right path. Last year an anime movie called Summer Wars came out. The main setting of this movie was in a cyber world in which through a 3d virtual space you could do anything from playing games, run governments and communicate with people. Of course we have that now, but its all 2D and as boring as this flat web page you are looking at. Something 3D that we can travel through is, in my opinion, how we should evolve the use of computers. Ted Nelson, just a little bit ahead of his time, got it right.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The good and the bad about my job...

If you know who I am you know I am an avid cyclist. Outside of school, my life is nothing but bicycles. I ride everywhere I go whether it be sun, rain, wind or snow. I ride about 300 KM every week and eat about 4,000 Calories a day. On a student budget eating that much is impossible to sustain and still have money for school books, so I got a part time job in the beginning of last summer.

Unsurprisingly I got a job at a bike shop. Located in Shibuya, I get to see all the different exotic and interesting sub cultures of Japan walk through my shop. People who customize their bike to fit their outfits, others to fit their personalities, some who wish to buy the most expensive bike to look good on the cycling roads and a few serious people that taking biking to heart as much as I do.

 Sometimes I don't even consider it a job because truth be told, I used to spend hours browsing the goodies in the shop before I worked there. Now I just get paid to do the same thing and talk to others about bicycles. For me, it's kinda like a dream part time job.

A downside to this job however is that I am the only foreigner in the entire company, all 50 plus stores included. So a week after I started working there, all the company workers knew who I was even though I don't know any of their names. Also if I make a mistake when selling a part or ordering something for a customer, it sticks out big time. The customer just has to say they were helped by a foreigner, no need to remember my name. I can't hide like other employees can. I feel like everything I do is scrutinized by the customer because they don't trust me. My ability in working with bikes is unquestionable! It's my Japanese language ability that puts them at unease. I can't explain things in Japanese as well as I want to so my broken and sometimes vague explanations make it sound like I don't know what I am doing even though I am 100% right.

My co-workers on the other hand are amazing!!! They help me out when ever they can, they try to teach me more Japanese and they just love to chat about anything. When being a foreigner in Japan you have to be outgoing to get anywhere. The reclusive, shy, me back in America would never be able to do what I do here but if I don't put my fears and shyness behind me, I won't get anywhere. Because I seem so out going I become good friends with all my co-workers within minutes. When I started working at the Shibuya store, I was calling a co-worker I met for the first time by a nick name within 5 minutes. Something that doesn't normally happen in Japanese companies.

There are 2 things I really like in the Shibuya store. One is this $5,000 carbon fiber racing bike that sits pretty on the shelf waiting to be ridden. I fiddle around with that bike, keeping it clean, show casing it in the store blog and taking pictures of it so much, sometimes customers ask if it's my bike.

The second thing I like in that store is a co-worker of mine. It might be somewhat cliche to have a crush on your co-worker but whatever, I have one. She's cute, funny and down to earth. Best of all she likes bikes as much as I do and love outdoor activities.

 Somewhat rare to find in Shibuya among all the materialistic girls. I hate to generalize but Tokyo girls seem to be all about shopping and looking cute. When I was an English teacher, all my female students would say their hobby was shopping... Kind of an instant deal breaker for me when I hear that. I guess I should mention that my co-worker is not originally from Tokyo but from the Shikoku area country side. She only moved to Tokyo for University.

Recently I found the courage to ask her out and we have a date set! Hopefully things will go well!