Thailand Footprint: The People, Things, Literature, and Music of Thailand and the Region

Posts from the ‘Writing’ category

Interesting reblog from Melissa Ray’s Muay Thai on the Brain. About Muay Thai fighters, convicts and an appearance by, Happy Thailand Guy. Melissa has been interviewed and profiled twice at Thailand Footprint.

Melissa Ray's avatarMuay Thai on the Brain

Nai Khanom Tom Nai Khanom Tom

Every year the World Professional Muay Thai Federation (WPMF) holds a show to commemorate the birthday of legendary fighter Nai Khanom Tom, or National Muay Thai Day, on March 17th.

This year, the show was held on the slightly earlier date of March 11th, at a venue in the Lad Krabang area of Bangkok, with a line-up that included Berneung Topkingboxing (Thailand) defending his 168lb WPMF title against Thomas Carpenter (England/Thailand), Saiseelek Sitsuperman (Thailand) taking on Marik Kiatgorwit (France) for the 175lb WPMF title, Kwanjai Sor Por Lor Chaiyaphum (Thailand) defending her 118lb WPMF title against Sayfa Sor Suparat (Thailand), and a bout between WPMF favourites Jos Ingram Gym (Brazil) and Alex Chiangmai Muaythai (Switzerland).

My gym was to be represented on the day by former Lumpinee and Channel 7 Boxing Stadium champion Tapaothong Eminent Air—a veteran of more than 300 fights, though absent…

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Soi-Cowboy-Baccara-Club

Last Friday pulp fiction writer, James A. Newman, Bangkok Night of Noir photographer and videographer, Alasdair McLeod and I were granted access to Baccara Bar on Soi Cowboy in Bangkok, Thailand for the purpose of photographing the art of Chris Coles and hanging out with the artist during our time there. Four paintings were recently purchased by the owner, a Frenchman named Patrick. Patrick gave us just one caveat,  “No photographing the girls”. We complied. In addition to owning Baccara, which most consider to be the premier Go Go bar on Soi Cowboy and all of Bangkok, he also owns the former Insomnia Disco (now called Insanity), Bangkok Beat, Baccara A-Go Go on Walking Street, as well as 4 other popular venues in Pattaya City. Patrick is the exception to the expat bar-owner scene.

As Bangkok 8 author John Burdett recently pointed out in an excellent video interview, prostitution in Bangkok benefits from being illegal. It remains by and large a cottage industry, run much like a Mom and Pop store. Baccara and Patrick run things quite differently in the Kingdom. He would be the equivalent to the mansion on the hill owner. Baccara sees roughly 1,000 people go in and out their doors, most every night of the year. The numbers add up.

Patrick is creative. In a big way. Paying attention to lighting, layout, costumes, audio system, the rules of engagement or what I would call, the art of the deal. The women earn large monthly pay. Baht 200,000 a month and up for the elites. That is more money in one month than their father’s, if they come from Issan, make in years.

Patrick is a collector of Chris Coles’ paintings. The businessman showcases the original paintings depicting the Bangkok nightlife, along with 200+ dancing girls every night, at Baccara. Baccara a Go Go has distinguished itself from the crowd. High season or low season, the good times roll every night at Baccara, for a price.

PULP FICTION

The 1994 $5.00 milkshake in the movie, Pulp Fiction has been replaced with the 2014 $6.00 Coke at Baccara. Stay tuned at Thailand Footprint for an interview between pulp fiction writer, James A. Newman and Bangkok noir artist, Chris Coles in the next few days. In addition, you’ll get an inside look at Baccara Bar and the paintings in the neon world of the artist. Here is that post and video interview: Chris Coles – Bringing it to the Bangkok Night

Baccara 11 (1)

Photo by Alasdair McLeod – Painting by Chris Coles

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When I say, Hallmark Greeting Cards, can you think of their tag line? It is, “When you care enough to send the very best.”

Hallmark

Now, have you given any thought as to who decided that Hallmark was and is the “very best”? For 70 straight years, no less. Was it a poll? Was it an independent greeting card association? Was it decided by their peers? No. Actually, Hallmark decided they were the very best. One of their sales executives came up with that conclusion right around the time World War II was ending. They were ahead of their time. People may have been too distracted by other things to question it, then. Humility seems to be a 20th Century characteristic. It doesn’t want to fit into a 140 character world.

Thailand Footprint will be 1 year old in mid-April. So I am very pleased to announce that we are the recipient of an award. The Best Blog Ever Award.

And if you need to see proof, well, here it is:

best-blog-ever

Because if we see it written on the internet, it must be true. Right?

And in case you are wondering, who selected Thailand Footprint as, Best Blog Ever? Well, I did. But it still looks good, dontcha think?

If you got this far, thanks for reading Thailand Footprint. Seriously. I appreciate it. I don’t know how much longer I will stick to it but it has been a lot of fun. If I have created a little entertainment for any of you readers out there, then so much the better.

Sincerely,

Kevin Cummings

Creator of, Best Blog Ever

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Steve Irwin would have turned 52 years old last month. He died, tragically, at the age of 44 years. Stung by a giant stingray around 8 feet long. The photographer with Steve that day is giving interviews, which puts Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter, back in the news.

It turns out his last words were, “I’m dying.” That must have been a startling and shocking realization for Steve. I feel sorry for his wife, a former American citizen and now a proud Aussie along with their son and daughter, whom Steve left behind.

First impressions are a funny thing. As the saying goes, you never get a second chance to make one. I remember the first time I saw Steve Irwin on television in the USA. I got an unfavorable first impression. I was probably the only one. But I remember thinking, clearly, “Leave the poor crocodile alone.” As he was jumping on its back, tying it up, hooding its head and carting it away somewhere for some good reason in the middle of the night. Steve Irwin won me over with time. He was a likable bloke. He really was. My favorite video image of him is when he was a young boy, shown with his dad. He’s rolling around in the dirt, having fun and there was some kind of animal involved. I cannot remember which kind but it wasn’t a puppy. Among the things I got to like about Steve Irvin, a lot, was his friendship for the ocean’s sharks and his outspokenness about the deplorable shark fin harvesting that still goes on to this day. I believe less shark fin harvesting goes on now, because of people like Steve Irvin.

Steve Irwin has been dead 7 1/2 years. He had a scheduled trip to Thailand the month after he died. He never made it here for that planned trip. The elephant camp that he was to visit paid a tribute to Steve as only elephants can do. Here is a picture from that tribute.

Steve Irwin

We are all dying at one rate or another. We don’t always think about it or say it aloud like Steve Irwin, but maybe we should more often? I have a couple of planned trips in the next three months. I hope I make it to the destinations. I only have so much control over that. I’ll do my best. But we can all plan to go somewhere or do something to cross off the bucket list before the bucket is kicked. It’s the thinking about the dead and the dying that reminds me to live as best as I can, while I still can. Thank-you, Steve Irwin for living the life you wanted to live.

Steve_Irwin

Steve Irwin. Born February 22, 1962 – Died September 4th, 2006

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CityLife

This post also ran at Chiang Mai City News and may be seen there by clicking the banner above

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(Reblog) A good review of, The Dying Beach by Australian author, Angela Savage. Set in Thailand; it is the third in the Jayne Keeney series. We hope to interview Angela and her partner in crime fiction, Andrew Nette, author of Ghost Money, which is set in Cambodia, soon at Thailand Footprint

Whispering Gums's avatarWhispering Gums

Angela Savage, The dying beach Courtesy: Text Publishing

When I received Angela Savage’s novel The dying beach out of the blue last year as a review copy, I didn’t put it high in my list of reading priorities. I had – and still have – a pile of books waiting patiently, and I rarely (never say never) read crime novels. However, two things changed my mind. One is that Christos Tsiolkas dedicated Barracuda to Savage, and the other is that this year, for the first time, I will visit Thailand, which is the novel’s setting. So, I read it!

The dying beach is apparently Savage’s third Jayne Keeney novel. Jayne is a Private Investigator, an expat Australian living in Bangkok. Like many female PIs, she’s gutsy, hard-living, resourceful, somewhat of an outsider, and rather inclined to bristle if her independence is questioned. (Perhaps this latter is not confined to female PIs, but can be said…

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Henry Miller bonus coverage for March, 2014. An excerpt from Henry Miller: Plexus, Book 2 of Rosy Cruxifiction. One I’ve actually read.

A 1965 advertisement from Grove Press for the Rosy Cruxifiction trilogy

A 1965 advertisement from Grove Press for the Rosy Cruxifiction trilogy

Sweet's avatarMusings

“When man, with his pitiful sense of relativity, looks through the telescope and marvels at the immensity of creation, he means to confess that he has succeeded in reducing the limitless to the limited. He acquires, as it were, an optic lease on the boundless grandeur of a creation which is unfathomable to him. What matter if he succeed in putting a thousand universes within the focus of his microscopic telescope? The process of enlargement merely enhances the sense of the miniature. But man feels more at home in his little universe, or pretends he does, when he has uncovered what lies beyond its bounds. The thought that his universe may be no bigger than a tiny blood corpuscle entrances him, lulls his desperate anguish. But the use of an artificial eye, no matter to what monstrous proportions it be magnified, never brings him joys. The greater his physical vision…

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Father

“Walk across the soi, you’ll save 10 baht.” He said

Seems like a lot of trouble on a street known for the dead

Illusions are flying like bullets and hot air

Children are dying, does anybody care?

What’s it all about? Power and greed

There is no glory in doing the good deed

I hate you. But I hated you first

But I hate you more

But you are the worst

Liars call people lunatics

To try and save face

Everyone has a Plan B

To get out of this place

Burmese Fortune tellers tell a good tale

While Rohingyan refugees face rotting in jail

Is this a farce? Can this be happening now?

Don’t burst my illusions and I won’t burst yours, pal.

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Footprint maker and Muay Ying Champion, Melissa Ray writes an excellent essay of her impressions regarding the new Lumpinee Boxing Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand …

Melissa Ray's avatarMuay Thai on the Brain

Photo by Roman P. Aguila Photo by Roman P. Aguila

When news of the impending closure of Lumpinee Boxing Stadium on Rama IV Road was announced several months ago, Muay Thai fans around the world reeled in dismay.

Granted, the stadium was falling apart at the seams (the roof leaked in heavy rain and a cat famously fell through the ceiling into the ring during a show last year), but it represented a cultural landmark—the scene of some of the greatest fights in Muay Thai history since opening its doors in 1956.

Major General Surakrai Jatumas (Chief of Lumpinee Stadium)
Image source: http://www.awd-rta.com

However, as explained pragmatically by Major General Surakrai Jatumas (Chief of Lumpinee Stadium) in a video by the Bangkok Post, “Lumpinee Boxing Stadium’s land lease contract ended and changes happen.” The construction of a new Lumpinee Boxing Stadium had been underway in the grounds of the Royal Thai Army Sports Centre on…

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JerryHawaii

“I hope I see you today, I’m meeting Jerry Hopkins there at 3:00 p.m.” The message came from, Will Yaryan another former  NorCal resident.  It was all the motivation I needed to get to the Sunday Jazz at CheckInn99 late last year. I had never met Jerry before but I had heard a lot about him, in addition to reading some of his books and knowing about many others. A passage he wrote in one of those books, Bangkok Babylon, had altered the course of many an afternoon and evening for me in Bangkok, Thailand. I wanted to thank him. I grabbed the book as I headed out the door.

Jimi-Hendrix-The-Jimi-Hendrix-406539

When I arrived at CheckInn99, Dr. Will and Jerry Hopkins were already there, listening to the sounds of William Wait on saxophone, Keith Nolan on keyboards and other talented musicians. Will Yaryan is a former record company public relations man with Atlantic Records. His friendship with Jerry Hopkins goes back 40 years. Will introduced me straight away and I learned Jerry and I have at least one thing in common, which didn’t make the conversation easy but it was always interesting. Jerry and I are both deaf in one ear and the good ears don’t always align well. During a break in the jam session, Keith Nolan joined in on the conversation. The subject was music and everybody there liked it. At one point Keith told me the batteries were dead on his camera and asked me if I would mind taking a picture of him with Jerry, using my camera phone? Done. You can see that picture on Keith’s Facebook page where he adds the words, “Jerry Hopkins – A gracious legend.” I agree with Keith Nolan’s assessment of Jerry Hopkins. What makes a man a legend? That’s a difficult question to answer. For starters Jerry Hopkins published the best selling biographies of Jim Morrison of The Doors, Elvis Presley and Jimi Hendrix. In addition he’s penned biographies for David Bowie, Don Ho, Yoko Ono and almost, Raquel Welch. Hopkins is the author of 40 books, including a definitive book on the Hula. He is also the author of an unpublished work,The History of The Condom. The most recent book I have purchased, written by Jerry Hopkins is, ROMANCING THE EAST: A Literary ODYSSEY from the Heart of Darkness to the River Kwai.  (Tuttle Publishing –  Singapore – 2012). A wonderful read so far, spanning 150 years of literature in Asia and featuring those who have traveled here during that time.

RomancinEast

But it takes more than books to make a legend. He also had two stints as a correspondent for Rolling Stone – once in London and once in L.A. and served as contributing editor for the iconic magazine for 20 years. His stories are legendary and enchanting. On that first day I heard about his time as chief “kook booker” for The Steve Allen Show, where he met Frank Zappa for the first time. About thirty minutes into the conversation I handed Jerry my copy of Bangkok Babylon. Rather than have him sign in the standard place I asked him if he would read a passage on page 16, which had meant so much to me since I first read it almost 10 years ago. He did. And as he did he chuckled, signed the page, still smiling and said, “It’s true. It’s good advice.” The passage reads:

When in Bangkok, do what your mama told you never to do. Talk to a stranger.

Bangkok Babylon

I next saw Jerry Hopkins one week later. It was the evening of Bangkok Night of Noir, Sunday January 5th, 2014. I was at a table that included Collin Piprell, author of Kicking Dogs among many others and a longtime acquaintance of Jerry’s. There was an open chair next to me. Jerry sat down and ordered some food and drink. One of the featured authors for the evening saw Jerry and came over to shake his hand and tell him how pleased he was to see him at the event. “Kevin told me about it last week.” said the man whose books have sold in the millions. I got a kick out of Jerry’s reply on a couple of levels. One, I was glad Jerry remembered my name from a week ago. Two, I couldn’t remember telling him about Night of Noir, although I am sure I did. Jerry may need a hearing aid but his memory, short term and long term, is just fine. If you read Bangkok Babylon, which is about the real-life exploits of Bangkok’s Legendary expatriates, you will learn that Jerry Hopkins likes to have a good time. So I wasn’t completely surprised when at a little after 9:00 p.m. for a scheduled 7:30 p.m. start, Jerry stood up. “You leaving, Jerry?” I asked. “Yea. I hate Filipina cover bands.” And just like that the person who has been described as a real life Forrest Gump, for being in the right place at the right time, went up the tunnel leading to Sukhumvit Road. Unlike the Forrest in the movie, Jerry didn’t seem a little tired and I didn’t think he was going home, now.

Thailand Confidential by Jerry Hopkins

After those two occasions at CheckInn99, I wrote Will Yaryan telling him I’d very much like to interview Jerry and suggested that the three of us get together for a lunch meeting. I wanted Will to come along because I thought it would be fun and suggested a restaurant where we could meet.. Will wrote back: “Jerry says, the food there is no good.” Jerry has appeared on Anthony Bourdain’s popular cooking and travel shows, not once but twice. The first time he was responsible for the footage that shows Tony on the second floor of Nana Plaza as the show’s credits roll. The second time Tony and Jerry pull up to a restaurant in a longboat  – again Jerry’s idea. In addition Jerry has written books titled: Strange Foods and Extreme Cuisine. On his web site http://www.jerryhopkins.com there is a picture of him eating a deep fried baby frog. I figured he was entitled to call the dining shots. We settled on Hemingway’s Bangkok on Sukhumvit 14, outdoors by the fountain, along with a date and time.

HEMINGWAY'S

Jerry and Will arrived on time. Jerry looking fit in his trademark Hawaiian shirt, well groomed beard, large spectacles and sparking blue eyes. For a man of 78 years, with four wives, two grown children, triple bypass heart surgery, a heart attack and pacemaker in his bio, he looked damn good.

Jerry Hopkins on the left, Will Yaryan, long time friend and former West Coast PR Man for Atlantic Records

Jerry Hopkins with Will Yaryan, a long time friend and former West Coast PR Man for Atlantic Records

All my previous interviews had been via email, so I was a bit of a fish out of water in the company of a career journalist and distinguished author, even if he has described himself as a whore monger and bottom feeder at times. Jerry always maintains a comfortable, if not joyful manner and soon apologized for leaving early on the Night of Noir, explaining that a friend of his had opened a bar nearby and reiterated his feelings for Pinay singers.  Jerry Hopkins likes all kinds of music but not all music.  My temptation, when in the company of a rock n’ roll legend was to talk about sex, drugs and rock n’ roll and I told Jerry so. But I thought I’d be clever, so I asked Jerry, since you are the journalist, what would you talk about with Jerry Hopkins if you were interviewing Jerry? “Sex, drugs, and rock n’ roll, of course.” Jerry said, somewhat incredulously. Now I was feeling better.

JerryKevin

Curiosity may have killed the cat but it has helped Jerry Hopkins see the world. There is a quote attributed to Yogi Berra that goes, “When you see a fork in the road, take it!” Jerry struck me as the kind of guy that would take that fork, every time. In addition, when he comes to the same fork a second time, he’ll go left if he’d previously gone right. Jerry Hopkins would be a fascinating person even without his fascination for transsexuals or lady boys as they are known in Thailand. I was curious where and when that fascination began. As Jerry tells it, he was in Hawaii around 1989 when he saw what he described as a vision walking on the other side of the street. Jerry did what Jerry does, he crossed that street and made an introduction to a very “beautiful creature”. They went to a nearby bar. Jerry wanted to know her story, “Well, I was born a boy.”  Jerry then sits up straight to demonstrate how she thrust out her artificial but perfect breasts and told him, “And now, I’m a man!” That relationship remained friends only. But that meeting led to the introduction of another transsexual, Vannessa whom Jerry unashamedly admits to falling in love with and sharing his bed with during those Hawaii years. And oh, by the way, she was a hooker to boot, working the Chinatown beat on the island of Oahu. Jerry told a story about his live-in lover hitch-hiking home and arriving with a large box of donuts in one hand, received from a grateful bakery truck driver as a tip for services rendered and a pair of high heels in the other. It was 6:00 a.m. and Jerry was sipping his morning coffee. If you were looking for Ward and June Cleaver, you’re in the wrong neighborhood or perhaps the wrong galaxy. The whole time Jerry speaks he has a gleam in his blue eyes.

Jerry Hopkins Hemingway's Bangkok Jerry Hopkins Image Jerry Hopkins Thailand Jerry Hopkins Thailand Footprint

Jerry Hopkins at Hemingway’s Bangkok, Thailand

There was pretty much no subject Jerry was unwilling to get into, except, perhaps wife talk, but I didn’t really press him on that subject since there was so much else to talk about.  Even his bad experiences, if you can call them that, are memorable. The originally authorized biography to be done of Raquel Welch doesn’t get done when a terse letter arrives from an attorney representing the sex symbol. The biography is never made but you cannot take away all the memories Jerry has of being in Rio de Janeiro with Raquel and being treated like royalty. Another time, Jerry is hit while walking in the crosswalk in those Hawaii years. His injuries are serious. But it is during his convalescence that he decides when he can ambulate again he will go to divorce court, as they had already been to bankruptcy court and start the next chapter in his life, which leads to Bangkok, Thailand.

“Jerry Hopkins’, NO ONE HERE GETS OUT ALIVE sets the standards for rock biographies and Jerry’s just as good in person.” Timothy Hallinan, author of Little Elvises

LittleElvises

Hopkins rock biography, NO ONE HERE GETS OUT ALIVE about the iconic Doors lead singer, Jim Morrison has been translated into at least 16 languages. It was the first rock biography that made it to #1 on the New York Times Best Sellers List. It made the list again when the Oliver Stone movie, The Doors was released in 1991. Those facts are pretty well established. I found it more interesting to learn from Jerry that the first topless bar he ever went to was with The Doors lead man in Los Angeles. Hopkins told me Morrison was nothing like the person the press portrayed him to be. “Jim had read more books than any rock star I had ever met.”  It was Morrison who was the fan of Elvis Presley, more than Jerry and encouraged him to write the biography. One reason the first Elvis biography has a dedication to Jim Morrison, who never lived long enough to see it published. Dead of a heroin overdose in Paris at age twenty-seven.

The Biography of Jim Morrison by Jerry Hopkins

When you get three hours of Jerry’s time, which is what I got at Hemingway’s restaurant in Bangkok, it’s not a matter of getting enough material suitable for print, it’s a question of what the hell am I going to leave out? Trust me, I am leaving out plenty and it is not your typical cutting room floor stuff. It would make most people’s highlight reel. The Groucho meet Lenny story has been written before, when Jerry introduces the famous Marx brother to Lenny Bruce. But perhaps lessor known is Jerry being in the audience when Harpo, the Marx brother who never spoke, grabs a microphone on stage and says to the crowd, “As I was saying …”. What was the response? I ask Jerry. “The place just erupted.” Among the biographies that get discussed but not written by Jerry, in addition to the one of Raquel Welch, is one for the famous rock concert promoter Bill Graham, whom Jerry spoke with about the possibility more than once. Bill died many years later in a 1991 helicopter crash.

In the course of the interview I notice that Jerry Hopkins, the legend, is wearing the same pair of shoes he wore the first two times I saw him at CheckInn99. They are, Blue Suede Shoes. As in the the rock n’ roll standard written by Carl Perkins and recorded by Elvis Presley, among many other rock legends. Jerry Hopkins biographies of Elvis Presley are so closely linked to the musician that in 2007 Jerry was flown in by the Presley estate to participate in Elvis activities at Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee and Honolulu in February, 2013. The shoes Jerry is wearing cannot be a coincidence. How many people do you know who wear blue suede shoes? I mention them to Jerry about two hours into our lunch. “I’ve got the title for this interview, already” I say, pointing under the table, “A Conversation with the Man in The Blue Suede Shoes.” Jerry smiles for the 100th or so time that day and says, “You’re the first one to notice in quite awhile. I like it.”

ElvisABiographyHopkins

If you look up, SEX, DRUGS, and ROCK N ROLL in your Urban Dictionary you’ll read the term is a nickname for the lifestyle of rock stars. You’ll also see that of the three rock examples used, Elvis Presley is #1: Died of a drug overdose. I learned from Jerry Hopkins that Jim Morrison’s drug of choice was alcohol. Jim telling Jerry once, “It’s suicide, one drink at a time.” As for Jerry’s own lifestyle, it has been comfortable. When I alluded to his 2013 interview, WHEN YOU’RE STRANGE in Post Magazine and asked him how much money he did put up his nose over the years, Jerry peered at me over his glasses and said, “Not that much.”

You cannot leave out the time Jerry speaks of a Billy Preston concert to be held on Sunset Boulevard at a club that escapes me at the moment, but don’t worry, Jerry will remember. The concert was to be filmed. To get Billy’s true fans and to create the proper authenticity it was decided to bus in some of the residents of nearby Watts, California. The date was August 3, 1966, just a little over one year after the famous Watts riots, which occurred in the summer of 1965. On the way to the concert Jerry hears, on his car radio, that Lenny Bruce has died. He takes that fork in the road again to Lenny’s house. When he arrives, Lenny is in the bathroom, dead, naked and the police are letting people have a look see, two at a time. The crowd in Lenny’s Hollywood Blvd. home begins to grow. Jerry tells me at that moment he thinks, “It’s time to go to Billy’s concert.” And he went.

JerryKevin2

What is Jerry Hopkins working on now, you may be wondering? He is researching a book in which he will profile 25 kathoey (lady boy) sex workers. That should bring a whole new context to the Joe Friday line, “Just the facts, ma’am.”

Elvis+Presley+-+The+Final+Years+-+

Jerry Hopkins also penned a third biography of the King called, Elvis in Hawaii

I’m no psychologist but it seems to me the mentally healthy way to go through life’s journey, is thinking the Hopkins way. Be curious. Ask questions. Cross the road if you see something you’ve never seen before. Stop and see the two-headed cow, if someone takes the time to advertise one. You never know what else you might see for one quarter more? Stand in front of the Fun Zone mirror and enjoy the distortions. Jerry will be careful in his next life, maybe. Having a good time is still important to Jerry Hopkins. The Thailand resident now splits his time between the craziness of Bangkok and the quiet of his family home near the Cambodian border in Surin with his wife, fruit trees, ponds, fish, frogs and many guests. Getting the facts right is also important to Jerry. As it is to every good journalist. Toward the end of my questioning, listening and laughing session, I reported back to Jerry, incorrectly, that I was glad he was having just as good a time, now, as any other time in his life. Jerry looked at me as if I was deaf in one ear, “I said, better!”

That he did. That he did. Who would want to be disagreeable with a gracious legend, anyway?

jerrywithelephant

Jerry Hopkins in Thailand

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This post also ran at Chiang Mai City News on March 6th, 2014 and may be seen there by clicking the banner, above

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KromColor

When we left off the interview with Cambodia’s man in black, Christopher Minko we had gotten into music, social issues and disability sports, particularly his involvement with the Cambodian National Women’s Wheelchair Basketball Team. They are more connected than one would have thought at first. I also left off with a YouTube video of Christopher Minko singing Mango Madness, Monsoon Sadness. In case you missed Part I it is easy to find a number of ways, including using the search box or clicking, Footprints – Latest Posts. For Part II we’ll start off with a Krom video which features the sultry voice of Sophea Chamroeun. You can play it as you read the rest of this interview.

 KC: I’ve just re-read an excellent article about Krom, written by Christopher G. Moore, which he wrote late last year and has been published in two periodicals already called, PAINT IT BLACK. Most recently published in The Advisor and found at:  http://theadvisorcambodia.com/2014/01/paint-black/ . As I’ve stated before I like Christopher’s writing on a number of levels, one of which is he helps me understand and bring attention to subjects that I intuitively know and agree with, but may not have articulated in my mind nearly as well as he does on paper or screen. Here is a quote from that article written by Moore which, as you might be able to tell, greatly influenced my introduction of this interview in Part I:
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“Krom is such a scream from a wounded soul. The lyrics consolidate into a dark pitch blasting our sensibilities in an echo chamber of pain. There is an existential scream and nothing prepares us for it in our cozy world of shopping malls, social media, offices, clubs and homes.” Christopher G. Moore
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I am a fan of noir fiction. I can handle it because, for the most part, I know it is fiction. But the Krom lyrics are not fiction. I know that – you know that. I have enjoyed the songs of Krom many times, even though they made me uncomfortable at times, as I alluded to in Part I. But it is precisely the un-comfortableness that Krom evokes, in some, that makes your message all the more important. Your songs are the antithesis of Pop songs because what you write about, the horrors of child sexual exploitation and human and social injustices are not popular subjects, but they need to be. The worst things being sold in South East Asia are not packets of Chiclets chewing gum by eight year old boys and girls. Why is it important for you to write about and sing about these social injustices? What good has come from your work (musically and in the area of disability awareness) and what more needs to be done – and I speak of the social injustices which you put your time and effort into, particularly those that are occurring in Cambodia, Thailand and the region? 
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CGM&Minko

 Christopher Minko fields a question at the launch of Phnom Penh Noir – Christopher G. Moore is to Minko’s right

CM: Man – you throw them at me hey –  the hardest question comes last – onto it –OK: Firstly –Fact:  Human slavery (labor, sex and other) is at its highest point ever in the history of humanity – that’s a fucking tragedy – some of this I attribute to the horror of unbridled capitalism, particually since the collapse of communism, whereby we now have a world dominated by greed and selfishness, an ever widening gap between the rich and the poor ( which allow even greater exploitation of the poor and) power elites addicted to the worst traits of ego driven madness found in humanity

The sex industry – Nearly every one side steps the issue, they smile about it, joke about it, participate in it and waltz around it– but the blunt truth is this is an industry built on the sale of human flesh as an object of sexuality with exceptionally high profit margins and a high turnover of deaths as the women spiral quickly into a world of dependency on drugs and alcohol to numb the sale of their bodies over and over to aging old men on a daily basis  – let me give you a blatant example using Thailand and CNN – CNN run their well meant ( but naïve) Anti Human slavery campaign – It focuses on sensationalism usually through a Brothel Bust which involves a celebrity and the bust action is filmed – despite all the good intentions CNN fail to point the finger where it needs to be pointed – at the ruling elites of the South east Asian nations that have allowed the industry of sex trading to proliferate and flourish as cold hard profit is at the end of the equation..–Why doesn’t CNN point the finger as it should? – Easy – In the case of Thailand, Thai International Airways spend millions per annum on advertising on CNN so CNN don’t want to upset Thai International along with the Thai ruling elite who own Thai International……….and so it goes………….It’s all interconnected this world wide billion dollar industry of sex trafficking – airlines, hotel chains, tourism PR and so on – all complicit in what can only be described as a major international industry (of human trafficking)reaping huge profits for an elite few despite the human misery imposed on countless women who are nothing more than sex slaves in the final analysis  and usually subservient to a nasty pimp controlling them through a volatile mixture of drugs, alcohol and violence. I am not saying here that hotel chains etc are directly implicated in the sex trade- they are indirect beneficiaries ( accommodation, food etc) – (and may I add – those hotels in the “right locations “know exactly what their clients are up to – no matter how many stars they have….)…However – the real tragedy reveals itself when one sees how mainstream and integrated into society prostitution has become in many SEA nations over the past 5 decades ( I have watched the many many changes in Bangkok since the 1st time I arrived there in 1972) – an industry that flourished during the Vietnam war and was recognized by the ruling masters as a viable ( and very profitable) commercial enterprise where the commercial benefits of a foreign clientele needing to purchase sex was recognized and a subsequent hospitality industry purposefully built around catering for the “sex Tourist” was allowed and supported at the highest of levels. In fact it is publicly recognized that this now mainstream integrated profession provides a significant % of the Cambodian and Thai GDP (sadly Cambodia is following Thailand’s footsteps into the lucrative sex trade industry) – again – no matter how mainstream ( or accepted) this trade has become –One can never ever deny or justify, that behind the scenes, it remains a brutal world of young women and girls forced by poverty and entrapped, enslaved or even kidnapped into a criminally led machine that constantly needs to be fed with new young stock to satisfy the ever growing international appetite for commercial sexual services. This is why I change the text in the final words of the lyrics to Krom song “Down Sukumvit Road/ Where many a body is sold” from using “I’m walking down Sukumvit Road” (singular) to We are all walking down Sukumvit Road (plural) – as truth is we are all walking down these roads as we all allow this horrendous industry of sexual enslavement to exist .and even to, dare I say,…flourish…………as a blind eye continues to be turned….and encouraged

After all, Let’s not bullshit – anyone can take a walk down Sukumvit road and buy a woman ( or man or ladyboy – whatever suits you fancy) – yet the Thai regimes continue to deny that this industry even exists (“Soi Cowboy is just an illusion – remember we believe in ghosts”……….they say….). As I sing in Tango Traffic Tango – these are nations that quite willingly sell their daughters into the sex industry. As nations they are not yet mature enough to confront the tragedy that they impose on their own people – that requires real courage – and real change – unlike the ego and profit driven political charade currently taking place in the streets of Bangkok…

So many observe the Noir, …how many live the Noir I ask ?  – How many can truly acknowledge the brutal reality that 98 % of these women do not want to participate on this trade but have no other choice due to poverty and very often family pressure – often sold by their very own parents as part of the so called “poverty alleviation “process (as many foolishly argue). Again, just take a walk down Sukumvit and look at the numerous  deluded old white boys in their 60’s on a Viagra overdose drinking the morning beer with a scraggy 16 year old girl hanging on their wrinkled arms  – It says it all in its obvious brutality and I want these deluded old fools to hear these Kromsongs in order to make these people feel uncomfortable as uncomfortable they should feel.

And in its own way I can’t deny a morbid philosophical fascination with what I find is the ultimate exercise in nihilism-a nihilistic exercise that involves that most sacred of human entities we call “love”, an existentialist drama that plays itself out every day in thousand of bars, brothels and hotels through SE Asia (and the rest of the world one could say.) – here we find lonely pathetic ancient men looking to purchase romantic love in much younger Asian women yet this love is an unattainable objective as the very women they court are no longer capable of love as the brutality of the process of endlessly selling one’s body has destroyed that women’s ability to genuinely love – a bitter irony if I have ever seen one yet thousands of misguided fools, each year embark, on this fruitless and tragic journey.

Blunt truth is the Krom songs need to be sung and need to be heard and there will be more krom songs that touch on these uncomfortable themes however the reality behind the current tragedy of the sex slavery industry is that these women are not only rendered incapable of love ( ….those cold Sukumvit eyes…), their lives are destroyed including often a very early death

The more we speak out about these injustices the better – in a world that’s gone stark raving mad

What good comes from the work ? / I have devoted a lifetime to the causes of social justice and will continue to do so now focusing on Krom as the main vehicle for this along with maintaining the disability work – Bottom-line is the worlds a shithole in so many ways – you can either try to do some good and effect positive change or you can selfishly turn your back on it all – I just try to do my best with my music and with my disability work and  hopefully achieve some good things in a rather complex world acknowledging life’s horrors and beauties are so intermingled as to be beyond all understanding

In finishing I give you the best example of all that negates many of the bullshit arguments supporting prostitution and the sex trade through a myriad of questionable excuses – Look at Krom and Sophea and Sopheak, the Krom vocalists, who are a brilliant example of what can happen when a 12 year old girl is given educational opportunity rather than being steered down the path towards commercial sexual exploitation – Both Sophea and Sopheak grew up in one of Phnom Penhs most notorious slum / drug prostitution quarters – the legendary White Building-  Yet they managed to avoid the horrors that surrounded them through becoming pupils of the renowned Cambodian Living Arts program and now at the ages of 22 and 23 they are fast becoming internationally recognized musical stars – what I am saying here is that every 12 year old girl deserves a chance of an education and nearly always –chances are they will go onto to lead productive lives as contributing members of their respective communities  – after all – Look what Sophea and Sopheak have achieved… and imagine if all 12 year old girls were given the same educational opportunity……..

BasketballMinko

Anya Irmingard Minko. Born in Australia. Raised in Phnom Penh since age two. A third example of what educational opportunity can do.

KC: Thank-you, Christopher Minko for your blunt truth in this most interesting and for me most memorable two-part interview. Keep doing what you’re doing, mate. I hope to see you on a basketball court, at a recording studio, or at a live Krom gig soon. 

Krom albums: Neon Dark / Songs from the Noir are available via ITUNES / CD Baby / AMAZON / SPOTIFY

Krom on You Tube: http://www.youtube.com/user/themekongsessions/videos

Krom on Face book: https://www.facebook.com/KromSong

@Kromsong on Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/kromsong

Official website: http://www.themekongsessions.com/

CityLife

This interview is also posted at Chiang Mai City News where you can find many Thailand Footprint Blog Posts

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