Sunday, June 21

Sunday was a day at the races. We visited the Seoul horse race track with Adam and Meg, a couple of C&L's friends who used to work with them, but got new jobs. None of us had ever been to horse races before, so it was a pretty exciting day. In one afternoon there are a dozen or so races. You are supposed to read a guide with a lot of complicated statistics, and from that determine which horse to bet on in each race. We sat in the foreigners' lounge, which was very nice considering it was free, and that we got to have simpler guides written in English.


Just before the race starts, the odds of several different types of bets on all the horses are displayed on a giant board next to the track. These indicate the payoff on your bet and fluctuate every couple of seconds. I have no idea what they are computing, but it is fun to try and figure out. Sometimes we would bet on a horse that seemed pretty good, but then its odds would suddenly jump to 1.0, which means you just get your money back with no gain if you win.


To bet, you fill out a card and turn it in for a ticket. You can put several bets on a card, so even though I won bets on all but one race, I still came out behind. The lowest bet you can make is 100 won, which is less than $0.10. We were betting $1.00-2.00 per race. All in all it was pretty cheap for a whole day of entertainment.

After the race we went to a Czech bar for some drinks. I have no idea how or why it exists in the middle of Seoul. We had dinner at a Korean restaurant that served sliced pork with a hot soup filled with big spine bones and vegetables.



Adam and Meg had to go home because they had work early, so Chris, Laura, and I went back to Beomgye. We went to the grocery store first, where I bought some stuff to take back home. One of my souvenirs is a big bottle of Soju, which I hope can go through customs.

Laura was tired, so she took the groceries home. Chris and I were going to go to a movie theater, but we changed our minds since he had been wanting to try a DVD-bang. This is where you get a private room with a big screen projector and surround sound, and you rent a movie from a selection in the lobby. When we went up the elevator, Chris said "I hope this isn't something for couples and they think we are gay or something." That was foreshadowing. When we went in it seemed to be just a normal, run-of-the-mill video store. They had action movies, comedies, and dramas from the U.S. and Korea alike. After some confusion with the clerk, we found the movie we were looking for: a Korean interpretation of The Good the Bad and the Ugly titled The Good the Bad and the Weird. The clerk showed us to the room, and when we got there Chris and I just started laughing hysterically. The only thing in the room besides the screen and sound system was a giant half-couch, half-bed thing with a vibrate feature. We still watched the movie, though. We had already paid! In the end, the couch was the only sketchy thing about the place. The movie was good, the place was clean, and the quality of the sound and video was great. The couch baffled us!

It was cool to talk movies with Chris again. I'm glad we went. Earlier in the evening, we ran into Jun who told us Matt and Josh were out drinking. After the movie we went and found them, had a round, and played some darts.

Saturday, June 20

Saturday got off to a late start due to self-induced illness. It was raining so we decided to do indoor stuff. The Seoul Museum of Cotemporary Art had a specal exhibit celebrating 100 years of Korean comics and cartoons. It was pretty cool to see all of the prewar and wartime era stuff. unfortunately though, all explanations were in Korean. The second part of the exhibit consisted of modern art inspired by comics, including sad, sad robots.


For dinner we had famous cold noodles. Then we sought the mysterious and elusive cat cafe. Chris had been wanting to show me, and see for the first time himself, a PC-bang (PC room). This is like an internet cafe where people can go play computer games or surf the web. Laura looked up directions to the cat cafe there and I got my ass kicked at Starcraft by a Korean kid (something that was actually on my list of things to do in Korea).



Once we knew how to find the cat cafe, we set out. A cat cafe is a place where you pay to have drinks while being surrounded by lazy cats who like to be petted. It was simultaneously intriguing and odd. Afterwards we saw a band playing in the park and ate waffles. There are waffle stands all over Seoul. Everyone pronounces it "wappuhls."



Chris and I wrapped up the night by watching Blood Simple while Laura went to bed. I felt sorry for the boyfriend. To everyone else it was a crime drama. To him it was a horror movie.