Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Asia's Most Sinful Cities
By Andrew Willis
The best cities in Asia for indulging the devil on your shoulder. Seven deadly sins -- seven lively Asian cities. We all stray off the path of righteousness from time to time.
So  if you're going to end up in hell due to a temptation to eat more than  your fair share of stinky tofu, take a detour to Taipei first. Or if  pride's your vice, take a turn toward Manila.
These Asian cities take a sin and turn it into a raison d'être.
Taipei sports 18 streets dedicated to nothing other than food.  Where you might usually expect a bus shelter, instead you'll find a  barbecue. Sidewalks become snack stalls. The pungent smell of stinky  tofu fills the air. 
Night markets in Taipei have become famous for their snack selections, or xiaochi, literally meaning "small eats."
The dishes may be little, but so are the prices, running around US$1-2 dollars. A fat gut never came so easily. 
Seoul's  Internet has been honed, sculpted, streamlined and sped up to such a  degree that no one really needs to move, at all, ever, except maybe when  the orc hordes descend in "World of Warcraft" and some rapid  double-clicking is required.
South Korea has been ranked the 15th  laziest country in the world (and the first in Asia) by The Daily  Beast. And there's every reason to assume they'll get even lazier. 
A  recently proposed government policy seeks to advance digital technology  in the capital, partly influenced by demand for online gaming and  streaming video, and will take Internet speeds to 1,000 Mbps by 2012. 
So  if some of the 39 million connected South Koreans wanted to emulate  their favourite national soccer heroes, they may as well just do it via  "FIFA Manager."
Much is made about the loveliness  of the Filipino female. But you wouldn't know it by talking to the  Filipino men -- they're too busy gazing lustfully into the mirror.
According  to a study from Synovate, Filipino men are the most narcissistic in  Asia. A whopping 48 percent consider themselves sexually attractive.
And  if the ladies reading this think the guys' encounters with the brow  tweazers are for your benefit, sorry -- nine out of 10 Filipino men  polled said they liked to look good for themselves, not anyone else.  
By  way of comparison, just 25 percent of men in Singapore considered  themselves sexually attractive, 17 percent in China and Taiwan and a  measly 12 percent of Hong Kong guys think the same.
When everyone else was tightening the  belts, Shenzhen carried on regardless, pumping out billions of dollars  worth of high-tech products. 
Shenzhen is one of the fastest growing cities in the world, with a provincial GDP of US$42 billion -- that's more than some countries such as Guatemala and Lebanon, and four times more than Iceland.
Meanwhile, China's millionaires keep millionairing -- it won't be long before there are 1 million U.S. dollar millionaires in the country, guided by Shenzhen's philosophy: if you can't make a million, make a billion.
Japan's sex industry is worth an estimated  ¥2.5 trillion (US$30 billion), second only to the country's automobile  industry. Is there any competition?  
According to "Pink Box" author Joan Sinclair, "Japan offers absolutely everything imaginable."
From gratuitous puke porn (and worse) to the barely titillating maid cafes,  Tokyo is like a dirty old man in a teenager's body. But one who  celebrates his lewd desires with the gusto of an exhibitionist poodle on  heat.
Head here to indulge your fetishes or simply to have yourself bathed by a pretty young thing in a uniform.
More Indians emigrated in 2010 than  any other nationality in the world except for Mexicans, according to the  World Bank's Migration and Remittances Factbook 2011.  
Some 11.4 million Indians headed elsewhere to find a better life, drawn by the lure of things done properly.
India, and its capital New Delhi, has the world's worst case of grass-is-greener syndrome.
Pugnacious, belligerent,  quarrelsome ... the North Korean capital is the moody adolescent of the  continent. But unlike most spotty delinquents who express their angry  insecurities by piercing body parts or coloring their hair, this one  sinks ships and shells islands.
North Korea's national sport is  Taekwondo. If there's a food shortage, the military get served first.  Propaganda films talk of the "invincible power" of the North Korean army  and posters in the capital state, "The way to peace is on the point of a  bayonet."
Its army comprises nearly 1 million troops, out of a nation of 24 million.
Still, the Dear Leader Kim Jong Il does claim to have made the world's best ever golf score  -- an astonishing 38 under par on a regulation 18-hole course including  five holes-in-one. And that on his first ever attempt, too.
Perhaps he's not so bad.
http://ph.travel.yahoo.com/inspirations/279-asias-most-sinful-cities 











