https://www.reddit.com/r/funny/comments/1awtfk/so_this_weather_girl_was_on_tv_somewhere_in_china/
Makes me wonder how many young women have “Public Toilet” tattooed in Chinese above their butt cracks.
As long as it doesn’t say “No passing zone” in Chinese.
A guy I went to school with joined the navy and got a rooster in a noose tattooed on his calf.
So he could brag that he had a cock that hung below his knees.
I read the question about why one would get his own name tattooed. I suppose it might make sense for somebody who is starting to get Alzheimer’s Disease. If the patient wandered off, he’d have a built-in ID tag. Otherwise, I can’t think of a reason.
I am I, Don Quixote!
When I was a kid, I received shorts from step family in Hong Kong. I’ll never forget the words written on them:
I wish I still had those.
Well, you couldn’t get it tattooed on someone else.
In theory, getting medical information on a forearm would be handy.
I have long thought that if I get HIV (or a similar blood born disease) that I would get a tattoo on my right arm, just near where they generally stick the needle as a public service to the people who - at the point they read it - are probably trying to save my life.
I know needle-stick injuries caused one of my teacher’s husbands to die really early on in the AIDS pandemic, before much was known about it.
This guy who speaks speaks in several Chinese dialects did it with Kung Pao Chicken
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WPXT43Rekaw
I find some of his and others videos funny, but overall I think they’re condescending and disrespectful, even if most of the people seem to enjoy it.
Doesn’t that kind of sum up this whole message board?
So I’ll try your link; bet I like it.
ETA: I didn’t like the “fisheye lens” technique, but loved that he’d walk around a Chinatown market with a huge tattoo that translates as “Kung Pao Chicken”.
A friend of mine has her name on her shoulder to help identify the remains. (Her explanation)
the SS agrees with you …
An elderly friend of mine has done that. Tattoos are exceedingly common in Hawai’i so no one finds it at all strange.
Until you find your (tattooed) diagnosis of lupus was mistaken. After all, “It’s never lupus.”
One of my prized possessions is a set of pink plastic chopsticks my Aunt brought me back from Japan. They say MADONNA: FEEL THE GOOD FEELING.
I’m a Madonna fan and can pretty much guarantee that song is not in her repertoire. But I have to give them credit for capturing the gist of her music.
Cracks me up.
It was probably deliberate, given some of the other slogans I’ve seen like this. The Japanese are clever with these jokes.