Godzilla is ready for summer in Tokyo. Photo by Brett Homenick.
Today, I stopped by the Godzilla Store Tokyo and was quite amused by the new displays. Fortunately, I had my camera with me, so I'm able to share them with you. Enjoy!
In the scene I’m in, the ambassadors of the three countries and their deputies are in a big conference room engaged in a lively discussion about whether to unleash the first nuclear weapons against a “hostile” since the United States bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Their deputies, including me, are looking on stone-faced with concern. It’s not a great scene for those playing the deputies to show off their acting abilities.
But I did a great job of following the director’s instruction to look worried. A true artiste, I told myself.
By the way, the actor playing the Soviet ambassador looks like a scraggly Lenin. Talk about type-casting. If memory serves me, he wasn’t Russian, either.
I've been lucky enough to be a journalist at some terrific news organizations, including the Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Pacific Stars & Stripes in Tokyo, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, the Portland Oregonian, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the Houston Chronicle, and the Omaha World-Herald.
I've also been a journalism professor in the United States, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Moldova. Two of my teaching positions were endowed chairs, and another was a Fulbright professorship.
I wrote about the Ukraine war in 2014 for USA Today, which asked me to report from there because of my four years as a journalist, professor and media consultant in the country. I've done freelance writing and editing in two dozen countries in Europe, Asia and the former Soviet Union.
I've also been a media consultant in Japan, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, Bosnia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. And I judged the multimedia category of the Hong Kong-based Society of Publishers in Asia's Annual Journalism Excellence Awards competition.
For almost two decades I have been helping journalists in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union who have been under duress because of their work. A new wrinkle in my journalist-advocacy work is helping open anti-fake-news centers in Romania and Moldova.I hope to get more details about Hal's life from his daughter. When I have more to share, I'll post an update. Thank you very much for your friendship, Hal. RIP.
My father was born on January 10, 1945, in Panama City, Florida. However, he grew up mostly on Offutt Air Force Base in Bellevue, Nebraska, and stories from classmates about East Asia sparked his interest in the region; many had spent time in Japan with military parents on assignment there.
Although my father loved adventure and learning about the world, he was most passionate about journalism, freedom of the press, and teaching aspiring journalists the nuts-and-bolts of writing and editing, as well as journalism ethics. He also loved helping others: he once fund-raised to pay for an operation to save the eyesight of a journalist that was attacked and he also had a major daily donate a printing press to a paper in Ukraine. And he started a journalism scholarship at the University of Nebraska in honor of a former mentor.