Jumbos from the sun
Nov. 27th, 2007 12:05 am
Tyler Brûlé has a column in the International Herald Tribune which he mostly uses to promote Monocle, his stylish, slightly smug business magazine. This week his slot sees perhaps the most shameless piece of advertorial yet. Headlined Haneda Airport leads top 50 travel poll, the article is nothing more than a plug for the next edition of Monocle, which runs "a year-end, top 50 list focusing on the best in travel". You'd think that a quality newspaper like the IHT would know that a "poll" is an inquiry into public opinion conducted by interviewing a random sample of people. Read Tyler's piece, though, and you'll find that "poll" here has lost all its democratic implications and become something imperial. The carefully-weighted sample group for this "poll" is just two people: Tyler and his Tokyo assistant Fiona.
What Tyler and Fiona have chosen as "the ultimate in flying" is equally imperial. "We nominated the Japanese government's pair of 747-400s - one for the prime minister and one for the emperor," Tyler tells us. "While not quite a flying palace, the emperor's 747 comes with a matching fleet of support vehicles that all feature the same signature black and gold stripes that run elegantly down the fuselage of the aircraft. The inside is decorated in subtle caramel and camel tones that reference ancient patterns used by the royal family." This isn't bling stuff, though. "There's also not a gold tap or gold seatbelt in sight. From nose to tail, the identical aircraft are exercises in restraint and good taste."
Now, expensive private aircraft have long been part of Tyler's dreamworld, which is to say his world plan. Wallpaper, Monocle's loungecore ancestor, encouraged its readers to imagine they all owned a Falcon 900B private jet with interior design by Marc Newson and were just about to fly off to Belgrade for a weekend of simply divine decadence in Marshall Tito's refurbished brutalist Interior Ministry, now a luxury hotel.
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But the stakes have now been upped: if you aren't an emperor, flying into Tallinn or Arlanda in twin 747s (one for you, one for staff, presumably Fiona) bearing the insignia of your chrysanthemum throne and, on the tail, the sun (your great, great, great... great granny), you're nobody, friend. If a fatal crash for your enormous plane wouldn't mean, quite literally, the end of an era (in this case the Heisei era defined by the lifespan of Japan's Emperor Akihito), well, forget it. You're a loser. You probably read Star magazine.

I must say, the sheer cheek of this recommendation intrigued me (as Tyler and Fiona knew it would) and made me want to see pictures of the interior of the imperial planes. They were indeed understated. The Japanese page providing those glimpses tells us that the planes are kitted out with conference tables and up to 350 seats for diplomatic staff if it's the PM who's traveling, but sofas for the Emperor. If practical power does, symbolic power is. The "job" of the Emperor is simply to be.
So what does the Emperor -- this creature whose job is simply to be -- actually do on his foreign visits, once his twin sun jumbos have touched down? Well, on a visit to Sweden this year Akihito made a visit to the Bergius Botanic Garden in Stockholm, had lunch with the Swedish Prime Minister at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, visited the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences then saw the exhibition “From Linnaeus to DNA” at the Swedish Museum of Natural History. The next day he attended the 300th birthday commemoration of Carl Linnaeus at Uppsala University, met with Japanese and Swedish students and researchers, then banqueted at Uppsala Castle.

Akihito, a keen biologist and scientist, is quite an expert on Linnaeus. When a Swedish delegation to Japan showed him a rare 1735 copy of "Systema Naturae" -- the book of Linnaeus' classifications of animals, plants and minerals -- the emperor "studied the copy with great interest and was especially interested in observing the notes and changes Linnaeus had made in the margins".
Reading this, it's hard not to think of Akihito's father, the Emperor Hirohito. Both emperors studied marine biology and published scientific papers (Hirohito published accounts of jellyfish previously unknown to science, his son is an ichthyologist known for his research into the taxonomy of gobies).
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In Aleksandr Sokurov's haunting 2005 film "The Sun" (the third part in his Men of Power tetralogy) the Shōwa Emperor is portrayed as a stammering, modest, sheltered man. Although it means life or death to his fanatically faithful lieutenants, the Emperor's announcement that he is not, after all, a god seems to matter little to Hirohito. Sokurov portrays him -- with more than a tip of the top hat to Dostoyevsky's "idiot", Prince Myshkin -- as, finally, a sympathetic character.
"A small, frail man with a high-pitched voice," Sokurov said in an interview, "an academic working on botany and hydrobiology, [Hirohito] was entirely unsuited to absolute tyranny, both physically and spiritually. He even turned his palace into a scientific laboratory - this wasn't the bunker of a bloody god of war. But that was the role that Hirohito had to play, that was the mask that he had to put on, and rejecting it was one of the main themes of the work that lay ahead... The Emperor gave the world a lesson for which no students could be found. The scale of the example that he set wasn't noticed in Europe or in the Soviet Union. Our creative group is drawing attention to the fact that good can be both strong and intelligent."

Personally, I find the idea of a shy, unworldly botanist -- Prince Myshkin with a microscope -- flying around in his own personal 747 rather an intriguing one. In our oddly hierarchical, endlessly greedy, nominally "democratic" society it may well be that everyone aspires, ultimately, to be some kind of consumer-emperor (or, at the very least, an airport queen). That's certainly the impression you get reading our magazines and their top-down "polls". Real emperors, though, dream of nothing more than being marine biologists, tweaking with tweezers at a curved, preserved guppy spine or leafing through Linnaeus. Imperial he may be, but I suspect Akihito is, in real life, somewhat less imperious than Tyler Brûlé.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 08:05 pm (UTC)I nearly applied for a job at Monocle, but then I found out it actually had nothing to do with monocles and was so dissapointed I gave up.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 08:18 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 07:36 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 08:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 08:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 08:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 09:00 pm (UTC)signorphibes
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 09:36 pm (UTC)Yes. Isn't it wonderful? It's stealth camp.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 09:07 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 09:35 pm (UTC)It only started playing in my mind when I saw this entry, and I didn't even read any of it!
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 08:06 am (UTC)Anyway, I have no idea what this has to do with the entry. Were you trying to make some parallel with Tyler Brule, or did you just not care whether it came across as kind of random?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 05:09 pm (UTC)It's fun imagining that you are the one singing the song!
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 05:25 pm (UTC)I still say that if you wear Crocs, you look like a dumbass. EVEN IF the Crocs have magical flying powers.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 09:38 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 09:47 pm (UTC)Would be nice to have a couple greenhouses, though.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-26 10:33 pm (UTC)Since Tyler's assistant Fiona is mentioned in this piece, here"s (http://monocle.com/sections/design/Web-Articles/Tokyo-Designers-Week/) her video report on the recent Tokyo design week events. You get a glimpse, in that, of something even more extravagant than the emperor's jumbo: the city of Tokyo itself, buying and selling things, using vast amounts of electricity, working and playing, inventing new stuff, wasting and saving, living and dying.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 02:40 am (UTC)Some form of civilizational ferment seems to be crucial to dandyism; of course that can take many forms. Dandies are aspirational and middle class for the most part, taking the old conventions of the upper echelons and turning them on their head in a variety of ways.They engage in both celebration and satire, and are both hero and pariah.
Right now the times are ripe for them, because they seem to thrive in settings when things have reached their peak, and have almost exhausted themselves. As I said in the book, bohemians often set down the broad, bold strokes, and the dandies tend to limn the delicate calligraphy in the spaces that remain. I find myself both attracted and repulsed by that milieu--it is simultaneously brash and utterly bloodless, anxious and smug.
I must admit that while a few things caught my eye (like the writhing chandelier), that Monocle piece on Tokyo leaves me somewhat cold. It's a bit too self-satisfied and arid for me to find any purchase. Perhaps it is not the thing itself but how it is being presented.
I prefer a garden party to a red carpet event; to me, they feel more civilized, glamorous and luxurious than the hives of relentless expediency that media/art/design shindigs in cities have now become. They tend to be a clustering of industry types talking to other industry types trying to bed aspiring industry types. Hardly any amateurs--all "pros". I much prefer gatherings where there are sure to be hobbyists--that's where the diaspora, and synthesis lies. Those who fancy themselves in the center of things in time are revealed to have been practicing merely another form of provincialism.
(Alcibiades always struck me as a proto-dandy, of sorts.)
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 03:04 am (UTC)godawful jet planes
Date: 2007-11-27 03:01 am (UTC)Re: godawful jet planes
Date: 2007-11-27 03:05 am (UTC)Of course, this might be the most elegant mode of flight ever devised:
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 01:40 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 05:34 am (UTC)(dramatic license applied)
meh.
Date: 2007-11-27 05:53 am (UTC)it would be just as easy to point towards your flimsy wired posts as promotions for this blog, no? i adore your hypocrisy, though, it's kinda cute.
this one gets a "meh" AND a "pfft".
Re: meh.
Date: 2007-11-27 07:34 am (UTC)Come, come! Just the list appears, not the whole content of their Top Travel feature. There are no pictures, for instance. Reading about the imperial 747s, I immediately wanted to see pictures of the interior Tyler describes. Online there isn't really much; you have to buy the mag. Which costs money, unlike Click Opera.
Re: meh.
Date: 2007-11-27 12:03 pm (UTC)no need to buy, just make the effort to go look at it.
Re: meh.
Date: 2007-11-28 04:57 am (UTC)Oh, and surely a minion would gladly fork over a Monocle subscription -- it worked when you advertised on Click Opera your need for a flickr pro account, deshoooo?
Re: meh.
Date: 2007-11-28 12:21 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 10:31 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 11:18 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 11:33 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 11:45 am (UTC)World War II was responsible for the deaths of 99% of my Okinawan family and directly influenced hardships in my own life, so maybe my thoughts are heavily biased, but many people would be alive today if the Showa emperor had put down his microscope, picked up a pair of testicles and announced on the radio that he would not support the war. I suppose when you believe that you descended from a god, you protect your own life in exchange for millions of others.
Arrrrrgh.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 12:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 09:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 12:50 pm (UTC)I think what I am trying to say is that I don't think you disapprove of these things but that you feel that they should come about in a future, intelligent and aware social context.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-27 01:25 pm (UTC)j'espère que tyler se brûle
Date: 2007-11-27 03:13 pm (UTC)also, amusing to see this link (http://anonymouse.org/cgi-bin/anon-www_de.cgi/http://www.livejournal.com/"http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/11/27/europe/france.php?WT.mc_id=rssfrontpage") on the front page of monocle. i wonder where moushin and larami would come in its 'quality of life' index?
- mrs elva miller's warbling pants
Re: j'espère que tyler se brûle
Date: 2007-11-28 12:27 pm (UTC)It's funny, I just saw a video here at the Vienna Secession of Bush's visit, on Air Force One, to Berlin in 2002. The video concentrates on the minutiae of the security surrounding him, and specifically on the marine who walks behind him carrying the "nuclear football" with which he can order nuclear strikes while on the move. And I wondered at my capacity to see Akihito in his 747 as a benign marine biologist, yet Bush as some sort of crypto-fascist. I suppose it does have something to do with that little doomsday case. Akihito doesn't have one. (Also, Japan has never nuked anybody, but has been nuked by a man -- an American -- who also never faced any war crimes tribunal.)
Re: j'espère que tyler se brûle
Date: 2007-11-29 01:53 am (UTC)and yup, the evil football of death doesn't bring on the love much either
- secret modernist stealth corgi
even if...
Date: 2007-11-27 07:07 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-28 12:34 am (UTC)Funny to read this, just when Im finding out about all the stuff thats going around the king of Spain these days. You should check it out. Well I'd like to tell you the story in a few words but since im out of the country i dont know all of it and im also a bit drunk. But anyway anarchists where burning his picture in the streets, satyre magazines were making very dirty jokes about his family and all that, nobody seemed very grateful anymore about him helping out to build a democracy, and then a few weeks ago in a big conference he told Hugo Chavez to shut up. He just burst out in the middle of Hugo being a jerk and without any political correctness or democrat professionality just went "why the hell dont you shut your trap".
Anyway i dont know if this makes any sense in relation to this. It does to me but i cant really explain.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-28 05:04 am (UTC)"Nick, do you notice anything wonderful and epic-ly exciting on this link? Dig deeper still..." : http://www.vinylinternational.com/
love,
John Flesh
Stugar
Date: 2007-11-28 03:09 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-29 12:47 pm (UTC)