FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “young men”

Showing 1 - 5 of 5

Image-Content

LIFE

What 2020 has already brought

Life, John Clewley, Published on 07/01/2020

» Likay in Klong Toey seemed like a good way to kick off the New Year. I spotted a very small stage while I was down at the market earlier last week. It was in the old part of the market, which is about to be upgraded. I asked around and was told that the likay troupe Mere Da Tam was performing last Saturday, in the early evening.

Image-Content

LIFE

'Deaf' Western beggars deserve a right earful

B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 10/12/2017

» There has been a commotion this past week in the media over the appearance of two attractive young Westerners begging for money at an intersection in Klong Toey in Bangkok. Just four days ago, the Bangkok Post published a photograph of one of them, a woman, clutching a bunch of Thai flags and trying to flog them off car window to car window. There was a man as well.

Image-Content

LIFE

Come on Baby, Light My Fire

B Magazine, Published on 30/07/2017

» After 24 years in Bangkok there's no hoodwinking Jerry Hopkins, pioneering Rolling Stone reporter and author of No One Here Gets Out Alive, the cult biography of The Doors' self-styled shaman-poet Jim Morrison.

Image-Content

LIFE

Melancholic, dissonant memories

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 23/10/2015

» Jakrawal Nilthamrong's Vanishing Point is a story of loss, death, alternative destinies and reminiscence of sadness. It floats a few inches above the ground, it connects, disconnects and reconnects lives and fates, sometimes in a dissonant manner, and even though you may scratch your head wondering what exactly is going on, the film's semi-experimental style and narrative rupture has a strange intoxication.

Image-Content

LIFE

Documenting the eye of the storm

Life, Achara Ashayagachat, Published on 21/01/2015

» When 46-year-old Nikolaus Freiherr von Nostitz, better known as Nick, sent emails to his contacts on Dec 20 seeking financial help, some thought it was a scam. Soliciting donations is uncharacteristic of the outspoken but humble Nostitz. For years, people could see that the German was a modest guy who roamed around Bangkok on his decade-old Kawasaki GTO motorcycle to cover the turbulent transformation of Thai politics, from both sides (or more) of the conflict.