Changes Around Here

I’m trying to integrate this blog a bit more with my main portfolio site, which means some changes to the layout, and to the navigational structure. I’m still working out some of the kinks, and in the meantime, there may be a few hiccups.

On the plus side, I hope this’ll mean that I’m spending a bit more time over here. For the past year, I’ve been in a full-time magazine position that doesn’t allow me to freelance. I haven’t had any legal restrictions against maintaining a personal blog, but it’s been hard to find the time or motivation, especially since so much of what I blog about has always stemmed from research or travels connected to freelance projects.

I’m happy to report that my current contract will be ending July 4 (appropriate, nu?) and with it restrictions against freelancing. So I hope to be around here a bit more.

Hell and High Water in Jakarta

In the north, bloody protests left three (confirmed) dead.

In the south, torrential rains and flooding.

The former, I chose to avoid.  The later, I had no choice but to confront:

Sunda Kelapa

Sunda Kelapa
Jakarta’s 800-year-old port. Still a working cargo port, Sunda Kelapa only allows piring, traditional two-masted sailing ships.

Sunda Kelapa
Cargo is still loaded manually. Interestingly (though not terribly surprisingly) most of the workers in the port and on the ships are Bugis — the seafaring ethnic group that earned notoriety in the English language as “Bogeymen.”

Sunda Kelapa
I felt a bit bad actually. Sunda Kelapa is a big tourist attraction (by Jakarta standards, at least), but the people in the harbor have nothing to do with the tourist industry. They’re just putting in a very, very hard day’s work, and have to deal with dozens of cameras trained on them. Granted, this is not their biggest problem, by a long shot. But I still felt like I should hang back much more than I usually would, and it shows in the photos. I’m not too worried though — if I missed anything, I can always buy a post card.
Sunda Kelapa

Still Here

Still in California, Still Alive.
There’s just something about grad school that kills my urge to write.
Ocean Beach
But I’ll be traveling a lot in the upcoming months. A research trip to DC in November, a short family visit to Utah in early December, and then an indefinite relocation to Southeast Asia. So here’s hoping life gets a little more interesting.

How to extend a Visa in Jakarta (if you’re me)

Procrastinate. Everything is more fun at the last minute, right? Plus, you’ve got the election and the bomb and the odd spot of food poisoning to attend to.

Gather the requisite documents: a sponsorship letter, photocopies of your passport and visa. Proof you do actually plan to leave the country relatively soon can’t hurt either.

Attempt to locate a coherent set of instructions on the process. Fail.

Notice in passing something about needing to extend at least seven days before your visa expires. Wonder if you should be concerned you only have two days. Be concerned.

Finally locate the address of the immigration office closest to your house. Be vaguely irritated that the Department of Immigration’s webpage has not been translated into any foreign languages. (Including English.) Because, clearly, no-one looking for information about visas would have any use for such a thing.

***

After fitful sleep, drag yourself out as early as you can manage. (Not very, sad to say) Head through Jakarta’s hellish traffic to the immigration office closest to your place of residence and your visa sponsor’s address.

Upon arrival, be told you’re in the wrong office. And, consequently, your paperwork can’t be processed. Get directed to an office twice as far from home and work, that is technically in the right district.

A long, expensive taxi ride later, arrive at an office in a part of Jakarta you were previously unaware even existed. [Read more...]

Attracting a Crowd

I had a chance to escape from the office for a few hours yesterday and accompany friends from Voice of Human Rights Media to Klender, a kampung in East Jakarta. They were shooting footage for a documentary about efforts to provide kampung youth with basic legal training to protect themselves and their neighbors against police abuses, especially in drug-related arrests. Bringing a video camera onto the street invariably attracts a little bit of attention:

Supervisor

and then a little more:

And then there were two...

and then some more:

...and a few more

(But not, on the whole, as much attention as I attracted when I inadvertently stumbled into a nest of fire ants while trying to get a better angle on a shot. My feet are still stinging and covered in dozens of teeny little welts.)

Would like to reassure people that I was miles from the deadly explosions in Kuningan, Jakarta this morning.
Not many miles, but enough.

Election Day in Jakarta

Despite warnings from police that Jakarta might face election riots, today’s vote seems to have gone quietly in the city, with all exit polls showing incumbent president SBY giving the competition a solid trouncing.

Jakarta Voter

A man shows his inked finger — proof he voted in today’s presidential election — as he leaves a polling station in Jakarta.

Election in Indonesia

A woman casts her ballot at a polling station in Jakarta.

Ciwidey, West Java

Happy to be cool enough to wear a sweater
It was lovely getting out of the city for a few days.

It’s been quite a busy week.  I’ve been bouncing between two desks at work — features and online — and it was getting to be a bit too much.  Next week, I’ll officially transfer to the online desk, to help train reporters in basic multimedia skills, and to develop new online features for thejakartapost.com.

I’ll miss going all over the city for reporting, but it will be exciting to get to spend more time thinking about multimedia and interactive features. We’ve started putting up a few simple flash interfaces — like this one on the Presidential Debate — and they’ve gotten a good response, because even though they’re pretty basic, it’s still a new and exciting use of technology for a newspaper in Indonesia.

There’s a longer post, for sure, to be written, about the challenges of trying to develop multimedia content when you know the internet infrastructure of the country isn’t good enough for most readers to stream video or audio.  Perhaps I’ll try to write it next week, after I’ve spent more time getting to know the back end of the paper’s website.

But I write now, because after a very long workweek (complete with two well-past-midnight crunches in the office), I’m taking a weekend completely off, and travelling to Bandung, about two hours from Jakarta by train.  I will be, gasp, without a computer.  But I’ll take lots of pictures, and post them after I return.

In the meantime, for your reading pleasure:

My articles on Max Kisman’s graphic design and another on an arts collective in South Jakarta.  Both, I’d like to add, written after very long nights dealing with flash.  And the first with a few hundred words chopped out.