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Konbini Life

Konbini Life - Living in Japanese Convenience Stores

Welcome to Konbini Life. Any gaijin in Japan knows that the Japanese convenience store is the only way to survive in this country, at least for the first couple months of living here. 

This page is dedicated to those things which we can buy in said convenience stores. Be it pastries filled with mystery meats, seasonal colas, inexplicable kids toys, or the latest DVD release of some 1980’s sci-fi movie, it’ll be covered here. 

Pepsi White

(main picture)

Price: 147yen

Store: 7-11

So I'm walking by the soda section, and frankly this bottle is pretty hard to miss, so at the very least I have to give the design team props. ‘Pepsi & Yogurt'?! WTF?!?

Usually I don't have to put much thought into what something tastes like, but this one I mulled over for a good 30 minutes. Eventually I came up with an answer: Girl's Body Lotion. The split second it hits your lips you think to yourself ‘this is good!' but you give up that thought as soon as you start drinking it. Kind of the same way you'd rather lick a girl with said lotion than eat her.

It smells sweet and if you can find a girl who will let you pour this on her so you can lick it off of her neck or belly, by all means buy a bottle. If you happen to own World of Warcraft, this ain't gonna get you throught the night.

Sprite 3G

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Price: 147 yen

Store: Lawson

Sprite has long been my favorite drink, and its low availability in Japan has always been a dissapointment to me. So now they're rolling out Sprite 3G, and I'm guessing this is a Japan-only release considering how popular Guarana and Green Tea are here (Glucose is the 3rd G,G). But I could be wrong.

So here's the thing about messing with perfection: It's never a good idea! This drink isn't BAD per se, but the guarana leaves a weird tangy aftertaste, and the drink actually leaves you more thirsty in the end instead of refreshed. The drink claims to be stimulating, but all I can say is ‘meh.'

Today's lesson is this: give is more of what we want and stop tinkering with gifts from heaven. After all, we COULD give Jessica Alba a boob job, but SHOULD we?

ブレスケア (Breath Care)

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Price: 504yen

Store: Lawson

Alright, yesterday I made the mistake of ordering a gourmet Garlic Ramen. I'm talking piled high with a glob of crushed garlic as big as my fist. If I didn't love garlic so much I would have regretted it on the train sitting next behind that poor old lady. But we all have our limits, and when 2 hours later it showed no signs of slowing down the stinky havoc it was wreaking on my body, I had to fight back.

Breath Care was recommended to me as it fights from the inside. Swallow the tablets and feel the minty freshness take you from the inside. I gotta say it works. Kinda. My garlic meal was beyond logical, so I cant blame the tablets for losing the battles, but they fought hard for a good 30 minutes or so per dose. And by ‘dose' I mean 5 tablets.

This morning I still woke up with garlic breath, but by early afternoon it was gone. While I can't say it will work for the most extreme situations, I can support Breath Carew for your average bad breath problems. Now if only there was a way to let the average Ojii-san know how bad his breath smells without being rude...


ハイチュウ ライチ (Hi-Chew Lychee)

hi chew

Store: AMPM

Price: 105yen

OK OK, trying to get back in the swing of things, so it's pretty easy to fall back on working with old trusty Hi-Chew.

The first time I ever ate Lychee was in Hong Kong. I instantly fell in love and never looked back. I've never found a lychee product I didn't like, and that holds true with today's review. I will say though that there's a bit of an aftertaste that I don't usually find with Hi-Chews... Hmm...

Anyway, for some reason these babies are wrapped in gold wrapping. I guess it's to present the royalness of the flavor. Aight, aight. Getcher royal on people!

Fanta ふらふらシェィカーレモン (Furafura Shaker Lemon )

fanta lemon

Price: 120yen

Store: 7-11

Oh hi!

Have you been waiting long? I didn't die or anything. I was just trying to be mysterious. I hope you've all been enjoying the summer! I certainly have! I've been particularly fond of these Shakers from Fanta.

You can pick up traditional Orange and Grape just about anywhere, but I have to say I got excited when I saw Lemon. These are carbonated drinks filled with a Jello-type substance, I guess that's what stops it from exploding after you shake the hell out of the can (which you're supposed to do. If you don't the drink won't come out.)

If you're a heavy pulp Orange Juice kinda person, or if you just enjoy a little texture in your drink, give Fanta Shakers a shot. They won't disappoint.

Palitte

palitte1

Cost: 158yen

Store: Lawson
Hi all! Hisashiburi! Sorry for the long delay. I got a new phone and I've been scared to death of trying to post a new review from it. As you can see, it takes pictures horizontally, so that's something else I'm gonna have to figure out.

Anyway! Palitte is sweet! I want to eat Palitte! You all know I'm a big fan of chocolate and vanilla, and this is actually pretty standard fare as far as all that goes, BUT, standard fare is awesome! The chocolate swirls are beautifully formed on the ice cream, and when you bite into them they give a super satisfying crunch! The vanilla is vanilla-ey.

The only downside is this is another case of waste packaging. The cone is wrapped in double plastic, and then popped in a bag. It's one of my biggest pet peeves in Japan. But how can I, a single solitary blogger, change the world?

Pino レアチーズ


pino

Cost: 126yen

Store: ampm

To tell the truth, レアチーズ is one of those  Japanese-English words that I never really bothered to figure out the meaning of.  At  the moment I'm gonna guess it's not "rare" and  go for "layer." The picture here is of cheesecake... so I guess that makes as much sense as anything.

So anybody who has this site on their RSS feeds knows I love Pino, and while this Pino has been out for a while, I just today got around to buying it. I could see people going either way on this one. I personally thought the cheesecake flavor was a little underwhelming, but some might see it as subtle. Either way, that milk chocolate still melts in a heavenly fashion on your tongue.

As always, it's a limited time offer. You know what I want? Pino with pumpkin ice cream. THAT would be freakin' hizzy! To all my peeps at pino, let's see what you can get crackin for me by autumn!

ポテロング (Pote Long)

pote long

Cost: 148yen

Store: Lawson

OK, so I don't have much opportunity to talk about anything outside of Konbinis on this site, but I'm gonna say it now: CoCo ichi is the best "quick service" restaurant in Japan. I LOVE their curry. Seriously, I'm there once a week, and if you don't go there as soon as possible there's a fire-storm comin' your way.

So obviously I had to try these CoCo ichi curry flavored potato sticks. To tell the truth, I'm a little ambivalent about these. While the flavor matches CoCo ichi's curry really well, I didn't really feel the desire to eat more than a couple of these. Maybe it's the fact that it's not a hot steaming plate in my face. I love other potato sticks, but I was satisfied with just having a few of these. Maybe that makes them more valuable though. You could spread out your snacking over a few days.

If you're a fan of CoCo ichi, you should give it a try. But I'm not guaranteeing you anything amazing here. You're better off spending the cash at the restaurant with a real plate of curry & rice than you are getting a crispy potato stick that copies the flavor.

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So, I read today that the designer of Mattel's Barbie doll was obsessed with sex. Seriously? We need a book-length study to tell us that?

We in the land of feminist academics have been teaching the pernicious sexual politics of Barbie for years. The breasts that defy gravity, the hair, the long, long legs and of course the cruel, nipped in waist. Oh, don't forget the tiny clothes, the f*ck-me pumps, not to mention the well-equipped kitchens in every Barbie Dream House. The message of Barbie seems unambiguous to me.

Still, many students (and not a few colleagues) consistently resist seeing Barbie as a miniature sex toy, claiming instead that the doll was a good role model for little girls. (One could, after all, purchase a Barbie doll dressed as a doctor.) Or claiming, equally untenably, that toys had no impact on their ideas about gender roles or their own sexuality.

These students, mostly women, want to rescue Barbie, to protect their own childhoods from academic interrogations of pop culture and what those interrogations might reveal. That's understandable. Yet, many of these same students sit in my class pouring out of tank tops, squeezed into low-rise jeans, or tugging on mini-skirts so short they are nearly impossible to sit down in. That is, dressed like Barbie.

It's an experience I regularly have as a feminist critic of popular culture: a media event, book or news story demonstrates that I'm not wrong, my ideology is not based in "over analyzing," "hyper sensitivity," or "reading too much into things" (the three most common criticisms feminists tend to encounter). It's disappointing, frankly, to stumble so often upon evidence of society's sexism and to keep having to explain that it's there. Disappointing that Barbie was so obviously a sexed-up, misogynist, bad idea for little girls and to realize how thoroughly our culture embraced the toy anyway.

So, here we are again. Feminists were right: no one but a sex-obsessed man with a perverse idea of female anatomy would create a female toy like Barbie. And, as is too too often the case for feminists, being right isn't something to celebrate.

Dr. Bean is an Associate Professor of English at Marshall University, specializing in Gender Studies, Film and Drama. She is the author of "Post-Backlash Feminism: Women and the Media Since Reagan/Bush" (McFarland & Co. 2007). She hosts a blog on mid-life and feminism at kelliebean.com.