Our first morning in Varadero, Shea, Pace and I woke up early (well, we woke Mr. Sleepy Head up!) and made our way down to the beach which we ended up having pretty much to ourselves. One of many special moments from our trip…
Our first morning in Varadero, Shea, Pace and I woke up early (well, we woke Mr. Sleepy Head up!) and made our way down to the beach which we ended up having pretty much to ourselves. One of many special moments from our trip…
If you’re not familiar with ChatRoulette, read this old post first.
As I say in that post, a good portion of Chat Roulette’s participants appear to be young men looking to expose themselves to unsuspecting (although if you’re on ChatRoulette, it won’t take long to become “suspecting”) viewers.
Occasionally though, Chat Roulette breeds some incredible creativity – whether it’s a person doing mime for whoever pops up on his screen or someone creating ad-libbed songs or, as shown below, doing a full-on musical production (along with many customized live elements as the song goes on!) to “propose marriage” to an attractive young woman.
I gotta say, the first time I saw this, my “fake” radar started beeping like crazy – it was too intricate, too well-done, had too many customized elements. I thought it was most likely some indie band trying to create a buzz video to help their career, like OK Go or Atomic Tom on the NY Subway.
But looking into it further, it appears to be totally legit and was created, with two months’ preparation by a Dane who did his Masters in Social Media with a focus on viral video who wanted to see if his theory could work in reality.
It obviously worked – as I type this, it’s over two million views on YouTube and growing!
(via MetaFilter which has lots of other speculation and insight.)
…Happy St. Patty’s Day!
But as someone points out in the comments, “Shane will be drunk temporarily but the interviewer will be a twat forever.” (Though that’s admittedly a pretty broad definition of “temporarily”!)
Ah well, he’s always been a gooder, addictions or no.
We all know that most books are better than the movies that they inspire. Books give much more depth and insight and allow you to actively create a world for yourself rather than having one created for you passively.
But a recent Reddit thread asking this question led me to do a general Google search which finds all kinds of places contemplating the question of which movies were actually better than the books they were based on.
We started to watch “The Motorcycle Diaries” the other night and a Google search during the movie ended up leading to the sad news that Alberto Granado, Che’s companion on the voyage that gave the book and movie its name, passed away in Havana during the time we were in Cuba.
He died on March 5 and we were in Havana on March 9 but Cuba doesn’t have newsstands on every corner, flashing billboards or street-mounted LCD screens so we didn’t realise this Cuban here had passed away until we got back to Canada (and to be fair, we may not have noticed even if they had. Lots of times in Canada, if I miss the evening news on TV or don’t glance at the newspaper, I don’t catch some of the latest local happenings either.)
Everyone know the famous photo of Che Guevara that is a symbol of revolution around the world.
Of course, for many, it’s also a symbol of revolutionary iconography being co-opted by capitalist interests which have placed the image on everything from t-shirts to posters and much much more.
I always leaned towards the latter interpretation of what the image had become and this was further reinforced during our time in Cuba when the image was even more prevalent than it is here on the continent.
It was only during the flight home when I was reading through a Cuba guide book (I know – usually people do this *before* going on a trip. I had done that but hadn’t seen the section on the history of Cuba at the back until we were on the way home!)
In that history, the author talked about the famous photograph and mentioned that the photographer, Alberto Korda, had chosen to release the photo without requesting any royalties in the hopes that the spread of the image would help spread the ideas.
And then it clicked (er, no pun intended) – this photo, often cited as the most reproduced photo ever, was the first item that would go viral around the world in a way that would be echoed fifty years later by the way information would spread during the Internet age.
Although copyright is still sometimes enforced when the image is used in a way that Che’s family finds contrary to Che’s beliefs (they sued a vodka company who used the image in a marketing campaign), the image has basically been released with what today would be recognized as a very broad, open Creative Commons license.
After a lifetime pursuing South American solidarity and revolution by the poor, this precursor of the viral Internet may actually turn out to be the most revolutionary impact of Che’s life!
I was going to do a list of some of the highlights of our trip (and still might) but I just came across a business card for a taxi while sorting the various papers I accumulated during the trip and so I thought I’d focus instead, on one of the singular highlights of our trip.
One of the “must do’s” we’d been told about a Cuba holiday was a trip into Havana. The obvious route is to book a bus charter through your travel company but we decided to be a bit more adventurous and book a private taxi to take us in. Early in the week, my brother-in-law talked to one of the servers at the main restaurant in our resort who said they knew a driver and that it would be 200 pesos for four of us to go in – much less than the 67 pesos the tour company wanted per person.
My brother-in-law and his girlfriend (who wasn’t yet his fiance but would be by the end of the trip!) decided to take the Jungle Safari Tour instead but the server was still quoting us a figure of 200 pesos for just two people. That seemed a bit excessive so I talked to someone else in the restaurant the next night and after an 11:30pm confirmation phone call to our room, we were quoted 120 pesos for the day with all tolls, gas and related expenses included. That sounded perfect (plus was still comparable to the tour company price) so we went ahead and booked it.
So there we were, on the second last day of our trip, unsure what to expect other than there would be a yellow car waiting for us outside the hotel at 8am with a driver who “spoke pretty good English”.
Well, our fears about the car being a rusty 1957 Chev were quickly dispelled. Instead, the driver had a canary yellow, blinged-out 2004 Peugeot. As for his English, I think I’d been conditioned by all the foreign exchange students I’ve known in Canada who always apologise for their poor English when they usually have a better grasp of the language than I do!
His English wasn’t that good but he did speak well enough that we could communicate on the basics. (I kept thinking his English was about how well I’d be able to speak French if someone dropped me in rural Quebec.) His passing resemblance to Adam Sandler also helped add humour to his lack of facility with the language!
So after some initial “oh crap – we made the wrong decision! Can we still catch a tour bus?” thoughts – which disappeared by the time we left the Varadero peninsula, we were on our way to Havana, two hours away.
Visiting Havana was a great experience but equally worthwhile was the opportunity to spend a full day with a young Cuban, sharing and exchanging stories of our respective lives.
His name was Pavel and he was 34 years old. Born in the mid-1970’s with two parents who were police officers (all details of this post subject to translation errors – I never heard him mention this detail but Shea said she did), it was logical that he be given a popular Russian name. But he was obviously a Cuban youth who was enamoured with the material lifestyle of the rest of North America. Beyond his blinged out car and brand name clothes, he proudly told us that he’d named his two children Amy (2) and Ricky (9) – “good American names.”
Being the child of police officers, you wonder if he had certain privileges that others may not have and we were surprised to learn that he’d even spent six months in Jamaica playing semi-professional baseball when our understanding is that the vast majority of Cubans aren’t free to travel outside the country at all. When we stopped at a tourist look-out on the way into Havana and I bought him a Coke (imported from Mexico, not the US obviously), he told us of how you could get Coca-Cola in Cuba but no Pepsi which he’d gotten hooked on during his time in Jamaica! (This gave us an instant bond as I’m a Pepsi man myself!)
Beyond his parents and travel, it was clear that he was in a privileged position with his and his wife’s jobs. If the average Cuban salary is 20 pesos/month, us paying him 120 pesos for the day is like the equivalent of paying him six months wages for a day’s work – pretty decent money, even after the expenses for gas and toll booths. He had an LG cell phone – sent by a godmother (this word skuttled us for a long time at lunch until I loaded an English-Spanish iPhone app I downloaded before we left) in Toronto. His car had a DVD player mounted that the front passenger could watch, a pretty sweet Panasonic stereo. He said he had a computer at home but it was broken right now. I don’t notice these things but Shea was the one who noted that he was dressed in brand-name clothes from head to toe.
He said his wife was a server at one of the five star resorts in Varadero (they lived in a town fifteen minutes past Varadero on the opposite side of Havana. Though they live in an apartment, both owned cars) so they are both fairly well off by Cuban standards.
When we talked of baseball, he proudly named the various Cubans who were playing in the Major Leagues along with details of their contracts for “seventy-million dollars!”, “one hundred million dollars!” He said he had a New York Yankees ball cap that was one of of his prized possessions. (On the other hand, the Blue Jays cap he got from a Jamaican friend who now lives in Toronto – “not so much”.) This was also possibly a mis-communication but it seemed like he thought the Expos were still in Montreal, not realising they’d moved to Washington DC in 2005. I asked if they could watch major league games on TV and he said they get bootleg DVD’s with the games burned on them.
Although not a professional tour guide in the “check the clipboard, keep to the schedule” sense, he did a really good job of ferrying us around Havana to all of the major sites – we visited the Museum of the Revolution (again, it was the people more than destination that were fascinating as our visit happened while two different groups of students were touring the Museum and I spent as much time looking at them – how they dressed, how they interacted, what they had for supplies – as the displays. We walked through Old Havana stopping at many smaller shops that I don’t think would be on the normal tourist beat (he popped us into a perfume store that had a “museo” in the back which basically consisted of a few display cases showing pre-Revolution beauty products – a 1950’s bottle of Palmolive or a small tube of Colgate.) After lunch, we hit a large souvenir flea market by the docks where the cruise ships come in and finished our day in Revolution Plaza where we took the elevator up to the top of the 35 story Jose Marti Memorial Tour but decided to skip another museum tour as we were all (including Pavel who said he would stay longer with us but hoped to get out of town sooner to be home to his kids as well as avoid some bridge construction that apparently started at 4pm.)
By staying so close to us most of the day, he even got in trouble at the Revolution Plaza where, instead of letting us cross a fairly major roadway unaided, he escorted us to the pay window then decided to come up the elevator with us when the clerk offered to let him up for free (it was 3 pesos each for Shea and I.) When we got back to the car, an armed military guy came to the window and said “chauffeurs must stay with the car!” and we both had a chuckle at this. “Sure, next time!”
I’m sure there are lots of details I’m missing – our conversation covered everything from speed limits on the highway (he was diligent about dropping down in speed when the posted limit changed) to snow (he’d obviously never seen any.) I tried to broach politics a couple times but he didn’t seem to want to engage unlike pretty much every other cab driver we experienced during our week in Cuba. He did repeat the common line we heard from multiple people – “in Cuba – two people, one police officer.”
There were some moments that were a bit more…eye-opening…that we weren’t in the same world we were used to. For example, we expected to be taken directly to Havana as the paying passengers. But passing through Mantazas (which is the town he grew up in) on the way to Havana, he said something about “needing to pick up a parcel to deliver with a friend.” We did a detour through town and when he got out to go into a house, I leaned back to Shea and said “Hmm, either we’re picking up a parcel or he’s giving a friend a lift into Havana.” Turns out it was just a parcel but when he put a square package in a brown paper wrapper in the glove compartment, Shea and I couldn’t help but (jokingly – we’re almost 100% sure it wasn’t) think “hmm, I wonder if it’s drugs in there?” 😉
Although I’m sure he would’ve taken us to see whatever we wanted, he seemed to be focused on hitting the main attractions without too much interest from his side to see if we wanted to go a bit further afield or check out anything different. This was also clear at lunchtime where he made a gesture of asking where we wanted to go for lunch but basically pushed for a single restaurant. It was pretty good but when we went to pay (we wanted to buy him lunch), Shea saw him take the CUC (Cuban Convertible Pesos) for his meal off the tray and substitute in local Cuba pesos.) Again, since CUC’s are worth a lot more than the local peso, it was a way for him to make a bit of extra cash. (We’ve heard that lots of people in Cuba get kickbacks for bringing tourists to certain restaurants, bars, attractions and so on.)
Overall, it was a great experience and one of the highlights of our week. I told him I’d put his name and number on the Internet (another weird thing I might cover in another post – being in a country where, for all intents and purposes, the Internet doesn’t exist) so if you’re ever in Varadero and want a taxi into Havana or elsewhere, give Pavel a call at: 619812. Tell him Jason & Shea from Saskatchewan sent you!
(Oh, and in conclusion, Shea and I both agree that if we never hear another Marc Anthony song, it will be too soon! Pavel had a CD on replay for the entire trip
Here’s a few more photos from our trip, set to one of Cuba’s most popular songs…
Pace has been counting down the “sleeps” until we go to Cuba on Thursday. Meanwhile his daddy has been counting down “how many days left of standing at the bus stop freezing my butt off?” 😉
We leave Thursday for a week’s vacation and since Cuba is one of the least connected countries in the western hemisphere (though this is changing), instead of paying $6 for half an hour of dial-up equivalent access in the hotel lobby, I think I’ll just take another blog holiday for the next week or so.
I debated pre-loading a week’s worth of posts but that was going to be quite a bit of work and I’ve still got last minute packing to do. So instead, I thought I’d just do it all at once in a single post…
Wisdom Wednesday – Traveler vs. Tourist: Four Ways To Tell (Or one easy way to tell: “Are you going to an all-inclusive resort?” </guilt>)
Thursday – (holy shit – just saw this while fishing for Cuba links) Fidel Castro Expected to Step Down As Party Chief as soon as April. Even if we’re going as tourists, I’m so glad we’re going to get a taste of Cuba before it opens itself even further to capitalism and other reforms.
Thursday – The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil
Friday Fun Link – Cuba Launches Its “Decolonized” Version of Wikipedia – interested concept for a country with such limited Internet access
Saturday Snap – Cuba, As Viewed From the International Space Station
Sentimental Sunday – 1930’s Havana Travelogue
Music Monday – Bebo y Cigala – Hubo Un Lugar, Cuba Linda (Cubano, Flamenco, Jazz)
Tuesday – Americans Favour End of Embargo by 2-1 Margin
Wisdom Wednesday – Health Care Spending vs. Average Life Expectancy – check out the last graph and look for Cuba and United States.
Thursday – Cuba’s Underground Rappers Test Free Speech Boundaries
Hmm, I shouldn’t have done that. Holidays go fast enough without a post like this to remind me how my holiday’s basically a few lines of a blog post long!