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| other people on the visa run |
| no. i only like to play with myself |
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16% |
[ 4 ] |
| 25% are good |
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8% |
[ 2 ] |
| 50% are good |
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12% |
[ 3 ] |
| 75% are good |
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40% |
[ 10 ] |
| 100% are good |
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8% |
[ 2 ] |
| everybody is a nut job |
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16% |
[ 4 ] |
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| Total Votes : 25 |
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mishlert

Joined: 13 Mar 2003 Location: On the 3rd rock from the sun
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Posted: Tue Mar 08, 2005 4:12 pm Post subject: |
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On my visa run to Fukuoka once, I met and hung out with a model.
She was very cool, and a lot of fun. |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Tue Mar 08, 2005 9:54 pm Post subject: |
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On my one visa trip to Osaka I met a newbie chick. She was in Asia because she'd just finished her third (I think it was) Master's and had just bought a pickup truck and couldn't make payments. Her total debt was somewhere in the neighborhood of $70,000.
We went out for galbi once we got back. She threw a tantrum because they didn't have forks. When I say 'she threw a tantrum' I mean she threw the chopsticks on the floor. The waitress ran across the street and borrowed a fork from another restaurant. The chick said it was the least she could do.
We lost contact soon after that.  |
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pauly

Joined: 24 Sep 2004 Location: Incheon
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Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2005 1:17 am Post subject: |
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Not to be a grammar nazi (I couldn't resist this one), but shouldn't the first choice of the poll read "no. i only like to play BY myself" and not "no. i only like to play WITH myself?" It just sounds so...  |
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matthewwoodford

Joined: 01 Oct 2003 Location: Location, location, location.
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Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2005 1:22 am Post subject: |
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| just because wrote: |
| You know the saying old son, don't throw stones at glasshouses. |
Yes, and watched pots never cast the first stone.  |
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Tiger Beer

Joined: 07 Feb 2003
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Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2005 1:29 am Post subject: |
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| osangrl wrote: |
Ive been on two visa runs... first one met a british guy in that british pub across from the embassy, drank with him all nite and gotta a lil cozy and the next day we went sex shop shopping. It was really fun.
Second one, i met this guy and we talked and talked all the way to the embassy, weird looking guy.... then we went shopping at the gap, where he was shopping in the women's section. Turned out it was a weird looking girl.  |
Did you ever see either of these two people later in Korea? |
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Plume D'ella Plumeria
Joined: 10 Jan 2005 Location: The Lost Horizon
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Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2005 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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| The last visa run I made (Fukuoka), there was some scraggly looking guy filling out the application form at the embassy. He went to the window to submit the form and turned away looking abashed a moment later. He came over to me, a virtual stranger, and said that he didn't have any money and therefore couldn't afford the visa fee. He explained that he had used all the money he had with him at Korean immigration in Busan to pay some kind of fine. Then he asked me to lend him the money for the visa, a rather significant amount of money to be asking a stranger for, I thought. Even panhandlers and homeless folk rarely ask for the equivalent of 60,000 won (if I am remembering the fee amount correctly). I backed hastily away, claiming a cash flow problem and watched warily as he approached another visa applicant with his sob story and plea. I guess I'm a bad Samaritan, but somehow I knew that handing over money to that dubious looking character was going to mean I'd never see that money again. I figure that I just can't afford to be the philanthropist of penniless E-2 visa seekers. |
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Mashimaro

Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Location: location, location
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Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2005 9:46 pm Post subject: |
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| Tiger Beer wrote: |
| osangrl wrote: |
Ive been on two visa runs... first one met a british guy in that british pub across from the embassy, drank with him all nite and gotta a lil cozy and the next day we went sex shop shopping. It was really fun.
Second one, i met this guy and we talked and talked all the way to the embassy, weird looking guy.... then we went shopping at the gap, where he was shopping in the women's section. Turned out it was a weird looking girl.  |
Did you ever see either of these two people later in Korea? |
think she got banned dude |
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Zenpickle
Joined: 06 Jan 2004 Location: Anyang -- Bisan
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Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 5:42 am Post subject: |
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I met some interesting folks, including a middle-aged professor from Texas who had great stories. But I met many that had me thinking, "Hmm... maybe SBS was on to something."
There was one guy, while filling out his application, was bragging that by the fifth month, he's going to call in sick from the airport on his flight out of the country. A few of us were peeking over at his application to see what school he was signing up for. He then would ask to each lunch with us, disappear, reappear, accuse us of leaving him, then disappear again.
Another girl seemed really cool until something didn't go as planned or a train was a tad late. She then fell apart and panicked and started ranting and raving at every person, calling them names.
The train ride back to the airport, the foreigners on the train started getting rowdy and disrespectful. They bitched that they had to change seats because they weren't in the seat they were assigned.
Other than the professor, I wouldn't want to hang out with most any of those people again. |
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Flossie

Joined: 19 Feb 2005 Location: Up to my nose in the sweet summer smells of sewerage in Seoul
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Posted: Fri Mar 11, 2005 7:20 pm Post subject: |
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I guess I am like previous poster. Never had to do a visa run. Had my visa before I got here, then kept working at the same hagwon although changed branches. Just had to renew, didn't have to do a visa run.
To answer a previous question: based on my experience, you only need to do a visa run to renew an E2 if you are changing companies, or if you are working for the same company but the owner is legally different, eg: franchise. Otherwise you just have to go to immigration with papers and they fix it for you.
Does anyone know if it is only E2 visas that need visa runs? What about the other working visas? I just changed to student visa and didn't need to do one. Nice!!  |
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Cthulhu

Joined: 02 Feb 2003
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Posted: Sat Mar 12, 2005 8:53 am Post subject: |
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My last visa run was around 1999 but I met a number of people on them--average people, but mostly decent people. But it was on a visa run I hung out with a rather nice woman who disabused me of the preconceived notion that lesbians are unfriendly and wound far too tightly.
Plume D'ella Plumeria wrote:
| Quote: |
| The last visa run I made (Fukuoka), there was some scraggly looking guy filling out the application form at the embassy. He went to the window to submit the form and turned away looking abashed a moment later. He came over to me, a virtual stranger, and said that he didn't have any money and therefore couldn't afford the visa fee. He explained that he had used all the money he had with him at Korean immigration in Busan to pay some kind of fine. Then he asked me to lend him the money for the visa, a rather significant amount of money to be asking a stranger for, I thought. Even panhandlers and homeless folk rarely ask for the equivalent of 60,000 won (if I am remembering the fee amount correctly). I backed hastily away, claiming a cash flow problem and watched warily as he approached another visa applicant with his sob story and plea. I guess I'm a bad Samaritan, but somehow I knew that handing over money to that dubious looking character was going to mean I'd never see that money again. I figure that I just can't afford to be the philanthropist of penniless E-2 visa seekers. |
My situation wasn't quite so dire, but it reminds me of my first visa run to Fukuoka in '97, when my hagwan didn't tell me about the steep visa fee and I left most of my money in my dresser drawer instead of my wallet. When I got to the embassy I found I had to pay for the photo (nice they have a booth there, though it was expensive) and after all the forms were done and the money handed over I had 90 yen and a Mastercard to my name. I was too proud to beg, and since the visa was taken care of I figured I could suffer for a day or two.
Walked back from the embassy to downtown on a scorching summer day and tried in vain to find a hotel that didn't only take Visa or Amex. Ended up staying at the New Otami for around $350 a night with skinny cans of Fanta in the bar fridge for $5. I didn't discover the friendly busiessman's capsule hotel downtown--the one with the smiling, waving businessman sign located next to the liquor store--until the next visa run. I heard its gone now--too bad. |
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Zenpickle
Joined: 06 Jan 2004 Location: Anyang -- Bisan
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Posted: Sun Mar 13, 2005 4:27 am Post subject: |
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| Ya-ta Boy wrote: |
On my one visa trip to Osaka I met a newbie chick. She was in Asia because she'd just finished her third (I think it was) Master's and had just bought a pickup truck and couldn't make payments. Her total debt was somewhere in the neighborhood of $70,000.
We went out for galbi once we got back. She threw a tantrum because they didn't have forks. When I say 'she threw a tantrum' I mean she threw the chopsticks on the floor. The waitress ran across the street and borrowed a fork from another restaurant. The chick said it was the least she could do.
We lost contact soon after that.  |
I think we hung out with the same person. This girl was all cool and then would suddenly throw a tantrum at the slightest thing.
I wonder what she did when she figured she couldn't make the payments ont he pickup truck. |
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weatherman

Joined: 14 Jan 2003 Location: Korea
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Posted: Sun Mar 13, 2005 5:23 am Post subject: |
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| Did three visa runs in total. Now on F-2-1 so don't need to anymore. I always flew, got a hotel for the night and kept to myself. Find I can get a better feel of the city if I don't have to be in attention to another's conversation or needs. |
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whatthefunk

Joined: 21 Apr 2003 Location: Dont have a clue
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Posted: Sun Mar 13, 2005 6:51 am Post subject: |
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| I meet visa run people all the time at the bars in Fukuoka. 50% strange, 25% impossible to talk to, 25% pretty cool. Met a few Daves posters as well... |
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