Way-of-Life drinks: now it’s a dog’s life

No sooner had I reported on the Way of Life drinks that have been created to cynically target thirsty martial artists, than TokyoTimes is describing Pet Sweat.

Pet Sweat in a conbi 

The claim is that it's an isotonic drink for dogs — ideal for budo-dogs during intensive training in the doggie dojo.

Anyone who has trained in — or, indeed, just been to — Japan will be familiar with Pocari Sweat. Pocaris are large, sloth-like creatures that up until modern times used to live quiet, undisturbed lives in the forested mountains of the northern parts of Japan. Now, few remain in the wild. Mostly they are cultivated in huge industrial cage-farms kept artificially hot, with suction pumps attached to their sweat-glands. This sorry state of affairs is a direct result of the unrelenting demand for isotonic drinks. Obviously, this raises the troubling question of how exactly these bottles of Pet Sweat are being filled. Dogs, even the sturdy Japanese Akita, are considerably smaller than the shambling Pocari. The lines of cages must run for miles.

 

The Penguin is Mightier than the Sword

I wanted to post this link to an interview with Berkeley Breathed on Salon for two reasons. Firstly, it has such a fantastic strap line (see myths if you are not familiar with Fudebakudo's "The Pen is Mightier . . ." motto). Secondly, I loved Breathed's Bloom County cartoon strip when it appeared in the 80s, and the interview is interesting if you're into cartooning (which of course I am). Although the Salon piece is actually from 2003 (yes, that's a long time ago already), My Comics Page recently started republishing Bloom County online to subscribers.

Fudebakudo's first exposure to the general public was in the now long-defunct UK paper The Cartoonist. In the interview, Breathed talks about how he was able to insist that he got a whole half-page space in the newspapers for his recent work Opus. The great thing about The Cartoonist was that, being a broadsheet devoted to the form, it was very generous with space, so those early Fudebakudo drawings were actually big enough to read at arm's length. I also know that some people kept them because I've met someone who showed me one of the early editions (with the Hokikoki Kata on the back page,  I think). 

If that was too much about cartooning and not enough about penguins, here is the almost obigatory link to penguins doing aikido.

 

Inu no Judo desu

(I know, I know, I should have put this link up months ago.)

Roy is a judo purist, Rexley less so.

Together they are Dog Judo.

I haven't checked, but I suspect that nowhere in the International Judo Federation's rules does it explicitly state that only humans may enter the competition circuit.

Sweep the Leg, Johnny!

A beautiful video for those of you old enough to know better…

"I was a superhero
King of 1985
I showed no mercy
I was always Kobra Kai!"

 Sweep the Leg!

Wow. Nice Hero touch running across the swimming pool 😀

Update:
Although I recognised Ralph Macchio's cameo at the end, when I first posted this I hadn't appreciated that the video actually reunites all the male members of the original cast (except the late Pat Morita, of course).