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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

LDP loss bodes badly for high-end dining establishments

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
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LDP loss bodes badly for high-end dining establishments

Postby 2triky » Thu Oct 01, 2009 10:37 am

High-class restaurants' 'oil lubricating' business drying up due to lack of politicians

Image

Tokyo's entertainment districts are feeling the effect of the recent change in government.

Traditional Japanese restaurants, once the usual haunt of Tokyo's movers and shakers, first took a hit with the bursting of the bubble economy, suffering another blow following the Lehman collapse. Now, with their Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) regulars trounced in the latest election by the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), restaurant owners are worried.

"First the bureaucrats go away, then the business leaders, and now the politicians. I hear the DPJ members hardly ever go out drinking to places other than izakaya bars. What's going to happen to ryotei (high-class restaurants) from now on?" one restaurant source says plaintively.

The recession has been tough for the ryotei. Famous names like Yonemura and Kanetanaka were once among the tens of restaurants dotting the Shinbashi "Flower Quarter" around Tokyo's Ginza. By this spring, however, just 10 were left, with another two famous spots closing only recently.

The remainder are diversifying frantically in an attempt to stay afloat, opening for lunchtime businesses, selling lunchboxes, taking online orders, and in some cases, being used for weddings.

"At one time, during an election or Cabinet formation there would be faction meetings almost every night, with dark cars lined up down the street, but now there are none," says one famous restaurant owner.

"Since the post-war economic growth period, we made all the arrangements and laid the groundwork, and we came to think of ourselves as the oil lubricating business, government and bureaucracy. We felt proud," says another veteran maitre d'.

"I admit that ryotei were the haunts of the factions and movers and shakers, but rejecting and criticizing them for that is very strange."

Another restaurant owner in Akasaka, near Nagatacho where the Diet is situated, says: "I hope at least the DPJ will get to grips with the economic problems."

In the '60s, there were around 1,500 ryotei across Tokyo. Now, there are just 50 or so scattered across the Ginza, Akasaka, Ningyocho, Kagurazaka, Mukojima and Asakusa districts. And the number of geisha in the city has plummeted from at least 10,000 to around 300.

All Japan Social Association head and owner of Yonemura, Masahiko Fujino, says: "Ryotei are places where you can come in direct contact with and understand traditional Japanese culture. I'd like DPJ members to dine at ryotei and be active in the international arena."

http://mdn.mainichi.jp/features/news/20090926p2a00m0na029000c.html
2triky
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Postby Level3 » Thu Oct 01, 2009 8:56 pm

here's an idea.

How about they offer free lunches to anyone who has paid taxes over the past 50 years? They were the ones benefitting from politicians and bureaucrats using our taxes (either directly through government expense accounts, or indirectly through public works contract bid-rigging - likely arranged informally right inside those ryotei establishments - enriching the corporations who gave money to politicians) to pay for their luxury meals.

We paid for their success and got nothing in return, and now they are puzzled as to why the general public isn't crying over their troubles?
Hubris?
Stupidity?
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Postby Typhoon » Fri Oct 02, 2009 3:46 am

re: "High-class restaurants' 'oil lubricating' business drying up due to lack of politicians"

Hostess bars and tranny clubs do a booming business instead.
Never criticize anyone until you've walked several kilometres in their shoes.
Because

1. You're now several kilometres away; and

2. You've got their shoes.
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Typhoon
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Postby Screwed-down Hairdo » Fri Oct 02, 2009 3:10 pm

2triky wrote:High-class restaurants' 'oil lubricating' business drying up due to lack of politicians
Image


Ryotei always remind me of Juzo Itami movies and the wonderful way he portrayed sleazy politicians during the Bubble Days.

* Link goes to clip from Ageman.
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