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American Oyaji wrote:She's probably been there done that.
Brax wrote:How much fake tan does she use!?
Mulboyne wrote:[img]http://www.fuckedgaijin.com/forum/album_mod/upload/7a4daf7e600e003af78ddd71df5c5449.jpg[/img
AssKissinger wrote:I can tell at first glance that she has a beautiful tight cunt. Any single man who passes that up is damn fool.
Mulboyne wrote:
Signing her new book in Shibuya.
Shiho Fujita was once a typical "gal," as the tribe of deep-tanned, garishly dressed young women who wander the streets of Tokyo's trendy Shibuya district in search of the latest fashions are called. Now a company president, Fujita is at the forefront of what she calls a "gal revolution."
"Social prejudice against gals is stunting their potential. I want to open up new possibilities for many gals" by changing people's perceptions of them, said the young entrepreneur, blinking her heavily mascaraed eyes.
Dressed in a micro miniskirt with accessories jingling around her neck, the 21-year-old Fujita looks every bit the gal, or "gyaru," as the term is mispronounced and given its own definition in Japan. But don't let the look fool you. In 2005, she set up SGR Inc. -- Shiho Gal Revolution -- a marketing company that specializes in products catering to gals -- from cosmetics, perfume, shoes and clothing to video games. In her first year, she racked up sales of 70 million yen....more...
The darkly tanned female before you has dyed hair, eyes thick with mascara and wears a skimpy miniskirt. If you were a corporate recruitment officer, would you hire her? Not likely, says Shiho Fujita, a company president and sometime J-pop singer who ought to know.
Fujita is a gyaru (gal), one of thousands of young women in their teens to early 20s famous for their trademark flashy appearances. She stuck with her rebellious look during her post high-school job hunt, dressing to kill and refusing to dye her streaked brown locks back to black. Not one company was willing to give her a full-time job.
In the photo attached to her resume, she looked just the way she is: a rather determined young woman.
"Of course, I knew it would be wiser to tone down my style to a 'proper' one," she says. "I just didn't want to turn into somebody that wasn't me."...more...
Hanae Watanabe doesn't need to speak to get attention from her underlings. All it takes is a subtle lift of her eyebrows to bring them in line.
When Watanabe makes that gesture, it means it's time to put away the nail polish and turn off the sequin-studded cellphones. Out come pens and notepads.
"The first thing on tonight's agenda," begins Watanabe, "is--Hey! You four down at the end--you think you're alone here? Listen up to what I'm saying!"
The first thing on the agenda, she continues, is discipline.
So begins another night in Tokyo's Shibuya district for the brightly plumed, heavily painted members of the girl gang Angeleek....more...
Jack wrote:Very doable but a good story nonetheless. You got to respect a girl that starts her own business and succeeds at such a young age. Damn, she's nice looking.
Mulboyne wrote:
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