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Samurai_Jerk wrote:She sounds like a fun chick to hang out with. Anyone that nuts has got to be a great fuck too.
Kaikyaku, a Japanese term used to describe spreading the legs, is also the name given to a technique in moguls skiing.
Kaikyaku helped Tae Satoya pick up a gold medal at the 1998 Nagano Winter Olympics, but spreading her legs for an entirely different purpose in a Roppongi nightclub last month has now got her in all sorts of trouble following an expose in Shukan Bunshun (3/10).
Roppongi is known for attracting large numbers of foreigners. On its main street is a club called 911, where loud club music booms out and swarms of men and women bump along to the beat. Things were a little different in the wee hours of Feb. 8, however.
"All of a sudden, about 10 uniformed cops poured into the club one after another and headed to the VIP room. There were about 50 customers in the joint, but a cop stood at the entrance to the VIP room and wouldn't let anybody in. People were gathered around trying to find out what had happened. The first person they escorted out of the VIP room was a young white guy. After a while, a cop came out carrying this young woman over his shoulder like a lump of wood. She was absolutely blotto. This woman dangling off the cop was Olympic gold medallist Tae Satoya," a woman at 911 at the time tells Shukan Bunshun....more...
Captain Japan wrote:Marvin just wrote up a detailed piece on the incident...
Satoya's sex fest snowballs into Tokyo nightclub nightmare
"I was sitting down with a girlfriend on a sofa to the left of the club entrance when he came over to us, said he was a Canadian who liked Japanese women and plonked himself down in between us," the woman tells Shukan Bunshun. <snip> "He was a looker with blond, spiky hair.."
"At a ceremony at the Nagano Olympics, she was given a bottle of champagne that she was supposed to shake up and spray around, but drank the whole magnum instead. This became a minor scandal and caused the cancellation of a party with journalists that was supposed to be held the following day."
An employee from 911 said that somebody claiming to be "an associate of Satoya's" had called the club, taken complete responsibility for the incident and offered to pay compensation for any damage, as well as the medical costs of the bouncer injured when dealing with the berserk gold medallist
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Man, she sounds better and better. I ABSOLUTELY want to meet her sometime.
the ski association is standing behind her.
Marvin wrote:I'll stand behind her. Right behind her, if you know what I mean.
As long as standing is all you're doing, I'm sure she wouldn't mind in the least.
Big Booger wrote:What is the law regarding self-defense here? I mean if someone hits you, what are you legally supposed to do in Japan?
Taro Toporific wrote:Big Booger wrote:What is the law regarding self-defense here? I mean if someone hits you, what are you legally supposed to do in Japan?
Nothing.
Really. Japanese law doesn't not have self defense as a "right," only an mitigating option.
WOT?!Marvin wrote:Have to edit.
American Oyaji wrote:Ok, NOW what are you guys talking about?
Spill it or send me a PM please.
And what does that kanji mean?
American Oyaji wrote:
And what does that kanji mean?
American Oyaji wrote:Ok, NOW what are you guys talking about?
Spill it or send me a PM please.
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