Anybody have an actual Bio on this fella?
Where did he come from?
How did he get to be the gaijin tarento and last on the rung on the popularity vote?
curious
den4
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den4 wrote:Anybody have an actual Bio on this fella?
Where did he come from?
How did he get to be the gaijin tarento and last on the rung on the popularity vote?
Dave Spector, who had landed in Japan as a segment producer for "Ripley's Believe it or Not".
The thing that Japanese have on their minds about Americans is that they're blond and blue-eyed and they're wearing sweatshirts and stuff like that. But of course, I'm not like that at all. I'm from Chicago originally and I decided to look more 'American'. I would change my hair a little bit, you know? And it looks very strange, you know, I feel weird when I go back to Los Angeles. People think I'm in a heavy metal group or something like that, and I also have like, you know, the blue contacts. And all of a sudden, 'Wow! Look how American he looks. We can use him much better now.'
directed by Hideyuki Tanaka (starring: Dave Spector, Pierre Taki, Senri Yamazaki, Prof. Otsuki, Kiyoshi Beat, Shie Kohinata and others)
The future TV shopping program entitled 'Spector 21' has the lowest audience rating because it deals in worthless items like Space kitchen knife, Space crab and Space scourer. The MC Dave Spector's jokes are really boring and both the producer and director are worried about how to raise the audience rating.
"Gaijin Tarentos
As embodied by Kent Gilbert and Dave Spector, both profiled in "The Japanese Version", the concept of the gaijin tarento, or "foreign talent", has no real equivalent in the United States. These are men, American-born, whose fluency in Japanese and ability to fit themselves into a perceived stereotype of American behavior have yielded them lucrative TV careers in Japan as professional Americans. Gilbert, the clean-cut Utah man, and Spector, the artificially blonde energetic urbanite, are often presented as "typical Americans", and their opinions sought on a variety of subjects that they do not necessarily have any expertise in. There are two or three more gaijin tarento on TV, including a Sri Lankan and an American bodybuilder, and their friendly demeanor helps soften the edges of what many Japanese think is an aggressive American culture. They are domesticated, tamed "pandas", reassuring to the home viewer. Perhaps this is an essential process in a culture which is essentially non-confrontational.
[Dave Spector: Making foreigners cuter takes away the threat of foreigners being more powerful, or having more know-how, or more sophistication. So definitely, they use that in a way to make themselves more comfortable. So I've done things on Japanese TV that are totally silly, or ridiculous. I mean like jumping rope with French poodles. Doing things like the lowest Bozo, circus kind of stuff. But it doesn't bother me at all. A lot of times the foreigners on TV, models and what-not, are compared to pandas. They use that term here--pandas-- because they're cuddly, you can go and have fun with them, and throw a marshmallow and that's about it. And you don't get involved any more deeper than that. But...since I'm making half a million dollars a year, I'm very happy to be a panda. I'd be a much lower animal. I'd be like a sloth, or something, or a hedgehog, you know, for that money. So it doesn't bother me at all.
[Narrator]: It was one thing to cut the foreigner down to acceptable size on TV. But the Japanese know that America is not a nation filled with pandas.
den4 wrote:Anybody have an actual Bio on this fella?
Where did he come from?
Born: Chicago, Illinois
When: 1:24 am [[5/5/1954]]
...He also serves as an advisor to the Tokyo Chapter of the New York-based Guardian Angels and is active in crime prevention...
...Dave would like to put his chopsticks down long enough to thank 5th grade classmate Michael Sugano who-despite the promximity to the friendly confines of Wrigley Field-took the time to introduce him to the world of his birthplace, Japan.
den4 wrote:Anybody have an actual Bio on this fella?
Where did he come from?
GomiGirl wrote:Did anyone see the panel show on Sunday night featuring numerous FG with their Japanese spouses discussing the issues of a cross-cultural marriages in Japan?
Dave baby and my other least fave tarento "Kyra" (spelling?) sans brightly coloured wig in the front seats. She was fairly quiet for a change - but then how is her marriage??
Did anyone else see it? Was about 7:30 last Sunday forgot which station.
[/url]After her husband, Japanese actor Mayo Kawasaki, admitted to having an affair a few years ago, Caiya publicly berated him, forcing him to apologize at a news conference.
GomiGirl wrote:Did anyone see the panel show on Sunday night featuring numerous FG with their Japanese spouses discussing the issues of a cross-cultural marriages in Japan?... Was about 7:30 last Sunday forgot which station.
The joys and frustrations of international marriage...common problem of chauvenist husbands who refuse to help out with housework and fault-finding mothers-in-law."
--from the Japan Times TV guide listing last Sunday
The joys and frustrations of international marriage...common problem of chauvenist husbands who refuse to help out with housework and fault-finding mothers-in-law."
--from the Japan Times TV guide listing last Sunday
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