Weekend Beat/ Your boyfriend a drag? Dump him for a sleek Shinkansen
Asahi
Yuko Kimura's "date" with her "boyfriend" unfolds at Tokyo Station or Ueno Station. They spend, at most, 10 minutes together. Then it's time to say goodbye.
"My boyfriend is the 400-series Yamagata Shinkansen 'Tsubasa,'" the 24-year-old model explains.
Is she serious? Very much so. She arrived in Tokyo for the first time a year and a half ago, and there it was, just a few platforms away at Tokyo Station. For her, it was love at first sight.
"I mean, the Tsubasa is so cool!" she beams. "Trains nowadays are made of aluminum or stainless steel, but the Tsubasa is iron all over. And I just love the name." Tsubasa means wing.
But all is not bliss. There is a rival for Tsubasa's affection. It is the Akita Shinkansen "Komachi." Fortunately, the Tsubasa is designed to be linked only to the Tohoku Shinkansen "Yamibiko." "As a woman, if it could be coupled with the Komachi I'd be jealous," she says....more nonsense here...
The makeinu inclusion puts it over the top...
Tetsuko have a knack for personifying their favorite train cars. They fall in love with them--with Shinkansen in particular. One who did is Junko Sakai, the writer behind the popular catch-phrase "underdog," signifying single women in their 30s or older.
"I fell in love with a Shinkansen's face," she writes in "Joshi to Tetsudo" (Women and the railway) published last year. "There's something masculine about a Shinkansen's face," she admits. "That's why I guess I could fall in love with one. As of now, the one that appeals to me most is the 700 series, with its duck-billed platypus face."