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SuperTanuki wrote:Hi people,
First up, my account's new but I've been one super-silent lurker around here since one fellow fucked gaijin told me to quit posting on gaijinpot, which he quite rightly pointed out was full of arrogant and slit-my-wrist gloomy tossers. Never a positive word to say.
On that complimentary note to the clearly more approachable, brighter-minded peeps in here, I've finally decided to break the stalker silence and ask for you guys' advice.
I'll (try to) keep this short. I'm a games Journolist (of ten years) in London. My girlfriend (a nursery nurse) and I want to go to Japan to study Japanese full time. We'd like to work part time on the side, and I've got the backing of a few websites, magazines (and a TV studio) in UK who say they'll use me on freelance terms for regular japanese features, video blogs and previews.
There must be more than a few of you doing this very thing right now (Mulboyne!!! You here man?), so I just want to know how it all works out financially. Roughly how much cash money will we need in advance and, considering tuition, travel, accomodation and living expenses, how much will we need each month? How feasible/achievable is this, and what PT jobs should I be looking for.
Oh, and we'd ideally like to be in Tokyo, although Yokohama (which, I'm told by a friend who lives there, is quite a bit cheaper) is also on the radar.
Damn - I always write too much - sorry guys. Any help would be very much appreciated.
SuperTanuki wrote:I'm a games Journolist (of ten years) in London. My girlfriend (a nursery nurse) and I want to go to Japan to study Japanese full time.
Charles wrote:From what I hear, she's mostly doing localization, converting Japanese games to English.
SuperTanuki wrote:I knew someone would pull me up on a type-o - ironic that it had to be that word. Heh.
Cheers for the advice all, particularly Charles. I must say, figuring this 'I want to go to Japan for a year or two' gig out is proving frustrating. I've been networking and researching this for months now. Check out the patter:
Speak to fellow journo/designer that's been in Japan for years and loves it - Feel encouraged. Get a plan with their advice. Slap said plan on Gaigin forum for their take. Get shot down. Meet and speak to another happy gaijin in my industry. Feel encouraged. Devise new plan. Post on Forum. Get shot down. Repeat x 4.
Charles - those incompatibles. First, what if we came in on student visas to study three times a week - would you see that working better with PT work (I know there's a limit to work hours).
Second, the girlfriend. She's as keen to go as I. One guy, actually the one who forwarded me this site, saw our partnership in this as a positive, costs wise. Our appartment costs would be halved, for example.
Third, I know of a few Journos that have gone to be a freelance Japan correspondent for US and UK publications. It didn't matter that they couldn't speak fluently to Nintendo or Sega - just being there meant you could get to events, write about new crazes and do features that those publications otherwise can't/wouldn't think of.
In terms of studying, I've already learned the bare basics, and am studying at the moment in London (IIEL).
And "carving out my niche in Japan" is exactly what I want to do, but every time I devise a plan just to get my feet on Japanese soil for a few months to a year, forums shoot it down. My company paying is out of the question. WH visa was my first plan, but someone advised me to go for the Student gig instead.
Its funny - I know of and hear of students, journos and others going to japan all the time, learning some japanese, doing some work, meeting some people, and coming back a year or two or even three later having had a fucking awesome time. Some of those are people with equal or even less experience, money, contacts and planning than I, and they manage it.
I want to know how to do that.
SuperTanuki wrote:Speak to fellow journo/designer that's been in Japan for years and loves it - Feel encouraged. Get a plan with their advice. Slap said plan on Gaigin forum for their take. Get shot down. Meet and speak to another happy gaijin in my industry. Feel encouraged. Devise new plan. Post on Forum. Get shot down. Repeat x 4.
Third, I know of a few Journos that have gone to be a freelance Japan correspondent for US and UK publications. It didn't matter that they couldn't speak fluently to Nintendo or Sega - just being there meant you could get to events, write about new crazes and do features that those publications otherwise can't/wouldn't think of.
And "carving out my niche in Japan" is exactly what I want to do, but every time I devise a plan just to get my feet on Japanese soil for a few months to a year, forums shoot it down. My company paying is out of the question. WH visa was my first plan, but someone advised me to go for the Student gig instead.
Its funny - I know of and hear of students, journos and others going to japan all the time, learning some japanese, doing some work, meeting some people, and coming back a year or two or even three later having had a fucking awesome time. Some of those are people with equal or even less experience, money, contacts and planning than I, and they manage it.
I want to know how to do that.
SuperTanuki wrote:Second, the girlfriend. She's as keen to go as I. One guy, actually the one who forwarded me this site, saw our partnership in this as a positive, costs wise. Our appartment costs would be halved, for example.
GomiGirl wrote:In terms of monthly living costs - pretty much what you are used to from London. I think it is a myth that Japan is a super expensive country. Sure some things like accommodation can be not as good value for money, but groceries etc are pretty reasonable.
ttjereth wrote:I can't speak to living costs from London, but I hope you're kidding about the Japan not being an expensive country thing.
Some sample prices from our recent shopping receipts etc.:
Large (medium in most other places) delivery pizza with 1 or 2 toppings 3,000 yen
1 stalk of celery 198 yen
bag of 3 onions (round kind) 198 yen
2 carrots 198 yen
1 bell pepper (or paprika as they are called here) 198 yen
bag of 5 miniature potatoes 198 yen
5 kilogram bag of rice 1980 yen
5 packages of instant ramen 397 yen
1 liter of milk 198 yen
6 slice "loaf" of bread 198 yen
1 banana 97 yen
1 orange 98 yen
1 apple 128 yen
Gas for two people for a month (bath/shower and cooking range only) 7-10,000 yen
Telephone minimum of 4000 yen a month, plus at least 30,000 yen to get a phone line in the first place
Electricity anywhere from 7000 yen a month to 24,000 (running the AC and two computers full time)
Then of course there's still water, sewage, NHK (ha!), train fares, taxi rides, toilet paper, etc. etc.
Also, I don't know much about gaijin houses, but would he be able to get his own internet connection there? If he's going to be doing freelance work with places back home, I'd imagine he'd need more ready access than hauling off to an Internet cafe or Starbucks to check his email...
ttjereth wrote:I'm kind of surprised that everything is so expensive in Australia and NZ. I find the States is still cheaper for most things. I STILL do almost all of my clothing and shoe shopping in bulk when I go back home once a year or so because it's so much cheaper.
Charles wrote:If he just wanted to make big money (or feel like it) he should write for UK publishers and live in the US. I recently wrote a story for a UK website and was astonished at how much money I made, due to the incredible Pound/Dollar exchange rate.
Mulboyne wrote:I live more cheaply in Tokyo than London when I'm in town. In January, when one pound exchanged for 250 yen, there were bargains to be had. Since the rate is now vacillating around 200 yen, prices have effectively gone up 25% for UK travellers in the space of only three months even without considering the recent rises in taxis, beer, bread, milk, fish etc. I think a rate of around 170 would make Tokyo a more expensive proposition and, since it was not so long ago that the rate was 130 yen to the pound, that's not an impossible scenario.
kusai Jijii wrote:True enough. Every time I go back to Oz, I cant help thinking how expensive everything has become. I recon a night on the grog is cheeper in Japan than it is in Australia these days, and food and clothes (within reason) are now definately cheeper in Japan than Australia.
Of course the flip side to this is that real wages have exploded in Oz over the last decade, whereas in Japan they have stagnated.
ttjereth wrote:Some sample prices from our recent shopping receipts etc.:
1 banana 97 yen
1 orange 98 yen
1 apple 128 yen
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Batsu_Girl wrote:Couldn't agree more. Rent is cheaper for me in Yokohama-shi than it was in the suburbs of Melbourne for a similar size place. Internet here is also a quater of the cost I paid in Aus. Apart from fresh fruit and veggies, you can get pretty cheap dinners and much cheaper drinks here.
I know an older woman who used to travel to Cairns for a holiday every year with her husband but they don't do it anymore because they think Aus has become too expensive.
ttjereth wrote:How much does rent go for in Japanese Yen in the suburbs of Melbourne? What is an average salary in Australia? I was under the impression the annual average income was siginificantly lower there than here in Japan (my only basis for this was word of mouth from Australian friends), and if so, and the prices are the same, how does anyone make a living there at all?
Is this just a really recent trend or has it been this way for awhile? All of my anecdotal evidence through friends is about 5 years old, but is there that significant of a difference between then and now?
Iraira wrote:Why are you only buying one banana, one apple, and one orange at a time? Oh, I got it, you like the girl at the supermarket register and gotta pull the old, "Oh, damn, we're out of banana, orange, and apple (singular tense is on purpose), again, hon. Gotta go to the market, no...no...I'll go, you stay here and stay warm, the forecast said (insert natural disaster here), I'll be back in a couple of hours. Picking the right apple, orange, and banana takes time, ne....."
amdg wrote:5 years ago was on the trailing end of the cusp of change. Salaries are higher in Oz, rent is higher, pretty much everything is more expensive. It started changing about 10 years ago.
ttjereth wrote:Huh. Still not having visited (despite persistent pestering to do so from a friend) I was under the impression that things were siginifcantly less expensive there, mainly from the examples of an Australian friend who was here on JET for three years and returned home and bought a house outright with money he had saved on JET over three years, which even 5 years ago would have been difficult in the U.S. and now would be bloody impossible and other Australian friends who joined me in constantly complaining how expensive Japan was.
amdg wrote:A house, outright, from 3 years of JET money? It's possible - if by 'house' you mean ruined log cabin the middle of nowhere, and by 'money he saved on JET' you mean drug cartel profits.
But seriously, I guess he wasn't from Melbourne. Things may be different in other places around Australia, but I guess most major cities are following the same trend and what your friend said he did is just not possible.
Let's run the numbers -
JET salary 4,000,000 Yen p/a (or thereabouts).
pension refund after 3 years - 900,000
Let's say he lived with his girlfriend in Japan who paid all the rent herself, he never spend anything on food or drinks and made no purchases at all. Basically he saves every single yen he ever earned.
He ends up with 129,000 dollars (without interest calculations). You couldn't buy any property in Melbourne right now for that - neither house nor apartment.
kusai Jijii wrote:Melbourne these days is a fucking rip off!
Trust me.
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