Confessions of a foreign correspondent
- - - Weird Japan fills gap left by foreign hacks
The Japan Times: Sept. 23, 2003
These are not happy times for people who make a living writing about Japan. With the country apparently having become, as one magazine put it, the "Switzerland of Asia," i.e., rich but boring, foreign newspapers are shuttering their Tokyo bureaus as fast as they can ...
...Given the nature of Japanese politics and society, where developments often seem to move at the pace and clarity of a drunken salaryman, it's hard not to sympathize with the people who make the decision to pull out. If I was a busy foreign editor forced to choose between a story about yet another thrilling factional fight in the liver-spotted old guard of the Liberal Democratic Party, or the latest shenanigans in the court of Kim Jong Il, no prizes for guessing what would be on tomorrow's pages....
...most prominent pieces are about cults (Panawave, Aum Shinryikyo), gangsters (three interviews), and, er, suicides. I've managed to avoid geishas but that's more than been made up for with articles about kamikaze pilots, train gropers, Sumo wrestlers and ultra-rightists. Okay, there's stuff in there too about teachers...