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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ Working in Japan

Nagoya: not as bad as Coligny thinks

The secrets to securing the coveted Token Gaijin position.
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Nagoya: not as bad as Coligny thinks

Postby yanpa » Wed May 02, 2012 2:13 pm

There might even be the odd career-changing opportunity there...

Blood, beatings and the cage: the bouncer
An interview with Thomas, the night security manager at Nagoya's biggest club, iD Cafe

By STEPHEN CARR

Before The Japan Times was invited inside Nagoya's iD Cafe to speak to Thomas, the nightclub's security manager, we stopped to chat to a uniformed policeman near the club. He told us there were as many as 50 fights in a nearby park on Friday and Saturday nights. This busy area of the city, Sakae, known to most residents for its shopping and restaurants during the day, changes dramatically in character late at night.

What first brought you to Japan?

Eighteen years ago I was working as a model in L.A. and Las Vegas when my agency called and said a Japanese lady, in town scouting for dancers, had seen my picture and thought I would be a hit in Japan.

I knew nothing about the country, just that my grandfather had fought in the war there. I thought, "Why not?" signed a contract and flew to Tokyo. I joined a troupe of six male strippers and we toured the country.

What was the job like?

It was pretty rough. We were treated no differently to the female Russian, Romanian, Filipina and Brazilian dancers and hostesses you see in (Tokyo's) Roppongi and (Nagoya's) Nishiki. We had our passports locked away and our movements were restricted.

We'd dance four or five one-hour shows a night. Money was stuffed in our G-strings. We used to strip everything off except for a "tea bag." It was a humiliating job. Once offstage we were told to get in the van and were driven back to the hotel.

...


http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fl20120501a1.html
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Postby Coligny » Wed May 02, 2012 2:23 pm

Yea... seems to be even worse...

Remember going down Sakae around 2am once...

The only 2 sentence we could say during the trip were:
"Are the doors locked ? you sure ?" &
"Why is this fucking car fire red... why is this car red... why..."

To give you an idea:
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But with more useless plastichrome around the windows that look miserable like a dirty sink tap after every rain season.
(not ours, we don't have much pictures of it where it's not behind a tow truck or on a wrecker's flatbed, never a JAF subscription has been such a good investment. I start to think that when the paint started peeling, it was if fact a way to try self improvement...)
Marion Marechal nous voila !

Verdun

ni oubli ni pardon

never forgive never forget/ for you illiterate kapitalist pigs


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