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Taro Toporific wrote: See what happens when they ban used panty vending machines...
Captain Japan wrote:But Tokyo's infamous trade in previously worn female undergarments, which has satisfied the Lolita-like longings of many middle-aged men for years, will soon be subject to a new wrinkle: regulation. The Tokyo Municipal Government is cracking down on the sales, revising a previous measure that will outlaw the purchases of briefs from minors.
TOKYO — A TV Asahi Corp production company submitted a videotape showing an instance of underwear theft to police on Wednesday.
The production company shot the theft with the cooperation of a Tokyo woman who had suffered similar thefts between August and September. It was to be part of a documentary on underwear thefts.
The company bought the underwear before the shoot to serve as the woman's, as she said she could no longer stand having her own underwear stolen, according to TV Asahi.
TV Asahi staff overpowered the suspect on the balcony of her house and handed him over to police.
However, the advance preparation of the underwear "was imprudent and may invite misunderstanding," the broadcaster said in a statement.
"The submission of the videotape to the police is against a general rule of reporting, that it should be used only for broadcasting purposes," TV Asahi said, adding it punished four of its employees.
TV Asahi has decided to cancel the program in which the video footage was to be aired in November, it said.
[/quote]Captain Japan wrote:[b]TV Asahi unit lures underwear thief into trap as part of documentary
-snip-
"The submission of the videotape to the police is against a general rule of reporting, that it should be used only for broadcasting purposes," TV Asahi said, adding it punished four of its employees.
TV Asahi has decided to cancel the program in which the video footage was to be aired in November, it said.
gboothe wrote:This points to an item that I find hard to understand. Where in the laws of any country or even so-called "general rules", does the media have the right to withhold criminal evidence from the police? There has been a mis-belief that somethings, such as videos of crimes in progress or criminal information from a source, is protected by the same process afforted to freedom of speech and can be withheld from the police and courts.
Isn't that pushing media control of society a taste over board?
homesweethome wrote:I am not sure what you mean by 'media control of society' but by that if you mean the responsibility of commercial broadcast production facilities to make their products available for use in criminal and civil court proceedings, this I have to disagree with.
Neo-Rio wrote:You can still find panty vending machines in adult shops. They're just not out in public now.
Neo-Rio wrote:(they don't look like the ones in your post though)
Taro Toporific wrote:I need a take a sleath video of a panty vending machines to win a outstanding bar bet.
A production company working on behalf of TV Asahi submitted footage to police showing women's underwear being stolen, prompting the broadcaster to pull the plug on a documentary scheduled to be aired in November, it has been learned.
TV Asahi officials announced on Wednesday that the company had handed the tape to police without first consulting the broadcaster.
The footage was taken in August and September as part of a program on theft. It featured a woman whose underwear had been stolen by a thief, and captured someone stealing underwear from the veranda of her home.
As soon as the theft occurred, a worker at the production company apprehended the thief, who was taken into police custody. At the request of police, the company handed over a copy of a tape containing the footage to police, but at the end of September a problem arose between TV Asahi and the company over the tape, and company officials asked police to return it.
"The production firm did not ask us first before supplying the tape (to police)," a TV Asahi official said. "We view this as a serious problem that violated company rules of not using the footage for purposes other than broadcasts."...more...
homesweethome wrote:Also this might not be true in Japan, but in a normal society it is the police who have the authority to arrest and detain suspects. I know they don't do their job, but this is not an excuse for vigilante justice for the purpose of a tv documentary.
"Police 24 Hours" is a hard-hitting crime documentary series and the jewel in the crown of Asahi TV's news programming.
* Tokyo Confidential surveys popular vernacular magazines -- often "salacious, libelous and utterly unreliable" -- to discover what the Japanese are "really thinking." See also below:
With an in-your-face style of news gathering, its intrepid reporters work on stories that expose crime and detail the efforts of the law enforcers fighting it.
One story that didn't make it to air, however, was conceived last summer by producer Kazuya Kitajima. His plan: investigating the common, and annoying crime, of underwear theft.
Kitajima (a pseudonym) and his team planned on pointing a hidden camera at a piece of women's underwear hanging on the balcony of the apartment of someone frequently victimized by such thefts. The bait, they figured, would be sure to attract the attention of at least one pervert.
"Mr. Kitajima apparently spent July doing the planning and began the actual reporting in August for a segment to air in September," a person Shukan Shincho describes as "connected to TV Asahi" tells the magazine.
An underwear-theft victim was located. As for the bait, the producer reckoned that a racy type of lingerie -- rather than the conventional undergarments this particular woman usually hung out to dry -- would have the best chances of attracting a pervert.
A camera was installed and the bait put on display. The TV crew lay in wait over several evenings. Then one night, a man emerged from the darkness. Like a trout darting for an angler's worm, he grabbed the lingerie -- and the snatch was nicely captured on video....more...
Captain Japan wrote:To catch a (panty) thief
Japan Times
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A camera was installed and the bait put on display. The TV crew lay in wait over several evenings. Then one night, a man emerged from the darkness. Like a trout darting for an angler's worm, he grabbed the lingerie -- and the snatch was nicely captured on video....
Buraku wrote:Sony vending machines mooted
http://www.ferrago.com/story/7858
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