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Toeless cropped socks are "new", riiiiight, new for the past 15-20 years here in Japan.
Steve Bildermann wrote:Toeless cropped socks are "new", riiiiight, new for the past 15-20 years here in Japan.
hmmm sock styles are not somerhing I keep up on however *you* speak with such authority.
Toro-San, a sort of Japanese Jerry Lewis, was played by Kiyoshi Atsumi in no less than 48 films between 1969 and 1995
The movie devotes full time to the Ginzo boss (Ittoku Kishibe) and his auditions for a bodyguard, and establishes Aunt O-Ume (Michiyo Ogusu), who befriends the two geishas, O-Kinu (Yuko Daike) and O-Sei (the transvestite Daigoro Tachibana).
On a street in Tokyo's old entertainment district of Asakusa, the radiant figure in the white kimono is surrounded by adoring fans.
The matinee has just finished at the Taishokan Theatre, and the crowd of mainly middle-aged women gathers around the star, who is happily obliging with autographs. "Outrageously pretty!" declares one woman in her 50s. "He's also such a beautiful dancer."
The "he" is no misprint, for the beauty in the kimono is a teenage boy, 16-year-old Daigoro Tachibana. To his legion of fans, he is simply Daigoro, a rising young star of Japan, as the throng on the footpath this afternoon testifies.
Taro Toporific wrote: The Worst Things About Tokyo
Journalism is dead. Welcome to blogsterbationism; The I-can-put-three-fucking-sentences-together-about-anything-I-fucking-know-nothing-about era..I was wearing sneakers and my feet felt like they were swollen and on fire after about the approximately, oh, two hours of constant walking and standing as we were going from place to place. (It helps if you're not an American hippo)
It might seem hard to believe, but many people in Japan prefer using these floor holes to a standard Western toilet... (rearry?)
Japan also has only six free Wi-fi hotspots in the country, according to the Wi-fi Hotspot Directory... (honto? I count over 170 in Tokyo alone.. No need to research before writing these days, ne)
Taro Toporific wrote:Living And Dying In Tokyo
VIEW FROM THE RIGHT
Adam Sparks, Special to SF Gate [San Francisco Chronicle portal site ] / Monday, October 4, 2004
Caustic Saint wrote:Ummm, which country did this guy visit to write this story? 'Cause it sure wasn't Japan....
They can trace their roots back some 3,000 years, compared to a mere 230 years for us cowboy Americans. And longevity matters: When a culture has stewed and simmered for that long, it tends to evolve into a very fine broth.
The few criminals the Japanese do have often turn themselves in within a week]they simply feel too guilty, and honor dictates that they face the music of justice rather than hide.[/b]
It's normal for an employee to be loyal to his first company from the time of his college graduation to his retirement.Loyalty and honor still matter. Ritual suicides for those who gravely dishonor family or company still occur: Now, that's accountability.
The Japanese have traded the bigger-is-better philosophy of the struggle for ever more material goods for a lifestyle of simplicity, meaningful relationships and societal harmony and security -- all of which they have in spades.
Adam Sparks is a Bay Area writer. He can be reached at adamstyle@aol.com.
Environmentally, too, the Japanese are far ahead of us.
Why does this social structure matter? It helps explain why there are virtually no homeless people on the streets.
The ritual of the long wake, in which the body is kept at home, seems at once primitive and cathartic: It offers the proper amount of time to mourn. American funerals, by contrast, are sterile. Often, the body is never seen again, or at any rate spends little time with the surviving family members.
BETSY PICKLE Newbie tard wrote:While there's plenty of bloody, lifelike action and one interesting detour into a chain of realities (another "Matrix" nod), the film is jarringly verbose.
Mulboyne wrote:Telegraph: Lifting the lid on a healthy, tasty lunch in Japan
I have been fascinated with bento boxes ever since I moved to Japan seven months ago. In many ways they denote so much of what we westerners perceive to be typical of Japan: delicacy, beauty and intrigue. .
Taro Toporific wrote:Living And Dying In Tokyo
VIEW FROM THE RIGHT
Adam Sparks, Special to SF Gate [San Francisco Chronicle portal site ] / Monday, October 4, 2004
....there are virtually no homeless people on the streets.
yakinoumiso wrote:
Yeah, whatever...but I've been interested in how my Japanese colleagues can spend up to five minutes washing their plastic, disposable bento boxes before tossing them into the rubbish bin. A couple of guys use more soap and water for one plastic tray than most restaurants use during their entire lunchtime rush.
Now that is what I call 'fastidious'.:
maraboutslim wrote:Taro Toporific wrote:Living And Dying In Tokyo
VIEW FROM THE RIGHT
Adam Sparks, Special to SF Gate [San Francisco Chronicle portal site ] / Monday, October 4, 2004
....there are virtually no homeless people on the streets.
I emailed this guy to tell him how his story was inaccurate and that he should read fucked gaijin dot com.
braindead BCC news crew wrote:The activists trying to stop them are likely to be exclusively outsiders.
That is not necessarily because the Japanese support the trade. During the three weeks we were there, we found no one outside the dolphin hunting towns who even knew that dolphins were eaten.
So, perhaps the challenge is not to change minds, but to inform them.
Monday, 8 November, 2004, 00:54 GMT
Dining with the dolphin hunters
By Paul Kenyon
Director/producer/reporter, Dolphin Hunters Dolphin Hunters will be broadcast in the UK on BBC Two at 1930 GMT.
Mulboyne wrote:
Telegraph: Lifting the lid on a healthy, tasty lunch in Japan
I have been fascinated with bento boxes ever since I moved to Japan seven months ago. In many ways they denote so much of what we westerners perceive to be typical of Japan: delicacy, beauty and intrigue. .
...It's all about presentation, no matter where you go you can expect the highest of standards. The box can vary in size depending on the quantity of food that you want, but they are always divided into sections for each food type ensuring that the flavours do not run into each other. Fastidious as the Japanese people are, it is not surprising that such care is taken.
Essentially the aesthetic of food is more important that its taste, the delicate nature of the preparation calls for "smallness, separation and fragmentation". Colour, shape and texture are all important in the overall appreciation of the meal.
...When people think about the Japanese diet, they think about sushi and yakitori, but bento boxes too are very much a part of the daily culture of contemporary Japan. They are simply a Japanese manifestation of the British love for a square meal.
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