I think part of my resentment is born from those jackass suits he wairs, but the icing on the cake is the blonde highlights in the hair.
WTF?
Please tell me I am not alone on this topic?

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kotatsuneko wrote:well, he has a job that earns him plenty of money, earns quite a bit from tv I imagine [tho have heard that jtv doesnt pay domestic staff well, hence even the biggest talents being on several shows a day] drives new sports cars and plays up the gaijin god image
to any FG crashing out after a day in office/eikaiwa hell, he's sending out on message:
hes a CUNT.
kotatsuneko wrote:Thane is way >
kotatsuneko wrote:well, he has a job that earns him plenty of money, earns quite a bit from tv I imagine [tho have heard that jtv doesnt pay domestic staff well, hence even the biggest talents being on several shows a day] drives new sports cars and plays up the gaijin god image
L S wrote:He's just a hollowed out TV caricature of a bubble-era gaijin from around 1990 or before. He's milking it to the very end because that is what he has become.
Japan is a seductress and if you here stay a long time its easy to get trapped in a very narrow existence. He's just a very public example of that. I pity him too, but wonder if he is truly unhappy with his life or not.
omae mona wrote:I agree with what everybody's saying. But, maybe with the exception of those in the fine arts, I wonder how many of us haven't sold out our souls for work.
omae mona wrote:Dave Spector is a little bit of a know-it-all, but is what he does on TV is so awful, other than the hair thing? Don't forget TV is TV, and these tarentos are putting on a show. Those guys are a lot more like normal human beings when they're not working (though Dave Spector's hair doesn't go away, unfortunately).
omae mona wrote:I have a hunch they are not unhappy at all.
torasan wrote:Chotto mate, everyone, I know Dave Spector and he's a very nice guy. you got it all wrong.
[...]
Get over it. Everyone who disses him is jealous envious scared,
torasan wrote:Get over it. Everyone who disses him is jealous envious scared, damn, he's just a Chicago kid who got lucky in Japan and he's a pro on TV here. So what if he woulda been nobody back home, we all woulda been nobody back home, we are all nobody here.
torasan wrote:The issue is the absolute crap of JTV. Yes to that. But again, that's what the locals want, so that's what they get.
torasan wrote:Yes, the issue is not Dave, he is just fulfilling his karma, and more power to him. The issue is the absolute crap of JTV. Yes to that. But again, that's what the locals want, so that's what they get.
torasan wrote:And if as you say, some local J people say Dave is not so good, then why, pray tell, why, tell me, has he remained on TV for over 15 years or so. If he wasn't selling the commericals that sell the shows, then they would take him off. They haven't. Ergo: he's just what the medium requires.
torasan wrote:He is not a gaijin. He is a Chicago boy doing his thang in Tokyo. Welcome to the Global Village.
torasan wrote:And money? What's money go to do with it? Nothing.
The state of competition in the media market is not strongly correlated with quality or innovatative programming. Some of the best television was created in Britain with two public channels and one commercial broadcaster - Channel 4 only began in 1982. Japanese television has actually been extremely good at producing television on low budgets. It is striking that, as the number of channels has exploded across the globe, many production companies are facing the same challenges to create low-cost programming and are coming up with the same solutions as Japan.FG Lurker wrote:With the complete lack of meaningful competition in the market here giving the stations what they want is key, no?
Mulboyne wrote:
"Pop Idol" and it's numerous counterparts around the world are nationwide competitions to find new singing talent...famously, Morning Musume was formed from the losers of one of these competitions.
Mulboyne wrote:Horie's attack on Fuji TV, whether he is successful or not, will also act as a catalyst for change but I don't expect a golden age of programming to be the result.
dimwit wrote:Mulboyne wrote:Horie's attack on Fuji TV, whether he is successful or not, will also act as a catalyst for change but I don't expect a golden age of programming to be the result.
If he can resurrrect 'Gilgamesh Night' I'll be a happy camper. :P
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