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Apr 13 2006 1 Comment

Manga misdemeanor

Whilst way short of the staggering 2 month stint achieved in Niigata last year, Kiyoshi Ikeda recently made a valiant attempt at the staying-in-a-manga-cafe-for-as-long-as-possible world record, living in such an establishment for a very respectable 34 straight days.

manga
some manga

Before being arrested for fraud in the early hours of Wednesday morning, the 37-year-old had enjoyed the relative comfort of a ‘1,000 yen for nine hours’ room; his only problem being a distinct lack of food, as after a grilled beef dinner on March 10 he had been surviving on only coffee and toast each morning. Well, that and the cafe’s lack of washing facilities, unemployed Ikeda resorting to washing his underpants in the room’s washbasin.

a washbasin

Being a regular at the cafe combined with rotating shifts amongst the staff meant Ikeda’s secretive sojourn initially went unnoticed, but after finally being rumbled for non-payment he was unceremoniously handed over to the police; the paltry 16 yen in his possession being well short of the bill — a hefty 150,000 yen (720 pound). Not that the comic connoisseur showed any repentance, Ikeda-san brazenly boasting, “I ran out of money and I thought I’d stay there until I got kicked out.”

Categorized: Odd

Apr 12 2006 6 Comments

Fowl play?

People riding home with their weekly shopping piled precariously in their bicycle’s basket is commonplace.

Middle-aged men on the other hand utilising the same mode of transportation to relocate birds of prey, isn’t.

owl

(click image for extra eccentricity)

Categorized: Odd, Photography

Apr 11 2006 1 Comment

East of Eton

Saturday saw the opening of Kaiyo Academy in Aichi Prefecture, a boys-only boarding school modeled on Britain’s exclusive Eton College. The elaborate ceremony welcoming around 120 students from all over the country, many of whom will be molded into future leaders of Japan. Or at least that’s the aim.

kaiyo academy

School principle Takeo Izuyama told the gathered throng, “What is important for one to become a leader is to establish his or her individual identity.” Student representative Taiki Aoyama — a regular fun-loving 12-year-old by all accounts — responding in kind by saying, “We will study Japanese history and culture and will make efforts so that we can play an important role in the global community with confidence and pride.”

Yet whilst the overall curriculum at Kaiyo Academy may differ slightly from that of Eton, several house masters assured parents that rugby is compulsory, as will be the time-honoured public school traditions of group masturbation and buggery.

Categorized: General

Apr 10 2006 3 Comments

Convenience store chainsaw misdemenour

Customers treating their local convenience store as a library of sorts is far from uncommon, with many spending considerably more than a few minutes leafing through magazines and manga. That said, Ibaraki resident Yasumasa Matsuzaki managed to take such brazen browsing into previously uncharted territory — visiting the same Seven-Eleven store everyday and reading to his heart’s content.

However after an eye-straining 3-hour stint at the magazine rack last Wednesday, the manager of the store finally lost patience with the 70-year-old, telling him to either buy or bugger off. Perhaps predictably Matsuzaki opted for the latter, but his chainsaw-wielding return was somewhat less expected, the rabid reader revving the motor and shouting to the manager, “I’ll cut you to pieces!”

japanese convenience store

Thankfully Matsuzaki-san didn’t carry out his threat, instead opting to leave the (still running) chainsaw at the store’s front entrance and go back to his reading; the mystified manager explaining, “He was still reading magazines even after I called police.”

After the culprit was taken away, Seven-Eleven spokesperson Nobuyuki Miyaji explained that customers reading for long periods of time wasn’t unusual, but Matsuzaki was an extreme case. Also adding, “I’ve heard that he wouldn’t leave the store, coming every day and lying on the floor eating food.”

Sustenance purchased in the shop or brought from home in the form of a packed lunch wasn’t disclosed.

Categorized: General, Odd

Apr 07 2006 5 Comments

Mellow moneylenders

Now admittedly this bank’s interest rates are appalling, and getting one of its credit cards is complicated beyond belief, but the customer service is absolutely top notch.

japanese bank

Genial even.

(click image for added amiableness)

Categorized: Language, Photography

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