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Jul 27 2004 2 Comments

B for beer advertising

Japanese beer itself is very nice. A good selection to choose from, not overly expensive, and practically all of it around 5%. Which I can confirm packs a very respectable punch. And when drinking holes serve it super cold and in iced glasses, you could argue that life doesn’t get much better.

Yet remarkably it does.

Go into most bars or shops selling beer, and you’ll be able to buy/drink your beverage of choice whilst having a gander at the tasteful beer posters on display. Most of which consist of young ladies sporting bikinis and clutching beers. All of them presumably waiting for a date with a pot bellied beer drinker.

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And just like beer, a second one is always a good idea.

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One for the road?

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Categorized: Food and Drink, General

Jul 26 2004 4 Comments

A for Ayu

Or Ayumi Hamasaki to use her full name.

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This female singer is arguably the biggest name and most recognizable face in Japanese pop music at the moment. But despite her detractors, Ms Hamasaki (or whoever looks after the singer) isn’t stupid. Her time at the top could well be over before she knows it, especially as Japanese consumers are perhaps even more fickle than their western counterparts, so understandably she is making hay whilst the sun shines. Not only does Ayu regularly release new music, but she also lends her face to countless products, and even has her own fashion label. But who can blame her?

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From all accounts, Hamasaki’s childhood wasn’t the happiest, and at the tender age of 14 she moved to Tokyo in search of fame and fortune. But after bit parts in low-budget movies and relatively unsuccessful dramas, the young Ayu was left to wile away her time hanging around in the city’s fashionable Shibuya district. Until that is a chance encounter with a record producer from one of Japan’s biggest labels.

Some accounts say he spotted her on the streets, whilst others claim they were introduced in a karaoke parlour. A few even suggest she used her womanly charms. Yet either way, the rest as they say is history.

Just as Ayu could soon be…

Categorized: Fashion, General, Music

Jul 23 2004 10 Comments

Homeward bound

From next week I’ll be enjoying a month long break back in the motherland. But regular reader(s) fear not. Whilst I’m away, an A to Z of Japanese life will keep Tokyo Times active until I return.

This daily (well, weekdays anyway) alphabetical attempt will endeavor to maintain the high standards associated with the site. So you can look forward to gratuitous pictures of pretty young ladies, constant reinforcements of long held Japanese stereotypes, and perhaps if you are lucky, the odd interesting fact.

Don’t hold your breath on the latter though!

Categorized: General

Jul 22 2004 1 Comment

Flight of fancy

Kohei Shibata, a 24-year-old male, was arrested for fraud last week after attempting to pass himself off as a young flight attendant.

It seems Shibata trawled numerous internet personal sites, pretending to be a 23-year-old female flight attendant called Mizuki Shibata (he obviously couldn’t resist keeping his own family name). This wasn’t just an online scam though. Young Shibata even went so far as mimicking a woman’s voice when he spoke to some of the men he had built relationships with through the sites and in e-mails. Plus he also sent pictures cut from magazines that he claimed were the attractive Ms. Shibata.

After managing to form a particularly promising relationship with a 31-year-old Tokyoite, Shibata-san sent a message saying that he (or should that be she?) had been taken sick and desperately needed a loan to pay for the operation.

Sound suspicious? Too right it does. Yet unbelievably the love-struck victim fell for this and made 6 bank transfers, totaling a whopping 8.2 million yen (40,000 pounds).

Presumably he was hoping for a blissful future with someone like this.

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But even still, 8.2 million yen!?

Categorized: General, Web/Tech

Jul 20 2004 2 Comments

You can’t miss it

As the Japanese take a rather relaxed approach to town planning, finding your way to someone’s house, a restaurant, or bar can be a tricky endeavor to say the least. More often than not a map is a necessity, as are numerous telephone calls, as you inevitably find yourself going round and round in circles.

Because of this, using landmarks is essential. Now in this department I’m quite fortunate as I live near a school and a well-known karaoke complex, so people usually have no trouble finding my humble abode. Yet I’m nowhere near as lucky as the people that live in an apartment building I came across yesterday. First off they can say, “My place is above the opticians.”

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Or to make things really easy, they can simply point out that they live below the giant gorilla.

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Categorized: General, Odd

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