A little cottage tale

A cottage getaway owned by former Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone in a small town in western Tokyo has been converted to a memorial hall to commemorate the summit Nakasone held with U.S. President Ronald Reagan there in 1983.

Ron and Yasu

The bonds forged between the two leaders in the mountains of Hinode led to their famous “Ron-and-Yasu” relationship.

“This was an important place for me to bolster my spirits by looking into the blue sky quietly and wandering through nearby lanes,” [Nakasone said at a ceremony to mark the opening of the hall].

The house will be open to the public every Sunday, and visitors can view the tearoom where Ron and Yasu held talks, and the living room where Nakasone performed tea ceremony for Ronald and Nancy Reagan.

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Giri Giri Girls getting it on

A trip down TV memory lane with a video of the Giri Giri Girls (popular in the ’90s) performing on Super Jockey.

That guy at the beginning of the clip is none other than “Beat” Takeshi Kitano before he messed up his face.

Via Japan Sugoi

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Official Hello Kitty vibrator!

Japundit reader Janine kindly writes in to let us know that the Hello Kitty vibrator is back. no doubt by popular demand.

And this time it is the real deal, straight from the offical Sanrio catalog (Volume 27, Page 3).

Ahhhhhh Hello Kitty vibrator

Looks like it is just the thing for working those nasty kinks out of your neck. . .

Price: 1,260 yen (in pink or black)

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Antique map of Tokyo

Antique Map of Tokyo

MAKER Montanus
TITLE Iedo
PLACE ISSUED Amsterdam
FIRST EDITION 1671
AREA SHOWN Tokyo
TECHNIQUE Copper engraving

I came across this while browsing old maps for sale online. If anybody wants more info drop me a line.

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Here be dragons

What does the small, sleepy town of Mifune in Kumamoto prefecture have that Tokyo wishes it had? Giant lizards, that’s what.

While Godzilla (ゴジラ) takes the pop culture limelight, real dinosaurs are being unearthed in Kyushu.

Reuters reported this weekend,

An 85 million-year-old dinosaur skull has been found in southwestern Japan, one of the oldest discoveries of its kind in the country, the Kyodo news agency said on Saturday.

The fossilized skull, belonging to a herbivore called hadrosaurid, was unearthed on a mountain in the town of Mifune in Kumamoto prefecture, Kyodo said, quoting an official of the Mifune Dinosaur Museum.

With Mifune being just down the road from where I live, I made the short journey down there to see what dinosaur evidence I could find…

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Quote of The Day: Mayako Torigai

“I was once a Bond girl.”

Mayako Murata, who appeared in the 1985 James Bond Film “A View to Kill” under the name Mayako Torigai when being questioned by police after her arrest for swindling 5 million yen from a man she met though a marriage consultation service.

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Fighting over schoolgirls’ uniforms

The Fukuoka uniform, for so long said to be the firstThe Fukuoka Jo Gakuin introduced sailor-suit school uniforms for girls in 1921, and was, according to a Mainichi report, “thought to be the origin of the uniforms”.

But now another school is said to be trying to claim the accolade. The Heian Jogakuin St Agnes School, Kyoto, says it brought the iconic uniforms in in 1920.

The article goes into some of the history of the respective schools, but doesn’t appear to seek to settle the argument.

In fact in rounds off with a quote from a spokesman from [school uniform manufacturer] Tombow, who says

“Heian Jogakuin was the first school in Japan to employ western clothing. But the design of today’s sailor uniforms came from the uniforms that Fukuoka Jo Gakuin employed at the time. You could say that there is truth to both claims of having the first sailor uniform.”

The Mainichi also provides a gallery entitled Schoolgirl uniforms through the ages, with many vintage photographs.

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The way they were: 1970’s Pink Lady bikini bash

Via TV In Japan

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Waxing nostalgic about Japanese music and TV

I can still clearly remember the first time I ever watched Japanese TV back in 1969.

In those days, just about every show on the weekend was a music show, complete with a big band. All the big-name singers of the day would make the rounds of the different shows singing their songs for large live audiences. I learned a heck of a lot of Japanese just by enjoying the weekend music shows and memorizing the songs they were singing.

But on that particular day, the first image that came on the screen was that of Miyako Harumi, dressed in full kimono and singing in the distinctive enka style that has fallen out of favor of late, but whose popularity was pretty much on par with pop music back then. Harumi’s hit at that time was something called Suki Ni Natta Hito, which started out:

Sayonara, sayonara. Genki de itte ne.

I was pretty thrilled with the song because sayonara was one of the few Japanese words I could understand at the time. Anyway, it was love at first sight and I became an unabashed Miyako Harumi fan. I have been to about four of her concerts, and I still have a pretty good collection of her CDs.

Here is a video of Miyako Harumi that I ran across doing one of her most well-known enka songs, Kita No Yado Kara.

If you are still interested, click here for a video of Ayumi Ishida (link does not allow embedding) singing Blue Light Yokohama, which was the number one song in 1969.

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Spend an Hour at a World Heritage Site

Japan’s gaudy, kitschy love hotels should be made into World Heritage sites, photojournalist Kyoichi Tsuzuki, recently told Mainichi Daily News. He’s photographed numerous love hotels all over Japan but regards three of them as especially deserving of preservation–Kawasaki’s Geihinkan, Fuki, a hotel in Osaka’s Kyobashi, and Alpha Inn, which specializes in S&M dungeons.

Tsuzuki-san’s idea isn’t completely wacky either. Apparently revisions to the law regulating adult entertainment made in 1985 put love hotels under exactly the same category as ordinary lodgings.

This meant that they were subjected to rules that outlawed rooms from having equipment not regarded as necessary for the accommodation of people. Hence goodbye mirrored ceilings and walls, rotating circular beds and bathrooms with glass walls that symbolized love hotels in their heyday.

While it’s unclear to me why S&M dungeons are still OK in a typical dwelling for basic accommodation of ordinary people, Tsuzuki says “Love hotels as we imagine love hotels to be — y’know, the places filled with a sense of fun — are simply not built like that anymore. And the old ones that do survive are gradually dwindling in number.” He adds that the love hotels serve a valuable role and are highly regarded by many prominent foreign architects even as they rapidly vanish.

They will clearly be a huge cultural loss. When it comes to places we visit on a daily basis, it’s love hotels and not (Tokyo’s posh) Imperial Hotel. If the Imperial Hotel is made a World Heritage site, we’re going to be giving people 100 years in the future the wrong impression of what our lives are really like now. There’s a reality to be found in love hotels, and it’s important to preserve that as a record of what our current lifestyles really are like. We need to keep a record of lifestyle that is in danger of fading away. Rather than preserving magnificent hotels that are a symbol of an unrealistic lifestyle for most of us, it would be better to look after love hotels.

He has a point–”you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone.” In my town one of the post offices is a big art deco building–probably a pretty good example too. It would have been easy to bulldoze it and have a parking lot instead, as happens so often. But instead they decided to clean it up and keep using it.

There should be more of that. On the other hand, I think the news lately has been saying that too many people basically live in manga kissa or Internet Cafes. Maybe they should be world heritage sites too?

Thing is–such places are just common and familiar right now yet 50 years from now only some slobbering old man on a park bench remembers what they looked like. And we think he’s semi-crazy and babbling about hopelessly old-fashioned stuff?

Photo: Angel from a love-hotel’s facade, Yushima (Bunkyo-Ku, Tokyo). Uploaded to Flickr 09/01/06 by e-chan. Some rights reserved.

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Satoyama

In 2004, NHK showed a wonderful documentary about the slow and sustainable lives of the villagers of Satoyama on the shores of Lake Biwa. It was also aired in the UK as part of the BBC’s Natural World series.

You can now view ‘Satoyama: Japan’s Secret Water Garden’, narrated by the one and only Sir David Attenborough, on Youtube. It’s in six parts, here’s the first.

HT to Bob Brady at the wonderful PureLandMountain.com

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Let’s Go J-Sound!

Check out Let’s Go J-Sound! for a fabulous trip back in time down J-pop memory lane with a couple that describes their efforts thusly:

In 1991 a guy and a girl met and fell head-over-heels for each other. They spent much of their time from that day forward hanging out in San Francisco’s Japan Town and encouraging each other’s interest in things like Japanese music, movies, toys and food. This blog is a result of their 15 year relationship and their mutual love of music. You’ll find nothing but songs, videos and other various music related bits here. We hope you’ll enjoy exploring J-Sounds with a guy, his girl and their music collection.

And straight from Let’s Go J-Sounds, here’s a real blast from the past — Shiroi Iro Wa Koi Bito No Iro (Colors of Love) by Betsy & Chris, a popular singing duo from Hawaii that made it big in Japan in the early 1970s.

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I Want One of These!

You have probably seen this elsewhere already but I definitely want one! While doing a routine Web search for information on home nuclear power systems, Pink Tentacle came across this scan of a 1980s print ad for a possibly imaginary device called the Chernobyl Household Nuclear Generator.

With all the talk today of global warming and peak oil, perhaps it would not hurt to take another look at what home fission reactors have to offer. If affordable, would you be interested in purchasing a Chernobyl Household Nuclear Generator? The features include:

  • Reduce your monthly electric bill by 80% and enjoy a constant, stable supply of energy free from the fluctuations in supply that affect the oil market.
  • A single, user-friendly activation switch makes the Chernobyl Household Nuclear Power Generator simple to operate, even for children and the elderly.
  • One small nuclear fuel rod (about 15 cm long) generates enough electricity to support the average household for six months.
  • To dispose of a spent fuel rod, simply insert it into its special shielded case and discard it along with ordinary non-combustible household waste.

The cost is a little steep at 1.31 million yen ($7,856) with a set of three fuel rods going for 137,000 yen ($822) not including taxes. But imagine powering a whole household or boat for a year with just two tiny, economical, and safe nuclear fuel rods? And kawaii too! Truly the Kyoto dream come true?

Nihon Shogata Genshiryoku Hatsuden does offer a small note of caution though: “When using the power generator with direct current, people near the device may on rare occasions experience dizziness or a tingling sensation in the hands or feet. If you experience such conditions, temporarily discontinue use and consult a physician.” [EBT]

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Lovely Spam

Japundit reader Mr. T writes to inform us that Freshness Burger in Japan and has lovely Spam sandwiches on their menus for 390 yen. Tony wonders whether Spam is a legacy of the U.S. occupation. Anyone know?

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He fought the law and the law won

From Mainichi:

Koichi Toyama, a controversial candidate in the April gubernatorial election in Tokyo, has been arrested for traffic violations, police said.

Toyama, 36, was arrested for violating the Road Traffic Law on Tuesday after he denied the allegations and rejected repeated orders to turn himself in to a local police station.

On Jan. 17, 2006, Toyama was caught riding a motorcycle in the wrong direction on a one-way municipal road in Kagoshima. On July 10, last year, he was also riding a motorcycle at 50 kilometers per hour, 20 kilometers per hour in excess of the speed limit, police said.

Officers issued traffic violation tickets at the scenes, but he denied the allegations. He also refused to pay the fines.

I knew they’d get their revenge. He’s only questioning authority, leave the guy alone.

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Pyongyang - the cradle of evolution

There are many theories out there concerning the origins of mankind, some more plausible than others. And I don’t know which one you were taught, but I bet it wasn’t this one.

“The Black Mountain Grape Homonids”

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Tezuka: The Marvel of Manga

tezuka osamu manga anime exhibition astroboy“Manga is virtual. Manga is sentiment. Manga is resistance. Manga is bizarre. Manga is pathos. Manga is destruction. Manga is arrogance. Manga is love. Manga is kitsch. Manga is sense of wonder. Manga is…There is no conclusion yet.” — Tezuka Osamu, 1969

David Pescovitz notes in Boing Boing that San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum has a huge retrospective on Tezuka Osamu, the pioneering master of manga who created Astro Boy and so, so much more.

The exhibition features 200 works, including original art, covers, posters, anime, adult manga, and film screenings. A lot more information about Tezuka and the exhibition is available on an impressive dedicated website.

Artist, writer, and entrepreneur Tezuka Osamu (1928-1989) is regarded in Japan as the “god of comics,” and revered worldwide as an artistic master. He was the driving force behind the international phenomenon of manga-Japanese comics-and their offspring anime, Japanese animation. Creating over 700 manga titles-and drawing more than 150,000 pages-during his lifetime, Tezuka is best known in the West for Tetsuwan Atom (Mighty Atom or Astro Boy) and Jungeru Taitei (Jungle Emperor or Kimba the White Lion), both of which originated from his manga, and were serialized internationally for television in the 1960s. Today, Tezuka’s work is acclaimed for its complexity, originality,
and a powerful dynamism.

Tezuka: The Marvel of Manga, which took nine years of complicated negotiations to organize, is the first major exhibition of Tezuka’s art outside of Japan.

The exhibition was organized by Australia’s National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) in association with Tezuka Productions. Curator Philip Brophy said:

Tezuka is venerated as a driving force of the manga and anime industries in Japan. This exhibition will reveal the striking originality of his manga; its technical inventiveness, extraordinary dynamic range, and its close relationship to his anime. From the people who remember Astro Boy on TV when they were kids to the late teens of today-who are in tune with Japanese pop culture-this exhibition will appeal to a wide audience to whom the bold and sharp sensibilities of the comic form are exciting and relevant.

San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum is a public institution whose mission is to lead a diverse global audience in discovering the unique material, aesthetic, and intellectual achievements of Asian art and culture.

Holding nearly 16,000 Asian art treasures spanning 6,000 years of history, the museum is one of the largest museums in the Western world devoted exclusively to Asian art.

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Irresistible?

Irresistible?Remember Hirohito Shibuya?

He was the polygamist who was arrested back in February 2006 and convicted of attempting to terrorize two women into joining the group of 11 women that were living with him in Higashi-Yamato.

After his conviction, Shibuya was handed an 18-month prison term, suspended for four years, after he promised that he would persuade the women to leave him and return to their own homes.

The problem is, however, that almost none of the women want to leave.

According to news reports, 10 of the 11 woman that Shibuya allegedly coerced into living with him showed no signs of wanting to leave, even while he was being detained by police.

The 10 women, however, awaited his return for four months. While undergoing police questioning, they continued working as before.

[One 27-year-old woman who also was arrested but returned to the home within a week after being released] said she was “moved” when other women visited her in detention with gifts.

Shibuya says: “They don’t leave even if I tell them to.”

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Betamax reloaded

U.S. Betamax commercial from 1975. Via FG.

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The Destroyer

Uwasa No ChannelWhile banging around the Web today trying to track something down, I happened to stumble across an amazing site dedicated to an amazing man — The Destroyer.

Now I am no professional wrestling fan, but old Japan hands will remember that he was a major regular on Wada Akiko’s TV program called Uwasa No Channel, which was a laugh riot from start to finish (photo nearby).

Check out The Destroyers website here, where I picked up the following bio.

Dick Beyer, the son of Buffalo, NY minor league baseball pitcher, was extremely active as a child. He was in the Cub Scouts and the Boy Scouts (he was awarded the Eagle Scout merit), and participated in high school sports, where he won a football scholarship to Syracuse University (S.U.). At S.U. he was co-captain of the1952 Eastern Championship team that played in the 1953 Orange Bowl game. After earning a Masters Degree in Education from S.U., he was recruited into pro-wrestling by Buffalo promoter, Ed Don George. George sent Beyer to Columbus, Ohio where promoter, Al Haft, who had one of the biggest territories in the country, agreed to train the young college amateur champion. There he trained under great wrestlers like Dick Hutton, Big Bill Miller, Ray Stevens and had his first match against Eddie Albers on Oct. 15, 1954. After a year in wrestling, Wrestling Life Magazine in Chicago named Beyer “Rookie of the Year.” After his rookie year, Beyer spent his “real name” career wrestling in and around Syracuse and Buffalo because he had an eight-year military obligation in the U.S. Army reserve, and he had spent nine years as an assistant football coach at S.U. from 1953 to 1961. He was on the staff when the Syracuse Orangemen won the National Championship in 1959. He did well in the Tennessee territory in 1958, where he had big matches against Freddie Blassie and Gorgeous George.

From 1959 through 1961, he had success in the Buffalo territory against the likes of Fritz Von Erich,Billy “Red” Lyons, Miller Brothers, Gallagher Brothers, Tolos Brothers and Ilio DiPaolo. When he went to Hawaii in 1962 as Dick Beyer, and gained recognition with his W.W.A. title match against champion Freddie Blassie, he got the attention of promoters on the West Coast and in Japan. In Hawaii, he turned “heel” and got the attention of Jules Strongbow, the promoter in Los Angeles.

In April, 1962, he received a phone call from Strongbow to wrestle in Los Angeles, and he went there soon after, with the idea of being a “heel” as Dick Beyer. Much to his dismay, he found out that he was going to wrestle under the “mask” as The Destroyer. Strongbow convinced Dick, “try it for four weeks, and if you don’t like it take it off.” The mask was made from a woman’s girdle, which fit over his head like a tube sock. The distortion of his features made him look fierce and actually helped his facial expressions. The Japanese called him the “white devil.” Of course with a mask that stretches as much, every wrestler did what he could to take it off. As The Destroyer, he promised to take the mask off only if he lost two pin falls or submission in a two-out-of-three fall match. We who were there, are still waiting.

While in Hawaii, Lord Blears taught the power legged Dick Beyer the “figure-four-leg-lock” which he used on his way to the World Wide Alliance (WWA) championship. During his career he offered any wrestler $1000 if they could break the “figure-4” once it was applied to them. He still has the money.

Dick BeyerThe Destroyer was an immediate box office sensation. His income tripled after the first three months. On July 27, 1962 he defeated Freddie Blassie for the WWA Worlds title. Over the next ten months, he defended his title against stars such as Lou Thesz , Ricki Starr, Ray “Thunder” Stern, Haystack Calhoun, Johnny “Rubberman” Walker, Curtis Iaukea, Cowboy Bob Ellis, former NWA champion Dick Hutton, Enrique Torres, Mr. Moto, Sandor Szabo, Don Leo Jonathan, Mil Mascaras and Pedro Morales. On November 7, The Destroyer defeated Gorgeous George in the epic match “the Mask vs. the Hair” at the Olympic. The match was repeated with a win over a bald Georgeous George on December 11, 1962, in Long Beach, California. The ticket demand for The Destroyer vs. former WWA champion, Ed Carpenter match was so great that a special Friday night card was used for the first time at the Olympic, beginning a tradition that would last until the Olympic closed in 1980.

In the early part of 1963 he wrestled three matches at the Olympic against Shohei “Giant” Baba that were all sellouts. These matches were legendary, creating big names for Giant Baba the The Destroyer in Japan. It was also the beginning of a respect and friendship between the two that lasted decades, until Baba died in January, 1999.

In May of 1963, The Destroyer made his first trip to Japan as the WWA worlds champion to wrestle Rikidozan, Japan’s reigning pro-wrestling champion. Seventy (70) million people watched that match on television. To this day, it is the 2nd highest rated TV show in Japanese history.

While in Hawaii, and prior to going into L.A., he promised Don Owens, the promoter in Oregon, that he would go into his territory. When Beyer received that call from Strongbow in L.A., he felt that moving there would be a stepping stone to bigger and better things. He subsequently called Owens to inform him of his decision to go to L.A., but Owens wasn’t happy. However, he released Beyer from his obligation, providing that he promised to go to Oregon when he finished in L.A. True to his promise, he went to Oregon from September of 1963 until June of 1964, where he wrestled the superstars such as Nick Bockwinkle, Danny Hodge, Mad Dog Vachon, Luther Lindsay, Lou Thesz and Tony Borne. On November 11, 1963, he came within a few seconds of beating Thesz for the NWA Title. The Destroyer has expressed that Don Owens was the best promoter that he had ever worked for. While in Oregon, he made his 2nd trip to Japan, challenging Rikidozan for the NWA International title on December 2, 1963. Following this tour, Rikidozan, the father of pro-wrestling in Japan, was stabbed in a night club in Japan and died a week later from complications.

In June of 1964, The Destroyer returned to L.A. and beat Dick “The Bruiser” for the WWA championship title. He lost it to Bob Illis in September, but won it back on November 13, in San Diego. He lost it the last time on March 12, 1965 to Pedro Morales.

From there The Destroyer went to Houston to work for Paul Boesch for one year and then came back home to Buffalo where he tried his hand at promoting with Billy “Red” Lyons, Fritz Von Erich and Ilio DiPaolo.

Destroyer ChristmasAfter an AWA title match against Vern Gagne in Chicago, Beyer was invited to go to the Minneapolis territory. The promoter there didn’t want him as The Destroyer, so Beyer entered the ring as Doctor X. Beyer wrestled as Doctor X from 1967 to 1970, then went around the world as The Destroyer with his wife and three children (10, 7 and 2) and then returned toMinneapolis from September, 1971 to December, 1972. At this time he made a deal with Giant Baba and NTV in Tokyo to wrestle in Japan for six straight years – a deal they didn’t refuse. During the six years he stayed in Japan, he helped Giant Baba establish All Japan Pro-Wrestling and established himself as a television personality. From 1973 to 1977, he was a star on Japan’s number one musical-comedy series called “Uwasa No Channel.” Upon his return to the United States in 1979, he worked between Toronto and Montreal. In Toronto he wrestled against Bob Backland, Andre The Giant, and Terry and Dory Funk. In Montreal, he wrestled against Tony Paresi, Nick Bockwinkle, Edward Carpenter, Mad Dog Vachon, The Super Star and many more.

In 1984 he went into semi-retirement when he took a job as an Elementary Physical Education teacher at Akron Central School in Akron, NY. He coached high school football and wrestling, but his greatest success was in coaching high school swimming. During his summer holidays, he returned to All Japan Pro Wrestling for the month of July for the summer action series. He retired from wrestling after 8500 matches in July of 1993, ending his career in a climactic match with his son Kurt, wrestling by his side in the Budokan in Tokyo, Japan. He retired from teaching in June, 1995, but still coaches high school swimming. Only he knows when he’ll retire from that …could there be a millennium match coming up?

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