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Saturday, 10 August 2013 00:00

Tokyo Wins 2020 Olympic Bid

Tokyo Wins 2020 Summer Olympic Bid

THE International Olympic Committee (IOC) elected Tokyo as the 2020 host city at the 125th IOC Session in Buenos Aires, Argentina on September 7, 2013. The IOC was deciding between Madrid, Istanbul and Tokyo. The Tokyo 2020 Bid Committee promoted its delivery (by demonstrating that Tokyo will provide guaranteed quality and maximum benefits), celebration (by advocating that Tokyo will be a great host of a wonderful party) and innovation (by showing that Tokyo will use all the creativity of the world’s most forward-thinking city to benefit sport and the Games.) If you think numbers speak louder than words, than here are statistics that the Tokyo 2020 Bid Committee have compiled to support their bid to host the world’s leading international sporting event.

Published in SPORTS & LEISURE
Monday, 05 August 2013 00:00

Life is like a Festival

Try no matter what happens. Move forward without looking away

Life is like a Festival

I was born in Kishiwada, Osaka, a town surrounding the Kishiwada Castle. It is known for its Danjiri Matsuri Cart-Pulling Festival held the third weekend of September and attracting some 600,000 visitors. The 310-year-old festival has become exceedingly dangerous.

Since I was a kid, I’ve loved hearing the pipes, drums and the loud “So-rya, So-rya” chanting of the festival. I joined the float pullers between my fourth year of primary school and second year of high school. It was the big event of the year for me.

人生もまた祭りのようなもの。

私の生まれ育った大阪府岸和田市は、岸和田城を中心とす る城下町です。岸和田と言えば、毎年 9 月の第 3 土・日 曜日をメインに行われ、60 万人もの人が訪れる「だんじり祭」が有名。約 310 年の歴史と伝統を誇り、危険なまでに白 熱する祭りとして知られています。

私は子供の頃から祭りの笛や太鼓のお囃子、「ソーリャソーリャ」 という威勢のいい掛け声を聞くと何とも言えない高揚感で胸が踊 り、ウズウズしたものです。好きが嵩じて、小学4年から高校 2 年まで、年に一度の晴れ舞台 さながら山車の曳き手として一団に加わるまでとなりました。

Published in FASHION & DESIGN
Wednesday, 31 July 2013 06:32

Volume 32. Issue #272

Contents


Please click here for PDF file of actual Table of Contents
   
1. Tokyo Street Editorial
Summer is sizzling in Tokyo
23. Donald Richie’s Honorable Visitors
Charlie Chaplin’s Brush with Death in Japan
   
2. Fashion Design by Junko Koshino
Life is like a Festival
24. Performer Yusuke Onuki
Singing, Dancing & Acting
   
3. Feature Story: Tokyo’s Olympic Bid
Why Tokyo Should Host the Olympics
25. Yuki Furukawa
Taking “Playful Kiss” from Manga to TV
   
4. Share your WOW!
Photo Contest Grand Prize Winners
26. Ryohei Suzuki
“Hentai Kamen” and “Gatchaman” on the Big Screen
   
5. Tokyo Street Fashion
Harajuku Trendsetters
27. Danny Choo
Interview with Culture Japan Founder
   
6. Tadao Ando
Self-Taught Architect
28. MAX
Interview with J-Pop Stars
   
7. Dwell on Design
Modern Design Event in L.A.
29. Japanese Culture Blooms in Seattle
Fashion, Film & Flora
   
8. Michael Graves
Architect & Product Designer
30. Time Warp
Asakusa Souvenir Shops
   
9. Movie Subtitling with Natsuko Toda
Dealing with Directors
31. Harajuku & the Olympic Games
The Historical Link
   
10. Anime Expo & New Anime Releases
Anime, Manga & Cosplay!
32. Travel Treasures in Washington, D.C.
Aloft National Harbor &
Aloft Dulles North
   
11. Production I.G Founder
Mitsuhisa Ishikawa Exclusive Interview
33. Pritzker Prize Presented to Toyo Ito
Architecture's Most Prestigious Award
   
12. Kings of K-Pop in L.A.
TVXQ! First Headlining Concert in U.S.
34. Garrity’s Japan
Walking the Trail of Basho
   
13. Underground Music & Cool Cars
Penetrators & Fisker Karma
35. Moments in Construction
Photographer Hiroyuki Suzuki Interview
   
14. Cheap Trick
The Band that Put Budokan on the Map
36. Japan & Globalization
M&A Consultant Yukuo Takenaka Interview
   
15. On Tour with Bob Gruen
Elton John Retrospective
37. Through the Eyes of Yankelovich
A Philosophical View of the Economy
   
16. The Man Who Brought Sushi to America Part II
Mutual Trading CEO Noritoshi Kanai Interview
38. Japan Growth Strategy
Accenture Japan Founding Chairman’s Insight
   
18.Mari's Homemade Cooking Recipes
Make Tempura at Home!
39.What Will Happen in Capitalist Societies?
The Spiral Staircase Theory
   
19.Dispelling Myths
English in Japan
40.Food Allergy Research & Education
The Deadly Danger of Food Allergies
   
20.Learning From Nelson Mandela
Revealing the World’s Most Powerful Weapon
41.Online Education
Solution or Problem?
   
21.Haitian Art
Synopsis of Haiti’s Top Artists
42.Parenting with Lorraine
Bullying
   
22.Yoga Advocate Judit Torok
Bad Excuses & Good Reasons
43.Passionate Journey
Psychotherapist Bianca Schmidt Flies the Skies
   
Published in FASHION & DESIGN 12
Thursday, 18 July 2013 12:24

Interview: Inventor Dr. NakaMats

Dr. Yoshiro NakaMats is said by many to be Japan’s most prolific inventor. Take an in-depth look at his astonishing background in what is his most revealing interview ever.

Interview with Inventor Dr. Yoshiro NakaMats

Dr. Yoshiro NakaMats is said by many to be Japan’s most prolific inventor. His documented patents include some of the most significant inventions of our time including 16 patents related to the floppy disk which he sold to IBM, and many other inventions including retractable landing gear, the digital watch, the digital display and in total 3,368 inventions. Dr. NakaMats sat down with Tokyo Journal for an in-depth look at his astonishing background in what is his most revealing interview ever.

 

Published in Living Legend
Thursday, 18 July 2013 11:38

Editor's Insight

Globalizing Haiku

Over the past 25 years or so, the Japanese art and literature form haiku has grown in popularity from its humble beginnings as an appendage to tanka poetry.

As a student of haiku, I have studied the styles of the four great masters Matsuo Basho, Yosa Buson, Kobayashi Issa and Masaoka Shiki.

But in attempting to write haiku in English in the 5-7-5 syllable format, I have found it difficult to find the sense of balance associated with the traditional poems.

Published in Editor's Insight
Monday, 10 June 2013 12:34

Tokyo Street Editorial

IT’S spring and there’s a scent of change in the air. For the first time in history, His Imperial Majesty the Emperor welcomed the incumbent president of the Caribbean nation of Haiti. For the first time in over 20 years, the Emperor and the Empress danced in public, and one of Japan’s most acclaimed architects, Toyo Ito, is being celebrated by the world through the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize.

The media worldwide are heralding Japan’s economic awakening. Japan’s stock market is roaring, its overvalued yen finally falling, and the Bank of Japan is spending many trillions of yen. So far, Japan’s rally is based on politics. The economic reality is yet to be proven.

Cautious Optimism
Still, many of Japan’s business people are cautiously expressing optimism “with a large question mark,” as an official in Tokyo’s heavily industrialized Ota ward said to me this week. “Companies have high expectations, but it is unclear when they will feel the effects of Abenomics. Or whether they will experience it at all. There is still much skepticism and uncertainty.”
On the streets of Tokyo few people feel any change yet. Many are apprehensive. “I don’t notice any difference,” a small business owner in Tokyo told me while walking his dogs. “It is just the stock market and large companies. Small companies are struggling. I have no expectations that things will get better. They are just creating another bubble.”
Naturally, Tokyo Journal hopes the skeptics will be proven wrong and Prime Minister Abe’s risky economic experiment will bear fruit.

North Korean War Threats
One experiment we don’t want to bear fruit comes courtesy of our neighbor North Korea. It has once again explored the limits of overly aggressive negotiation techniques. Many foreign media seem to take the reclusive regime’s bellicose rhetoric at face value.

Published in Street Editorial
Friday, 31 May 2013 09:25

Interview with Diamond Yukai

JAPANESE rock rebel Diamond Yukai, who was born Yutaka Tadokoro in 1962, continues to reinvent himself in a music, film, television and writing career that has spanned nearly three decades.

As a teen, his parents, who were civil servants in Saitama, wanted him to conform to the system. They told him he would never succeed as a rock and roller. Diamond Yukai proved them wrong in the mid-eighties by forming Red Warriors, a band that went on to fill stadiums throughout Japan including the legendary Budokan and Seibu, the latter of which seats close to 40,000.

During this time, Diamond Yukai branched into the movie industry, beginning with a starring role in the 1988 movie “Tokyo Pop” directed by Fran Kuzui, creator of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and Fox TV’s hit series “Angel.” He co-starred in “Tokyo Pop” with actress Carrie Hamilton, daugh- ter of the legendary comedienne Carol Burnett. He went on to appear in Sofia Coppola’s “Lost in Translation” in 2004 and numerous Japanese films and television dramas.

Published in Celebrity Showcase
Thursday, 30 May 2013 09:56

MANGA & ANIME EXPOS

Japanese comics are no laughing matter. Manga and anime have grown in global popularity and have captivated a legion of seriously devoted worldwide fans.

Manga & Anime Expos

Anime Expo 2013

ANIME Expo 2013, North America’s largest anime and manga convention, will be held July 4 – 7, 2013 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Expo events include Masquerade, Anime Music Video Contest, Concerts, Battle of the Bands, and the AX Fashion Show. Running 24 hours a day, the convention offers all night video programming, tabletop gaming rooms, late-night dances, and open-mic Karaoke in the late evening/early morning hours. Attendees cosplay and many gatherings for fans of different anime and manga series will be held during the convention. Danny Choo (Culture Japan Director/Presenter) will emcee the event.

Published in MANGA & ANIME
Thursday, 30 May 2013 00:00

Focusing on Japan’s Strengths

TJ: What has made the Japanese automobile and electronics industries so successful in the U.S.?
TAKENAKA: Japan had its heyday in the decades following World War II. There was a shortage of quality products and the Japanese were very good at making products. They came in and supplied the world. The timing was right in terms of the world’s needs, the environment and Japan’s capabilities. You didn’t have to negotiate hard. You didn’t have to do a lot of sales and marketing. There was a lack of quality products being manufactured and people simply had wants and needs. The Japanese were excellent at manufacturing. Trading? Not so good. Marketing? Not so good. But you didn’t have to do a lot of that back then.

TJ: Is Japan going to continue to be a manufacturing country?
TAKENAKA: I think they have to. You have to focus on your strengths. If you only focus on your weaknesses, you’re going to become weak. The Japanese have an excellent skill set and commitment that suits manufacturing.

Let’s take a look at televisions. The Japanese used to be excellent at manufacturing TVs. But they stopped thinking about what the customer wanted. Konosuke Matsushita once said, “The customer is God.” In the old days, they really believed the customer was God, so they were always trying to figure out, “What does the customer want? What does the customer need?” They would find out so they could make good products that met their needs. Well, as you get more successful (this happened in America, too), you start to get cocky. They are still using the same words, “The customer is God.” Before they really believed it. But now it is only words. This is a common mistake with successful companies. They start imposing what they think their customers need on their customers.

Published in TJ Business Expert
Tuesday, 07 May 2013 00:00

Chavez and the World

IN October 1999, after only eight months in office, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez made a state visit to Japan. I had the honor of meeting him at The Foreign Correspondent’s Club in Tokyo after he gave a speech that remains engraved in my memory. He shared with the diplomatic corps and journalists his discussion with the Emperor of Japan who had asked him how a country as rich in natural resources as Venezuela can have 80% of its population living under the poverty line. Chavez confessed that while he welcomed the Emperor’s concern, he was not expecting such a question from him.

The Emperor pinpointed the dilemma Chavez faced all his life: a huge disparity between the rich and the poor. How can it be that Venezuela’s vast natural resources could only benefit the elite? How can such a trend be reversed after plaguing his country for so long? How could anybody convince the country’s privileged class that it is in their interests that the fundamental rights of all Venezuelans are respected? Is it acceptable that foreign companies control 95% of the petroleum reserves of his country?

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