Tag Archives: culture

The Endless Tournament of the Not Funny

One thing I don’t get about Japan is it’s unceasing love for comedians. Perhaps it stems from a lifestyle that’s so work-oriented it’s driving people to suicide. In that environment, some humor must be a nice thing.

That part I get. What I don’t get is their love of unfunny comedians. For the most part Japanese humor is old vaudeville slapstick with two comedians, one the straightman and one the stooge. The stooge does something dumb and the straightman responds by slapping him on the head. In fact, it’s common for the host of a comedy show, if he’s a comedian to hit his comedian guests. They even do this to women which can be rather disturbing to someone from the west. (More on that in another post.)

There’s also a reliance on goofy gestures and pratfalls. Most comedy duos also have a signature gesture they use to announce the end of a joke as most of the audience isn’t laughing and need a cue to commence polite golf claps and polite, er, golf laughs.

Soon after I got to Japan, I saw a TV show where several comedians played a form of baseball. Nine members of a family were arranged in a tic-tac-toe grid. The members’ ages ranged from elementary school kids to retirees and included at least one teenager. Each comedian was given a set number of “pitches” (i.e. jokes) to make all nine members of the family laugh.

I wanted to practice my Japanese so I thought I’d watch and see if they could make me laugh.

Spoiler: they couldn’t.

Almost every comedian went up and started making stupid gestures or simply acting stupid. The elementary school kids laughed right away but everyone else kind of seemed sad for the comedians. Finally, Takashi Okumara of the Japanese comedy duo Ninety-nine got the chance to “pitch”. After a few failed gestures and stupid puns, he announced something called “Bruce Lee DJ”. He made a big show of balancing imaginary headphones and putting on a record. Then as he started to scratch the record he started making Bruce Lee kung fu chicken noises and kung fu gestures.

I’m not sure anyone else laughed, but I did. It was an actual joke requiring set up, timing and delivery. It also required a bit of knowledge about Bruce Lee.

It may not have been that funny, but by that point I was hoping for anything resembling a joke.

Crumbs and Licked Fingers

Today we celebrated our girls by eating way too much.

Today is Hinamatsuri, also known as Girl’s Day. Traditionally, families with daughters set out dolls that represent the Emperor, Empress and the Imperial court from 1,200 years ago. The dolls are handmade by artisans and it is tradition to start with a small set and then add to it every year. We are cheap and lazy which means we stuck to the original set and never added to it. However, we also carefully avoid any Hina doll artisans shops when we are with the girls.

Akira Kurosawa had a gorgeous scene in his occasionally interesting, often boring film Dreams where Hina dolls came to life and started dancing. (The scene is here, but some moron has added Philip Glass music to it rather than the traditional Japanese music. It still looks great, though.)

It is also tradition to eat Chirashizushi, which we did, but we also added a side dish of fried chicken, honoring our daughters with the ultimate version of surf and turf. The surf and turf dishes were followed by the cake, which She Who Must Be Obeyed spent the better part of the day preparing an shaping like a Hina doll set:

This looks great now but a few minutes later it was nothing but crumbs and licked fingers.

This looks great now but a few minutes later it was nothing but crumbs and licked fingers.

Unfortunately, our bookshelves are full of books, including the small one we used to use to display the dolls. Because of this we didn’t have room to ward off the bad spirits which means we’ll still have to deal with our oldest being a teenager.

The KISS and the Clover Zed

It’s hard to believe, but after all these years, Japan might have finally jumped the shark on crazy.

Or someone in Japan is a genius. Or a crazy genius.

Whatever they are, someone decided it was a great idea to take one of the most popular girl groups in Japan, Momoiro Clover Z–For the record: The Z is pronounced “Zed” thus Momoiro Clover Zed but everyone just calls them “Momoclo”–and pair them up with aging 70s superstar rockers old enough to be their grandparents. The genius/madman then decided to all it “Momoiro Clover Z vs KISS.

That’s right, the dark princes of glam rock are pairing up with pop princess lolitas to, well, rock and roll all night? The images of them together are rather disturbing. Keep in mind Gene Simmons is about as tall as I am. It could be creepier though, but every Momoclo is at least age 18 so that makes it, well, no, it’s still creepy.

They’ve already produced a single and a promotion video which can be enjoyed here. (Note: the “live” action starts at about 1:40.) Momoclo will also perform at the final concert in KISS 40th anniversary tour.

I’m not sure why someone thought this was a good idea. Back in 1977 KISS sold out the Nippon Budokan five times (which beat the Beatles record of four) but no one younger than I am had ever heard of them until last year.

As the members of KISS promote the concert and the single, you can see the young TV announcers staring at them like “Who sprayed graffiti on grandpa?”

That said, Gene Simmons is a marketing genius and I can’t imagine anyone younger than I am would attend one of their concerts unless there was a gimmick like this attached to it. This gives them a chance, albeit a weak one, to grow their audience among young Japanese.

I still think it would have been more logical if KISS had performed with Babymetal, but I guess they needed someone who couldn’t out rock them.

Demons Out Good Luck In Beans On Floor

Today my wife and children tried to run me out of my house by throwing packets of beans at me. First, though, we tried to drive our youngest out of the house.

While the USA is waking up hibernating rodents–and hoping New York Democrats don’t kill another one–all in the name of shortening Winter, Japanese people are throwing beans at demons to celebrate the end of winter and the lunar new year. (And they’re eating sushi. More on that later.)

Today is Setsubun, which in the traditional Japanese calendar is supposed to be the last day of Winter. Because it also serves as a kind of new year, it’s traditional to take the opportunity to drive out the evil spirits of last year and make room for good luck in the new year.

A lot of people do this at temples where they try to catch bags of peanuts thrown by celebrities.

This involves a couple steps. First, everyone eats an uncut sushi roll. To do this, a compass used to figure the exact direction to face (West-Southwest this year) and then everyone must eat their entire sushi roll without talking. In many ways this tradition is absurd and may be the result of clever marketing by fishmongers, but it guarantees five to ten minutes of glorious, relaxing silence at supper. Once that’s finished, everyone can talk again and finish the rest of the sushi (which can be cut and enjoyed in small bites).

After that, one family member puts on a demon/ogre mask and then gets beans thrown at her as the other family members say “Demon out. Good luck in.” The mask is then passed to another family member who goes to a different room and suffers the bean barrage. this continues until each room has suffered a barrage.

Today, though, our oldest “had a headache” (i.e. was too cool for such stupid crap) and She Who Must Be Obeyed used her make up and not wanting to ring the mask as an excuse (i.e. was too cool for such stupid crap). This left our youngest and me to take most of the abuse.

Well, actually me.

Granted, throwing food at me is probably not the best way to get me to leave the house, especially when the “beans” we use 1) are actually coated sunflower seeds, mini-almonds and mini-pumpkin seeds; 2) are still in small bags; and 3) are highly addictive.

Poor little demon. Everyone wants him gone.

Poor little demon. Everyone wants him gone. (So they should stop feeding him.)

The Spirit of the Law is Not the Rule

All the talk of deflated balls and questionable tactics by the New England Patriots has me thinking about Japan and its attitude about rules in games and sports. Those attitudes can be very solid and yet kind of flexible.

In 1951, for example, Nobel Prize in Literature winner Yasunari Kawabata published The Master of Go which is a docu-drama about a famous match between a young Go player and a fading master. The match turns on a move that, while fully legal, is still kind of dirty.

This idea of fully legal yet kind of dirty also effects the sport of Sumo. In Sumo there’s a move called a henka. Basically what happens is at the initial charge, one of the wrestler’s jumps to the side and uses his opponent’s momentum against him. It is considered a desperation move and is very much bad form. Wrestlers are supposed to meet each other, in this case literally, head on. Wrestlers who do a henka are supposedly reprimanded and get a black mark in their permanent records. On the other hand, a win is a win and if it takes a henka to get a winning record then that’s a small black mark compared to being demoted because of a losing record.

Smaller wrestlers use the move a lot and it’s been argued that a henka only works if your opponent is charging out of control. In fact, I once saw a large sumo wrestler catch a smaller wrestler in mid-henka and slap him down with one arm. The smaller guy was notorious for doing the move which meant it had lost its element of surprise. I’ve also heard that on at least one occasion two wrestlers did a henka at the same time and end up facing each other from a different direction.

Perhaps the most notorious case of legal but kind of dirty involves Japanese baseball. In 1964 Sadaharu Oh set the Japan home run record of 55 home runs in a single season. After that, on three different occasions foreigners tied the record with enough games left to break the record. In each case they came up against teams coached by Sadaharu Oh himself and were intentionally walked from their first at bats. Randy Bass was so frustrated he started holding his bat backward. In 2001 I remember “Tuffy” Rhodes swinging at pitches a full meter outside the strike zone while the catcher grinned at it all. The next year Alex Cabrarera tied the record and although Oh claims he told his pitchers to throw strikes, not a single strike was thrown.

There was a some controversy about these but those of us who’ve been here too long knew that the record would never be broken as long as Oh was still managing. The record was finally broken in 2013, five years after Oh retired, by Curaçaon Wladimir Balentien who would end up with 60 home runs.

All this tends to sour people on sports. Like the master of Go, we are so disheartened by legal but dirty moves, it hurts our enjoyment of the game. At least if it’s our team that loses to them.

Ring in the New Forget You Forgot the Old

Oddly, after a season that includes the Forget Year Party and special food and lots of drinking, the Japanese ring in the new year with a fairly boring party. Alcohol is involved, of course.

Sometime after the new year, a lot of Japanese companies hold the Shinnenkai or New Year Party. This is a much quieter affair that is supposed to celebrate friendship and team and teamwork. Like all Japanese parties, it is timed to the minute and the theme is “I love you guys. Let’s have a great and productive new year and let’s never forget to forget what happened at the Forget Year Party and never talk about it again. Cheers.” (Something like that.)

In my experience, the Shinnenkai is the only time I’ve seen a break from traditional party food like sashimi, cooked fish, and some kind of meat (a technical term) but even those had issues.

At one party we had Chinese food, including shark fin soup (which is way overrated for the price and the amount of cruelty involved; give me fresh tuna and dolphin any day).

At my favorite party, thoguh, we went to an Italian restaurant in Nou-machi that is one of the best restaurants in Japan especially if you’re there during crab season. Our menu included different kinds of pasta, including the restaurant’s specialty of crab sauce pasta, and lobster thermidor. We also had wine instead of beer, although some beer was served and I kept having to explain that I’d much rather have the Samuel Adams and not the Budweiser because Bud isn’t worth six dollars a bottle. Actually, very few beers are worth that much.

My principal wasn’t a big fan of the food as he enjoyed the traditional Japanese party dishes. He also, somehow, managed to track down a bottle of sake, which I shared as well.

There were no silly games and no men dressed as ballerinas, just a couple extra speeches.

Actually, I think the men dressed as ballerinas would have been more interesting.

Today You Are an Adult So Sit Down, Shut up and Listen

One of the things that the Japanese almost have right is the idea of celebrating adulthood. Unfortunately, the way they do it is often the wrong idea.

This past Monday was Coming of Age Day, a national holiday where all the people who turned 20 the year before get to officially celebrate their coming of age. For those who may not know, age 20 is the age where “everything” is legal. Specifically this means 20 year olds can legally drink alcohol and smoke cigarettes. (They’ve been of legal age to star in porn movies, though, since age 18. Go figure.)

Traditionally, on Coming of Age day, women dress up in expensive kimono and get their hair done whilst the men get a choice of suits or male kimono. They then go to shrines for various ceremonies and, if they are lucky, they escape and go drinking as soon as possible.

Unfortunately, it’s also a tradition that towns hold their own coming of age ceremonies which usually involve dozens of drunk men and women in kimono assembling in a bland auditorium to listen to speeches about the responsibilities of adulthood.

This is where I think the Japanese go wrong. Although I like the idea of a day that celebrates you officially being an adult (perhaps without frisking) I don’t like the idea of the newly minted adults being lectured to like children about being an adult. Having gotten in trouble during a long speech when I was sober, I shudder to think what I would have done if I was drunk.

Actually, it would probably look like an incident several years ago, when several men rebelled by making lots of noise, running up to the podium to take proto-selfies (which used to be called “photographs”) with the mayor and, in one case, fire poppers full of confetti at him. Several of the men were then introduced to concepts like “arrest” and “jail time”. (Yeah, technically that’s more my speed I’m afraid.)

The funny part of all this is, I hated being age 20. I still can’t get my head around the idea of celebrating it.

 

Fukubukuro Follow-up With Foreigners

A very rare follow-up based on some new information and some I didn’t report:

After I posted my last post, I learned that a group of Fukubukuro fighters in Hokkaido had lined up a few days before the fighting started in order to get the best chance at the bag they wanted from their favorite store. Being Hokkaido, it started to snow heavily and, being Fukubukuro Fighting season, everyone refused to give up their place in line. It got cold enough that store employees took it upon themselves to make sure that everyone in line was still okay.

After all, the dead can’t spend money and they lose their place in line. (Or they’re actually concerned about their customers, or both. Something like that.)

One thing I didn’t write about was the reaction of foreigners to the concept of Fukubukuros. For the first time I can remember, TV news interviewed several groups of foreigners during the rampage. The first batch were Russian or Eastern European men. They were caught peaking in the bags. This is not encouraged, but isn’t against the rules, especially with partially open bags. The trick is that the contents are hidden in smaller bags. (Not that I ever looked once myself…)

Almost to a foreigner, they seemed unimpressed. Many of them pointed out that they didn’t want to get stuck with a bunch of items they didn’t want. The Chinese woman figured out that her best best was to target make-up stores and accessories shops because those things could easily be given away as gifts and/or sold upon her return to China.

One store had clear, duty free fukubukuros that could not be opened inside japan. (Knowing the Japanese, there’s probably some kind of proximity alarm that goes off if it’s opened in-country.)

The most interesting foreigners were three German women, each with a different hair color. (Pink, red, non-photo blue.) They stood in line in Harajuku and explained how they loved Japanese cuteness and wanted to be that cute. (Only the one with pink hair was that cute.)

After a fairly peaceful Fukubukuro experience, they went to a cafe and opened their bags. They immediately began a small scale Great Exchange with pink giving red a plaid trilby hat in exchange for a bow headband.

The Japanese TV announcers seemed disappointed by the underwhelming response from foreigners, which actually made me laugh.

 

 

Wanton Acts of Violent Consumerism and Friendly Exchange

For the most part, the Japanese are very civil. They stand quietly and patiently in neat lines and are excellent to each other. Until this time of year. This is when things get ugly.

Right now, in the right places, all rules are suspended and the older the lady is, the more violent she gets.

This season features New Year’s sales that, in Japan, come in the form of what I like to call Fukubukuro Fighting (That’s Foo Coo Boo Coo Row, not F@#k You Buckaroo, although that latter is more appropriate.) Fukubukuro translates to “Lucky Bag” or “Mystery Bag” and it actually represents a kind of gambling.

Basically, all the major chain stores, and few boutiques, divide all last year’s fashions and random things into sealed bags that are then sold for set prices. The contents are usually close in value (if not a little more) the price, which are typically 10,000 yen. Some stores, however, have special bags that might contain more expensive goods. For example, the Apple Store in Ginza sells it’s bags for 35,000 yen and one might contain a MacBook Air or an iPad.

The most popular stores bring the biggest crowds and the biggest rush. TV news shows groups of women and their pack mules (sons, boyfriends, husbands, etc) planning their shopping attack with military like precision: “First we rush to XYZ on the fifth floor for their bag. If anyone gets in your way, crush, just crush them. After that proceed directly to ZYX Cutie on the second floor for their bag. The pack mule will provide a blocker. SHOW NO MERCY! And, Pack Mule, don’t let those other b#@tches steal anything out of your hands. And don’t forget to give me your cash.”

It’s typical for someone to get knocked down and injured or trampled lightly and for at least one table to devolve into a tug-of-war between women, especially if there’s only a couple bags left. I’m a sixth level black belt in Karate, and I’m afraid to get involved in this level of shopping.

After the violence, there then begins what I call the Great Exchange. People open their bags and either celebrate or sigh. They sort out what they want and then try to trade what they don’t want with others who have unwanted things. (I should note that bags from fashion shops are usually sold by size so almost everything should fit, if the women are honest about their sizes…)

After this brief rest, the pack mules load up and carry the goods home.

Miles and Miles of Miles and Miles

New Year’s is one of the few times Japanese sit down and watch sports as a family. Unfortunately, the most popular sport for this is Marathon Relay.

Also unfortunately, the networks insist on covering every minute live in real time. All five hours of it.

To the uninitiated, marathon relay (or ekiden) is a 100 km (63ish mile) long relay where five to seven runners run legs of various distances and pass of a sash that represents their team. During the new year holiday, there are two major ekidens, one of which happens over two days.

First is the New Year Ekiden, which takes place in Gunma on New Year’s Day and features teams representing different companies. We watched a bit this year because the company where She Who Must Be Obeyed works part time had a team running. (They stunk the place up and I’m not going to allow She Who Must Be Obeyed to work there anymore. Or, more specifically, I suggested they weren’t worth her awesomeness and she should find employment elsewhere.)

January 2nd and 3rd see the running of the Hakone Ekiden. This is the granddaddy of all ekidens and is run between 20 universities and a special team made up of representatives from the loser universities that didn’t make the top 20. Oddly, this team only runs for pride and experience as their time doesn’t count and they can’t win.

The Hakone ekiden starts in downtown Tokyo and finishes in the resort town of Hakone 108 or so kilometers away. The final leg (the fifth of five) is a mountain climb that breaks lots of runners. The winners of day one get a special prize and an early start on day two when five different runners run the relay back to Tokyo.

The race is somewhat controversial as only a certain number of foreign runners are allowed on each time and those runners aren’t allowed in the first and final legs so that cameras get to see a Japanese cross the finish line.

Despite the lack of any action (in defense of the sport, at least, unlike baseball, there is constant movement) the network deploys a shocking number of fixed and mobile cameras that put the audience in the middle of the race. If a runner stumbles, the network has cameras all over it and the announcer and color commentator begin shouting “Look! Look! Something actually happened! Something actually happened!” (Something like that.)

Today a runner barely managed to run the final few steps. He fell down several times but kept getting up until he finally staggered through the tape. It made for a great highlight reel, but not for a great television event.