What's it like Growing Up Half White in Japan?

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  • Опубликовано: 29 дек 2022
  • Amy
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    Tobi
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    / @mrnippon
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Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @takashiifromjapan
    @takashiifromjapan  2 месяца назад +4

    TOKYO GUIDEBOOK
    takashifromjapan.com/tokyocompleteguide

  • @itzamia
    @itzamia 7 месяцев назад +337

    It's facinating watching her speak Japanese and then flip to fluent English. I can still hear the Japanese accent come through, but still sounds like she's been living in the U.S. for a long time. She seems very sweet and humble, hope she does well when she comes back to the States.

    • @imouto4hire
      @imouto4hire 7 месяцев назад

      She became so much less attractive when she started speaking in that horrible nasally American accent.

    • @mlml8018
      @mlml8018 7 месяцев назад

      She will fit right in the states. She looks like generic white girl

    • @chrisdawson1776
      @chrisdawson1776 7 месяцев назад +17

      Her English is not fluent.

    • @Peter-pb8jg
      @Peter-pb8jg 7 месяцев назад

      Huh? Her English was close to perfect @@chrisdawson1776

    • @interuniversal321
      @interuniversal321 7 месяцев назад

      She seems essentially almost entirely Japanese to me.

  • @BobbyFreshwater
    @BobbyFreshwater Год назад +2024

    Felt a bit sad about the German/Japanese who didn't feel like he belonged anywhere. I'm half Japanese/Swedish and felt that as a kid but only realised it later it in life. Then I moved to a very multicultural place like London and it flipped, I felt I belong in BOTH Japan and Sweden, and by extension, everywhere.

    • @scottthompson7329
      @scottthompson7329 11 месяцев назад

      It's amusing you mentioned moving to London, because the only people that feel out of place in London are the English people. Not that many remain in London, most of the working-class English having been ethnically cleansed by the political elites to make room for foreigners with cash, or who can provide cheap labour.

    • @kazunaedits
      @kazunaedits 11 месяцев назад +62

      yoo im mixed the same as you, my mom is Japanese and my dad is swedish

    • @BobbyFreshwater
      @BobbyFreshwater 11 месяцев назад +31

      @@kazunaedits Nice! First person I've heard of with same mix. Where have you lived?

    • @Magellan-vb2uz
      @Magellan-vb2uz 11 месяцев назад +33

      Yes. Totally
      Its so difficult for halvsies.... particularly when younger and then youre in adulthood and realize, this is awesome! Seriously wouldn't want to NOT be mixed.

    • @skypirate2199
      @skypirate2199 10 месяцев назад +34

      German/Japanese would've been great in a parallel universe where...

  • @bernardoxbm
    @bernardoxbm 8 месяцев назад +367

    Sending my heartfelt wishes to all the "misfits" in the world. You are not alone. Don't seek happiness through external validation. I love and support you all.

    • @SonGoku31213
      @SonGoku31213 7 месяцев назад +6

      Thanks.

    • @OtomoTenzi
      @OtomoTenzi 7 месяцев назад +5

      You are a man of TRUTH.

    • @terdragontra8900
      @terdragontra8900 7 месяцев назад +5

      Humans are social creatures, most need external validation. The hard part is finding a community that validates you for good reasons. I sure as heck haven't figured that out.

    • @OtomoTenzi
      @OtomoTenzi 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@terdragontra8900 Why not STOP worrying about what OTHERS think and just focus on doing/living for YOURSELF? We're ALL gonna die soon anyway... 💀

    • @HumbleRagamuffin
      @HumbleRagamuffin 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, I think we all deal with being misfits in ways, some more than others. We are only at home with God, for God is love, and not love as humans love, but unconditional love. When we accept that he unconditionally loves us--as demonstrated on the cross in Jesus Christ who died for us before we ever did anything good or made any attempt to reciprocate his love for us--that is when we can begin to learn to love others unconditionally. As long as we believe we are the objects of conditional love, we keep most others at arm's length and turn to various coping mechanism to make up for our souls not getting that for which it was made (God/unconditional love).
      We can't make the world love and accept us, as much as we want it too, and that can be painful. But the secret is, in Christ we CAN love all others unconditionally (start to do so), and that is its own reward. True happiness comes when we admire ourselves (love ourselves). We will truly admire and love ourselves when we unconditionally love others. We are miserable because we hold ourselves in contempt for our failures to love others as we ought. We numb this misery in various ways (sex, drugs, hobbies, work, or whatever works for you). But we do have unconditional love from our Creator, and he wants us to open ourselves to it and allow it inside, to become a part of us, to rest in it, to make it the bread and water of our souls.

  • @ba2724
    @ba2724 9 месяцев назад +518

    Wow, what a cool girl. She may feel 'out of place' being mixed and living in Japan, but I think it makes her so unique and special. The way she switched from speaking fluent Japanese to pure American English is so rare for an American. Again, super cool. Thanks for the video.

    • @fordhouse8b
      @fordhouse8b 8 месяцев назад +63

      You could still detect a slight but definite foreign accent when she spoke English.

    • @FullShade
      @FullShade 8 месяцев назад +64

      But she didn’t spend the majority of her life in America. Even for this interview she’s in Japan, working in Japan, speaking Japanese a majority of the time. Sure she has duel citizenship but objectively she is more Japanese than American. I feel like if she looked more traditionally Japanese you wouldn’t have made this comment.

    • @1508djg
      @1508djg 8 месяцев назад +33

      Totally agree. So effortless and natural. She sounded like a native speaker in both languages.

    • @dorcasirizarry5494
      @dorcasirizarry5494 8 месяцев назад +31

      It’s funny because being blonde etc. probably makes ppl think she’s a white girl but I really see her Japanese come through. Her mannerisms down to the smallest thing, seem Japanese! I’m sure if she gets to spend a longer time in America, her mannerisms may seem a little more American in time.
      Environment is always the biggest factor, regardless of a person’s genes so because she has been mostly raised in Japan, I see an adorable Japanese girl!

    • @isaacthegoat1432
      @isaacthegoat1432 8 месяцев назад

      Not mixed.

  • @valerieayla4687
    @valerieayla4687 Год назад +1936

    I appreciate the last interviewee--the german/japanese guy, very down to earth and came to terms with his situation as being unique and half, with an awkward unbelonging in Japan despite his Japanese mom, her attention on bringing him up with the language and values. Yet when in Japan he is considered foreigner! No one knows the pain of this experience except those who have lived it!

    • @MrNippon
      @MrNippon Год назад +128

      💚

    • @billschinken6764
      @billschinken6764 Год назад +53

      He is a youtuber. His channel is Mr Nippon

    • @guitarplayer1994
      @guitarplayer1994 Год назад +33

      @@MrNippon Hab' dich sofort erkannt, hehe ^^

    • @Xilladan093
      @Xilladan093 Год назад

      He should blame his mom for breeding with another species

    • @mikamikamiia
      @mikamikamiia Год назад +3

      @@billschinken6764 Thank you for commenting this. I was looking and looking...

  • @urbirdfriend
    @urbirdfriend 7 месяцев назад +187

    I'm half Taiwanese, half white American and grew up on the East Coast of the US. People were really awful and ignorant toward me growing up and I used to hate being half Asian when I was a kid, because I just wanted people to stop bullying me. When I got older, I realized that a lot of the bullying came from jealousy, and I was actually so fortunate to have such a different perspective than the average American. It's not always easy to be mixed race, but I feel very grateful to have the experience! Thank you Takashi, I love getting to hear the perspective of other hapas from around the world :)

    • @BreakofDawn
      @BreakofDawn 7 месяцев назад +22

      I’m also half white and half Taiwanese. As a child I wanted to be just white since I grew up in a heavily white neighborhood and I wanted to be just like the other kids. When my family moved state, I made more Asian friends and felt I related to them more, but one time they told me I was just considered white and when I said I was half Asian too, they said yeah, but you’re really just white. That hurt and made me feel like I didn’t belonged anywhere. Even though I struggled to feel like I belonged, I like being mixed since it allows me to experience different cultures and different experiences from two different perspectives. I hope one day there will be a lot more mixed children, so we could be one big giant melting pot

    • @Zomfoo
      @Zomfoo 7 месяцев назад +12

      I grew up with my friend in California. He is half Japanese and half Caucasian American. He never seemed to have any negative experiences related to his ethnic mix.

    • @urbirdfriend
      @urbirdfriend 7 месяцев назад +9

      @@Zomfoo Good for him, he probably grew up in an area with other Asian-Americans. The town I grew up in was very rural and white

    • @rickybobbytexas3487
      @rickybobbytexas3487 7 месяцев назад +10

      I was a kid in the late 60s early 70s growing up in the South. My Mom is Japanese and my Dad American (and we were fighting an Asian war...again). I caught $hit from whites and blacks pretty much equally (back then the population where I lived was not very diverse). It wasn't fun, but I will say it really toughens you up and you learn at an early age that literally words can't hurt you (sticks and stones do). It didn't stop me from having a mixed group of friends because there are also really good people too. It showed me regardless of race, there are idiots that are scared of you because you are different or because they are jealous that you are unique. In hindsight, I really think I was fortunate for that life experience. It has really helped me with having some compassion and understanding interacting with everyone as an adult.

    • @davebellamy4867
      @davebellamy4867 7 месяцев назад +5

      There are a lot of advantages, especially as a many countries are becoming much more totalitarian. It gives a Plan B second option for a place to live where you have contacts and know the language. Plus you're already able to live in multiple places. This is going to be increasingly to your advantage. My S.E. Asian immigrant friends in the UK also have this advantage. Mixed race or not. These options will probably save many lives in future.

  • @MrFragalax
    @MrFragalax 10 месяцев назад +68

    Another episode of "Takashi interviews the most attractive people he can find".

    • @grahamstrouse1165
      @grahamstrouse1165 3 месяца назад +2

      Maybe he doesn’t have that much of a choice? Half-Japanese people always seem to be insanely good-looking. The ones who live in Japan, at least. Could be because they have much better diets and tend to walk a lot more. If he interviewed some half-Japanese people in Alabama I reckon they’d be a little more…squidgy. 😉

  • @bluBlaq33
    @bluBlaq33 8 месяцев назад +73

    I’m Half Mexican & Black. It’s interesting hearing other types of mixed peoples experience. And Half Japanese people have a very unique experience I’m finding, regardless of what the other half is, unless they are totally Yamato passing, they seem to share this “being treated as a outsider”experience.

    • @brunette_hunter98
      @brunette_hunter98 7 месяцев назад +1

      Go play basketball

    • @suutico
      @suutico 7 месяцев назад +1

      go on and make me some tacos why don't ya

    • @emilymorris6214
      @emilymorris6214 7 месяцев назад

      You're a sweet individual and I hope you have a great life. F**K the two asshats that replied to your comment negatively.

    • @hultonclint
      @hultonclint 7 месяцев назад

      So, all the Black people in Mexico are what, Full Mexican and Full Black?

    • @OtomoTenzi
      @OtomoTenzi 7 месяцев назад +1

      Come to New York, and help us throw some heavy-ass things off rooftops... Water-soaked file cabinets are a HUGE favorite! 🗄🗃

  • @robobin
    @robobin Год назад +1399

    My husband is Japanese, I'm Caucasian Canadian and giving birth in 7 days. Excited to see how our daughter looks and also flourishes! We'll be teaching her English, French and Japanese.
    EDIT She arrived Jan 5, I absolutely loved reading everyone's comments

    • @alphonseroyer9915
      @alphonseroyer9915 Год назад +107

      Congratulations from BC! I am half Quebecois Half Japanese and speak all 3 languages you mentioned. It’s an interesting identity and I know that your daughter will have a very special life :)

    • @notplatypustheperry9179
      @notplatypustheperry9179 Год назад +16

      @@skipper4114 probably Quebec because French

    • @SL16867
      @SL16867 Год назад

      In other words, you are not Japanese, and you are parading your own child like an object.

    • @revoktorment440
      @revoktorment440 Год назад +25

      Bonne chance dans ton accouchement!

    • @paulfu8894
      @paulfu8894 Год назад +17

      I believe she will look amazing !

  • @RogerDuly
    @RogerDuly 6 месяцев назад +21

    Man, you’re doing an amazing job! I’m not Japanese or even particularly interested in the culture. But, your interviews are so informative and captivating that I can’t scroll away from them. I think it really breaks down to the importance of communication to foster respect. Keep doing your thing!

  • @zantigar
    @zantigar Год назад +18

    You are a very good interviewer, asking excellent questions and making the people relax and answer satisfactorily.

  • @JW-dp4we
    @JW-dp4we 7 месяцев назад +19

    I can empathize with the first girl in the video. I was born in Mexico but have very heavy German ancestry and am pale as a ghost, so I looked nothing like any of my friends growing up and used to get picked on. Even if there’s no overt bullying, you’re still made to feel different.

  • @Gurugurustan
    @Gurugurustan Год назад +402

    Great interviews. It's interesting the two gals could speak the language but would ultimately see themselves returning to overseas. It's also great that you dived deeper into different nationalities among ha-fu in a way that was not too uncomfortable but yet able to bring up the differences.

    • @twincherry4958
      @twincherry4958 Год назад +5

      Most mixed Asians (Asian&caucassian decent) prefer the non Asian side 😂

    • @kazunaedits
      @kazunaedits 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@twincherry4958 im that mix, and I prefer my Asian side

    • @twincherry4958
      @twincherry4958 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@kazunaedits outlier

    • @BreakofDawn
      @BreakofDawn 7 месяцев назад +3

      @twincherry4958 No true. Humans have a desire to fit in, so mixed children will have a preference to which ever side is the majority in the environment they grow up in. If a mixed child grows up in a predominantly white area, of course they’ll want to fit in and be like all the other kids, but that is also true if they grow up in an Asian country. They’ll want to be Asian just like all the other kids

  • @losmosquitos1108
    @losmosquitos1108 8 месяцев назад +175

    I somehow envy everyone who was raised bilingually. There is nothing easier than learning an idiom naturally starting in your 8th month in your life, when the brain’s speech center starts developing! I started learning foreign languages as a hobby in the age of 18 and it was always a struggle knowing I‘ll never reach their skills. 👍

    • @thehuntermikipl1170
      @thehuntermikipl1170 8 месяцев назад +28

      Wdym you will never reach their skills? You definitely can, it's just not as easy and takes time. Tbh even children don't speak perfectly immediately. For a long time they don't speak at all, and then it takes them years to fully learn the language, all the words, perfect the grammar...
      And then there are a lot of adults who butcher their native language, lol.

    • @losmosquitos1108
      @losmosquitos1108 8 месяцев назад +11

      @@thehuntermikipl1170 thanks for giving me hope, appreciated it. ♥️

    • @oshawott946
      @oshawott946 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@losmosquitos1108time is an illusion, you’ll make it eventually 😎😎 good luck mann

    • @miahconnell23
      @miahconnell23 8 месяцев назад

      @losmosquitos1108 although humility can be a good thing, don’t let it prevent you from learning all you can and taking all the opportunities you’re given. I became a writing tutor in grad school and realized (even before then) a person can go from zero to over 100 years of age and keep continuously learning and improving their English. When a professor offered me a job teaching my SECOND language (not English) I told him: but I’m an adult and I’m STILL learning English !! How could I ever be good enough to teach my 2nd language ??? That was too humble. He probably (maybe ?) thought I was refusing a personal favor that would’ve facilitated more graduate study. And the truth is: because I encountered many of my 2nd language’s hurdles by living abroad (& not only through taking classes), I would’ve been a good choice to teach newbies. I would’ve made lessons about the parts that surprised me- these were parts I had to figure out on my own. There’s some added value in that. So: in summary: don’t be TOO humble & think you’ll never get it 100%. It’s obvious that you’re conscientious. You’ll do well, and you’ll do better than other people given the same opportunities who are less conscientious than you.

    • @craftsandstuff3349
      @craftsandstuff3349 7 месяцев назад +6

      Same here. I loved foreign words, phrases and songs as a kid, and used to complain about not being able to speak a foreign language.

  • @justawalkingtrashcan
    @justawalkingtrashcan 9 месяцев назад +33

    My dad told me a story where a lady saw a picture of me on my dad’s windows computer background and commented that I must’ve been half Asian. I have a white Canadian father and a Filipino mother, but growing up in Canada where majority of people of are not “half” of anything, I kind of felt I couldn’t connect with either side of my family nor other kids’ families. People will try to guess if I’m white or asian- not both. So when my dad told me the story about this lady, turns out she was a half Canadian/Japanese mix once she told him. Even he assumed that she was only white and found it weird she asked about if I was biracial. I wonder where that woman is now, she probably had similar stories and issues pointed out like the people in this video.

    • @AndreasViking1
      @AndreasViking1 7 месяцев назад

      She looks close to 100% European though, Japanese genes are so weak. No Caucasian person would ever think she’s half white, she looks completely white.

  • @54tisfaction
    @54tisfaction Год назад +33

    I love your videos! They are so personal and informative about everyone you interview, but also address large societal issues about identity, prejudice and discrimination through the experience of these individuals! I myself am of mixed heritage (not Japanese though) and have struggled with how I feel about myself and how others feel about me just by the way I look...
    You are doing an important job, improving the world! 🌏 Arigato gozaimasu!

  • @fivebats10
    @fivebats10 Год назад +131

    Thanks, you always ask really good questions and get the best out of your interviewees. One guy mentioned honne/tatemae and this has come up in other interviews. I think you could do more about these kind of distinct Japanese values and ideas - asking foreigners if they have ever come across them and been surprised by them, and asking Japanese people to give everyday examples of how they work, in the family, social life, workplace etc. .

    • @Agret
      @Agret Год назад +1

      Great ideas, hope he takes on board suggestions about discussing japanese values/culture more as it is quite unique. Really love watching the interviews on this channel.

  • @lawrenceralph7481
    @lawrenceralph7481 Год назад +7

    Your interviews are very interesting. You seem to get a lot of information about the people and the cultures. Thank you.

  • @cjdecker4169
    @cjdecker4169 6 месяцев назад +4

    One of the most fascinating RUclips podcasts I have ever seen. The perspectives are eye opening. Great concept. Excellent imagination. Really well done.

  • @cesar5666
    @cesar5666 Год назад +10

    Good interview as always Takashii. I always enjoy the Hafu interviews in Japanese especially how they have adapted to growing up in Japan

  • @ianjohnson4987
    @ianjohnson4987 7 месяцев назад +2

    Absolutely fascinating interviews - thank you

  • @bjoernoswald2473
    @bjoernoswald2473 9 месяцев назад +103

    It's funny and interesting how switching to english changes A LOT of her character when speaking. (Speaking as a non Japanese here so maybe I'm wrong). Her japanese persona is much more "cute timidly polite" not only the the way she speaks, a bit more high pitched and the choice of words, but also her posture and gestures with her hands.
    Oh I love the German guy! His accent gives it away, that he is German haha. Probably not suprising that his german accent is dominant when speaking english (not his japanese), but would be funny haha.

    • @climatechangeisrealyoubast3231
      @climatechangeisrealyoubast3231 8 месяцев назад +8

      oh no his german accent is very prevalent when speaking japanese. I'm german myself and he sound just like a german person who learnt to speak japanese to fluency.

    • @starby7137
      @starby7137 8 месяцев назад +2

      Deja las fumadas mijo cuando uno habla en un idioma que se sienta comodo y le guste habla energicamente

    • @pazza4555
      @pazza4555 7 месяцев назад +1

      I've seen that difference with Japanese women many times. I've also seen it, in different ways, with some French women. Actually, a big difference I see is with friends who are Black Americans. It varies somewhat, but the difference in speech and body language when they speak to whites or Blacks can be huge. They may seem relaxed taking to white friends, but a Black friend ( or even a stranger) starts talking to them, and they relax way more. Actually, the biggest shifts I see are with Japanese women and Black American men.

    • @pingapple123
      @pingapple123 4 месяца назад

      She had little eye contacts with the interviewer. Is that a common behaviour of the women in Japan?

  • @Marlo_189
    @Marlo_189 Год назад +72

    Japan is a nice place man even though I’m 1/8 Japanese my great grandma taught me about the culture came to Japan met my Japanese relatives they gave me a tour around Japan it’s beautiful

  • @Republicofpeter
    @Republicofpeter Год назад +24

    It’s amazing that you find these people to interview. Fantastic content as usual. Loved to hear the perspective from such varied places. White might be a monolith to many but it’s so varied and this video is a great example of that.

  • @maoxian
    @maoxian 22 дня назад

    Fascinating! I love this series of videos with ハーフ

  • @judithoconnor6442
    @judithoconnor6442 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you Takashii. I find your interviews fascinating and informative.

  • @loopyfrog
    @loopyfrog Год назад +6

    These interviews just get better and better! So interesting. Thank you Takashii

  • @Clarahidesmoney
    @Clarahidesmoney Год назад +7

    This makes me feel happy! Thank you so much for this video Takashii

  • @lunatunakitty
    @lunatunakitty 7 месяцев назад +2

    I really enjoy your videos. I feel like we learn so much about the cultural differences around the world.

  • @lefweakshow871
    @lefweakshow871 Год назад +10

    As a mom of a half French half Japanese girl these videos are very interesting. I want to prepare myself to accompany my daughter's life in Japan as well as possible. Thanks for the videos

  • @mmb-ig7iq
    @mmb-ig7iq Год назад +11

    Takashii your content is so great and candid, I love it!

  • @yoshiUMR
    @yoshiUMR Год назад +9

    Nice Mr. Nippon cameo!
    thanks for this video, hope you have a great NYE!

  • @enriquesanchez2001
    @enriquesanchez2001 7 месяцев назад

    WONDERFUL insight into our fascinating world and diverse cultures! THANK YOU, TAKASHI ♥♥♥♥

  • @lizzimia5479
    @lizzimia5479 9 месяцев назад +2

    This video was brilliant. I feel it is so important to learn and understand how people feel in different cultures. It really educated me. Thank you.

  • @dieauferstehung
    @dieauferstehung Год назад +221

    the 2nd girl surprised me how well her english and japan both are, they all have great english and japanese thats very nice to see them being bilinigual its a blessing

    • @orngpeelr9017
      @orngpeelr9017 Год назад +61

      same, she spoke japanese so native sounding yet her english and american accent sounded near native too. You dont hear that too often.

    • @marimo66666
      @marimo66666 Год назад +5

      im sure there are international schools for kids if she wants to remain in japan. perhaps deep down she wished she was brought up in the US

    • @BeeBee-pl9ly
      @BeeBee-pl9ly Год назад +5

      Yeah that threw me off lol

    • @almasysephirot4996
      @almasysephirot4996 Год назад +7

      It was more surprising to me she had a slight Japanese accent (heard a bit r/l mix, too at the end) while the optics would just tell your brain otherwise

    • @errolugdamina815
      @errolugdamina815 Год назад +1

      Off course, her father was American
      from Seattle in the U.S. She talked with
      her father in the English language.

  • @happyshopper570
    @happyshopper570 Год назад +9

    i love hearing different stories from how people grew up being the minority, whether it was a good or bad experience...its what make people interesting.. Great video!!

  • @Meianju
    @Meianju Год назад +3

    This was a good video. It's interesting hearing about other people experiences.

  • @Islandgirl4ever2
    @Islandgirl4ever2 9 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, Takashi, that was sooo interesting.. Great interviews and great questions from you!!! I love your intereviews and topics you choose... Keep up the great work!

  • @TVD1984
    @TVD1984 Год назад +13

    I enjoy these series because I moved at a relatively young age to a different country and married abroad so I have a 50/50 daughter as well now. She's still little but I try and speak to her in my own language and take her back to my original country relatively often to be with relatives. Very interesting these videos, thank you so much for making these.

    • @OtomoTenzi
      @OtomoTenzi 7 месяцев назад +1

      And WHAT country are we talkin' about here? France, Germany, or Italy? 🤔

  • @worldsboss
    @worldsboss Год назад +442

    Hearing their English-speaking voices next to their Japanese is actually so fascinating. All of these people seemed awesome, but the German guy in particular having to learn Japanese, English, and (presumably) German as well is very impressive! Thank you for sharing all their perspectives! 😁

    • @Freakazoid12345
      @Freakazoid12345 Год назад +23

      I'm German and my parents moved to America when I was a child.
      Left my last job after harassment/being called a nazi for several months.
      Half of the places I've worked I've had these issues and I was denied my military benefits in America for the same reason.

    • @worldsboss
      @worldsboss Год назад +19

      @@Freakazoid12345 Oh my god, that’s awful! 😔 I’m so sorry to hear that you have had those issues, there’s no excuse for that. People can be so ignorant.

    • @Freakazoid12345
      @Freakazoid12345 Год назад +16

      @@worldsboss thanks.
      I'm 40 and that's probably the first time I've heard somebody say something like that in my life.
      I just feel bad for black/asian people who can't hide from discrimination as easily as I can blend in until people read my name and google it or hear me talk for a while and pick up that I talk slightly different.

    • @sophia17965
      @sophia17965 Год назад +9

      ​@@Freakazoid12345 What are you talking about?? Many white people have German last names in the US who are several generations removed and i don't think they're discriminated against for having a german name ..... but if someone called u a nazi several times thats just immature and honestly very strange...

    • @Freakazoid12345
      @Freakazoid12345 Год назад +8

      @@sophia17965 again, there's a difference between growing up in a country and having ancestry.
      Very different.
      Not strange at all considering it's happened non-stop since coming to America and lasting several decades.
      Stop making excuses for the murder of my family.

  • @SaqrThabet
    @SaqrThabet Год назад +12

    I'm an Arab and I find your videos quite interesting, especially when it comes to the videos topics and the dialogues in general. Actually I know some Egyptian lady who moved to Japan with her Japanese husband, that is her RUclips channel Planet NIHON كوكب اليابان. She might help you to find half Arab half Japanese individuals. I can not wait to watch the coming video. Cheers!

  • @Hasenru
    @Hasenru 4 месяца назад +8

    5:30 Tobi's bento story hit me like a gut punch. I'm sorry he felt that way, but I'm glad to hear he thinks bento lunches are cool now. I was born in rural Pennsylvania, and had a similar experience, always wishing I was 100% white. Other kids made fun of my bento, saying rice looked like fly maggots. One day, a boy stole my lunch and started a "snow ball" fight with my onigiri. After that, I packed my own brown paper bag with a PB&J or hid in the school nurse's office to avoid bullies. Now that I'm much older, I wish I'd been braver and unapologetic about my family's culture. There's nothing wrong growing up with intersectional identities. I'm not any less American if I embrace any other parts of my family's history or customs. I hope all societies will eventually phase out harmful otherism mentalities and become safer and more accepting for everyone living there.
    Thank you for making and sharing these videos, @takashiifromjapan. These interviews make many of us out in the world feel less isolated by our experiences and give us hope. Keep up the wonderful work!

  • @MichelleKiwiGirlCrawfordvocals

    Very insightful and interesting interviews, I would like to visit Japan one day.

  • @WrightViewLLC
    @WrightViewLLC Год назад +3

    I enjoy your interviews and interviewing style. You ask good direct questions.

  • @HockeyPurist
    @HockeyPurist Год назад

    Really enjoy your videos!

  • @ryanberthelette8801
    @ryanberthelette8801 8 месяцев назад

    Cool interview ..she has alot of good points about the differences between us and Japan

  • @Paul.Douglas
    @Paul.Douglas Год назад +48

    Great interviews! I completely understand how they feel, being hafu, growing up in Texas. I had no identity, although I did have very good friends who treated me well. Racial bullying was limited to just a few idiots. In my workplace, there has been absolutely no issue at all. I work for a good company, and it's been great.

  • @fitswiththepandandmonkey
    @fitswiththepandandmonkey Год назад +27

    I loved this video! I love how u were so interested in how mixed Asian American ppl live their lives and how it was for them as kids, I’m 13 and Korean American mixed my mom Korean and dad American, and I am happy to relate to some of these other people thanks for the video 🙏 감사해요!

  • @victorialee1323
    @victorialee1323 4 месяца назад

    I loved the content of this video, thank you for your interesting work, Takashi-san!

  • @kathleenmelzer7499
    @kathleenmelzer7499 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the Interviews.

  • @takashiifromjapan
    @takashiifromjapan  Год назад +501

    Thank you so much for watching!!
    This is the last video of this year!
    Hope you guys are having a good holiday weekend!!
    See you next year!🐰

    • @captaincaption
      @captaincaption Год назад +3

      Early Happy New Year Takashii!

    • @readmycomment3707
      @readmycomment3707 Год назад +7

      So I disagree with the first girl completely. Shes young and attractive, literally a model. That has nothing to do with her being half White, her "privilege" is being a young attractive woman which helps a lot in any society on Earth.
      Try the same interview with a below average looking White guy and I guarantee his experience is the exact opposite of hers yet both are White.

    • @specialk9999
      @specialk9999 Год назад +2

      あけましておめでとうございます

    • @ilhamMrizki
      @ilhamMrizki Год назад +1

      hallo Takashii-san, perhaps you can make about half Indonesian-Japanese on your next video, and by the way merry christmas and happy new years, domo arigatou 🙏

    • @darkclouds27
      @darkclouds27 Год назад +1

      Another captivating interview! Keep it up and Happy New Year, Takashi-san!

  • @francy80
    @francy80 Год назад +11

    👍Thank you so much for sharing this very nice video.
    All the people interviewed are very nice and interesting.
    In truth, I believe that being the child of parents of two different nationalities and cultures is a strength rather than a limitation, even if in some cultural contexts there may be difficulties that sometimes lead to the "so-called identity crisis". Takashi I wish you a happy new year. I will look forward to the next new year's videos with joy. A warm greeting.☺️

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      @Takashiifromjapan1. Год назад

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  • @user-ut4tt7xm8s
    @user-ut4tt7xm8s 9 месяцев назад

    Fascinating , & great interview technique, allowing the subjects to speak uninterrupted

  • @ildarkinildarkin
    @ildarkinildarkin 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the video!

  • @adamharita206
    @adamharita206 Год назад +179

    I am half English-Japanese and I am now 50. When I was growing up in California, in the 70’s and 80’s there were almost no other half-Asians. I can relate to the German guy - I just wanted to be “American”. I also think there is a big difference when you mom or dad is Japanese. All the people in this interview had Japanese mom’s so I think they were closer to the culture. My father is Japanese so I think I was much closer to my British culture/family.

    • @abc4359
      @abc4359 Год назад +13

      I guess time has changed a lot. Also depends where you live. These days mixed race children are everywhere. Nothing special in a way. Well at least here in europe

    • @Go4Broke247
      @Go4Broke247 Год назад +10

      Amwf back then was very rare sight. Get nasty look wherever you got. Look at Bruce Lee and his wife.

    • @Go4Broke247
      @Go4Broke247 Год назад +3

      @clarence6605 seen a lot now. Don't see Black females with Asian man much though. It's all about personal preference.

    • @Go4Broke247
      @Go4Broke247 Год назад

      @clarence6605 once you go black, you're a single mom. It's Da Truth!

    • @spartanwarrior1
      @spartanwarrior1 Год назад +1

      the maternal side is often stronger or more appealing

  • @GraceMyHeart
    @GraceMyHeart Год назад +167

    As someone who follows both Takashi and Mr Nippon (the last person he interviewed in this) here on RUclips, it was a lot fun to me to see both RUclipsrs interact. Very interesting video. As a kid I always wished I had been half-brittish because I wanted to know the language. Unfortunately I am only a basic German. 😂

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      @Takashiifromjapan1. Год назад

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    • @Luffy-vy7pg
      @Luffy-vy7pg Год назад +10

      Finde es auch so geil die beiden in einem Interview zu sehen. Wäre echt nice wenn die mehr zusammen machen würden

    • @inotoni6148
      @inotoni6148 Год назад +4

      Du kannst aber Englisch lernen, dafür braucht man nicht halb-englisch zu sein.

    • @Starkiller935
      @Starkiller935 Год назад

      lol, at least I'm not the only one. I'm Czech and always envied my cousin because his dad is British and he grew up bilingual.

    • @basedchad6035
      @basedchad6035 Год назад

      Bruh warum denn ein Engländer? Der ewige Brite.

  • @crush42mash6
    @crush42mash6 9 месяцев назад

    Excellent interviews thank you from 🇨🇦

  • @OntarioAndrews415
    @OntarioAndrews415 Год назад

    Very interesting and enjoyable. Keep up the good work!

  • @steel_judoka
    @steel_judoka Год назад +3

    Takashii wanted to say that the quality of your videos improved significantly, also your english too, always interesting to watch your interviews, keep it up!

  • @ryan.treckoreptiles3494
    @ryan.treckoreptiles3494 Год назад +21

    Very nice video, this is the first time I've seen a video of interviewing mixed Japanese people. Myself on two other family members are mixed, and we struggle with conversing to Japanese. I dont look mixed because I am fairly light skinned and many Japanese just see me as white. While my cousin is Black and Japanese mixed people see him as just black. I wish more people would speak on identity because for me I personally do not feel like I have an identity to Express my culture, when I tell white people I'm mixed the treat me very different and I have never met a Japanese person who has liked a mixed person besides like a few family members. I am reminded that I am mixed whenever I try to converse with a full Japanese person and they always explain that my "blood" is dirty before I am mixed which they do not like.

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      @Takashiifromjapan1. Год назад

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    • @sandraalfaro7242
      @sandraalfaro7242 Год назад +2

      I’m so sorry you have that experience. People can be so closed minded…

  • @dougallwinship
    @dougallwinship Год назад

    takashii ... you ask such good questions that allow people to elaborate ... good skills!

  • @nico.p9963
    @nico.p9963 4 месяца назад +1

    Habe dich und deinen Channel gerade entdeckt und ich liebe es, es ist sehr interessant ^^ vor allem weil ich Japan und die japanische Kultur äußerst spannend finde, bald mal dort hinreisen möchte. Wahrscheinlich dieses Jahr.
    Außerdem möchte ich gerne in der Zukunft die Sprache lernen!

  • @terriem3922
    @terriem3922 8 месяцев назад +2

    Those were both very interesting interviews. I'm looking forward to your interview as well.
    My dad was stationed in Japan for two years, and knew Alan Watts. My dad said he liked Japan.
    Also, my boyffriend lived in Japan for three years, and spoke it. He liked Japan a lot.
    He thought I should reincarnate in a particular island there because the people there are very healthy.

  • @DrNotEmpathetic
    @DrNotEmpathetic 5 месяцев назад +4

    I'm a pretty mixed guy. Got Spanish, English, German, Mexican, Arabic, Polish, and north African blood in me but thanks to being in a military family I was always on the move every 3 years so I didn't have a "home." Europe has always been great for me, especially Italy and Spain, but the U.S. is where I felt like I didn't belong. It's interesting how there's so many types of people in America yet most of them are intolerant, including the minorities.

    • @jibril2473
      @jibril2473 5 месяцев назад

      Do you have super powers?

    • @DrNotEmpathetic
      @DrNotEmpathetic 5 месяцев назад

      @@jibril2473 Man, I wish. I'd give for psychic powers or super strength.

  • @richal4596
    @richal4596 Год назад +15

    I was born on the American naval base at Yokosuka 1959. Dad was active duty Navy, Mom was Japanese. Lived in Yokohama until 1965 with Mom's family. Dad lived on base but everyone in our neighborhood knew who we were. It was rough for us just fifteen years after the war. Then my Mom said it got even worse when we spent one year in my Dad's hometown in southern Indiana 1965. Many gold star houses in Vincennes back then.

  • @Jinouga502
    @Jinouga502 Год назад +3

    Takashii you always find the most interesting people to interview!

  • @BURP39R
    @BURP39R 7 месяцев назад

    These videos are fascinating. The swith from Japanese to English is incredible. Wow

  • @iBearsFPS
    @iBearsFPS Год назад

    I learn so much from your videos! 🫡

  • @final-ben-san
    @final-ben-san Год назад +6

    Great to see Tobi. I love his channel ^^

  • @MrShem123ist
    @MrShem123ist Год назад +28

    These interviews are getting better and better. I know a few people who are half as well. Based from my observation, they tend to be more open minded since they are exposed to multiple cultures. 素晴らしい!
    Happy new year, 皆さん!

    • @spongebracket
      @spongebracket Год назад +1

      As a Japanese/Philippina in the USA, I do feel that I am more open-minded. The way I think is definitely more broad and made me realize how a lot of cultures are so closed minded.

  • @Roxy-Mara
    @Roxy-Mara 9 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for this beautiful episode! ❤As a European with a South American parent, and looking more South American myself I can relate to a lot of what they said when it comes to struggles with finding your identity.

  • @AlexandreYAMADA74
    @AlexandreYAMADA74 Год назад +6

    It is quite interesting that you are interviewing half. I see a lot of half people in Japan who are Japanese from their mother.
    From my side, I am half Japanese, half French but from my father who was Japanese. I have lived in Japan only 2 years for studies and I feel like most of half whereas we are mostly seen as “gaijin” in Japan. Still a beautiful country that I like to visit as often as I can.

  • @the-the-the-the-the-the-the
    @the-the-the-the-the-the-the Год назад +3

    thank you for your content takashii!!!!

    • @callingallcovens2759
      @callingallcovens2759 Год назад +1

      It’s biased propaganda. He never has the challenging conversations and it’s superficial.

  • @gailcousins9609
    @gailcousins9609 Год назад +20

    A Blessed and a Prosperous Happy Happy New Year Takashi! I truly can relate and enjoy this video. I am mixed with Japanese and African American. My mom is Japanese and dad is African American. I was raised in a rich diversity of both cultures! I was blessed to be surrounded by my mom's culture and customs and to have communication with my cousins and her family in Japan. Growing up I had people to ask me my mixture. I wish I learned to speak Japanese. I went to Japan when I was very young visiting my grandparents. I don't recall any racism. I do look forward to visiting Japan this coming year.

  • @TruePower44
    @TruePower44 3 месяца назад

    Very cool that you did a video with Mr Nippon. Please more!

  • @CanadianBear47
    @CanadianBear47 8 месяцев назад

    I appriciate your interviews. I am 1/4 japanese my family stayed here in canada during second world war so were in internment camps in canada. I appriciate giving me insights into japan i visited as well maybe in 2018 ish. and of course learning about history online. Anways thank you and keep doing u

  • @prometheuszero9
    @prometheuszero9 Год назад +28

    It's so interesting watching these interviews and hearing everyone's individual stories. The second girl was particularly interesting because if I saw her walking down the street here in the US, I would never guess that she was half. It's interesting how some people inherit more or less of their Japanese parent's features, to the point where they might not even appear very Asian to Westerners. Also, this is a random observation, but the half German half Japanese guy kinda looks like the RUclipsr Trevor Wallace, if Trevor Wallace was half Japanese.

    • @wolle8182
      @wolle8182 Год назад +3

      the german guy is a youtuber aswell, his channel is mr nippon

    • @namedrop721
      @namedrop721 7 месяцев назад +1

      Americans only see skin color, other countries are more perceptive

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Год назад +4

    We appreciate your effort and hard work. God bless everyone

  • @danquinnell3502
    @danquinnell3502 Год назад

    Very intelligent and informative interviews on a subject I never would have thought about. Bother the interviewer and interviewees were very articulate.

  • @CaveCanem74
    @CaveCanem74 7 месяцев назад +24

    I spent 1 year in Japan while in the military when I was 20 and 21 years old and I loved it! I 'm 49 now. I wish and desire so so much That I had been half Japanese so as I to be part of two cultures. Listen guys and gals, if you have an American or whatever and a Japanese parent and get to spend time in both cultures, please be thankful! And forget about the bullying. I was bullied relentlessly in the US and I'm not mixed, just plain white lol! Bullying happens everywhere and it can either build character or make you depressed, that is really up to the individual and how their parents have raised and strengthened them.

    • @davebellamy4867
      @davebellamy4867 7 месяцев назад +4

      There are a lot of advantages to being mixed race, especially as a many countries are becoming much more totalitarian. It gives a Plan B second option for a place to live where you have contacts and know the language. Plus you're already able to live in multiple places. This is going to be increasingly to your advantage. My S.E. Asian immigrant friends in the UK also have this advantage. Mixed race or not. These options will probably save many lives in future.

    • @nightfrost1891
      @nightfrost1891 7 месяцев назад +1

      i mean, obviously
      it's just as a whole, japan and other east asian countries are largely just an asain population so you will be the 'oidd one out' if you are mixed race or any other race
      i also find those countries to be a lot more conservative in terms of 'don't do anything to stand out' or break the status quo so obviously you can feel restricted for not being the same as everyone else
      i mean, it's frowned on if you wear something that could mildly be revealing (even things that are sleeveless! IN SUMMER)
      i find japan is better than when i was in korea (with judgment) but it's still like... constricting that way and i think that's why she said that
      obviously there are cons to being in america too and their are pros to being in japan, they have some things that are better than us and vise versa
      no place is perfect, like you said but the cultures are different in certain ways both good, and bad
      if you're looking to feel comfortable expressing yourself, united states is one of the best places to do it (and not be shamed about your weight whew... it's bad in east asian countries), even if people will bully you too occasionally

    • @CaveCanem74
      @CaveCanem74 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@nightfrost1891 i struggle with weight myself but to be honest, societies that shame fat a bit more are actually a bit more healthy because it holds people accountable. As Americans we are too fat, too unhealthy and for some reason we can't define what a woman or man is. Ask someone to define what a woman is without using the word woman, only a person who sees sex normally can do that lol! Now that being said I do love my country but we have our problems as well.

    • @pazza4555
      @pazza4555 7 месяцев назад

      That's a really disingenuous characterization of bullying. Japan's high suicide rate is rooted in part in bullying, and we're seeing terrible spikes in American children killing themselves because of it too. There's no "character building" option. It's just mistreatment. What some people think of all character building is normally just pretending that pain doesn't exist, and its unhealthy.

    • @CaveCanem74
      @CaveCanem74 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@pazza4555the thing that is disingenuous is that you truly probably believe that you can end bullying around the world. And yes i was suicidal at times myself but I overcame it. The only way to lower the suicide rate is number one stop trying to baby your children by putting them in padded protective rooms. They have to know that life is hard and cruel and that mommy and daddy will not always be there to bail them out of situations. Number two, well really number one is to realize that this is a fallen world and Japan like our country needs Jesus Christ. We are trying to fix the the results of a world without christ instead of getting to the root of the problem. The root is our sin. If you are not a Christian I guess that will be a lot to swallow.

  • @geoffk777
    @geoffk777 8 месяцев назад +27

    My daughter is half American. She has always gone to Japanese schools and has never really had any issues. She has lots of Japanese friends and is very popular. Most Japanese consider her unusually pretty and stylish. Her Engish ability is also helpful in school and travel. However, aside from Englsh, we never tried to raise her as "half American", so she has always considered herself as a normal Japanese person.
    Parents need to consder what their goals for their children are. If you want your child to Americanize, prefer English and move to the US, than an International school might work well. If you expect our child to settle in Japan and live and succeed in Japanese society, than you should raise thm to be like other Japanese and to fit in well with the culture.

    • @David_Hypnos
      @David_Hypnos 4 месяца назад +1

      It seems her parents preferred to raise her as Japanese, but she dreams of moving to the US. You cannot know the dreams and aspirations of your children from a young age and you cannot shape them into what you want them to be. I believe the correct answer is for people to just accept others for who they are rather than acting as a collective that rejects anything different.

    • @geoffk777
      @geoffk777 4 месяца назад

      @@David_Hypnos My daughter speaks English quite well, so if she wants to move to the US, she is perfectly free to do so. The fact of the matter is that you have to decide on an International school track or a Japanese school track for a mixed child. But, aside from being far more expensive, the International school track will actualy limit her future options far more than the Jsapanese track would. I Love my daughter and believe that I made the best possible choices for her.

  • @sadafali6996
    @sadafali6996 Год назад +3

    Nice to see such types of interviews

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      @Takashiifromjapan1. Год назад

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  • @trgpanama5966
    @trgpanama5966 10 месяцев назад

    Very interesting how these kids evolve thru time. They come to the realize that they need to be true to themselves and be who they are in order to be happy.
    Congrats on this You Tube channel. I guess everyone is an open book.

  • @dalisayreyes8893
    @dalisayreyes8893 11 месяцев назад

    Very interesting video Takashi 😊😊😊

  • @theodoredodge
    @theodoredodge Год назад +3

    Love your videos.

  • @jeweledbyjazzz3030
    @jeweledbyjazzz3030 Год назад +703

    My boyfriend is half white and Japanese, and hes been treated very badly by a lot of people out here in Las Vegas. I'm proud that our son is mixed with Japanese, white, and Mexican. I think it's so cool to be able to teach him about all the different cultures

    • @nomadicheadspace5334
      @nomadicheadspace5334 Год назад +41

      Same in California I’m mixed with everything under the sun and get treated like I’m not real god bless

    • @kanizmajorys2572
      @kanizmajorys2572 Год назад +1

      I didnt known that mexican was a race

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      @Takashiifromjapan1. Год назад

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    • @catalinarossi
      @catalinarossi Год назад +59

      Mexican? I understand Japanese since they are homogeneous but Mexico is not, there’s even white Mexicans in the north. Based on your profile I’m guessing you’re Mestizo, which is what I think you meant.

    • @benjaminislesesq.9551
      @benjaminislesesq.9551 Год назад

      I guess you haven’t traveled outside of Italy. There are plenty of Mexicans that are of European background. Sounds like you are being Microagressive here.

  • @johnmc3862
    @johnmc3862 Год назад

    Great chat up method!!

  • @brianbell3417
    @brianbell3417 6 месяцев назад

    Great interviews! Very interesting!

  • @mugen8602
    @mugen8602 Год назад +21

    Your interviewing skills are getting better and better Takashi!
    You seem so much more comfortable in front of the camera and especially with the interviewees 👍👍

    • @brucebergkamp
      @brucebergkamp Год назад

      practice makes perfect, over time you will get over your stage fright

  • @KL-kn4lz
    @KL-kn4lz Год назад +391

    Takashii, could you interview people with disabilities. I curious to know how accessible Japan is. I'm especially interested in people who are on the autistic spectrum as plain, direct language is often preferred in communication. I wonder how this fits in with the Japanese style of communication where things are often implied rather than said directly. Thank you (PLEASE NOTE here in the UK autism is described as a lifelong developmental disability)

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      @Takashiifromjapan1. Год назад

      👆🎉 THANKS FOR WATCHING AND COMMENTING, TELEGRAM ME TO CLAIM YOUR PRIZE 🎁

    • @GPTMagana
      @GPTMagana Год назад

      Hi, autistic here and is a guy that loves Japanese fashion and have some expertise on fashion and modeling industry. I have a thing for gravure models and gyaru women.

    • @DmitryIsc199
      @DmitryIsc199 Год назад +15

      plus 100. I've never seen a blogger (among jap/kor ones) who would open such thread

    • @thomasespy007
      @thomasespy007 Год назад +15

      Yes. Takashii. I would definitely like to see an interview with disabled people point of view in Japan. Especially having a disabled child myself and wanting to visit Japan soon. ありがとう ございます

    • @JxSTICK
      @JxSTICK Год назад +14

      I also have autism and I'm wondering the same

  • @cvilsack1
    @cvilsack1 Год назад +7

    You really are creating an incredible social experiment.

  • @paulastafford1642
    @paulastafford1642 7 месяцев назад

    Love these videos.

  • @metacapitalism5113
    @metacapitalism5113 10 месяцев назад

    Takashi, you are doing a wonderful job and service. Keep it up.

  • @isaaccantu494
    @isaaccantu494 Год назад +4

    I hope you come back to interview in Okinawa again soon, a good video Idea would be something like “Interviewing US Military members in Japan” I myself am stationed on Kadena Air Base and have a lot of stories to tell of my time here in Okinawa.

    • @Mwoods2272
      @Mwoods2272 Год назад +2

      He doesn't have to go to Okinawa to interview service members, there are plenty of bases in the Tokyo area.

  • @atomboy45
    @atomboy45 9 месяцев назад +11

    You never see “my dad is Japanese and my mom is white” it’s always the other way around 💀

    • @Osprey850
      @Osprey850 6 месяцев назад +1

      I imagine that more men have spent time in Japan for work or service than women have, which may help explain why that combination seems more common.

    • @dermann4525
      @dermann4525 6 месяцев назад

      No that is not true

    • @kayAc92
      @kayAc92 Месяц назад

      not suprising Japanese women are beautiful, and men usually seek women not the other way around. Japanese men are shy it's going to be more rare to see Japanese men with white women.

  • @blaze_ihyli8619
    @blaze_ihyli8619 10 месяцев назад

    Súper interesting!!! Thank you!

  • @sbwheelmen
    @sbwheelmen 11 месяцев назад +10

    You are a very good interviewer! Excellent questions and insightful for viewers. The people you interviewed in this video also gave deep, thoughtful answers. I think it’s because of their Japanese background and intelligence.

  • @syfy.sylvia
    @syfy.sylvia Год назад +52

    I think that regarding Christianity, many young christians lose their connection with religion because their parents or the society put a lot of pressure on them as children. It's very different though because Christianity has many different branches, so my experience was rather positive being raised as Eastern-Orthodoxal. My mother is religious but never pressured me on anything, so when I was a teenager and young adult, I did my fair share of research on religion, I read the Quran and studied articles about Buddhism and Shintoism, etc. Ultimately I returned to my native Eastern-Orthodoxal christian background because I feel it had the biggest impact on me as a person.
    I would love to see a video about people of different religions in Japan.

    • @garethwest9069
      @garethwest9069 Год назад +4

      Which of you convicts Me of sin? And if I tell the truth, why do you not believe Me? - John 8:46
      It's not a lack of evidence for Christianity but a lack of willingness to sincerely seek truth, which presupposes earnestness, courage and humility (Proverbs 14:6). That woman is a nominal Christian, lured away by the satanic worldly system., which preached the Darwinian delusion via UNESCO in public schools.
      There were no denominations in the early church (Acts 11:26). God gave us one Book which false preachers have perverted with the traditions of men, something which the Lord Jesus Christ severely reprimanded way back then. God bless you.

    • @user-fn3vy4ug2n
      @user-fn3vy4ug2n Год назад +4

      Don't be fooled by colonialist versions of christ, any version of religion that standardizes exclusive supremacy is a part of the problem, not the spiritual solution. God is in all things, all people all cultures.. nameless and aboriginal... far outdates the modes of cult bias of humans. Christ is loving state of consciousness, to be shared and found synonymous with original cultures understanding of the human heart, not a golden calf to be warshipped

    • @garethwest9069
      @garethwest9069 Год назад

      @@user-fn3vy4ug2n Colonialists refer to the Bible; you should try it too instead of your demonic, New Age lies.

    • @davorsisul5065
      @davorsisul5065 Год назад

      @@garethwest9069 As a Roman-Catholic, the original Christian, I'm just going to LOL at you from my moral high ground. Christianity in the modern world should be taken as a set of beliefs on how to treat your fellow men (i.e. - ten commandments and Christ's 2 ones) than being a religious zealot blindly believing everything in the Bible. It's just another book written by men (people) for men (people). It's value lies in it's philosophical and societal set of beliefs more than anywhere else.

    • @maryprice8458
      @maryprice8458 11 месяцев назад

      Cool observations in this comment!

  • @sidesketch
    @sidesketch Год назад +10

    It's interesting if you think about it, how similar a topic this is, represented in the famous InuYasha anime in particular, as the main character struggles his entire story arc regarding his origins duality (half demon/ half human) and how the rest of the world (demons) tream him (badly) different compared to humans in the "human world".
    That's why it's even my fav anime ever, as I've struggled with the same thing in my life while being a foreigner in a different country, as you have this identity crisis and in the end, you just have to accept who you really are, for what you are.
    P.S: I find very curious how well the last inverviewed person conserves such a German accent when speaking Japanese, pretty unique if I may say.