Japan, Kabuki, and Bunraku: Crash Course Theater #23

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  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

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  • @damedesuka77
    @damedesuka77 6 лет назад +189

    Kabuki is exclusive to male actors, but now in modern Japan there's also a female only theater troupe called the Takarazuka Revue. Some actresses specialize in playing male roles and, dare I say, look more gentlemanly on stage than actual males. They play adaptations of many titles, even some famous anime/manga.
    You should talk about them later when these videos reach the modern theaters era!

    • @AyubuKK
      @AyubuKK 6 лет назад +5

      helios396 That sounds really cool!

    • @seleciaa
      @seleciaa 6 лет назад +2

      helios396 That sounds pretty cool!

    • @atsukorichards1675
      @atsukorichards1675 5 лет назад

      That's true, but theirs are more like the modern musicals, not kabuki.

  • @scarredchild
    @scarredchild 6 лет назад +98

    Anime makes a lot more sense. Especially the dramatic pause is like that moment where the background changes to action lines just before the person hits their opponent.

    • @AyubuKK
      @AyubuKK 6 лет назад +1

      scarred child Yeah

  • @pirateking56128
    @pirateking56128 6 лет назад +227

    Shout outs to all the people that know japanese watching this video. I know your pain.

    • @highfivehangten
      @highfivehangten 6 лет назад +5

      Okashido So much pain. 痛い!

    • @pirateking56128
      @pirateking56128 6 лет назад +5

    • @irrelevantFJS
      @irrelevantFJS 6 лет назад +1

      Okashido 我慢できなかった。😂

    • @safir2241
      @safir2241 5 лет назад

      Eh it’s pretty easy compared to english

    • @littlefishbigmountain
      @littlefishbigmountain 4 года назад +23

      Safir
      They’re referring to the pronunciation of the video. They didn’t think it needed to be spelled out because anybody who they were referring to would obviously notice

  • @Jaydoggy531
    @Jaydoggy531 6 лет назад +20

    The Met Opera has a staging of Madame Butterfly that involves a Bunraku Puppet being her son (since the part has no dialogue). It's a fascinating mix of theaters, I encourage anyone to check it out.

  • @CommodoreFluffy
    @CommodoreFluffy 6 лет назад +299

    i guess mispronouncing things is no longer john green's thing

  • @camiloiribarren1450
    @camiloiribarren1450 6 лет назад +21

    I always wondered the difference between Noh and Kabuki. Now I learned the term for puppet, Bunraku. Thanks a lot, Mike

  • @jitaru3707
    @jitaru3707 4 года назад +12

    Hearing about these puppets, and the very odd illustrations in the Japanese children's books I grew up with finally making sense

  • @carolin9697
    @carolin9697 6 лет назад +84

    Not to be nitpicky, but the amusement district in Edo is called Yoshiwara, not (really) ukiyo. "Ukiyo" as a word stands more for the lifestyle in the amusement quarters etc. While it is all intertwined, I think it would be wrong to remember "Ukiyo" as the name for a physical place, which it is not (really). The translation "floating world" is correct though.

    • @RSeidl540
      @RSeidl540 5 лет назад +7

      Yes, and in addition to this, the theatres were not located in Yoshiwara. The Kabuki theatres were placed in two different districts as the Edo Shogunate wanted to separate prostitution from theatre. It is a common misconception that the theatres were located in the red light districts - but they were indeed close by.

  • @lsamaknight
    @lsamaknight 6 лет назад +21

    Aww. No mention of the fun Kabuki has with the Kuroko (stage-hands dressed all in black). It's where the tradition of ninja dressed all in black comes from. Since the audience was supposed to treat them as part of the scenery it was shocking when one of them interacted with the actual actors.

    • @yukomoriyama7532
      @yukomoriyama7532 6 лет назад +1

      Ninja was there during sengoku-jidai and it is way back than kabuki. How come kuroko be the tradition of ninja?

    • @lsamaknight
      @lsamaknight 6 лет назад +2

      Not the existence of ninja, just how they were depicted in popular culture. Stuff like the costume design in Shuriken Sentai Nininger traces its roots back to the costumes worn by the kuroko.

  • @lacybookworm5039
    @lacybookworm5039 6 лет назад +60

    Finally theater outside of Europe!

    • @Elfos64
      @Elfos64 6 лет назад

      You mean wrestling? Eh... while it is certainly a performing art, it's mostly televised. Sure, there are people in the audience to see them actually do stuff in the arena and there's not generally much effort put into cinematography, but by that logic talk shows could count. Theater is all about live performance right in front of the audience, without film or editing.

    • @sarahleonard7309
      @sarahleonard7309 6 лет назад +3

      I realize that they have been focusing on European theater, but they have already done episodes on Sanskrit and Noh theater.

  • @thebermudaI
    @thebermudaI 6 лет назад +76

    Boon-raku. ♡ There's no "uh" sound in Japanese.
    文楽です。日本語でuh音がない。

  • @aperson22222
    @aperson22222 6 лет назад +32

    Why would I think the death of a soy sauce seller is less tragic than the death of anyone else in similar circumstances? A person’s a person, no matter their job.

  • @GusAlo17
    @GusAlo17 6 лет назад +8

    Just today in the med school we studied the Kabuki syndrome, which has it's name for the face shape of the affected, which reassembles the Kabuki masks.

  • @gickles8830
    @gickles8830 6 лет назад +25

    That thought bubble was basically like:
    Oh I'm broke, GUESS ILL DIE THEN

  • @BlackEyedGhost0
    @BlackEyedGhost0 5 лет назад +1

    10:30 Those plays must be sensational. I laughed for a whole minute just hearing a description of the play.

  • @Nadia1989
    @Nadia1989 6 лет назад +12

    Kabuki is so popular that there are some operas that were adapted to the format, like Aida. Sadly, there is no recording AFAIK

  • @thebeatisdead
    @thebeatisdead 6 лет назад +32

    Why does the law nearly always ruin the fun for female performers? It is cool that the Kabuki genre was started by women even if they didn't get to continue being performers at the time.

    • @12mjk21
      @12mjk21 6 лет назад +1

      Izumo no Okuni did it to pay for the travel fees she did as a traveling priestess (since there were not enough shrines to go around, priestesses traveled to do their services), this was kind of a fluke. atleast Kabuki was not outright banned, love the "shiranami gonin otoko" play

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 6 лет назад +2

      thedeadbeat Prostitute is a problem. I guess. The shogun hated the samurai going there, so he decided to stop it.

    • @AyubuKK
      @AyubuKK 6 лет назад

      True

  • @ericamorrissey4718
    @ericamorrissey4718 6 лет назад +6

    Would love to see a video on the arts of the Geisha. Thank you for making these great videos 😊

  • @TheAlpacalypseIsUponUs
    @TheAlpacalypseIsUponUs 6 лет назад +2

    A crash course forensics would be pretty cool.

  • @cwam1979
    @cwam1979 6 лет назад +26

    Very good overview, but your pronunciation is off (mie, bunraku).

  • @Gogandontas07
    @Gogandontas07 6 лет назад +2

    you guys are amazing, thanks for everything you do!

  • @Cae_the_Kitsune
    @Cae_the_Kitsune 6 лет назад +180

    With all due respect, your Japanese pronunciation needs some work.

  • @Orlymusicboy
    @Orlymusicboy 6 лет назад +69

    I'm a great admirer of both CrashCourse's content and Mike's presentation style, but the pronunciation in this episode is atrocious. It really lowers the quality and educational value of the video.
    They also show an animation of a bunraku puppet with marionette-like strings. That's not how they work. It's also a pity that they omit the tayuu from their summary of bunraku.

  • @danitiwa
    @danitiwa 5 лет назад +1

    Very informative and good video thou thank u

  • @hiteshgupta8474
    @hiteshgupta8474 6 лет назад +3

    Thought bubble characters are so cute !!

  • @yohtan
    @yohtan 6 лет назад +2

    The change from boys to men didn't stop the naughty stuff btw.

  • @carmellaboykin2720
    @carmellaboykin2720 6 лет назад +4

    I wish I had this when I was in IB theatre 😂

  • @nothisispatrick4644
    @nothisispatrick4644 6 лет назад +40

    This so interesting

  • @adoredpariah
    @adoredpariah 6 лет назад +2

    The Muppets were substantially more horrifying in ancient Japan.

  • @mojosbigsticks
    @mojosbigsticks 6 лет назад +2

    This is never long enough!

  • @maddoxorourke871
    @maddoxorourke871 6 лет назад +1

    you should discuss rakugo!

  • @maria-lz3he
    @maria-lz3he 6 лет назад +1

    I wanna see a kabuki play now :( so cool!

  • @yugo4k
    @yugo4k 6 лет назад +13

    Very interesting and well researched, but besides the numerous pronunciation comments already made, it would be a lot more informative (to a very large part of the world) to have the measures in metric... at least also in metric.

  • @kzenias
    @kzenias 5 лет назад +1

    There's a typo in the Tought Bubble animation at 11:10
    It's sonezake, not sonezak

  • @Andy-km1xp
    @Andy-km1xp 6 лет назад +2

    これはすごいと思います。

  • @metrok00laid
    @metrok00laid 6 лет назад

    what a great channel! thank you

  • @harsyakiarraathallah2222
    @harsyakiarraathallah2222 Год назад +1

    Kabuki must be Learn by the Westerns more to make Greater Opera for Shakespeare.

  • @eruno_
    @eruno_ 6 лет назад +2

    onnagata ❤️

  • @seleciaa
    @seleciaa 6 лет назад +9

    Hi Mike! No one expects perfection, but a lot of your Japanese was pronounced incorrectly. Just thought to let you know for future videos. The vowels are pronounced like the Spanish ones, if you're used to that.
    A = ah
    I = ee
    U = oooh
    E = eh
    O = oh
    Hope that helps!

  • @DrFarazHarsini
    @DrFarazHarsini 6 лет назад +3

    CrashCourse: Would you be interested if I help to add Farsi (Persian) subtitles to some of your videos? I couldn't find a way to message you, so let me know if interested! Thanks!

  • @Tjm5656
    @Tjm5656 6 лет назад

    I absolutely love watching Bunraku and Ningyo puppetry

    • @irrelevantFJS
      @irrelevantFJS 6 лет назад

      TONY MANFREDI By the way, ningyo just means puppet in Japanese.

    • @atsukorichards1675
      @atsukorichards1675 5 лет назад

      I think Tony meant Ningyo-Joururi (人形浄瑠璃). Bunraku (文楽) became almost the other name of it nowadays.

  • @plursocks
    @plursocks 6 лет назад +1

    You should mention Takarazuka too! :)

  • @AAAAAA-lx2cl
    @AAAAAA-lx2cl 6 лет назад

    For effective speedrunning of crash course playlists, increase the video speed according to familiarity:
    Watched the playlist before =1.25x
    Studied concepts in spare time=1.5x
    Taken a class for subject=2x

    • @AAAAAA-lx2cl
      @AAAAAA-lx2cl 6 лет назад

      I do this for the Crash Course Chemistey playlist. Helps me get right to the meat of the videos.

  • @vitgerivaz
    @vitgerivaz 6 лет назад +1

    There's also a weird but entertaining movie called Bunraku with Ron Pearlman, and that's all that I'll say

  • @MariankGonzalez
    @MariankGonzalez 6 лет назад +3

    Matsuo Bashou is the most famous Japanese poet, so he could be the new Japanese Shakespeare.

  • @somiiasalah2958
    @somiiasalah2958 6 лет назад

    Crash courses u r the best ❤❤

  • @samalexander8574
    @samalexander8574 6 лет назад

    MIKE! I missed you!!!

  • @glitschqualle
    @glitschqualle 6 лет назад +9

    I know I'm nitpicking here and it's "only cartoons" but I often wish the graphics team was putting a little more effort in the costumes. The kimono (especially the female ones) just don't look like japanese kimono but more like chinese hanfu. It would help distinguishing the different cultures. As someone who loves and collects kimono it really bothers me...
    I otherwise really love this video and the shows.

    • @irrelevantFJS
      @irrelevantFJS 6 лет назад +2

      teapotOctopode That was tough for me to stomach as well. But unfortunately they just don't understand how kimono work or their structure. :(

  • @plasticturnipboy5642
    @plasticturnipboy5642 5 лет назад +2

    Narrator: ..."They have become models of true love"
    Me: Have they though?
    Mike, 2 seconds later: Have they though?
    Me: Nice!

  • @Elfos64
    @Elfos64 6 лет назад +4

    Why was this video done so long after the Noh one? Anyway, will you cover Hero shows, modern Japanese theater too? Basically, set up a small stage somewhere public/high traffic, like a mall or something, and act out a little fight scene or something with actors dressed as superheroes/villains, usually to promote a tokusatsu series popular at the time.

    • @ayaaralemua7154
      @ayaaralemua7154 6 лет назад

      Elfos64 it would be interesting if he covered the Takarazuka Revue too

    • @eruyommo
      @eruyommo 6 лет назад

      I think it is because of a loose chronological order.

    • @Elfos64
      @Elfos64 6 лет назад

      +AyaAraleMUA I'm not familiar with that, describe it please.

    • @kokuinomusume
      @kokuinomusume 6 лет назад +1

      Because Mike is focusing on the most famous playwrights so the noh episode focused on Kan'ami and Zeami who lived during the Kamakura shogunate in the 1300s and 1400s, and this one is centered around Chikamatsu Monzaemon because he's the most famous kabuki/bunraku writer, and he worked during the flourishing of kabuki around the Genroku era (let's say some decades before and after 1700 even if the actual Genroku period was a lot shorter) in the Edo period.
      There are more famous plays from this period like Kanadehon Chuushingura (which features in the video as a background woodcut) and also later ones like Tokaido Yotsuya Kaidan, but Mike is focused on ~famous playwrights~ so Monzaemon it is.

    • @ayaaralemua7154
      @ayaaralemua7154 6 лет назад +1

      Elfos64 the Takarazuka Revue is an all
      Female theatre troupe. They adapt plays/Japanese folklore and western musicals (sometimes they do anime series too like rose of Versailles) for performance.
      They are located in Takarazuka in the Hyôgo Prefecture have been around since the early 20th century. The revue itself is separated in 5 troupes based on style of performance and material that they perform.

  • @ms.rstake_1211
    @ms.rstake_1211 6 лет назад

    YASss!!! ...but when do they use Kabuki brushes?
    😂😅

  • @AyubuKK
    @AyubuKK 6 лет назад

    Pretty cool!

  • @PennyDreadful1
    @PennyDreadful1 5 лет назад +1

    9:45 why is a soy sauce salesman allowed a sword? The Japanese were quite strict about weapon control.

  • @esta1ful
    @esta1ful 4 года назад

    Thanks for the explanation. I understand it all now 😢🥶🤖NOT

  • @chrisforsyth8323
    @chrisforsyth8323 6 лет назад +4

    Okay, Japanese pronunciation critics. We all suffered through the French terms, you can just deal with it.

  • @tomoxt
    @tomoxt 6 лет назад +15

    見得(mi-e)をmiiって発音するのはなぁ

    • @Daviysoh
      @Daviysoh 6 лет назад +3

      立役(Tachiyaku)のTa"kii"yaku発音も気になった

    • @atsukorichards1675
      @atsukorichards1675 5 лет назад +1

      Syouyu merchant's apprentice could carry a katana around??

  • @cramerfloro5936
    @cramerfloro5936 6 лет назад +2

    Oh hey! It's lewd mime! :-)

  • @htx-brad
    @htx-brad 5 лет назад +1

    Who else had to watch this for there theatre class?

  • @Clayton0301
    @Clayton0301 6 лет назад +27

    Mike you’re looking extra delicious in this vid

  • @maverickrobinson5521
    @maverickrobinson5521 5 лет назад +2

    4:03 So JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, is more or less
    anime at its Kabukiest...

  • @dragonhunter6900
    @dragonhunter6900 6 лет назад +4

    Kathakali is not south east asian. It’s south indian, native to the indian state of kerala.

    • @12mjk21
      @12mjk21 6 лет назад +1

      which is south of Asia, somewhat to the east more to the middle

  • @funstuff81girl
    @funstuff81girl 6 лет назад

    this explains so much about Japanese culture

  • @lacybookworm5039
    @lacybookworm5039 6 лет назад +15

    Why has PBS History of Theater been so eurocentric? I enjoyed those episodes and would like to see the same thing with other regions of the world.

    • @Udontkno7
      @Udontkno7 6 лет назад +5

      Skylar LacyBookworm !! I'll love to see African/Middle Eastern theatre.

    • @kennethconnally4356
      @kennethconnally4356 6 лет назад +7

      It's going in chronological order. Are there any major dramatic traditions from before the 18th century that you think they've skipped?

    • @htoodoh5770
      @htoodoh5770 6 лет назад

      Kenneth Connally Who?

  • @PirateLuffyDKing
    @PirateLuffyDKing 6 лет назад +1

    Just in time for Wano

  • @conorsmith9424
    @conorsmith9424 6 лет назад

    Could you update the playlist for this series please?

  • @TheDumdei
    @TheDumdei 6 лет назад

    So, what I'm getting from this is that Kabuki was basically an early version of the Lifetime movie of the week.

    • @SiKedek
      @SiKedek 6 лет назад

      Yep, especially with the sewamono plays - often with much more tragic conclusions! You can also think of the graver jidaimono (historical plays) as a combination of Masterpiece Theater and your primetime drama of choice (GoT or Breaking Bad, y'know - and some dark stories are reminiscent of The Walking Dead!).

  • @simsrock9982
    @simsrock9982 4 года назад

    So were Kabuki used to depict any current real life events or where they based in fiction or history?

  • @michelleyoung4973
    @michelleyoung4973 6 лет назад +1

    What is he saying? Corazon?? Korason??

  • @hiteshgupta8474
    @hiteshgupta8474 6 лет назад +1

    Btw,I live in India and it's not "kata-kali" but "kathak-kali".

  • @Kikuye
    @Kikuye 6 лет назад +1

    What the heck did he say Kabuki means? Tilt?
    Kabuki : 歌舞伎 song/dance/skill

    • @irrelevantFJS
      @irrelevantFJS 6 лет назад

      KrayolaBlue91 Yeah that really confused me too.

    • @SiKedek
      @SiKedek 6 лет назад +6

      That's actually an ateji ('folk-etymology' character combinations), so Mike is right with this fact. It's actually from the verb kabuku [傾く], which means 'to be eccentric; to lean; to dress oddly'.

  • @lukechadwick2882
    @lukechadwick2882 6 лет назад

    I’m doing a report on British theatre and all things Britain be great if you do a video on them and btw I love your channel I’m passing a lot of reports And modules because of your videos

  • @PunkoRegarto
    @PunkoRegarto 6 лет назад

    Does anybody know the name of the play used in the Thought Bubble section?

  • @kieranduffy6760
    @kieranduffy6760 5 лет назад +1

    "The audience was full of soy guys." Ok, chill out Paul Jospeh Watson.

  • @GallantGriffinGaming
    @GallantGriffinGaming 5 лет назад +1

    "young boys who also prostitute themselves"
    kirby's calling the police

  • @sandradermark8463
    @sandradermark8463 6 лет назад +2

    I got to know Okuni of Izumo through the anime Samurai Deeper Kyo... 😘 Subversive indeed. A precursor of Takarazuka, may we say?

  • @miekefabel7596
    @miekefabel7596 4 года назад

    could you post your written dialogue for this video? Thanks

  • @JohnBrockman
    @JohnBrockman 6 лет назад

    Obviously Izumo no Okumi is the preincarnation of Contrapoints.

  • @ZealClarke
    @ZealClarke Год назад

    EE-doh????

  • @aravind.r9621
    @aravind.r9621 6 лет назад +1

    Its "Kha-tha-kali"

  • @WeiYinChan
    @WeiYinChan 6 лет назад +1

    Funny how most shoguns are gay or at least bisexual (there was only one who was exclusively straight, and he was considered a weirdo because of that),
    Also, now women are still banned from kabuki, even though a woman invented it. But now because there are no woman actors, female roles are cross-dressing dudes, and if you look up a dancing performance... it’s like really gay.

    • @irrelevantFJS
      @irrelevantFJS 6 лет назад +1

      WeiYinChan where in the heck do you get this really crazy information? 😂

    • @WeiYinChan
      @WeiYinChan 6 лет назад +1

      Ara Mahar It’s pretty well known that in feudal Japanese it’s common for samurais and monks (who thought doing it with men doesn’t break the celibacy rule) to have male lovers. Similar things were happening in China among nobles and royal officials. Like you would be considered weird if you don’t have one. I can’t remember who the weird straight guy was tho...
      I learnt of al these from my Japanese class 😂

  • @ixis
    @ixis 6 лет назад

    Kah-buhki, Boon-rah-koo, No

  • @ductuslupus87
    @ductuslupus87 6 лет назад

    If it take two decades for someone to be "Qualified" to operate a puppets head, that is nothing but messing around.

  • @1980rlquinn
    @1980rlquinn 6 лет назад +70

    Please make the minimal effort to pronounce words correctly. Of course, you are not obliged to lose your American accent for your audience here, but 1) if you could not do the minimal work to know the words themselves (some are already established in English), how do we trust any other research and 2) many of these words are new to the audience and here is where we learn them. Deliberately or accidentally teaching them incorrectly pointlessly frustrates further research and communication.

    • @cwam1979
      @cwam1979 6 лет назад +7

      1980rlquinn Couldn't agree more, but at least they are bringing attention to different forms of theater in "the West".

    • @bassdylan7048
      @bassdylan7048 6 лет назад +14

      Christopher Miller agreed and agreed. Japanese phonology (pronunciation) isn’t too difficult anyway.
      There’re only five vowel sounds.
      あ (a/ah)
      い (i/ee)
      う (u/oo)
      え (e/eh)
      お (o/oh)

    • @MariankGonzalez
      @MariankGonzalez 6 лет назад

      1980rlquinn Yesssss!

    • @rdreher7380
      @rdreher7380 6 лет назад +7

      I completely agree. What really gets me especially is when people mispronounce ROMANIZED words. It's one thing when someone butchers a word because the don't understand how letters are used differently in languages like French or German or Italian, but when it comes to languages like Russian or Japanese, which are not written in Latin script, we've already TRANLITERATED them in the most easily understandable way. And yet still people say "ee-do" instead of "eh-do" or "Ah-na" instead of "onna," or "takiyaku" instead of "tachiyaku!" wtf! (He probably just read the script wrong with that one). "Bun raku" (with bun like "hot dog bun") sounds particularly bad though. "U" means "oo!" (though even that is an approximation to the actual Japanese sound; it's still better than a schwa sound).
      At least Mike Rugnetta didn't do some of the most egregious mispronunciations, such as "key-YO-toe" instead of "kyoh-toh," or even more common than that: "TOE-key-yo" instead of "Toh-kyoh." We've translitereated it as clear as possible: KYO not KI-YO!!!
      Another common problem, which Mike does a little bit too, is adding stress in weird places. This is somewhat unavoidable, as English is a stress-accent language and Japanese is a pitch-accent language, so unless you have practiced a lot you're going to change the pronunciation at least a bit, and if we're talking in English we need stress patterns to let our speech flow correctly. However, stressing some syllables is much better than others.
      For example. I live near Sapporo. In Japanese, this is pronounced sap-po-ro, with the sap being a little lower in pitch, and the po and ro a little higher. However, the sap is a closed syllable (ends in a consonant) and is thus "heavier" (longer), so the best way to approximate this in English is the put the stress on the first syllable: SAP-po-ro. However, since at least the time the Winter Olympics were here, it has become very common for English speakers to pronounce the city as "suh-POOR-roe." This sounds AWFUL! It completely ignores the double consonant, and reduces the heavy syllable into an unstressed schwa, instead emphasizing what should be a very short "po," it's just... why!?! Ugh.
      At least most of Mike's pronunciations where completely fine. It's not like the time John Green said "A-ki ha-BA-ra" in a Mental Floss video. THAT was bad XD

    • @Geobacter
      @Geobacter 6 лет назад +2

      Yeah... it's very common to come across severe mispronounciations on RUclips. I'm a German native speaker and I watch a lot of history videos on this platform. So I hear seemingly easy words being butchered all the time (along with more challenging ones). It's best to expect those mistakes and then to ignore them. ;)

  • @decipleofchristforallmyday8810
    @decipleofchristforallmyday8810 6 лет назад

    Anyone else here cause futurama episode where they were making fun of Scooby doo?

  • @psyphi1394
    @psyphi1394 6 лет назад +1

    Kathakali should be pronounced as Ka (like 'ca' of 'card')-the (english word, not pronounced as thee)-ka ('ca' of 'card')-li.

    • @AyubuKK
      @AyubuKK 6 лет назад

      PsyPhi Thanks

  • @myusernameis_pasword6860
    @myusernameis_pasword6860 4 года назад +2

    Wait... Buddhas couldn't love like that so how will they reach "buddhahood"?

  • @MrPabs23
    @MrPabs23 6 лет назад

    For a second I misread the title... there I said it

  • @winstonchurchill4389
    @winstonchurchill4389 6 лет назад

    Hey CrashCourse do an episode on the Khazar empire:)

  • @anderson_98
    @anderson_98 6 лет назад

    Subtitles?

  • @LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat
    @LittleJoeTheMoonlightCat 4 года назад

    CATS is done KABUKI STYLE. MIE is Pronounced MAY.

  • @PedanticAntics
    @PedanticAntics 5 лет назад

    The reason we get so bent out of shape about Japanese pronunciation is that it's *SO. DAMN. EASY* to pronounce if you're already a native English speaker. It isn't like you have to learn new sounds like in French or Arabic or Chinese. So to consistently mispronounce Japanese shows a kind of blatant lack of respect. Just spend *five minutes* learning the *5* basic vowels. That's it. It's really that easy. Just 5. Please..
    A (a in wash)
    I (ee in beet)
    U (oo in boot)
    E (e in get)
    O (o in tote)

  • @AshishGupta-ql9lq
    @AshishGupta-ql9lq 6 лет назад

    i like how he pronounce kathakali

  • @somtamtim
    @somtamtim 5 лет назад

    or domestic drama 'sewer mono'. nice.

  • @nakoruruwantspepsi1556
    @nakoruruwantspepsi1556 6 лет назад +1

    I'm only a little disappointed you missed the opportunity to say "soy bois"

  • @Nihadhawan
    @Nihadhawan 6 лет назад +1

    How are u able to say so many japanese words😜

  • @robertpalumbo9089
    @robertpalumbo9089 6 лет назад

    Sgt. Kabuki man NYPD troma studio

  • @madambutterfly1997
    @madambutterfly1997 5 лет назад

    calamites?

  • @emilyrosetucker
    @emilyrosetucker 4 года назад

    Giuguguguv

  • @djkeshacrown5143
    @djkeshacrown5143 4 года назад +1

    think about being the girl whos man literally killed himself because he had to marry her oof

  • @danitiwa
    @danitiwa 5 лет назад

    You missed an A when you pronounced Kathakali dude