They Call Him the Best Japanese Speaker on the Planet

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024

Комментарии • 182

  • @KoreKaraPodcast
    @KoreKaraPodcast  11 месяцев назад

    🗓 Subscribe to the KoreKara Newsletter: korekara.beehiiv.com/subscribe

  • @dillberrystew6205
    @dillberrystew6205 Год назад +196

    This guy is a legend. Not a lot of people know but he’s a very prolific songwriter, particularly with Yellow Magic Orchestra.

    • @schrodingerscat3912
      @schrodingerscat3912 Год назад +5

      he wrote music with them?

    • @dillberrystew6205
      @dillberrystew6205 Год назад +10

      @@schrodingerscat3912 lyrics yes!

    • @samnsamole9448
      @samnsamole9448 Год назад +7

      and he's also a very experienced broadcaster (lol)

    • @lpschaf8943
      @lpschaf8943 Год назад +3

      That's awesome I love YMO

    • @n8nate
      @n8nate 10 месяцев назад

      His brother is a brilliant guitarist that's played with all of the best (Bruce Springsteen, Van Zant, Mick Ronson, Joe Cocker, Johnny Hallyday etc.).

  • @jeanbon6710
    @jeanbon6710 2 года назад +38

    I love Peter Barakan. When I started to study japanese 20 years ago he was my idol

  • @brianmessemer2973
    @brianmessemer2973 Год назад +39

    Peter Barakan is a living treasure, one of the original, most experienced and most influential 外タレ in post-war Japan. Peter is in that rarified air alongside the likes of David Spector as super Gaikokujins who not only speak at a native level but do so in front of millions of people, and are known by just about everyone in Japan. If I had to characterize Peter Barakan, I would include “patient,” “positive,” “calm,” “respectful,” and “teacher.” All of these qualities are on display in this interview with these two young and enthusiastic Americans (I am assuming). One thing that strikes me about Peter is that he is always thinking in Japanese even when he’s speaking in English - meaning that, he is always thinking about and considering the viewpoint of the interlocutor and tailoring his conversation to that person, and he is never in a rush but always happy to linger on each detail in a way that might bore most Western brains. His pace of conversation and demeanor are thoroughly Japanese.

    • @ironhell813
      @ironhell813 Год назад +1

      I have done the same since I was 8. It’s a sad state of affairs that the rest of the world finds consideration boring.

  • @NotSatan
    @NotSatan 2 года назад +130

    Super inspirational! My guy was on that grind for 50 years and he's finally made it on the Korekara podcast!

    • @humanbean3
      @humanbean3 2 года назад +21

      he finally accomplished his goal! inspirational stuff for sure

  • @nashd1821
    @nashd1821 Год назад +24

    I really love his japanology segment in nhk

  • @KoreKaraPodcast
    @KoreKaraPodcast  2 года назад +54

    It was an honor talking to Peter on the podcast this week. Make sure to turn on subs at the end when he speaks in Japanese!
    As always thanks for the continued support, subscribe for more interviews!

  • @TheDavidN
    @TheDavidN 2 года назад +14

    So amazing to see the Barakan speaking naturally to "the kids these days," and turned me on to your channel as a self-learner of Japanese for several decades.

  • @dubio77
    @dubio77 2 года назад +14

    Great interview! My wife is a biracial native speaker of Japanese and still gets nihongo jouzu’ed from time to time. So even a native speaker can get that comment, if they don’t look full Japanese!

    • @Inaka90
      @Inaka90 2 года назад +4

      The same thing happened to my son, who is biracial. A mother of a classmate told me how good his Japanese was, but he was born there, grew up there, and was a native speaker.

  • @yo2trader539
    @yo2trader539 Год назад +103

    When I saw him on Japanese TV as a kid, I thought he was half-Japanese who grew up abroad with a foreign name. His Japanese was so natural, that I didn't even question his Japanese ancestry.

    • @KassraRomeoArturia
      @KassraRomeoArturia Год назад +4

      He's in fact of Burmese/Myanma ancestry on his mother's side.

    • @ShikataGaNai100
      @ShikataGaNai100 Год назад +5

      Actually, Peter's mother was Anglo-Burmese. He is a remarkable human being and a very kind man.

    • @mamaharumi
      @mamaharumi 6 месяцев назад +1

      It's a bit funny since the older he gets, the more Japanese he looks, lol.

    • @thumbwarriordx
      @thumbwarriordx Месяц назад

      Somehow he even looks the part.
      Which can only be his hairstyle and fashion, but in some sense he does look Japanese to me.
      And I'm not quite sure why. I didn't even know there was already a white japanese stereotype in my head.

  • @keurikeuri7851
    @keurikeuri7851 Год назад +10

    I first learned about Peter in Begin Japanology series in NHK. Since I already love watching the less than 5 minutes Japan Video Topics clips on our local channel here in the Philippines since I was a kid in the 90s, I was excited to learn they will have almost 30 min. long episodes just like it. Now I'm still watching Japanology Plus were he is still hosting it which is the updated version of his previous show.

  • @humanbean3
    @humanbean3 2 года назад +8

    I'm shocked. I really like this old dude. He's so cool, self aware and humble, and jouzu. Like button destroyed.

    • @KoreKaraPodcast
      @KoreKaraPodcast  2 года назад +3

      💯

    • @Bristecom
      @Bristecom Год назад +4

      You should watch his Japanology segments from back in the day. They were very interesting and he was very relaxing to listen to. No over the top exaggerations, just professional yet genuine content presentation, which is rare these days.

  • @DozleZabi-kp4mj
    @DozleZabi-kp4mj Год назад +3

    It’s Peter Barakan! Love his Begin Japanology NHK series. What a lad. OG.

    • @sagadabeans
      @sagadabeans Год назад +1

      I love that series! So relaxing!

  • @Cryosxify
    @Cryosxify Год назад +1

    japanology bringing back the memories. love that show

  • @exponentzero
    @exponentzero 2 года назад +13

    Over years and years of RUclips watching I rarely comment and never "like", but I've impulsively done both for this interview with the legendary Peter Barakan. KoreKara enters the ranks of the elite weebs now...おめでとうございます!!

  • @MidosujiSen
    @MidosujiSen Год назад +6

    Wow, how did I not see this. You guys actually managed to get Peter Barakan on here lmao. I recently rewatched an interview he did with Yoko Ono about John Lennon in the 80s. Dude is a real og as far as foreigners in Japan go. Bro has been there so long he could've read Dragon Ball as it was releasing from the start haha.

  • @danilvoronov8417
    @danilvoronov8417 2 года назад +13

    I thought it was a joke like the interview with Katzumoto :) The like button has been obliterated.

  • @timolol6268
    @timolol6268 Год назад +3

    Watching Mr. Barakan talks in English is refreshing.

  • @apt_get
    @apt_get Год назад +3

    This was fascinating but I wish there wasn’t a lofi bgm on the entire time. At the beginning to introduce the podcast totally OK, but playing the whole time feels like a lot. Looking forward to watching more of your stuff

  • @beck7326
    @beck7326 2 года назад +4

    experienced podcaster Peter Barakan

  • @brianmitchell9941
    @brianmitchell9941 2 года назад +1

    What a surprise to see Peter Barakan on the KoreKara Podcast! I shouldn't be so shocked, but you guys really do leave no stone unturned in your search for Japanophiles and Japanese linguists from the enthusiast to the legendary!

  • @say_cicada
    @say_cicada Год назад +5

    I don’t get the video thumbnail.
    Peter Barakan is part-Asian though. He’s of Anglo-Burmese descent.

    • @hulamei3117
      @hulamei3117 Год назад

      He does pull some Asian featured.

  • @thumbwarriordx
    @thumbwarriordx Месяц назад

    I mean I think Peter Barakan fits like a glove in Japan.
    First off, he hit the jackpot with a European surname that is entirely compatible with the Japanese syllibary. Mine ain't and most Euro/NA surnames have an issue somewhere.
    The sheer lucky privilege of having a name nobody mispronounces. Boom. That's power.

  • @ashitanojoe69
    @ashitanojoe69 Год назад +1

    He is also one of the most known person among japanese music band "Yellos Magic Orchestra" fans. I knew him since late 70s.

  • @justalameusername1736
    @justalameusername1736 2 года назад +4

    Amazing interview

  • @user-nd7rg5er5g
    @user-nd7rg5er5g Год назад

    I learned about him first from the TV show Japanology, and then my jaw dropped when I noticed his name as a lyricist for some excellent songs I found on RUclips. What a cool guy! He even scanned a picture of the booklet from one of his CDs when I emailed him for the lyrics of one of the songs he worked on. :D

  • @attention8312
    @attention8312 2 года назад +5

    4:10 'impetus' not 'input'

  • @kona_moon6055
    @kona_moon6055 Год назад

    Living in the US now, I am familiar with Peter B only through watching the English version of NHK World. This is the first time I heard him speak Japanese.

  • @jfatsnorlax
    @jfatsnorlax Год назад +1

    Oh yeah I've seen him on NHK!

  • @BoyAditya
    @BoyAditya 10 месяцев назад

    Legend! How I adore japanology show!

  • @KyleCzHall
    @KyleCzHall Год назад

    Experienced broadcaster peter barakan is my favorite youtube channel

  • @schrodingerscat3912
    @schrodingerscat3912 Год назад +2

    I've gotten "nihongo jouzu" too but they seem sincere and sweet. So I like don't really see it as a problem at all

  • @authormichellefranklin
    @authormichellefranklin Год назад

    The OG. Amazing score! Love Peter

  • @_chary990
    @_chary990 Год назад +1

    he truly is an *experienced broadcaster !

  • @Jollighe
    @Jollighe Год назад +2

    I love watching japanology

  • @Gustavo-ff1zl
    @Gustavo-ff1zl 2 года назад +2

    You guys need to Interview gengotaku,
    He is from Brasil lives in Japan ,
    And hás the best japonese i ever seen
    He had a Channel on RUclips and the mame is gengotaku..
    He is polyglot , he speak english two!

  • @Alex43198
    @Alex43198 10 месяцев назад

    @4:11 he said impetus rather than input..who would have thought his english was so good as well

  • @beastbum
    @beastbum Год назад +2

    4:08 impetus, not input. Why add subtitles to the words you can't understand?

  • @gaburierupeppas5628
    @gaburierupeppas5628 2 года назад +1

    very cool guest all jokes aside. very cool. stellar, even.

  • @carycoombe3380
    @carycoombe3380 Год назад

    Love the stories.

  • @LordMarlle
    @LordMarlle Год назад +1

    4:10 *impetus, not input
    Thanks for this lovely talk with the legend that is the radiohost, music aficionado, writer of YMO lyrics, and alround nice guy Peter Barakan
    But why didn't you link to Peter's music festival. That seemed a little disrespectful

  • @tidalfriction5301
    @tidalfriction5301 Год назад

    Yes, I was shocked 😳

  • @joshz8140
    @joshz8140 2 года назад +2

    OMFG you guys got Peter Barakan up in here... nice!

  • @wherearetheavocados7012
    @wherearetheavocados7012 Год назад

    omg i know this guy! often saw him on NHK

  • @aspen9102
    @aspen9102 Год назад

    Peter is the GOAT

  • @irinafromrussialove
    @irinafromrussialove 2 года назад

    GREETINGS FROM NOVOSIBIRSK, GOOD LUCK TO EVERYONE❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @aliciaw3289
    @aliciaw3289 Год назад

    I love begin japanology and japanology plus I would love to go to Japan and meet Peter barakan and Matt allt?!

    • @ShikataGaNai100
      @ShikataGaNai100 Год назад

      Sadly, Matt is no longer with NHK.

    • @aliciaw3289
      @aliciaw3289 Год назад

      @@ShikataGaNai100 darn it I would love to get a picture with both of them if I ever go to Japan on a single cruise that would be fun?!

  • @terushinomiya
    @terushinomiya Год назад

    Peter Barakan best TV Host 😎

  • @JLa748
    @JLa748 Год назад

    that man has sushi written all over, hence his that good at that language.

  • @JohnDaubSuperfan369
    @JohnDaubSuperfan369 Год назад

    experienced broadcaster peter barakan. where the fuck is oneplus though, i thought they came as a package deal?

  • @BrandonNozakiMiller
    @BrandonNozakiMiller Год назад +2

    gives you the impetus to up your game, not input to up your game.

  • @DirtyDan666
    @DirtyDan666 2 года назад +6

    this shocked me.

  • @gaburierupeppas5628
    @gaburierupeppas5628 2 года назад +1

    THE BEST pog

  • @NelsonStJames
    @NelsonStJames Год назад

    Target goal, now sighted and locked onto.

  • @GNRGNRGNR100
    @GNRGNRGNR100 2 года назад +5

    Wanting to Shock people in japanese gotta be the single most cringe language habit

    • @KoreKaraPodcast
      @KoreKaraPodcast  2 года назад +1

      idk if its a habit more just like a subgenre on YouTutbe

  • @leonardosciolis9620
    @leonardosciolis9620 Год назад

    subtitle should be "impetus"

  • @MatrixCoder01
    @MatrixCoder01 Год назад +1

    If you think it's this, it's the opposite 😂

  • @Fatihkilic075
    @Fatihkilic075 Год назад

    *impetus, not input - good stuff!

  • @pumpkinhill4570
    @pumpkinhill4570 Год назад

    I thought the best was Robert Campbell.

  • @アレックスの部屋-s9h
    @アレックスの部屋-s9h Год назад

    この顔、日本のテレビで昔どこかの番組で見たことがある気がするけどね

  • @beck7326
    @beck7326 2 года назад +3

    Matt Alt next?

  • @error404m
    @error404m Год назад

    Impetus, not input

  • @StarMercurian
    @StarMercurian Год назад +1

    He doesn't look Japanese he looks white.

  • @thisisallthereis
    @thisisallthereis Год назад

    4:09 He says "impetus" not "input". Fix yo shit

  • @steveburke7675
    @steveburke7675 Год назад

    "...like...like...like.........."

  • @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd
    @TheImmoralNosferatuZodd Год назад

    Damn, the Japanophile guy is getting old... 😢

  • @OmarLivesUnderSpace
    @OmarLivesUnderSpace 2 года назад +4

    Well... Peter's pronunciation is not _that_ good provided he speaks for 50 or whatever years... Still quite decent though... 上手上手 :3

    • @7Nico8
      @7Nico8 Год назад +3

      wow, I am native speaker and his pronounciation is perferct imo.

    • @OmarLivesUnderSpace
      @OmarLivesUnderSpace Год назад +3

      @@7Nico8
      日本語上手ですねええええええ, yea, we all know that stuff

    • @7Nico8
      @7Nico8 Год назад

      @@OmarLivesUnderSpace 彼のラジオ聞いたらいいよ。ネイティブよりも語彙が多いし話し方も熟練のラジオパーソナリティです。あなたも日本語がお上手なようですので日本語の検索エンジンで探してみてはいかがですか?

    • @nigelc.7818
      @nigelc.7818 Месяц назад

      My wife thought he was a native speaker when I played it to her.

    • @OmarLivesUnderSpace
      @OmarLivesUnderSpace Месяц назад

      @@nigelc.7818
      You should play her a Dogen's vid for a change then, she must think he's an alien

  • @vampyrelycan99
    @vampyrelycan99 Год назад +1

    This is Barakan at present?
    So sad to see him turn old.
    And with more and more of his work associates (esp. Sakamoto) biting the dust, God knows how much longer he'll survive. So sad... But nevertheless, wish him good health and hope he'll survive longer......

    • @Val-gv3vu
      @Val-gv3vu Год назад

      つづく下さい、バラカン先生!

  • @shanghaislim1467
    @shanghaislim1467 Год назад +9

    He is wrong about the economy. Economies do not need to be maintained, they can shrink back while the populace shrinks back. Japan SHOULD NOT import loads of foreigners to work there, it will not stay Japan if this is done.

    • @ShikataGaNai100
      @ShikataGaNai100 Год назад +1

      Thank you for your inane and insular input. You have not a single clue.

  • @gonzaimondono
    @gonzaimondono 2 года назад +60

    What a score! Peter Barakan is a legend, and super knowledgable about a lot of things, particularly music. My Japanese wife grew up listening to his music radio show. It exposed her to some great western music that she would otherwise never have known about. His show was a bright spot in her sometimes difficult childhood, opened up horizons her, and brought her a lot joy. We enjoy listening to his weekly podcast, The Lifestyle Museum, which I highly recommend. Thank you for having him on your show!

  • @slycordinator
    @slycordinator Год назад +19

    This doesn't really matter, but at 4:10 where the on-screen text says "gives you the input", he actually says "impetus" (as in a force/stimulus).
    edit:
    Also, what he said about his English/Japanese seeming archaic to younger natives, that also wouldn't entirely be due to age either. There's a phenomenon that when a language gets exported to a region alway from where it's native, it generally changes slower. So, a person learning Japanese in the west likely would learn a style that seems older to natives, because the people who taught the language there generally either are from that older generation or are descendants of people from it.
    Similarly, I've had Korean-American acquaintances who said that living here in Korea their friends thought that some of the ways they spoke or things they did were much more traditional than what they say/do as people who've grown up here.

  • @choukichigaijin
    @choukichigaijin 2 года назад +33

    Some notes:
    - Awesome you got Peter Barakan! You guys are big time! Have watched him on NHK a lot over the years
    - Language labs were common in late 90s US universities as well still, but I think since the wide adoption of Genki they've disappeared
    - I remember Crayon Shinchan saying "ねね彼女、ピーマン食べれる?" but getting corrected any time I used ~れる vs ~られる
    - I wanted to hear how he would translate "smash that like button" (super sad)

  • @AlexanderHL1919
    @AlexanderHL1919 Год назад +6

    4:08 Peter said "impetus" (motivation) and not "input". The subtitles are a bit spotty here and there I must say.

  • @clarencejohnson8964
    @clarencejohnson8964 Год назад +10

    At 4:10 i believe he said Impetus and not input. But man that aside, what a legend

  • @HitByRainbows
    @HitByRainbows 2 года назад +21

    As a fellow Brit living in Japan this is by far my favorite video that you’ve done🇬🇧 I’ve been here for 14 years now..so I guess another 36 to go🙃

    • @jonroberts1890
      @jonroberts1890 Год назад +4

      You are living my dream, Japan for me would be hard to beat traveling wise. Did you learn the language before you decided to move? And do you miss England 🇬🇧

    • @HitByRainbows
      @HitByRainbows Год назад +3

      @@jonroberts1890 Hey Jon! Thanks for your comment! I studied by myself watching old Japanese dramas before I came here, but it was only after I started living here that things started to improve! I do miss England sometimes..family mostly of course but the banter, pubs, and the food would you believe lol..

  • @jearsh
    @jearsh 2 года назад +13

    impetus is the word, not input

    • @Rod-bp8ow
      @Rod-bp8ow Год назад

      The dictionary also spells it as impetuous.

    • @whitehare
      @whitehare Год назад +1

      impetuous and impetus are different words with completely different meanings. omg 😂😂😂

  • @txemanovelo
    @txemanovelo Год назад +8

    Peter Barakan is one of the nicest person on earth! I am a huge fan of begin Japanology of NHK and I am also a huge fan of YMO, when I discovered the connection between this two amazing forces for a film project, Peter grant me a interview with some amazing and unique stories from his HUGE contribution to some of Japan coolest music. Very grateful to his insight, kindness and generosity.

  • @lukidjano
    @lukidjano 2 года назад +17

    If this guy had started uploading videos of him shocking natives 50 years ago he would be the number 1 youtuber by now

  • @Zaph_Kiel
    @Zaph_Kiel Год назад +5

    jozu is like an old southern lady saying "bless your heart"

  • @yukikoma2806
    @yukikoma2806 2 года назад +8

    When I heard Peter speaking Japanese for the first time on the radio , which was almost three decades ago, I thought he was a native speaker of Japanese🤗

  • @ruyal
    @ruyal 2 года назад +6

    I had no idea Mudan was ur editor, im ... shocked. Oh, and great video as always

  • @crt_rex
    @crt_rex Год назад +2

    The only guy I know that has a better grasp on fluent Japanese is the Samurai Cop, of course, but this guy is definitely a close second. Well done.

  • @seth8510
    @seth8510 Год назад +8

    This guy is awesome, I’d like to reach a Japanese level like him one day

  • @Crimsontears83
    @Crimsontears83 Год назад +1

    I don't mind the nihongo jozu. I recognize it comes from a want for me to keep going and a love of sharing their culture with others. And while there are a lot of people who can speak it I think most only really count people in major cities like Tokyo . If you go around military bases, which there are a lot, then the number of Foreigners goes up but the Japanese level goes way down. So many of them live here and have little interest in learning the language

  • @mindfu11dr0n3
    @mindfu11dr0n3 2 года назад +2

    Never heard of this podcast before, but I will listen to Peter Barakan read a phonebook. He is the King of Ryuugakusei! I will be listening to more of these. And yes we did Language lab type of thing in language school, shadowing. I think that is kind of what he is talking about.

  • @svisvisvisvisvi
    @svisvisvisvisvi 10 месяцев назад

    Good point about English speakers taking it for granted that people will speak English.
    I’d like to know a bit more about what he meant about Japanese people “mispronouncing” or “getting it wrong” with katakana English. It felt like he was making a false equivalence between the original English words and their Japanese/katakana versions. “Correct” is a tricky term - it seems to me (with my limited Japanese) that there *is* a correct or standard way to katakanise words in Japanese. In fact, if you don’t say them that way you likely won’t be understood.
    I do recognise that there is a widespread phenomenon of Japanese speakers speaking *English* “in katakana”, or in a way that’s very influenced by it. It can get in the way of communication at times. But when they’re speaking their own language, we have to accept to a degree that imported words are going to be adapted to that language’s pronunciation and may even take on new meanings. That’s how language works - just look at English. I don’t know if that’s exactly what he meant though, so I guess I’ll have to read the book!
    Nice interview.

  • @thezeroconditional2287
    @thezeroconditional2287 Год назад +1

    It sounds like the 60 minutes experience not only vastly expanded his vocabulary, but also really nailed down his accuracy.

  • @tanpotgs5313
    @tanpotgs5313 2 месяца назад

    Absolutely love Peter. The interviewers could stand to be a bit less goofy and more professional.

  • @wheresmyeyebrow1608
    @wheresmyeyebrow1608 Год назад +1

    YOOOOO THIS IS THE JAPANOLOGY GUY!!!

  • @scottpilgram696
    @scottpilgram696 Год назад +1

    I dont think ill get tired of people being shocked at my japanese, its great! Instant smikes and topic of convo. Whats to hate? I have no ego

  • @endoflevelboss
    @endoflevelboss Год назад

    watched this up until the idiot TikTok zoomer captions popped up over Peter. Had to quit at that point 🥳🎉

  • @kierano5496
    @kierano5496 2 года назад +1

    As an Australian, his English to me just sounds like a completely normal British English.

  • @jasoncary7957
    @jasoncary7957 Год назад

    mooshi mooshi shi shi

  • @trueseeker262
    @trueseeker262 Год назад +1

    Peter we love you, thank you for NHK Japanology.

  • @nr655321
    @nr655321 Год назад +3

    Guy rightfully brushes off pitch accent because, well, it's pure bs.

  • @TalynStormcrow
    @TalynStormcrow Год назад

    Impetus not input.

  • @yishihara55527
    @yishihara55527 2 года назад +2

    He's been on TV for years.

  • @gaburierupeppas5628
    @gaburierupeppas5628 2 года назад +1

    that's pretty pog about the software that you guys used

  • @barebones9
    @barebones9 Год назад +2

    Here in US Japanese words spoken by Americans are atrocious, laughable and comical. But, you have to appreciate the effort. LOL

  • @Brocollipy
    @Brocollipy 2 года назад +1

    Sweeeeeet!! Just found you guys. Great stuff 👍👍