12 Things I HATE about Living in Japan

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • 10 years living in Japan; I can't love everything right?
    Food, transport, architecture and culture here's the 12 things that drive me craziest in Japan.
    🍿 BEHIND the scenes Patreon: goo.gl/NWEoQm
    ⛩️ Why I Hate Japanese TV: • Why I HATE Japanese TV
    ► WEEKLY Podcast: hyperurl.co/nhgr30
    Edited by David Parish
    00:00 What I Hate about Japan
    01:02 Japan’s Hostess Clubs
    03:35 Singing Karaoke
    04:36 Toilet Bidets
    05:58 Mos Burger
    08:07 Pachinko
    11:02 Tokyo Go Karts
    13:32 Purikura Photo Booths
    14:52 Microagressions
    17:50 Modern Japanese Architecture
    20:39 Ekiben (Train Station Bento)
    22:30 Fruit Sandwiches
    24:08 Japanese TV
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Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @AbroadinJapan
    @AbroadinJapan  Год назад +3644

    TOUGHER than diamonds and STRONGER than steel - Abroad in Japan is back!
    But what do you hate the most in Japan and what did I miss guys?
    Sorry for the long absence - I've been trying to get fit. Also been filming a ton of videos that'll be out over the Christmas season. Should be a fun month!

  • @arianeh-m2847
    @arianeh-m2847 Год назад +3565

    We walked, attracted by the crazy noise, into a Pachinko parlour in Kyoto and the security guy at the door told us emphatically that this is not for tourists and literally kicked us out. My hero.

    • @notthegoatseguy
      @notthegoatseguy Год назад +428

      Not all heroes wear capes.

    • @countzero2405
      @countzero2405 Год назад +262

      I wonder why he didn't mention the noise in the video. A big, two story pachinko parlour in Tokyio was probably the loudest place I have ever been in.

    • @justaaccount8083
      @justaaccount8083 Год назад +229

      Man had to pretend to kick you out just to save your wallet from the pachinko overlords

    • @SkiBumMSP
      @SkiBumMSP Год назад +31

      While I was in Tokyo, I also wondered into a Pachinko parlour as I was actually tempted to play. Was loud and I could not stand the cigarette smoke (I am a non-smoker), so I quickly left. When I was a kid, we used to have a Pachinko machine down in the basement game room so I at least was familiar with it. Now that I think about it, I don't recall seeing any pinball machines as we know them here in the west while I was in Japan (was there for a month at the beginning of 2020, right before all the COVID shit).

    • @HelloMalaka
      @HelloMalaka Год назад +32

      I was threatened to get arrested for taking a picture of the machines as I tried to avoid the security guard and wander about. He followed me through every corner until I left as he kept saying police… 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @scalien225
    @scalien225 Год назад +6406

    The number of times Chris complains about Connor makes it clear this can only be love.

    • @MarsLonsen
      @MarsLonsen Год назад +132

      Better love story than twilight!
      And twilight was really good!

    • @frecuenciasoniricas2867
      @frecuenciasoniricas2867 Год назад +38

      It's oficial, isn't it?

    • @paultaverne2788
      @paultaverne2788 Год назад +111

      @@frecuenciasoniricas2867 yeah, Chris called Connor his boyfriend once

    • @Ronsparks1006
      @Ronsparks1006 Год назад +46

      Still daydreaming about Chris being gay? Talk about sexual harassment.... Calm down Francis!

    • @Sunprince7
      @Sunprince7 Год назад +46

      Chris himself said that Mouse is Connor's wife, which basically mean....

  • @frostneedle
    @frostneedle 5 месяцев назад +102

    So many people do not understand that you can love something but still hate little parts of it too.

  • @user3040lili
    @user3040lili Год назад +398

    There are many Japanese people who don't like hostess clubs, and only a few people go there. Pachinko is also hated by many people. Some people don't go there for the rest of their lives, and losing money at pachinko is one of the most ridiculous things.

    • @Jackassik
      @Jackassik Год назад +25

      In UK and Poland there's a lot of betting shops as well. They don't do Pachinko, they bet on everything. Starting from football, to things like who is going to win the Eurovision song contest... And slots, I know some people who blow their weekly salary on slots, then to do it again next week. Lottery tickets, Lotto, Euro Jackpot, scratchcards... All of it is gambling and a lot of people lose a lot of money on them. It's just the form of gambling is different.

    • @Uncensored-ep8sf
      @Uncensored-ep8sf Год назад +21

      Strictly speaking, pachinko in Japan is not gambling. Pachinko is a gentleman's game where money is wasted and exchanged for trivial prizes such as candy and cigarettes. However, there happens to be a facility at the back of a pachinko parlor parking lot where you can exchange your points for money, and many users go home after redeeming their points there. It is all coincidental. It is not inevitabre.

    • @Jackassik
      @Jackassik Год назад +36

      @@Uncensored-ep8sf Yep, that's gambling with loopholes 😐😐

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@JackassikYep, Germans also have a problem with betting on sport (especially people from the Middle East)

    • @beepbeeplettuce5890
      @beepbeeplettuce5890 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Jackassikyes that's the joke genius

  • @lukadaris9567
    @lukadaris9567 Год назад +655

    I was interviewed on Japanese TV a few weeks ago. They asked me a lot about covid and what measures are up in my country compared to Japan. When the interview was on TV, they just cut out everything about covid and the only thing they left on was me saying that I like dango...

    • @kayannhorn233
      @kayannhorn233 Год назад +40

      🤣

    • @Mason_van_Bike
      @Mason_van_Bike Год назад +123

      Can’t have the Japanese knowing that they’re the only ones in the world still forever masking.

    • @Chillyz
      @Chillyz Год назад +15

      Who doesn't like dango?

    • @MrXMysteriousX
      @MrXMysteriousX Год назад +2

      It's pretty common with all TV networks to do that, though they likely cut out your Covid comments for ulterior motives.

    • @fnvfanMSPR
      @fnvfanMSPR Год назад +2

      lmao

  • @MrPraveen7796
    @MrPraveen7796 Год назад +5075

    "Britain invented it, America ate it, and Japan completely fucked it" love this line, made me laugh my head off!

    • @TheCoolDave
      @TheCoolDave Год назад +7

      Same here LOL

    • @alexanderg1935
      @alexanderg1935 Год назад +25

      @@Njsjdjdjdj Stop chatting BS.

    • @ltsiver
      @ltsiver Год назад +127

      The best part is he eats that dessert sandwich right after and actually praises it.

    • @RNGeeGee
      @RNGeeGee Год назад +67

      "Sandwiches should be savory"
      US and their overly sweet sliced bread: Uh....

    • @Jasonoz007
      @Jasonoz007 Год назад +33

      I have lived in the US for years and have yet to find a half decent sandwich. Soggy sweet 'bread', no butter, with a fistful of tasteless pulverised ham rammed in the middle. I dream of those delicate Japanese egg sarnies you can get at every conbini.

  • @nini52tvxq
    @nini52tvxq 8 месяцев назад +97

    There are a lot of foreigners in Taiwan as well. I'd never tell them "oh your Mandarin is so good." when they try to speak Mandarin to me. Your understanding to what they're saying is already a validation to their speaking skill.

    • @hoboeyjobi7020
      @hoboeyjobi7020 7 месяцев назад +2

      what if their mandarin was surprisingly good ?

    • @Road_Rash
      @Road_Rash 6 месяцев назад +5

      People do like to hear that they're doing something well... I only speak English, & don't even do that very well, Lol! But if I did speak another language, I'd appreciate native speakers telling me I did it correctly & my pronunciation & grammar was good... that would be pretty cool...

    • @sew_gal7340
      @sew_gal7340 5 месяцев назад +5

      I think it's a compliment, everyone is different, we shouldnt assume everything to be offensive...that is a very american thing.

    • @bradthunderpants3283
      @bradthunderpants3283 3 месяца назад +2

      @hoboeyjobi7020
      Then you would assume they aren't actually a foreigner and just someone who lives there who's a different race?

    • @ShiekahTribe
      @ShiekahTribe Месяц назад

      ​@@Road_Rash The difference is that you get complimented after saying two Japanese words, so even an absolute beginner would get that comment (because it feels insincere). And it does feel patronising when your Japanese is advanced and you still get that comment.

  • @Redshirt214
    @Redshirt214 11 месяцев назад +99

    Man they really, really should have left Harujuku station alone. It was one of the last Meji era buildings in Tokyo, a beautiful part of the neighborhood that, with its more subtle and cottage like architecture really was a good balance to the *other* Harujuku. As someone who is in historical preservation it just kills me to see that they demolished an architectural gem and replaced it with a crappy glass box!

    • @Vault-Tec_Ooyodo
      @Vault-Tec_Ooyodo 5 месяцев назад +8

      Yes, to me this frustrated me the most of all points Chris made in the video. It was such a beautiful building with historical value, just destroyed for an utterly generic station. It annoys me even more because here in the Netherlands they do it too.

    • @thomaskurtz9592
      @thomaskurtz9592 4 месяца назад +2

      Very sad to see timeless architecture replaced by functional crap ( sorry about my language).

    • @4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz
      @4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz 11 дней назад

      That happens a lot in Japan. There does seem to be more of an appreciation for retro architecture, fashion, and cars lately, though.

  • @simontanguay3619
    @simontanguay3619 Год назад +535

    Genuinely felt it had been ages since Chris' last "classic" abroad in japan video. Really shows how much the content quality has improved compared to earlier works in the same format.

    • @xiwhiplash2523
      @xiwhiplash2523 Год назад +26

      This is a very classic chris video you can tell that he is enjoying youtube more than ever

    • @NationX
      @NationX Год назад +10

      When I saw this pop up in my feed I was almost shocked to see it was a new video and not something from 2 years ago or so. Instant click

    • @zulawoo
      @zulawoo Год назад +5

      No bike or complaining about being and/or getting fat?! What is this tomfoolery??

    • @siliconhawk9293
      @siliconhawk9293 Год назад

      @@NationX exactly. i was like is this a reupload, but then i was like it has too many views for a reupload.

    • @weirdstonk729
      @weirdstonk729 Год назад

      @@NationX Same haha

  • @andrewcgs
    @andrewcgs Год назад +2659

    I'd love to see you making a "12 things I hate about the UK" some day, that'd be hilarious

    • @salientsolution5436
      @salientsolution5436 Год назад +374

      Gonna need a bigger list

    • @persnikitty3570
      @persnikitty3570 Год назад +116

      That'd be at a minimum a 3 hour opus, the Dr Zhivago of crankiness and bitter sarcasm.

    • @Cotfi2
      @Cotfi2 Год назад +105

      The "Things I hate about the US" list is an open-ended project due for a spin-off channel...

    • @persnikitty3570
      @persnikitty3570 Год назад +14

      @@Cotfi2 I think my toppers would be drivers who come to a complete stop at a green light, and those who insist on driving 5-10 miles under the posted speed limit. Granted, the green light issue might be from color-blindness, but they are always oriented in the same way to mitigate that issue.

    • @Artista_Frustrado
      @Artista_Frustrado Год назад +2

      so a Top 12 CDawg list then LMAO

  • @yuletak
    @yuletak Год назад +430

    I lived in Japan for about 7 months in '99, and I also got the nihongo jouzu, which was fine. It's the chopsticks that got me, cuz I'm ethnic Chinese 🤨. When I told people that I'm American, I could see their brains trying to reconcile the fact that I'm not blond haired and blue eyed, yet I still called myself American.

    • @octogonSmuggler
      @octogonSmuggler 10 месяцев назад +24

      I went out to eat in the US with a friend of mine from Japan. When I asked for chopsticks, the lady brought them to him. I asked for another set and started using them in front of her. Blew her mind that this american girl was using chopsticks in america.

    • @yuletak
      @yuletak 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@octogonSmuggler lol, that probably shouldn't be too surprising. I personally would be a little surprised but not too much. Did you hold them correctly tho?? 😬😛

    • @octogonSmuggler
      @octogonSmuggler 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@yuletak Yes! Yes I did. I think that's the part that supprised the waitress so much.

    • @Swakkzmc94
      @Swakkzmc94 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@octogonSmuggler This is such a great example of why professional discretion is so valuable. We often make slightly embarassing mistakes like that when we rely on intuition, but if the server instead brings chopsticks for both guests they got all bases covered.

    • @rachelar
      @rachelar 8 месяцев назад +1

      99, yeah still cherishing their beloved old racial stereotypes about who looks "American" (Schwartznegger versus Wesley Snipes etc)

  • @wombatpandaa9774
    @wombatpandaa9774 8 месяцев назад +56

    The four season thing confused me when I lived in Korea too, especially because...most places do have four seasons. Like, they might not be the same four seasons you're used to, but the planet we all live on turns the same everywhere in the world.

    • @devanman7920
      @devanman7920 7 месяцев назад +4

      Ya I don't understand how they go from you're Japanese is good and can you use chopsticks to we have four seasons yano? 😅

    • @DsiakMondala
      @DsiakMondala 6 месяцев назад +6

      Some places only have 9 months summer , 1.5 spring and autumnn
      Some places high up north have 10 months of winter and 2 months of mercy

    • @NunontheRun
      @NunontheRun 5 месяцев назад

      @@DsiakMondala lol - yeah.. I live in the UK.. here we have damp and warm, and damp and cold - and there's a few weeks in-between those two seasons where all the leaves fall - that's called "leaves on the track" season, I'm from Canada though, so winter is -40, summer is +35 (and lately smoky) - spring and autumn are the mercy seasons.. one of them has leaves.

    • @Trackers89
      @Trackers89 5 месяцев назад

      To be fair near the equator you often have a dry season and wet season, or four seasons but less distinct with temperature differences and not much else.
      But yeah anywhere with a similar temperate climate (ie much of Europe and the northern US) also has similar seasons.

    • @larsinthewoods
      @larsinthewoods 5 месяцев назад

      Seasons come from the Earth's tilt. There are no seasons at the Equator.

  • @HydrangeaFLWRS
    @HydrangeaFLWRS Год назад +669

    You look great Chris. So proud of you for taking the initiative to improve your overall health

    • @AbroadinJapan
      @AbroadinJapan  Год назад +248

      Many thanks! It’s been a long journey these last few months and it’s awesome to finally be slimmed down and able to work out properly! 🎉

    • @PaNDaSNiP3R
      @PaNDaSNiP3R Год назад +16

      @@AbroadinJapan KFC Christmas Chris !! 😂

    • @s-o-u-p6095
      @s-o-u-p6095 Год назад +8

      @@AbroadinJapan What are the gyms in Japan like? same as any other, or is there more of a "keep slim" mantra behind fitness over there?

    • @McChopper2000
      @McChopper2000 Год назад +2

      Its all the camera angle like in the hobbit

    • @zZiL341yRj736
      @zZiL341yRj736 Год назад

      Looks the the same.

  • @dudewuttheheck
    @dudewuttheheck Год назад +279

    Wow... the fact that Chris has turned even a simple list video into a full on, brilliant production is incredible. It really shows how far the channel has come and how much he has refined his craft.

  • @Figgy5119
    @Figgy5119 Год назад +140

    I think karaoke with your friends is loads of fun, especially if you don't worry about doing it Japanese style (ie. Only the person who picked the song may sing) and just all sing your favorite songs together.

    • @otakuhime3119
      @otakuhime3119 Год назад +10

      I think he means drunk karaoke with colleagues or at the hostess clubs

  • @charleyschoolmaster5155
    @charleyschoolmaster5155 Год назад +21

    Been living in Japan for 20 years now, and the only reason I've ever stepped into a Pachinko parlor is to use the toilet. They are usually really nice and decked out with faux luxurious decor !

  • @CryoJnik
    @CryoJnik Год назад +930

    As someone in the US who has lived in cities that can't bother to have a supermarket but will damn sure have a liquor store in close proximity I feel that Pachinko hatred.

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel Год назад +104

      My favorite in the US are liquor stores near homeless shelters and day shelters. Never fails.

    • @phoenix72999
      @phoenix72999 Год назад +51

      Poorer cities and areas in Germany are also usually riddled with places where you can gamble (less fancy than real casinos though), places where you can bet on Sports, pawn shops for jewelry, and small shops for liquor and cigarettes.
      I also hate how these people who don't have a lot anyway are just being exploited for the gains of some greedy assholes. It's really depressing.

    • @Exavil
      @Exavil Год назад +9

      As a Japanese living in the US, I've seen both of these in person and damn is it depressing to watch people (either family or friends) lose their money and time to gambling and vices. I get gambling to a degree (I go to Vegas from time to time, but i don't lose myself at the tables), but don't make these places ubiquitous as actual important places like clinics or grocery stores.

    • @pauljs75
      @pauljs75 Год назад +8

      The better analogy in the U.S. is going by some reservation where everyone is poorer than dirt, but the casino there is thriving. So much for the "money going to the community" B.S.

    • @lawrenceiverson1924
      @lawrenceiverson1924 Год назад +2

      @@phoenix72999 It may be that people that have a weakness for alcohol, smoke and gambling are generally poorer ,, No ??

  • @SyaoranDC
    @SyaoranDC Год назад +320

    Even after 12 years, my in-laws STILL say "Nihongo Jyozu!" and complement my chopstick usage every single time we visit. TWELVE YEARS. Even when we lived next to them for 3 years they complemented me daily like somehow I forgot when I was asleep.

    • @southcoastinventors6583
      @southcoastinventors6583 Год назад +39

      Just out of curiosity you ever ask them to stop saying it, because it causing EMOTIONAL DAMAGE.

    • @brianh9358
      @brianh9358 Год назад +30

      You should have just started butchering the pronunciation to watch them still attempt to painfully say "Nihongo Jyozu" anyhow.

    • @jensebu78
      @jensebu78 Год назад +2

      Since i am married to a Japanese i don't get complement about eating with chopsticks anymore... It helped 😂

    • @mlem6951
      @mlem6951 Год назад +20

      Did you ever ask why they do this? This really intrest me. Politness is one thing, but this seems more like a passiv aggressive act to torture you xD.

    • @4nja
      @4nja Год назад

      i never got either from my in laws, maybe because they only speak japanese and we couldn't communicate otherwise?

  • @jasonjackson4555
    @jasonjackson4555 Год назад +47

    Holy crap! I didn’t realize they replaced Harajuku station😱 I studied abroad in Tokyo back in college and I remember that station well. Once, during Golden Week, that station was so packed you literally couldn’t get off or on the train. It was perfectly gridlocked and the train doors closed with almost nobody getting on or off.

  • @isaw8195
    @isaw8195 Год назад +23

    I tend to agree on most things you’ve listed here. 😊(I’ve never been to a hostess or host bar though but I can imagine how dreadful they are). I don’t mind karaoke with some good friends here, once or twice a year it’s fun.
    I’ve been here 10 years and I try to ignore the micro aggressions too. My pet hate is when people are actually in front of you and talk about “gaikokujin” as if you were invisible. I used to work in a shop in Ginza and it happened so many times (customers). The worst thing is they don’t even realise how rude they are. And the fact that people assume you speak English because you’re a gaijin (I’m French). I do but the world is a large place …😅
    One thing I disagree on though : the washlets ! I LOVE them ! but I am a woman and I always make sure the water is set on the lowest strength so it just rinses my “lady parts” (lol) softly.
    And just like you, for every little thing that gets on my nerves here I could find a thousand I love.
    Thank you for the fun video.

    • @rachelar
      @rachelar 8 месяцев назад

      "Micro aggressions" has certainly entered the vernacular, especially in relation to Japan!

    • @TechRyze
      @TechRyze 6 месяцев назад +2

      I’m totally unsurprised that women love a toilet that can spray a jet of water at their lady parts 😂

    • @garryferrington811
      @garryferrington811 3 месяца назад

      Very nice for helping to avoid those awful uterine infections. I've known a lot of guys who could have used a cleaner - that is, less smelly - butt.

  • @thequietplayer3691
    @thequietplayer3691 Год назад +1144

    Going to Japan as an outsider, eating an ekiben and a fruit sandwich on a train, having fun driving a go-kart around, taking pictures with your friends in a purikura, losing money on a pachinko, having karaoke in a hostess bar, ending your night eating a Moss Burger half drunk, and washing your creepy nuts with the bidet in your modern hotel room while watching Japanese television. I don't know, Chris. It sounds like a fun time to me.

    • @boomguitarjared
      @boomguitarjared Год назад +93

      He gave us a crash course for experiencing all the funkiest Japanjank in a day 🤙

    • @buch1224
      @buch1224 Год назад +41

      Until the Groundhog Day effect kicks in after a month or three of it.

    • @kleinerprinz99
      @kleinerprinz99 Год назад +13

      What makes those nuts creepy? But the Bidet is exactly for that to wash your intimate area clean after using the toilet or whenever.

    • @melyourheart
      @melyourheart Год назад

      How much this comment made me laugh omg ahahhaah

    • @lauracoutinho5478
      @lauracoutinho5478 Год назад +21

      It's fun to do as a visit. Not month after month year after year. Believe me, all that gets old FAST

  • @assistantmagus5213
    @assistantmagus5213 Год назад +376

    Chris was so dedicated to making this video feel immersive, he grew a detached extra limb to give him things from off-screen, and I really respect that.

  • @juanluisuribedavies8086
    @juanluisuribedavies8086 Год назад +195

    As an architect I got to tell you. You don't hate modern japanese architecture, you just hate modern comercial architecture, which is happening, unfortunately all over the world. Japanese architects are probably the best and most renouned in the whole world, in fact they have won the pritzker award more times than any other country. Otherwise good video, I'm going to japan soon in my honeymoon and looking very much forward to it. Been watching your videos lately to get an idea of what to expect.

    • @MetaKnight964
      @MetaKnight964 11 месяцев назад +3

      Except you won't find many japanese style houses in any other part of the world.

    • @tupums
      @tupums 11 месяцев назад +2

      Indians are best architects since ancient times. Look at the colossal granite temples still staying for thousands of years! Sanathana Hindu Dharma is the source of architecture science and many other sciences too.

    • @protoaltus
      @protoaltus 11 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@tupums the only issue there is, right now? Nah the architecture is just blocks upon blocks with maybe some flair in between for offices.
      But yeah, the Shinto Shrines and the Temples do share similar structure.

    • @ThePandaAgenda
      @ThePandaAgenda 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@MetaKnight964 Romania.
      No srsly.

    • @sandygordon496
      @sandygordon496 11 месяцев назад

      You are an architect and you can't spell commercial or renowned ?

  • @Binkoro
    @Binkoro Год назад +29

    Excellent piece of work, as usual! I love Japan as someone who grew up there but I can’t believe you didn’t mention the thing I hate most: The old school system of Japanese consumer banking and also how it’s impossible for a foreigner to be approved for a credit card in Japan no matter how many time you are harassed to get one by the credit card promoters on the streets. Japanese banks are where I have experienced the most consistent discrimination in Japan. I do love pretty much everything else about Japan though.

    • @rachelar
      @rachelar 8 месяцев назад +3

      If you're tired of the same old boring questions, give freakish answers that play on stereotypes . "Can you eat Japanese food?" "Yes, sushi off the back of a woman". "Nihongo jouzu" "Yes 💯 GF/BF taught me" How long will you stay in Japan? "15 cm" ok I went too far with that last one but there are plenty of borderline boorish J- Oyaji giving these types of "funny" "earthy" comments especially in drinking situations. You could make it even more post modern and ludicrous

  • @bertdaniels
    @bertdaniels Год назад +214

    Gotta admit Chris, best "list" video you made yet. Not just sitting in a room , but strong editing, going out and filming the subjects, well build arguments. Great quality work Mr. Broad!

    • @SophiaAstatine
      @SophiaAstatine Год назад

      The days of Chris just sitting in a tiny room are over.

  • @NoFuqinIdea
    @NoFuqinIdea Год назад +483

    About modern japanese architecture: What shocked me when coming back to Japan after basically being exiled for 2,5 years, was the amount of cheap looking, plastic family houses that popped up everywhere. There used to be a pretty traditional house next to our apartment. They tore it down and replaced it with 4 generic plastic cubes that could be standing anywhere on the world. Super sad.

    • @yohanes7440
      @yohanes7440 Год назад +1

      plastic houses? tell me more about it

    • @lostintechnology1851
      @lostintechnology1851 Год назад

      its called globalism and is not only a issue in japan. the whole world will become a post globalist hellhole with a few themeparks for wealthy tourists left. But even there will be a mc donalds in walking distance. It is what the us military industrial complex is fighting for.

    • @zierlyn
      @zierlyn Год назад +7

      I'd like to offer a different perspective though. We know that Japan has a traditionally xenophobic culture. As outsiders, one of the things we admire is how strongly the Japanese people have held onto their culture and architecture. Thus, when we see traditional looking Japanese architecture torn down to become a typical modern glass box we feel like the appeal is lost.
      To a Japanese person, that traditional styled building is just a normal everyday building though. There's no excitement, no mysticism, no fantasy, it's just the shop next door. To someone who was born and raised in Japan, modernism is something different that stands out; meanwhile to a foreigner it's just like any other city downtown (note: a city that the majority of Japanese people will never visit and have only seen in movies).
      So in a way, we should stand with the Japanese government in rejecting Western influence?

    • @mileshenry3867
      @mileshenry3867 Год назад +23

      @cyrussmlee I see what you’re saying, but I think people from any culture value some of the traditional aspects of it. I’m American and am always disappointed when I see an older home with a more traditional style torn down to be replaced by a cookie cutter town home or bland apartment.

    • @destituteanddecadent9106
      @destituteanddecadent9106 Год назад +7

      While that's also true (I'm Japanese), the example Chris brings up of Harajuku Station is simply not true. Although it's tough to tell from the pictures, those are different angles, different parts of the building. They very much DID bring an old part of the station to the new, in fact created an entire exact replica in its place, while simultaneously adding the glass structure to expand space. He's mentioned it a few times on his channel now, and I hope he realizes his mistake sooner rather than later.

  • @jaanaberg6125
    @jaanaberg6125 Год назад +13

    If you're a swedish speaking finn you basically get Nihongo Jouzu'd when you go to Sweden. Because they have no idea we have a swedish speaking minority in Finland. The most I've had is them having trouble understanding my dialect but I've heard a lot of others who go to Sweden, speak swedish to swedish people, and get the response "Oh you've learnt swedish really well" and you're just like yeah I'd sure hope so it's my native language :D スウェーデン語上手 indeed

  • @dusky6280
    @dusky6280 Год назад +50

    The pachinko problem is like liquor stores in the North Woods of the U.S.
    Gotta drive 30mins between each small town to buy bread, but each one will have 7 liquor marts and 2 peep-shows.
    Despicable how we've abandoned our rural communities worldwide.

    • @ohhi5237
      @ohhi5237 Год назад

      bread is harder to sell

    • @NotReallyAya.
      @NotReallyAya. Год назад +1

      Pachinko is like a casino not ah damn corner store 😂😂😂😂

    • @dusky6280
      @dusky6280 Год назад

      @@NotReallyAya. smoke less

    • @NotReallyAya.
      @NotReallyAya. Год назад

      @@dusky6280 only difference, liquor store are jst stores , that sell shit and liquor. .

    • @ohhi5237
      @ohhi5237 Год назад

      @@NotReallyAya. they sell a service; its a store

  • @footjuice
    @footjuice Год назад +1617

    The production of this episode is stunning! You just never stop, do you? The Chris that keeps on giving!

    • @AbroadinJapan
      @AbroadinJapan  Год назад +592

      THAT’S THE POWER OF LOVE

    • @larsstougaard7097
      @larsstougaard7097 Год назад +56

      Creepy nuts for life ✌️

    • @wiseweeb5578
      @wiseweeb5578 Год назад +27

      @@AbroadinJapan Now that's what I call being affable

    • @tachidesu
      @tachidesu Год назад +6

      ah yes creepy nuts thats going on my discord bio

    • @ThunderRoo
      @ThunderRoo Год назад +7

      I love that tired singing xD

  • @KenshinRyuzaki
    @KenshinRyuzaki Год назад +208

    Damn Chris did not have to go this hard for a simple list video but I'm glad he did.
    I expected the typical RUclipsr droning-on-to-the-camera sort of video, only to be surprised that we've got scene re-enactments, Chris actually heading to the locations he talks about, along with him sacrificing his body by eating Fruit Sandwiches. Love the dedication to the craft.

  • @denierlexiese
    @denierlexiese Год назад +92

    I used to tell the Japanese their Japanese was very good. Always got a laugh.

  • @brendago4505
    @brendago4505 Год назад +121

    As an American, that burger and fries from Mos Burger made me want to cry for the poor cows that died for that burger

    • @tokyohands
      @tokyohands Год назад +8

      Yep, Mos burger sucks! Slimey burgers and about 3 fries.

    • @holyordersol2668
      @holyordersol2668 Год назад +3

      Glad i listened to my instincts to not try out the local Mos Burger during my stay.

    • @mac9954
      @mac9954 Год назад

      American are war criminals please don't comment on other people's ways

    • @thelifeofbatteries2603
      @thelifeofbatteries2603 11 месяцев назад +1

      don't be surprised if that patty once went "woof"

    • @Peanutdenver
      @Peanutdenver 9 месяцев назад

      If Mos Burgers truly uses 100% ground beef for their patties I'll spend two weeks in a hostess club that only plays Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber and all the hostesses look like Amy Schumer. Mos Burger west wingers need a trip to the States and sample a few Fat Burgers or Five Guys or In&Out burgers for some help on their patties.

  • @ronknox3376
    @ronknox3376 Год назад +257

    Honestly Chris, this is more entertaining than anything on TV. Keep the sarcastic, sardonic image and keep producing gems like this.
    What is great that most RUclipsrs don't do is sneak in a lot of good information and positive information into a I Hate list. Best thing on YT

    • @booba2141
      @booba2141 Год назад

      He’s also someone who should do sweet kissing & rubbing & being wet to the friends & friendship.

    • @arbbar2674
      @arbbar2674 Год назад

      @KDW whats it about this specific video that you find funny? bc he has loads of videos like this

  • @Jamesquarebush
    @Jamesquarebush Год назад +365

    Your face is positively glowing with health, Chris! As a long time subscriber I am aware you stepped up your health game recently and it is really showing with this video. Everything is improved as a consequence. Your demeanor, your vibe, and the freshness of your video skills are all at a much higher level. You always make great videos, but this one shows your rededication to your craft and yourself. I'm feeling inspired to walk more and find my passion!

    • @drankto
      @drankto Год назад +9

      Waiting for Chris vs Natsuki six pack battle

    • @linglingkung356
      @linglingkung356 Год назад +9

      @Jamesquarebush
      You forgot to count the most important thing - Chris' girl friend 🤣😂😅

    • @booba2141
      @booba2141 Год назад +1

      Kiss those other boys on this video show

    • @oo0OAO0oo
      @oo0OAO0oo Год назад +7

      I absolutely agree. Chris looks really healthy now and acts with really cool and fresh energy.

  • @iamdaysea6428
    @iamdaysea6428 Год назад +57

    Went to a Mos Burger in December in Tokyo and they wrote "gaijin" on my friends receipt 💀
    Also can certainly vouch for Pachinkos in the inaka. The biggest one is called Texas which is ironically where I'm from--

    • @mac9954
      @mac9954 Год назад

      Good go home and think about your country war crimes .please go to Afghanistan for your next holiday.

    • @Adirer1
      @Adirer1 8 месяцев назад +1

      Lmao thats so funny

  • @spencebradburn
    @spencebradburn 10 месяцев назад +4

    There’s like 3 RUclipsrs that I come back to and binge every few months, Chris is one of them and I’m doing it now(I’ve watched every single abroad in Japan video till now)

  • @NuclearWarGaming
    @NuclearWarGaming Год назад +91

    The pachinko problem in rural areas of Japan, is very similar to Slot halls here in Italy. You can literally go through little empty villages with maybe only a Bar and a little market, and suddenly the best building in the city is one of those awful places. That's just sad.

    • @notthegoatseguy
      @notthegoatseguy Год назад +9

      Similarly here in the US, casinos and gambling facilities often are a core part of rural areas and are sold as economic development, often promising tax revenue that often doesn't materialize or isn't worth the burdens that casinos bring. Most cities outside of Vegas and a few others don't have casinos within them, and there's a good reason for that.

  • @pressonyang5835
    @pressonyang5835 Год назад +234

    as someone who have lived there while in the military I can concur with the hostess club opinion. I had a military buddy that is always going to them saying he will get lucky but after 4 month of losing all his money it finally hit him like an Isekai delivery truck.

    • @FormerGovernmentHuman
      @FormerGovernmentHuman Год назад +18

      Should have just gotten a soapie for $100 and guaranteed happy ending. Girls aren’t bad either.

    • @ironjade8666
      @ironjade8666 Год назад +1

      @@FormerGovernmentHuman A soapie is a one and done experience. hell with the clubs and bars at all, hit up the shops. That's where shit is awesome.

    • @solitarelee6200
      @solitarelee6200 Год назад +2

      Four months it took him??? Dang, that man had some confidence... probably unwarranted but still!

    • @eewweeppkk
      @eewweeppkk Год назад

      @@solitarelee6200 Military men are dumb creatures. Source: was one.

  • @hederoth7883
    @hederoth7883 Год назад +15

    I lived in Switzerland for 25 years (I’m Swedish). Even after 20 years, and I’d even become a Swiss citizen, people would explain things to me along the line of ”in Switzerland we have…”. Yeah right. Once I got so frustrated with an insurance guy that I told him to go and find an empty conference room, go in there and be ashamed for a few minutes. Well, not my proudest moment but I had to let some steam off.

    • @rawgab4439
      @rawgab4439 Год назад +5

      lol...I understand ...in the 80's I lived in Italy and besides speaking the language fluent I was always "the Stranger" ...awful ..couldn't wait to get out ..

    • @andrewbulock
      @andrewbulock 7 месяцев назад +2

      You may not be proud of telling him off, but you should be proud of the manner in which you told him off. That's brilliant! 'Go f*** yourself' would provoke defensiveness and anger. Go find an empty room and be ashamed for a few minutes, that can make a person stop and question himself. "Wait, do I need to be ashamed?" 😆

  • @edwong4178
    @edwong4178 Год назад +12

    I tots empathise with microaggressions and feeling like an outsider. 16 years in Australia, “Where are you from?” the moment they detect my accent. “Your English is really good”, even though English is my first language. I would be lucky to get 3000 subscribers if I started a channel called Asian in Australia. And don’t get me started on the overt aggressions.

  • @jayspot8894
    @jayspot8894 Год назад +353

    I have to say that I totally agree with Chris about the Architecture. I am an Architectural photographer and I am going to Japan in May for 3 weeks to photograph architecture for a personal project. What he said about Harajuku station is accurate. They took something unique with historical value and put something boring in its place. I personally love when architects take something old and add something new to it. You still keep the familiar old qualities while modernizing it at the same time. Its the best of both worlds and still has meaning. There are still architects and projects in Japan that design projects that feel new but also reflect traditional Japanese qualities thankfully, it just doesn't seem to happen on a large scale building. Kengo Kuma did a good update to Japans National Stadium for the Olympics that reflects traditional Japanese aesthetic. The initial bid was going to go to Zaha Hadid architects but it didn't reflect Japan at all so I am glad it went to Kengo Kuma.

    • @-_Andreas_-
      @-_Andreas_- Год назад +5

      I love all the different forms and shapes of houses you can find. Took a walk yesterday during lunch and there is so many interesting shapes and forms, except the new built areas which are just so insanely boring. Now this I just private single family houses, so nothing big like a station. :)
      But I hate with a passion how badly maintained all the house and buildings are. Seeing all the peeling paint, moisture damaged wood and overall abandoned buildings.. breaks my heart.

    • @soasertsus
      @soasertsus Год назад +7

      Harajuku station needed to be renovated frankly, it was borderline non-functional for one of the more high traffic destinations in Tokyo. As someone who lives in the city and uses the trains every day, it was a big improvement. But that being said they absolutely didn't have to make it so ugly, why not at least make the new facade look nice? Especially for such a popular tourist destination you would think the Shibuya city council would ask that it retain its style at least. But honestly I think a lot of the shit architecture lately a result of the fact that the Japanese economy has been in a sorry state for like 3 decades now and in many ways it's a country in decline, so there is no forward-thinking vision to anything anymore, just a general oppressive atmosphere of stagnation and everyone trying to cut costs as much as possible.

    • @verreal
      @verreal Год назад

      Yeah. That was a crime.

    • @grln930
      @grln930 Год назад +1

      Zaha Hadid architects would have been epic though

    • @destituteanddecadent9106
      @destituteanddecadent9106 Год назад +4

      Edit: rereading this after five months (got a notif) and wow I used to write like such a nerd 😂 Point still stands though!
      TLDR; Harajuku Station is a terrible example, or not even a valid example at all, as they did replicate it. Traditional Japanese architecture was always made to be rebuilt, unlike in Europe, mostly due to seismic activity and the rest due to the humid climate. But, when they did rebuild it, the architects made sure to pay their respects.
      As a Japanese person who has grown up near Harajuku, Harajuku Station is such a flawed example of tearing down beautiful traditional architecture and replacing it with bland, cookie cutter cuboids and it's unfortunate that Chris has brought it up multiple times throughout his content. (This is around the third time as far as I know.)
      This trend in favor of sleek boring glass rectangles over beautifully detailed structures that Chris points out has actually been around for a while, but the poor example undermines this point. What they did with the station is exactly what you said, they replaced the old building with a replica, but also expanded the building, i.e. added the glass part, in the process. This is something that happens quite often. Case in point, my university building was also rebuilt to look the same from the street but have a glass structure augmented behind and above, obscured from view.
      I don't know if this is purposeful or he just missed it, but even though it is very deliberately an exact replica, it's always been hidden in the angles he presents. (Okay he probably missed it since he even says "Why not borrow a part of the old design and integrate it into the new?")
      If you want to know why they rebuilt it then to begin with, one issue surrounding traditional Japanese architecture is that you simply cannot make durable buildings out of bricks or stone in such an earthquake prone environment. That is why the traditional building material is wood. That is also what makes it so hard to just preserve buildings as they are, what with the humidity in the summer and the fact that the city was bombed to near oblivion mid 20th century. Part of what made people value Harajuku Station as the classic monument it was was the fact that it was last rebuilt in 1924 (the one shown in the old picture is actually still not the original) and survived the bombings. That is why it had such a distinct, iconic aesthetic, because while the rest of the city had to scramble to rebuild their infrastructure with critically limited resources, to hastily get it back up and running, Harajuku Station was an exception. A true remnant of a bygone era. But, all wooden things must come to an end, and a 100 year old wooden structure could not serve as a modern station any longer without major reconstruction. So they had to rebuild the whole thing from scratch, but to say the people behind the project neglected to pay their respects to the original architecture and the cultural hub that it came to manifest is an egregious misrepresentation of their work.
      That was a rant, but I'm just so deeply saddened that this is what people who've never even seen the station for themselves think of the new station and the incredible thought and effort that was put into restoring the quaint look. Easy W in my book.
      Edit: adding a preemptive disclaimer about the use of the word "traditional" since some hardcore architecture nerds might disagree with my usage of the term to refer to something built in the 20th century with heavy western influence.

  • @pf3558
    @pf3558 Год назад +436

    Seeing this video made me realise how much I missed the ‘sit down in a room’ format, not that actual ambitious videos aren’t as good, but there’s something nice and cozy about just listening to Chris rant about random things (and ofc as per every Chris video the production is still insanely well done lol)

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer Год назад +4

      siting in a room? but he was clearly at a ramen shop. behind the counter.

    • @GigiLowe
      @GigiLowe Год назад +5

      @@sirBrouwer I think he's referring to Chris' old videos, where he sits in his apartment and it just feels like he's chatting with friends.
      Perhaps Chris can put a tatami room set in this studio?

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer Год назад +2

      @@GigiLowe I know those. this was just a literal observation of this video. in other videos he more often is sitting at the barstool.
      for the tatami like room he could use the other part of the studio the office part.
      that already has most there.

    • @SisterDogmata
      @SisterDogmata Год назад

      100% this.

    • @alexm-e4910
      @alexm-e4910 Год назад

      Damn
      Chris is looking great

  • @NetITGeeks
    @NetITGeeks Год назад +12

    I actually love the bidet. I love them so much, I went to Home Depot here in Canada and got one. Installed it myself and it took me a lot of effort to reroute hot and cold waterlines.

    • @AbsentWithoutLeaving
      @AbsentWithoutLeaving Год назад

      Haha, I'm picturing the effect of a cold shot on a bitter winter's morning...

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme 7 месяцев назад

      That's probably because you're not a gross human being who wipes with dry toilet paper and calls it a day

  • @calliastah4115
    @calliastah4115 Год назад

    I absolutely love the immersive background like when you were being given nuts or when you stole the singing drunk guy's mic, LMAO. That's honestly really new to me and amazing at the same time.

  • @burgersbeansandchips
    @burgersbeansandchips Год назад +619

    I haven't watched Chris in a while, his healthy transformation is almost as remarkable as David Mitchell's transition from a man who had completely given up on himself to a happily married father.

    • @STINKFISTBOBCAT
      @STINKFISTBOBCAT Год назад +32

      For real though Chris is lookin like a snack.

    • @UpNextWithNickLate
      @UpNextWithNickLate Год назад +16

      He gotta do if he's gonna dominate at chess and boxing.

    • @goprojoe7449
      @goprojoe7449 Год назад

      Happy he was able to pull himself away from crack cocaine and prostitution

    • @lynth
      @lynth Год назад +5

      Realizing that you are the baddy is the first step towards positive change!

    • @swoleboi3831
      @swoleboi3831 Год назад

      @@STINKFISTBOBCAT he's participating in a ChessBoxing Match soo

  • @lorenabarzanti2729
    @lorenabarzanti2729 8 месяцев назад +30

    I’m Mexican and today I reached 20 years living in the UK and I still feel very much a foreigner/outsider. My daughter born here is serious about going to Japan next year to learn Japanese after college, she is doing the basics now but we love your videos which are funny and informative please keep doing them.

    • @janboomstam1727
      @janboomstam1727 6 месяцев назад +2

      Oh god the Brits always have a way to make you feel you're not one of them ... I can't really explain how they do it. It's really weird.

    • @standupphilosopher7059
      @standupphilosopher7059 5 месяцев назад

      I am of Mexican decent and can't imagine not being able to get the best Mexican food. I'm on the west coast. I thought the British would be more welcoming. Wow😒

    • @StimParavane
      @StimParavane 4 месяца назад +1

      @@janboomstam1727 Brits are made up of 4 distinct nations and there is a strong regional component too. It's actually hard to define a British identity and now even more an English one. Once you can participate in British humour and banter you're probably safe.

  • @BOB-wo2nb
    @BOB-wo2nb 10 месяцев назад +13

    I love the fruit cream sandwiches lol!! So much that once I left Japan I kept making them for myself.

  • @felixpujade1541
    @felixpujade1541 Год назад +374

    I appreciate that Chris doesn't waste any of the food. It always annoys me when influence buys big bowls of food and then never eat it

    • @FusionKush
      @FusionKush Год назад +5

      Why if they bought it with their money. I could careless about another person's meal that they paid for them selves.

    • @Inucroft
      @Inucroft Год назад +77

      @@FusionKush It's a waste.
      We produce enough food to feed three times the global population without any starvation.
      Yet here we are with such a vast food surplus yet mass starvation.

    • @FusionKush
      @FusionKush Год назад +8

      @@Inucroft that's the problem you care to much about nothing. Just because someone paid for there food and doesn't finish it doesn't mean it's the end of the world. What if they didn't like it? I know if bought food and it tastes gross or it didn't meet my taste buds then I might as well throw it away. After I paid for it.
      Yes I know it will be disrespectful if some else paid for it but to be fair I won't eat anything I don't like even if someone else paid for it.

    • @midorykq7217
      @midorykq7217 Год назад +29

      Carbon footprint. I do care about it. Buying and not consuming, generates a big carbon footprint, the food that arrives to table took many steps: logistics, transportation, packaging, etc.

    • @L0REN0R2Z0RR0
      @L0REN0R2Z0RR0 Год назад +20

      @@FusionKush Waste of food - and a lot of other things - is a huge problem in this world. We use up more ressources from poor countries than we need, our way of life currently is too much for the planet. It would even be too much for two planets.

  • @magmarr8304
    @magmarr8304 Год назад +394

    Creepy Nuts is honestly such a great duo, their music checks every vibe. Some songs fit perfectly for a summer day and some fit perfectly for a cold fall/winter night

    • @ThugHunterfromIsrael
      @ThugHunterfromIsrael Год назад +1

      @@messagemeontelegramam_abro1311 explosives

    • @NICHOLSON7777
      @NICHOLSON7777 Год назад +14

      8 years ago they randomly showed up in my youtube feed. They were the gateway to japanese hip-hop for me.

    • @magmarr8304
      @magmarr8304 Год назад +17

      @@NICHOLSON7777 I started following their music after reading a manga called "call of the night" and the author said the manga got its name from their song

    • @akaroth7542
      @akaroth7542 Год назад +2

      Welp, screw it. Gonna have to check them out.

    • @Foranoda
      @Foranoda Год назад +14

      @@magmarr8304 and they made an anime recently of "call of the night", and it's not only using Creepy Nuts for the opening AND ending songs, but they also have a small cameo, even voiced by the guys themselves. such a great circle of appreciation

  • @sumirunihon
    @sumirunihon 5 месяцев назад +5

    Creepy Nuts is unironically one of my favorite Japanese bands. I've been listening to them for years since 2016 when they were still small and now they have a whole ass anime intro and outro. The anime Call Of The Night 【よふかしのうた】was actually inspired by a song they made by the same name。 I'm so proud to see how far they've come over the years. I'm really glad you're discovering them now and i hope you at least try out their music. They have a very unique style. R-指定's voice and flow is unique and unmistakable and 松永's production immediately sets them apart from any rap/pop band and he incorporates any genre into his unique style. I never saw them live but i hope to do so next year. Thanks for discovering them.

  • @66meikou
    @66meikou 8 месяцев назад

    I enjoyed this video. As a fellow Brit (who now lives in the US) I appreciate the sense of humor.
    When I was around 8 years old, we went to some friend of my parents and Dad's mate had a pachinko machine. I played if for about an hour before I ran out of balls. Fast forward many years later, I scored on from a local auction. As a Japanophile, I've always kind of liked them for sort of mindless entertainment. Plus I can open the back up an reload for free.
    As for Japanese architecture, a subject close to my heart as I study traditional structures and carpentry. I'm also an architect.
    Tadao Ando is my favourite Japanese architect but I like the works of Shin Takamatsu as well. One of his buildings i really liked was the Kirin Plaza in Osaka which featured in one of my top ten lists of films, Black Rain. I love Osaka and I generally prefer western Japan to eastern Japan. I asked a Japanese friend a few years ago about the building and he replied that they demolished it. I was gutted.
    Subb'd

  • @kimmysmilesatyou
    @kimmysmilesatyou Год назад +95

    The first time I went to Japan we landed at the Narita Airport in Tokyo, and my teacher so excitedly told us to try the bathroom, and let me tell you. That was the first toilet I used in Japan and I just. I had been violated by a toilet. That shit just goes straight up, no warning. My teacher, and classmates were dying laughing. She decided to remind the whole class towards the end of our study abroad. It was an experience I'll never forget.

    • @martiuscastle
      @martiuscastle Год назад +5

      "Violated by a toilet" made me laugh really hard! Cheers!

  • @axis6333
    @axis6333 Год назад +701

    I love that Chris dips in and out of an American accent for a punchline the same way Americans do the exact same thing with British accents

    • @beepboop5491
      @beepboop5491 Год назад +23

      I wonder if Japanese people do the same but with a Chinese accent 🤔🤣

    • @arrone7
      @arrone7 Год назад

      Except Americans are usually absolutely awful at British accents, or merge them, or just do an Irish accent...

    • @timothyreel716
      @timothyreel716 Год назад +21

      @@beepboop5491 That might start a war!😂

    • @bdank7
      @bdank7 Год назад +2

      This is my first time seeing this channel and I thought he sounded a lot like Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow.

    • @josephvanas6352
      @josephvanas6352 Год назад +2

      And then there is FriendlyJordies who just dips into whatever accent he pleases for the punchlines. It ranges from the most Australian accents ever to a smooth cool radio broadcaster.

  • @makeupfriik
    @makeupfriik Год назад +39

    What I hate about Japan is that I am not there 😭😭 my first trip there was so good and me and my boyfriend actually felt little to no culture shock in the sens that it was pretty easy to adapt as a tourist that is.❤️❤️ can't wait to go back

  • @MrJayxander
    @MrJayxander Год назад +19

    We did the Mari-Karts when we visited like any good American. But yes! It was terrifying and we broke down multiple times (IN THE MIDDLE OF TRAFFIC), with pieces falling off the carts. Fun, but we definitely didn't feel safe with the thin protection of Mario and Yoshi costumes.

  • @PTS504
    @PTS504 Год назад +177

    Chris,
    I moved to Japan (studying abroad at university) about two months ago, at least in part due to your "glowing" coverage of the place.
    If I were to take a shot for every time I heard "nihongo jouzu" or "why did you come to Japan" in one day, I'd be even worse of an alcoholic than the cheap Gekkeikan carton sake has made me.
    Thanks.

    • @seregruin
      @seregruin Год назад +2

      Have you come up with any good standard answers, though? There should be a self-help group out there about this.

    • @PTS504
      @PTS504 Год назад +14

      @@seregruin
      At this point, my standard answer for why I came is that it was just to study, which is only maybe 5% of the real answer - it's just not worth trying to explain the whole thing.
      What really sucks is what I call "Gaijin English Training," in which you're automatically targeted by people who have 0 interest in you except as a practice dummy for conversation - especially at bars. Sadly, GET doesn't have the payroll or benefits of JET.
      When I'm knee-deep in my fifth pint, I'm not exactly looking to give an English lesson - or even capable of it!

    • @AbuHajarAlBugatti
      @AbuHajarAlBugatti Год назад

      I just always answer women. If men they leave me alone and if women they show if interested

  • @legitbread
    @legitbread Год назад +564

    I came back from my vacation in Japan a week ago and I LOVED it, but one thing I will always hate is the amount of plastic waste that is generated. So many tiny snacks, cutlery, and products are layered in needless plastic and most of it ends up in the garbage. Although I love myself some Japanese snacks, I can't help but wince every time I open a bag to find a bag within a bag containing a single piece of candy.

    • @wombat5252
      @wombat5252 Год назад +3

      They are over the top on cleanliness and contamination. Extremely clean country, but they go overboard lol. Probably one of the only countries where you can lick a public toilet's seat though.

    • @bfragged
      @bfragged Год назад +39

      I remember shopping in Japan and them wrapping and then bagging a tiny money clip which was already in a box. Basically creating 3x the waste then if I just put it in my pocket when I bought it.

    • @luciussakura5031
      @luciussakura5031 Год назад +20

      Yeah, when I went there we went to a restaurant with plastic napkins. Like why???

    • @tsmcdiz1758
      @tsmcdiz1758 Год назад +41

      Japan is infinitely better and more effective at recycling than the US, so it’s not as much of a problem as you’d think

    • @julcaos
      @julcaos Год назад +1

      Brazil has this same issue...

  • @derncii
    @derncii Месяц назад +2

    Creepy nuts is actually getting tons of fame now for their new anime opening for mashle. It’s very popular among people who know anime.

  • @YourGuyAlex
    @YourGuyAlex Год назад

    This video is FANTASTIC. Tells a little timeline story. Love it

  • @katek1381
    @katek1381 Год назад +1103

    Lived in Japan for a decade and re: Microaggressions -- you nailed it. 10 years of the same boring ass questions from everybody, and if you ever try to steer the conversation to something different (in Japanese, mind you, there are no language issues limiting the conversation topics), they often push it back to basically "yeah yeah, back to you being a gaijin tho." Always gaijin first, person second. That's fine working as an ESL teacher where your conversation is paid for, but dealing with that on a personal level wears on the soul after awhile.

    • @Dreadlock1227
      @Dreadlock1227 Год назад +136

      I don’t think that’s exclusive to Japan. Even for me, as an American living in Canada, I get those little micro aggressions whenever I tell someone I’m American, and it’s always the same questions. And people are really passive aggressive about it too. They just wanna hear me say how much I love Canada and how much better it is than America. Which I don’t even necessarily think, but that’s just the answer everyone’s looking for

    • @FransceneJK98
      @FransceneJK98 Год назад +95

      I found that it’s really hard to make real friends in Japan. Like way harder than in other countries. Idk why but Japanese are reluctant to show you who they really are or what they really think. It takes a long time for them really warm up to you. So I give up before that

    • @amazin7006
      @amazin7006 Год назад +60

      ​@@FransceneJK98 For me it was the opposite. I made a handful of friends on my first time visiting over the course of a single month, many are still in contact.
      It's going to be hard to make friends just on the street or something (even here in America), but if you're in a nice work environment, or playing sports or something it's not hard at all imo. My closest Japanese friend I met while playing football in some random field lol

    • @alexandresobreiramartins9461
      @alexandresobreiramartins9461 Год назад

      @@FransceneJK98 Japanese are genetically hypocrites.

    • @mikespike2099
      @mikespike2099 Год назад +14

      You Gaijin!!!

  • @toni-kaku
    @toni-kaku Год назад +371

    I was in Japan for 4 months in 1995 and almost every conversation was exactly as you describe. Good to know some things haven't changed!

    • @Chrnan6710
      @Chrnan6710 Год назад +42

      *_N I H O N G O J O U Z U_*

    • @Redisnice100
      @Redisnice100 Год назад +5

      I was also in japan in 8 years I’m still here

    • @insiainutorrt259
      @insiainutorrt259 Год назад +2

      Why do you 2 assume every japanese is the same person?... Quite uttery insane aint it...

    • @jameswiggle
      @jameswiggle Год назад +4

      @@insiainutorrt259 they lived there longer than you.

    • @Jarred94
      @Jarred94 Год назад +1

      Yeah, can't mess with the classics

  • @TobyIKanoby
    @TobyIKanoby 8 месяцев назад +1

    Having lived in Bangkok a lot of my gripes are quite similar. But the funniest will always be the Thai service in restaurants or things like that talking Thai to my Japanese friend, me answering in Thai, because she didn't speak Thai at all, and looking at their face, and they would still be talking Thai to my Japanese friend who doesn't have a clue what they were talking about and acting like I don't understand Thai. It is very funny for a few times, but after a while you just want to order and move on, like the 1000th time they ask "when are you going home?".

  • @InvestDiva
    @InvestDiva 11 месяцев назад +2

    Mos burger, “the best thing to come in a basket since Moses” I’m dead 😂😂😂😂

  • @SY_STAR
    @SY_STAR Год назад +146

    Not going to lie, when Chris describes Japanese toliets "Opening up like it desperately wants my custom" had me crying with laughter 🤣🤣🤣

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 Год назад +4

      He said custard, not custom. Like shit custard, lol.

    • @GabbaaGhoul
      @GabbaaGhoul Год назад

      same😂

    • @andrewwashburn6080
      @andrewwashburn6080 Год назад +3

      i definitely heard custom as well

    • @SY_STAR
      @SY_STAR Год назад

      Oh sorry!! Hahaha.. I'm hearing custom 🤣

  • @very_vaelin
    @very_vaelin Год назад +135

    The “Japan has four seasons” thing baffles me. When I studied in Tokyo, I blew someone’s mind when I responded, asking if they thought other countries didn’t have seasons.

    • @user-bf9dk4xb1j
      @user-bf9dk4xb1j Год назад +22

      My country, for instance, only have 2 seasons, the dry and wet season lmao😭💀

    • @mr.prince7086
      @mr.prince7086 Год назад +6

      Weirdest flex ever...

    • @xchemicalXladybugx
      @xchemicalXladybugx Год назад +3

      Sometimes I feel some places have like 8 seasons

    • @annierutter5398
      @annierutter5398 Год назад +11

      🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 can have all the seasons in one day

    • @xchemicalXladybugx
      @xchemicalXladybugx Год назад +6

      @@annierutter5398 Same in Texas

  • @Wizard_howl
    @Wizard_howl Год назад +1

    the segway edits in this are great! I've seen your videos preciously but I am embarrassed to say I have only just now subscribed. Love the honest take on matters as well as adult language and content. We're not all kids here so nice to hear cursing and talking of drinking , etc.

    • @CorvusCorone68
      @CorvusCorone68 Год назад

      just so you know, "segue" is the spelling you want; Segway is the brand name for self-balancing scooters

  • @TheOriginalGabberjaw
    @TheOriginalGabberjaw 2 месяца назад +3

    Creepy Nuts rock mate 😂 they're really really really good

  • @kobazeta
    @kobazeta Год назад +89

    The modern, "universal style" architecture one really bothers me. I am an art student and this semester I'm writing a large analysis on the Nakagin Capsule tower (credit to your videos for introducing it to me 🫡). The tower was such a great representation of the Japanese Metabolist movement, which was known for architects treating buildings as living, breathing structures and more than tall glass boxes. I'm sad to see it all getting wiped away and even sadder that the Capsule Tower won't be in Tokyo when I visit for the first time next year.
    I absolutely loved the production in this video, cheers!

  • @paolaanimator
    @paolaanimator Год назад +179

    I loved how Chris changed locations as he went through the list, his videos are so entertaining!

    • @hermz8616
      @hermz8616 Год назад +5

      Its like he was walking around and said “oh yeah, add that shit to the list so i can rant real quick”

  • @rick98765
    @rick98765 Год назад

    You look good man! Great that you got fit. Going to Tokyo in October for the first time and am super excited.

  • @Astroqualia
    @Astroqualia 11 месяцев назад

    First video ive seen of yours. Informative! And interesting.

  • @Peter_Schiavo
    @Peter_Schiavo Год назад +257

    #8. I have a cousin-in-law who emigrated from Chile to Sweden 40+ years ago. He's been a Swedish citizen for 30+ years. He speaks fluent Swedish. He still, to this day, is treated like an outsider.

    • @TurtleGamers1
      @TurtleGamers1 Год назад +28

      Really? You must live in a smaller town? As long as someone speaks fluent Swedish they usually are treated normally where I live/have grown up

    • @9.5.9.5
      @9.5.9.5 Год назад +66

      If you move to another country, you are an outsider

    • @naturesfinest2408
      @naturesfinest2408 Год назад +53

      @@9.5.9.5 not most of the U.S. Thats one of the reason why i like it here. Almost anywhere in America, usually in or near the city i can meet people from another country. Ive met hundreds and i always ask them how is it living here? Do you feel alone? Treated as out of place? Or something along those lines. And the answer in overwhelming "yeah there are a few people but most people are nice/don't care." It doesnt matter in the U.S because of the large foreign population, especially in and near cities but even in rural areas. Its crazy the amount of people you can meet. I love it.

    • @xxnoobslayeriv
      @xxnoobslayeriv Год назад +19

      @@9.5.9.5 Not in North American cities PAL! Go to a Toronto mall and it is like a rainbow. I assume nearly every brown, black, and East Asian is born here.

    • @staggeringdeath8479
      @staggeringdeath8479 Год назад +3

      Japan is far less multicultural than Western countries and that is the reason people that visit Japan walk away saying their culture is so different and unique from Western countries and the day that they decide multiculturalism and immigration is a strength is the day Japan becomes another multicultural shithole!

  • @Pawsandstitch_
    @Pawsandstitch_ Год назад +160

    I’m from Honolulu, HI and I COMPLETELY agree with those touristy Mario cart things being an nuisance. We have become over run with scooters and go-carts all over Waikiki. It’s irritating but because this area is basically all business and there’s already so much traffic to begin with 😩😩😩

    • @nanifa6082
      @nanifa6082 Год назад +2

      sounds terrible! I can only imagine... and its already painful. Hope your government(?) wises up and closes down all of them

    • @Logan-ed4pu
      @Logan-ed4pu Год назад +6

      Yeesh. I visited Honolulu in 2007, and traffic was a fustercluck then. I couldn't imagine it now with the go carts.

    • @HotdogSosage
      @HotdogSosage Год назад

      Hi Ashley, really bad place to put this but me and my Japanese girlfriend are taking her parents to hawaii and some places are so insanely expensive. Do you know anywhere that might be good but not the most expensive touristy spot?

  • @genericsavings
    @genericsavings 8 месяцев назад +3

    I got accustomed to using bidets while I was there, but there was one that was too hot & high pressured.
    My initial response was:
    “Whoa, I’m not that kinda lady. You gotta buy me dinner first.” 😂

    • @Pezzerd
      @Pezzerd 8 месяцев назад

      Haha that made me chuckle 🥰

  • @MultiRozey
    @MultiRozey 10 месяцев назад

    Love your video. Well prepared me before my travel.

  • @DonMIFC
    @DonMIFC Год назад +179

    14:52 can also be attributed by the how often the word "gaikokujin"/Foreigner is used. I've lived in Japan, and also Australia, USA and Singapore. The word foreigner is so seldom used in those countries. Whenever, we talk about someone foreign in those countries we refer to their nationality specifically. "Oh he's Columbian, she's Italian, etc."
    This is ingrained in the culture and it reminds everyone whilst we may be Australians, there are 200 plus nationalities across the world and we are just a small spec of the world population.
    In comparison, in Japan, they quite rarely refer to a foreigners nationality and just call them foreigners. This creates a cultural divide where people in Japan are either, "nihonjin"/Japanese OR "gaikokujin"/foreigner.
    Essentially, what I'm trying to say, in Japan you're grouped in one of two nationalities, youre a foreigner or youre Japanese
    In most other countries, you will be referred to as your actual nationality (200 plus countries)
    On a side note, the only times I hear the word "foreigner" used in Western countries is when we are talking about administrative things. For example in university, we might group people as local students or international students as international students usually have to pay higher fees to the university (local students fees are subsidised by the Government)

    • @23Lgirl
      @23Lgirl Год назад +8

      Japan is not America.

    • @jake2011rt
      @jake2011rt Год назад +52

      @@23Lgirl That's a great observation. Thanks for cluing us in. However, neither are Australia or Singapore, so his point stands. The bigger thing to note is that Aus and the US, in particular, are very diverse countries with large immigrant populations and colonial roots. By nature these countries will be less likely to use the term "foreigner" because being Australian or American isn't necessarily tied to one's genetics or cultural heritage. In Japan, it is purely tied to these factors.

    • @user-bf9dk4xb1j
      @user-bf9dk4xb1j Год назад +5

      I think that's fine if they just met you and don't know you personally.. like I've seen many videos in different social media platforms, where half Japanese people are offended if they are not seen as a Japanese person when meeting someone new in Japan (due to different physical characteristics: hair, skin, eye color, eye shape,etc.), and foreigners, who also get offended when they were thought of as Japanese lmao Idk what to think of this world anymore, people are just so sensitive and get offended in every little thing.
      Like for instance, do you see any blasian in every Japanese neighborhood everyday? Even if they look mixed Asian, how do you know if they're Japanese? They could be a mix of other Asian nationalities too. Also, East Asians and SEAsians gets mixed up a lot and can blend in with the Japanese. So is it rude to think they were Japanese if they look similar, can speak fluent Japanese, and live in Japan? Like you can be proud of your country/culture, but nobody can guess what you belong to at first glance...
      I'm not Japanese, but I meet foreigners of different nationalities a lot due to my work, and I always treat them the Japanese way, which is to not assume other people's nationality and just treat them as a "foreigner". And until they tell me what nationality they have, I will always refer to them as Foreigners...

    • @ChrysusTV
      @ChrysusTV Год назад +16

      @@23Lgirl What an incredibly useful response! I would add: "comparing countries does not mean you think all countries should be the same." Since you seem confused on this point. For example, I could say, "I've read Jacob Smith's and V's replies, and I think 23Lgirl's comment is useless compared to theirs," but that doesn't mean I think you should become those people! :)

    • @nanifa6082
      @nanifa6082 Год назад +1

      @@23Lgirl a 28Mboy is not a 23Lgirl

  • @webbtrekker534
    @webbtrekker534 Год назад +147

    I was in Japan in 1968 when I was in the US Navy. Over all I had a good time and enjoyed seeing everything I could when I had the time. Now as an old man I think back fondly and remember my visit and wish I could have seen and done more. One thing the visit did was open my love for Japanese food. I love the flavors and how simple and complicated it is at the same time. Hard to find that here in the US. The Finns have a game almost like Pochinko.

    • @Deadbeatcow
      @Deadbeatcow Год назад +4

      it's got some very cool stuff and some terrible stuff, I think the best way to experience it would be a few months at a time. I'd love to stay there for a while and still be able to come back home to the creature comforts that I grew up with

    • @Heidegaff
      @Heidegaff Год назад +3

      US military, in Japan, during the postwar?
      Boy must have been fun.

    • @quetzalcueyat
      @quetzalcueyat Год назад

      There's no pride in anything Americans do. Our service sector is a joke

    • @BreakEm22
      @BreakEm22 Год назад +1

      @@Heidegaff If I remember correctly the US military has a bit of a rape problem.

    • @FlatulentWhale
      @FlatulentWhale Год назад +1

      Good Japanese food can be found on the west coast of the US mostly. Proximity and historical populations. NYC has good Japanese food too.

  • @Kaimana9271
    @Kaimana9271 Год назад +1

    When I first arrived in Japan I shared your opinion on Mos Burger...but I actually miss it now!

  • @loubriccant9222
    @loubriccant9222 Год назад

    I lived in Sendai for 5 years ..I love when I catch some Sendai footage in your videos
    Great production quality you are a professional at your craft

  • @aileenjones8484
    @aileenjones8484 Год назад +32

    I live in Korea and they say the same things to foreign-looking people too. I literally just say hello and they’re like “wow your Korean is so good!” They say the four seasons thing too 😅

    • @Josh-dr9db
      @Josh-dr9db Год назад +4

      Makes me wonder what they learn in school sometimes. Most people don’t seem to know the sun and moon cause the tide

    • @Taima
      @Taima Год назад +2

      I find it pretty baffling that while generally considered smarter than most of the world, they apparently don't understand anything about seasons around the world. Not like you need to know what it's like everywhere, but kinda weird that even Americans know more places than not have the "full set" of seasons, some are more just rainy and dry, some just one extreme or the other. Like wtf do they actually think is in Europe and North America?

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 Год назад

      What's up with that? Do they think all Americans come from Florida?

  • @coffeeandchijen
    @coffeeandchijen Год назад +152

    I appreciate the honesty in this video. The "nihongo jouzu" thing got tiresome after a while, but I learned to stop faking self deprecation (Ehhhh really? No, no, no.), and just started answering with "Thank you, I've studied hard." That usually nipped that conversation in the bud. All in all, I think the irritations are outweighed by the advantages. There were things that drove me up a wall when I lived there, but I'd move back in a heartbeat.

    • @julienb.9526
      @julienb.9526 Год назад +4

      Nowadays I just ignore the compliment, especially if it comes from someone I have just met and hasn't really heard me speak Japanese.

    • @ChrysusTV
      @ChrysusTV Год назад +3

      Got told this yesterday by the radiologist at the hospital because I was able to say my name and birthday in Japanese. Wow, imagine!

    • @coffeeandchijen
      @coffeeandchijen Год назад +3

      @@ChrysusTV I suppose at the end of the day, it's harmless small talk and people mean well, but it's a bit...eh...when it's after two or three basic words.

    • @ChathushkaPeiris
      @ChathushkaPeiris Год назад

      Thank you is never the answer if someone gives a complement. it should be "iie iie.." (no no not so much). else the speaker will think you are full of yourself.

    • @coffeeandchijen
      @coffeeandchijen Год назад +2

      @@ChathushkaPeiris I'm not really concerned with what someone I don't know thinks of me in conversation honestly. Like I said in the comment above, I appreciate that it's harmless small talk, but sometimes it does come off as patronizing. My response to people are on a case by case basis.

  • @bellarina
    @bellarina Год назад +2

    I love fruit sandwiches so much 🤣 can we have them in Asda already omg

  • @renfw
    @renfw 11 месяцев назад

    I absolutely love your videos and thanks very much for making them. I am going to ask a silly question: is your ramen shop really just a set, and where is that located? I mean if that's a set is that located in a rental storage somewhere in Tokyo? Thank you.

  • @BrandoCalrissi
    @BrandoCalrissi Год назад +74

    Early to mid 2000s I had hopes to work in Japan in the music industry, like MTV Japan. I was working in College radio doing a show featuring Japanese artists and Anime soundtracks. I ended up getting a CD from a band called... Bathtub Shitter. I still have that CD today.

    • @Xubuntu47
      @Xubuntu47 Год назад +5

      Wow, I thought Bump of Chicken was weird, but apparently I know nothing.

    • @FuneralFleshFeast
      @FuneralFleshFeast Год назад +1

      Grindcore is cheating!

  • @lenaistalar8032
    @lenaistalar8032 Год назад +352

    To be fair: the architecture thing is applicable nearly everywhere. Yes, rectangular glass and concrete buildings are very efficient in using space and money/materials, but they are also damn boring (and often ugly).
    Also, I loved the bonus karaoke at the end. You actually sounded like a text-to-speech in some lines xD

    • @LG-te4vh
      @LG-te4vh Год назад +12

      Fun facts: glass buildings are like greenhouses and require a shit ton of AC, resulting in an absurd waste of energy and money....

    • @coozant
      @coozant Год назад +3

      @@LG-te4vh Sure thats in the summer, but being a greenhouse is efficient in the winter?

    • @xw3132
      @xw3132 Год назад +1

      @Zonka There's no good way to put that many people in a single block and not look like a dystopia.

    • @chenry6835
      @chenry6835 Год назад +1

      they got great architect like 伊東豊雄, 安藤忠雄, 隈研吾...etc, yup i like them but unluckily not all the others built like them cause of budget or anything else

    • @MysticalHaze.
      @MysticalHaze. Год назад +3

      since there are several earthquakes that happen there, do the buildings that are copy pasted at least build with that in mind....cause isn't all that glass just going to break if things get crazy, the cities will have some glass showers if it ever were to happen. Also the glass like mentioned previously...would that not just become an oven and freezer during seasonal changes e.e what is da logic wea

  • @blackwatertrs
    @blackwatertrs 4 месяца назад

    I always tease my Japanese friend about the 7-2-11 strawberry sandwich. 😄🍓

  • @Sweenymee
    @Sweenymee Год назад +2

    I'm happy that I went to Tokio and Japan in 2018. At least I got to see the old Harajuku station. I think it was nice :T
    I did not know that my first Tonkatsu was an Ekiben. I thought it was delicious! 😅

    • @annefitzgerald6654
      @annefitzgerald6654 3 месяца назад +1

      I did the JET programme 1989 -1990 and love the insights and well structured videos. Keep it up❤

  • @Mryodamiles
    @Mryodamiles Год назад +476

    One thing that somewhat annoys me about Japan is how indirect they are. Like many Asian cultures, Japanese etiquette values politeness so much to the point that people don’t tell you things directly…. This means you encounter a lot of passive aggressive behavior in Japan. For people who grew up in the culture this kind of thing is a norm and learning to read between the line is a part of becoming adults . But for foreigners who are not used to that type of culture and language, passive aggressive behavior really puzzled them. Honestly it can really triggered you when you deal with them so often and don’t understand why people just don’t say things directly/clearly. It also one of the reason why japan is such an emotionally repressed country.

    • @kleinerprinz99
      @kleinerprinz99 Год назад +54

      Holding grudges seems to be very common and a motivation for suddenly violent but meticuleously planned outbursts like the assassination of Shinzo Abe or attacking Idols with a hacksaw (althought that might be of sexism and general consumerism and generally bad working conditions and contracts for idols).

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 Год назад +28

      I imagine it is a problem from cultures like Germany and the Nordic countries, where being very open and direct is the norm.

    • @charlesjones7063
      @charlesjones7063 Год назад +17

      Yep....I have had so many similar experiences in SEA...particularly in the Phils...but, I have learned to blow of things that don't matter...my more aggresive Westerner side exhibits itself when things do matter (such as money)...it is actually entertaining to watch a Filipino's reaction when you point out the absurdity of their propositions when make assumptions about your Western ignorance

    • @Dezomm
      @Dezomm Год назад +26

      This is why one of my closest friends I made in Japan was super direct. She will always state her opinion very clearly. It made conversation much easier and more fun, and as a result we got much closer than we probably would have otherwise!

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Год назад +21

      If I didn't grow up dealing with haughty Southerners in the US, people notorious for passive aggressiveness(see "bless your heart") and backhanded compliments, I don't think I would have been able to get my head around that aspect of Japan so easily. It's particularly similar to dealing with certain parts of Tokyo

  • @jenniferdevoe9921
    @jenniferdevoe9921 Год назад +104

    Your willingness to get sprayed by a bidet to illustrate your story shows an amazing work ethic and dedication to your cause! Bravo Chris!!

  • @Japan-in-N
    @Japan-in-N 9 месяцев назад

    Love it I had the same experience with small talk for the whole 12 years I lived in the USA.

  • @coldfire22
    @coldfire22 Год назад

    This was a fun watch. I've lived here for over 20 years. I've never been to a hostess bar. I just never saw the point. Pachinko is something i"ll never understand. And Mos Burger.. I agree, its horrible. So many people told me it was FAR better than McDonald's.. which Im not really a fan of either, but I thought, ok, lets try it. But all I could taste was whatever sauce they put on. The first time I went it was just ketchup. I couldn't taste any meat at all. Freshness is really good though, so its strange that Mos is the go to fast food place. Although, actually most of the people I know go to McDonalds more often anyway so who knows.
    The four season thing.. Oh man.. do they really? For me, most of Japan, doesn't seem to have a real winter. It doesn't get that cold here. Sure in Akita and Hokkaido it does, but Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka... Winter doesn't seem to really even exist. Its a long Autumn. Thats it. So they have Summer and a really long Autumn? Oh.. there is also a rainy season, so three seasons I guess.
    My home town has four real seasons. Three months of warm Spring like weather. Three months of hot and humid weather. Three months of cool weather. And then three months of freezing cold weather. Four REAL seasons.
    As for the sandwich thing.. I mean, that is just on you, lol. I mean you like those egg sando? Yuck. I couldn't eat that crap. The fruit thing, I mean, its like a desert type thing. So I mean, to each his own.

  • @blanktroll2606
    @blanktroll2606 Год назад +64

    The spoon breaking really shows how sturdy the rice is and the reaction from Chris is priceless XD

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh Год назад +47

    Chris, 4 year subscriber here. This is the performance I fell in love with, with the best production quality i've ever seen in your videos. 10/10 deserves it's spot on trending.
    Edit: I just checked and i've been here 6 years. wow.

  • @StellyITA
    @StellyITA Год назад +2

    15:19 I think is the same in many countries, I actually got asked something like that in Romania as well (I actually love Romanian food, and they were totally amazed by that lol)

  • @greenwoodfarms7920
    @greenwoodfarms7920 9 месяцев назад

    Rain in the UK in every season 🤣 love it!

  • @LadyRP
    @LadyRP Год назад +112

    One thing my partner and I agree on (me especially) is the view toward mental health in Japan. The idea that a person is not strong enough because they cannot handle it, and just meant to be treated as a personal struggle that no one else should be involved with. Also the shame that is perceived when the discussion comes up regarding seeking said help for their mental health. Japan can really make important, necessary strides to review this matter and help its citizens that are most vulnerable on this subject.

    • @amh9494
      @amh9494 Год назад +1

      The high suicide rates aren't a surprise in that context.

    • @LadyRP
      @LadyRP Год назад

      @@amh9494 Very true it wouldn't be a surprise. Their feeling of not wanting to be a burden rather than seek help. Definitely a mindset which needs to change.

    • @neonshadow5005
      @neonshadow5005 Год назад +3

      I remember seeing a Japanese psychologist express this same thing. He said people like him, that is people who understand people need help some times to deal with shit, are very rare and that the negative stigma around has led to Japan having serious problems with peoples' mental health.

    • @jenniferstine8567
      @jenniferstine8567 Год назад +1

      I have a friend in Tokyo. One day she wrote to me asking my opinion related to mental health. It was one of the most awkward questions I've been asked. Do I give the American answer or something more Japanese? I no longer have any acquaintances from Japan to ask what I should do. Finally I decided to go with an American answer because it's the honest one. I still am not really sure if it actually helped or if she was being polite.

    • @AccordGG1
      @AccordGG1 Год назад +1

      big reason why the suicide rate in japan is alarming considering no one sees it as mental health but instead it's you being weak. it's sad because the culture there is reserve and shy so even if they can get help they're embarrassed to do so.

  • @Zante_on_google
    @Zante_on_google Год назад +168

    I met my in-laws in 2019, I've been married with their daughter for three years now, and they know I-ve been visiting Japan regularly since the '00s. They still compliment me on my use of chopsticks.

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Год назад +7

      lol

    • @kermit8173
      @kermit8173 Год назад +1

      Honestly I would just snap and tell them that they are acting like a cliche.

    • @CleverGirlAAH
      @CleverGirlAAH Год назад +9

      @@kermit8173 Easy, bud...

    • @kermit8173
      @kermit8173 Год назад

      @@CleverGirlAAH Snap: To speak abruptly or sharply. I'm not dropping the third nuke bud. Also, you aren't my bud, pal.

  • @michaelbrandse7450
    @michaelbrandse7450 11 месяцев назад +2

    As an addon; pachinko parlors are also LOUD. Like, inside it's deafening, but that sound leaks out. Don't ever get an apartment near one, if you don't want to hear go crazy. Personally I would rather live next to a station with trains screeching to a halt every five minutes than next to a pachinko parlor to be honest.
    Also, the go carts are back? I thought COVID-19 killed them off. It's been a while since I last used non-train transportation, so I haven't actually been in Akihabara for a while.
    The microagressions; yeah, can confirm. Lived here for ten years, those questions. never. stop. ever. Back in the university this was a running joke with the other foreign students. Never got told the season thing though in all my years in Tokyo. Perhaps because lately Japanese winter is just an extended autumn? Or perhaps I just got lucky.
    And finally, the TV thing? I couldn't agree more. It's basically 90% talkshow to make it worse. The thing that irks me the most, are the food reactions. Think Shokugeki no Souma, but without the fun, without the advantage of animation being over the top. Instead, just a bunch of adults trying to outdo each other with the HOOOOOO!s and the HIIIIIIII!s when they take a sip of beer while embarrassing themselves.

  • @lovingdemon2932
    @lovingdemon2932 Год назад

    watching this while my finger is throbbing again which seems to be from caffeine.But im in such a good mood i sang along at the end!Looks like a gave my finger the finger😉