Idk, my first thought was, if it’s not able to be advertised as healthy because it’s mostly processed liquid instead of real juice, why are they making it more appealing for kids by adding cartoons? Juice whether it’s real or not isn’t healthy anyways. Am I wrong?
@@drone2936 that sounds like it could be a problem but then again Japan doesn't have the obesity problem large part of the West does so clearly at least for them and their culture that's not an issue, for reasons I can only guess.
Also wish we had the "Food on the package must be the exact same sauce as the actual product" regulation Seems like Japan is constantly trying to get better while we are stuck with greedy companies who want to cut corners and hide their shortcuts
@@rickeykoga2312 the Japanese are concerned with health and aging. I'd almost say neoliberalism is to blame. Seeings one thing that's defined is deregulation.
@@Monkchelle_Kongbama We live in a world where "100% Fruit Juice" can mean "The fruit juice part is 100% Fruit Juice, but that only makes up 10% of what you're drinking"
@@Monkchelle_Kongbamawhy not just be 100% transparent about what is in your product? When can we hold companies at a higher standard for what they sell us to put in our bodies
You have to be careful in the US when it comes to fruit juices because even if it says it has 100% juice, half the time it’s full of filler juice, such as grape juice and then there’s a smaller portion of the actual juice you are buying it for, but juices with little flavor make it go further. Lots of so-called juices are full of water and grape juice with a little bit of fruit concentrate.
Yeah, I hear apple juice is also used for that purpose for things like Mango juice or other more exotic fruit juices. 100% juice could be any kinda juice
Simply Orange brand, boils the real orange juice to pasteurize it for longer shelf life in stores, then they add in perfume powder to make it smell and have a fresh flavor so when it gets cold again you can't tell different from the actual squeezed orange juice vs pasteurized orange juice from Simply. Its very deceptive trick they are using now.
As well, 100% fruit juice is not usually 100% fruit juice. It usually is from concentrate, contains added sugar, or has added flavours (Canadian here 👋). I have strange dietary restrictions and finding fruit juice, even organic, *without* any of these is extremely difficult. Real fruit juice tastes totally different. It tastes really concentrated and honestly, I don't find I like it as much! :)
For those wondering about this, you may read this journal entitled "Plato’s Theory of Forms: An Overview with Arguments Contrary and Supporting". Please, let us kindly indulge ourselves in reading available literature (there are tons, really).
it’s our rotten culture. everyone wants to be a tyrant here and feel they’re the most important person to exist. so they deserve to abuse their power and those beneath them bc anyone with money is inherently better than you. i’m first or i’m last mentality. “rugged individualism” is killing us all.
@@ninnywaggon3470It's not 'corrupt'. The algorithm automatically deletes messages that have certain offensive words in them. You're obviously using offensive terms and that is why your message isn't posted.
That's actually so helpful for when I shop at a nearby Asian market with a good amount of Japanese products. I would love to know if you are aware of any other visual cues for other types of products too.
That regulation is actually genius, more countries should implement things like this And as someone in marketing classes I feel it’d be more fun designing the products too lol
Didn't that bottle in the video says 20%? Even then is that juice really juice or from concentrate like sneaky corporations do in the US and get away with if?
I worked at a juice manufacturing company, and I've learned that regardless of whether a product is labeled as 100% juice, it’s still a processed food. The thermal processing used in all juice products alters the properties and nutritional content of the fruit. For instance, natural vitamin C is often lost during this process, which is why synthetic vitamin C is added to boost the nutritional profile.
I agree. My husband and I don't buy commercial fruit juices anymore bc they are high in fructose and barely have nutritional value. I make our own juices fr my edible organic trees. I wish everyone would be motivated and have the opportunity to plant fruit trees, too!
@@Ckawauchi35 I wish I could have my own fruit trees! I can’t at my current living situation, but I’m very inspired by my grandparents and their amazing lemon and orange trees 💕
If you work at juice manufacture company, you SHOULD know exactly why they did that 🙄. Like bro, they are heated for safety and shelf life reason. What are you wishing from them ? Not Pasteurize their juice and presumably letting microbe in the juice at shelf temperature ? Yeah NO.
Such a law that exists in Japan could NEVER exist in the USA, due to the lobby of companies. American consumers have very little influence on their Representatives & Senators (and Presidents).
The lobbyist wouldn’t have such big influence if it wasn’t for Americans (generally republican voters) already believing that government shouldn’t have much influence like this regulation. Sad fact
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson the problem is all the dark money in and around our “democracy”. we have what’s called manufactured consent. these corporate lobbyists advocate for and pay off politicians so public services are so poorly funded and mismanaged so that the private sector looks like a better option by default, then people say “well the government wouldn’t manage it any better”. is sabotaging the competition in the spirit of a “freemarket” which you claim to value?
Wow!! Japan is always so creative and kind to it's citizens even when it comes to every small minimal details🥺 Wish all the other countries were like this!!
In the UK only drinks with pure non concentrated and unsweetened fruit can be called fruit juice. Anything with added sugar, concentrates or any other flavourings is called a juice drink.
@@stardust1782plus the art is the same too, you won't see any real fruit on a drink which is "from concentrate" plus, it has to say "from concentrate" or "never from concentrate" clearly on the front (sometimes the side)
It's probably for kids. But great for anyone who can't easily read Japanese or cant be bothered to read the label every time. Its really smart, like some countries have wording regulations, but those can be kinda vague or misleading, a picture is very easy to understand.
I love this kind of content from you coz I learn something amazing. This is where I watched the snacks cover are the same size too. Japan is really amazing
Im not for heavy regulations on US prodcuts, but transparency regulations like this should be mandatory. It should be my right to know when I'm getting ripped off.
@@here-i-am2316 overweight people being shamed is a natural reaction. Even if nothing unkind was said towards them, they would still feel "shamed" because they are unhealthy and ashamed of themselves already.
yup, and with its horrible work culture, the "guilty until proven innocent" justice system no wonder a lot of japanese trying to get out of their planet
In Brazil we have something similar but with juices sweetened with apples. If any type of juice (no mather the concentration of pure juice) contains apple juice, they have to display it in the package. Some products have them very hidden and it's kinda funny to find it.
@@memory_treez apples are very cheap to grow compared to many other fruits and the flavor blends well. Companies will use the juice or puree as a filler to buff out their products. Look at a LOT of juices on the market. They'll have apple juice/concentrate as the 3rd, 2nd, and sometimes even 1ST(!) ingredient and not have a single other indicator that apples are in it. I've seen an Orange/pineapple/mango 100% juice have apple juice higher up on the ingredient list than any of the fruits shown on the label. 100% juice doesn't always mean only the fruits pictured.
The video is literally lying. なっちゃん at the end, where she says less than 5% juice, has 25% juice, it literally says it on the front, you can see it in the video if you look closely.
In my country, if the word "juice" is used, it must be 100% made from fruit. If not, it has to be called (rebranded) fruit drink or fruit saft. We don't have a lot of of imported "juices" - changing/covering the printed carton is usually too expensive for shops/importers... Typically, a fruit drink costs 20%-40% of what real juices cost
It's the same case in the States. People just don't educate themselves enough to know the difference. Most foodstuffs here are adulterated anyway unless one has enough budget for fresh and organic, and has to be aware of what we are buying.
Exactly, here in Germany juice (Saft) is 100 % fruit content. Often fruit concentrate. Pure fruit juice (Direktsaft) is 100 % fresh pressed juice, concentrated juice can not be labled thus way. Less then 100 % and you have nectar (Nektar) or fruity drinks, never juice.
Same in the US…if it contains at least 10% fruit juice it has to be called a juice cocktail. It’s only allowed to be called juice if it’s 100% juice. And if it has other fruit juices added, like apple juice then it has to be called a fruit juice cocktail. Just like chocolate in the US. It cannot be called chocolate if it isn’t 100% pure chocolate. It has to be called chocolate flavored candy or chocolate flavored confections. Although I don’t know why they bother, most of the typical American chocolate is disgusting anyway. You have to buy specialty chocolate or from a local chocolatier to get good American chocolate.
@@McTobe LoL well, not all of it. But the most well know and most popular brand is Hershey’s and honestly I don’t like it at all. I was raised on Hershey’s as are all American kids because it’s found in every corner of every town in the entire country. And since most ppl are raised on it they like it….but I had a bit of a privileged home life and was exposed to other chocolates as a child that most American kids aren’t. My family has a candy making history on my father’s side…the Boyer’s were from Bavaria and brought some family recipes with them to Pennsylvania once the French Revolution destroyed the palatinate and drove my family away from the area in religious persecution. Anyway, I’m more prone to liking a thicker, more dense and less waxy chocolate…I like the creamy texture.
@@melissadunton3534 That is a interesting family history you got. Think most candy stores stock imported Hershey's, gotta try it this week. I guess the Swedish counterpart would be Marabou chocolate, but it pretty much is universally loved here 😅 pretty sure it is what every Swede use as the baseline regarding chocolate.
In Singapore all drinks are now labelled A to D based on how healthy or unhealthy they are. After this regulation came out, you saw a lot of drinks disappear, because they were incredibly high in sugar, but this simple change exposed them and suddenly acted as negative branding. Even many bubble tea places started changing their recipes to avoid the ominous D rating.
@kmo20794 Yes, much like the Shinkansen or the Walkman. And others like QR codes, LED lighting, electronic washlets... Also, don’t forget video game consoles like the Playstation or the Switch and those popular games on each platform. Oh, and advanced robotics too and supercomputers and high-efficiency solar panels.
@@미아모레사나 yeah, but there is almost no paying attention, cause in normal grocery stores you maybe have an orange press machine, or smth. otherwise you might be lucky to even find fresh juice at all in your store^^
@@coooolibri Well, yeah, that depends on the place and on the person. Even local and not-so-fancy grocery stores sometimes carry those ストレート juices. If it’s available and you’re looking for it, you’ll find it.
Dole Orange 100% Juice Contains orange juice from concentrate, filtered water, apple juice from concentrate, citric acid, natural flavor, ascorbic acid, vitamin C, sodium benzoate, and potassium sorbate
Very intuitive and protects all customers, even those who cant read
Idk, my first thought was, if it’s not able to be advertised as healthy because it’s mostly processed liquid instead of real juice, why are they making it more appealing for kids by adding cartoons? Juice whether it’s real or not isn’t healthy anyways.
Am I wrong?
@drone2936 fair point, but that can be mitigated by parenting. The grocery buyer (usually adult) benefits from this tool if they can't read.
@@drone2936 How is juice that's 100% just from real fruit not healthy?
@@drone2936 that sounds like it could be a problem but then again Japan doesn't have the obesity problem large part of the West does so clearly at least for them and their culture that's not an issue, for reasons I can only guess.
@@Humdinger69 it’s still sugar, with hardly any fiber
I wish the US had this regulation
too corrupt
it’s always been rotten from the inside out. always been for old white landowning men.
Yep. Shame lobbyist of the sugar and beverage won't allow it.
Also wish we had the "Food on the package must be the exact same sauce as the actual product" regulation
Seems like Japan is constantly trying to get better while we are stuck with greedy companies who want to cut corners and hide their shortcuts
@@rickeykoga2312 the Japanese are concerned with health and aging. I'd almost say neoliberalism is to blame. Seeings one thing that's defined is deregulation.
@@86LukeM Liberalism hate group and regulations, the issue in the US are lobbies, that is a group driven regulation.
In Japan the punishment for not using real fruit juice is that you have to design a cute cartoony fruit mascot
I'd rather die
@@masaomorinaga6412 just what attracts children 🤔
@Leonskennedy777 why would u say such a thing
and that works as a magnet for kids
It’s not a punishment, but I guess you’re funny???
This is so useful. It should be implemented everywhere
You have got to admire the Japanese honesty.
if this were about honesty they wouldn't need a law about it
@@dingusuhum eloquent, precise .. nice!
Smart way of keeping the information available to the consumer
just
read
what's
in
it
what is with all these people in the comments, this isn't a conspiracy, it's food
@@Monkchelle_Kongbama ?? It's convenient, that's all I was saying lol
@@Monkchelle_Kongbama We live in a world where "100% Fruit Juice" can mean "The fruit juice part is 100% Fruit Juice, but that only makes up 10% of what you're drinking"
@@Reelix if you are capable of knowing that, then you are capable of researching what's in the bottle
@@Monkchelle_Kongbamawhy not just be 100% transparent about what is in your product? When can we hold companies at a higher standard for what they sell us to put in our bodies
Judge a book by its cover ❌
Judge juice by its cover✔️
Literally 😂
😂😂
Juice a book by its cover ✅✅✅
What if the cover, has a picture of a guy, with a sword, covered in blood, running right towards you?
@immortalsoul7172 cover a juice by it's judge
You have to be careful in the US when it comes to fruit juices because even if it says it has 100% juice, half the time it’s full of filler juice, such as grape juice and then there’s a smaller portion of the actual juice you are buying it for, but juices with little flavor make it go further. Lots of so-called juices are full of water and grape juice with a little bit of fruit concentrate.
Yeah, I hear apple juice is also used for that purpose for things like Mango juice or other more exotic fruit juices. 100% juice could be any kinda juice
Simply Orange brand, boils the real orange juice to pasteurize it for longer shelf life in stores, then they add in perfume powder to make it smell and have a fresh flavor so when it gets cold again you can't tell different from the actual squeezed orange juice vs pasteurized orange juice from Simply. Its very deceptive trick they are using now.
@@sparda9060I think I may actually use my juicer exclusively after reading this....
the only thing getting juiced is your wallet
As well, 100% fruit juice is not usually 100% fruit juice. It usually is from concentrate, contains added sugar, or has added flavours (Canadian here 👋). I have strange dietary restrictions and finding fruit juice, even organic, *without* any of these is extremely difficult.
Real fruit juice tastes totally different. It tastes really concentrated and honestly, I don't find I like it as much! :)
So innovative ❤ sometimes it's through the small things that you can tell that they care!
I’m Japanese
We are serious about foods
日本人は食べ物には本気出す
We also have this in Argentina
Video Idea:
HOW TO JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER
it's like Plato's Theory of Forms but applied in honest and informed advertising
And yet a trace of the true self exists in the false self
i have a master degree in philosophy and have no idea what you're talking about
@@juliensorel2517me too bro, no clue why he got that many likes… 😂
For those wondering about this, you may read this journal entitled "Plato’s Theory of Forms: An Overview with Arguments Contrary and Supporting".
Please, let us kindly indulge ourselves in reading available literature (there are tons, really).
That's actually pretty insightful
If only our government worked to protect us and not fleece us. Props.
it’s our rotten culture. everyone wants to be a tyrant here and feel they’re the most important person to exist. so they deserve to abuse their power and those beneath them bc anyone with money is inherently better than you. i’m first or i’m last mentality. “rugged individualism” is killing us all.
this app is so corrupt that i can’t even post a comment agreeing with you without it getting deleted over and over! wild
Which government? The Uk govt? The Chinese govt? The Bolivian govt?
I assume you mean US government and it doesn't work to fleece you, it works to allow big US corporations, landlords and the wealthy to fleece you.
@@ninnywaggon3470It's not 'corrupt'. The algorithm automatically deletes messages that have certain offensive words in them.
You're obviously using offensive terms and that is why your message isn't posted.
That's actually so helpful for when I shop at a nearby Asian market with a good amount of Japanese products. I would love to know if you are aware of any other visual cues for other types of products too.
That regulation is actually genius, more countries should implement things like this
And as someone in marketing classes I feel it’d be more fun designing the products too lol
I love this logic! Such a simple but great idea
Tropicana sells pure juice in japan
In india they sells sugar mixed water as Juice..
Not really..
@@joahnye4778 nah they did
Yeah. Even if it says there is no added sugar, there is so much sugar in the drink that I can barely taste it.
Didn't that bottle in the video says 20%? Even then is that juice really juice or from concentrate like sneaky corporations do in the US and get away with if?
@@vitasoy1437 the sneaky one
I worked at a juice manufacturing company, and I've learned that regardless of whether a product is labeled as 100% juice, it’s still a processed food. The thermal processing used in all juice products alters the properties and nutritional content of the fruit. For instance, natural vitamin C is often lost during this process, which is why synthetic vitamin C is added to boost the nutritional profile.
Exactly, and they add apple/grapes glucose to enhance sweetness and keep a certain level of sweetness across batches
I agree. My husband and I don't buy commercial fruit juices anymore bc they are high in fructose and barely have nutritional value. I make our own juices fr my edible organic trees. I wish everyone would be motivated and have the opportunity to plant fruit trees, too!
@@Ckawauchi35 I wish I could have my own fruit trees! I can’t at my current living situation, but I’m very inspired by my grandparents and their amazing lemon and orange trees 💕
If you work at juice manufacture company, you SHOULD know exactly why they did that 🙄. Like bro, they are heated for safety and shelf life reason. What are you wishing from them ? Not Pasteurize their juice and presumably letting microbe in the juice at shelf temperature ? Yeah NO.
Unprocessed orange juice is just straight up eating an orange. Squeezing and grinding a fresh orange is still processing it.
Such a law that exists in Japan could NEVER exist in the USA, due to the lobby of companies. American consumers have very little influence on their Representatives & Senators (and Presidents).
but but but we democracy 🥺
@@ninnywaggon3470that is a byproduct of democracy. Are you 9?
The lobbyist wouldn’t have such big influence if it wasn’t for Americans (generally republican voters) already believing that government shouldn’t have much influence like this regulation. Sad fact
@@Homer-OJ-Simpson the problem is all the dark money in and around our “democracy”. we have what’s called manufactured consent. these corporate lobbyists advocate for and pay off politicians so public services are so poorly funded and mismanaged so that the private sector looks like a better option by default, then people say “well the government wouldn’t manage it any better”. is sabotaging the competition in the spirit of a “freemarket” which you claim to value?
Its called Corporatocracy!
OMG I’m in a Japanese supermarket right now and this is so helpful 😭🙌🏼
Taking your advice 😘
Wow!! Japan is always so creative and kind to it's citizens even when it comes to every small minimal details🥺 Wish all the other countries were like this!!
Not the best country for women I must say
Let's start with afganistan first 😅@Patricia-cn7ox
@Patricia-cn7ox let's start with afganistan first 😅
"kind" brother 😂
Can't say the same for the working culture tho can you
That's cool and easy to remember as well ❤️
2010:we are going to have flying cars.
2024:we have oranges with faces on it
Japan is so real woth their showcasing. Even when they show an snack item on the box, the image is exactly the same size as the snack inside! Love it
This is so interesting and impressive! I wish more countries adopted this rule!
In the UK only drinks with pure non concentrated and unsweetened fruit can be called fruit juice. Anything with added sugar, concentrates or any other flavourings is called a juice drink.
@@stardust1782plus the art is the same too, you won't see any real fruit on a drink which is "from concentrate"
plus, it has to say "from concentrate" or "never from concentrate" clearly on the front (sometimes the side)
just nooo... regulate the product names - not the packaging...
@@freespam9236Why? Visual communication needs to be consumer friendly.
The whole EU does... Maybe not pictures, but enough info on the bottles to know...
makes it super easy for consumers to know even if they can't read japanese
Now this is actually helpful without gatekeeping or paywalling, and makes me a subscriber
So you live in Japan?
Ooo I like this! We should adopt this elsewhere a very intuitive way to show what % whole fruit juice
Only a picture of a ninja sliced in half proves he was a real ninja
I lived in Japan for a decade and didn't know this. Thanks!
It's probably for kids. But great for anyone who can't easily read Japanese or cant be bothered to read the label every time.
Its really smart, like some countries have wording regulations, but those can be kinda vague or misleading, a picture is very easy to understand.
"To get your money *WORTH*....
5 out 5 stars, no drama..."
👏👏
That is actually amazing. It's like if every product had a description of the product front and centre instead of in small letters on the back
I love this kind of content from you coz I learn something amazing. This is where I watched the snacks cover are the same size too. Japan is really amazing
this is so crazy and cool at the same time
Im not for heavy regulations on US prodcuts, but transparency regulations like this should be mandatory. It should be my right to know when I'm getting ripped off.
Japan is like another planet. ❤
It sad you don’t see many babies there. They also shame you if you’re overweight and have a beard
@@here-i-am2316 Overweight yes, but a bread is generally fine if kept neat.
@@here-i-am2316 overweight people being shamed is a natural reaction. Even if nothing unkind was said towards them, they would still feel "shamed" because they are unhealthy and ashamed of themselves already.
@@johnjungkook2721 it’s the Japanese men who stare and they mumble words.
yup, and with its horrible work culture, the "guilty until proven innocent" justice system no wonder a lot of japanese trying to get out of their planet
Judge the book by it's cover 🙅🏻♀️❌
Judge the juice by it's cover 🧏🏻♀️✅✔️
That’s the coolest thing I’ve ever heard of in terms of food regulations 😭
That's good 👍
It should be introduced in any country!
Love your videos they’re very informative about Japan! Hopefully one day I can visit the place.
In Brazil we have something similar but with juices sweetened with apples. If any type of juice (no mather the concentration of pure juice) contains apple juice, they have to display it in the package. Some products have them very hidden and it's kinda funny to find it.
Thats interesting. Why specifically apple juice tho?
@@memory_treez apples are very cheap to grow compared to many other fruits and the flavor blends well. Companies will use the juice or puree as a filler to buff out their products. Look at a LOT of juices on the market. They'll have apple juice/concentrate as the 3rd, 2nd, and sometimes even 1ST(!) ingredient and not have a single other indicator that apples are in it. I've seen an Orange/pineapple/mango 100% juice have apple juice higher up on the ingredient list than any of the fruits shown on the label. 100% juice doesn't always mean only the fruits pictured.
@@MistHarbinger oh okay thank you
@@MistHarbinger also the jams, many have apples, strawberry jam for instance need to look the label to see if is only strawberry.
I love Japanese food regulations
Me buying the animated one cause it tastes better.
Hacks that mainland customers do, opening packages and tasting them, then putting it back on the shelf.
which mainland
@@em1l437 Mainland generally means China.
this is the 1st helpful hint for japan i have seen.
Or just read text on the package
This regulation should be used globally. Very user friendly.👍
as a marketer, Japan never ceases to amaze me
I like that way. Makes it easier for the consumers.👏🏾
No WAY that is amazing!
Even as a Japanese I really did never know that fact!!!!! So useful. I’m gonna tell my friends about it thanks
I saw this on Japan TV almost 15 years ago
The video is literally lying. なっちゃん at the end, where she says less than 5% juice, has 25% juice, it literally says it on the front, you can see it in the video if you look closely.
In my country, if the word "juice" is used, it must be 100% made from fruit. If not, it has to be called (rebranded) fruit drink or fruit saft.
We don't have a lot of of imported "juices" - changing/covering the printed carton is usually too expensive for shops/importers...
Typically, a fruit drink costs 20%-40% of what real juices cost
It's the same case in the States. People just don't educate themselves enough to know the difference. Most foodstuffs here are adulterated anyway unless one has enough budget for fresh and organic, and has to be aware of what we are buying.
Actually a very smart regulation thats very easy to understand and very easily enforcable if need be.
That’s REALLY funny, while also being useful!
Pretty convoluted. In Sweden (and probably more European countries) it's not allowed to be called juice unless it's 100% fruit or vegetables in it.
Exactly, here in Germany juice (Saft) is 100 % fruit content. Often fruit concentrate.
Pure fruit juice (Direktsaft) is 100 % fresh pressed juice, concentrated juice can not be labled thus way.
Less then 100 % and you have nectar (Nektar) or fruity drinks, never juice.
Same in the US…if it contains at least 10% fruit juice it has to be called a juice cocktail. It’s only allowed to be called juice if it’s 100% juice. And if it has other fruit juices added, like apple juice then it has to be called a fruit juice cocktail.
Just like chocolate in the US. It cannot be called chocolate if it isn’t 100% pure chocolate. It has to be called chocolate flavored candy or chocolate flavored confections.
Although I don’t know why they bother, most of the typical American chocolate is disgusting anyway. You have to buy specialty chocolate or from a local chocolatier to get good American chocolate.
@@melissadunton3534 can't wait to try American chocolate, can't be that bad can it,? 😅
@@McTobe LoL well, not all of it. But the most well know and most popular brand is Hershey’s and honestly I don’t like it at all. I was raised on Hershey’s as are all American kids because it’s found in every corner of every town in the entire country. And since most ppl are raised on it they like it….but I had a bit of a privileged home life and was exposed to other chocolates as a child that most American kids aren’t. My family has a candy making history on my father’s side…the Boyer’s were from Bavaria and brought some family recipes with them to Pennsylvania once the French Revolution destroyed the palatinate and drove my family away from the area in religious persecution. Anyway, I’m more prone to liking a thicker, more dense and less waxy chocolate…I like the creamy texture.
@@melissadunton3534 That is a interesting family history you got. Think most candy stores stock imported Hershey's, gotta try it this week. I guess the Swedish counterpart would be Marabou chocolate, but it pretty much is universally loved here 😅 pretty sure it is what every Swede use as the baseline regarding chocolate.
It's shameful how little US companies care about their consumers' well-being & how little they're required to care by law.
they are actively poisoning us. we americans love setting a standard and then scraping by on the bare minimum! i hate this country.
youtube didn’t like my comment about how our rotten american culture allows for corporations to actively poison us, so they deleted it
Capitalism baby, it's all about profit over people and planet!
In Singapore all drinks are now labelled A to D based on how healthy or unhealthy they are.
After this regulation came out, you saw a lot of drinks disappear, because they were incredibly high in sugar, but this simple change exposed them and suddenly acted as negative branding. Even many bubble tea places started changing their recipes to avoid the ominous D rating.
I LOVE THE ANIMATION JUICE I LOVE THE APPLE ONE❤
(I Went To Japan to see my grandparents 😊)
I read the first sentence as "Avoid getting your jeans ripped off in Japan "😭😭
Japan living in the year 2050. It's a country that believes in attention to detail...
Fax machines are so futuristic!!!!!
@kmo20794 Yes, much like the Shinkansen or the Walkman. And others like QR codes, LED lighting, electronic washlets... Also, don’t forget video game consoles like the Playstation or the Switch and those popular games on each platform. Oh, and advanced robotics too and supercomputers and high-efficiency solar panels.
I think we have the same regulations in EU. It's written in the product description.
Holy glaze legend
@@미아모레사나actual Japan glaze machine
Every country should have such regulation
Beauty
I'm going one day, I love how on point they are.
I'm not sure if I will ever visit Japan but this is super useful information for those that do
even that stuff that says 100% in 99% of the cases its still from concentrate, and not freshly pressed.
True. That’s why it’s good to pay attention to whether is 濃縮還元 (from concentrate) or ストレート (freshly pressed). You can usually tell from the price too.
@@미아모레사나 yeah, but there is almost no paying attention, cause in normal grocery stores you maybe have an orange press machine, or smth. otherwise you might be lucky to even find fresh juice at all in your store^^
@@coooolibri Well, yeah, that depends on the place and on the person. Even local and not-so-fancy grocery stores sometimes carry those ストレート juices. If it’s available and you’re looking for it, you’ll find it.
Pretty
I love that because even kids can learn this from their parents to make their own healthy juice choice
Finally I can judge something for its cover
I have to comment every single time I see a beautiful woman with no/MINIMAL makeup. Kudos to you and keep it up
imagine being honest to customers
that's smart - the US needs this!
Don't judge a book by its cover
Judge a juice by its cover 😊
These regulations are really useful considering 99% of consumers in Japan don't know them.
All countries should use this method
this is why patopato is my favorite!
This is one of the few novels of this type that has a good pace and separation of conflict arcs
“always judge a juice by its cover. BUT NEVER A BOOK.”
great idea for customer transparency
我々には当たり前過ぎて、なんとも思わないけど、他の国の人にとってはすごいことなんだね。ありがとう。
thanks for the trick, surely I will use it when I go there in 20 years
They put "animations" on their products? That's some impressive technology.
Need this all over the world. brilliant.
That is so helpful!!! Thanks for the tip, although I probs will never have enough money to go to Japan lol
She proved them all wrong who said
"Don't judge a book by its cover "😂😂
You're so dang adorable keep living your best life
great im seeing this after leaving japan😭😭
They're smart and it's nice to know that there're packaging images regulation..
We need this around the world.
Moral of the video: Don't judge a book by it's cover but judge a juice by it's cover
Oh boy, the reverse psychology is making me overthink way too many things
what a perfect life, honest and respect everywhere
Thats actually really clever they made that regulation
Need this in the USA!
Such a simple but clever system, you don't have to be able to read to know what you're getting.
First time i've ever heard of this. Thank you!
"Don't judge the juice by it's cover "
Literally...
I still loved drinking those orange juices with the faces on it
Must be fun being a Japanese graphic designer.
Same with Red District: What you see on the cover is what you get.
Dole Orange 100% Juice
Contains orange juice from concentrate, filtered water, apple juice from concentrate, citric acid, natural flavor, ascorbic acid, vitamin C, sodium benzoate, and potassium sorbate