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Philip Brasor
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Sep 18, 2005
Trying to keep the train-groping perverts out of touch
Earlier this year when some Japanese train lines inaugurated women-only cars the Western media picked the story up as yet another example of Weird Japan, a place, they implied, where sexual deviancy was so culturally grounded that the only thing railway companies could do to protect female passengers...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Sep 11, 2005
The Evens
Have you hugged your local independent record store lately? It might need it, what with all those kids downloading songs and pumping them into their iPods. Whatever happened to long, lazy afternoons picking through used record stacks and cutout bins, hoping to find that deleted 13th Floor Elevator comp...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Sep 11, 2005
Desperate drones are content to be 'conned' into buying a condo
As long as I've lived in Tokyo I've received phone calls from condominium salespeople. In the past, these solicitations seemed accidental, as if the salespeople had dialed my number at random. But in the last five years the calls have been more deliberate. The salespeople know where I live -- not just...
CULTURE / Music
Sep 4, 2005
Hot Hot Heat
Since last we saw Hot Hot Heat at Summer Sonic in 2003, the Victoria, British Columbia, band lost their invaluable guitarist Dante Decaro and released a major label album, "Elevator" (Sire-London/Rhino), that has incurred the unallayed derision of the indie-rock cognoscenti. For sure, "Elevator" doesn't...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Sep 4, 2005
The aged better off heading for the hills on their limited pensions
The main opposition parties claim that Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's attempt to make the upcoming Lower House election a referendum on postal reform is simply a scheme to deflect public attention away from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's fiscal failures under his leadership. Consequently,...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Aug 28, 2005
Postal reform gets stamp of approval from celeb politicians
Opponents of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's postal reform plans have a number of complaints, but the point they tend to harp on about, presumably because it's the only one the average citizen can appreciate, is the downsizing of post offices in far-flung regions.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Aug 28, 2005
The Double: "Loose in the Air"
Positioned somewhere between the noise rock of Black Dice and the more accessible psychedelia of Animal Logic, fellow Brooklynites The Double use distortion, analog effects and explosions of pure feeling to mess around with classic pop.
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Aug 21, 2005
'Pacifist' Japan always ready to back a bit of conflict
"I don't care to belong to any club that will accept me as a member." -- Groucho Marx
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Aug 21, 2005
Zuco 103: "Whaa!"
Brazilian singer Lilian Vieira met drummer Stafan Kruger and keyboardist Stefan Schmid at the Rotterdam Conservatory of Music in 1989. After that, they worked together in a fusion outfit, and while Vieira's Tropicalismo pedigree livened up the group's sound, fusion is fusion.
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Aug 14, 2005
He hops onto a shuttle, jumps off to a media shuffle
Last Tuesday's landing of the Space Shuttle Discovery in the deserts of California capped a tense two weeks in which the safety of the vehicle and the seven astronauts it contained was never 100 percent assured. The loss of foam insulation during liftoff was eerily reminiscent of the last shuttle mission...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Aug 7, 2005
No turning back the clock when the walls come tumbling down
Because earthquakes are unpredictable, people who live with them are fatalistic: There's nothing you can do except hope you're in a place that doesn't fall down on top of you. This attitude only covers naked survival, which to most people means everything, but experts predict that in a worst case scenario...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Jul 31, 2005
Dawn of New Wave
If you're reading this on Sunday then most likely you're not at the Fuji Rock Festival this weekend. But if you're kicking yourself for not having made the trip to Naeba, you still have a chance to enjoy at least a fraction of the Fuji fun, because six bands who are playing at the festival will be doing...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Jul 24, 2005
It's the black comedy of Japan: 'Don't mention the war . . .'
A point that tends to be overlooked in the debate over textbooks that whitewash Japan's actions during World War II is that Japanese junior high school history classes rarely make it past the Meiji Restoration. Whether or not "comfort women" or the Rape of Nanking is mentioned in textbooks becomes an...
CULTURE / Music
Jul 24, 2005
Adassa: "Kamasutra"
As with any musical genre that becomes popular overnight, reggaeton, the Spanish-language hip-hop form that has taken Latin America by storm, is much bigger than any of its individual stars, who are often difficult to distinguish amid the synthesized beats and rapid-fire, dancehall-style rapping.
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Jul 17, 2005
How gei can one get? 'Pretend gay' is as far as it gets
"Talent," or tarento, is the cushiest job in Japan -- maybe in the whole world. Though you are expected to have some kind of skill (gei), once you achieve a level of regularity as a TV variety show guest, the work is self-perpetuating, though it's by no means guaranteed forever. And rarely do successful...
CULTURE / Music
Jul 17, 2005
Missy Elliott: "The Cookbook"
The divine Miss E's sixth album of spicy hip-hop and juicy R&B is even more old school than her last joint, the criminally underrated "This Is Not a Test!" Dismissing her sous chef Timbaland after two excellent opening cuts, she takes sole charge of the kitchen and brings in the original irresponsible...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Jul 10, 2005
Author asks Japanese courts, 'Where is your mind?'
Sensational crimes are defined by the media since sensations fuel the media engine. Murder has the greatest potential for sensationalism, but some murders attract more attention than others. Through a certain confluence of motive, money, and methodology some hog headlines for weeks while others never...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Music
Jul 10, 2005
Chicago's fertile ground
Traditionally, American musicians who want to reach the masses gravitate to Los Angeles or New York, where the big record labels and artist-management companies are headquartered. However, pop music tends to have a regional pedigree, and with the rise of truly independent labels in the 1980s musicians...
CULTURE / Music
Jul 10, 2005
Afrika Bambaataa
If any one person could be said to have invented hip-hop it's the man born Kevin Donovan in the Bronx in 1960 who, during the mid-'70s, organized block parties where he acted as DJ and his friends acted as emcees, rapping to the beats he selected so carefully. The wider world didn't turn to Donovan,...
JAPAN / Media / MEDIA MIX
Jul 3, 2005
This is Japan and yes, it's easy to net a pet to enjoy a dog-day life
Ten years ago I was in San Francisco and dropped by the local SPCA's pet-adoption facility in the Mission District to make a donation. When I was living in the city years before, I had adopted a cat there that was still living with me, and I wanted to express my appreciation.

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Construction takes place on the Takanawa Gateway Convention Center in Tokyo, slated to open in 2025.
A boom for business tourism in Japan?