logo
ASDF's Blue Impulse set for Osaka Expo performance

ASDF's Blue Impulse set for Osaka Expo performance

Japan Times01-04-2025
The Air Self-Defense Force's Blue Impulse aerobatics team will make a performance flight for the World Exposition in Osaka on its opening day of April 13.
"This is a crucial opportunity to show our performance to people around the world," Lt. Col. Suguru Ejiri, who leads the flying team, said in an interview. "We want to make this flight something in which people can feel the themes of the Expo."
Blue Impulse flew for the 1970 World Expo in Osaka Prefecture as well, during which the team drew "EXPO 70" in the sky.
The team, based in the city of Higashimatsushima, Miyagi Prefecture, will fly above Osaka for the first time in 35 years, since the International Garden and Greenery Exposition in 1990. For the opening ceremony of that event, Blue Impulse drew an enormous flower with contrails.
Ejiri declined to disclose details of the upcoming Osaka Expo performance but said, "We want to make this flight based on the Expo themes of lives, the future and connecting the world."
In deciding its performances, Blue Impulse considers requests from organizers and the themes of events. Last March, Blue Impulse aircraft flew in a line just like a train to commemorate the launch of an extension of the Hokuriku Shinkansen bullet train line.
Capt. Shoya Matsuura, pilot of the third aircraft in the Blue Impulse team, looks forward to flying in his home prefecture of Osaka. He had dreamed of becoming an ASDF pilot while he was still in junior high school. |
Jiji
The same year, Blue Impulse drew a "grand cross" in the sky above the city of Shimabara, Nagasaki Prefecture, which has a UNESCO World Heritage site related to Christianity.
"Our goal is to do a performance that can lead to the success of Expo," Ejiri said. "We want people to look up at the sky so they can have wonderful memories."
Capt. Shoya Matsuura, a 30-year-old pilot of the team's third aircraft, is from the city of Suita, Osaka Prefecture, where the 1970 Osaka Expo took place. The Expo'70 Commemorative Park, which hosts the Tower of the Sun monument, is located along the route of his regular training runs.
He learned about Blue Impulse when he was a junior high school student and became an ASDF pilot in 2018. With stints in Blue Impulse limited to three years, he timed his application to join the team to coincide with this year's expo.
"This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," Matsuura said. "I will make all efforts for the flight (performance) to be memorable."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bon dance at World Expo in Osaka breaks Guinness World Record
Bon dance at World Expo in Osaka breaks Guinness World Record

NHK

timea day ago

  • NHK

Bon dance at World Expo in Osaka breaks Guinness World Record

Dancers set a new Guinness World Record for the largest Bon dance on Saturday at the 2025 World Expo in Osaka. The event was held as part of "Osaka week" and brought together 3,946 people from 62 countries for the record-breaking traditional Japanese dance. Participants dressed in summer kimono known as yukata and ethnic costumes danced to the expo's official theme song. To be certified by Guinness, more than 90 percent of the participants needed to perform a choreographed dance for more than five minutes. All the participants met the criteria by dancing for ten minutes. The new record for the largest Bon dance exceeded the previous one by more than 1,000 people set in Yao City in Osaka Prefecture in 2017. The number of participants' nationalities also broke a Guinness World Record. A local participant said it was great that so many people came together for the performance, and she was almost moved to tears. Another participant from Okayama Prefecture said he was able to dance well by following the other dancers.

Latvian staffer at Osaka expo goes viral with love of Japan
Latvian staffer at Osaka expo goes viral with love of Japan

Japan Today

time2 days ago

  • Japan Today

Latvian staffer at Osaka expo goes viral with love of Japan

A Latvian staff member at the World Exposition in Osaka has drawn over half a million social media followers after posting about his experience of engaging with Japanese language and culture as a foreigner. Artur Galata, 31, who has been posting on X and Instagram, said he was "very happy to work in my favorite country" after having visited 11 times since April 2017, traveling to more than 40 of the 47 prefectures. Galata has been fascinated by Japanese anime since watching it aired in the Latvian language when he was an elementary school student. He then deepened his knowledge of Japanese culture and customs by reading books related to the country given him by his family. "The most attractive part is the kindness of Japanese people," Galata said, adding he has been particularly impressed by the well-maintained roads, packaging for onigiri rice balls sold at convenience stores, and how he was served at restaurants. His popular social media posts include humorous descriptions of how certain Japanese words using the same kanji characters are read differently and expressing his amusement about soy beans transforming into different kinds of food such as miso, soy sauce and tofu. In the expo, Galata has been working at the Baltic Pavilion jointly presented by Latvia and Lithuania, using four languages to welcome guests. He enjoys communicating with his followers and going to karaoke with other expo staff. During his planned eight-month stay, which began in April, Galata plans to visit the remaining prefectures he has yet to travel to, he said. © KYODO

Latvian staffer at Osaka expo goes viral with love of Japan
Latvian staffer at Osaka expo goes viral with love of Japan

The Mainichi

time2 days ago

  • The Mainichi

Latvian staffer at Osaka expo goes viral with love of Japan

OSAKA (Kyodo) -- A Latvian staff member at the World Exposition in Osaka has drawn over half a million social media followers after posting about his experience of engaging with Japanese language and culture as a foreigner. Artur Galata, 31, who has been posting on X and Instagram, said he was "very happy to work in my favorite country" after having visited 11 times since April 2017, traveling to more than 40 of the 47 prefectures. Galata has been fascinated by Japanese anime since watching it aired in the Latvian language when he was an elementary school student. He then deepened his knowledge of Japanese culture and customs by reading books related to the country given him by his family. "The most attractive part is the kindness of Japanese people," Galata said, adding he has been particularly impressed by the well-maintained roads, packaging for onigiri rice balls sold at convenience stores, and how he was served at restaurants. His popular social media posts include humorous descriptions of how certain Japanese words using the same kanji characters are read differently and expressing his amusement about soy beans transforming into different kinds of food such as miso, soy sauce and tofu. In the expo, Galata has been working at the Baltic Pavilion jointly presented by Latvia and Lithuania, using four languages to welcome guests. He enjoys communicating with his followers and going to karaoke with other expo staff. During his planned eight-month stay, which began in April, Galata plans to visit the remaining prefectures he has yet to travel to, he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store