logo
Japan's acrobatic ‘Cheer Re-Man's' find joy in cheerleading: ‘it's so inspirational'

Japan's acrobatic ‘Cheer Re-Man's' find joy in cheerleading: ‘it's so inspirational'

It is a cold, wet morning and frigid air is seeping through the open doors of a college gymnasium in Tokyo. But that does not seem to worry Soichiro Kakimoto and 30 other young businessmen as they gear up for their weekend routine: cheerleading.
'Smile when times are tough!' shouts a tall man with an eager smile. The others – all dressed in dark suits and ties – pump their fists and jam to the upbeat music that fills the space.
Their chants echo through the gymnasium.
'Yes you can! You can definitely do it! Go, Japan! Go Japan!'
Members of Cheer Re-Man's perform in Tokyo earlier this year. Photo: Reuters
The young men are all about spreading cheer through their eye-popping acrobatic performances, volunteering their weekends at shopping malls and other venues to entertain crowds.
Calling themselves 'Cheer Re-Man's' – a mash-up of 'cheerleading' and 'salaryman' – the group, formed in 2023, is made up of alumni from the elite Waseda University's male cheerleading squad.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Behind the Shadows movie review: Louis Koo plays detective in Malaysia-set murder thriller
Behind the Shadows movie review: Louis Koo plays detective in Malaysia-set murder thriller

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Behind the Shadows movie review: Louis Koo plays detective in Malaysia-set murder thriller

3/5 stars Louis Koo Tin-lok, the Hong Kong film industry's most prolific star and arguably its most influential investor too, puts his signature blend of deadpan charisma and dramatic intensity to fine use in Behind the Shadows, the first Malaysian production of his company One Cool Film. A character-driven detective thriller that shows a fascination with cheating wives and jilted husbands, the film sees Koo play a hardbitten private investigator who, while running away from his own marriage, must track down a serial killer who seems to bear a grudge against unfaithful women. Life has not gone the way he would have liked for Au Yeung Wai-yip (Koo), a Hong Kong detective who believes he threw away a successful career when he moved to Malaysia to marry Kuan Weng-sam (Chrissie Chau Sau-na), a Malaysian-Chinese woman he met years earlier in Hong Kong. Play Now resigned to handling unremarkable cases that often involve adultery, Au Yeung is nonetheless shocked when a travel agency boss shows up at his office one day and commissions him to look into the personal life of Kuan, who the client says is his girlfriend of three months. This new development in his ongoing midlife crisis distracts Au Yeung from a missing-person case at the worst possible moment. The consequences prove to be dire when the woman he has been tailing becomes the latest casualty in a series of grisly murders that are plaguing a town.

Labubu figurines set records at auction as Hong Kong-designed soft toys' popularity grows
Labubu figurines set records at auction as Hong Kong-designed soft toys' popularity grows

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Labubu figurines set records at auction as Hong Kong-designed soft toys' popularity grows

A Labubu figurine sold for over a million yuan (US$139,100) at an auction in Beijing this week, as demand for rare and limited editions of the soft toy rises. Created by Hong Kong-born Lung Ka-sing and produced as collectible toys by mainland Chinese company Pop Mart, Labubu figurines are usually priced between US$30 and US$300. The Yongle Auction sale featured 48 lots and recorded proceeds of 3,725,425 yuan. The auction drew a packed crowd at Beijing's Phoenix Art Centre and was streamed online to hundreds of thousands of viewers. Its hashtag quickly trended on Weibo, China's Twitter-like platform, garnering over 45 million views. Labubu is closer to art than it is to merchandise Zhao Xu, founder of Yongle Auction Zhao Xu, founder of Yongle Auction, said the sale attracted more than 1,000 bidders, and roughly 25 per cent of them were from outside mainland China, mainly from Taiwan, Singapore and Indonesia. Most of the toys sold for figures in the low tens of thousands of yuan during the hours-long auction. The first major buzz came when a 160cm (63-inch) tall brown Labubu figurine – number 7 of an edition of 15 – hit the stage. Bidding rose rapidly from a few tens of thousands to over half a million yuan, before the piece sold for 820,000 yuan.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store