
'Expo lady' completes full circuit of Osaka pavilions on 46th consecutive visit
Tomiyo Yamada, 76, also known by the nickname "Banpaku obaachan," or "Expo lady," completed the feat on May 28. Twenty years ago, Yamada visited the Expo 2005 Aichi, Japan, which was held in her home prefecture, every day it was open. From then on, she became famous for visiting Expo events on every opening day, including those in Shanghai and Yeosu, South Korea.
Yamada smiled as she visited the Netherlands Pavilion, which was, by her count, the 219th place she had been to at the Expo. She commented, "I feel it is important to keep going. I'm so happy to have made it to today." There, she met Dutch Consul-General at the Osaka Consulate-General Marc Kuipers and others. During a commemorative ceremony held after the tour, a pinatalike "kusudama" exploded in celebration, and she was given a specially made plushie of the character "Miffy."
As she aims to visit the Expo on all 184 days until the final day on Oct. 13, Yamada, her husband and son moved to an apartment block in nearby Suminoe Ward from their home in the Aichi Prefecture city of Seto last December. Yamada shared her aspirations as she completes a second go-around of the pavilions, saying, "From now on, I want to convey the splendor of Japanese culture to visitors from overseas."
(Japanese original by Makiko Nagao, Student Newspapers Editorial Department)
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Japan Today
an hour ago
- Japan Today
Concept cafes explode in popularity in Japan
By Michael Hoffman The world bursts at the seams with fun, pleasure, joy. It may not look that way but it's so. Cares banished, time transcended, laughter resounding, champagne corks popping, clothes flying open (not quite off), anime music throbbing and in the whirlpool bath in the center of the room a bikini-clad young woman completes the picture of wild, joyous abandon. Shame on those of us not of the party! We could be. We too are invited. It's as near as the nearest 'concept café' – konkafe in Japanese – very near indeed if Spa (July 29-Aug 5) is right in estimating their number in Tokyo alone (vagueness of definition makes a precise count impossible) at 1,400. What is it about pleasure, though, that debauches it almost at birth? Does it contain the seeds of its own corruption? Is it peculiarly vulnerable to infectious invasion? Spa recalls with nostalgia the innocence of the first konkafes. They were 'maid cafés' (meido kissa), born with the century, circa 2001. 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One of the law's aims is to keep minors out. Underage staff and underage clients bedevil the industry. More distasteful still is the hiring and exploitation of girls with development disorders and mental illnesses. 'No wrist cuts,' reads a sign Spa hears of posted publicly in one konkafe – the macabre and the erotic as kissing cousins. This too the magazine hears from one konkafe operator: 'So many women want to work in konkafes.' (Why? one wonders in passing? Because it beats office work? Because it's pseudo-showbiz?) 'The inevitable result,' the operator continues, 'is a 'cast' of mixed good actors and bad. It's a problem. Among them are young women with development disabilities. The other day (one of our girls) was followed home by a stalker. She had no sense of danger. She told us later, much pleased at the coincidence, 'Near my house I met a regular customer' – while I, listening to her, broke into a cold sweat.' 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SoraNews24
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Yomiuri Shimbun
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