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Japanese hotel offers toys their own beds, but it will cost you

Japanese hotel offers toys their own beds, but it will cost you

Yahoo17-07-2025
A Japanese hotel is offering travellers tiny beds and pyjamas to tuck in their stuffed toy roommates.
The teddy bear beds are currently being trialled at the Toyoko Inn Osaka Dome Mae for an additional fee of 300 yen (£1.50).
Nuikatsu or 'living with stuffed toys' is a social media trend that sees people travel to events with their nuigurumi plush toys.
#推し活なら東横インぬいとお泊まり pic.twitter.com/VfyIEed3dZ
— 𝕡𝕚𝕟𝕜 (@pinkiro83765) July 15, 2025
A hotel representative for Toyoko Inn told J-Cast News he hoped the service would be popular with Gen Z travellers, reported The Times.
According to the Toyoko Inn website, the sleepover plan includes 'a special overnight set for your Oshi merch — like plushies or acrylic stands — complete with a mini bed and tiny bathrobe'.
Travellers are also encouraged to post a photo or video of their stay on TikTok, X, or Instagram with the hashtag #推し活なら東横イン (Toyoko Inn is the place to go for your favourite idols) to receive a small gift.
The overnight set is available as a rental and has to be returned to the hotel on checkout.
1セット300円でレンタルできるんですよー。#推し活なら東横イン #ロボホンはギリギリ寝れる#ガウンのサイズは2種類#どちらもロボホンは着られなかった#あみホンのZEROクン#ぬいホンのOCEANクン#2人が添い寝できます pic.twitter.com/oGrRhuz3un
— れおクレ&rb (@RE_RBHN) July 5, 2025
Recently, a Chinese hotel was ordered to end its unusual wake-up call service that involves red pandas climbing onto guests' beds after concerns for safety and animal rights.
Lehe Ledu Liangjiang Holiday Hotel, a popular family resort in Chongqing, has been called on by the local forestry bureau to stop one of its most popular services. Many guests are attracted to the hotel solely for its red panda wake-up experience.
The service involves bringing one of the hotel's red pandas up to a guest's bedroom in the morning, allowing the panda to roam freely around the room and climb onto the bed.
Despite the popularity of the service, the Chongqing Forestry Bureau has reportedly asked the hotel to immediately cease all close contact activities between the pandas and visitors.
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Justice for Gen X
Justice for Gen X

Business Insider

time9 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Justice for Gen X

You know " main character syndrome?" The phenomenon/meme that posits that certain people go about life like they're the stars of their own private TV show? Gen X, broadly speaking, is suffering from a perpetual case of whatever the opposite of that is. They're the cool kids in the back of the classroom who act so chill that the teacher, the principal, the lunch lady, and all the other kids barely notice they're there. Gen Xers — people born from 1965 to 1980 — have a reputation for being the " forgotten generation." When the discussion of generations comes up in popular culture, work, or the media, it tends to be framed as baby boomers vs. millennials or millennials vs. Gen Z. Gen Xers are sort of just squashed in there, if they come up at all. To be totally transparent, we here at Business Insider play into this, too: We've published 166 stories about Gen Z, 123 stories about millennials, and 97 stories about boomers this year, while we've touched on Gen X only 34 times. And in many cases, Gen X has been a footnote in the story. It's complicated to unpack why Gen X is so overlooked and what it all means. Some of it's a question of numbers. Gen Xers are sandwiched between two giant, transformational generations. In some ways, they're a transitional bridge between them. "It's almost like Gen X was a journey from boomer to millennial, and it wasn't a destination at any point," says Jason Salmon, a standup comic whose comedy often focuses on the plight of Gen X. Online, he jokes, younger generations identify themselves with pronouns, and older generations do flags, but "we're in this middle ground, where there's no emoji for concert T-shirts." Some of Gen X's discourse disappearing act is contextual. Many Gen Xers, famously, were latchkey kids, often left to their own devices after school while their parents were at work. They grew up in the 1990s, a solid time for the US economically, but also an era of transition in technology, politics, and culture. They idolized Luke Skywalker as kids and then came of age with Kurt Cobain, a shift from romantic heroism to grunge cynicism. Whereas boomers were the " me generation" and millennials were the "me me me generation," Gen X has become the "meh" generation. "We historically have wanted to kind of fly under the radar," says Erin Mantz, the founder of Gen X Girls Grow Up, a blog and Facebook group for Gen X women. "We kind of were like, 'Whatever.'" Gen X's "whatever" attitude has translated to a society that's perpetually a little "whatever" about them. When I called up Megan Gerhardt, a professor of leadership and management at Miami University who's a Gen Xer herself, to ask for her take on the whole forgotten generation thing, I floated the idea that maybe a lot of it was about middle age. Gen X right now is 44 to 60, in the throes of what's supposed to be the most miserable era of life. Is the problem that talking about it too much would just be depressing? Gerhardt shoots down my thesis immediately. "It's kind of on brand that Gen X is overlooked," says Gerhardt, who is also the author of the book "Gentelligence: The Revolutionary Approach to Leading an Intergenerational Workforce." A big part of the issue is that the generation never became the most dominant force, population-wise. Millennials surpassed boomers as the US's largest generation years ago — Gen X never got there. "I don't think Gen X had as significant of a ripple because of the statistical side," she says. Another statistical issue: Gen X was the "least supervised" generation, she says. In many households, they were the first cohort of kids to have both parents working outside the home, and it happened at a time before they'd figured out day care entirely or helicopter parenting was in vogue. This meant many Gen Xers had to be more independent and autonomous. There was no tech for their parents to track them or cellphones to even reach them. Gen X kids were expected to watch TV after school and put dinner in the oven before Mom and Dad got home. They were the "supporting actors" in the family, Gerhardt says, not the focal point. It's kind of on brand that Gen X is overlooked. Jean Twenge, the Gen X author of "Generations: The Real Differences Between Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X, Boomers, and Silents — and What They Mean for America's Future," tells me many people of her generation say they don't feel as distinctive as the groups above or below them. Gen X's psychological profile tracks a shift across generations, she says, "when you look at, say, increases in positive self-views and individualism that grew steadily from boomers to Gen Xers to millennials." Citing the American Freshman Survey, which tracks the attitudes of incoming college freshmen in the US, Twenge notes that from boomers to Gen X to millennials, young people have become more focused on their financial well-being than developing a meaningful philosophy of life and have become likelier to think they're above average. Gen X was the transitional phase from one mindset to the other. This dynamic has left Gen X with a sort of generational middle-child syndrome. They feel overlooked and stuck between self-centered boomer parents above them and perhaps even more self-centered up-and-comer millennials behind them. But they're also good at figuring stuff out on their own, and a lot of them say they'd really rather be left alone. "We're super proud of how independent and resourceful we are," Mantz says. The ambivalent attitude Gen X embodies is appealing. Part of Salmon's Gen X routine is that the generation's slogan is, "I don't care," which can be empowering but also presents problems at work and for people just trying to muddle through life. Gen Xers were the first generation to reject the baby boomer work ethic and rat race. There's a reason movies such as "The Breakfast Club," "Slackers," "Ferris Bueller's Day Off," "Reality Bites," and "Office Space" have come to epitomize them. That's good in that there's more to life than work, but it's also difficult when there's a super-hungry generation coming up right behind you. As much as millennials prioritize work-life balance, they also want to get ahead, and their employers have been happy to help them get there. "When millennials came to the workplace, they brought that hustle culture of you work hard and you go for it, anything's possible for you," Gerhardt says. Many businesses created fast-track programs to get millennials into leadership, which often leapfrogged the Gen Xers in the room for some positions. It's left Gen X in a mediator role within the hierarchy and in a weird limbo. Given their age, Gen Xers do occupy the C-suite — about half of Fortune 500 CEOs are Gen Xers — but millennials now make up the largest share of managers in the workforce overall. As the Wall Street Journal notes, people in their 50s are losing share of CEO spots in the Russell 3000. Many Gen Xers feel like they're stuck with a boomer executive who won't retire or a millennial young gun who shot to the front of the line. They're the translators between the old and the young, trying to find common ground. It's worth pointing out that we haven't had a Gen X president yet, either — the cohort is more of a victim of America's political gerontocracy problem than anyone. Mantz says part of the reason she started her community for Gen X women was to try to get them to make a little more noise and get themselves into positions of power, despite their low-key inclinations. One part of the Gen X wealth story is they really took a hit from the financial crisis in 2007, 2008, at a time when they were just starting to build wealth. "We're having to shift gears. We are being forgotten. We're being taken for granted," she says. "We are such a strong and steady force at work, and if we don't start changing the way we amplify our generation, we will continue to be overlooked." Gen Xers also aren't particularly happy, and again, not just because they're middle-aged. Frank Infurna, a psychology professor at Arizona State University, tells me that Gen Xers in the US are reporting higher levels of loneliness, more depressive symptoms, and poorer physical health than other generations. He says their cognition is worse, too. He chalks it up to a variety of factors. Gen X started working during the transition from pensions to 401(k)s, when the onus for retirement savings switched from employers to employees, and many workers were still figuring the system out. They're the first generation raising kids in today's hypercompetitive educational environment, with all the pressures to make sure your children succeed. They've also lived through a lot of economic upheaval, even if we don't always talk about it. "They've dealt with the dot-com bubble burst, the Great Recession, and it's like, can you just have some stability when it comes to these big economic events?" Infurna says. Jeremy Horpedahl, an economist at the University of Central Arkansas who studies wealth across generations, echoes the point. "One part of the Gen X wealth story is they really took a hit from the financial crisis in 2007, 2008, at a time when they were just starting to build wealth," he says. "They have recovered since then, but it took a long time for them to catch back up to where baby boomers were at the same point in their life." The vibe from Gen Xers on their neglected status is mixed. On the one hand, a lot of them are fine doing their own thing. On the other hand, it's not particularly fun to have your experiences constantly erased from the narrative. It's not the case that Gen X hasn't left its mark on American culture. I think there's an argument to be made that in many ways it's more significant than boomers and millennials, but much of what Gen Xers have contributed doesn't get pinned to their age as much as other generations. " Friends" is Gen X, but nowadays doesn't really code as such. The same goes for " Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and " The X-Files" and " The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air." They don't feel as generationally specific as, say, " Girls" or " M*A*S*H." Angelina Jolie is Gen X, as are Jennifer Aniston, Ethan Hawke, Will Smith, and we'll count Brad Pitt, too. We see them as the big movie stars, not the big movie stars of a certain era or age. Facebook's cofounder Mark Zuckerberg: solidly millennial. Apple's Steve Jobs: boomer. Google's founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin: Gen X, which I bet you never even thought about. To be sure, this isn't true in every arena. Beck, Nirvana, and Pearl Jam epitomize Gen X music culture, like Taylor Swift and Beyoncé do millennials these days. Gen X also got a bit of a nostalgia hit over the past few years, which millennials are only getting a taste of now and Gen Z is about 10 years away from. This may be the millennial in me talking — after all, Gen X teens were my "cool kids" growing up — but Gen Xers getting to fly under the radar does seem like a solid deal. Maybe they're not managers at work, but middle managers are getting phased out anyway, and besides the pay, being in charge of everything doesn't seem that awesome in terms of actually enjoying life. They don't get blamed for ruining everything like millennials do because they eat avocado toast, or Gen Zers because they stare weirdly. Gen X has a sort of soft power that comes with people not paying attention to you all the time. And they got to experience life before the internet, which, what a joy! They know how to adapt to technology, but they're also aware it can be tricky. "Before we got the internet, we got Terminator," Salmon says. Perhaps Gen X is finally about to have its moment in the sun, politically, culturally, etc. The '90s are making a comeback, after all. If not, whatever.

Millennials Reveal The Bizarre Childhood Fears We All Shared
Millennials Reveal The Bizarre Childhood Fears We All Shared

Buzz Feed

timea day ago

  • Buzz Feed

Millennials Reveal The Bizarre Childhood Fears We All Shared

Each generation grows up with fears that stem from the current world they live in. For millennials, some of the things they were afraid of ended up being less of a threat than they thought they would be. For example, many people grew up fearing getting stuck in quicksand, thinking they'd find themselves in that situation quite often. Other millennials feared Y2K and the end of the Mayan calendar in 2012. DueEntertainer0 on Reddit started a dialogue about millennial fears when they asked, "Can we talk about some of the random things that we were afraid of in the '90s and early 2000s?" Here are some of the responses, and as a Gen Z, are you millennials okay? Ya'll really thought the world was ending, huh? "Driving behind a log truck, thanks to Final Destination." —CandidateNo2731 "The 2012 Mayan apocalypse definitely was something my neighbors brought up often." —cocovacado "The Bermuda Triangle. I was convinced my family was gonna disappear if we ever flew through it." —kenyafeelme "I thought I was going to be dodging quicksand all of the time." —jgasbarro "Eating razor blades in my Halloween candy." —funky_colors "Spontaneous human combustion." —hunky_dorie "Swallowing gum and not digesting it for seven years." —Devious_Bastard "Being offered drugs on a daily basis." —4browntown "Swimming less than 30 minutes after eating." —HPHambino "'Don't meet strangers off the internet.' Cut to my late-20s when we are now encouraged to do the exact opposite via dating sites." —andisteezy " drop, and roll. I asked my kid about this the other day, and he looked at me like I was silly." —superminingbros "The idea that sitting too close to the TV will make you go blind." —Little_Bird333 "The dreaded white van with the promise of candy inside." —Correct-Body9590 "Spiders, piranhas, and clowns in storm drains." —ShigoIAjumma "Every plastic bag was out to suffocate me." —SureElephant89 "Y2K." —b1llb3rt "Bloody Mary. I was absolutely TERRIFIED to go into the bathroom at night because of the mirror….and I never even said her damn name!!" —JennieDarko "Acid Rain. Remember that sh*t? And we all just stopped talking about it." —Tortellini_Isekai "I remember microwaving water being a thing. In Home Ec, they told us to never use microwaved water because the microwaves made it toxic or something." —TheOriginalBigDave "Rabid raccoons jumping out of random places and attacking my face." —Sevennolater "Killer bees. They made it seem like we'd get attacked by them at any time." —bigkatze "Honestly, I'm still afraid that one day I'm going to lift my toilet seat and be greeted by a snake or an alligator." —80s_angel "Random needles in the pay phone change thing." —vcabalda "Similar to quicksand: whirlpools. They seemed so prevalent in cartoons. Like the ocean is just littered with these evil water funnels that suck people in, never to be seen again. Terrifying." —xilefelix "People under the stairs." —Striking_Ad_8883 "I forget the movie, but swimming under a pool cover." —Palmspringsflorida "My hair getting eaten by that Cabbage Patch Kid that ate the crinkle-cut fries and carrot sticks." —earmufffs "Going down escalators. My mom told me a kid's toe was ripped off on an escalator because his shoe was untied and the shoelace got caught." —triponsynth "I was afraid of getting abducted by aliens." —Thee-lorax "That only I can stop forest fires. Saving all of California is a lot to put on a person." —mtnshadow83 "Getting letters in the mail that could be lined with undetected drugs that would kill you the moment you opened the envelope and released them into the air." —According-Pen-9774 "Lava. Like quicksand. There was that scene from that movie where the guy just slowly melts into the lava." —Dazzling_Side8036 "Driving with the interior lights on." —ewsurnme And lastly, "Anthrax!" —potato_couch_ If you're a millennial, is there something you were afraid of that wasn't included? Let us know in the comments!

Palmer Luckey has Hilary Duff on his Spotify playlist. These are the tunes BI staff have on theirs.
Palmer Luckey has Hilary Duff on his Spotify playlist. These are the tunes BI staff have on theirs.

Business Insider

timea day ago

  • Business Insider

Palmer Luckey has Hilary Duff on his Spotify playlist. These are the tunes BI staff have on theirs.

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"Like most olds, I jam to the music I grew up with," Luckey wrote in an email to BI's Henry Chandonnet. "Around my peers and the radio-driven world of shared cultural experience it was 'Sk8er Boi' — who doesn't like reliving the highs and lows of teenage angst?" In light of this, I asked a few BIers what's on their Spotify playlist. Here's what they said: Michael Domanico, senior managing editor, people:" 'Teenagers' by My Chemical Romance has been heavy in my rotation. That type of music was ambient noise in the early 2000s for me, so going back to that sound has been really satisfying." Jordan Hart, business news reporter:"Faye Webster's voice on 'A Dream With a Baseball Player' is filled with yearning, and the chords in her music are dreamy, especially on this track. When I want to pretend I'm in an indie music video, I put this song on and sing to an imaginary love interest." 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"Eyes of Wakanda": This animated Disney+ series is a spin-off of the successful " Black Panther" movie franchise that focuses on a group of Wakandan warriors who set out on dangerous missions. What to shop Budget finds, Prime convenience: Amazon's new Haul section is packed with ultra-cheap, under-$20 finds — from kitchen tools to trendy clothes. Naturally, we had to order a bunch of stuff and show you what it's like. Ultimately, shopping on Haul is impulse-buy heaven, but quality can be hit or miss. Your feet will thank you: We tested 22 pairs and ranked the most comfortable shoes for standing all day. Each pair is built for support, durability, and long-haul wear, no matter your job, routine, or travel itinerary. Best Breville for your brew: Coffee aficionados know Breville is the gold standard for home kitchens, whether you want quality shots with minimal effort or full control over every step. We tested and compared the brand's top models, from beginner-friendly to barista-level machines. More of this week's top reads: A cardiologist explains how to tell if your heart is aging too fast, and four tips to keep it young. Costco started opening early for executive members. I wish they'd done it sooner. A Navy SEAL vet turned CEO shared his morning routine to stay fit at 48. What it's like staying at a resort with one of the largest pools in Hawaii. The high-protein trend is coming for your Starbucks order. Four simple food rules to stay in shape and live longer, followed by a longevity doctor. A former "Real Housewives" star just sold her waterfront home for $40 million. Take a look. Older job seekers may be hurting their chances. A career coach shared how to avoid self-sabotage.

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