Great interview with Heidi! I follow her on social media and did so before she started with Merkmal Mermal. Happy to provide support for her since she worked tirelessly as a youngster to make her dream come true and earn a spot with an idol group in Japan. Doing so as a foreigner is also a feat on it's own. Hoping for much continued success with whatever she decides to do in the future.
@EnharmonicPlum5 күн бұрын
Heidi🪽! That’s my girl! 🤍 This was a great video!
@matty68785 күн бұрын
idolmaster mentioned! very interesting subculture. i was all about the idol culture and music for a while, probably at its most hyped during the late 2000s/eary 2010s when the west really started to take notice. i think it petered out a bit since then but the chikai groups keeps things interesting. im still amazed that there are people from the west are still making it into these idol groups. i just wish these japanese companies took advantage of that cuz it probably would have taken off much like how kpop did but i think that time has passed so anyone in the idol culture are doing it cuz they really want to be part of it. enjoyed the candid discussion! i think the perspective of a foreigner idol is always honest and fascinating
@wattstax175 күн бұрын
I recognized Heidi from the preview picture right away. It just so happened that I see her groups performance just a few months ago. Regarding your question about the Akushukai: It is a very specific term regarding the AKB groups, thus Heidi probably got confused and only replied to this aspect. I assume, you rather wanted to hear about the Tokutenkai of her group and those of similar level. (The fan can take polaroid photos with the Idol and gets some talk time.)
@scttschlz2 күн бұрын
I've been aware of Japanese idol culture for about 6 years now, but I did not learn this tidbit until this year. The term "graduation" and the idol love ban has a history that's over a century old and comes from a bizarre motivation. Namely, a train executive back in 1913 wanted more people to be taking his trains to his terminal station in Takarazuka outside of Osaka. And so he started a woman-only musical theater company called the Takarazuka Revue. The problem was that women were not legally allowed to act on public stages at the time, and so all the members were formally attending a university for the arts. They would have to "graduate" if they got married or otherwise exited the company even if it took decades for some of the more popular performers to do so. Johnny of the Johnny's Agency adopted many of the same rules, terms and monetization ideas from the Revue for his boy groups starting in the 60s which were then in turn adopted by Morning Masume and AKB48 etc. Unfortunately, I doubt there are many if any non-Japanese who are into that scene even as fans, but I would be fascinating to see you interview someone who was.
@unpackingjapan2 күн бұрын
oh is that actually where that comes from, wild 👀 -editor
@icydragon1862 күн бұрын
Scrolling throught the sections and seeing "Watergate" I'm like wtf is that and realize it is maybe a misspelling of Wotagei
@unpackingjapan2 күн бұрын
Fixed!! Thank you for catching that
@nowakimagica2 күн бұрын
As a fellow German, I think this podcast would be so much more entertaining if the host and guest would bounce off each other more! I loved this podcast episode, but I missed some sort of chemistry, fun and puns maybe, to make it feel less serious
@_nihongo_jouzu_5 күн бұрын
Tobi really wanting to be an idol 😆 you can ask lady beard if he wants to be an idol duo with you, "buns and beard"
@matty68785 күн бұрын
i was gonna say, there's a market albeit very niche market for that! something to think about when he graduates from podcasts lol
@TheTakashi605 күн бұрын
ハイチャン、カワイイ ハイ👏カワイイ
@eldoprano3 күн бұрын
Wait a minute.. that voice. Sound a lot like Heidi
@unpackingjapan2 күн бұрын
could it be?!
@tesserakuent68763 күн бұрын
"Self produced in a really small basement in front of a crowd of two people" I'm an idol too. I'm this kind of idol 💩