The American version is based in a small city in Pennsylvania - so that's probably why they chose a small city in Japan
@tanizaki10 күн бұрын
Having been there, I wouldn’t call Amagasaki small. It’s five times Scranton’s population and one of the largest cities in Hyogo.
@Annsunshine309 күн бұрын
It`s the same in the original version in UK as well!
@elgecko58729 күн бұрын
Immediately what I thought lol
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
I see! Maybe someone from the crew was from there!
@Jimbo8189 күн бұрын
@MrsEats the general idea for the UK and US versions is that the business is a boring one in an unnoteworthy grey place. I think they've tried to do the same with the Japan version.
@beecat41839 күн бұрын
The thing is, Michael is supposed to be offensive and norm breaking. That's his character on the show. That is what makes the skit funny, he's doing the same thing, but in Japan.
@frizzlefriar44179 күн бұрын
Part of the joke with The Office was how unprofessional they really were. Bosses could be casual, but not like Michael. Jokes and pranks happened, but not like the jello scene. The skit seems on brand with the show.
@jimmypark322410 күн бұрын
They picked a small town in Japan to parallel the fact that the Office was based on a small town in the US.
@titanuranus309510 күн бұрын
UK
@AZNFLACO10 күн бұрын
Yep! exactly. Tokyo branch would be NY? And I guess Osaka branch would be...Stamford?
@Annsunshine309 күн бұрын
You mean in the UK!
@Annsunshine309 күн бұрын
@@AZNFLACO Slough..
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
I see! Thank you!
@charlesedwinbooks10 күн бұрын
Given the context of bosses and names, Michael probably would deliberately use their first name. In the show hes always preaching how theyre all best friends and as close or closer than family.
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
Oooh I see! If Michael want everyone to be like a family, then it's okay to use first name! But maybe the coworker might still feel uncomfortable!
@charlesedwinbooks9 күн бұрын
@@MrsEats I think they likely would feel uncomfortable. But, that is how Michael's character is written in american culture. Hes very awkward and crosses the line of what should happen at a work place. That being said.....this behavior isn't 100% out of place in american offices. Especially in smaller businesses. His character is kind of written to be that awkward boss. In the first season he was super inappropriate and highly unlikable. But from season 2-7 hes a lot more goofy and awkward vs simply being inappropriate and racist.
@beecat41839 күн бұрын
@@MrsEats That's the point of his character. Making people uncomfortable is his entire shtick.
@erikab13179 күн бұрын
Michael would definitely be calling everyone by their first name. I think they should have made the joke that everyone is calling him Scott-san, and him making them call him Michael-san, as we watch everyone visibly cringe after he walks away. 😂
@ebonlibra9 күн бұрын
The fact that Michael is clueless to his worker's comfort level or discomfort is part of the skit @@MrsEats
@friiq08 күн бұрын
How offensive! In the intro, they use a Texas Instruments calculator in stead of a true Japanese Casio. For shame! 😂
@MrsEats8 күн бұрын
Oh! Good point lol!!
@CarbonatedTurtle10 күн бұрын
I got married in Japan in 2019 and wore the traditional kimono and everything that goes with it while spending an entire day getting photos taken all around Kamakura. I've never had so many strangers come up to me and congratulate me or say how great I looked, and I felt like a king (or emperor). I did feel a bit embarrassed when first going out in public wearing it as a white guy, but Japanese people were going out of their way all day to let me know there was nothing wrong with it.
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
Oh so nice!! I'm sure many people were happy for you!! I'm glad you could experience such a warm moment on your wedding!
@vinicastro92929 күн бұрын
I think this "cultural apropriation" thing is only in the US. I never heard of something like that here in Brazil and I've seen tons of people who actually live in Japan say that japanese people don't mind and some even feel happy that you are wearing their traditional clothes, it shows interest in their culture.
@joseherrera84899 күн бұрын
@@vinicastro9292there is a difference. He said he did it for HIS WEDDING. I’m assuming CarbonatedTurtle married a Japanese woman. If she was dressed traditionally and he was in jeans and a tshirt, it would look odd. Why do people find it so difficult to understand?
@SamBourgeois9 күн бұрын
@@joseherrera8489 Jeans and t-shirt? 😂 I don't think a suit and tie opposite a kimono would be bad, but it's cool he went for the local look.
@tanizaki9 күн бұрын
@@CarbonatedTurtle The “traditional” Japanese wedding is a 20th-century invention.
@ChickensAndGardening9 күн бұрын
Eating while on a phone call would be rude in a U.S. office as well. Or, probably, anywhere else in the world.
@howlingbreeze70784 күн бұрын
Very true, but gonna play devils advocate because we can't hear the other side of the call he could have been on hold or someone was just rambling on
@FatGuyLittIeCoat9 күн бұрын
The point of The Office was to be awkward and offensive, it's goal was to make people so uncomfortable that it became ridiculous and funny. Personally it always made me want to jump out the nearest window to avoid the cringe, but to each their own, I feel the skit is pretty on brand for what the show was. The Office is American business culture hyperbolized to the max.
@alexb.13208 күн бұрын
And being an SNL skit, there is SNL's own attempt at trying to be off the wall, offensive, or play up stereotypes.
@MrKingkz8 күн бұрын
When it comes to cringe the US version has nothing on the UK original 😂
@hoaxygen8 күн бұрын
I wouldn't say it was made to make people uncomfortable, rather, I think it highlights uncomfortable moments for you to laugh at.
@3DJapan8 күн бұрын
Almost all Chinese restaurants in America have a manekineko on the counter. We know it very well.
@foshizol9 күн бұрын
That prank at 5:59 would not only get you fired (terminated) in the US, you could actually get arrested for assault.
@ishakak1478 күн бұрын
I was thinking the same - putting stapler in jello, no matter how stupid it is, would not even be close to that thing. That prank would get someone sued,
@Greenlion7818 күн бұрын
That prank in the US would only be guaranteed to get you fired if you're male, in the US there is a lot more leeway given for women doing inappropriate touching.
@mac1950008 күн бұрын
Having lived in Japan a long time this is one of the oddest things I've encountered. Japanese people generally do not touch each other much. There isn't a lot of hugging, kissing, slapping, pinching, grabbing, etc. compared with Western countries. So how is it that poking someone in the anus came to be seen as an acceptable prank? I'm still baffled by this. 🤨🤔
@xantiom8 күн бұрын
@@mac195000it is all or nothing. Either tentacle porn or being a prude. No middle ground.
@Stoffer55006 күн бұрын
@@Greenlion781 I´m pretty sure that sticking your finger into someones anus in the workplace, would get you fired regardless of your gender. It´s wild to think that this is acceptable in any country. Personally I´d have immediately slapped the person to kingdom come, regardless of the gender, if they attempted to do that. It´s effectively sexual assault.
@Rabijeel9 күн бұрын
The Series is about "transgressions" and such in an Office - the boss getting alweays too close to sexual haressment, the Guys violating "good Taste" and "morals" all time (the Guy eating Noodles on the Phone is alwasy doing really bad things on the Phone for example). It is about a very Toxic Work Enviroment. The "Funny" is that it is "all wrong" what is done and that no normal Person would ever do it irl - as we all sadly know some Guy in the irl Offices that is like one of them.
@kesayo9 күн бұрын
When I worked in Japan, I would eat my bento at my desk. Nobody else did this. They all went to the cafeteria. But I was in my 20s and a foreigner, so I think they just let it slide.
@11679MRT9 күн бұрын
I think the American workplace shown in the Office isn't anything like what most people experience. That's what makes it so funny.
@BohemianScandalous10 күн бұрын
Sure it’s offensive but the “hibachi benihana teriyaki” clip is iconic. Also the most unbelievable thing about the commercial scene is the idea any Japanese company would advertise tampons. Tampons are like impossible to find here. I’ve been in Tokyo for a year and haven’t seen a single pack of tampons yet.
@gagamba91989 күн бұрын
According 日本衛生材料工業連合会 report タンポンのおすすめ人気ランキング【2024年】, Regis Philbin tampon is Japan #1 tampon. Nine out ten tampon user prefer Regis Philbin tampon to Unicharm Sofy Soft tampon and Unicharm Eldy tampon.
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
You can find them! But maybe packaging is more colorful than the one in other country!
@AZNFLACO9 күн бұрын
@@BohemianScandalous They make the packaging so colorful and fun, so you might not even notice they are tampons. They would look like candy bars or popsicles from the playful packaging!
@ishakak1478 күн бұрын
With the stapler I was so surprised - I was thinking Japanese would catch that they are mocking Japanese for apologizing too much, but then Mrs Eats is saying that the worst was playing with chopsticks while ignoring whole apologizing scene. I think this shows how Westerners and Japanese view things differently sometimes.
@alveolate5 күн бұрын
i thought the deliberate use of black hair wigs might be a little controversial too... then i realised, these "racist" tropes really only become a thing in melting pot societies, where blackface and stuff that could be considered mocking another race become taboo. in japan itself, folks might not even notice these as "racial traits" at all, and thus may have never considered how it could be mocking or insulting. mrs eats herself mentioned that "cultural appropriation" is more of a "thing in the west" (i'm sceptical that this concept does not exist in japan, considering they've had a pretty nasty imperial history too).
@howlingbreeze70784 күн бұрын
Was just about to say the same thing, I remembered they made a little throwaway joke in food wars about the same thing because 2 characters kept apologizing to each other and it was never ending loop
@cousincarrot6440Күн бұрын
Yes I think the joke is meant to be the non-stop bowing, which is a bit racist imo because I think the joke is meant to make the culture feel very “other” from American or western audiences. I’ve seen this joke before but not in a long time, it is outdated lazy and in bad taste, which it always was. I was surprised that she did not comment on it but it’s absolutely all about experience and perspective. Thank you for the video!
@69SalterStreet6 күн бұрын
No lie in America, koncho would be considered sexual harassment
@glitchsister10 күн бұрын
this was pretty insightful because i honestly never thought the sketch was trying to be offensive or rude, and the creator of the office was just brought in that day to record that single line without any involvement or knowledge of what the sketch was, only for that baseless throwaway line to make it infamous. bill hader portraying rain wilson was an inspired choise in hindsight though
@polarfamily622210 күн бұрын
If Japan did it right it'll be extremely offensive which would make it a must watch.
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
It might be too much Internet Outrage!!
@joaquindonoso54812 күн бұрын
@@MrsEatsif japanese people liked it, who cares?
@jeffreysg9 күн бұрын
After watching this, I now wonder what you think of the SNL skit where Chris Farley is on the Japanese game show.
@redomagnus47628 күн бұрын
THIS, omg. It’s even older so maybe a bit more unintentionally offensive, but Farley was an amazing American half-wit
@saminusprime27467 күн бұрын
I was actually thinking the same thing! Hopefully it's still up on YT.
@scotttak2 күн бұрын
Kuwa ki surupi niku?
@christianames216110 күн бұрын
Me after seeing the Japanese office parody: 個人情報盗難は冗談ではない!毎年何百万もの家族が苦しんでいる。
@sarougeau8 күн бұрын
The part with Jim playing with the chopsticks at 6:09 is most likely referencing his US character since he is always playing with a pen in weird ways like he does with the chopsticks in this scene.
@johnirby88472 күн бұрын
My experience working in Japan: When a Japanese company is going to release something in another country, they hire lawyers from the US, Europe, etc, to make sure they aren't sued in a US/European court for whatever reason. We did use first names, but it was mainly European people in our group. Even our boss was European. His boss was Japanese. The big boss. We were drinking one night, and the big boss asked why we all used first names. The answer we gave was that if you are too formal or strict, people may be making fun of you while pretending to be polite. Almost like a "Sir, yes sir" response, it sounds polite, but its meaning can be that you are unlikable or unfriendly, like a dictator. He didn't get it at first, but suddenly a light bulb moment happened in his mind, and he understood. He said, "Like a jerk like North Korean Dictator, forcing them to call him things." Yes! Exactly the same sentiment. This big boss, who is still a big boss in Japan, became much more light-hearted after that, giving his employees gifts and holidays. He is currently listed as one of the best lawyers and bosses in Japan now and is held in high regard by Japanese and Europeans alike. When I saw this I thought of him!
@jcnot97128 күн бұрын
1:05 because Scranton is a small town in Pennsylvania.
@RhumpleOriginal8 күн бұрын
You beat me by 15 min 👏
@LB-yg2br8 күн бұрын
Beat me by 3 hours
@jimmytangooo569 күн бұрын
It was a skit on Saturday Night Live when Steve Carrell hosted. Not a real show.
@pengwin_9 күн бұрын
...she said that.
@NickInRealLife8 күн бұрын
I must've missed that because I was thinking how the hell did they find an actor that looked so much like Steve Carell 😂
@nerdstudent88528 күн бұрын
That's explained Kristen Wiig as Pam 😁
@richard_n9 күн бұрын
In the world, the Japanese laugh the least at work and the most outside of work.
@erklid28824 күн бұрын
they missed the opportunity to use Asian Jim
@sw-gs6 күн бұрын
Japan: "Small town with 460,000 people living in it." Meanwhile Europe: "Small town has up to 20,000 people living in it." America: "Watch us we have 250 people in our town".
@KaitouKaiju17 сағат бұрын
And the town is basically a rest stop on the highway
@Hananotaka8 күн бұрын
This skit was written by Marika Sawyer, who has a Japanese mother. She coached the cast on what to say. Her name and that of her sister appear in the credits, そうや まりか and そうや はな.
@MrsEats8 күн бұрын
Thank you! This is very interesting!
@jondoh94149 күн бұрын
What makes something racist is whether it is insulting/denigrating in anyway, whether intentional or not. None of this stuff is really ugly. Its whacky/silly maybe, but it is not demeaning.
@unquiche8 күн бұрын
No… If something offensive is not intentional, then it’s not racist; it’s merely ignorant, and can usually be corrected.
@jondoh94148 күн бұрын
@@unquiche It's not uncommon, or even extremely common, that people will consistently make insulting remarks about others bc they look down on them based on ethnicity, religion, etc., but still not believe they're racist and not see the problem with what they're saying.
@unquiche8 күн бұрын
@@jondoh9414 You are describing an *intentional* behavior, assuming they’ve been called out on repeated rude behavior. Or if nobody ever calls them on it, it remains an unintentional rudeness.
@mikicoal8 күн бұрын
Worked in Japan for 25 years and I see people expressing personality all the time. Not as much as in West but still. Also, it's quite common to use people's first names if somebody else has the same same surname in the department.
@VarunSharma-km3wv9 күн бұрын
This is the SNL skit, not the actual show
@pengwin_9 күн бұрын
...yes, she said that.
@CritCommanda8 күн бұрын
@@pengwin_ she waited until the 8:15 marker to mention it, not at the beginning, not in the text. It seems a little disingenuous
@unquiche8 күн бұрын
@@CritCommanda it’s funny when people who rushed to comment early, with their “superior knowledge”, end up getting defensive and butthurt when they get called out for trying to look smart
@chris-hayes8 күн бұрын
It's irrelevant to the point of this video, and yes she said it was a SNL skit too, so clearly not disingenuous.
@indo87949 күн бұрын
All of the negatives you pointed out is exactly the negatives we point out in the american version, it's what makes it so funny
@TheCsel9 күн бұрын
Michael's old boss told him to keep his family his family, his coworkers coworkers, and friends his friends. You shouldn't mix them. But Michael hated that and his philosophy his coworkers should be his family and friends. And part of the humor is Michael behaving awkwardly and not professional, you are supposed to laugh at how uncomfortable it is.
@LMMSDeadDuck8 күн бұрын
As an American, I would say we have some real bizarre commercials, too, especially if you don’t understand the language or reference.
@TeaBurn8 күн бұрын
Old Spice commercials are the first to come to mind.
@LMMSDeadDuck8 күн бұрын
@@TeaBurn lol! I had to go back and watch a few. XDDD I was originally thinking of almost any Super Bowl commercial, but Old Spice are classic examples.
@MrKingkz8 күн бұрын
@@TeaBurnThere weird in the UK as well I would love to find out who is the mad person behind all of them bet they have a lot of fun😂
@MrsEats10 күн бұрын
Which scene did YOU think was the most offensive?
@RHCole10 күн бұрын
From an American perspective, the tanner everyone is wearing.
@blakeharvard584110 күн бұрын
I didn't think it was racist, but could have been offensive slightly 🤔. I am one who doesn't get offended so easily.
@IsaacGabriel-kh5ds9 күн бұрын
Are you serious?! This must be a joke considering the open racism in Japanese culture 😅
@RHCole9 күн бұрын
@@IsaacGabriel-kh5ds💯
@dvaunt35169 күн бұрын
oh who cares..... Lots of things are offensive. Whether or not they actually bother you, is YOUR decision.
@straxacore9 күн бұрын
4:25 When I back packed around continental Europe when I was younger I spoke very little of only a few languages. But when I tried to speak, even the ones I knew nothing, every single person was friendly and wanted to help. And this was in multiple countries. So if you travel and want help, try to speak the language even if you suck.
@Jotse-q6l4 күн бұрын
I'd recommend you to react to 31 minutos' japanese episode
@Whoo7114 күн бұрын
"And Japanese hen- anime!" nice save ;)
@scocassovegetus8 күн бұрын
7:44 I lived in Japan. So many commercials on TV were really weird and made no sense at all with no connection the product they're selling -- so, yes, these are standard commercials in Japan, she's wrong, maybe 50% of commercials are like this.
@queuedjar457818 сағат бұрын
I think you slightly misunderstood what she said. The joke from a western perspective is that they think Japanese people think commercials like this are normal or effective, but Japanese consumers viewing these commercials themselves also usually think those commercials are pretty weird.
@RinaRetro10 күн бұрын
*I never seen this, because we refuse to pay NHK fees.* 😅
@haruhisuzumiya665010 күн бұрын
Based
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
Me too! But I don't have TV either!
@RinaRetro9 күн бұрын
@@MrsEats おはよう Thank you for replying. I really enjoy your channel. I thought this was a Real Show. 😅 I watch no TV whatsoever. So embarrassing. 良い一日を 💙
@worsel5558 күн бұрын
I remember when this skit first aired years ago and a friend of mine was VERY much into The Office. She called me up and asked me to translate as I was the only person she knew in our small Michigan town who could speak Japanese. What a nostalgia trip to stumble across this video today :)
@tmoney0000110 күн бұрын
I never caught the fake Japanese in scary movie 3 😅😅😅😅
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
It's real Japanese! Very fluent!
@ondoreondore74209 күн бұрын
We don't have that concept as well, a loud minority, with a ton of extremely rich companies and organizations behind them, do.
@Zedem0n8 күн бұрын
Just discovered this channel. Very cool vibes! Subbed!
@nabguy9 күн бұрын
I live 15 minutes away from the actual Scranton, PA. I never expected to see any variation of the Welcome to Scranton sign show up on this channel. 😅
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
You should visit the Dunder Mifflin location someday!
We had a nudels joke, and then the boss calls the lady Pam-o-san in reference to Parmesan (cheese that in Italian food belongs to nudels).
@wihatmi55104 күн бұрын
Why do they show Japanese buildings in the intro? We would never show a medievil European castle in the intro of a localized Japanese tv show. It's supposed to take place in the country it's from. Changing this makes it unnatural. If you take King of Queens for example and let it take place in Munich you take an elemental part out of the series. And how did they change the writing on the pizza boxes and books?
@KaitouKaiju17 сағат бұрын
American shows like the US version of the office heavily use B roll footage like this to establish location. Makes sense that a parody of the office would also parody the intro.
@KyleReaume8 күн бұрын
Ahh i missed you! So glad to see your content again!
@MrsEats8 күн бұрын
Thank you Kyle!
@admiralyamato29910 күн бұрын
こんばんは、お会いできて良かったです Eats 久しぶりにあなたのビデオを見ました。
@MrsEats9 күн бұрын
Hi Yamato!! 久しぶり!! Thank you for always supporting us!! We're happy to see you again and thank you so much for SUPER CHAT!
@samadlam72889 күн бұрын
The stapler in the jelly bit is originally from the UK version of The Office.
@JesseOaks-ef9xn9 күн бұрын
I love watching Japanese commercials. Even though I don't understand the language I understand the point of the commercial. Japanese commercials tend to be more creative than American commercials and are more fun.
@Punkologist9 күн бұрын
I'm a beginner and understood most of what they said, but I laughed so much at stapler どこですか it's technically wrong, but probabaly makes it funnier. Correct Japanese would have been ホチキスはどこですか
@ModularLanding8 күн бұрын
でもステープラーもいいですよ。
@byronbarrientos84714 күн бұрын
wait im very confused. Is this a specific episode where they play/act japanese. Or is it an actual full series that is japanese ?
@ChrisCypher2 күн бұрын
It was an SNL skit.
@taylankammer8 күн бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't comment on the joke where they all suddenly start to bow and say "suimasen" to each other, which I think is supposed to poke fun at how overly polite Japanese society is and how often they do little apologies like that. It's interesting that you commented on the chopsticks instead and saw that as a bigger offense. :D
@TheDarkLink77 күн бұрын
Hey didnt kniw you posted. Happy to know you guys are good.
The ultimate example of Japanese humor is wordplay... But not elaborate ones, just silly ones. Yes, that's what you did as a child. For them, it's the BEST.
@Karash770-k9d3 күн бұрын
I work for a major japanese company in Europe in a larger office space with European as well as some Japanese colleagues. While all European colleagues are on a first name basis, the Japanese colleagues are of course addressed by -san. However, the Japanese colleagues commonly address the European colleagues by -san, which must be weird for them.
@blengi8 күн бұрын
need a japanese version of the UK classic "the inbetweeners"
@MrKingkz8 күн бұрын
This would be funny but they do have a lot of school anime/manga so there could be something similar already out
@jmw1982blue9 күн бұрын
Us in the west don't all believe in cultural appropriation, it's just a bunch of weirdos pushing the stuff. Most of us understand appropriation is appreciation when done respectfully with love.
@drusillathetinsmith9 күн бұрын
I play the video. I auto-like bec everything Mrs Eats puts out there is funny and/or interesting. I watch the video and I am always surprised, I always learn something new. 😄
@CapnCharlie4 күн бұрын
Michael sees every employee as his best friends and family...to the disappointment of the entire staff. Everyone sees him as a lovable idiot and hates that they love him. Michael would be the guy who pushes the limits and tries to break barriers... This is why he calls everyone by their first name.
@k1tsun3k0ko7 күн бұрын
Mrs Eats, your hair looks amazing❤❤😍
@JohnCena-rf2lw2 күн бұрын
you're very light hearted and funny and your videos are so entertaining! why aren't you more active on youtube?
@Carlospere-l9s4 күн бұрын
In Japan,in Japan would you stop bragging that you leave in Japan please I’m already jealous of you
@Jimalcoatl9 күн бұрын
A skit that would be interesting to see if a Japanese person finds offensive like this is "Tokyo Breakfast", an old web video skit from pre-KZbin days.
@arknark9 күн бұрын
apparently I'm not as much of an Office fan as I thought I was cause I had no idea this happened.
@JakeCarlini3 күн бұрын
love this! So fun and refreshing to see comedy alive and well!
@happyzahn80316 күн бұрын
Anyone who gets offended by the office is just looking for something to complain about. It is a crazy, over-the-top, sometimes offensive, comedy. It's meant to be strange, a little bit like a real office but obviously set up to emphasize characters and situations that may happen (or one would wish could happen) in a real office with (often offensive) exaggeration. That Kanchoo thing is really shocking to me. Anyone older than 10 would likely get a broken nose or something worse in the US depending on who they did it to.
@Overthinktank8 күн бұрын
no some japanese call each other by first name in the work place. I think society wants that to happen but japanese people have heart also and wants to feel human not just a military society😂
@viciouswindstalkers9 күн бұрын
In the US, putting the stapler in the Jerry means something completely different... 😉
@PastaMaster1155 күн бұрын
I agree about the commercial. I've seen a lot of weird Japanese commercials but I've also seen a lot of very conventionally normal commercials. But when it comes to stereotypes, it's usually what stands out the most. And the weirdest ones are what stand out the most in peoples' minds. I think every country has their own share of weird commercials. I know the US does. A know a lot of European countries do.
@toropikaruburuu3 күн бұрын
Marika Sawyer was the writer who came up with the SNL Japanese Office skit. She is Japanese American, and she not only wrote their lines, but also had to keep coaching each of the actors in how to say the lines as they were shooting. Akiva Schaffer of the Lonely Island was the director for the sketch, and he himself was worried about offending the audience, but the crew just kind of put themselves in Marika's hands. Also it seems likely that Marika was trying to be as over the top as possible.
@NucleiteКүн бұрын
I haven't seen a Rosetta Stone ad in YEARS. Glad to see them making a comeback.
@parrydox.gaming9 күн бұрын
Omg. People eating while on the phone whether at work or at home drives my brain absolutely nuts! Haha. I think it has to do with my ADHD as there’s enough going on in this noggin to have to focus through eating noises 😂 Also linguistically, they really stall out words but I think it’s exactly what you said. It’s them not knowing the language that well while trying to add that comedic, sometimes derogatory effect that stalling out words can imply. Doing this also, for lack of a better term, makes them seem less intelligent so for the context of this show it’d make it funny as it goes with the character.
@MrKingkz8 күн бұрын
You would hate me and my friends we all eat and talk on the phone all the time sometimes it has to be done 😂
@chikokishi70309 күн бұрын
Those are not stereotypes. My Ad for this video was Tommy Lee Jones running in slow motion carrying coffee and screaming japanese.
@putinscat120817 сағат бұрын
This is actually less racist than other SNL skits around the same time that always portrayed Japan as weird, perverted, etc.
@JohnMatyas18 сағат бұрын
This is why Japanese Sponge Bob was cancelled. JSB - I ripped my pants. Office Lady - KANCHOOOOO!!!
@Littlefighter19114 күн бұрын
1:08 Amagasaki is a sister town of the town I'm living in in Germany! :D
@DanielThureskog14 сағат бұрын
My hometown's sister town is Okazaki.
@loloshua14 сағат бұрын
This is like when an anime that doesnt take place in japan has a "modern day" spin off that puts the characters in a modern japanese setting
@sx0lx0127 күн бұрын
As an Asian American, that was actually one of my favorite episode. Especially when there are guests cast from Saturday Night Live.
@nack83109 күн бұрын
I thought calling Pam her first name was intentionally meant to be offensive. American humor is at different levels.
@wardenm7 күн бұрын
Anyone know where I can watch this subtitled?
@TyTyMcGinty9 күн бұрын
I would love to see Japan make a skit about Americans just to see what they think of us.
@JohnFekoloid9 күн бұрын
There's some funny Animes. One where everybody in a shopping mall has rocket launchers, and blasting at an attacker. Another where a fighter in a match trying to intimidate his opponent starts shouting all the English he knows, "Cheeza Burgah!" "Ah Yam an American Boy".
@KaitouKaiju17 сағат бұрын
Watch/read Axis Powers Hetalia
@Shepherdservices3173 күн бұрын
I don't think she knows the office as soon as she said "why did they choose a small town" because the town in the show is small.. duh
@jimmymartinez258510 күн бұрын
Where can watch this I’ve never seen this 😅
@pavementpounder75029 күн бұрын
Was this in an episode? Ive watched all the seasons and dont recall it. Maybe i forgot.
@scott021279 күн бұрын
WOW! Thank you for sharing. I am buying 2 tee shirts right now. Thank you for sharing, you guys rock 😎🤘
@Capydapy16 сағат бұрын
Putting chopsticks in your hair would be like putting a spoon or a fork in your hair like you're Ariel from The Little Mermaid or something 💀
@travesty-studios3 күн бұрын
Ricky is one of those comedians that thinks things are funny because they are offensive, but they are funny because they are a good joke, not because its offensive.
@Navak_9 күн бұрын
Mrs Eats I miss you saying "it's Mrs Eats" at the start of your videos. The way you say it, with such gusto, is so satisfying for some reason
@LydiaKrow8 күн бұрын
After seeing this, it makes me appreciate the skit even more. It definitely works with the "over-the-top boss intruding into your life" vibe and workers who are so tired of his crazy ideas, which are out of place for even an American office.
@davogee9 күн бұрын
Rosetta Stone makes no language mistakes. The best! 👍
@warumonokurenai3 күн бұрын
How am I just learning that The Office has a Japanese version where Michael Scott actually speaks Japanese?! I just wish they had kept the original cast
@TheFiddleFaddle5 күн бұрын
"Chopsticks are the tool that brings the food to your mouth, so you should treat it with respect." Wow. That's a fascinating philosophy.
@mechanicat238 күн бұрын
I use Rosetta Stone for learning Nihongo… It’s ok. It will get your speaking skills started. For learning to write, I suggest Genki book series. And Duolingo is pretty good for slow learners that need more repetitious-type lessons.
@MrsEats8 күн бұрын
Great points!
@Rairosu8 күн бұрын
I always use my Chopsticks properly and never ever use it for anything else and I always say いただきます before eating.
@kkachi8 күн бұрын
Does anyone know why Japanese Jim is played by "Mike Shore"? All the other actors in this video have Japanese names.