I enjoyed listening to your story. we've got quite a bit of similarities. Although i was born and raised in hawaii currently living in Seattle Washington my dad is from Okinawa and my mom is from tokyo. I cant understand a damn thing when he speaks in the okinawan dialect though lol.
@airgaborpara38248 ай бұрын
You are so pretty!! Great interview! In September I am going to Japan to explore the country. Okinawa on my list. Do you know like Towa Tei? I am defo checking your music ?
@Reprodestruxion8 ай бұрын
No mention of the Chinese Okinawan Ryuku relationship
@ironhell8138 ай бұрын
@Reprodestruxion Most posters here are American, they won’t mention it even if they know it because they don’t like Chinese lol damnatio memorae.
@jerryedelman35818 ай бұрын
I maybe old, being 75 but I absolutely loved hearing her story. I've always been interested , as an American, in learning about other cultures. American is primarily made up of many different cultures, myself having Russian, Jewish blood in me. And I find it fascinating to hear especially how young people deal with the complexities of their mixed cultures. Very well done interview.
@v.ju._.ju.v8 ай бұрын
this is so cool! Im full Okinawan, but grew up as Japanese American! This made me very connected to you Grace! Thank you Max for having her as a guest! Now, she's my new fav artist ^o^
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it! :) Make sure to check out OKIDOKI and Again (by Matt Cab and Grace). They are my favs 🙏🙏
@MaxDCapo9 ай бұрын
Who else loves Okinawa? Audio only versions of the Live in Tokyo Podcast Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/1XdRNqW9BYi9avrXHiuczq Amazon: music.amazon.com/podcasts/07d79aa7-725d-4ad8-aa3e-1c012e1be08e/live-in-tokyo-with-max-d-capo Apple: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/live-in-tokyo-with-max-d-capo/id1723641269
@ironhell8138 ай бұрын
I do, and I’m not Japanese or American, I just found Okinawa on my own without any connection to her.
@Reprodestruxion8 ай бұрын
Anyone that can speak Okinawan Rohan , like Chiaki?
@greg.peepeeface8 ай бұрын
In the US, it's so diverse, so it's interesting to hear an Okinawan describe their experience with ethnicity and race in such a homogenous culture. I also describe Okinawa like Hawaii to Japan.
@greg.peepeeface8 ай бұрын
My 2 cents are markability to an international audience would be to sing in Japanese because she doesn't look Japanese, yet speaks fluently. I highly suggest that she target the Asian American community, and I can put her in touch with my homie Kero-One in LA.
@MoPoppins8 ай бұрын
I’m half-Japanese,half-Vietnamese & grew up in LA (born in Tokyo). I’ve never been to Okinawa, but curious about visiting! I’d also like to go to Hokkaido, since it’s not humid up there. At 49, I think I’d feel more confident & comfortable navigating different places than I would’ve when I was younger, since I have more life experience now. When I was younger, there was no internet, so there was also no insight into what a place was like-I really love the connected era we live in! 🥰
@jejudo30008 ай бұрын
Are you a Japanese citizen?
@MoPoppins8 ай бұрын
@@jejudo3000 Naturalized American citizen.
@Wainwright958 ай бұрын
Okinawa is an absolutely beautiful place. I visited a pen-pal and it felt like paradise, I'm looking forward to saving up and going back again
@debbiejansen11788 ай бұрын
Makes me want to go
@sanseiryu8 ай бұрын
I'm so happy you interviewed Grace. I have been watching her videos and listening to her music for a while. Those in car singing videos were so good! I'm glad she is still making music. I love Okinawa, I was stationed there in the late 70s on Kadena Air Base. Many good memories and I hope to visit again in the future,
@christineshadd19297 ай бұрын
Hi Max! I just love your interviews! This one was AWESOME since I'm half Okinawan and 25% German 25% British...champuru nin gen!! I just showed my 83 year old Okinawan mom this interview and she LOVED watching it sooooo much she forgot to eat her dinner!! I've shared it with my 2 brothers, niece and 3 nephews! One nephew is also a HUGE One Piece fan!! I have also shared Grace Aimi's song OkiDoki with EVERYONE!! Keep making great interviews🌺
@MaxDCapo7 ай бұрын
Wow this was really heartwarming. Thank you and I’m so glad your Okinawan mom loved it that much! That’s amazing to hear! Okidoki I had playing on repeat for weeks too. PS your One Piece loving nephew sounds cool ;)
@edjarrett31648 ай бұрын
This really impacted me. My Mom is Japanese and I had some limited contact and visits with my Japanese relatives. I spent months working as a pilot deployed to Kadena AB over five years. I spent my free time outside the base because, I could speak decent Japanese. I came away feeling more Okinawan than Japanese. I totally get the differences in culture. Okinawan is more skewed to Western culture. I found the difference to be pronounced. I miss Okinawa.
@cupidok27688 ай бұрын
wow the dad is good looking. does she have a brother
@keyser0218 ай бұрын
Just don't mind the pesky Ryukyu huh? The ones you've occupied and subjugated the good part of century with your guns? Those guys? 石なぐの歌
@edjarrett31648 ай бұрын
@@keyser021 You’re under so many false assumptions that it”s hard to address. We occupied as a result of winning the war. The Okinawans built businesses and carried on with life under their provincial government, not ours. As for subjugation, there has been none. Everything our military has accomplished as been with the approval of the Okinawan and Japanese government.
@Pomisher8 ай бұрын
Could be said about Mainland Japan. The Ryu Kyu Islands were annexed by Japan. The Ryu Kyu culture and language is being suppressed by Japan.
@VeryTotemo8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this interview! I have always wondered about Grace and her family, since watching their video singing Okinawa songs. I am Okinawan American, 100%, and I say I am Okinawa American vs Japanese American too. I love that she has the Okinawa tattoos! My great grandmothers both had them. I'm happy that there is the move towards younger Okinawa women wearing them again.
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
I think we all seemed to have gotten recommended that video! 🙏🙏🙏
@socalguy8298 ай бұрын
this was such a cool, chill conversation between two people that really got into the details of third-culture kids, being biracial, identity, growing up etc. well done Max and Grace!
@worldview7308 ай бұрын
she's pretty, & has the best of both worlds from her father & Mother, which I think she favors
@pandaplutten25738 ай бұрын
Amazing ... makes me wanna go to Okinawa even more! I'm half-Japanese and half-Hongkongese. Born and raised in Sweden though. Gambate!
@ironhell8138 ай бұрын
Interesting, so japaneae and Chinese parents? Sugoi Okinawa!
@Drownedinblood8 ай бұрын
You're half Japanese, Half Chinese...stop being so ashamed.
@pandaplutten25738 ай бұрын
@@ironhell813 Yes, father from HKG and mother from Kawasaki, Japan! Okinawa makes me think of Mr. Miyagi from the Karate Kid movies =)
@taiyonoboru1192Ай бұрын
日本と中国人というのではなく香港人のアイデンティティーもっているのはいいね~
@jrthiker99088 ай бұрын
Love this interview. I'm mixed also....my mother was Shanghainese/British and my father was American (German/Scottish), also US military/CIA. I was born in Taiwan and lived 4 years in Okinawa (near Kadena) and 8 years in Tokyo (Akashima/Tachikawa), as well as Hong Kong and Thailand. Moved to the US for the first time when I was 16. Now I split my time between the US and Europe. You're right, we mixed ex-pats are all insiders and outsiders no matter where we live. It's an odd situation, but you get used to it and learn to appreciate being different. It enables you to live anywhere and quickly adapt to be comfortable in other cultures.
@ironhell8138 ай бұрын
You’re a fool to have left.
@DominicanStud1018 ай бұрын
Where does Max get all these amazing and beautiful guests?! What a way to end 2023!
@tokyo3338 ай бұрын
This young lady is so cool and her music rocks!
@socalfloridian18 ай бұрын
What brilliant, beautiful, gifted, talented, and smart human beings grace (like Grace Aimi) this You Tube channel! Thank you for your existence and for you being alive in this world!❤🎉😅😊
@candygirl75863 ай бұрын
Yes! This was a beautiful interview. She is a lovely young lady.
@danielmatuska7953 ай бұрын
My first time in Japan was in 1957, I was 21 and fascinated by everything. I went to Kokusai, the four seasons show and was entranced by the Japanese content interspersed with a wonderful presentation of a Radio City like chorus line that would put the Rockettes to shame. I was amazed at the acumen of Japanese tradesmen and rates and artisans. I have been to Jana many times over the years on business and pleasure. To me, Japanese culture is characterized by striving for perfection. You and your guest brought out many of the unique features of the Japan I came to love. I know change is inevitable, but I hope the Japanese culture is able to retain the qualities that make it one of the world’s great cultures.
@janefreeman9957 ай бұрын
I'm almost 65 and very much appreciate gen z. So many are involved and care
@街歩きチャンネル-o8x8 ай бұрын
Hey! Finally! 待ってました! My eternal sunshine!
@fohponomalama506510 күн бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed this interview primarily because I am a half Japanese half Okinawan person raised in Hawaii, and have lived for several years in the South Pacific. From my experience being raised in Hawaii, I am convinced that Okinawans are related to Pacific Islanders, sharing similar foods and even dance moves. Also, although Grace looks very Caucasian and is only a quarter Okinawan, she is truly more Okinawan than me. It shows you are truly what you are on the inside, not what you look like on the outside.
@SiggyMe8 ай бұрын
I studied Okinawan karate for over 10 years and its definitely my instructor was a 6th Dan. Its very different than Japanese Karate and much of it was designed to protect against Japan. So I get it. She is very intelligent, pretty, humor, and has a great voice.
@johnmarengo39198 ай бұрын
Funny, my brother and I are half Okinawan, raised in California. Of course, this was due to the military, and while my brother was born in Okinawa, I was born at Camp Lejeune, NC. Okinawa is so unknown to Americans, so in short conversations, we just say that we're Japanese. Definitely, differences in Japan's mainland and Okinwans, Okinawa so laid back. Grace Aimi, so beautiful, great mix of races, and cultures, like Taco Rice! : )
@michelebrown63744 ай бұрын
Love this interview and Grace!! 🥰😘❤️
@seanv31808 ай бұрын
Awesome interview! The editing at 32:07 made me LOL though 😂
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
I was hoping no one would notice...😂
@walkacrossjapan8 ай бұрын
Haha same here. I watched it twice.
@gracecadet32448 ай бұрын
I scrolled just to find this, I was like "is no one gonna talk about this?" It was a funny cute moment 😝
@Pomisher8 ай бұрын
I’m half Japanese/white with fair traits. I have four children, they’re blond with blue eyes. Only one came through with brown eyes and hair. Pretty much the same with my nieces and nephews. It’s a role of the dice at the 3rd generation depending who you match up with.
@chiburu_uchinanchu8 ай бұрын
she's rocking the hajichi!❤
@rogersmith91148 ай бұрын
I really miss Okinawa! I’m half Japanese and American. Born in Japan but I live in the States. My dad was from Texas as well.
@DATApush3r7 ай бұрын
This is one of the most enjoyable interviews I've ever watched! You guys killed it. Such good topics and vibes.
@xenofrost698 ай бұрын
She is so beautiful ❤
@yaayoiii8 ай бұрын
I’m mix Japanese and Korean born and raised in Fukuoka and now lives in US. Being mix and having dual/multiple cultural backgrounds makes person a rich person, can appreciate, and be able to have wider/multiple perspectives to see one things. And Aimi I get you about the weight- I recently saw my grandma for the first time in 3 years, the first thing she said is that I gained weight lol
I have nothing but great memories of my time in Okinawa. As a pilot, I deployed numerous times over 5 years to Kadena AB. I spent much of my spare time outside the base because I can speak decent Japanese. While my Mom’s family is from Tokyo, I felt this strong bond to the Okinawan culture. They are more western culture driven and opposed to the Japanese national governance. I miss Okinawa.
@eatlaughandstupid44308 ай бұрын
very cool...enjoyed it
@kotinnda1238 ай бұрын
ウチナーンチュのアイミさん、応援してますよ!
@tadashiisa54588 ай бұрын
Super cool Podcast. The conversation, the experience, very positive upbringing, proud of her heritage, keep up the good work 👍🤗
@meganb.higgins9738 ай бұрын
I think that people who don't live in America/haven't traveled between states aren't aware how different each state is from each other.
@atatur1238 ай бұрын
Do Japanese people not realize that Okinawans are ethnically Ryukyuan not Japanese? I am shocked by the number of ignorant comments here. Do Japanese schools not teach this stuff?
@atatur1238 ай бұрын
@ridgemonthigh8h4a I had always heard about the discrimination but I never realized how bad it was until now. My heart goes out to the minority groups of Japan.
@taiyonoboru1192Ай бұрын
@@atatur123 中国はもっと酷いけどな~チベットにもウイグルにも!
@Tinatina-m7h15 күн бұрын
Japanese are not exactly so called one race as they claimed themselves are and surely Okinawa had a different ethnic identity from the mainland Japan but to be honest Okinawa is a small island so it’s better to be annexed with Japan otherwise it will become like Taiwan always threatened by communist China、when the world view Taiwan is a part of China but the fact is despite those refugees flew to the island during the IIWW the true Taiwanese is also a race of Polynesian ethnic.
@KantoCafe7158 ай бұрын
100% Heaven on Earth. I’ve been twice to Ishigaki
@marieneu2648 ай бұрын
She’s beautiful!
@melissam92538 ай бұрын
Grace, you look Japanese/Okinawan… I can see it…in your eyes, cheekbones, face shape, and coloring. You don’t have to follow the narrative that you cannot be “really Japanese” if you’re mixed looking. Being mixed is inclusive and has subtlety. People don’t always work on that level.💖
@taiyonoboru1192Ай бұрын
必要なのはハート、精神
@cjaoshenyjc72768 ай бұрын
She is absolutely stunning
@letsgokinawa8 ай бұрын
So glad Okinawa's represented with a KZbinr in tokyo!!! I am a huge fan of Trafalgar Law!!!!
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
Let’s gooo also love Law
@desuburinga8 ай бұрын
Awesome interview and Grace does look like Emily Rudd from One Piece 😲
@debbiejansen11788 ай бұрын
I'm fascinated with the Japanese culture. In this case Okinawan. Thanks for this interesting interview. I'm born and raised in the US but people will always ask me where I'm from because I don't have a look that people can quite place. This makes me feel sometimes like a foreigner. My mother is from South Africa. I am mostly Caucasian. I have black( about 10 percent) and Asian( about 13 percent) This I only knew because of the different DNA companies. ( I was raised by my mother but knew her. I have no doubt she didn't know either).Now I understand a little bit about my own look.
@chocopiebunny8 ай бұрын
Grace does not "look Japanese," but I can definitely see some traces in her features. However, it really shouldn't matter if she looks Japanese or not because we need to stop conflating race and culture. Grace is Japanese period. And as people like Grace continue to use their voice to share their truth, we can start shifting our perspectives on what it means to be Japanese. Hopefully, we can someday come to a place where we can be Japanese without being held to imperialist, Yayoi standards. Grace may not "look Japanese," but there are many Japanese people who look like Grace. -sincerely, a fellow Japanese
@TB-vb1st8 ай бұрын
People always say that in these types of videos but I would never have guessed she had any asian heritage unless it was pointed out.
@Pomisher8 ай бұрын
Yeah but. Even in Japan she would be considered foreign.
@MoPoppins8 ай бұрын
Even if she weren’t a quarter Japanese, it wouldn’t matter-if you like a culture, you like it. There are non-Asians who are pretty much honorary Japanese, by way of immersing themselves in the language & culture-if you closed your eyes, you’d think they were native, and that’s actually a better tell. Conversely, there are native Japanese who leave the country because the cultural values never vibed with them, and these things are part of our essence-characteristics we’re born with, that manifest and if we’re lucky, we get to relocate to where our souls feel at home, which could be multiple places on this planet. 🌎
@chocopiebunny8 ай бұрын
@@Pomisher whoosh
@GTX3113 ай бұрын
She would not have the common Japanese look because aside from her being mixed, Okinawans also look more similar to Southeast Asians, Pacific Islanders and Taiwanese aborigines. They are a different ethnic group from the dominant Yamato Japanese of the mainland. This is probably why her 23andMe DNA test didn't say that she's Japanese but instead said that she's Okinawan, like she said.
@brandondon328 ай бұрын
Okinawan and Japanese are different. Here in Hawaii we were taught that when we were young. Hahaha!
@GTX3113 ай бұрын
Okinawans have the Austronesian look of Southeast Asians and Pacific Islanders. 🙂
@pokya-anakrantau88458 ай бұрын
In Malay and Indonesian the word "campur" or spelled in the 50s "champur" means mixed or to mix. So I guess, "champuru" in contemporary Okinawan usage has its origin from the Malay-archipelago or Nusantara region.
@atatur1238 ай бұрын
Austronesian people have been found to range up to Taiwan (in the north). Wouldn't be surprising if it extended to Okinawa too.
@sprue_goose8 ай бұрын
I agree....when I heard this I went straight to "campur". I speak Indonesian and Japanese and I think this is where it came from. Why....I'm not sure.
@Slave-Of-Christ8 ай бұрын
Nice, Aimi! We named our daughter Aimi as well! We call her Ami though.「愛実」Same??? I've been checking out your music! Nice stuff. Like how you "chanpuru" the styles. I've been learning the samisen for a bit now and like hearing it in contemporary music.
@flightbyrd8 ай бұрын
In the old days in Hawaii they used to say "chop suey" for mixed ethnicity.
@siegpasta8 ай бұрын
first time seeing your channel, but I loved the One Piece talk outta nowhere. I love One Piece. I've been reading the manga since 2017. Unironically the best story ever written. Oda sensei is on another level and other authors end up looking like amateurs in comparison to him
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
I’ll always find a way to throw in one piece into any topic. Glad you enjoy it too. Oda is a world building genius.
@bertshimabukuro6408 ай бұрын
Karate Kid II wasn't shot in Okinawa either. Shot on Oahu.
@ЕвгенийРыбин-п7ъ8 ай бұрын
Thank You dear friend
@monicapaeklucky8 ай бұрын
Chanpuru is same meaning in Korean champong we use this term describe ppl of mixed ethnicity but does have a condescending tone to it
@patrickmcevoy32578 ай бұрын
Hi Max saw ur channel on KZbin ur interview with Grace she is very cute and very happy person her japanese is very good ur channel is great hope you do more interviews on mixed people I love the Japanese language I have been learning Japanese language for a while anyway great interview with Grace
@DLing-h4v8 ай бұрын
3:40 "Campur" is "mix" in Indonesian / Malay
@OkiMiku7 ай бұрын
Ayyyye I'm also Okinawan/Texan (grew up half of my life in Okinawa, half in the States). I relate to sooooo many things you said here! Same thing with me though, I had a lot of trouble getting put in Japanese school so my parents just ended up putting me in Kumon and I went to a private school, Zion.
@MizanChen4 ай бұрын
I like the fact that champuru means mixed, because in Malay(Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia too maybe) it also means mix
@Golgi-Gyges8 ай бұрын
I like how she says "my dad is a Texan" (in effect)
@moisestorres96188 ай бұрын
It's crazy the school hesitated to accept you as a foreign student because when I came to Japan in the 4th grade without knowing any Japanese, the principal told my brother and I to start attending school right away. My classmates treated me so well that I ended up learning Japanese in no time.
@vandalorian87778 ай бұрын
Awesome interview. I found the editing mistake at 32:08 very funny
@123mixtwoАй бұрын
I knew this girl from that okinawa song too,I’d love it
@aeromtb24688 ай бұрын
she is really level headed.
@michelleg78 ай бұрын
I love this and I love how she identifies, I prefer to say someone who is mixed ancestry versus saying words like Hafu, it has such a stigma attached to it. I was thinking about the tattoos of the Okinawan women. I love she embraced that. Tattoos were outlawed because its also how tattoos are seen in Japan as having to do with Yakuza, and then being banned from bathouses there. Its terribly sad such a stigma is attached to tattoos like that. I love Okinawans they are so different from mainland Japan.
@ironhell8138 ай бұрын
Iam glad that tattoos are frowned on, it’s an indicator of lack of satisfaction with the self. I like living with ppl that like each other.
@taiyonoboru1192Ай бұрын
でももっと古くの歴史では倭人は皆、刺青してたと歴史書に記されてるけどね~
@GodenClark26 күн бұрын
Cute interview
@anaisabelgarridomartinez79468 ай бұрын
I love how Japan is changing. Spain needs to change a lot more too. The entire world needs to develop for the best version of ourselves. Younger generations are bringing lots of big potential changes right now. Well done and keep pushing forward for these changes to appear.
@MoPoppins8 ай бұрын
I’m of Asian heritage, and when I went to Barcelona in ‘99, there was no internet yet-just the Lonely Planet guide, which was absolute crap. 👎 We went on a bus tour of the city, and I guess the entire thing was sponsored by KFC & another fast food joint, because they kept mentioning them throughout the ride. 😂 Las Rambas was underwhelming, maybe because I’m from LA and couldn’t help but compare it to grander versions. Anyway, what I wasn’t prepared for was the bigotry. I wish the Lonely Planet guides mentioned which places were racist towards which groups-traveling to where you’re not wanted is NO FUN AT ALL. 🫤
@John-f7q9k12 күн бұрын
You are American one hundred percent. That's it. Culture is culture be proud of it. When I was born my mother and I was disowned by her family,, we lived with my great grand mother who had the tattoos you mentioned She had them from her knuckles to her elbows, they were triangles interlocking patterns, to me they were beautiful. She told me, and who would know right? She said the Japanese would come around and take the young girls and they never came back, but if you have tattoos they wouldn't take you, some girls wouldn't mind but ultimately it's up to the parents The truth was the young girls were taken to Japan to work in brothels The people who went to these places thought that workers there wanted to be there, and found it difficult to be someone who didn't, also tattoos were associated with a lower class, criminals were tattooed under their arms, modern Japanese tattoos or styles leave this area empty. Firefighters ther tated their bodies, because they did this naked, but appeared clothed. But back to my ,,, so it was the real reason only women from Okinawan ladies had them, true story, told to a little kid. She died in 1966, it was my first time I ever rode in a car it was a black Cadillac she was 83 when they took her away. I have nothing to say about Okinawa, but I can say that it has gotten to be a better a place and time heals . My culture is Okinawan and father was a white dude from Texas who was with the 1st , SF, who made me a love child. In Hawaii nixed people back in the day were called poi dog, they don't call them that' any more? The ghosts of Okinawa are real, the first A and W built on Okinawa was by our house and so was our haka at base of the cliff, g.i.s would throw the mugs off of it, broken glass would litter the bottom where our family grave and I'd go there and pick up the broken glass, The ledge above was the same but sometimes one of the mugs wouldn't be broken, I seen one and I went after it I had fallen in Field of broken mugs and I decided to leave, when I started to walk away I notice a lot of blood spilling from the bottom of my uncut pant leg, which I rolled up to look at this unbelievable cut I had gotten, a few minutes later my mom comes running up and tells me grand ma said I was hurt. But she had been gone now over a year
@dhl15447 ай бұрын
Great Video.
@incognito_tk24246 ай бұрын
Grace, she is so cool & nice character!!👍 i’d love to ❣️ BTW, best wishes for good luck in her success future 🫶🎉🇯🇵
@1256giff6 ай бұрын
Ah 1980 Okinawa becomes Japan. I was there it was fun.
@victordasilva52558 ай бұрын
Beauty
@udui1o1738 ай бұрын
This was a good interview with Grace. Being half Okinawan myself from Hawaii pretty much everyone here is a mixed plate. Can you find a half Okinawan guy to interviewview his perspective.
@erniestrother35458 ай бұрын
🎻🎻🎻🎻🎶🎶🎶☠️☠️🏴☠️YOHO! Great job as always.
@SilverforceX8 ай бұрын
100% beautiful
@joesoy91858 ай бұрын
In English, accepted usage comes and goes. I´m a quarter Indian, three quarters English. I had to explain to an English friend that the term "half-cast" is unacceptable nowadays. "Mixed race" or "mixed heritage" are OK. He couldn´t understand that accepted vocabulary changes. The expression "coloured" is taboo, whereas "people of colour" is not. Interestingly, the term "black and brown people" seems to have established itself in modern usage.
@stevefiorito53796 ай бұрын
I am enjoying your video interviews. I got my major introduction to Okinawan and Japanese culture when I trained under the Okinawan Goju-Ryu Master, Morio Higaonna ... now living back in Okinawa and declared a "National Treasure" in Japan. I trained under 4 other styles of martial arts, 3 of the 4 were also Okinawan, but those Dojos did not present much in the way of culture. Goju-Ryu is so Okinawan that even the Japanese Language is insufficient to convey the concepts embedded in the philosophy ... only the Okinawan Language can do that.
@hoosierhugh535 ай бұрын
I've spent about 2 years altogether on Okinawa when I was in the Marine Corps, I can honestly say that Okinawa would be better off if we weren't there. And in actuality, it's a horrible location for military assets now because the entire island is within range of conventional ballistic missiles, if things goes nuclear, forget about it.
@Albanianjapanesefamily8 ай бұрын
hey. i just watched all interviews and we are planning to go back to japan on 2024. we have a 13 years old son and he is born and raised in Sweden and we parents would like to put him in junior high school(中学校) public japanese school but my husband is afraid of bullying because he looks almost full japanese but speaks only basics. Do you have any advice? we are planning to live in Tokyo. Do you think it will be a good experience for him? And i love how Grace embraces her both roots and is proud of them i hope my kids do too :)
@taoist328 ай бұрын
Just go after everything is restored from the earthquake and tsunami.
@atatur1238 ай бұрын
Maybe start him out in an international school in Tokyo first? There are ones with a mix of Japanese & foreigners. That might ease him into the country/culture. Speaking as someone who's Asian but grew up in the West, whenever I went back to the motherland as a child/teen, I definitely got judged severely by the locals for not being fluent in the language or the culture/customs. I didn't have "foreigner looks" to fall back on as an escape/excuse.
@goldensurfer27782 ай бұрын
For me as a German, it is historically rather difficult to mention ethnic origins at all. We have been taught for decades that everyone is the same, there are no differences, whether black or white. Now I am always surprised at how this is dealt with in Asia. If you don't look like us, then you're not from here. In the end, it follows a "simple" logic. Which in Germany is immediately labeled as xenophobic and National Socialist. I find it quite interesting what different faces are characterized by their mere origin. So these videos are always particularly interesting for me. So long... I'm not following any particular agenda, just wanted to share my thoughts.
Fantastic interview - the audio is driving me nuts.
@JohnPowell614 күн бұрын
Max. please have her back to explain where the term "chicken skin" comes from. Here in America I thought we only said "goosebumps."
@AmmarZolkipli8 ай бұрын
Could be derived from the Malay/Indonesian word campur which means mixed. Champuru makes sense as a garaigo.
@redpill79935 ай бұрын
Grace is so pretty, she reminds me of Debbie Harry (Blondie) over 50 years ago.
@red29778 ай бұрын
She is painfully cute
@jackwong2308 ай бұрын
I read that there was Chinese influence in Okinawa before it became part of China. "Cham" sounds like a Chinese Cantonese or Chinese Hokkien word meaning "mixed-in" or "add in to mix".
@lowkeyconvert89718 ай бұрын
the whole of japan and korea has chinese influence.
@yjk57378 ай бұрын
Chinese influence on mainland Japan was mostly in the Tang dynasty. Chinese influence on Okinawa was up until more recently, really up until 1879 when Okinawa Prefecture was created.
@Reprodestruxion8 ай бұрын
Well of course stir fry would be the Lew Chew influence
@Reprodestruxion8 ай бұрын
The Ryuku Lee chew islands were the cultural intermediaries between China and Japan until the Satsuma
@Pomisher8 ай бұрын
The Ryu Kyu islands are closer to Taiwan.
@cashflownpv8 ай бұрын
I'm definitely not messing with your dad.
@omi44708 ай бұрын
I love how it’s specific like “Okinawan” Sure let’s do a half “Hokkaidoite” too 😂
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
Maybe Ainu from Hokkaido😂 Okinawan is different ethnically from Japanese though!
@ironhell8138 ай бұрын
Isn’t Ainu as well isn’t it more Russian?
@atatur1238 ай бұрын
The way she labelled herself is accurate. Okinawan is literally a different ethnicity (Ryukyuan) from Japanese.
@SucculentDoorbell8 ай бұрын
Beautiful girl
@walkacrossjapan8 ай бұрын
How is it that I see her video recommended to me on instagram and now here it is on KZbin?!
@MaxDCapo8 ай бұрын
Google and the Zucc must be watching you😳
@walkacrossjapan8 ай бұрын
@@MaxDCapo right? I’m shookith 草
@Don_Yuan8 ай бұрын
No disrespect to Grace--- but it is worth noticing that the vast majority of half or mixed Asian kids have White fathers and Asian mothers, and not the other way around. WMAF is far more common as a social phenomenon, while AMWF is quite rare in comparison. It's taboo to discuss this difference, and people generally avoid talking about it. But as an Asian man, it is painfully obvious to me that the two types of Asian/White couplings are vastly different in fundamental ways that shape their respective children. 99% of the half-Asian kids I see online are of the WMAF variety.
I wish you could have asked her if she would live in the US one day
@assoverteakettle8 ай бұрын
Re: Dopplegangers. At 32:00, I think from certain angles Grace Aimi kinda looks a little bit like Peyton List from Cobra Kai which makes it ironic that she wants to study Okinawan karate.
@km4946Ай бұрын
歌のチャンネルを見ていたら、こちらが出てきました!
@melverys3 ай бұрын
I first heard about Okinawa from Karate Kid looool
@jerryedelman35818 ай бұрын
INCREDIBLE SAD that people have no clue where OKINAWA is. One of the deadliest, battles of WW2 for both Japan & ALLIED forces, yet its not being taught in schools anymore. Just another example of history being erased.
@DevRel1Ай бұрын
I think it’s more sad that we keep hearing stories of people that grew up in Japan and had such a hard time going to school and not being accepted
@jerryedelman3581Ай бұрын
@@DevRel1 I simply can't understand why people have to be so competitive when discussing moral wrongs. The world is NOT perfect. People are not perfect. But it does no good to deny anyone's or groups moral injustice or to even try to rate it on a scale 1-10. Its ALL bad for those who have experienced it. My point was that not teaching history doesn't erase the fact that it took place, nor does it erase the pain associated with it. But what it does is potentially allowing it to be sadly repeated. As the current state of the rise of anti-semitism in the world is proof of just that.
@worldview7308 ай бұрын
13:18, only an original native Japanese can tell if she nailed the dialect purely