Why Are These AMAZING Things SO COMMON in Japan?

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Mrs Eats

Mrs Eats

11 ай бұрын

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Japan has a robot cafe where your waiters are robots! And Japan has the most luxurious train, with a two-story suite room, wooden bath, and world-class chefs preparing your meals! And these are just SOME of the amazing things I’m going to show you today! But even though they’re mind-blowing to the rest of the world, they’re quite normal for us Japanese! So let’s start with the robot cafes!
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Пікірлер: 216
@MrsEats
@MrsEats 11 ай бұрын
Which of these Normal Japanese things BLEW YOUR MIND?
@kaitlynlsari681
@kaitlynlsari681 11 ай бұрын
All of it😮 that's what blew my mind. I live in the mountains of central Otago in New Zealand 🥝🙋 I've never even SEEN a robot😅 as far as safety goes, this is one of the safest places in NZ, people still leave Thier houses unlocked and Thier keys in the car here😂 you probably couldn't do that anywhere else in NZ
@Raiden-if2be
@Raiden-if2be 11 ай бұрын
Love the Cafe idea 👏🏾 It will be on my list of places to visit when i go to Japan. No one wants to have a disability and the hardships it entails. This gives them something to do while also interacting with people via video chat, instead of being locked away/shut out from society/public view
@amandahayward
@amandahayward 11 ай бұрын
All of it. I can't wait to see it when I visit ♥️
@stuart5178
@stuart5178 11 ай бұрын
The robot/disabled waitstaff restaurant. This is unbelievable and an unbelievable gift.
@kanexiong3827
@kanexiong3827 11 ай бұрын
The robotic mouth was cool😮
@10isab
@10isab 11 ай бұрын
As a disabled myself, (I used to walk just fine 3 years ago and now I am almost confined home and it has been very difficult)... I find that Japan is WAY AHEAD to include disabled people and help them have an almost normal life instead of hiding them. We have so much to give to the world despite our physical limitations. Thank you for your videos! ❤❤❤
@nyahanaru8899
@nyahanaru8899 11 ай бұрын
I agree! I Have CP, I walk with a Walker so that means I don't have |hands| to carry stuff and do I am very limited when it comes to working, at a store, I can site and work but so many plases dont alow that and finding a job online seems inposible
@Lightice1
@Lightice1 11 ай бұрын
That's an incredibly new development. Japan's accessibility used to be terrible just a few years ago, they had a big campaign about improving disabled accessibility due to the 2020 Paralympics. When I visited Japan in 2019 I saw exactly one person in wheelchair in the streets of Tokyo in the course of over a week. When I revisited a few weeks ago, I saw dozens in a much shorter time.
@fosterfuchs
@fosterfuchs 11 ай бұрын
@@Lightice1 It's nice to read this. The last time I was in Japan was 2019 (multiple trips). And I noticed how rarely I saw disabled people in public. I'm glad this has changed for the better.
@fosterfuchs
@fosterfuchs 11 ай бұрын
@@missplainjane3905 The part that disabled people are no longer hidden away.
@fosterfuchs
@fosterfuchs 11 ай бұрын
@@missplainjane3905 As I mentioned in the previous comment, that’s something I noticed. Very few disabled people in public.
@cynthiasmith398
@cynthiasmith398 11 ай бұрын
You did not sound rude when you talked about the disabled. You sounded very compassionate. Your videos make me happy.
@johnwakamatsu3391
@johnwakamatsu3391 11 ай бұрын
I was paralyzed for a number of years and was fortunate to recover. I believe that this cafe is very important because disabled people can still contribute to society. I helped disabled WWII veterans and many were able to have families and lead productive lives. I thank you for this video.
@sweiland75
@sweiland75 11 ай бұрын
As a person with a disability myself, you are absolutely correct to say that we are forgotten and I appreciate your sensitivity to our challenges. It's all about accessibility.
@boris1387
@boris1387 11 ай бұрын
Great idea to help the disabled, love the cafe 👌👍🏻
@rinner2801
@rinner2801 11 ай бұрын
The Robot cafe is one of the best things I've ever seen, I hope they can continue to help those less fortunate reach out and interact with the rest of society.
@DavidCruickshank
@DavidCruickshank 11 ай бұрын
I love how Japan is both very low tech and very high tech simultaneously.😅
@jasonfanclub4267
@jasonfanclub4267 11 ай бұрын
me, too
@h.o.j2375
@h.o.j2375 11 ай бұрын
Normally I am against robot cafes or hotels as they take away jobs from people but Dawn Cafe is totally different and I fully support this style of robot cafe. It’s great to be able to give people who are not able to physically leave their house to work and interact. There should be more of these, the robot hotel need their robots to be like this!
@Jordan-inJapan
@Jordan-inJapan 11 ай бұрын
The contrast between heartwarming, wholesome content and hentai cringe-humor was glorious. 😂 Also, I was reminded just how different life in big cities (esp Tokyo) is to rural Japan like where I live. No robot cafés in Mie-prefecture. And while the trains are great BETWEEN cities or tourist destinations here, you really need a car to get around locally. (Actually most people opt for a “Kei-Truck” in my neighborhood…)
@missplainjane3905
@missplainjane3905 11 ай бұрын
A balance
@Haph3us
@Haph3us 11 ай бұрын
You hit the nail on the head. In a lot of countries, disabled people are kind of forgotten by society. It’s wholesome to see that technology is enabling them to be a bigger part of society.
@LorienInksong
@LorienInksong 11 ай бұрын
I wish we had cafes with robots like that here. I'm disabled and going outside with people is so scary I often can't do it. Working at a place like that would help me have a job and be less lonely.
@iMuzik3
@iMuzik3 11 ай бұрын
That café is absolutely amazing, and I hope the world sees more of them!
@johnnygrind77
@johnnygrind77 11 ай бұрын
When they released the Japanese tv show, "はじめてのおつかい" here in the USA, they renamed the show, "Old Enough!" and American people freaked out and were so worried and confused. We couldn't do something like that in a lot of areas here, but it fills me with joy knowing that there are people in this world who raise their citizens in a safe environment and care about each other and their towns!
@kjt7971
@kjt7971 11 ай бұрын
Societal social trust. The problem is rather ironic.... Yet it can be quantified socially and genetically. Socially: People who were raised around one another tend to have unwritten rules with one another that were drafted over the expanse of time that they interacted. Plus a social benefit to not be a hindrance to others (for instance, it is rare for a japanese to say, "邪魔してよ!", to another japanese person, but very likely to be said to an unruly foreigner, *if it is at all said.* ). Point being, (and this is a tendency of people who live on an island with outsiders occasionally or rarely interacting with the inhabitants), Japan has both of these qualities in spades. A social pressure to not be a burden on others, and an uninterrupted unwritten social contract. Both of which yields a high trust society. Bringing in massive amounts of outsiders who either do not respect the social cohesion or choose not to conform (or both), would always be the destructive element of social cohesion. In fact, it may seem like a plea for natalistic nationalism, but I beg to differ. I am saying, don't be a Logan Paul, who chose to be what can be interpreted as a jerk to the japanese, in japan. Live by the credence that you do as the Romans, while in Rome. Effectively, do not bring your disruptive ignorance to another location. This is a particularly western problem. We habe inverted ourselves with this farcical "multiculturalism" narrative that is the polar opposite of cohesive societal trust. The ignorance of those who push the anti-assimilative "multicultural" narrative, either willfully or in error, postulates that assimilation will not result in having a chinatown or having "cultural exchange zones". Which is an outright lie. Japan proves this. They do not have a flood of American Migrants who disrupt the social cohesion of Japan, for the sake of having a Kentucky Fried Chicken in Tokyo, or other american experiences within Japan. It is all a lie predicated on a two-way deception (which tries to gaslight americans, while misinforming a migrant), for the sake of political gains. The perfect example of my ideal is, "If I am at home, I may lounge around naked, all day. But if I am a guest at someone else's house, or chose to join their household, and they are religious puritans, I have no right to tell them that their ways are backwards, and they should be nudists at home. I am a guest, and I am not the one who used social and tangible capital to create their home, thus i have no place, to make the rules in their home, since I have little to no contribution to their home. In that respect, I must abide with them being non nudists, and if I desire to be an indoor nudist, I should go back home, and not be a disruption to their home.". Genetically: Heuristic bias. It is a hardwiring of the human mind to be distrustful of outsiders. Said trust must be earned. Even in an insular society, trust is earned. However, you are more likely to trust someone who resembles you, either physically or culturally. In error, some social constructivists believe this to be "white privilege", but what about a society that is a majority of nonwhite, while white people are a significant or insignificant minority? The huristic bias paradigm goes as follows: If they resemble me, they are more likely to be of my tribe, and my tribe members are less likely to cause me harm. In that effect, it is not a learned trait, but a genetic hardwiring from a prehistoric time where humans were in clusters, and meeting someone who was not a part of your cluster would likely kill you, due to competitive stresses. Hence, how war became a thing. Clan A sends out hunters, Clan B does the same. Both clans know that hunting a mammoth would ensure the survival of their clan. The hunters of both clans are after the same mammoth, and sharing it is far less beneficial than taking all for one's own clan. Both hunter groups encounter one another, one clan kills the mammoth. The other clan sees this as an opportunity to take the bounty. Thus, both hunter bands begin to fight. Then when one or the other side retreats, they get reinforcements to track down the victors in the original skirmish, resulting in a war between both Clans. Our history has more of this as a common disposition, than what we experience now. If it were a clock, and human existence was a full hour on the clock, non-aggression or lowered aggression toward outsiders is less than 2 minutes. We have had 58 minutes of aggressive actions in an in-group/out-group interaction. On this scale, unless the outsider is willing to conform, it is foolishness to assume that the outsider will not be harmful to the indiginous society. Especially if but for the last 10 to 30 seconds, yhe outsider comes from a society that constantly shifts societal norms and governance (IE the middle east.... Only since the 20th century has it even been stable, and the typical middle easterner views outsiders in an enemical manner, within the boundaries of their nations, to include other middle eastern nations. If not for islam and the fear of invasions from more powerful nations, that entire region would possibly still be involved in constant uphevals.
@DarthBirdy3
@DarthBirdy3 10 ай бұрын
はい。アメリカの子供たちにとっては危ないすぎます。
@hoodedneko
@hoodedneko 11 ай бұрын
That robot cafe is great! I work with children who have disabilities and often wonder what will happen when they get older and yes society does forget them. This cafe shows how that's not the case. It's heart warming to see.
@Theolife
@Theolife 11 ай бұрын
I started watching your video a few years ago and thought "Wouldn't it be great to live in Japan!" Now, I've moved to Osaka and I think "Hey, I know that street!" Thanks for being part of our journey.
@starlalilymoon
@starlalilymoon 11 ай бұрын
That robot café is so awesome that it helps people with disabilities get a job an be part of society! That really touches me as it means people can meet such wonderful people; without the robots people would have not met them. I really hope other countries start doing this!
@starlalilymoon
@starlalilymoon 11 ай бұрын
I really like it that it is quiet on the trains and buses in Japan, in the United States, it is annoying when people blast their music etc. I always try to be mindful and 99% of the time I refuse to talk on the phone when I take public transportation.
@epowell4211
@epowell4211 11 ай бұрын
The robot café where they were controlled by people was so heartwarming! So many people are told they can't do anything to contribute to society, and the operators prove them wrong. I also think many customers benefit from this as it brings awareness to how valuable "disabled" people can be and provides social interaction.
@TheDarkLink7
@TheDarkLink7 11 ай бұрын
OH MY GAWD!!!! The mouth one. I *LITERALLY HAD THAT THOUGHT* pop in my head. Glad Mrs Eats did that joke. And as always. Happy to see Mr Eats as well.
@karriek.3429
@karriek.3429 11 ай бұрын
I was feeling kind of down this morning and the notification for this video popped up at just the right time! Thanks for giving me a reason to smile and laugh 🥰 I love Hentai Mrs. Eats! It's nice to see Mr. Eats have a chance to recoil in horror for a change 😂 Great comedic choice 👏👍
@specialk9999
@specialk9999 11 ай бұрын
When I lived in Tokyo as a kid, I used to take the train all over the place and ran errands for my parents. Seeing the kids in the video cleaning the school was very なつかしい!I remember doing that. It was good exercise too. I definitely miss the trains in Japan.
@armandob.8433
@armandob.8433 11 ай бұрын
I feel joy watching those Pilots working and feeling useful for them and society!!!
@UnChannelDuVulpineX
@UnChannelDuVulpineX 11 ай бұрын
8:35 Best sound! Great video, Mrs. and Mr. Eats!
@yugioht42
@yugioht42 11 ай бұрын
actually robot waiters are being used now in the states but they tend to be on the simple side. they are just programmed and sent out for one task then return to their dock. Hospitals do use them for sanitizing empty rooms. police robots are being used for entry and patrol as its easier for them to scan areas without human presence or hit places that are too dangerous. radio controlled robots are way too complex right now.
@MrsEats
@MrsEats 11 ай бұрын
Wow cool!! I want to see American robots too!
@NIGHTGUYRYAN
@NIGHTGUYRYAN 11 ай бұрын
see this is the problem with the way american robots are being implemented. its almost always a cost cutting and job cutting measure. the use of drones and robots by police is dystopian and despite there being a few instances of genuine utilization for the betterment of the american people, it will most certainly be exploited and used to crack down on dissent despite legitimate grievances by the people. america makes robots for capitalist oligarchs and private enterprise, while japan seems to be more interested in how this technology can be applied for the betterment of society as a whole.
@thevectorchef
@thevectorchef 11 ай бұрын
I've seen robot bartenders, fry cooks, and even automated wok cooking … which is still awkward to look at.
@NIGHTGUYRYAN
@NIGHTGUYRYAN 11 ай бұрын
OH MY GOD! the very first thing you showed us with the robots blew my mind! at first i was annoyed that there were robots taking jobs from humans - and then to see they are being controlled by people with disabilities??? THIS IS A BEAUTIFUL THING AND EXACTLY HOW TECHNOLOGY SHOULD BE IMPLEMENTED! wow, im so jaded i couldnt help but expect this was just another excuse to not pay people a living wage - if AI and technology is used to actually HELP people...well, i think thats great! im honestly shocked and so impressed at the level of empathy and compassion with regards to these robots beibg used. this is great.
@LinRuiEn
@LinRuiEn 11 ай бұрын
As a disabled person, I am glad there are changes being made in Japanese cultures acceptance of disability even if these come slowly. I also think it's cute how some of the robots have outfits ❤
@johnsinger3540
@johnsinger3540 11 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mrs Eats.
@Balthazare69
@Balthazare69 11 ай бұрын
5:15 those mechanical dolls r amazing!!!
@tinglee388
@tinglee388 11 ай бұрын
Mrs. Eat, you made me spilled my coffee with the robot mouth. Thanks for the video, will definitely try the restaurant and hotel next time I visit your fine country.
@piperbird7193
@piperbird7193 11 ай бұрын
I was a teen when shows like Sailor Moon and Tenchi Muyo started airing here. I started watching all kinds of stuff, like Kiki's Delivery Service. Something I noticed in many of the anime I watched, was the freedom children had, and I wondered if it was really like that there. Even small kids, taking the train to school, kids after school taking the train to go get ice cream - this was mind blowing to me. We did not have public transport of any kind where I lived, so the idea that an unsupervised child could just pop into the city for ice cream was just the wildest concept to me.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 11 ай бұрын
Saw kids running around in 80's and 90's so maybe that a big city hangup unless you are talking about a county other than the US.
@piperbird7193
@piperbird7193 11 ай бұрын
@@southcoastinventors6583 Yeah, we were out in the road playing or in the woods or at friends house, but we were absolutely not getting onto public transport alone to another town at 8 years old.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 11 ай бұрын
@@piperbird7193 Use to do all of the above in the 90's
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 11 ай бұрын
That's the result of having car dependend sprawl instead of infrstructure for humans. If you need a car to get anywhere, there are also too many cars to be safe outside a car. The US has locked itself into an unhealthy, society destroying living model that is also financially unsustainable, since the suburbs are money sinks.
@natalietowner6780
@natalietowner6780 11 ай бұрын
What an amazing idea that the Dawn cafe is. Very touching ❤
@mandab.3180
@mandab.3180 11 ай бұрын
mrs eats i love your earrings! 🌸 so pretty! also thanks for going in depth about the robot cafe, i've seen videos on other channels but never knew they were controlled by people with disabilities. that's actually very cool 💗
@GaryAa56
@GaryAa56 11 ай бұрын
Another wonderful video Mrs. Eats!
@SushiJim
@SushiJim 11 ай бұрын
Love that inspirational cafe. Very nice… Also your “tongue in cheek” comment about that robot mouth thing was hilarious.
@sookiebear9215
@sookiebear9215 11 ай бұрын
May God Bless these disabled people who still choose to serve in the face of adversity, and may God bless those that created these opportunities to enhance those people’s lives! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@hermeticbear
@hermeticbear 11 ай бұрын
Poo that super deluxe train looks amazing Also your earrings are awesome.
@DannyLuxray
@DannyLuxray 11 ай бұрын
5:12 Saw one if these in Kimetsu no Yaiba a few episodes back I didn't know they were actually a thing, just another reason to love your videos
@yerabbit6333
@yerabbit6333 10 ай бұрын
that robot cafe is so heartwarming
@Ismcant
@Ismcant 11 ай бұрын
in america, parents get arrested for letting their kids go to the park by themselves - its nuts
@enter8487
@enter8487 7 ай бұрын
mr eats reaction @ 4:39 is perfect
@sage268
@sage268 11 ай бұрын
I went to Japan November 2022! It was very surprising how safe it felt there. The first time my friend and I saw very young children taking the train by themselves, we were shocked! At first, we were concerned about where their chaperone might be, but then we realised that they were just doing their own thing. It was very impressive, both on the level of trust and just how independent they were at such a young age. On my first day, I did lose my cellphone at the JR lines just outside the Narita airport and never found it. Our hotel staff were so nice and helpful in trying to help me locate it because I don't speak Japanese (they used a translator on their phones), though. After a few days, I asked if I could get a package shipped there (I got a tablet as cellphones were insanely expensive in Japan and apparently region-locked, according to the sales people I spoke with?). I got them charms from the Inari shrine as thanks. They really went above and beyond! I absolutely love the concept of the Robot cafe! If I didn't have a special diet (I'm strictly gluten free), I would've love to have gone there. I wish the rest of the modern world would do something like this. I ALSO WANT THOSE DANG VENDING MACHINES THAT HEAT UP HOT COCOA TO PERFECT TEMPERATURE, AAHH! I miss Georgia hot cocoa. It was so good! I'd move to Japan just for vending machines (and heated toilet seats) if I could, hahaha! (No, I'm kidding. But I would for the low crime and general better cultural outlook on health and such, which is becoming more and more important to me.) This wasn't mentioned in the video, but one of the most surprising things I found about Japan (outside the amazing vending machines and just how safe it was there, among a few other things) was that there were sanitzers/cleaners for the public toilet seats in almost every public bathroom we went to. So, not only did I feel safe in a low crime sort of way, but I also felt very safe in a cleanliness sort of way. (I also enjoyed the chirping sound track as a shy bathroom-goer.) Thanks for another great video!
@yioulan
@yioulan 10 ай бұрын
Its real mind blowing!!! Thank you Mrs Eats,you are doing a great job!!❤❤❤❤
@Enforcedcraft
@Enforcedcraft 11 ай бұрын
10:32 man I can just hear Ojisans be like. 『うるさい, ばかやろ』. Hahaha.
@alexdrapou4554
@alexdrapou4554 11 ай бұрын
Thats amazing thank you
@MrsEats
@MrsEats 11 ай бұрын
Glad you like it!
@travgpeters1
@travgpeters1 11 ай бұрын
Mrs. Eats ! . Hello from Canada . watching the video while enjoying my breakfast
@DavidSmith-vw5eg
@DavidSmith-vw5eg 11 ай бұрын
I love your sense of humor
@johncameron4194
@johncameron4194 9 ай бұрын
Those old dolls amazing
@MatthewTheWolf2029
@MatthewTheWolf2029 11 ай бұрын
WHOA! That's amazing!
@Katianie9
@Katianie9 11 ай бұрын
Such awesome stuff! Thank you for these videos!
@williamalsing3865
@williamalsing3865 11 ай бұрын
I love your videos about Japan! Also your humor is the best! Make more videos please.
@trustme2001
@trustme2001 11 ай бұрын
That's really cool, helping people with special needs to be productive and contribute to society. ❤
@tankareno
@tankareno 11 ай бұрын
Thank you Mrs Eats for another entertaining and informative video.
@thehangmansdaughter1120
@thehangmansdaughter1120 11 ай бұрын
The lost hat hanging in a pole reminds me of New Zealand. You'll sometimes see jackets, children's toys, or umbrellas on fences or public seats, so the owner can come back for them. I lost my wallet years ago, with hundreds of dollars inside for my uni textbooks, and got it back when a lady dropped it off at the police station, complete with money. Such a lovely lady.
@thehangmansdaughter1120
@thehangmansdaughter1120 11 ай бұрын
Ah, I see, a high trust society. That explains NZ too. We're very small, just 6 million people, at the edge of the world. If we don't help each other none of us would survive.
@kujjitafari8509
@kujjitafari8509 11 ай бұрын
"This thing can replace my girlfriend " lol! I was thinking the same thing when I saw it😅
@IronEagle49
@IronEagle49 10 ай бұрын
I love your chanel! Thank you so much for bringing us lots of joy with your content thanks again!
@gianlucafantini1332
@gianlucafantini1332 11 ай бұрын
The luxury train at the end reminded me of the Snowpiercer in the Netflix series. 😂
@jasonschubert6828
@jasonschubert6828 11 ай бұрын
That robot cafe seems like an insanely stupid idea until you see what's behind it. Fantastic that you can improve people's lives like that! 😍
@tylerjacobson5201
@tylerjacobson5201 11 ай бұрын
Looking good Eats! Love you guys!
@princessbanning
@princessbanning 9 ай бұрын
I have even more of a reason to visit Japan now . 😃
@Lorten369
@Lorten369 11 ай бұрын
Hard to follow when you say robot like Robert. So had to rewind after giggling. Super cute as always 🙂 so more view time for you. You're welcome. 😋
@dallaspcc3886
@dallaspcc3886 11 ай бұрын
I'm almost 50 & when I was young living in the US, we would be sent to school & go home from school by ourselves. Nowadays, you don't ever see that, or it's extremely rare.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 11 ай бұрын
Same thing happen in the 80's and 90's at least where I lived after that not so much. US
@gregramirez7337
@gregramirez7337 11 ай бұрын
Your hair looks so beautiful today!
@davidstephens189
@davidstephens189 10 ай бұрын
Time mark 4:40.... OMG! BWAH HAH HAH HAH!!!!! I love you, Mrs. Eats! you are so funny!
@martinricardo4503
@martinricardo4503 11 ай бұрын
Growing up in the US during the sixties and seventies kids always went out together or on their own with no problems. I remember being gone all day and never a concern at home. People had morals and standards back then (for the most part) which is almost completely gone from American society today. Not saying it was perfect but compared to today there is no comparison.
@abbynormalz
@abbynormalz 11 ай бұрын
I blame the boomer campaigns of stranger danger that hightened the fears of the population and started us down this road. Add in the 24/7 news casts and every bad thing that happened in the country was spread everywhere. Futher re-enforcing those and other fears. Add in polictians that then leveraged that fear into bringing back many of the jim crow era laws and putting the blame for all their problems onto imigrants.
@michaelmurphy3554
@michaelmurphy3554 4 ай бұрын
God bless these people. This is an awesome idea as far as having robots serving you but having the disabled running the robots instead of AI or something like that. Truly amazing.
@nerd26373
@nerd26373 11 ай бұрын
We will always support you. God bless you.
@MrsEats
@MrsEats 11 ай бұрын
Thank you!!
@yioulan
@yioulan 10 ай бұрын
OMG technology is sooooo ahead in Japan!!!!!!
@kjt7971
@kjt7971 11 ай бұрын
9:45 In the US, this used to be a thing. I remember when I was a kid, it was safe enough to catch a bus to school. And this is in the 1980's! Back in 1986, I was 8 years old, and caught the bus. Back then, student fare was 35 cents. I remember waking up late to get to school, and missed the school bus. I had an allowance of $5 per week. But I would often get change and place my coins in a bank. Because I missed the school bus, I took $1 in dimes and nickels with me, caught the bus, and got to school on time. *と...それってデトロイトにいったらも!* This was also considered Detroit's most dangerous period. Detroit is technically less dangerous than in the 1980's, but most major cities in the US have trended toward lower and lower societal trust. Thus, it is not safe for children to travel alone as such, these days. Back then, people believed in leaving kids alone. These days, not so much. The problem are drugs and poor standards of mental health. I commend Japan for having such higher standards in societal trust, and I almost envy the societal cohesion. Nevertheless, I woupd like the US to learn from Japan, instead of our politicians attempting to coerce Japanese politics to be similar to american. We beed the Japanese Oni to visit the US, to scare the bejeezus out of some of these American kids... 😅
@NoshAbroad
@NoshAbroad 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for bringing attention to disability in Japan. It has been my option that Japan is probably the furthest behind in addressing the needs of the disabled among the G7. Maybe by as much as 20 years behind.
@EdjieboaNova
@EdjieboaNova 11 ай бұрын
Super cool. Love from Dallas, Texas 💙🌻
@rurikaadachi6405
@rurikaadachi6405 11 ай бұрын
"You can say that again." *wink* (I couldn't stop laughing.)
@haraya_manawari
@haraya_manawari 11 ай бұрын
4:10 it'll make a very good Mongolian throat singer
@SailorGreenTea
@SailorGreenTea 11 ай бұрын
I want to see robot immigration from Japan to Kitimat-Stikine, Canada.
@mitchzer0iii919
@mitchzer0iii919 11 ай бұрын
Forget the luxury train, I'm taking the Pikachu train
@Kabeer670
@Kabeer670 11 ай бұрын
Japan has trains like Aeroplanes lol
@LeandroFTW
@LeandroFTW 11 ай бұрын
That's fascinating!
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff 11 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@Sockpoppet
@Sockpoppet 11 ай бұрын
"When I see a weird FREAK, I cross da street" That's good life advice.
@craftydemon529
@craftydemon529 11 ай бұрын
Now I really wish that the US had something like that robot cafe. I'm on disability but mine is more of an "invisible disability". I look like a "normal" and healthy person and some days I feel fine and can move around just fine but other times, sometimes the next day or even a couple hours later I can be struggling to walk even a short distance (even just walking across a single room is difficult) due to several health issues. So work is near impossible and I couldn't do that to an employer because even I don't know when I'm going to have a flare up in symptoms
@ukcoupondeals
@ukcoupondeals 11 ай бұрын
I enjoyed watching this video!
@VictoriaGates
@VictoriaGates 11 ай бұрын
I love the concept of robot cafes employing disabled people. It would be fulfilling.
@renae9365
@renae9365 9 ай бұрын
I am disabled, you said it perfectly. I would love to work 4 hours a day, but we don’t have anything like this in USA 🇺🇸
@tcsworld8664
@tcsworld8664 11 ай бұрын
You put it great it’s a wonderful thing that people can work and take part despite being bed bowed can’t wait for it to take off around the world
@davidsims6554
@davidsims6554 11 ай бұрын
I have physical disabilities my self, it's great to see disabled people getting involved and hopefully making their lives a bit better, and beyond that ROBOTS, all the best from St Just Cornwall UK 👍🖖😎🤖
@Gendo3s2k
@Gendo3s2k 11 ай бұрын
"Good Morning, and Welcome to Robutt Cafe." "The biopsy did not go well" "Please end me." "Existence is pain."
@TheKitten
@TheKitten 11 ай бұрын
I went to a restaurant with a robot waiter yesterday, but I'm in the midwest so the other customers were swearing at the teenager in charge of the serving area and throwing boomer tantrums because they couldn't understand how to scan a qr code on their phone to order and refused to use a tablet provided. The whole Asia Mall has a lot of self service ordering kiosks and every time we were at one there was a boomer having a tantrum and leaving
@phildicks4721
@phildicks4721 11 ай бұрын
Very cool.
@Candyy248
@Candyy248 11 ай бұрын
Robot cafes are so cool, they should be everywhere 😊
@Larkin1500
@Larkin1500 11 ай бұрын
We in Croatia also have themed train rides, but it's more like Fallout or Metro 2033.....
@yugioht42
@yugioht42 11 ай бұрын
the easiest way to figure out the new york subway is simple go out of the station onto street level and you will see exactly where you are then check your phone on the route you need. New york has an issue of not marking things in big letters. Unless you see it on the station wall. Chinatown and Times square has this but most other stations do not. The subway does need updating but the city wants to fix disability access first with elevators and ramps into stations. but also the subway tunnels get flooded a lot especially during big storms and the station ends up underwater and completely unusable until its drained by the city. that metro is a mess until the city does something about it.
@Whoo711
@Whoo711 10 ай бұрын
I would totally ride the Pikachu Train
@Gavriel-og6jv
@Gavriel-og6jv 11 ай бұрын
11:13 True, unless you live in one of the biggest cities like NYC, you can't go anywhere without a car in the US.
@Save_our_poor_souls
@Save_our_poor_souls 10 ай бұрын
It seems really crazy to me how 7 year old girls can just easily travel on their own in Japan and in the U.S. where I live, as a 14 year old girl I can't even leave the house at all without fear of something bad that might happen to me.
@RedRoseSeptember22
@RedRoseSeptember22 11 ай бұрын
Love your earrings :)
@cbauch
@cbauch 11 ай бұрын
I went to Jonathan's and they had robots delivering the food.
@katcaparula7898
@katcaparula7898 11 ай бұрын
I am dead lolol Mrs eats is hilarious
@yugioht42
@yugioht42 11 ай бұрын
the problem with trains in america is mostly the funding. its a constant struggle for the funds to actually build the track and the route. States usually put up a portion of funds and so does the federal government but it doesn't go anywhere because corruption is rampant and these funds get sucked dry quickly leaving nothing to even start with. Private companies are starting to really come into the scene and basically saying no to government money and building the entire rail network with private money and a few company assets. Richard Branson the venture capitalist actually is building the Brightline high speed in Florida which will connect Miami and Orlando and expand into Tampa and Tallahassee and will eventually connect to Georgia and the new england system.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 11 ай бұрын
Better of giving up on trains and spending the money on autonomous buses for city to city travel.
@yugioht42
@yugioht42 11 ай бұрын
Cash is actually married to a japanese woman. although he is in New York most of the time due to his Real estate business. he's actually is headed back to Japan in a couple of months due to family there but will go back once that finishes. You should do a video on real estate differences in the US from Japan because its so different. our transactions with real estate companies tend to be through a bank which has the paperwork and it just goes through that. its a huge pile of paperwork that's all, the condo thing is also a different thing altogether. Its like your tower Mansion thing. we call it a condo.
@megadesu69
@megadesu69 11 ай бұрын
That guy actually turned an onahole into a vocaloid!
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