To the rural Japan part: I lived in the outskirts of Tsuchiura (Ibaraki). The people were great and lovely. Most unfortunately, they did not understand a single word of English but kept inviting me to join them for tea, cake, and other snacks. They sometimes came to me unprompted and apologised for the lack of action, but still hoped that I enjoy my time. Some even gave me their Line, so I can contact them when I needed help, a ride to a neighbouring town etc.
@ashliiprigmore54419 ай бұрын
I'd grown up in rural Wales and if I moved to Japan I'd want to go to a rural area, my old village had a very similar situation where the schools were closing, they had a small population etc, but it was a very closeknit community with a lot of traditions, stories etc. But it's nice to hear it's not too awkward in rural Japan.
@feiryfella9 ай бұрын
Rural Japan is my idea of heaven!
@gaiusjuliuspleaser9 ай бұрын
Re: Translation gaffes: On my first evening in Osaka I went to an izakaya where I sat down at the bar next to a bloke enjoying a bowl of what looked and smelled like mouth-watering ramen. I opened up Google translate and asked the owner to have what he was having. Some time later she plopped the bowl in front of me, accompanied by a stern warning. "Very hot!" in just the thickest accent. Me, a dumbass, thought she meant that the broth was piping hot and she was warning me not to burn my lips and/or tongue, so I let it cool for a bit, before shoveling a heaping spoonful of broth into my mouth. Turns out she wasn't trying to warn me that it was hot temperature-wise, but hot as in "this broth is spicier than a bag full of Carolina Reapers". The guy next to me was apparently a real spice fiend. He had a good laugh at the pale European turning different shades of red while trying his best to look like the inside of his mouth wasn't on fire. Then, to top it off, as I was slurping the noodles, a drop of the broth splashed into my eye. The owner subtly asked me if I wanted her to take the bowl of liquid fire away and get me something more suited to my palate, but at this point I was so deep into it I wanted to finish the whole thing, and I did. I wisely stuck to stuff like tonkatsu and karaage the following days. The owners and patrons turned out to be amazing people, and the izakaya basically became my spot as well. Went back a year later and I was treated as a long lost friend.
@Alex-039 ай бұрын
What was the name of the izakaya?
@marocat47499 ай бұрын
XD I got to respect the trolling, she even warned XD
@gaiusjuliuspleaser9 ай бұрын
@@Alex-03 it's called Noche, near the Shirokitakoendori station. If you ever go there, tell them Tonkatsuyarou sent you ;)
@DinnerForkTongue9 ай бұрын
Even if I wasn't a spice fiend, I'd do like you and ride all the way. I can't stand the thought of discarding food. 😶 Though for the eye, I'd immediately run to the sink and rinse until their water supply hit low. Capsaicin in the eyeball is just too much.
@Alex-038 ай бұрын
@@gaiusjuliuspleaser Thanks! I will :)
@nh84448 ай бұрын
I live in rural Japan, been here almost 10 years and have been welcomed to most things and haven’t had any problems with the locals. Having the kids like you helps a lot. Not being a super loud and inconsiderate prick helps as well. A lot of the English teachers I’ve met have made no effort to learn Japanese, don’t care about trying to learn customs, and seem very overwhelmed when they don’t understand anything about Japan. It leaves me so flummoxed, that I tend to avoid them.
@Shakyaman4 ай бұрын
yes. we tend to avoid each other for sure... if we could hold and fire pistols...well, there would only be one of us remaining... P.S. holy friggin' crap me in me pants!!!!!...Flummoxed...R U seriously...what's? No, i mean thanks for that amazing word, mate... unbelievable really P.P.S. but wouldn't they be kinda like forced to learn customs??? how could the even go out shopping, etc. ??
@Lock2002ful9 ай бұрын
Gotta be honest, I’m quite well integrated socially and speak the language fluently. I’ve rarely had the experience that japanese people don’t want to interact with me if I speak to them. A lot are confused, afraid, shy or whatever and after more than a decade, well, that’s Japan. However, once I talk with them, once I got out with them, it doesn’t matter that I’m a foreigner. That goes for both the countryside as well as the big cities. There are a couple of people who really dislike foreigners but I can count those encounters on one hand.
@Lock2002ful9 ай бұрын
@matsalvatore9074 omg, dude gtfo “there’s good reasons to dislike foreigners” No, there isn’t you dimwit. Take all that bs back to whatever Trump Channel you came from. You obviously know nothing about Japan or much of anything at all. One thing japanese people know to do is to stfu when they don’t know what they’re talking about.
@JezaLoki8 ай бұрын
While it's a good principle to not judge a group of people by the actions of a few, I don't blame some Japanese people for their attitudes towards foreigners. For every time I see a foreigner doing something that makes us all look like utter c**ts, I try to undo the damage by being extra polite, considerate etc.. I notice the locals reactions of surprise and relief.
@Mwoods22728 ай бұрын
The language barrier is what craps on everything.
@Lock2002ful8 ай бұрын
@@Mwoods2272 true but I don’t understand people who want to live in a country but refuse to learn the language.
@pg62448 ай бұрын
The US should be the same with foreigners who don't speak the language and don't assimilate.
@letiziacastiglione24929 ай бұрын
As an Italian I was so happy to hear you talk about Adriano Celentano’s “Prisencolinensinainciusol”. It really is a great song but I was so surprised to hear it was famous enough in the UK that u guys both knew about it! 😍
@RyzawaCh9 ай бұрын
Somehow I completely forgot that existed.
@ratoh17109 ай бұрын
I just looked it up and it is a complete trip. He sounds exactly like an American singer but I cannot comprehend a single word, except the "all right". What an incredible achievement
@letiziacastiglione24929 ай бұрын
@@ratoh1710 exactly! It’s all made up gibberish besides “all right” but he managed to achieve perfect “American sounding”.
@amystarke33179 ай бұрын
That song is famous in the U.S. too.
@ashliiprigmore54419 ай бұрын
An old bandmate had an Italian dad and shown us the song as we had a conversation about how English sounds to foreign people. It is such a funny song.
@seanw41489 ай бұрын
Pete, buy a small ozone generator for the car. It will really help with the smell. Just make sure you follow the safety precautions.
@Weatherman4Eva9 ай бұрын
While it's the absolute best way to get rid of smells, be careful as I hear that it will damage the plastics in the car. So yeah, try to keep the ozone generator to a minimum and when you're done, unplug the extension cord and leave the car to sit for a good long time before carefully opening a door and walking away
@DovidM9 ай бұрын
Ozone generators are bad for certain plastics but also fabrics, paint, rubber and metal.
@ZeroXSEED9 ай бұрын
Do the reverse and buy portable air filter. Or dehumidifier. Most of the time bad smell are exemplified by high humidity (as the molecules bond with water vapor). Keeping the air dry will minimize the stench.
@vanitasastra9 ай бұрын
That sounds like some shit from a mecha sci fi anime
@draconian66929 ай бұрын
Ozone is toxic. If you have a smell problem then burning hippie stuff like sage is a better areal disenfectant lmao. Otherwise just having it cleaned is a go to
@saldiven20099 ай бұрын
I mean, it's probably similar to why rural areas in many parts of the world aren't really enthused by foreigners moving to their area. Rural areas tend to be very insular. It's a situation where everyone in the community knows each other and tend to have a mistrust of "outsiders." The irony is that, for Japan specifically, foreign residents are most needed in rural areas, especially in agricultural areas.
@MoQambique9 ай бұрын
Chris.. got your book today. Amazing read almost done! A bit ashamed to tell you, but I didn't find any details about breastfeeding... I'm confused 🤔
@AbroadInJapanPodcast9 ай бұрын
Get ready for the sequel
@uss_049 ай бұрын
@@AbroadInJapanPodcastOh god there’s going to be photos on the dust jacket aren’t there.
@ML-cc7gj9 ай бұрын
I’ve only had good experiences living in rural Japan as a foreigner but it’s probably since I’m married to a Japanese man living in his small home town.
@KantoCafe7159 ай бұрын
Same.
@DinnerForkTongue9 ай бұрын
And I presume you speak the language?
@KantoCafe7159 ай бұрын
@@DinnerForkTongueyes, so maybe that’s why
@ML-cc7gj8 ай бұрын
@@DinnerForkTongue Yes. I mean you need to learn the language of the country you live in. As someone from a country that has lots of Russian-speaking (old people) from the Soviet times, who never bothered to learn the language of my country, even after we finally got our independence back and the people had the choice to go back to Russia but did not but still expected to be able to get by with only Russian...this is an issue that's a given to me. You learn the language of the country you live in. Not to say my reading and writing of kanji skills are good (it's a process that needs time), but speaking Japanese is not so difficult. Randomly getting back to my original comment, it was interesting what my Japanese MIL said and she is a usual rural Japanese obaachan. She said that in the beginning she thought that foreigners were a completely different species and wondered how was she supposed to deal with me....but getting to know me and learning of my life in my home country and hearing the old sayings and proverbs we have in my country, she realised that foreigners were usual people and not that different from Japanese at all. I'd say this could be the rural mindset of Japan - if there is no closer connection (and ALTs are not that close in this meaning) with foreigners, they think of us almost in the same terms as aliens from space. But when they get to know the foreigners, then they realised that we are all the same. I mean, proverbs tend to be so similar, even though my country is half a world away from Japan.
@DinnerForkTongue8 ай бұрын
@@ML-cc7gj "I mean you need to learn the language of the country you live in." You'd be flabbergasted by the sheer amount of arrogant foreigners that don't just not believe this basic fact, they actively go against it and feel proud of living in a bubble of their own language. I've been faced with so many of these goits that I've taken to asking first, unironically.
@Andy-43429 ай бұрын
For local band gigs I would say check with the stores in the area that sell or service musical instruments. They will usually have a good idea of what shows are going on where in the area.
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
Im already back now from my trip, but i will try this next time. Thanks for advice!
@poleosis9 ай бұрын
@@MrJapanApan @Andy-4342 i've been going to underground/local concerts in japan since late 2016 and put this together in 2019. ticketing policies have slightly changed since then due to that 3 year event i dont know if we can mention yet on youtube, but majority still applies. the only difference is most use ticketing platforms now kzbin.info/www/bejne/Zn7Ki5SMfdp6rMU
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
@@poleosisCool! Thanks.
@unasperanza98039 ай бұрын
I love these podcasts!!listen to them back to back while doing chores or web browsing.
@bagheera20579 ай бұрын
the nicest people i met in japan during my 3 weeks vacation there, were from rural areas. ofc most of japanese peoole were exceptionally nice, even though we had some strange encounters but those are funny stories to talk about. i was staring on a map with my travel companion and then elderly man approchaed us. we couldn't speak japanese but we were able to show him where we'd like to go. with a hand sign he showed us to follow him. he walked us the whole way to our destination, a really lovely man. and that was in a pretty rural area 😁
@kaicheek5 ай бұрын
I'm visiting japan in the autumn and i really want to visit some rural places as well. Which rural towns/places did you visit?
@mikehawk89848 ай бұрын
Love the fact that you broke your glasses by walking face first into a wall. I've broken like 3 pairs like that, and I've also broken a pair by too vigorously reaching up to scratch my nose, thus punching myself in the face and embarrassing myself as well 😂😂
@gordgallagher16509 ай бұрын
Godzilla Minus 1.0 is a great film, better than Shin Godzilla which I loved. Came out in Japan on November 3rd, Canada December 1 and UK December 15th. Recommend Pete see it once it is being streamed. Also recommend the Boy and the Heron and Perfect Days.
@CrashHobbyX9 ай бұрын
Can confirm. Godzilla Minus One was insanely good.
@adamlee25509 ай бұрын
I had an amazing time watching godzilla minus one, but shin godzilla will probably always be my number one
@mygetawayart8 ай бұрын
yeah absolutely loved Perfect Days. Wish i had seen it in Japanese but i still enjoyed it regardless
@prancingppony9 ай бұрын
I bought a car that had been smoked in for years, I bought a giant tub of bicarb powder dusted every fabric surface and used a brush to rub it in and then vacuumed it out. Then spray down all the hard surfaces 😊
@MarmaladeMaki9 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The cat themed bar in Golden Gai (4C Bar) is not cat themed. The cats are just there by circumstance (but the owner doesn't seem too sad about his co-owners).
@ursyoola9 ай бұрын
Depeche! My second ever concert was Depeche in NYC in 1985, Love them. Love that you love 80s music, young man!
@notchamama75715 ай бұрын
I bet that show was legendary!
@DovidM9 ай бұрын
I’ve had limited success with coffee beans, clothes dryer sheets and vinegar in countering smoke in cars. Put coffee beans in a sock, and place it on the floor . Wipe the upholstery with dryer sheets. Put a plastic tray on the floor, and pour in two ounces of vinegar. A combination seems to work better than using one of these alone. I’ve heard of people using orange oil but the smell can be overpowering, and it can stain carpets and upholstery.
@BeardedNerdSE9 ай бұрын
Before I went to Japan last time I was able to look up online what bands were playing in the area. I don't remember what site I used, but I found fairly small local shows in Osaka. You could probably also check what venues are available near where you're going and check their schedules that way.
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
Ok. Please let me know if you remember the name of the site. Thanks. Also, next time i will look up the venues . Cheers!
@dukealbert70179 ай бұрын
@AbroadInJapanPodcast *Tips for David!!! Look up the acts you would like to see live IN KANJI on ticketing sights!!! Last November when I went, I was able to catch Katsushika Trio (ex-Casiopea) using this method. NOTHING popped up in the English spelling, but IMMEDIATELY showed up when searched in Kanji!!! Good luck and happy concert going!
@Redpantslol9 ай бұрын
Congrats on finally getting your car, Pete! I'm in the final stretch of getting my car registered in Japan. It's a US-market car and I'm not in the military, so it's been brutal.
@KMakoENVtuber9 ай бұрын
You’re like the opposite of most jdm car nuts. Wishing you luck!
@Redpantslol9 ай бұрын
@@KMakoENVtuberThanks... it's been a huge pain but it's almost over. About five months but **should** be done next week!
@besutogaido9 ай бұрын
It’s only right that Pete records an episode in the acoustically superior environment of his new Toyota 😏
@quixadhal8 ай бұрын
Godzilla Minus One was an incredible movie (with a silly name)... but it did get back to the roots of the franchise. It was even more amazing when we found out the budget for the whole thing was something like 15 million USD.
@JoeDoom9 ай бұрын
Hello Pete and Chris. I am planning to visit Japan soon but am worried about something. I know Japan has a strong drinking culture but as a 37 year old guy who doesn’t drink I was wondering the most polite way to tell people that. Keep up the great work both of you!
@theKobus9 ай бұрын
"anmari nomanai", I don't drink much. "Non-arukooru onegaishimasu" (non-alcoholic xyz). I would say in the last 10 years (since I fisrt came to JP) non-alcholic options are MUCH more common across japan, especially since so many people drive for work. I'm basically the same age and nobody pressures me to drink; maybe like, 23-yr-olds have a different experience.
@Shakyaman4 ай бұрын
just say 'no'!!!! nicely..just let the glass of beer or whatever sit there unconsumed..just don't touch it..go to take a piss and on yer way back get a juice at the bar....they won't care...nobody cares...least of all those sh*heads trying to get hammered
@magscorner9 ай бұрын
My best tip to keep up to date with artists is bands in town its shows you and gives you notifications/email with artists you listen to is near by
@joepiekl9 ай бұрын
I hope we get to see a picture of this car when it's finally finished. I'm very invested in it.
@_Azzychan9 ай бұрын
EssilorLuxottica is the company that owns many brands of eyeglasses and eyeglasses stores.
@auberginebear9 ай бұрын
Until discovering that my insurance covers glasses (I hadn't thought it did), I bought from one of those online only places that makes their own frames and ships to your home, but the last few times, there has been some issue, from me putting in my prescription wrong to spots where the anti glare gloating bubbled and it created blind spots. But even then, I still recommend that service for those who don't have coverage for glasses like I apparently do now and still need them. (And in getting the cheapest frames from my insurance network's shop, I also was still able to get better than cheapest lenses and anti glare coating, but they were definitely more expensive than my previous pair.)
@theboredprogrammer11148 ай бұрын
My in-laws on my MIL's side are from rural Hyogo. I blend with the locals pretty well because I'm Asian with some Japanese (not fluent). I really enjoyed my month long stay there. I love the fresh fish, vegetables and kaki/persimmons that my husband's grandma plant in her backyard. Bonding with some elders and teaching them some tricks on cooking Japanese food is so unforgettable. Going back there in a few months.
@modvavet9 ай бұрын
The thing w/ Sharla and Shin Godzilla made me remember trying to teach an Okinawan lady how to make a 'TH' sound. It took her a bit. It's weird to think about the fact that some sounds in one language simply don't exist in other languages and are often absolutely foreign to folks first trying to learn those sounds (often as adults!).
@DinnerForkTongue9 ай бұрын
It's strange because the sound is created by a tongue position they're not used to. Explaining that yields far better results. For example, for the "ny" in Japanese, similar to the "ñ" of spanish, you touch the tip of your tongue to the roof of your mouth. Meanwhile for the similar but different "nh" sound of Portuguese, that's also in Vietnamese (under a different moniker), you touch the MIDDLE of the tongue to the palate. I explain the 'th' sound as putting the tip of the tongue close to the front incisors, close enough to vibrate when you speak but not close enough to touch the teeth.
@modvavet9 ай бұрын
@@DinnerForkTongue that ended up being the exact way I went about it. It occurs to me that the tongue position is only very slightly more forward than for making r/l sounds in Japanese. That might also have been helpful had I thought of it at the time.
@AlexanderArts9 ай бұрын
I thought I was having Deja-vu, didn't Pete already tell the glasses story exactly the same way as the intro for another recent episode?
@madensmith70149 ай бұрын
Great. I though I was the only one
@petedonaldson26989 ай бұрын
Yeah turns out that 630am record time has god ol' Petey a bit turned around 😂😂
@AlexanderArts9 ай бұрын
@@petedonaldson2698 The bigger question is; Why didn't Chris notice?
@AlexanderArts9 ай бұрын
@@petedonaldson2698 Actually, you should just keep telling the same glasses story until Chris notices, loool!~
@w-z1989 ай бұрын
I was confused too, thought they had accidentally uploaded the same episode again lol 😂
@jinxedpenguin9 ай бұрын
Chris, your beautiful British skin and Pete’s beautiful British smile always bring me great joy.
@rovidelarosa9 ай бұрын
Creepy
@DinnerForkTongue9 ай бұрын
That's some subtle shade. 😅
@jinxedpenguin8 ай бұрын
@@rovidelarosa Creepy? It's not serious! I wish KZbin had an option to make your comment history public, I saw this video minutes after it was published and couldn't think of anything else to say 😭I was just trying to echo some of the absurd openings of their letters, not be creepy!
@uss_049 ай бұрын
For a while my KZbin feed was filled with Akiya homes and the droves of foreigners expressing the desire to move there. Usually remote workers or people who wants an alternative life
@6c619 ай бұрын
Pete, please do some videos of your new car. To get rid of the smell get one of those wet vac steam cleaner things and maybe a drill with a soapy brush attachment.
@spacechannelfiver9 ай бұрын
Met my wife when she came to the UK from Japan, she was well into her Vivienne Westwood at the time and had a t-shirt with an English phrase on it. She loved it and never had the heart to tell her what it meant.
@wadoryujh9 ай бұрын
Buying a replacement pollen filter is essential for your car
@aaron_3339 ай бұрын
Yup, Luxottica. In my country, they own the optometrists, who sell their own brands of glasses (Oakley, Rayban, Chanel, Prada, GA, Burberry, Versace, D&G etc.....)
@jessicaluchesi9 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to be in a small town rural city hotel... Yusuhara... part of the staff was an immigrant family... it's a hotel I believe rarely visited by foreigners... but as far as I could tell, the family in question was just as hard working, dedicated, and had a grasp of Japanese I did not think was faulty ( with my then and still insuficient domain of the language ). Also, the fact they did speak english, something the local japanese staff had problems with... was of IMMENSE help for me. But again, it is a city I felt very welcomed, I did not get this resentment of foreigners vibe. If I could, I would like to move there.
@Chris-ut6eq9 ай бұрын
No music is better than Too Much Volcano! But Shake your Jelly is right up there!
@auberginebear9 ай бұрын
I still haven't seen Shin Godzilla, just found out that both the sub and dub are on Crunchyroll in the US. Looking forwards to Godzilla Minus One going online to stream, I might rent it then.
@automaticshelter1309 ай бұрын
Godzilla Minus One is the best movie I’ve seen in a long time. It lands like an 80’s American action movies. Unfortunately, America and Europe are struggling to make decent movies nowadays.
@martikalyle67299 ай бұрын
5 minutes ago?!!! Hello Chris and Pete!
@Thermosmcjug9 ай бұрын
I've found rural Japan is way more kind and accommodating than the major cities. I think there's a level of group think in the big cities where being sick of foreigners is socially acceptable these days. Half of the time you'll be barred entry to a Tokyo izakaya due to "language" while carrying a conversation with the owner in Japanese. Meanwhile, in more remote areas, they'll at least be open to the idea you won't be a nuisance.
@ukmonk9 ай бұрын
That brand was just the font on the back of the guys jacket!
@kimflycht22589 ай бұрын
Here is a good tip for getting rid of bad smells anywhere!!! Take a saucer and pour vinegar in it, leave it over night or longer in Your car and the smell will disappear!!! Good luck! Kind regards the Danish Viking
@auberginebear9 ай бұрын
Pete, you know that us watching here on YT expect some pictures or video of your car now.
@-a68339 ай бұрын
Good thing you proceeded to explain it was a cigarette smell you were referring to
@C3MushАй бұрын
I met Satomi Ishihara doing some work in Japan! Won't digress details about where, because that wouldn't be nice. Really surprised me though, we had a "special guest" and it just so happened to be her! Had a crazy year in Japan, full of unbelievable things that just kept happening. 😅
@hithere_19678 ай бұрын
Well, to be honest, I agree with these rural Japanese people 100%. Good for them!
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
Dear Chris and Pete: Are you excited for the Shogun remake that will be released soon?
@MrZarathas8 ай бұрын
I don't even think that the locals are even that keen on foreigners leaving. Most of my freinds who lived in rural villages told me that the locals loved them being there and hoped they would stay longer. My own school reacted with astonishment when I announced that I was leaving at the end of my 3 years. Sorry y'all, but it's not up to me. The Board of Education decided they wanted a shiny new Gaijin so they told me to take a hike. That's politics for ya.
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
Lol. I wrote a comment before watching the show and at the end you replied to one of my other comments. Well, im back home now and sadly i didnt catch any live shows. Fun story time: Me and my best friend had a trip booked. A mututal friend was the girlfriend of the booking manager of Iron Maiden. They had a tour in Japan during the same time, so she had arranged so that we could meet the whole band and hang out, now just backstage but in their free time. The chance of a lifetime. Less then 2 weeks before leaving the tsunami hit. The country shut down and the tour was canceled and the chance was lost forever (friend and manager broke up). I have been trying to fill the void with ramen ever since.
@ceramique1239 ай бұрын
Wow I had no idea Sharla helped Satomi Ishihara in Shin Godzilla. I went to see it in the theaters and her English almost killed the movie for me, it was extremely immersion breaking. I don’t blame the actress, but whoever thought it was a good idea to cast her as an American. Sharla had an impossible task😂
@hollyhenison93459 ай бұрын
We need David’s question re-answering haha, he wanted to know where to see small/local bands as he could only find big concerts advertised
@ExNihiloComesNothing8 ай бұрын
I couldn’t be arsed about Taylor Swift but I’ll remember you guys forever
@omelettttttteeeeeee9 ай бұрын
Shimokitazawa in Tokyo for music. Find the local live houses there, like shelter, and check their socials for dates. Blue note Tokyo is dope also.
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
Oh really? I have been there many times (love it) but i only knew it as a secondhand spot. I will for sure check it out next time. Thanks!
@dukealbert70179 ай бұрын
Another tip is searching the live acts names in Kanji!!!! That was a LIFESAVER for me!
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
@@dukealbert7017 I will try that. Thanks.
@dukealbert70179 ай бұрын
@@MrJapanApan Also, in addition to the Kanji trick, most ticketing sites ask for a Japanese address or phone number, just use the address and number of the hotel you plan to stay at.
@MrJapanApan9 ай бұрын
@@dukealbert7017 Good to know. I also have many japanese friends (i can use their adress or number) Only problem with searching kanji is finding new bands.
@autohmae9 ай бұрын
EssilorLuxottica aka Luxottica, is a Milan-based eyewear conglomerate and the world's largest eyewear company, but it's somehow French. They own a lot of the opticians/shops. The company is twice the size in market cap of the second largest, which is a Japanese company: Hoya Corporation
@miamilner32269 ай бұрын
Chris.. isn't September super hot? how can you enjoy onsen in the heat🥵
@Lucky149709 ай бұрын
Loved the outro “Creepy Chris!”
@danaberry62079 ай бұрын
Luxxotica owns EVERYTHING
@wendyon45179 ай бұрын
Yup. Luxottica owns... most everything.
@James-hy8zs9 ай бұрын
Is that trip to Norway...'all you ever wanted, all you ever needed, here in your arms?'
@brewstergallery9 ай бұрын
I am happy to know you enjoyed Godzilla Minus One! I saw it here in Spain last December. It was great and in the trus spirit of the old Godzilla films. Put Hollywood to shame.
@automaticshelter1309 ай бұрын
I agree. Best movie I’ve seen recently besides The Boy and the Heron. I wonder why Hollywood doesn’t make good action films like Minus One anymore?
@brewstergallery9 ай бұрын
Because it's all about profits so they only producing the same stories again and again even though the public is sick of it.@@automaticshelter130
@thatdudehans1349 ай бұрын
I'm sure this podcast can do like 1 hour long and maybe put on Spotify.
@Fite19898 ай бұрын
Luxottica is the italien Company that‘s produces most most of the frames for brands you know…. and they have a investment in Lenses to if i remember right
@victorianeastender9 ай бұрын
Oh, we've been using this brand of nitrile gloves that has "Thank you for using us!" slapped across its packaging 😅
@kevinwebb829 ай бұрын
You take the good You take the bad You take them both and there you have The facts of life
@veronicamaine38138 ай бұрын
Luxotica - nearly all glasses you see in stores come from them
@SatanSupimpa9 ай бұрын
Corridor Crew interviewed the director of Godzilla Minus One, and he's a VFX artist. So he directed the movie very carefully planned around the the VFX.
@automaticshelter1309 ай бұрын
Thank you for mentioning this. The director was heavily involved in the VFX from what I remember. I’m very proud of this movie and all it has accomplished thus far. Also, Stephen Spielberg is quite a fan of the movie!
@automaticshelter1309 ай бұрын
The Director said that he wanted his Godzilla movie to go back to the original horror and meaning behind Godzilla, which is the atomic bomb. The time period and setting in which Godzilla minus one takes place is a very big clue that the movie is a metaphor for the atomic bomb, including the fact that the opening sequence happens on an island near Bikini Atoll.
@xxSophie3609 ай бұрын
When it comes to shots, just pass it to someone else. Offer it to any random stranger in the bar who looks eager to drink
@rayza838 ай бұрын
Luxottica is the company you were looking for....they own 80% of the market through acquisition of other brands.
@RachelJamison9049 ай бұрын
No matter where I go I cannot escape the TSwift talk
@rodsmith4949 ай бұрын
Just watched Godzilla minus one trailer. Looks good, you’re right, Godzilla now looks like a giant Bully XL! The director has apparently said there might be a sequel (Godzilla plus 1 ?) I quite liked the Apple TV series Monarch, which is Godzilla/Giant creature themed, check it out if you haven’t so far!
@ZeroXSEED9 ай бұрын
Largely insular, usually conservative community dislike newcomers. Shocked, I'm shocked.
@fattiger69579 ай бұрын
IMO, only the Japanese can make great Godzilla movies because their (good) movies always say something about Japan, it's people and it's society. The OG was about the fear of atomic weapons. Godzilla 1984 was about Japan being stuck between America and the Soviets during the Cold War. Shin Godzilla was about the incompetence and bureaucracy of the Japanese government. Godzilla Minus One is about Japanese people trying to rebuild and find purpose after they were manipulated by their leaders and decimated during WW2. I feel like this could resonate with the post-Bubble Japanese people who have seen their country stagnate. I genuinely don't like any of the American Godzilla movies because they're just dumb sci-fi action movies. None of them have said anything interesting or had any plot more complicated than monsters attacking. And the human plots are insufferably cliche and boring. Yes, the Japanese had the goofy Showa movies, but at least the era was surrounded by Godzilla movies that did say something.
@marocat47499 ай бұрын
A german expressionism gojira movie could be interesting. Bmovie stryle, the stranger the better. Maybe about having gojira as neighbout and the life with it having hissy fits? It could say, something about politics? Bu then make betrter your own bozilla knockoff thats , a big lovecraftian bear like mutant? Or beaver, or squirrel as symboil of imported not good for renviroment animals. Squirrel mutant sounds terrifying and funny.
@automaticshelter1309 ай бұрын
I completely agree. The American Godzilla movies fundamentally misunderstand the meaning behind Godzilla. It’s hard to overstate how much of an impact the atomic bomb and reconstruction had on the Japanese people and country. If you think Godzilla is just a mindless monster movie you missed the point. I think a lot of Studio Ghibli movies are like that too. There’s a large anti-war theme in many Japanese movies post-WWII. The shock, horror, and loss that you experience because of Godzilla in Minus One is a similar feeling that people felt after the atomic bomb and firebombing in WWII.
@elizabethboone37249 ай бұрын
Prisencolinentinetusol is one of my favourite songs !
@itsfine58189 ай бұрын
Chris about Godzilla Minus One: "I like that Godzilla is not a metaphor for atomic warfare" Meanwhile, Godzilla Minus One: is set in WW2, Godzillas atomic breath creates a literal mushroomcloud, resulting in black rain - exactly what an atomic bomb does. Hell, I thought that the metaphor was maybe even too on the nose but hey, great movie nonetheless.
@c1neal9 ай бұрын
Use an ozone generator for the cigarette smell
@PredatoryQQmber9 ай бұрын
Just also have to account for the fact that it severely degrades rubber and plastic parts too, as well as accelerates rusting of exposed steel.
@carycoombe33809 ай бұрын
That made me go into twitter and look for that picture. Which I had to save to my computer so that I could magnify the image. Then I went "WHAT?!?!?" Then somebody replied with something even more ridiculous.
@arichan64239 ай бұрын
i went to his twitter but could not find it. On what date was the pic posted?
@carycoombe33809 ай бұрын
@@arichan6423 Feb 9. Look for a picture of Mount Fuji behind a hotel. You will have to download the picture to be able to zoom in on the text on the back of the guy's jacket.
@deptofcarstereorepair8 ай бұрын
speaking of Japanese bands, just saw amazing punk band Otoboke Beaver!!
@ShaneSteadycam9 ай бұрын
Godzilla M1 was excellent.
@janusmcgee89099 ай бұрын
That’s a fancy new outro
@bleedingpepper9 ай бұрын
I found it incredible that Fox News were moaning about Taylor Swift's carbon emissions. Given that Swift has made Fox News of all people finally acknowledge the issue of carbon emissions, I think it's fair to say she's done the world a great service.
@Stephen-up3sd9 ай бұрын
What amused me most about that was that her “people” issued a statement saying that the lovely Miss Swift wasn’t actually on a lot of the flights, but had chartered the plane to others - so not was she only contributing to climate change, but was actually making a profit doing it! 🤣 Hilarious!
@robertbrizendine59 ай бұрын
My glasses cost $1,500 USD due to my eye condition. I’d kill to have glasses that cheap.
@charlesacker91749 ай бұрын
Oh I'm interested for you needing that unique a perception. I had open eye surgery and I've seen pictures what it looked it like as I was taken to hospital with my eye out of socket as a very aggressive version of tag we played as ten year olds in a summer camp. So The fact I have -280 on my left eye instead of just being eye patch kid is a miracle of modern science. So whenever I go to optometrist I'm like here's the starting problem.
@Infern01215 ай бұрын
Japanese don't have an issue with foreigners who are respectable, learn the language and assimilate into their culture but this isn't most foreigners sadly most do not do that they want to still be western but in japan
@fattiger69579 ай бұрын
I feel like the Japanese isolationism is surely rooted in their history. For more than 250 years during the Edo era, the vast majority of Japanese people were completely isolated from the outside world. Then that was followed up by Japan's attempt at empire building, which did not turn out well to say the least. Post WW2, western countries were on good terms with Japan, but the rest of East Asia was still pretty angry at them to say the least. It really feels like, historically, Japan's international relations are very complicated. I'm sure that instill a sense of unease in the Japanese people and their society when it came to foreigners. Plus, I do get a sense that the Japanese are afraid of losing their traditions and culture.
@KantoCafe7159 ай бұрын
I tried to get my head round their imperial phase as it doesn’t really suit them , apparently there’s a book written by a Japanese man that I haven’t read yet, which argues that it was a type of “keeping up with the Jones’s” mentality to be taken seriously on the international stage. That I can believe. Seems like a more organic reason , from what I know of Japan, than any other reason.
@fattiger69579 ай бұрын
@@KantoCafe715 I think the Japanese saw what was happening to the rest of East Asia and didn't want to end up like them. So they chose to become like the Europeans who were running roughshod over the region. Makes sense considering how Meiji tried to change everything in the upper echelons of Japanese society to be like the Europeans, more specifically the Prussians. So I can see where the "keeping up with the Jones'" idea could come from. I can also see genuine paranoia in them not wanting to share China's fate. What I don't understand is the abject cruelty and sadism shown by the the Imperial Japanese army.
@KantoCafe7159 ай бұрын
@@fattiger6957 after decades in Japan I only just learned about what they did in the last century, not proud of my own country's history (especially Australia( but I have a special horror of medical experimentation style shit, it just seems so methodical and hopeless for the vicitim. (Also, children wtf) The British killed on the battle field (and I'm from a defeated and colonised nation in UK ). Slavery - British were the first to ban it and it still exists in some places and existed within Africa among Africans when the British were involved in it (who do people think the British were buying slaves from?( Nazis were beyond the pale. And now I'm hearing the Japanese did similar and they were both on the same side during the war. Due to recent events here also, on a personal level, I'm starting to pack my things, I reckon.
@fattiger69579 ай бұрын
@@KantoCafe715 The imperial Japanese were horrible, there's no arguing that. But those responsible were dealt with during the American occupation. The Tokyo Trials were like the Nuremberg Trials, but for Japanese war criminals. I don't think modern Japanese people should be held responsible for the crimes of people from nearly a century ago. Japanese society was fundamentally changed and reorganized after the war, whether they liked it or not. The Japanese government could do a better job in admitting to the previous regime's atrocities and apologizing for them. But time moves on and we can't hold onto grudges forever.
@KantoCafe7159 ай бұрын
@@fattiger6957 of course I do agree with what you say. I don’t have any grudge against Germans , of course not. I don’t agree with blaming people who weren’t responsible for any crimes themselves (wish many other people would also think like that as white women seem to be the easy target for everyone these days). I had thought things were long forgotten. But sometimes the scab gets scratched when you least expect it and we are confronted with things , and when we are, we have to deal with it afresh.
@gardencity35588 ай бұрын
Board of Education actively encouraged ALT's to leave local area. Your end time and pension payout prove as much.
@BlackBoxTheatre9 ай бұрын
That weird Italian song sounds like a concussion. Adriano Celentano - Prisencolinensinainciusol
@rsiiihgs7 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/jaWoZa2Xo9aeqNk
@densidste91379 ай бұрын
28 mins an intro telling us he cheaped out 3x on glasses... this thing is going places
@jeffjr849 ай бұрын
I have a question for someone i know.. what if that foreigner is a doctor and their family.. would the attitude change or would we then just be merely tolerated?
@pierrehase9 ай бұрын
Where did you find that study? I would like to read the whole paper
@adcaptandumvulgus42528 ай бұрын
Are you talking about the luxottica group?
@misa18amaneyt9 ай бұрын
What is the third film Pete said was his favourite? I couldn't quite hear it, after Eternal Sunshine and Virgin Suicides I have no clue what he said. I looked up Noy the Albanoy but got no hits, and on the transcript youtube generates for this ep it said No the Albano? Please help me out I trust Pete's film taste 😢 I haven't seen that new film but I did see Andrew Scott in his one-man production with National Theatre Live of Vanya (Uncle Vanya the Chekhov play)...just today actually!
@misa18amaneyt9 ай бұрын
Seem to have answered my question by just typing in a bunch of different spellings - Noi the Albino
@mobpsy15269 ай бұрын
Rural Japan: Beside many social rules people are trained to be very polite and considerate. Not judging other cultures in general but sometimes migrant workers especially from Asia come off as rude and pushy.
@samki_foto9 ай бұрын
The only time I heard anyone shouting "Gaijin!" to us was at Kumamoto railway station, summer '09. She was elderly woman, so I might understand, given the history. We encountered no other dangers, if you will call a one shout as danger.
@Djembe888 ай бұрын
I’ve heard of dry ice for cleaning cars and killing microbes.
@kaffeekatze11469 ай бұрын
Pete, I have to know, where did you get this shirt? I need it :P
@GainingDespair9 ай бұрын
I had a friend in highschool who was taking Japanese as a second language, he ended up in a foreign exchange situation and was very excited. He kinda broke contact after going to Japan, but after about 2 months he started talking again basically saying he hated it there, everyone ignored his existence and spent most of his time in his room. He really seemed to hate it in Japan.
@Fools_Requiem9 ай бұрын
No country is perfect, and there will always be people less accepting of those who don't look like them. It's disappointing, but there's really nothing we can do about it.
@williamgill96927 ай бұрын
Hi William What's the easiest way to contact my Girlfriend in Tokyo I just found your show and would like to contact her before I go to Japan to plan but don't know what's availability there or here enjoying your show and be interesting what you recommend
@mygetawayart8 ай бұрын
Luxottica is the name of the company you were thinking of and yes it's Italian but no they don't own *every single* other company....just most of them lol