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2008/1/25 Tiffany For Japanese Men![]() Japan Today
January 25, 2008
TOKYO — Tiffany & Co on Thursday announced plans to open two new boutiques under the name Tiffany & Co: The Men's Store, in the Hankyu Department Store men's building in Osaka in February; and in Roppongi Hills in Tokyo in April.
Michael Christ, president of Tiffany & Co Japan Inc, said: "Following the success of our first men's jewelry boutique at Isetan Department Store in Tokyo, we are pleased to announce the opening of two additional men's stores. Osaka Umeda's Hankyu Department Store and Tokyo's Roppongi Hills are both high-fashion retail locations that will give our customers convenient access to our stylish and distinctive men's collections."
The stores' contemporary design features a brushed black stainless steel facade that opens to a gracious environment of grayish white wall surfaces and Mondrian-inspired framework, with black ebony wall showcases. The contrast of these materials creates a cool, sophisticated atmosphere that highlights the various merchandise displays.
The new stores will offer Tiffany diamond jewelry including designs with the patented Lucida diamond, in addition to rings and pendants from renowned Tiffany collections including Tiffany Atlas and Tiffany 1837; gift items such as key rings; men's jewelry from the celebrated creations of exclusive Tiffany designers Elsa Peretti, Paloma Picasso and Frank Gehry; as well as an important collection of Tiffany complicated watches.
Jewelry retailer Tiffany & Co. said on Tuesday it would open a new men's boutique in Japan later this year -- the first of its kind that will sell jewelry and accessories made exclusively for men.
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"Tiffany & Co. The Men's Store" will open in the men's building of Isetan Department Store in the busy commercial district of Shinjuku in Tokyo.
Set to open in early September, the store will sell merchandise designed specially for men such as watches and jewelry designed by luminaries like Frank Gehry, Jean Schlumberger and Elsa Peretti, the company said.
Tiffany already sells men's jewelry and accessories in its other stores, and through its Web site. Currently, there are no plans to open similar stores in Tiffany's U.S. and European markets, though the company sees potential in the idea, a company spokeswoman said. Cherry Blossom, Wagyu, Yuzu and KangarooCherry blossom lunch, wagyu burgers, yuzu spas and a kangaroo for dinner...
![]() Spring comes early to the 130-year-old Chinzan-so garden of the Four Seasons Hotel in Tokyo this year, with the expected blossoming around the end of the month of a special variety of cherry trees (kanhizakura and kawazuzakura) that the hotel planted in the venerable garden early in the new year. To coincide with the blossoms' arrival, from Friday, Jan. 25, the hotel will display cherry blossoms throughout the building, and each restaurant and bar will welcome guests with special menus with spring and cherry blossom motifs through April 13. For example, Italian restaurant Il Teatro will serve an Il Ciliegio (cherry blossom) lunch course (¥7,000), which transforms Japanese spring specialties into unconventional Italian dishes, while the Seasons Bistro offers a Sakura Lunch (¥4,800) in a more casual setting. At the main bar, Le Marquis, there will be special cocktails reflecting the image of different types of cherry blossom, cherry blossom-flavored ice cream and sherbet, from ¥1,500. The hotel is a 10-minute walk from Edogawa-bashi Station on the Yurakucho Subway Line. Yuzu bathing at Spa Joule Spa and Wellness Joule on the 28th floor of the Hyatt Regency Tokyo is offering a special seasonal spa package, featuring Japanese traditional yuzu bathing.
Yuzu is a citrus fruit popularly used in Japanese cuisine as a garnish and flavoring, but floating yuzu in the bath on the winter solstice is also a popular custom in Japan. Inspired by this custom, the treatment package includes a private yuzu bath (30 minutes), body treatment (75 minutes) using yuzu essential oil and a yuzu footbath. The package is available through Feb. 29 and costs ¥24,500. Spa and Wellness Jule is a 10-minute walk from the West Exit of Shinjuku Station. Feel Australia in Kobe ![]() The Crowne Plaza Kobe is holding a Feel Australia fair at its five restaurants and bars through Feb. 3. Lunch and dinner courses at the Level 36 restaurant and bar feature guest chef Matthew Dixon's modern Australian cuisine — also known as "Australian Italian." Dixon is the chef at the restaurant RPR's, at the Crowne Plaza Royal Pines on Queensland's Gold Coast. The restaurant was named the Best Prestige Dining Venue in 2006. The lunch course is ¥3,675 and dinner is ¥11,550. On Australia Day, Jan. 26, there will be a special Matt Night dinner party at which guests will dine with Dixon (¥17,000, including dinner and wine). The casual dining The Terrace restaurant will provide lunch and dinner buffets with Dixon's original menus and other dishes, using unique ingredients such as Aussie beef, kangaroo, ostrich, lobster and other seafood, vegetables and fruit, all from Australia. The lunch buffet is ¥2,800 and the dinner buffet is ¥4,000. And if that doesn't feel enough like Australia for you, there will be didgeridoo performances during lunch and dinner on Jan. 26. The hotel is adjacent to Shin-Kobe Station on the Sanyo Shinkansen Line and subway. Beacon's new gourmet burgers Starting Feb. 3, the popular Beacon "urban chophouse" in Aoyama, Tokyo, will introduce a new menu of gourmet burgers and zinfandel wines, served every Sunday and holiday evening. Besides the classic Beacon Burger, there will be foie gras burgers, pizza burgers, Sliders (small square burgers) and wagyu (Japanese beef) burgers. And to drink — half a dozen good-value zinfandels, all priced at ¥4,000 a bottle. The mood is casual, and kids and families are welcome. The restaurant is located at 1-2-5 Shibuya, Shibuya-ku, near Children's Castle and the U.N. University. Golden SnowKyoto's Kinkakuji is shown covered in snow on January 25, 2008.
Kinkakuji (Golden Pavilion) is a Zen temple formally known as Rokuonji.
In 1397 construction started on the Golden Pavilion as part of a new residence for the retired shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu. Kinkakuji was converted into a Zen temple after Yoshimitsu's death in 1408. The Golden Pavilion functions as shariden, housing sacred relics of the Buddha and is covered in gold leaf. The present building dates from 1955 as the pavilion was burnt by a fanatic monk in 1950. 2008/1/19 More ANA SmartsANA to start Haneda-Hong Kong route in April
![]() Haneda Airport (HND), formally known as Tokyo International Airport, was opened in 1931. With the completion of the new Narita Airport (NRT) in 1978, Narita Airport took over most of Tokyo's international air traffic, and Haneda Airport was designated to handle Tokyo's domestic air traffic. Haneda Airport is located about 30 minutes south of central Tokyo. It consists of three terminal buildings: terminal 1 which is mainly used by JAL and its subsidiary airlines, terminal 2 which is mainly used by ANA and its subsidiary airlines and the international terminal which is used by a small number of international flights. Handling over 60 million passengers per year, Haneda Airport is by far Japan's busiest airport and ranks among the world's top five busiest airports. Haneda Airport is only 20 minutes from Shinagawa Station in Southern Central Tokyo... ANA to start Haneda-Hong Kong route in AprilAll Nippon Airways will introduce daily round-trip charter flights between Haneda Airport and Hong Kong from April 1, The Yomiuri Shimbun has learned. As part of the government's Asian Gateway Initiative to expand exchanges with Asian countries, the operating hours at Haneda Airport were lengthened for international flights in June. ANA's flights to Hong Kong will be the first regular international charter flight to take advantage of the longer hours. ANA is considering a flight that would leave Haneda at about 9 p.m. and arrive in Hong Kong early the next morning, and a return flight leaving Hong Kong early in the morning and arriving at Haneda at about 7 a.m. The airline operates two round-trip flights a day between Narita Airport and Hong Kong. ANA expects the new flights to and from Haneda will interest tourists and businesspeople who want to make more effective use of their time. Previously, international flights were permitted to land at and depart from Haneda between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m., with some exceptions. This tight time frame made it difficult for airlines to connect Haneda and Hong Kong because flights between the airports take about nine hours. However, in June, international flights were given the green light to leave Haneda between 8:30 p.m. and 11 p.m. and arrive between 6 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. Flights to and from Seoul and Shanghai operate out of Haneda during the daytime, so ANA's flights to and from Hong Kong will be the third international regular route. Further flights are expected to take to the skies between Haneda and Beijing in time for the Olympic Games in August. However, observers said the increasing number of international flights operating from Haneda might require a rethink about the sharing of roles between Haneda and Narita airports. Rice Sasazushi (bamboo leaf sushi) is a delicacy made with rice and enjoyed especially in Western Niigata and the Joetsu region. Sasazushi recipes vary from family to family, but generally rice seasoned with vinegar is molded into small oval shapes and placed on bamboo leaves. Such toppings as mountain vegetables and mushrooms marinated in soy sauce and sugar and omelet are laid out on top of the rice, producing a vivid, colorful feast. The toppings take a lot of time and effort to prepare, but it is worth it to see the joy that sasazushi brings to people's faces, particularly at festivals and special occasions.
Niigata Prefecture boasts astounding natural beauty. Looking out over the Sea of Japan to the West and surrounded by majestic mountains on its other three sides, lush rice fields fan out over the region's serene landscape. Niigata is known throughout Japan as the home of Koshihikari rice, sworn by many to be the best rice in Japan. The region is also known for its severe winters and heavy snowfall. The Echigo Plain, sometimes referred to as Japan's rice belt, stretches far and wide around the city of Niigata, home to around 810,000 people. Niigata's abundant harvest of high-grade rice yields some of the most sought-after sakes and rice crackers in Japan.
Niigata boasts Japan's biggest harvest of rice, which is essential to Japanese cuisine. Koshihikari, Niigata's most celebrated variety of rice, is famous throughout Japan for its taste. Large variations in temperature between night and day, the fertile soil of the Echigo Plain, and the pristine melting snow that feeds into the rice paddies create a natural environment ideal for nurturing Niigata's exquisite rice. Koshihikari in particular benefits from this environment as a resilient and savory rice variety with a delicate sweetness all its own. When freshly cooked, it is fragrant and tasty enough to be eaten on its own right out of the rice cooker. Hotel Of Eternal Youth
It was reportedly good enough for Elizabeth Taylor. It kept Chairman Mao forever young (until he died). And Charlie Chaplin went straight to the source — a clinic in Bucharest — for it.
Now, thanks to a tieup between Romania's government and the high-class healing resort Hotel New Akao Royal Wing in Atami, Shizuoka Prefecture, the famed antiaging treatment developed by controversial late gerontologist Ana Aslan is at hand — and it's available less than 40 minutes from Tokyo by train.
A view of the Akao Herb and Rose Garden at the high-class spa resort Hotel New Akao Royal Wing in Atami. "We'll turn your gray hairs black!" Hotel New Akao Royal Wing General Manager Takayoshi Goto boasts in the lobby of his establishment, perched on the Izu Peninsula's craggy eastern coastline on Atami's outskirts. The middle-age Goto sports a shiny charcoal mane, suggesting he's living proof of the success of the hotel's treatments.
Perched on Izu Peninsula's coastline, Hotel New Akao Royal Wing boasts a rose-scented hot spring, ocean views and antiaging treatment; the latter shouldn't preclude guests from tucking into the Rose Ice Cream, on offer in the hotel's rose garden. The business of trying to stay looking young is likely to have a bright future in Japan. With the nation's population both shrinking and aging — some experts predict that it may fall by as much as a quarter by 2050; when 35 percent of the population will be aged 65 or over — more old people will be put to work. Four years ago the government recognized as much, amending a law to require companies to raise their mandatory retirement age to 65 by 2013. "More and more people aged 50 or above will have to keep on working," says Goto. "And they can only do that if they're healthy." Which is where the Hotel New Akao Royal Wing fits in. Everything about this 100-room palace to pampering oozes rejuvenation and relaxation. Even the elevators have chairs in them in case you're too knackered to stand. "We're hoping to attract company managers," says Goto. "At the moment, the number of senior males having beauty treatment is close to zero. It's an image problem. When Japanese think of beauty treatment, they think it's for women." Not unreasonably, the resort staff believe that environment, food and customer service are as important as the antiaging treatment itself in making guests feel younger. The hotel's standard plan offers a three-night stay for two (¥127,500 per person; ¥498,000 per person for the Imperial Suite) in a generously proportioned twin room with an ocean view; breakfast and a health-conscious eight-course dinner with some produce sourced locally; and three 75-minute-long beauty-treatment sessions at the resort's four-bed spa, Rejuve.
Guests even get their own concierge to advise them on how to make the most of their four days. This might entail taking a walk through the hotel's vast Akao Herb and Rose Garden (at 82,500 sq. meters, it's 13 times the size of Tokyo Dome) or a soak in the hotel's rose-petal-scented hot spring (for women only; men get their own onsen, but no petals). Well, if it was good enough for Cleopatra. Though it's not mentioned on the hotel's Web site, the plan also includes treatment at Atami Onsen Clinic, just in case all of the above hasn't taken 10 years off you. There, after a patch test for skin allergies, guests can receive a series of injections and prescription drugs in line with Aslan's treatments.
The Romanian antiaging specialist attracted thousands of wealthy types from around the world to her Bucharest clinic in search of the drug she developed, Gerovital H3, which she promoted as having rejuvenating qualities. Some of the effects purportedly include the boosting of hormone levels — resulting in enhanced sexual potency — and the neutralization of those nasty free radicals that make your skin age. Although the World Health Organization acknowledged Aslan's work, much of the medical establishment — including Japan's health ministry — remains skeptical of GH3's promise of prolonged youth. Nonetheless, Goto confirms that GH3 is included in the clinic's treatments. Hotel New Akao Royal Wing recommends four sets of injections over a year. "Is this your first time?" asks Rejuve beautician Izumi Tanaka. "Do you have any skin problems?" Tanaka probes. Tanaka nods, then leads you to one of the four rooms and steps outside to allow you to disrobe. Five minutes later Tanaka is applying antioxidization cleansing milk with cotton wool and rubbing every corner of the face into submission. The aim is to restore the skin's natural moisture balance and reduce tension. She then scrubs that off and gets to work with another cleansing lotion that should help the skin avoid pimples (it's high in vitamins) as well as remove grime. All the while, she's saying that facials are beneficial to everybody from 20 to 80. Including men. Tanaka starts to massage the back of the head, shoulders and neck. "Wow, it's so hard!" she says, as she wrestles gainfully with the scalp. Tanaka thinks it's stress. She's doing her best to alleviate that, though, as she moves on to a facial massage, smearing in sea buckthorn oil (sea buckthorn leaves were supposedly the gruel fed to Pegasus to help him take flight) and coaxing every ounce of tension from the pores. She finishes off by baking the face in hot towels. And if that won't relax you, nothing will. Staring in the mirror, you look healthier; skin feels moist, velvety even. But to stand a chance of actually beating back the aging process, Aslan's disciples recommend medication — and this includes injections — four times a year. Atami is 37 minutes from Tokyo Station on the Nozomi Shinkansen (¥1,890). Shuttle buses then take guests to Hotel New Akao Royal Wing. 2008/1/18 Japan GardenAdachi Museum of Art
![]() The Adachi Museum of Art was founded by Adachi Zenko in 1980 as a way of combining his passions for Japanese art and garden design. He hoped that viewing the gardens and artwork together would expand peoples' appreciation and interest in Japanese art. The Adachi Museum of Art is best known for its award winning garden. It has been named the best garden in Japan annually since 2003 by the Journal of Japanese Gardening. The garden can be enjoyed at anytime of the year and shows a different character depending on the season. It can only be viewed from the museum building. In addition to the gardens, the Adachi Museum of Art also houses a collection of nearly 1300 twentieth century paintings and artworks which are rotated seasonally. There is also a permanent exhibit of paintings by Yokoyama Taikan, as well as a ceramics exhibit. The Adachi Museum of Art is located one hour outside of Matsue: Take a train from Matsue Station to Yasugi Station (20 minutes, 400 yen by local or rapid train, covered by the Japan Pail Pass), from where there is one free shuttle bus per hour to the museum (20 minutes). Limited express trains from Okayama also stop at Yasugi Station before continuing to Matsue. How to get to and around Matsue
Idol No MoreHamazaki Ayumi has been the raining idol of music since before my arrival in Japan almost a decade ago. My roommate used to think she was incredible during her debut years in the Early 90's but totally hated her after she swayed from natural beauty to trendsetting shmuck and as I take my roommate's virtues' religiously, I stopped listening, watching or even looking at her entirely from about 2002, her most popular period. No wonder she's sad? Her songs were heard virtually everywhere during this decade. She has been the "Madonna of Japan" in almost everything from music, style and trends throughout this decade but it looks like this idol's run is coming to a close...
"Pushing 30, rivals circling, and now deaf in one ear: it's tough at the top for Ayu http://mdn.mainichi.jp/culture/waiwai/face/news/20080118p2g00m0dm005000c.html Pop diva Ayumi Hamasaki confirmed earlier this month what her nastier critics have been saying about her tone for years -- she's deaf, at least in her left ear. And Sunday Mainichi weekly magazine (1/27) says the 29-year-old superstar's ailment isn't being helped by her increasing isolation in the music world. Hamasaki used a special member's only blog she writes to reveal she'd lost her hearing. "Actually, last year I had a hearing test that revealed my left ear doesn't work at all, and the doctor said there's no operation that can fix it," Sunday Mainichi quotes the songstress writing to her fans. Hamasaki has actually known for years that her hearing was going bung, and has twice postponed national tours because of it. Nonetheless, now her secret is out in the open, Hamasaki is determined to forge ahead with her plans to tour the country from April, but the disclosure of her deafness has also opened another can of worms for her. "I read everything she wrote on her blog and it seems she kept the news all to herself, not telling her relatives or staff," entertainment beat journalist Yuji Watanabe says. "I think rather than the deafness itself, the bigger problem (for Hamasaki) is why she kept such a problem held so tightly in her heart." Hamasaki has long known it's lonely at the top. She has almost single-handedly kept her record company Avex at the apex of the Japanese music world, but realized as the company's queen bee she can't afford to have a public perception of weakness. She only told two people of her hearing problems -- Tomoya Nagase, the boy band Tokio member and her longtime ex-boyfriend, and Mika Noguchi, the president of panty manufacturer Peach John. Hamasaki's career is also not as sturdy as it once was. During her 10 years on the scene, her every album has come out at No. 1 on the charts in the week that it was released. But "Guilty," her latest offering that came out on New Year's Day, only reached No. 2, giving greater credence to suggestions that younger, flashier singers such as Kumi Koda and others of her ilk are about to usurp Hamasaki's title. As for Hamasaki's actual condition, otological expert Tetsuro Ogata suspects she may have Meniere's disease. "She's got either sudden deafness or Meniere's disease. Her hearing has become progressively worse over a number of examinations, so I think it's probably more likely to be Meniere's," Ogata tells Sunday Mainichi, noting that sudden deafness arises out of the blue and can be caused by such things as viruses or stress, while the condition also believed to have affected Beethoven starts with hearing difficulties and dizziness before progressing to hearing loss. 2008/1/13 Kodo![]() Kodo performing "Odaiko"
I went to see Kodo tonight. This was my ninth time seeing Kodo live and as always I left the show feeling thoroughly impressed and with a renewed interest in taiko. My favorite song of the concert was the opening piece called "Burning". The energy of the song combined with the choreography of the dancing and jumping was overwhelming. They also performed other Kodo staples such as "Monochrome", a shime song that really highlights the speed and skill of the performers, and "Odaiko", which (not so suprisingly) is played almost entirely on an odaiko.
![]() Kodo performing "Burning"
The 2008 One Earth Tour goes from January 29th - March 27 in Europe and comes back to Japan May 9th - June 25th. Check out their schedule for more information. If you like taiko then they are not to be missed. Kodo isn't the only professional group but they are one of the most travelled and internationally recognized groups in Japan. Along with the One Earth Tour they also have an annual Earth Celebration three day festival held in August on Sado Island in Niigata prefecture.
![]() Kodo performing "Monochrome" NabeWonder Pot
A bubbling cauldron of nabe is sure to banish the winter blues
There are many comfort foods in Japan, but nothing warms the soul like gathering around a nabe with friends as it sputters gutsu gutsu. Nabe may also be the easiest dish to make: chop up some vegetables and fish or meat, toss it into a ceramic pot, and apply heat. These meals are easy to assemble, a snap to clean, and can be made for one person or as many as you can squeeze around your table. Oden may be the easiest style of nabe for beginners, as pre-made packs are available at the grocery store this time of year. Start with water and kombu in a pot. Simmer for about 15 minutes, remove the kombu, and add the oden kit. I like to use some sausage and hardboiled eggs as well. Garnish with a hot karashi mustard and the piquant yuzu kosho. Satsuma-age fish cakes are another wonderful addition; a fantastic shop in Tsukiji called Tsukugon (4-12-5 Tsukiji; tel: 03-3542-0181) offers delicious ones in a variety of flavors. One piece of advice, be sure to stir the pot every now and then. I have burned a few nabe, but this is usually after the shochu is flowing and the action has slowed down. Also, if you’re using tonyu, you’ll need to cook it on low heat to avoid scorching. So, enjoy nabe and warm up your winter. Naked Men![]() A poster promotes the Kokuseki Temple's Somin Festival.
Naked men poster too racy for JR East
Japan Today January 10, 2008 http://www.japantoday.com/jp/news/424605 TOKYO — Times are changing for a millennium-old festival in provincial Japan that features naked men, with a top railway operator saying advertisements for the event were too racy. The northern city of Oshu each February draws thousands of tourists with its Somin Festival, in which naked men pile upon one another and frolic about late into the night to pray for good luck. The city has printed posters for the festival for decades but East Japan Railway, better known as JR East, refused to put up the advertisement at train stations this year for the first time. The poster for this year's festival on Feb 13 has a bearded middle-aged man with thick chest hair who appears to be howling. Other men, wearing only loincloths, cluster in the background. JR East's branch in Morioka, which covers the region including Oshu, said displaying the poster could constitute sexual harassment. "Train stations are used by a wide range of people and it is highly possible that some passengers may be offended by the poster design," said branch spokesman Kaichi Yamasaki. "The impression the poster leaves is a bit unsettling." Kumiko Chiba, an Oshu official in charge of festival affairs, said the city initially brought the poster to JR East in November and hoped the company would take 600 as usual. After the company asked for changes, the local government put white loincloths on all of the men who originally were naked. "But the poster was again turned down," Chiba said. "We gave up on any more modifications due to the costs and the approaching date of the festival." "We regret this because an advertisement at train stations can usually catch many people's attention," she said.
With JR East not specifying the complaint, the middle-aged man in the poster wondered if the real objection was to his chest hair, which is relatively rare in East Asia. "But I don't care as it's all a matter of personal taste," the man, a 20-year veteran of the festival, told a television network. The BFound another one of these affordable upscale designer hotels popping up all over here again and this one could also be the next best hotel in Tokyo too! It's also located in the upscale Akasaka area in Central Tokyo and it's called The B! That's right, B! Seems the concept is based on "good breakfast, comfortable bed and balance in your life" but the hotel is more than just that. Like all these other hotels of its kind, it features strikingly chic ambiance and ultramodern decor throughout, free internet, flatscreen plasma television, sparkling ion pointlighting and of course full glass open baths and shower stalls. Seems these full glass open baths and shower stalls are getting quite common at these new designer hotels, if you open the room windows, you can see all outside from your bath or shower and everyone can see you as well. There's even a spa at this one!
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2008/1/12 New Year RewindSeems I'm still stuck in New Year's Holiday even though it has been back to work this past week full of work, work and more work again. Yeah, I think it's because the New Year Holidays for me is one of the highlights of my life here in Japan especially since it is the longest holiday we have and all the exclusive specials on television here. It's also so beautiful, quiet and peaceful yet so traditional and festive here during this time everyone seems sublime yet excited and the land returns to its origin, Japan... crisp and clear in every way, it's by far my favorite time of the year to enjoy everything in this, my own private wonderland of sorts so here's a bit more New Year...
Participants in a New Year's event at Sozenji Temple in Kiryu, Gunma Prefecture, eat traditional "nanakusa gayu," rice porridge with seven nutritious herbs, on Monday, January 7, 2007. The Japanese custom of eating the porridge on January 7 each year is believed to bring people good health all year round. And Clear SkiesAlso mentioned this before too but I just have to emphasize how crisp and clear the skies were over the New Year Holiday here. I never knew there were mountains around Tokyo before!
Snow-covered Mount Fuji is seen clearly in the distance some 100 kilometers behind Tokyo Tower, left, in this photograph taken from the Shiodome waterfront area in Central Tokyo during the New Year Holiday. Almost all businesses in Japan close from New Year's Eve until about January 3 every year leaving remarkably clear skies. Diamond FujiAs I mentioned previously, this year's first sunrise of the year "hatsu hinode" was one of the most spectacular ones I've seen ever in Tokyo. There was a rare "Diamond Fuji" on New Year's Day sunrise and sunset which continued for most of the following week...
This photo shows the rare natural phenomenon called "Diamond Fuji," in which the sun shines like a diamond over the top of Mount Fuji. The photo was taken from above Tokyo at sunset. Next Best Hotel In TokyoI keep on saying it over and over again but these affordable upscale designer hotels popping up all over Tokyo are absolutely incredible especially when considering how inexpensive they are with remarkably sharp stylish trendsetting interiors in the heart of one of the most expensive cities in the world! One of my newest discoveries here, as I've mentioned previously, is another very affordable chic new upscale designer hotel chain called Granbell. They currently have two locations. One is located in the middle of bustling Shibuya which is known mostly for its hip trendy youth oriented atmosphere as well as its highclass cultured shopping and leisure penuche. The other one is located in Akasaka which is known for its adult oriented, even more highclass stately, almost royal appeal in shopping, dining, leisure and business complimented with some of the most largest and mode trendy company headquarters and centerville of the most largest and extravagant luxury hotels on the planet!
The rooms are all like suites with unbelievable interior accessories to literally blow your mind away!
![]() It's all like a dreamworld or something? Fully open marble ceramic baths overlooking the city through surrounding full floor to ceiling picture windows, glass shower rooms, bowl above counter basins, adjustable twenty position revolution shower heads, sparkling ion pointlighting and designer chandelier poofs throughout, custom designed Italian mode furniture, unique art decor, spiral staircases and more!
Additional amenities include large flatscreen plasma television, free optical highspeed internet, a restaurant, an unusual performance art theater at its Akasaka location and much much more! All this at rates far below any major chain hotel anywhere in Japan! I've already stayed at the Shibuya location twice and I will be slipping into the Akasaka location soon too!
Granbell Hotel Akasaka:
Granbell Hotel Shibuya:
2008/1/5 Toyota No. 2Toyota leapfrogs Ford to become No. 2 in U.S.
AP
January 5, 2008
![]() Toyota Motor Corp. overtook Ford Motor Co. to become the No. 2 automaker by U.S. sales in 2007, using new products and relentless strategy to break Ford's 75-year lock on the position. Toyota sold 2.62 million cars and trucks in 2007, which amounted to 48,226 more than Ford, according to sales figures released Thursday. Toyota's sales were up 3 percent for the year, buoyed by new products like the Toyota Tundra pickup, which saw sales jump 57 percent. Ford's sales fell 12 percent to 2.572 million vehicles. General Motors Corp. remained the U.S. sales leader, selling 3.82 million vehicles in 2007. But that was down 6 percent from the previous year as customers turned away from some large sedans and sport utility vehicles and GM cut low-profit sales to employees and rental car agencies. GM's car sales fell 8 percent for the year while truck sales were down 4 percent. Overall, the year was expected to be the worst for the auto industry since 1998 as consumers fretted over high gas prices, falling home prices and the economy. December also was a tough month for automakers despite a slew of holiday discounts. Toyota's sales slipped 2 percent for the month, while GM's sales were down 4 percent and Ford's fell 9 percent. Nissan Motor Co.'s December sales were down 2.4 percent, while Honda Motor Co.'s December sales were flat, with a 10 percent increase in car sales canceled out by a 10 percent decline in truck sales. "This was definitely a challenging year to be in the car business, and 2008 isn't likely to be a piece of cake," said Dick Colliver, executive vice president of American Honda. Colliver said automakers with more fuel-efficient offerings fared better as gas prices took their toll. Honda's full-year sales were up 2.5 percent, thanks in part to booming sales of the Fit subcompact, while Nissan's shot up 5 percent thanks to strong sales of the Versa subcompact. Chrysler LLC also had a solid December, with sales up 1 percent thanks to brisk sales of the new Dodge Caravan minivan, which saw a 51 percent jump. Chrysler sales were down 3 percent for the year as falling truck and SUV sales erased gains on the car side. Ford's car sales plummeted 24 percent for all of 2007 as some models like the Ford Mustang aged and a new Ford Taurus sedan was unable to match the volumes of the older version. Ford also cut rental-car sales by 32 percent over the year. Truck sales were down 5 percent. Ford historian Bob Kreipke said it was the first time since 1931 that Ford wasn't second behind GM in U.S. sales. Toyota spokesman Irv Miller said the distinction wasn't important to Toyota. "We don't pay a lot of attention to rankings such as that," he said. "It's always nice to see the product is recognized and accepted by the consumer. The consumer's going to be the ultimate determining factor in who the winner is." Toyota got a boost partly from heavier than usual incentive spending as its Toyota Tundra joined the fiercely competitive full-size truck segment. Auto research site Edmunds.com estimated Toyota's incentives jumped from $822 to $1,063 per vehicle between November and December. But Toyota's general manager for U.S. sales, Bob Carter, said Toyota's incentives remain some of the lowest in the industry. Jim Farley, who recently became Ford's global marketing chief after a career at Toyota, said the new numbers won't change Ford's recovery plan, which includes carefully targeted use of incentives. "In fact, it actually accelerates the way we're running the business," he said Thursday. "It accentuates the difference between how we're running the business and how our competitors are running the business. It requires us to stick to the plan, no doubt, but it also requires us to really accelerate the development of new products." Conrad Urban Night Cruise, New Otani Special Buffet & Dinner For Two![]() Urban night cruise
The Conrad Tokyo has put together an exclusive accommodation and nighttime cruise package for small groups. Located in the bayside area of Shiodome, the hotel offers panoramic views of Tokyo Bay and Hamarikyu Garden. The Urban Cruise Night package combines a stay at the hotel and a one-hour nighttime tour of Tokyo Bay on the private cruiser the Urban Launch. The luxurious interior of the cruiser has a bar counter, a sofa and even a bed, and guests can relax and enjoy night views of the Tokyo Bay skyline with complimentary champagne and snacks. The cruiser departs daily from Shibaura pier at 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. The one-night package, which is available from Jan. 4 through March 31, starts at ¥131,000 for double occupancy and ¥141,000 for triple occupancy. It includes transportation between the hotel and the pier and breakfast at Cerise, the hotel's casual brasserie that was created by Gordon Ramsay. The hotel is located in the Tokyo Shiodome Building, a 1-minute walk from Shiodome Station or a 7-minute walk from Shinbashi Station. Crab and roast beef buffet The Hotel New Otani is holding a crab and roast beef buffet at Top of the Tower, the 40th-floor restaurant that features panoramic views of the Tokyo metropolis.
The buffet features various crab dishes, one of the most popular winter treats in Japan, including steamed crab legs full of sweet, succulent meat, as well as the restaurant's popular roast beef. One of the buffet's highlights is Bretagne-style galette (buckwheat crepes), which will be freshly cooked on the buffet table with crab meat, vegetables such as zucchini and green peppers, eggs and cheese. Other selections include crab paella, crab and mushroom gratin, crab and spinach quiche and more. The buffet is available through Feb. 29 11:30 at a.m.-2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m.-9 p.m. The lunch buffet costs ¥5,040 for adults and ¥3,150 for children (age 4 to 12); the dinner buffet is ¥7,875 and ¥4,725, including tax and service charges. The hotel is a 3-minute walk from Akasaka-Mitsuke Station. Duo dinner at Rihga Royal Osaka The Rihga Royal Hotel Osaka is now offering dinner courses named Pour Vous for two people through Feb. 29 at six of its restaurants. The various restaurants, which serve French, Italian, Chinese or Japanese cuisine, will each prepare a pair dinner course that can be shared by two, couples or friends alike, for ¥20,000. And while it may be far off, guests dinning on Valentine's Day will receive a tasty gift from the hotel's chocolate shop L'eclat. The hotel is a 10-minute walk from Higobashi Station. There are shuttle bus services from Umeda and Yodoyabashi stations. I'm A Rat![]() This year is the year of the rat. I am a rat so it's no wonder I got dai kichi "great forturne" for my omikuji fortune this year. The rat's historic reputation as a spreader of bubonic plague aside, being a rat, as far as it goes, is not a bad thing at all... in Asia at least. Humans born under the astrological sway of the rat are known, by turns, to be family-minded, magnetic, well-liked, affable and quick-witted. But they also have a tendency to be furtive, self-centered, protective and calculating.
If you happen to be a rat person -- a "toshi-otoko" (male) or "toshi-onna" (female) -- you will be turning 12, 24, 36, 48, 60 or 72 this year.
Rats, or the less intimidating mice, have been getting plenty of admiring squeaks from the mainstream media, most which have centered on the creative ways and means by which businesses are commercializing them.
For instance, a bakery located in Ono City, Hyogo Prefecture began selling "nezumi pan" (rat rolls). The cakes, bearing rodents' whiskered faces, were stuffed with custard cream filling, with strips of chocolate used for the eyes and whiskers. These tempting treats sold for 200 yen each.
Naturally, Tokyo Disney Resort made a big PR push for its premiere performers Mickey and Minnie, who dressed up specially for the occasion in Japanese kimono.
From January 1 to 5, restaurants at the massive Disney Resort theme parks in Urayasu City will be serving such traditional new year's foods as oshiruko and osechi ryori.
But the new year's edition of Friday weekly magazine relates a somewhat less amusing story regarding real rodents that infested yet another familiar US icon: McDonald's.
It seems that a rat made a live appearance at a branch of the McDonald's fast food chain in Tokyo's Shibuya district and was captured on camera foraging at the sales counter before scampering out of sight toward the food-preparation area.
The rat appeared to be approximately 10 centimeters in length and in well-fed, robust condition.
As it turned out, the five black and white photos of "Mackie" as we'll call the furry four-legged friend, were shot seven years ago by Yasuko Funamoto and Takashi Hotta, in an outlet of McDonald's on Shibuya's Center Gai, a popular promenade where the capital's youth love to come to stroll, shop and dine on junk food.
"There'd been rumors from some time ago that the shop had been infested with rats and I went to take a peep," one of the photographers is quoted as saying. "I was really startled to see one, so I grabbed my camera and shot through the window glass."
At the time, the outlet was closed for the night, and the rat made its foray in an empty shop. Following extensive renovations, that same outlet changed to 24-hour operation and the rats no longer have the run of the shop after closing time, since there is no closing time.
But Friday's story raises the point that, like many other companies in the food business, the burger chain has not been immune to the growing number of scandals over slipshod sanitation methods or serving of ingredients beyond their freshness date. Indeed, such a scandal erupted at the end of November.
"This company has established the best sanitation control in the food service industry," a spokesman from the Corporate Communications Division of McDonald's Holdings insisted. "Whether rats, cockroaches or flies, our sanitation systems are in the top class in the industry."
But the former manager of a Mac outlet says otherwise.
"Rats gave us a big headache at the shop where I worked," he tells Friday. "A lot of oil is used in the cooking, which rats love. You really have to work your butt off to keep the place clean, and it was hard to keep good workers on the payroll. And the pests kept increasing."
To contend with the problem, the parent company organized a "store to store" system of checks, in which the supervisors of five or six store managers would pay inspection calls on their outlets.
"But we would be told when to expect the inspection in advance and just before his arrival we would rush to clean things up," says the former manager. "Then it was back to normal. As long as surprise inspections or spot checks aren't performed, you're not going to get any improvements."
"A lot of 'Makku-san' outlets are located in commercial buildings close to rail stations, which is a place that rats love," a professional pest exterminator tells Friday. "They've got multiple entries and exits, the buildings are centrally heated and cooled, and there's always plenty of food around.
"What's more, if the building operator doesn't take prompt action, the rats multiply like crazy. When that happens, you're stuck with them." |
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