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2008/4/26

Gay Escape

 
Stolen skids after anonymous encounter in Tokyo gay bar may be best link to teacher killer Ichihashi 
Mainichi News
April 25, 2008
 
 

Crimefighters hunting accused English teacher killer Tatsuya Ichihashi may have received their biggest tip yet from a man who claims to have had sex with the fugitive twice in recent months, and even provided investigators with a pair of undies belonging to the wealthy doctors' scion for DNA testing, Josei Seven (5/1) says.

The 35-year-old man identified by the women’s magazine only as Mr. A, a Tokyo-based company employee, claims to have met the 29-year-old Ichihashi at what Japan’s gays call a "hattenba".

Hattenbas are cheap, dark places where men pay a small fee in return for a modicum of privacy while they engage in casual, usually anonymous sex with other guys who’ve come in looking for the same thing.

Mr. A says it was one such hattenba in Tokyo’s gay quarter of Shinjuku Ni-Chome where he came across Ichihashi during a steamy February encounter. His tale has provided one of the strongest of thousands of leads police have received since Ichihashi slipped through their grasp during a bungled arrest attempt after the body of British teacher Lindsay Ann Hawker was found in his apartment in March last year.

Mr. A says the man he met and made love to at a hattenba in February deliberately avoided showing his face, his attempts at hiding made easier by the dark lighting in the room where their alleged encounter was supposed to have occurred.

“Based on past experiences at hattenbas, I’ve never heard of someone trying to hide their face from a partner for the whole time. I thought he must really be scared about being seen. I thought it was a bit shifty,” Mr. A tells Josei Seven, noting that a flash of light gave him a glimpse of his partner's puss. "Right that instant, I thought to myself, 'I've seen that face somewhere.' I knew I could remember having seen him, but couldn't for the life of me remember where."

 

Mr. A tells the women's weekly about their meeting.

"We were at it for about 20 minutes and though he moaned and groaned, he didn't utter a single word. He came first, so I ejaculated inside him. I got up to go and have a shower, but he showed no sign of cleaning himself off, inside just hiding under the blankets on the bed in the room. Most people finish and go straight to the showers, so I thought to myself that he must be really scared about showing his face," the homosexual man says.

Ayumi Sakai, a writer specializing on Japan's homosexual culture, says the hattenba offer fugitives like Ichihashi a wonderful place to keep a low profile.

"Many hattenba operate 24 hours a day. You can get in by paying only a small entrance fee. They're nearly always dark, so as long as you're a man you can go in there for any length of time and stay hidden regardless of whether you're gay or straight," she tells Josei Seven. "If a young guy finds a willing partner outside of the place, he may find someone who'll pay for him to get in and stay there. Once you're inside, there's no need to say a word, even your name. They have showers, saunas and places to sleep. They're perfect places for criminals hiding out who don't want to be seen anywhere."

Chiba Prefectural Police, the force heading the hunt for Ichihashi, officially say the many rumors about Ichihashi's presence in the gay quarter have nothing to do with the real investigation into Hawker's murder. But others say it's a different matter and point to the large number of detectives seen in Shinjuku Ni-Chome since last summer.

Investigators sifting through Ichihashi's computer found that he had quite an interest in gay sex, and a search of his home revealed that he was also a cross-dresser, prompting police to add to their wanted poster an artist's impression of what the alleged killer might look like if done up as a woman.

Mr. A, for one, has no doubts about Ichihashi's preferences, saying a second encounter at a hattenba in March convinced him. Mr. A had left the facility and was outside talking to a friend when a man he was convinced had been the guy he'd just slept with walked out. Mr. A says his friend immediately noticed the other man's resemblance to Hawker's presumed killer, so he and the friend tried to take a photo of him with their mobile phones.

 
Lindsay Ann Hawker, captured on a security camera prior to her death.
Lindsay Ann Hawker, captured on a security camera prior to her death.

"We thought that if the guy really was Ichihashi we had to catch him. He must have heard us say his name because when we reached the corner where he'd turned, he had suddenly run off and ducked into a little alleyway," Mr. A says. "I wondered whether I should go to the cops, but my friend said he wanted nothing to do with it. I lost my courage then and went home to have a good think about it."

Mr. A says he spent the night poring over the photos of Ichihashi that the Chiba Prefectural Police have put online.

"The more I looked at them, the more convinced I was that the guy from the hattenba was Ichihashi," Mr. A says. "Reporting the incident to the police was really hard because it meant exposing my sexuality. And I worried that it may not have been worth it if the guy was not actually Ichihashi. But I thought that if it was the real Ichihashi, I had no other option but to let the cops know."

Mr. A says he eventually told the police of his suspicions. They questioned him and he led homicide detectives to the place where he had the steamy encounter with the man he believes was Ichihashi. Though he held onto them at first, Mr. A says he also presented police with something that may help identify his mystery partner.

"Actually, I took home a pair of his undies after the first meeting," Mr. A tells Josei Seven. "It's not uncommon at a hattenba to take home a reminder of someone you've met up with there. But taking something without asking is a crime, so I was reluctant to let the police know. I wasn't happy with the police, either, because they kept asking me the same things over and over and over again and I stopped trusting them, wondering whether they were really serious about the investigation. I eventually gave them the undies, but I have my doubts about whether they'll actually do anything with them."

Chiba Prefectural Police say they are currently having the undies DNA tested to confirm whether they actually belonged to Ichihashi. Mr. A has his worries, though, saying that he had already washed them in the time from the meeting until he gave them to the police on April 8, but experts say that DNA can still be tracked down on items that have been through a washing machine.

 
Josei Seven (5/1)
Josei Seven (5/1)

Chiba Prefectural Police, meanwhile, say they're doing all they can to track down Ichihashi after he raced off barefoot and penniless when a cordon of officers had him in their clutches last March. Police say that 45,777 officers have served on the case and the public has generated 4,137 tip-offs.

"Police have formally asked for assistance from about 5,000 businesses in (Tokyo entertainment districts such as) Shinjuku, Shibuya and Ikebukuro. There have been plenty of cases in the past where tip-offs from ordinary people led to crimes being solved," a police insider tells Josei Seven. "Police have got to follow-up every single lead they get in this case if they want to solve it."

Ichihashi reportedly seen in Tokyo's gay area

Tatsuya Ichihashi, 29, who is the prime suspect in the murder of British language teacher Lindsay Ann Hawker, 22, in Ichikawa City, Chiba Prefecture in March of 2007, has reportedly been seen in an area of Kabukicho popular with the gay community.

Hawker’s family visited Japan in March to appeal for public help in locating Ichihashi, but there has been no progress in the case. The most common theories have been that he is being hidden by the yakuza or that he is already dead.

However, undercover police officers from the Chiba prefectural police went to the Shinjuku 2-chome area of Kabukicho after a gay man reported that he had seen a guy resembling Ichihashi in gay bars.

The man told police that he met Ichihashi in a motel. “I slept with him twice. I first met him at midnight on Feb 28 at a motel where many gay people gather to meet each other. After taking a shower, I went to a room where three guys were sleeping, one of whom was him.”

The witness describes the guy he met as “tall with long arms and legs, and long, narrow eyes. Since he was my type, I approached him and we got it off straight away.” The witness says he met him again when he visited the same motel in the early hours of March 2. “It was the same guy. But what was strange was that he didn’t let me see his face fully, keeping the room dark. I sensed he had some secret. It didn’t click that he might have been Ichihashi until later.”

When the witness checked out of the motel at 8 a.m. on March 2, he bumped into a friend who told him that the guy resembled Ichihashi. “Then I remembered Ichihashi’s wanted poster and that’s when it clicked. My friend suggested we take photos of him and follow him, but he disappeared. I think he might have overheard our conversation.”

The witness said he didn’t report his encounter to police sooner because he wasn’t 100% sure the guy was really Ichihashi. But finally, on March 14, he called the Gyotoku police station in Chiba which is in charge of the investigation. On April 8, he also gave police the guy’s underwear, which he had kept, for DNA testing, but since he had washed the underwear, no DNA was detected.

A spokesperson for the Chiba prefectural police declined to comment on the man’s story, other than to say the police were checking all leads.

“Motels where gay people gather are good for some criminals who want to hide themselves for a short term because a lot of guests hate to tell police they are gay, which makes it difficult to disclose what is going on there,” said Kenichi Sawa, editor of a gay magazine. “However, in general, the majority of gay people are good citizens and willing to cooperate with police. So those motels cannot be permanent places for criminals to hide out.”

One police source did admit that they have received reports on sightings of Ichihashi in Shinjuku 2-chome before. But he says, “Many Chiba police officers are not familiar with the area, so it is actually very difficult to search for him there or get cooperation from locals.”

So was it really Ichihashi? “Of course, I’m not 100% sure,” said the witness. “But since I work in the hospitality industry, I’m good at recognizing faces. In addition, when I saw Ichihashi’s wanted poster for the first time, I felt he was my type. Especially, his eyes were very impressive. So my gut feeling tells me the guy was absolutely Ichihashi.”

NHK Homosexuality

 
NHK ventures into the closet for first time with program on homosexuality 
Shukan Shincho/Mainichi News
April 24, 2008
 
 
Shukan Shincho (4/24)
Shukan Shincho (4/24)

Coverage of homosexuality by Japan's notoriously squeaky clean, hyper-conservative public broadcaster NHK has so far been as hard to find as a G-spot, but the taxpayer-funded network is finally coming out of the closet, according to Shukan Shincho (4/24).

NHK's Education Channel program "Haato wo Tsunago (Let's Connect Hearts)" will screen a program on homosexuality on April 28 and 29, continuing its trend since hitting the air two years ago of taking on controversial topics like child abuse, learning disabilities and hikikomori recluses.

"We've covered gender identity on the program before and some responses to those shows urged us to consider the problems facing homosexuals, so we decided to pick up the issue," an NHK spokesman tells Shukan Shincho.

"The show basically involves talking to homosexuals, their families and their associates to find out what sorts of problems they face and what we can do about them. We asked them about what it means to come out or not, why some homosexuals feel uncomfortable with being open about their sexuality and how friends and relatives react to those who are out. All cases discussed on the program are based on existing examples."

Homosexuality in Japan is typically accepted, but rarely talked about openly, though many overtly gay performers appear on TV screens.

Appearing as a guest on the program will be Kanako Otsuji, a 33-year-old woman who has made a political career out of being openly lesbian.

"NHK first talked to me about the program in February. At the time, they said they were only doing background work for a show, but even then I was really surprised that high and mighty NHK was showing an interest in gay and lesbian affairs. I thought it was finally a sign of the times," Otsuji tells Shukan Shincho. "For a long time, the media has basically ignored the homosexual community. TV sometimes picked up the subject, but almost always on variety shows where comic drag queens were the features. It looks like TV is finally going to take a serious look at the issues facing the gay and lesbian communities. I really was surprised when I first heard NHK was going to do the show. Now I'm proud of it for doing so."

Ira Ishida, one of the hosts of the program, also lauds NHK for taking on a topic still widely regarded as controversial in Japan.

"When we announced on our website that we were going to do a show on gays and lesbians, we received over 70 mailed responses from viewers even though the show hadn't aired. It's unprecedented to have so much response to a program before it has even gone on," Ishida says. "It seems like there were lots of viewers waiting for us to pick up this topic."

Media commentator Nobuo Shiga is also pleased at the development.

"I'm sure this is the first time NHK has ever done a program on gay and lesbians. And for its Education Channel," he says. "NHK has been trying to broaden its viewer base and this project is certainly a huge step for it."

Those in the homosexual community are naturally pleased.

"It's revolutionary for NHK to cover this topic," the leader of a gay and lesbian support organization tells Shukan Shincho on condition of anonymity. "In the past, NHK producers have contacted me on countless occasions to say they have an interest in doing a show about homosexuality, but they're bosses have always nixed the idea. Awareness of homosexuality in wider society is still not great, or at least that's what the bosses refusing to cover the issue were always saying. The closest thing homosexuality ever got to coverage on NHK was the homosexuals working as performers in the adult entertainment business. I think things have changed now, though." 

 
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Azalea Bloom

 
Tsutsuji, or azaleas, are in bloom at Nezu Shrine in Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, on Tuesday, April 22, 2008. About 3,000 azalea shrubs, made up of 50 species, which come into flower at slightly different times depending on the species, can be enjoyed throughout the shrine's Tsutsuji Matsuri (azalea festival) that ends on May 6.

Akasaka Sacas

 
Tokyo's newest city within the city centers around the headquarters of TBS.

Akasaka Sacas became Tokyo's newest city within a city in March of 2008. After the success of Fuji Television at Odaiba, Nippon Television at Shiodome, and TV Asahi at Roppongi Hills, TBS (Tokyo Broadcasting System) decided to also try their hand at integrating their headquarters into the "city within a city" format.

Sacas is made up of five main buildings; the TBS headquarters, a residence tower, a 39-story office building called Biz Tower and a couple of performance buildings. The Blitz theater caters to a young audience, presenting shows from local and international rock and pop groups. The ACT Theater on the other hand presents Broadway-type spectacles, often of international renown.

Most of Sacas' shopping and dining facilities are located in the first few floors of the Biz Tower. There is less available when compared to the other cities within a city, but nonetheless, be it Thai, French, or Japanese, there is still a considerable variety of quality international food to be found. For fans of Japanese television, interesting souvenirs are sold at the TBS shop.   

 
ACT Theater
Biz Tower Atrium                                         

http://sacas.net/

Into Golden Week

 
The Golden Week is a collection of four national holidays within seven days. In combination with well placed weekends, the Golden Week becomes one of Japan's three busiest holiday seasons, besides New Year and the Obon week in late summer.

Trains, airports and sightseeing spots get very crowded during Golden Week, and accommodation in tourist areas can get booked out well in advance.

 
The national holidays making up the Golden Week are:
 
  • April 29
    Showa Day (Showa no hi):
    April 29 is the birthday of former Emperor Showa, who died in the year 1989. Until 2006, Greenery Day (see May 4) used to be celebrated on this day.

  • May 3
    Constitution Day (Kenpo kinenbi):
    On this day in 1947, the new post war constitution was put into effect.

  • May 4
    Greenery Day (Midori no hi):
    Until 2006, Greenery Day used to be celebrated on April 29, the birthday of former Emperor Showa. The day is dedicated to the environment and nature, because the emperor loved plants and nature. Before being declared Greenery Day, May 4 used to be a national holiday due to a law, which declares a day, that falls between two national holidays, a national holiday.

  • May 5
    Children's Day (Kodomo no hi):
    The Boy's Festival (Tango no Sekku) is celebrated on this day. Families pray for the health and future success of their sons by hanging up carp streamers and displaying samurai dolls, both symbolizing strength, power and success in life. The Girl's Festival, by the way, is celebrated on March 3.

In 2008, the weekends are placed in a way that results in a Golden Week consisting of an isolated public holiday on Tuesday (April 29) and a 4-day weekend  from Saturday to Tuesday (May 3-6). Travel activity is anticipated to peak on May 3 with people leaving the large urban centers and on May 6 in the opposite direction. Heavy traffic is also expected on April 26 and May 5.

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My company sets golden week vacation on April 29 and then again from May 1 to May 6 so we have one day of work on Monday (April 28), then one day of public holiday on Tuesday (April 29), then another day of work on Wednesday (April 30) and finally a full week on vacation and public holiday from Thursday (May 1-6).   

2008/4/19

Bye Bye JAL Bird

 
 
Merger grounds JAL's crane symbol 
Asahi
April 18, 2008
 

For close to half a century, a bright red crane with its wings spread majestically above its head was the symbol of Japan Airlines.

But the logo is about to go the way of the passenger pigeon and the dodo. Next month, with a swipe of a painter's spray gun, the last one will be gone from the tails of the company's aircraft.

JAL changed its logo after Japan Airlines Co. merged with Japan Air System Co. (JAS) in 2002. However, the crane logo is being phased out gradually. The process will be completed by late May.

Called Tsurumaru, the crane logo was created in 1959.

Before that, the logo consisted of the letters JAL stretched out to form wings. But when the airline moved from prop planes to jets, company officials decided a change was in order.

At first they wanted a logo with a modern design that expressed a sense of speed. However, in the end, a decision was reached to emphasize Japanese qualities.

The crane logo first appeared on a JAL jet in 1960. The first jet, dubbed Fuji, was a DC-8. On that aircraft, the crane symbol was placed on the fuselage slightly behind the cockpit. On the tail was a copy of the Japanese flag.

Many retired JAL employees are sorry to see the symbol go.

Shigeru Yoshida joined JAL when the company was established in 1951. At first, Yoshida, now 82, was posted at Haneda Airport cleaning aircraft and handling luggage.

"I felt a real sense of purpose working to put a plane in the sky at a time when the nation was still reeling from defeat in World War II," Yoshida said. "I thought the crane logo was a symbol not only for JAL, but for a Japan that was taking off."

In 1970, JAL entered the jumbo-jet era with aircraft capable of carrying about 500 people at a time.

The uniforms worn by flight attendants featured miniskirts designed by Hanae Mori. The flashy uniforms announced the start of the age of mass transport.

When JAL jets carried politicians and diplomats to events of historic significance--the normalization of diplomatic relations between Japan and China and the return of Okinawa to Japan are two examples--the crane logo went with them.

As the firm's international routes expanded, Yoshida found himself assigned to work at JAL operations in Denmark, Britain and Italy. He reached retirement age while assigned to a branch in Seattle.

The crane symbol also had special meaning for Japanese who traveled abroad.

Kaisaku Sano, 78, was another member of the first cohort of JAL employees. Sano worked in sales in Singapore, Britain, the United States and Australia. Japanese businessmen posted overseas often told him they felt "relieved" when they saw the crane logo.

JAL was more than just an airline in the early days. With few escorted tours available, it was not uncommon for Japanese travelers to visit JAL operations abroad hoping to find a volunteer tour guide.

Hiroo Moroboshi, 77, who joined JAL in 1957, worked as a JAL pilot until 1991. He still recalls lights flashing over the crane symbol on one of the first flights to New York.

At that time, JAL was the only Japanese company that flew outside of Japan.

"I really felt proud," Moroboshi said. "I feel as though I have grown along with the crane symbol."

When JAL was privatized in 1987, there were some in the company who called for a new logo.

However, while endangered--as real cranes are in Japan--the logo survived until after the merger with JAS in 2002.

Painting over the logo has taken time because the work could only be done during major maintenance periods.

While at one time there were about 140 jets with the crane logo, there were only two left as of April 17.

Yoshida and Sano say they are both sad to see the symbol go. They now work as volunteers collecting and organizing historical items for a JAL facility at Haneda airport.

25 Years Of Tokyo Disneyland

 
Fireworks explode in front of the Cinderella Castle during a ceremony to mark the 25th anniversary of Tokyo Disneyland in Urayasu, near Tokyo, on Tuesday April 15, 2008. Located just outside of the Japanese capital, Tokyo Disneyland opened 25 years ago and together with its sister theme park Tokyo DisneySea, which opened in 2001, has become the most popular tourist attraction in the country. 

U.S. Military Prisoners In Japan Get

 
Sunday Mainichi (4/20)
 
U.S. soldiers in Japanese jails cop sweet deal compared to natives 
Sunday Mainichi
April 20, 2008
 

American military personnel doing time in Japanese jails get plenty of chances to chew the fat behind bars. And a Sunday Mainichi (4/20) report says there may be plenty more fat in the works, judging by how much these military prisoners get fed.

U.S. military criminals jailed in Japan receive 13 tons of food a year, with a daily intake allowance of around 4,000 calories -- almost double the roughly 2,620 calories dished out to Japanese prisoners in the same lockup.

U.S. military convicts are jailed in the Yokosuka Prison, a branch of the Yokohama Prison in the same city as the biggest U.S. Navy base in the country. As of the end of 2006, the most recent figures available, there were 247 prisoners incarcerated in the jail, 16 of who were members of the U.S. military.

At first glance, the menu for U.S. military prisoners rivals most fare available at posh hotels, according to information the Justice Ministry made available to Yokosuka Municipal Assembly Member Hiroshi Ichiyanagi.

On June 8, 2006, a U.S. military prisoner in Yokosuka Prison was served a breakfast of fruit, scrambled eggs, a sausage patty, French toast with jam and cereal. His lunch comprised pot roast, boiled rice, asparagus, coleslaw and baked custard. And his evening meal, meanwhile, was vegetable soup, steak with tomato sauce, curry and rice, corn, macaroni salad and spice cake.

On the same day, Japanese prisoners at the same institution were served onion in miso soup, natto fermented soybeans, grated radish and pickled vegetables. For lunch, they got twice-cooked pork, bean sprouts and marinated fish. Dinner was a croquette, macaroni salad, miso soup with egg and salted cucumber.

And it's not just food where the American military offenders are getting it better than their Japanese counterparts.

"They have individual cells about three tatami mats (around nine square meters) big and the toilets are Western-style," a journalist tells Sunday Mainichi. "They also have their own TVs and are allowed to watch some American TV shows."

Justice Ministry officials explain that the preferential treatment extended to U.S. military prisoners incarcerated in Japanese jails extends back decades.

"It apparently started around 1955, and it was a decision Japan and the United States made together in consideration of the cultural differences between the countries," a Justice Ministry Corrections Bureau spokesman tells Sunday Mainichi. "The U.S. military is paying for the costs of the food."

Even if the pricey food bills aren't a burden on Japanese taxpayers, not everyone is happy with the cushy way U.S. military prisoners are looked after.

"Jeez, they're getting treated well, aren't they? If they commit crimes in Japan, they should be treated the same as the Japanese behind prison walls," Shuichi Sanada, whose sister Yoshie Sato was savagely beaten to death in 2006 by a U.S. sailor now serving a life term in Yokosuka Prison, tells Sunday Mainichi. "Unless we improve on things like this, we'll never be able to keep crime under control."

2008/4/17

Amanese

 

Amanresorts owns and manages 18 small luxury resorts worldwide. Each Aman resort is singularly unique but all offer an experience for guests that is intimate and discreet, while providing the highest level of service. Certain elements characterise all Aman resorts – a beautiful natural location, outstanding facilities, exceptional service and a small number of rooms to ensure exclusivity and privacy. The décor of each Aman resort makes use of locally sourced materials, reflecting elements of the natural surroundings and the traditions of local cultures. Since 1988, when flagship Amanpuri (‘place of peace’) opened in Phuket, Thailand, Amanresorts has established resorts in Bhutan (Amankora, 2004), Cambodia (Amansara, 2002), France (Le Mélézin, 1992), French Polynesia (Hotel Bora Bora, 1989), Indonesia (Amandari, 1989; Amanusa and Amankila, 1992; Amanwana, 1993 and Amanjiwo, 1997), India (Aman-i-Khás, 2003 and Amanbagh, 2005), Morocco (Amanjena, 2000),  Philippines (Amanpulo, 1993), Sri Lanka (Amangalla, 2005 and Amanwella, 2005), Turks & Caicos Islands (Amanyara, 2006) and USA (Amangani, 1998).

Always on the lookout for exceptional circumstances in which culture and history combine strongly in a unique natural environment, Amanresorts will continue to expand its worldwide presence. 

http://www.amangani.com/home.aspx?id=3202

Back From Indonesia Again

 
I just returned from Jakarta again this morning. This time it all went even better than the first time and I am finding Indonesia a little more and more interesting every time I go back. As I mentioned before, I will be going to Indonesia every month for my current project. We stayed at the Le Meridien Jakarta Royal Club as usual and had meetings with our customers at their offices in Central Jakarta.  
 
 
This time I had a free day and went on a day trip out to Java and the famous Borobudur one of Southeast Asia’s great Buddhist relics which sits on top a small hill surrounded by rice paddies in central Java, this immense stone monument was built sometime between 778 and 850. The temple was buried under volcanic ash until 1815, when it was discovered and excavated.  
 
The area around it is so beautiful with volcanoes, untouched villages with grazing rice paddies, greenery all over and a small road that ends the area's only hotel, the exclusive Amanjiwo Luxury Resort which is one of the world's most majestic resorts ever built with picturesque views of the Borobudur from every area, open air private suites, private garden paths overlooking sparkling blue private pools and baths sprinkled with orchids and wild flowers by the hotel's children. It's a majestic oasis in the middle of rice paddies. It's so quiet and relaxing there like another world. Wish I could have spent more time there at the extraordinary Amanjiwo. 
 
I didn't have time to go to the Borobudur itself but I saw it from the Amanjiwo where I wandered in awe speechless for hours. I have never seen anything like it before, I was like I was in heaven and wished I lived there forever. Some pictures of the Amanjiwo are attached.  
 
I heard Bali island is even more beautiful with crisp blue oceans, extremely openly friendly people and more luxury resorts beyond imagination. Maybe next time I will go there? Everything is so cheap and beautiful in Southeast Asia. I ate spectacular full course local meals which feature lots of tropical fair always accompanied by those red hot chili peppers that my dad grew in Hawaii and used to punish me with, lots of vegetables, fruits of all kind all so fresh and so cheap... it's like paradise my hotel room at the LeMeridien Royal Club which was like a royal suite with a private club floor filled with free food, drinks, meeting spaces, lounges and private check-in/concierge was only about $90 a night as usual and the meals were all less than $20 even room service nothing is over $10!  
 
2008/4/12

To The Airport & Beyond

 
I always travel on the Keisei Skyliner between Nippori and Narita because it's all in my neighborhood and the areas around me are rapidly expanding to become the new central tokyo as the New Tokyo Tower will be here soon seems the Shitamachi "Oldtown/Downtown" is becoming the Realtown Tokyo more than ever today...
 
Aya Ueto looking forward to smooth ride on new Skyliner  
Aya Ueto and Kansai Yamamoto, far right, with JR officials 

Aya Ueto looking forward to smooth ride on new Skyliner  

Saturday 12th April, 06:53 AM JST

TOKYO — Popular Actress/Singer Aya Ueto is enthusiastic about Keisei Railway’s new Skyliner Airport Express. Ueto, 22, turned up at the preview this week along with Japanese fashion designer Kansai Yamamoto, who designed the car. “I often write letters on trains, but it’s hard when the train rocks. With this train, I’m looking forward to a much smoother ride. It should be really comfortable.”

The new Skyliner, which will be launched in 2010, can go as fast as 160 kilometers an hour. It will cover the distance between Nippori in Tokyo and Narita Airport in 36 minutes.

Sakura Fukuda

 
Garden party   
 
Saturday 12th April, 04:30 PM JST

Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda poses with celebrities at the annual cherry blossom garden party at Shinjuku Gyoen on Saturday. Behind Fukuda to his right is actress Kaori Manabe. To his left are speed eater Natsuko “Gal” Sone, actress Rei Kikukawa and comedian Sumiko Nishioka. Approximately  20,000 guests attended the event.

Janet In Japan

 
U.S. pop star Janet Jackson greets fans upon her arrival at Narita International Airport, near Tokyo, on Wednesday, April 9, 2008. Jackson arrived in Japan Wednesday to promote her newest album "Discipline."
 
Janet Jackson makes surprise visit to Tokyo dance school 
Mainichi Daily News
April 11, 2008
 
 
Janet Jackson (center) watches dancers perform at a dance school in Tokyo, April 10, 2008. Jackson flew into Japan on Wednesday to promote her latest album
Janet Jackson (center) watches dancers perform at a dance school in Tokyo, April 10, 2008. Jackson flew into Japan on Wednesday to promote her latest album "Discipline". (AP)

American singer Janet Jackon, who has been in Japan to promote her latest album "Discipline," made a surprise visit to a dance school in Tokyo's Shinjuku on Thursday night, April 10, 2008.

Knowing that the school, "Zeel Studios," is currently giving its students tracks from the album as requisite dance tunes, the 41-year-old pop icon eagerly offered to visit one of the classes. About 20 students in the class were given prior notice about a visit from Jackson's choreographer. As Jackson walked into the class unannounced, some students burst into tears of joy.

After watching the students perform to her song, Jackson promised to invite them backstage to her concert in Japan during her world tour that starts in September.

Kanamara

 
photo
 
Kanamara a frisky festival for every Tom, Dick and Harry...without the Tom and Harry
Mainichi Daily News
April 7, 2008
 
 
Action at the Kanamara Matsuri in Kawasaki on Sunday. (MDN)
Action at the Kanamara Matsuri in Kawasaki on Sunday.

KAWASAKI -- Thousands gathered here Sunday for the Kanamara Matsuri, an event with roots dating back centuries and now one of Japan's best-known fertility festivals.

Kanamara Matsuri, literally the Festival of the Iron Penis, had its beginnings in the Edo Period (1603-1868) with the prayers of women called meshimori onna, according to Wakamiya Hachimangu, the Shinto shrine in Kawasaki where the event was held.

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Meshimori onna were women employed by the Shogun rulers of Japan during the feudal era to serve travelers along major roads such as the Tokaido that ran from Edo (modern Tokyo) to the ancient capital of Kyoto, with Kawasaki serving as a lodging spot.

Although the meshimori onna were supposed to serve only food, they also served themselves for a price, and it was their custom of praying to the gods that led to the festival as it is today.

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Kanamara Matsuri is said to have positive effectives on business and fertility, increases the chance of an easy birth, heightens the possibility of finding a partner, boosts marital harmony and wards off sexually transmitted diseases.
 
Some of the carriers of the Elizabeth portable shrine at the Kanamara Matsuri in Kawasaki on Sunday. (Mainichi)
Some of the carriers of the Elizabeth portable shrine at the Kanamara Matsuri in Kawasaki on Sunday.

The festival, which its organizers describe as being "relaxed and a tad different," is well-known internationally and attracts hundreds of foreigners every year.

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A highlight of the festival involves transvestites and transsexuals carrying a penis-shaped portable shrine (called "Elizabeth," incidentally, after the name of the Tokyo gay bar that originally donated it to the shrine) and screaming out a chant of "Kanamara, dekai mara (Iron penis, whopping penis)."

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Mega Mac Japan

 
MEGA×MEGA×MEGA 
 
McDonald's Japan is Mega x Mega x Mega! The popular Mega Mac burger previously tested is going to have a permanent place on the menu along with the new Mega Muffin and Mega Teriyaki.
 
2008/4/5

Sakura Everywhere!

 
Couples in row boats enjoy cherry blossoms in full bloom lit up at Chidorigafuchi, part of the moat surrounding the Imperial Palace in Tokyo's Chiyoda ward, Tuesday, April 1, 2008. The trees will be illuminated until April 6, ward officals said.

Hotel After Hotel

 
 
Like I said, every day it seems a new hotel is popping up in Tokyo.  The renown Singapore based stylish apartment/hotel group Fraser just opened Fraser Place howff Shinjuku, Tokyo a brand new stylish apartment/hotel just outside Shinjuku called Fraser Place howff Shinjuku, Tokyo! It's pretty amazing, the rooms and the price too!
 

Today I am staying nearby at the controversial new Best Western Shinjuku Astina Hotel I mentioned last week. Nice rates, interiors, amenities and it's all rather elegant for a Best Western smack dab in the hustle and bustle of Kabukuchi on the ever busy mega shopping and entertainment ridden east side of Shinjuku Station.