Bandai lists top cartoon characters in Japan: Anpanman #1 4 years running


Yahoo News (Thanks 2ch):

According to Bandai‘s “Children’s Favorite Cartoon Characters Ranking” released on June 22, “Go! Anpanman” was the top choice for boys and girls for the fourth year in a row.

At #2 and below were, in order: “The Precure Duo“, “Pocket Monsters“, “Winnie the Pooh“, and “Hello Kitty“.

Anpanman was overwhelmingly preferred by the 0-2 age bracket, with 58.6% choosing him as their favorite. For 3-5 year olds the top was “Precure” (LINK NOT SAFE FOR WORK), a show popular among young girls. “Pocket Monsters” was the favorite for both the 6-8 and 9-12 age brackets.

On Anpanman’s popularity, Bandai gathered, “There are lots of characters that show up on the show, and the stories, where the goodguys always win, are easy to understand and entertaining for both children and their caregivers.” (Metropolis magazine online has a good article on the origins and popularity of Anpanman)

The survey asked the opinions of 2000 caregivers of children 12 or under in the beginning of April of this year.

Jenkins’ Trip to NC


Charles Jenkins, the man who deserted the US Army to face a living hell in North Korea, is back in Japan after visiting his mother in North Carolina. He enjoyed his 2-week weeklong visit to his hometown, and we know this for a fact because reporters were in his face the whole time. Jenkins and family were greeted by a line of photographers and reporters starting at Narita airport, a similar line when he touched down in North Carolina, and from the beginning to the end of his trip the media followed him as if he were the pied piper. To show you how closely he was followed, just take a look at the things they covered:

Jenkins meets his mother

Jenkins gives present to friend
Jenkins visits graveyard

Jenkins and family go bowling
Jenkins visits Veterans’ Museum (For this story, I saw on Japanese TV news that a reporter shoved a microphone into Hitomi Soga’s face as she was viewing the exhibit to ask, “What do you think about the museum?”
Jenkins visits lake where he used to play as a child

They followed him EVERYWHERE. Before he came, I naively considered going to NC (only 3 hours away) to try and interview him. I was unprepared, however, for the absolute explosion of coverage that followed his arrival.

My boss explained the obvious to me: the kidnapping story captures the Japanese public’s attention on a level that goes beyond even America’s fascination with the Michael Jackson case. As a result, reporters are never far from Jenkins or Soga. While they may have stopped recording his every move during the period of downtime preceding his trip to the US, they were hot on his trail as soon as something dramatic happened. The media scramble might be a little distasteful, but I must admit I eat it up like the glutton I am.

But why is he putting up with this bullshit? I mean, there are ways to avoid reporters if you want to. The answer to that, I believe, is that the publicity keeps him in the public eye and will make it easier for him to sell his memoirs when they come out. Time Asia bureau chief Jim Frederick is working closely with the former defector to get his biography written and published. I know I’ll get it as soon as it comes out.

UPDATE: NKZone points us to a THINK News‘ link to a sympathetic editorial from the Raleigh News & Observer.

NEWS FLASH OMFG: FAMILY MART TO OPEN IN AMERICA!!!!!


AP brings good tidings:

Japan’s ‘Family Mart’ to Open in U.S.
06.21.2005, 09:14 AM

AWESOME Japanese convenience store operator FamilyMart Co. said Tuesday it plans to open 200 stores in the U.S. over the next four years, the first in California.

The inaugural U.S. store will open July 20 in West Hollywood, California, under the name “Famima,” the nickname widely used by Japanese.

It will offer traditional Japanese convenience store staples like “omusubi” rice balls, “bento” box lunches and sushi, as well as U.S. fare like takeaway sandwiches, the company said in a statement. < -- I've died and gone to heaven! "We would like our American customers to experience a new shopping style," it said. FUCK YEAH, I have been waiting for this for EIGHT YEARS!!! The store will also feature wireless Internet access, an ATM, a copy machine and an eat-in area, it said. COOL! The company said it plans to have three U.S. locations by the end of the year and about 200 by February 2009. OPEN ONE IN DC. I BEG YOU. FamilyMart already has about 11,500 stores, including franchises, in Japan and other Asian locations including South Korea, Thailand, China and Taiwan.

Guess what? When “Famima” opens in DC, I never have to go to Japan again! I’ll just eat lunch there every day! Haha! I never thought Forbes Magazine would make me feel like dancing on air, but then I never expected this either! Joy!

Six-party talks were Japan’s idea, says former Assistant Secretary of State James A. Kelly

From Asahi:

Former Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs for the US Dept. of State James A. Kelly, who acted as head representative of the US for the 6-Party talks dealing with the North Korean nuclear issue, revealed that the creation of the 6-Party Talks was Japan’s idea. When then-Secretary of State Colin Powell visited Japan, China, and Korea in 2003, the Japanese government presented the structure of the talks to him. He then proceeded to China, where he persuaded then-Premier Jiang Zemin to go along, succeeding in forcing North Korea, who had wanted a bilateral solution between NK and the US, to deal with the issue multilaterally.

According to an interview with Kelly from his residence in Hawaii, in 2003, the year in which North Korea worsened the nuclear problem by restarting the nuclear facility at Yong Byong, the US was considering multilateral talks that included the 5 permanent members of the UN Security Council, Japan, South Korea, the EU, Australia and others using multiple combinations.

The Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) presented the idea of either 5-party talks including North and South Korea as well as the US, Japan, and China, or 6-party talks including Russia as well, when Powell visited Japan, South Korea, and China on the event of South Korean President Roh Mu Hyun’s inauguration in February of the same year. The proposal was based on the frustrating experience of being left out of the “4-party talks” between the US, China, and North and South Korea.

“Powell presented the idea as coming from the US, since he thought it would be easier for the Chinese to agree than if he said it was Japan’s idea,” Kelly explained. China was initially hesitant, saying, “The nuclear problem is between the US and North Korea,” but America was insistent. After a three-party talk in April, the first six-party talks started in Beijing in August 2003.

Kelly said, “The six-party talks are the best framework to induce North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons. North Korea isn’t responding because it doesn’t like to feel ganged up on 5 to 1.” Expressing his desire to see the talks reopened, Kelly added, “The six-party talks aren’t dead.”

Japan’s whaling diplomacy: Connections to ODA

Whaling is in the news again, thanks to the annual IWC meeting in Ulsan, South Korea. Some interesting articles have come out of the hype:

  • Washington Post describes Japan’s efforts to rebuild domestic demand for whale meat.
  • BBC covers the situation pretty well.
  • Japan is accused of applying pressure on countries to support its seemingly arbitrary pro-whaling policy. I mean, no one in Japan CARES about eating whale except people who miss seeing it in school lunches, it just seems like the bozos in government who are really interested in making people into it. Curzon thinks it’s a good source of meat. I agree, with some reservations.

    Anyway, people say that Japan’s tactics in the IWC meetings is “sleazy” at best, “illegal” or at least “in violation of the spirit of ODA” at worst. Sure, asking for a secret vote EVERY YEAR might get a little tiring, and the several astroturf organizations created and soulless PR gurus employed to show support for whaling get shriller and more transparent all the time. But what I’m interested in is perhaps the most serious allegation: that Japan uses its ODA to pressure countries to support whaling.

    My original idea for this post was to analyze the data myself, comparing aid that IWC members get from Japan and their voting patterns. Thankfully, however, Wikipedia has done my work for me already:

    Allegations of “vote-buying”

    Each year the IWC meets to discuss arising from the convention. Member countries may propose a resolution for the Commission to adopt. It is usual for Japan to propose a motion to allow it a commercial hunt in the Pacific Ocean. Over the moratorium years the balance of support on this issue has changed from a majority in favour of keeping the ban to a 50-50 split. IWC rules say that such a change could only be brought about with a 75% majority in favour.

    Campaign groups and some governments claim that the Japanese Fisheries Agency has carried out a programme of “vote-buying” – i.e. offering aid to poorer countries in return for them joining the IWC and supporting Japanese positions on whaling.

    Specifically, Japan has given $320m in overseas aid to Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Guinea, Morocco, Panama, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St Kitts and Nevis and the Solomon Islands. Each of these countries has also sided with Japan in each IWC vote since 2001. Greenpeace says that the two events are correlated.

    When these allegations were aired at the London IWC meeting in 2001 by New Zealand delegate to the commission, Sandra Lee, the Japanese delegate comprehensively denied the allegations. Masayuki Komatsu said “Japan gives foreign aid to more than 150 nations around the world and that includes strong anti-whaling nations such as Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico and others who receive far more aid than the Caribbean nations [..] If Japan was buying votes, you would see 150 nations in the IWC and as a consequence the unnecessary moratorium would have been lifted years ago.”

    Komatsu also said that Caribbean countries naturally supported pro-whaling resolutions as they are whaling countries themselves (mostly of smaller cetaceans) and that the New Zealand commissioner was inventing “fairy stories”.

    In response to this rebuttal, anti-whaling groups point to several statements that apparently conflict with the official Japanese position. In an interview reported in The Observer newspaper in May 2001, Atherton Martin, Dominica’s former Environment and Fisheries Minister said “They [Japan] make it clear, that if you don’t vote for them, they will have to reconsider the aid. They use money crudely to buy influence.” Martin resigned because of the issue. Greenpeace also quotes Tongan parliamentarian Samiu K Vaipulu as saying that Japan had linked whale votes to aid.

    Indeed in a famous interview with Australian ABC television in July 2001, in which he described Minke Whales as “cockroaches of the sea”, Japanese Fisheries Agency official Maseyuku Komatsu said that offering aid was “a major tool” in obtaining backing for a return to commercial whaling. The previous week Lester Bird, prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, had said “Quite frankly I make no bones about it…if we are able to support the Japanese, and the quid pro quo is that they are going to give us some assistance, I am not going to be a hypocrite; that is part of why we do so”.

    Japan notes that major anti-whaling nations such as Australia and New Zealand also donate aid to poor countries on the IWC and thus it could easily accuse the anti-whaling lobby of the same tactics.

    But is it against the spirit of the ODA regime? Here is what Japan’s “ODA Charter” has to say:

    (2) Any use of ODA for military purposes or for aggravation of international conflicts should be avoided.

    It looks like Japan reserves the right to use its ODA to pressure other countries if it wants to.

    There is clearly a strong taboo in America against eating intelligent mammals. We love Shamu, go to Sea World, go whale watching, and think it’s brutal for the Japanese to insist on killing an endangered species. I don’t think I need to prove that, but here’s a link anyway.

    Personally, I am for the whaling moratorium. Though whale meat could be a potential food source if it’s well-managed, there needs to be a balance between demand and supply in order to ensure the survival of any species, not just whales. For Japan to push for an end to it simply to satisfy fishing lobbies and politicians with a case of nostalgia is irresponsible in the extreme.

    In the area of fisheries, we as a species are just not at a point where we can trust ourselves to manage our fish populations responsibly. Among some species in danger of depletion due to excess demand (mostly from Japan, the US, and other sushi-eating countries) are southern bluefin tuna and salmon. There are some controls on overfishing but in general the international community is failing when it comes to fishery control.

    University seeks protection after students dry up

    The From the Japan Times has just reported the first case of something that a lot of people have been expecting for a long time.

    Hagi International University in Yamaguchi Prefecture was expected to file for protection from creditors with the Tokyo District Court as early as Tuesday due to a shortage of students, city officials said.

    The institution will be the first university to apply for court-led rehabilitation in Japan due to a student shortage, the Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Ministry said Monday.

    Similar cases may follow due to Japan’s declining child population.

    Most readers already know that low birth rates in a number of industrialized countries, in particular Japan and South Korea, have fallen below the death rate, meaning that the total population will soon start declining. The most obvious sympton of a declining population of young people is the closure of schools. With less young people, there is obviously less of a need for schools to educate them. Is this the first school closure of many? What’s the real story behind Hagi International University?

    The private university with four-year international studies courses, the institute’s single department, was founded in 1999 with 4 billion yen in subsidies from the Yamaguchi prefectural and Hagi municipal governments.

    This sentence should be a massive red flag. Haji International University was a complete and utter joke. Aside from the utter arrogance of giving the prestigious label of ‘university’ to a tiny school with only a single department and a handful of students, Hagi International University never had any reason to exist in the first place. Japan’s coming population decline has been a widely known issue for years now, and nobody with even the slightest bit of common sense would have ever come up with a plan to actually build a NEW one in 1999!

    The university has tried to recruit 300 students a year, but enrollment has fallen considerably short of expectations from the first year, with only 22 students enrolling in 2004 and 42 in 2005.

    To deal with the shortage, the university increased admissions of foreign students in 2001. But immigration authorities became increasingly reluctant to issue visas to students from China after many foreign students disappeared after entering the country.

    What stupidity. I suppose this school was nothing but another of the utterly superfluous public works projects that Japanese local government is famous for. If any of the officials involved in the establishment of this school still have their jobs, they absolutely deserve to lose them now. In fact, they probably could also stand to be investigated for corruption or illegal profitering. Four billion yen in government subsidies went into the construction of this abomination of a ‘university’ which has now filed for bankruptcy protection, and I would be willing to bet that some fraction of that money ended up in the wrong pockets.

    Japan’s population decline is a serious issue, and there may very well be consequent school closures in the future, but this particular case is no such thing. Hagi International University only ever had a total student body of 194 students, out of a planned capacity of 1200. Clearly even if Japan’s population were holding steady, or even growing at a moderate rate, this school was built far, far too large to ever be sustainable.

    10% of civil servants leave their jobs after returning from study abroad, 700 million yen “wasted” on tuition etc

    I have met a good number of Japanese government workers who are here in DC studying for their Master’s on fat scholarships. It’s a great opportunity for them, but the taxpayers might want to take a look at what their money’s getting them.

    Yahoo:

    It was found in a report by the National Personnel Agency released June 21 that of the 576 young career bureaucrats of the central government who studied abroad between 1997 and 2002, 56 of them, or about 10% of the total, quit their jobs within 5 years after returning.

    The 56 were attached to 12 Ministries and Agencies, including the Board of Audit of Japan and the Cabinet Office. Among them, some even quit within 2 or 3 months after returning, taking offers from private firms that they received while studying abroad. Apart from their salaries, each person cost the government an average of 13 million yen, or a total of 730 million yen, for tuition, sojourn expenses and other costs. Only a few have returned the money. They have wasted taxpayers’ money while barely using the experiences for their jobs as public servants.

    MOFAODAPR Appeal

    Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) offers a regular e-mail notification service for their “what’s new?” section of the website. One of the items in today’s mail was an overview of Japanese Official Development Assistance to China since 1979.

    I haven’t the time or the strength right not to get into the politics of this, so if you haven’t been following Sino-Japanese relations lately, just skip this post.

    If not, here are the numbers:

    3.1331 trillion yen in loan aid (yen loans)
    145.7 billion yen in grant aid
    144.6 billion yen in technical cooperation

    See the page for a detailed breakdown of where the yen loans have gone.

    Interestingly, around 21 billion yen in loans has gone towards projects for “promotion of mutual understanding,” including funding for Japanese language study and a public broadcasting infrastructure improvement project.

    That sure was money put to good use.

    Given the timing of this it seems like MOFA is building a case for turning off the aid spigot.

    World Heritage Site Ninnaji Temple in Kyoto smolders for 2 days

    From Asahi:

    On June 19 at around 12:20am, a fire burned stored linens at the dormitory for monks in training at the Ninna Mikkyo Institute, which is on the grounds of UN World Heritage Site Ninnaji Temple in Kyoto’s Ouchi, Omuro, Ukyoku. No one was injured. There had just been a fire in the same building the previous night which burned rags. The Ukyo Police are considering the possibility of this being a suspicious fire due to the fact that there was nothing flammable around in both cases.

    Comment: Lest you think this is even less relevant than the Hankyu story, this temple is right near where both MF and I used to stay when we lived in Japan. [Ed note from MF: Saru lived just as close to Ninnaji as we did!]