A day after telling a group of Japanese livestreamers and YouTubers that he would stop livestreaming on trains, American streamer Johnny Somali was at it again today. However, he was being followed by Guts, a Japanese YouTuber known for catching voyeur photographers and chikan.
The police were eventually called and are questioning both of them. The police are telling him that the both of them are going to be taken to the police station.
The police are being very patient as he repeatedly tells them his a "victim" and wants to leave. The police are not letting him leave. He is accusing them of racism. For some reason, they are not taking away the phone he is using to livestream.
The situation has dragged on, with police telling him he needs to go to a police station where there is an interpreter who can figure out his side of the story. When he tells them he is "okay* to leave, they told him other people are "not okay."
Johnny Somali's mobile connection is terrible and only 5 second clips are appearing at random between loading messages. Here is one brief part of the stream where the police seem to have an interpreter on the phone.
He tried to just walk away, but the moments after this he was followed again and the police stopped him again. The police are saying that they cannot protect him unless he goes to the police station, and if he keeps streaming his location, he's going to be followed by people.
The police seem to be treating him like the actual victim here, saying that he should stop streaming and trying to get him to go in a direction away from the vigilante YouTubers (who have not totally left the scene).
The Japanese police actually led him to a taxi so he could move away from the people following him. Sorry everyone who was watching this who were hoping to see his arrest. (He's still streaming though, so it could happen later.)
He went to a bar in Shibuya, had a drink, and then freaked out because one Japanese streamer with a camera started filming him. Ran straight to a taxi and fled the scene. Johnny Somali seems genuinely terrified about being filmed in public by someone else.
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Thread: Kodansha is teaming up with JR to put "Welcome to Japan - Manga Manners" posters that will have popular characters "introduce Japanese manners in a fun way to foreign visitors using the Tokaido Shinkansen!" Examples: Blue Lock, Tokyo Revengers, Attack on Titan, and Kaiji
Some of the "manners" being pointed out pertain to hygiene and not being a nuisance to other people - for example: cover your mouth when you cough/sneeze (Medalist) and reserve space for large baggage in advance (Fairy Tail). There are also ticket purchasing tips (Cells at Work)
Sailor Moon teaches how to properly wear a Kimono, while characters from Skip and Loafer tell you to remove your shoes before entering certain places. The Parasyte poster tells you to line up before boarding trains and buses and the Akira poster informs you of traffic laws.
Thread: Political posters in Tokyo's crazy gubernatorial election. (1) Let's start with one of the posters for Kawai Yusuke, a perennial candidate known for cosplaying as the Joker. Here he's cosplaying as the Mask and advocating polygamy to solve Japan's declining birthrate.
(2) Some of Kawai's other posters feature nearly-nude photos of gyaru model/musician Sakurai Miu. Here is a video of her putting one up. The poster asks which is crazy: her, or this messed-up society? Kawai's face covers up her private parts.
(3) This year is going to have a lot of different posters because the NHK Party is exploiting a loophole in Japanese election laws. It's running 24 candidates - not to win, but to sell their designated spots on poster boards to various attention-seekers.
Thread: The US Navy record of the Alkonis trial differs considerably from the story presented by his supporters:
•the mountain sickness defense did not make sense given the altitude
•his testimony in court about significantly contradicted what he initially told investigators
•Alkonis' wife told the court that the accident would have been avoided if he had pulled over the car and not continued driving.
•Alkonis testified that he thought he could keep on driving because their destination was close.
•The American trial observer stated that "all safeguards secured by the Status of Forces Agreement between the governments of the United States and Japan were observed."
[Thread] Post-earthquake crime in Japan: 1) several men used tools to rip open a vending machine at a high school being used as an evacuation shelter in Anamizu, stealing the drinks and money inside. yomiuri.co.jp/national/20240…
2) A 21-year-old university student was arrested after stealing 6 expensive mikan worth 3,000 yen ($20) from an earthquake-damaged house in Wajima. He claimed to have come from Aichi as an aid volunteer. news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/6d5a6…
3) An evacuee sheltering an an onsen facility in Nanao reported that her bag was stolen. The same article mentions that the Suzu, Wajima, Nanao, and Hakui police stations have received a dozen reports and consultations suspected to be related to theft news.yahoo.co.jp/articles/7813b…
Video: a JAL plane caught fire while landing at Tokyo's Haneda Airport this evening. Fire crews are on scene trying to extinguish the blaze.
Here is another video of the landing. Media reports say they could see one of the engines touching the ground. Netizens who monitor flights are saying it could be JAL flight 516 from Sapporo to Haneda.
According to TBS, it is believed that the plane may have collided with a Japan Coast Guard aircraft. They don't know if anyone has been hurt or injured yet.
Update: Kadokawa has decided to cancel the publication of its Japanese translation of Abigail Shrier's "Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Crazy Seducing Our Daughters" ahead of a planned protest outside of company offices. They also deleted a Twitter thread promoting the book.
Transgender rights advocates were planning a protest in front of Kadokawa's corporate HQ in Tokyo tomorrow at 6pm (it has now been cancelled). There was also a very big online backlash against their Twitter thread promoting the book.
This is a case of a company responding to consumer feedback and dropping a product.
As many have pointed out, it was strange to see Kadokawa, a major publisher of manga/anime, promoting an anti-transgender book that describes anime as a part of "trans culture."