Trends in Japan > Memory Lane >  Pop Culture > 03-04

LOCAL FESTIVALS GO NATIONAL
(December 13, 2004)
Recently festivals rich in local color are being held not only in their regions of origin but in localities all across Japan.

WORLD-CLASS VIRTUOSITY
(December 3, 2004)
As the physiques of Japanese people Westernize, Japanese ballet dancers are rising up the ranks of top ballet companies of the world as principals and soloists.

COREDO NIHONBASHI
(November 1, 2004)
The year 2004 marks the 401st year since the construction of the Nihonbashi Bridge across the Nihonbashi River in Edo (now Tokyo) by the Tokugawa shogunate. Fittingly, the area enters its fifth century boasting a large, new commercial facility, Coredo Nihonbashi, which opened in March.

PURE LOVE
(October 14, 2004)
Japanese women are being swept up in an unprecedented craze for jun'ai (pure, innocent love). A South Korean TV drama series titled Winter Sonata and the novel Sekai no Chushin de, Ai o Sakebu (Crying for Love at the Heart of the World) by Katayama Kyoichi are among the catalysts for this boom.

TAKING A LOCAL LOOK
(April 8, 2004)
Japan is composed of 47 prefectures, from the snowy mountains of Hokkaido in the north to the sunny beaches of Okinawa in the south. It is no surprise that people coming from different areas may have very different outlooks on life. Recently a wave of new books has been focusing on this very phenomenon.

FOR MIND AND BODY
(April 7, 2004)
Herbal medicine (kampo) is becoming increasingly popular among Japanese women and is making inroads into their lives in several ways.

WHERE OLD MEETS NEW
(April 6, 2004)
The port city of Yokohama, located just 30 minutes southwest of Tokyo by train, has many faces. The city's latest efforts to boost its appeal coincides with the opening on February 1 of a new subway line, the Minato Mirai Line, which enables passengers to travel from the central Tokyo district of Shibuya to the Motomachi and Chinatown area of the city in just 35 minutes.

(April 5, 2004)
As Japanese anime sweeps the world (think of Pokemon and Spirited Away), the latest movie by one of the country's most talented creators, Oshii Mamoru, was released in Japan on March 6. The anime, Innocence, is Oshii's first movie in nine years.

HELLO KITTY, WAY TO GO!
(April 2, 2004)
Hello Kitty, the little white cat from Japan who is getting right up there with Mickey Mouse in terms of worldwide name recognition, turns 30 this year. Hello Kitty is unique in that her physical appearance has not changed a bit since she made her debut.

90 MAGICAL YEARS OF TAKARAZUKA
(March 17, 2004)
Takarazuka, the world's only all-female musical performance company, has long been established as a uniquely Japanese form of popular entertainment. This year the company marks its ninetieth anniversary of its first performance.

SHOW ME
(March 1, 2004)
Many corporations nowadays are working to develop theme-park-like showrooms where visitors can experience cutting-edge technology and learn about new products while having an enjoyable time.

PUPPET MASTERPIECE
(January 14, 2004)
Ningyo Johruri Bunraku Puppet Theater, one of Japan's best-known classical art forms, was officially declared a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity on November 11 by UNESCO (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization).

MUSEUM IN THE SKY
(December 17, 2003)
Never in Japan's art history has so much fanfare accompanied the opening of an art museum as the launching of the Mori Art Museum on October 18, 2003. Perched on the fifty-second and fifty-third floors of the spectacular new Mori Tower in Tokyo, MAM hovers 250 meters above sea level.

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CHEAP THRILLS
(November 18, 2003)
Popular in Japan over the past decade or so, ¥100 shops offer a variety of goods for the same low price. In the same mold, a number of leisure facilities that charge for their services in units of ¥100 ($0.91 at ¥110 to the dollar) have recently emerged.

SILVER SCREEN SUCCESS
(November 7, 2003)
Kitano Takeshi received the Silver Lion award for best director at the 60th Venice Film Festival on September 6. His award-winning work, Zatoichi, is an unconventional and entertaining period film that tells the tale of a blind master swordsman, played by the director himself.

GIFU LOOKS TO THE FUTURE
(October 2, 2003)
Gifu Prefecture, located in the middle of Japan's main island of Honshu, has undertaken a number of unique projects, including one designed to foster the information technology industry and another to turn the prefecture into a center of culture and fashion.

TEMPLE TREASURES
(September 22, 2003)
Japan has three national museums, one each in Tokyo, Kyoto, and Nara, and this year these establishments are competing to see which can put on the most impressive temple-themed exhibition. These exhibitions have offered the public chances to view precious artifacts never previously displayed.

GOLD FEVER
(August 25, 2003)
Goldfish this summer are showing up in some unusual places; especially popular are yukata (informal summer kimono) with goldfish patterns, but there are many other goldfish-related goods, too.

DANCING IN THE STREETS
(August 13, 2003)
August is a time when Okinawa basks in tropical sunshine and when the people of the islands participate in spectacular dance parades. Eisa festivals are thrilling summer events that blow away the heat and excite the souls of the Uchinanchu, as the people of Okinawa call themselves.

MIDSUMMER NIGHTS' REVELRY
(July 22, 2003)
The Nebuta Festival in the northern city of Aomori is in a class by itself. From August 2 to 7 every year, the city comes alive as huge illuminated floats are paraded through the streets.

TIME TESTED RELATIONS
(July 8, 2003)
The years 2003 and 2004 mark the 150th anniversary of pivotal events in Japan-United States relations, and both countries have various commemorative activities planned for between January 2003 and December 2004.

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RITES OF SUMMER
(June 27, 2003)
Hakata Gion Yamakasa is a traditional festival marking the beginning of summer in Fukuoka City. It comes to an end with a dramatic race on the final day.

HEAVENLY HOKKAIDO
(June 2, 2003)
For most of Japan, June sees the arrival of the annual rainy season and a spell of miserable weather, but in Hokkaido, which does not have a rainy season, it is the most pleasant time of the year.

ASEAN-JAPAN EXCHANGE YEAR 2003
(May 30, 2003)
This year Japan and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) are coming closer together. A number of events have already been held to celebrate ASEAN-Japan Exchange Year 2003.

VAGABOND WARRIOR
(April 24, 2003)
Miyamoto Musashi (1584-1645) is one of the most famous swordsmen in Japanese history, and he is known to many people outside Japan as well. Though he lived long ago, there is a Musashi revival underway at present in Japan.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ASTRO BOY!
(April 21, 2003)
Many Japanese adults grew up with the cartoon character Astro Boy and are celebrating Astro Boy's fictional birthdate in April 2003.

EDO BIRTHDAY BASH
(April 16, 2003)
2003 marks exactly 400 years since Tokugawa Ieyasu (1542-1616) established the shogunate in Edo in 1603. Various events will be held throughout the year to celebrate the 400th anniversary of this important juncture in Japanese history.

THE "JAPANIMATION" PHENOMENON
(March 6, 2003)
The legendary Astro Boy, Pokemon, Mazinger Z, Gundam, Sailor Moon, and Martian Successor Nadesico are just some of the names that have become familiar around the globe as Japanese cartoons, or anime, have cemented their place as the world's favorite form of animated entertainment.

(February 28, 2003)
As 2003 is the 100th anniversary of legendary film director Yasujiro Ozu's birth, as well as the 40th year since he passed away, a number of commemorative events have been planned both in Japan and around the world.

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HOT TOYS IN JAPAN
(February 27, 2003)
Competition in Japan's toy market is intense. Many of the hot toys recently fall into one of three categories: those operated by remote control, those that allow children to make things by hand, and those that relate to pets.

EAT UP!
(February 17, 2003)
Theme parks of a new kind have lately been springing up across Japan. The new parks, which have made the novel choice of food as their theme, are whetting the appetites of the food-curious Japanese.

CENTER STAGE
(January 29, 2003)
Japanese musicians attracted a great deal of attention on the world stage during 2002. Seiji Ozawa began work as the musical director of the Vienna State Opera, young Japanese took top honors at international competitions, and a blind pianist made his debut at Carnegie Hall.

THE RING
(January 9, 2003)
Four years since Godzilla, a remake of a more recent Japanese horror film has Americans quivering in fear once again. The movie is The Ring, based on the 1998 Japanese hit film Ringu.

MANGA GOES INTERNATIONAL
(January 7, 2003)
A steady stream of English translations of Japanese manga (comics) and magazines on anime (animated films) have made their way across the Pacific to the United States.

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