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Podcast Feed Japan Visitor Blog - Tokyo Osaka Nagoya Kyoto

What's happening in Tokyo, Nagoya, Kyoto, Osaka, Shimane Japan


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Type: Unknown
THU
NOV
20
2008
京都の寺社 ライトアップ

To accompany the fall colors, Kyoto city is sponsoring special night time lighting at many of its most famous temples and shrines.

Here is the schedule at the major temples and shrines:

Manshuin: until November 25th; 5 pm - 8 pm; 600 yen for adults

Eikando: until November 30th; 5:30 pm - 9 pm; 600 yen for adults

Chionin: until November 30th; 5:30 pm - 9 pm; 800 yen for adults

Enkoji: until November 30th; 5:30 pm - 8:30 pm; 500 yen for
adults

Daikakuji: until November 30th; 5 pm - 8 pm; 500 yen for adults

Tofukuji: until December 6th; 5 pm - 8:30 pm; 500 yen for adults

Kodaiji: until December 7th; 5 pm - 9:30 pm; 600 yen for adults

Kiyomizu: until December 7th; 6:30 pm - 9:30 pm; 400 yen for adults

Tenryuji: until December 7th; 5:30 pm - 8:15 pm; 600 yen for adults

Kita no Tenmangu: November 21-25, 28-30, December 5-7th; sundown - 8 pm; 600 yen for adults

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Type: Unknown
WED
NOV
19
2008
日本語英語

Today more examples of loan words that may or may not make any sense to a native speaker of English.

Once in the San Francisco Airport, I saw a group of women trying to order three cups of coffee.

スリーホット!スリーホット!repeated the flustered Japanese woman. The young Mexican-American at the counter stared back blankly.

What the customer wanted was "su-ri hotto," or three coffees.

Another example is アメリカン(American). This is a slightly weaker cup of coffee.

Moving to the workplace, there are of course the サラリーマン(salaryman)and オーエル(OL, office lady).

Then there are the dreaded リストラ(resutora, restructuring)and ブランク(blank). The former means layoffs, the latter a period on your resume that is empty or blank.

Another term with negative connotations is フリーター(furi-ta-), which is someone who works "freely." What it means in practice is someone who works part-time at several jobs instead of having one full-time job.

The last word for today is マイペース(mai pace). In general, it means someone who works at their own pace, even if others are rushing.

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Type: Unknown
TUE
NOV
18
2008
高瀬川京都

Kyoto's Takase River is a narrow canal that runs parallel to Kiyamachi Dori (street) from Nijo-Kiyamachi down to Fushimi, in southern Kyoto. The canal dates from 1611.

It is quite close the Kamo River and follows alongside it for roughly 10 km, separated only by Pontocho and Kiyamachi.

Prior to the invention of the steam engine and internal combustion engine, rivers and canals were used to transport both people and goods in Japan.

In the case of Kyoto, small barges carried goods on the Takase River within Kyoto and then, farther down where the canal meets the Kamo River, to Osaka.

Today is is a pleasant break from the concrete and neon, mainly thanks to the willow trees that line the canal. Near Nijo, several of the barges are moored and there is a plaque explaining the history of the area and the canal.

Kiyamachi is beset known today as a nightlife area, with bars and restaurants and brothels on the side streets. At night, students and young people and lovers throng the narrow streets.

Last week, though, riding down Kiyamachi during the day to avoid the traffic on Kawaramachi, we noticed many works of art in the river itself.

They were set on concrete blocks in the river, and labeled. The exhibit was a competition with winners and prizes.

The works ranged from the highly abstract to the merely odd.

One wonders what the pimps and whores, students and salarymen, geisha and tourists make of this as they make their nightly rounds.

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Type: Unknown
MON
NOV
17
2008
旧ソウル駅

The former Seoul Station building is one of the few remaining colonial buildings left in the Korean capital.

The brick structure is actually closed now, having been replaced in 2004 with the completion of the new Seoul Station. The adjacent glass structure houses the tracks for the new KTX bullet train and has the feel of an airport.

The former Seoul Station was designed by Tokyo Imperial University professor Tsukamoto Yasushi. Tsukamoto was a student of Tatsuno Kingo, the designer of Tokyo Station.

And, in contrast to the new efficient station building, it is comfortable and good looking.

The elegant building was completed in 1925 while Korea was under Japanese occupation. Based on it design and feel, it bears a close resemblance to Tokyo Station.

It is a three-story structure, which had a restaurant on the second floor and a waiting room on the third.

The building is scheduled to be renovated beginning in April, 2009. In June of the following year, the "Seoul Station Cultural Center" is scheduled to open its doors.

The former Seoul Station was designated in August of 1981 as a cultural property--and as such will not meet the fate of many other Japanese colonial era buildings: the wrecking ball.

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Type: Unknown
SUN
NOV
16
2008
Three young demonstrators were arrested by Japanese police in Shibuya, Tokyo after taking part in a "Reality Tour" to view Prime Minister Taro Aso's luxury mansion located in the area on October 26.

The march to the 6.2 billion yen apartment of Japan's latest PM, Taro Aso was organized by "Part-timer, Arbeiter, Freeter & Foreign Workers" to emphasise the income gap in Japanese society.

Japanese police argue the demonstration was unauthorized and they had issued warnings to the participants to stop before making their arrests.

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