Hello Sandwich Japan Interview # 4 - Lovegeek





You may have noticed that I am quite prone to Tokyo! But...I have decided to make way for the Kansai region because I know there are some Osaka lovers out there, in particular the lovely Mads from Lovegeek (who I also mentioned here)! Mads just returned to Sydney after one year of living in Osaka and today she shares some of her favourite memories from Japan. 

Oh and I have started a little list on my side bar with the other Hello Sandwich Japan Interviews.

Like me, you seem to be in love with Japan! Can you tell us how you first become interested in Japan?

I guess I was always really interested in Japan and Japanese culture. It started out in my teens with old Japanese Manga like Ninja Scroll and Akira. I then fell in love with Miyazaki at University (I studied film) and around that time I also realised that the most innovative and crazy motion graphic designers were all coming outta JPN! I love the difference in storytelling between western and Japanese culture, which can be seen in a lot of their moving image works. Then there was the Fruits exhibition at The Powerhouse (around 6 years ago...I think) that my Swedish flat mate dragged me to. It was when fruits first became big, before the Goth/Lolita fashion, and I just thought the girls were the coolest things ever!

 How is Japan a part of your current life? Are you working in a Japanese company, researching Japan, or have another link with Japan?

I have just returned from a year living in Japan. I have a lot of Japanese stuff in my house now, and the language is still slipping out here and now, which is quite awkward...


 Have you been to Japan a few times or lived in Japan? Please tell us about your time there.

My year in Japan was my first time there. I lived in Osaka, and I was teaching babies at first (1-2 year olds!) but I soon grew exhausted from that, and took a job teaching in Osaka Public Schools. It was the best thing I could have done. I was the only gaijin at all the schools I taught at. That was really hard most days due to my cultural retardation, but I had amazing access to Japanese school and work culture on a day-to-day basis. I met a lot of characters (teachers and students alike!) and I loved the kids so much. It took me a while to realise that they viewed me as a teacher, and not as one of them. It was really funny as they treated me with such authority and respect, and little did they know I had never taught before and didn't really know what I was doing! 

Osaka was great, but the best times were getting on the Shinkansen and travelling around Japan. We managed to do a lot, but there was one place I really wanted to go to, Okinawa, but we missed it this time around :( 

What is your favourite city in Japan and what do you love about it?

I have a soft spot for Hiroshima and Kyoto, but I have to say Osaka.

The people in Osaka and Kansai in general are just so full of life and are such characters. A lot of Japan's most famous comedians are from Osaka and I found a lot of the kids would tell me they wanted to be comedians when they grew up. I worked with a lot of people that were Osaka born and bred, and would scoff at the idea of moving elsewhere, especially to Tokyo. Osaka has amazing food, it has all the shops you'd find in Tokyo but on a smaller scale (which suits me), and it is home to the Hanshin Tigers and Koshien Stadium (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koshien_Stadium) - the most famous Baseball ground in Japan. It's also really affordable to live and is only 40 mins from Kyoto, Nara AND Kobe. 


Do you speak Japanese? Any tips for anyone interested in learning Japanese? Most useful Japanese phrase for beginners? 

To be honest I can't speak Japanese very well, which is shocking for someone that has spent an entire year there! My boyfriend at the time spoke Japanese fluently, so that made me a little lazy, and I was also quite shy when it came to talking to people! But I can understand a lot more than I can speak, which is helpful. I did learn a lot of excellent Osaka-ben from the Kids at school. The word they used most frequently was zen zen wakarahen (instead of wakarimasen) which means I don't understand AT ALL - doesn't say much about my teaching skills does it? I attempted to learn the words to an entire SMAP song to show it off at Karaoke, but never quite got past the first verse. 

The most useful phrase for anyone ever visiting Japan is most definitely sumimasen. It can be used to say sorry or excuse me, and Japanese people manage to use it in approx. 90% of their conversations.

 A little bit off topic, but my favourite Japanese phrases are Nani Kore (The e at the end it usually dragged out like eeeeeeeeehhhhhhhh, which I translate as WTF? but it literally means 'what's this') and okini! which is Kanasi ben for Thank You. If you want to get a laugh out of shopkeepers in Osaka use this and I guarantee smiles.


Your favourite Japanese food? (Don’t tell me it’s Natto! He he) 

Katsu Don - hands down! I also love Okonimyaki and Mos Burger and Udon and Gyoza and Yakisoba and Omurice! I couldn't bring myself to eat Natto!

 

Do you cook Japanese food in your hometown? If so, what sorts of foods? And do you have any websites, blogs or magazines you refer to for recipes? 

I have only been home for two months, so have been avoiding Japanese food thus far! But there are a lot of great places to eat Japanese food in Sydney, so I never really attempt to cook it at home.

 

Where do you go to stock up on Japanese food / books / treats when in your home city?

I wasn't too obsessed with Japan before I left, but I know I will be living at Kinokuniya in the city, and there is also a great supermarket in World Square which had Japanese candy, which is something I really miss.

 

Your favourite Japanese cultural quirk? 

When you watch Japanese variety shows on TV and something happens and everyone yells 'eeeeeeeehhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh?'. This is my favourite thing in Japan, ever. The kids at school all did it to me when I told them my eyes were green, it was so hilarious. I find myself doing it in Sydney, but here I just sound silly.  

Your favourite thing to do in Tokyo? 

Oh, I actually only made it to Tokyo for four days, but it was super rad. I LOVED Harajuku but I know there are places that I missed visiting and will definitely be buying tickets in the next Jetstar sale to go back! I loved going to the Mori Museum where I got my favourite Plushie Shacho which is one of Takashi Murukami's toys. I also went to Disney Sea, and it was a very very magical day. 

Do you have any funny stories about being lost / lost in translation in Japan?

Do I ever! Almost too many for this interview. 

Everyday at school was Lost In Translation for me, but you have to learn to embrace it. Mostly I was just constantly amazed at how different and efficient everything was. My catch phrase became 'of course they do it like that in Japan’; it was always nice to discover new ways of doing things.



 

What is your most memorable moment in Japan? 

One day at one particular school one of the more confident boys came up and introduced me to his cute girlfriend. I said 'Ahhhhh Kawaii!' in my most excited voice and they both laughed so much. He said agreed that she was totemo kawaii and it was the cutest thing I've ever seen. Young love huh?

 

What are you like at karaoke? Or, like me, do you stick mostly to purikura?

 I can't get enough of Karaoke. We took every guest we had to this amazing Karaoke place in the Shotengai near our place where they had 1000YEN/hour KARAOKE NOMIHODAI. They got to know us pretty well after 12 months... 

Chu-hi, Sake or umeshu? Which one is your favourite? 

Umeshu!

 And what about Onsen and Super-cento’s – like them much? Do you have any favourites in Japan? 

I love going to Onsen, especially when I was in the snow. There is something really liberating about the experience.

 Favourite Japanese themed websites / blogs? 

Um, Hello Sandwich! Pretty Pretty Yum Yum, neojaponisme and ii-ne-kore.


 

 


Favourite Japanese magazines? 

I really got into this magazine called SPOON, it has really beautiful photo shoots and images. I also loved Pretty Style, Japanese Nylon, Elle Girl (Super Kawaii) and Japanese Dazed and Confused. All of these I couldn't read, but they were way cheaper than foreign magazines.

 

If you could live anywhere in Japan where would it be and why? 

If I went back, I think I'd have to say Tokyo. I've seen a lot of Kansai, and would love to lose myself in the city.


And finally, what do you miss most about Japan? 

I miss my friend Amy. I miss people being nice. I miss no phones on the trains. I miss the trains. I miss the train conductors. I miss the cute kids everywhere. I miss the temples in the middle of the city. I miss the craft shopping. I miss the men with crazy hair that try to get women to come to their host clubs. I miss SMAP x SMAP on the TV. I miss my local Family Mart. I miss Asahi cans. I miss Magic Candy Bar in Namba. I miss Spinns (best clothes store in Osaka). I miss my pink bike.

  

Thank you so much lovely Mads for your inspiring Japan interview! 

Love Love
Hello Sandwich
xxx

Hello Sandwich Japan Interview # 3 - Emma Japan



Today I bring you a gorgeous little Japan Interview with my lovely friend Emma Japan! You can see the other Japan Interviews here and here. I hope you will enjoy and fall in love with Japan all over again! Oh and be sure to check out Emma's blog Le Petit Flaneur.





Like me, you seem to be in love with Japan! Can you tell us how you first become interested in Japan?
I think from a very young age I was very curious about Asia. My parents had friends that had lived in Japan, and were (and continue to be massive) fans of all types of Asian food. I vividly recall my Mum taking my sister and I for our first Japanese meal in Sydney’s The Rocks while we were on holiday visiting my great aunt. She ordered sukiyaki and, while we were initially apprehensive at dipping our food into raw egg, in no time at all we were happily gobbling it up!

At my junior school, come Year Four or Five we had the option of taking after school Japanese lessons with the fabulously inspiring Walton-sensei. She made us all the most adorable origami place cards with our names written on them in katakana. Around that time, my Mum started taking Japanese lessons; I remember the orange Alfonso textbooks and tapes she used. By the time I got to senior school and had to choose between French, Indonesian and Japanese language study, I easily chose the latter – I was totally struck.

What do you love most about Japan?
Now that is a difficult question! Broadly, that it has such a beautiful aesthetic culture – everything, from the tissue packs handed out at stations to the most expensive Rei Kawakubo knit, has been so carefully thought-out and designed.

I love the otera and jinja. They make me feel an incredible sense of calm, and I always take my shrine book (shuincho) and get it stamped and signed by the cute but also a bit cranky calligraphers.



I suppose the duality of history and modernity – Australia is such a new country that we don’t so much have that.

Um, vending machines with hot oolong and ocha? Hyaku-en stores? Muji? Freshness Burger? Sento? I could pretty much go on forever, but for the sake of you readers I will not!


How is Japan a part of your current life? Are you working in a Japanese company, researching Japan, or have another link with Japan?
I am involved with Japan now less than ever before, chops! Prior to my current job at The Diplomat, I worked for Jiji Press (one of two Japanese wire services) and also NHK (Japan’s public broadcaster). And before that at the Consulate-General of Japan, Sydney! I have recently been doing some Japan-related research for both The Diplomat and Art World, but I guess I am no longer a full-time Japanophile!

Have you been to Japan a few times or lived in Japan? Please tell us about your time there.

Yes, I studied in Japan twice, during both my undergraduate (Tokyo) and masters (Kyoto) degrees. I much preferred living in Kyoto – I consider it one of the most special places on earth. My uber-modern apartment building was right next to a rice paddy, after all! And just a few stops away from downtown Kawaramachi, which I adore.



I completed my masters in Kyoto, so I kind of feel like I left a piece of my heart (and a lot of blood, sweat and tears!) in that city.




I went back for the first time last year and it was both perfect and surreal. Returning to my neighbourhood, visiting a yakuza sento, and the Yokohama Triennial. Perfect.


What is your favourite city in Japan and what do you love about it?
Oh, am one step ahead, gomen Ebony! Tokyo is, of course, the metropolis that has to be visited (my favourite cities within the city are Daikanyama, Aoyama and Shimokitazawa), but Kyoto is more like home to me. I love to roam the backstreets of Kawaramachi and Karasuma – the hidden boutiques, amazing vintage stores, artisans selling traditional wares, the Nishiki market, funny little teahouses and ryokan. Love, love, love!

Do you speak Japanese? Any tips for anyone interested in learning Japanese? Most useful Japanese phrase for beginners?

Yes, I speak Japanese but I feel I am losing more and more each day! Zannen da yo! I really think the only way to learn a language is to be dogged and determined, and to immerse yourself as much as you can without living in a country where that language is spoken. Watch news broadcasts, television dramas and movies; listen to music; read or at least look at and try to translate magazines. And make it fun – organise a weekly conversation exchange with friends that are also studying, go on little cultural excursions and such.


Your favourite Japanese food? (Don’t tell me it’s Natto! He he)
Too hard, Ebony! I love so many kinds of Japanese food. From the simplest things like dorayaki and yoghurt with aloe in it, to fast foods like Freshness and Mos Burger, to the funny Japanese takes on Italian and Indian cuisines (which are actually delicious), to ramen and izakaya foods and mama-san style home cuisine and yakiniku and zarusoba and nabe and sukiyaki hotpots and all the lovely ame and cakes and pan-ya goods. I love mochi at New Year and the kumara chips you sometimes get at shrines. There are not many kinds of Japanese food I won’t eat – mainly dishes that are particularly stinky or have red fish in them. Oh, and I despise chikuwa! But that still leaves quite a bit for me to gorge on. Yum!





Do you cook Japanese food in your hometown? If so, what sorts of foods? And do you have any websites, blogs or magazines you refer to for recipes?
Luckily, in Sydney there are a ton of places I can go to eat Japanese, though I do cook simple things like curries and noodle salads and soups and hotpots. I love Azuma for their amazing ponzu salad and wagyu sukiyaki; Ichi Ban Boshi for their vegetable ramen; Haradokei for hearty home-style fare; Wagaya for izakaya yumminess; Ton Ton for their soups, bento and grilled kingfish… I could go on, but now I’m getting hungry!



Where do you go to stock up on Japanese food / books / treats when in your home city?
Well, I used to go to Maxim at Lumiere but it has sadly shut! So usually Konbini 8 because it is close to my workplace (on Pitt Street behind Woolworths) and Haradokei for lovely pickles and stocks. When I was at NHK, I happily patronised the great J-village going on in Artarmon – there are two fantastic Japanese grocers there, plus a great noodle soup place and Japanese pottery studio! Obviously, Kinokuniya is the one-stop-shop in Sydney for Japanese books and magazines – we are super lucky to have it.


Your favourite Japanese cultural quirk?
I love Japanese television advertisements. And that there is generally total silence on the trains – no loud mobile phone banter! The fact that nature and seasons still play quite a part in every day life. Respect for and obsession with design. The fact that you can pretty much organise your entire life in a convenience store. Funny trends that grasp the nation, like ‘Cool Biz’ (the introduction of short-sleeved shirts for salary-men) a few years back so as to stop people over-relying on airconditioning. The tendency to over-wrap and package everything (so beautiful, yet so bad for the environment). In Kyoto, I love to see oba-chan on Vespas speeding off to the supermarket with their aprons still tied on, cute!

Your favourite thing to do in Tokyo?
In Tokyo? Wander about Aoyama and Daikanyama, I suppose. Visit shrine stalls and galleries and book stores. I like to get lost in Tokyo – that is when I seem to find all the best stuff. Oh, and I always try to get my hair cut there. The best anthropological experience!



Do you have any funny stories about being lost / lost in translation in Japan?
I think these have more to do with my Mum than me (she came to visit just before I returned home after turning in my masters thesis). My Mum became quite obsessed with Japanese support underwear (the shop assistants thought her hilarious); she would loudly pronounce oki-ni! despite being in Tokyo; she would try and taste everything in the markets and department store basement food sections; she would ask to have her photo taken with random strangers; she would yell at people she considered rude. My Mum is a wonderful, vivacious woman with quite a bit of chutzpah – watching the way she responded to Japan made me realise a) it can be quite a tough place for foreigners and b) how normal it had all become for me.



What is your most memorable moment in Japan?
I think travelling to Enryaku-ji at Hiei-zan for the first time – a misty day, a procession of nuns and monks, a total adventure.


What are you like at karaoke? Or, like me, do you stick mostly to purikura?
I am an unashamed karaoke obsessive. I have been at least once a week over the last three weeks, chops! I love to sing duets with my friend Dougal best – he is extraordinary. The songs I probably sing most are ‘Lovefool’ by The Cardigans and ‘Umbrella’ by Rihanna, though I would like to sing ‘Not Fair’ by Lily Allen. Why does no one have this song as yet in Syd?


Chu-hi, Sake or umeshu? Which one is your favourite?
Umeshu. When it comes to alcoholic beverages, I have a total sweet tooth! I also love Tsunami drinks.


And what about Onsen and Super-cento’s – like them much? Do you have any favourites in Japan?
I just love going to sento! I would go every single day if I could! We went to a hilarious yakuza sento near Kyoto station last November, and I’ve been to some fantastic rotenburo in Hakone – very deluxe. Ohara and Kurama outside Kyoto also have some amazing onsen and rotenburo – it is such a special treat to go and stay at a ryokan in those towns, languish in the baths, then eat some kaiseki cuisine or hotpot. Heaven.



Favourite Japanese themed websites / blogs?
I love A-net’s Humor to see all the new stuff from my favourite J-designers; I also often look at Mottainai to check out their latest green wares. Oh, and I want everything on Truck furniture’s site! The illustrations of Yamauchi Kazuaki are favourites of mine, and of course I daily check out Hello Sandwich and Ii Ne Kore!


Favourite Japanese magazines?
This is a bit of a dorky answer, but I kind of love the big, fat, mainstream ones like Vogue Nippon, Spur and Madame Figaro. I think it’s fantastic the way that Japanese fashion magazines are very engaging and instructive for the reader – the seem to respond rather than dictate to readers.

If you could live anywhere in Japan where would it be and why?
Kyoto, because it allows the best of both worlds (history / modernity) and I like Kansai people best. In a perfect world, I would live in a little apartment near Kawaramachi and take classes in ikebana, tea ceremony, calligraphy, zazen and cooking every day.




And finally, what do you miss most about Japan?
Everything! Friends, food, the aesthetic and atmosphere, the sounds, the shopping, sento, the sense that anything and also nothing is possible.






Thank you so much lovely Emma Japan for your inspiring answers and super-cute images!

Love Love
Hello Sandwich
xxx