Episodi
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In this bonus episode, we explore Japanese customer service at a restaurant. First, Internationals explain their frustrating experience ordering meals. And later we hear from a Japanese individual who experienced customer service abroad.
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âSometimes I ignore my questions, and I just take it for what it is.â says Eri, a Japanese woman. This has affected her academically, romantically, and in just daily life. What does she mean she ignores her questions? In this episode, we explore the Japanese conformity and collectivist culture. First, Japanese individuals explain why they follow the crowd and why they don't ask questions. Later we hear what itâs like to navigate Japan from the expatsâ perspective.
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Episodi mancanti?
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âIâm on a holiday. Iâm there for the experience, right? But there are other people living their lives. My experience just intrudes in their lives, basically.â says Rutger, a Dutch man who visited Kyoto as a tourist. Rutger and (host) Kaho Koda visited Kyoto together back in 2018. And they still talk about that one evening in Kyoto where they had the same experience, yet very different interpretations of the event. In this episode we talk about Kyoto and tourism. First, we look at the foreign touristsâ experiences and then we take a look at the Japanese perspective.
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âI feel like itâs almost harder for a woman to be supported by other women in Japan to some extent because I donât think itâs a common idea that Japanese women want to change their conditions for themselves.â says Fanny, a French woman living in Japan. In this episode we talk about feminism in Japan. Do you know the word ăć„łććă (read as âjyoshi ryokuâ)? It directly translates to âgirl powerâ but itâs not what you think it means..
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âOften we are very talented to divert the conversation. Because thatâs the way we speak. We donât directly address on something. But we always kind of divert it.â says Terra, a Japanese man living in the Netherlands. In this episode we talk about how Japanese society does not discuss sex. We also talk to an English teacher, Lizzie who experienced the Japanese way of not talking about sex when she introduced western literature to her students.
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âYou donât say I love you. You donât give your mom a hug at the end of the day. Like I feel really awkward doing that. And itâs something that I tried to change at some point in my life. But I think my mom didnât feel comfortable with it as well when I started to try hugging her and saying things. So I kind of stopped... Oh my gosh, have you ever said âAishiteruâ to your family? â asks Natsumi, a Japanese woman living in Japan. Weâre going to get super intimate and talk about host Kaho Kodaâs relationship with her mom and how the Japanese family expresses love.
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âIf you live in Japan, and work in a Japanese company, you need to follow the Japanese custom.â says Misora, a Japanese woman working in Tokyo. We follow Misoraâs story about her âlazyâ colleague Paul. We also discuss Paulâs perspective - the western individualistic point of view.
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Japan is a prime example of collectivist culture while western countries put emphasis on the individual - such polar opposite mindsets. Misunderstandings and confusions are bound to happen when these two perspectives collide. Every episode we unpack one controversial opinion about the Japanese mindset, culture, and custom through stories and interviews. Join host Kaho Koda as she dives into her own culture and attempts to make sense of the disconnect between the Japanese and Western point of view.
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