Tag - channel-surf

 
 

CHANNEL SURF

CULTURE / TV & Streaming / CHANNEL SURF
Apr 29, 2001
Armchair travel to Italy and beyond
Tatsuo Umemiya used to be one of the hardest-working yakuza actors in Japan. Nowadays, he is mainly known as the father of model/talent Anna Umemiya and as "the cooking king" of Japanese show business. He even owns a popular chain of stores that sell all sorts of Japanese foods. The stores are easy to find since each features a figure of the actor standing at the entrance like Colonel Sanders.
CULTURE / TV & Streaming / CHANNEL SURF
Apr 22, 2001
Big novels get the small-screen treatment
Jiro Asada won Japan's prestigious Naoki Prize for literature in 1997 for his novel "Poppoya," which was later made into a hit movie starring Ken Takakura. His followup, "Tengoku made no Hyaku Mairu (The One Hundred Miles to Heaven)," was published in the fall of 1998. Veteran TV director Katsumi Oyama read it when it first came out and immediately secured the rights.
CULTURE / TV & Streaming / CHANNEL SURF
Apr 15, 2001
Love and commiseration, all in a day's work
Show-biz synergy reaches critical mass Saturday with the premiere of "Ashita ga Arusa" (NTV, 9 p.m.). The title, which translates as "there is a tomorrow," meaning you should work hard because the future is always staring you in the face, was also the title of a popular song by Kyu Sakamoto in the '60s. Several years ago, it was revived by the rock group Ulfuls and then picked up as a theme song by Re:Japan, who are also members of the Osaka comedy production company Yoshimoto Kogyo.
CULTURE / TV & Streaming / CHANNEL SURF
Apr 8, 2001
You say you've got woman troubles?
This week, on "Ningen Yuyu" (Educational, Monday-Thursday, 7:30 p.m.), NHK will explore the malaise that is afflicting many young Japanese women right now. The four-night series, "Hyoryu suru Shojotachi (Drifting Girls)," will use conversations with experts and documentary footage to show how many young women suffer from low self-esteem and depression. What's perplexing about the problem is that it isn't limited to any particular socioeconomic profile. Malaise cuts across the entire demographic, regardless of family stability, school performance or economic well-being.
CULTURE / TV & Streaming / CHANNEL SURF
Apr 1, 2001
Let us now praise famous men's mothers
It's spring and time for the networks to start rolling out their latest batch of series.

Longform

Rows of irises resemble a rice field at the Peter Walker-designed Toyota Municipal Museum of Art.
The 'outsiders' creating some of Japan's greenest spaces