In Japan, there are two types of people, those who like soy sauce dolloped over their fried eggs, and those who prefer the Bull-Dog sauce that's known as "sauce" (ソース) in Japanese. I'm a soy sauce man myself, unless we're talking about a fried egg sandwich, since soy sauce and bread don't mix that well, but I do recognize the superiority of "sauce" in just about every other food category, especially fried croquettes. That self-same Japanese condiment is under attack from an American foreign investment fund called Steel Partners, which is seeking to purchase controlling interest in the Bull-Dog sauce company in a leveraged buyout, a concept that's still quite foreign in this country where businessmen are usually polite to each other. Bull-Dog is taking some "poison pill" steps to ward off the buyout, including allowing shareholders other than Steel Partners to buy additional stock. As a general rule, companies attempting unwanted takeovers face an uphill battle in Japan and get plenty of negative press, despite the fact that takeovers are all part of how owning stock in corporations works (you know, stockowners being the owners of the company and not management, all that stuff).

As you know, Japan is a rather unique place, and sometimes it seems there's almost no aspect of the country that can't surprise you. As with other parts of the world, goods are transported from place to place by trucks, and truckers ply the open highways as they shuttle their cargo around the country, listening to the local version of country music, called enka. Many truckers spice up their time on the road by decking their wheels out with blinking lights, outrageously gaudy side mirrors and huge panels of traditional Japanese art, a practice called dekotora or "decoration truck." The whole business of driving around in a truck decked out with blinking lights began in the early 1970s with truckers who hauled fish to market attaching stainless steel fairings to their vehicles to keep corrosion due to the salty air at bay. The boom in decoration trucks was helped along by a Toho movie series called Truck Yarou (Truckers) which brought the hobby to a national level. Dekotora are usually named by their owners, with names usually ending in kanko (sightseeing), since the original truck modifiers had to scavenge for lights from old sightseeing busses, or maru (circle), often used in ship names (think Kobayashi-maru, Star Trek fans). There are many varieties of these colorful trucks, including designs that resemble colored floats from the Nebuta Festival in Aomori Prefecture or shrines to right-wing Japanese novelist Yukio Mishima or Amuro Rei from Mobile Suit Gundam. Today we happen to have gotten in some cool made-in-Japan T-shirts featuring the logo from the Truck Yarou film, a killer item for anyone who loves a truck, or who just digs the way the kanji and katakana look on the shirt.
Remember that J-List carries hard-to-find artbooks, manga and posterbooks of great Japanese artists, including Shirow Masamune, Satoshi Urushihara, Toshiyuki Tanaka, Range Murata, Shunya Yamashita and more. The Japanese are the most visually expressive people on the planet, and you can get lost for hours looking at the artistic creations of Tekkon Kinkreet or the illustrations in the Robot series. Why not browse through our beautiful artbooks pages now and see what we've got for you?
Here are today's "really cool products" that I thought were especially noteworthy. Note: the J-List links below may be for adult products and should probably be considered "not safe for work" (a yes/no verification screen will be displayed to filter products from our mature site). To see all the J-List products, check out J-List or the JBOX.com updated products link. We also recommend watching our "new products" RSS feed
Mini Skirt Illustrated DVD vol. 87 ~ Minisuka DVD Feb 2007. For some reason, certain J-List customers seem to think that Japanese women in short mini-skirts, high heels and silky "panty stockings" are hot or something. | |
Super Smart Lady ~The most excellent university in Japan -- Lemon Tachibana. A real Tokyo University student debuts as an AV actress. | |
Adult Debut -- Lina Dison (region 2). Leah Dizon is red hot in Japan and around the world, and now you can see her act in a JAV production. Well, it's a "sokkuri-san" or look-alike. Looks just like her too. | |
Kera Feb 2007 vol. 103. Gorgeous new issue of Kera, the leading magazine of Gothic + Punk + J-fashion. | |
robot 8 -- Super Color Comic. DESCRIPTION | |
Aoi Yume Figure ~ Wing Man. Gorgeous figure from Wing Man (Wingman), by Video Girl Ai creator Masakazu Katsura. | |
Secretarial Section Drop 2 ~ Hishoka Drop 2. Nice manga about secretaries and other girls in uniforms. | |
Hello Kitty Animal Head Plush Keychain -- Bear. Hello Kitty is so cute wearing a teddy bear costume. | |
Shakugan no Shana 1/8 Figure Noir Version ~ Kotobukiya. Fabulous prepainted figure of Shana from the popular anime. Haruhi Suzumiya character designer. | |
Movie T-shirt "TRUCK YAROU" -- Black / M size. Killer T-shirts featuring the famous logo of the movie that started the "decoration truck" boom in Japan. | |
Mini Sauce Bottle 9pcs ~ Pig. Take soy sauce (or "sauce") with you in your bento easily. | |
UKIYOE Chopsticks ~ Purple. Chopsticks with ukiyoe art built right in. | |
Japanese TV Sound Effect Soundrop (Full Set of 8). These are cool -- Soundrop keychains that make TV sounds when you press the buttons, from laugh track laughter to drum rolls and more. | |
Cheese & Mentaiko Pretz. Yummy! Cheeze and spicy cod roe flavored pretzels. Are you bold enough to try this? | |
Mosquito Coil . A tradition in Japan, this is what you use to keep those damned buzzing mosquitoes away. Plus it smells like summer. | |
BLEACH Characters Figure 4th Edition -- Full Set *Set of 5*. Cool Bleach character toy line, with full sets in stock (but hurry, we don't have that many more in stock). | |
Bus Stop Totoro -- Cominica DX Statue. Some things are just meant to be sold on J-List. This fantastic Totoro statue is certainly one of them. | |
Bull-Dog Sauce If I have one mission in live, it's to get as many gaijin as possible to try delicious Japanese "sauce" which is oficially called "sauce." |


















8 comments:
Although I am on China's case on the copying issue, there is a "nanchatte" (joke) Disneyland here:
http://www.themeparkreview.com/japan2004/nara1.htm
Oh and if you're burning to see more on these trucks:
http://www.asiandvdguide.com/toei/ty/truck_yarou.html
I've seen trucks like that over here. Perhaps not to such an extreme that they look like moving arcades, but with enough neon lights to be approaching Vegas-esque levels. It's quite interesting some of the designs and pictures they come up with.
You're in the UK right? It'd be fun to do stuff like that there, similar scale as Japan. The U.S. is so giant you couldn't get around in a truck like that without it getting messed up.
Yamaha should feel insulted & offended by the million dollar fine and an apology - the is an almost trivial "cost of doing business" in an industry like that. Based on that, I would assume that the manufacturer will just make minor comsmetic changes and keep seling the same motorcycles to the same markets.
I saw many fantastically lit commercial trucks in Okinawa during 1976 - 77. The used to congregate near the A&W drive-in that we visited for root beer floats & burgers. Attempts to reminisce about life in America didn't last long in the presence of these trucks (and the swarms of Okinawans also enjoying A&W :-) The lighting technology shown in your photo is more advanced, but the attempt to provide full coverage seems about the same.
Cheers,
Yes, it's bad. I wonder if companies doing business in China are even netting out in the end, or if they're expecting to make big profits later? It's bad. It's so dumb because if the Chinese maker were to make an effort to make a real brand, they could become the Ford of their market.
Wow, you were in Okinawa when I was in New Zealand. We were pretty close to each other back then ^_^ Do you mean A&W, as in the root beer? Man, I've never met a Japanese person other than my son who can drink root beer. I'd wager the shops aren't there anymore.
I ranted the other day about how region codes encourage piracy rather than deter it. I'm generally a liberal, not to say traditionalist, on copyright issues - I'm fiercely opposed to the DMCA and a big proponent of the tradition of "fair use" - but what Chinese firms are doing with movies is one of the most blatant cases of intellectual-property piracy I've ever seen. It's so blatant that I even see a lot of listings these days on eBay blandly claiming that the pirated copies of movies being offered for sale there are OFFICIAL, LICENSED copies in China!
-Joe-
Yes, it's really awful, because it's proactive -- Europe is overrun by awful pirate copies of high quality anime from Japan, which is "legal" in Taiwan or China only because they're not signatories of the copyright treaties. It's be one thing if these products were pirated inside their home countries, but to export with (bad) subtitles in other languages should be illegal as hell. If the Japanese weren't so "maa maa" (hmm, meaning "let's not fight, now") they could probably do something about the issue.
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