I’m not sure, but on the first day at Tokyo, I went to this sushi bar and had no idea who’s is the restaurant. So while eating with my boyfriend, suddenly a group of them came for lunch, and everyone stopped and bowed. Everything was dead silent until they sat at their table. Than things went back to normal, and the guy who was a bosS (very nice dressed), was actually really nice to us bcuz my boyfriend dropped his sushi and then the man laughed, and then everyone else did too and then he showed him the best way to hold the chopsticks and which order and way to eat each sushi. it was wild, I guess we were like a little circus entertainment 😂
This guy and his life is just endlessly fascinating to me! Also how am I the 1st to comment on this in seven years of it being on YT?! I bet since he's got a show about him now on HBO the comment rate is going to pick up a bit lol!
@@ask230 Wow, I double checked, and realized he meant to say "sarin [gas]", and not "'selling' attacks". People do pick up pronunciation tendencies from their second language if they live long enough in a second-language-speaking country, and it does influence their L1. (I just thought this wasn't the case, I had no clue about the 1995 sarin gas attacks in Japan - had to look them up.