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We've Got a Thing to Say to Japan Today | A Japanese Couple Reacts to Japan in the 1900s 

Let's ask Shogo | Your Japanese friend in Kyoto
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The videos we reacted to:
● [60 fps] 東京の光景(1913~1915年)
• Video
●カラーで蘇る昭和4年の京都の市場の様子(1929)
• カラーで蘇る昭和4年の京都の市場の様子(1929)
●1800's Japan [1894 - 1900] 日本 / にほん| Time Travel
• 1800's Japan [1894 - 1...
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♪Music♪
おとわび
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しゃろう Sharou
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MOMIZism MUSiC
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効果音ラボ
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♪Pictures♪
かわいいフリー素材屋 いらすとや
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#japan #japaninthe1900s #japanesereact #japanesereaction

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25 дек 2022

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Комментарии : 184   
@FireStar-gz2ry
@FireStar-gz2ry Год назад
Hey Shogo! Can you interview your parents, or your wife's parents about what Japan was like when they was children? ♥️
@philipcable437
@philipcable437 Год назад
Oh that would make an excellent video
@doktoruecker
@doktoruecker Год назад
That would be a great Video!
@shooter2055
@shooter2055 Год назад
Presuming they are still with us.
@mohamedb737
@mohamedb737 Год назад
great idea but maybe a grand parent or someone born before WWII is better
@brivonn5222
@brivonn5222 Год назад
That would be great!!
@charliegammon8090
@charliegammon8090 Год назад
I don't know about in Japan, but I know in the US they transported large blocks of ice packed in straw by train or truck from places where it is cold to warmer areas.
@dreadogastusf3548
@dreadogastusf3548 Год назад
This also meant that colder parts of a natiion made money by cutting ice and storing it for use during the summer. Ready to buy for your "icebox".
@TheCCBoi
@TheCCBoi Год назад
I really love the combination of japanese and western clothes/styles. It would be cool to see that come back.
@abee8405
@abee8405 Год назад
Yes, it looked very stylish
@Dustin_Frost
@Dustin_Frost 10 месяцев назад
Same! The hats are nice and those long school uniforms were actually kinda cool.
@Meanness_Scar
@Meanness_Scar Год назад
I like how you mentioned that there were so many things that were just daily life and everyone did it in their way but now there are so many rules about doing the same because it's tradition. Like, the "tradition" is changing the past instead of preserving it. Kimono was worn just everyday by everyone just like how we wear shirts. So just like how we sometimes button up our shirts or leave some buttons open because it's more comfortable or more stylish, they did the same with their kimonos, sometimes tying obi in different way or just tying it fast without caring about it. It's like if someone would suddenly tell us how to button our shirts. I think in Europe it happened with suits. Back in the days it was just normal thing everyone wore. Now we have rules like button up only the middle button or other things. While every suit stylist would just get a fever looking at how people wore suits in like 1950'. Or how those people were so cool while doing kyuudou or so happy doing nihonbuyou but today being happy is almost disrespectful. And it changed just recently. We also have some "traditions" that are just accidents. Like, we always don't eat regular meat on christmas eve, instead we eat fish. For few decades we were partially under Russian rule so we didn't have anything. But carp was big, cheap and usually the only available fish. So it was promoted as the best option for christmas eve because it was the only option. And today people are shocked if anyone serves any other fish on christmas eve. People are saying how bad carp is, how it smells, how it has so many bones but if anyone chooses any better fish it's the end of the world. "Because it's tradition". It's not. Traditionally we ate any fish, it could be carp. But it turned into carp only because of problems. And now everyone protects it like if it was something sacred. I think every country is like this. They have so many things from the past that were just normal everyday life, then they apply rules to it and say it's a long time tradition. Or people doing something they don't want because it's tradition but faced with an even older custom that's a lot nicer they suddenly call it trying to go back to being cave men. People take away all happiness from the past and force people to follow made up rules instead, saying it's tradition while the custom was just a normal thing and rules are just made a second ago, but if you want to do something even older just the way it was done because it makes you happy, they will suddenly forget about "protecting the tradition" and would call it bad names only because it makes someone happy. It's like if people wanted past to be sad. Like if they saw tradition as a formality not a part of life. So they apply rules to something that used to be freedom and call freedom wildness.
@7TPdwCzolgu
@7TPdwCzolgu Год назад
Poland with this is a bit bizarre, there is some minority of people who think that habits from Polish Socialist Republic are tradition... But some who are conservative are just a mix of hard catholics with... americanism, its wack.
@Meanness_Scar
@Meanness_Scar Год назад
@@7TPdwCzolgu You're right! We really have lots of people who just make up their traditions because it was somethng they did when they were small, even if it was temporary and just push it on others. But I hope we can soon be a lot better, with kinder people and better government^^ Also, you're really great! Remember you're loved and needed!
@7TPdwCzolgu
@7TPdwCzolgu Год назад
@@Meanness_Scar Ohhh thank you for the unexpected gentleness ^_^ o7
@Meanness_Scar
@Meanness_Scar Год назад
@@7TPdwCzolgu Thank you for being great^^
@Roseecactuar
@Roseecactuar Год назад
You raise an interesting point when you remark on how what is considered traditional today was just a normal every day occurence back then, and the people were so casual about it. It makes me wonder, what do we casually do in our every day lives in 2022 that will be revered and considered traditional in 100 years from now? Vacuuming a house? Taking a shower? Cooking?
@porcorosso4330
@porcorosso4330 Год назад
I mean rock music is considered classical music in one of the star trek movie. I guess I can see that happening...
@TruthIsTheNewHate84
@TruthIsTheNewHate84 Год назад
One thing that comes to mind for me is shaving. I use an old silver razor from the 20s. I dont really use it for the tradition or oddity. I use it because it gives a clean shave and it costs almost nothing to replace the razor inside. That being said, it does make me feel a certain way when i use it. I some times think back to what everyday life was like in the 1920s .Maybe in 100 years we wont be using razors to shave. Maybe everyone will have a laser hair remover in their home and people will use razors to shave for the tradition or oddity.
@wareforcoin5780
@wareforcoin5780 Месяц назад
Playing video games. It's considered bad form if you don't drop at least one slur in conversation in the lobby.
@lastnamefirstname8655
@lastnamefirstname8655 Год назад
there's a surprising amount of change in a mere 100 years.
@bishop51807
@bishop51807 Год назад
You can see the gradual change between the films
@W0LF9804
@W0LF9804 Год назад
It looks like the flags in the girls hair was a Japanese and United Kingdom flags so I'm guessing it must have been an diplomat event or as you say a cultural exchange.
@jgw5491
@jgw5491 Год назад
It was probably filmed for people who couldn't attend to share some things from Japanese culture. Also the bit where the Western guy took liberties with the young ladies on the bench was a not too subtle but funny reminder to visitors that they needed to respect the locals.
@inisipisTV
@inisipisTV Год назад
Yeah. Most likely the film is celebration of Japan-British diplomacy. Showing some unique Japanese culture. I bet the 'friscky' Westerner is a Brit doing a comedy skit for the Home audience as fun skit but also a lesson to British citizen who want to go to Japan to behave themselves among the ladies.
@ohppig1
@ohppig1 Год назад
Britain and Japan had formal alliance between 1902 and 1921, with Britain wanting to contain Russia.
@heronwireo1085
@heronwireo1085 Год назад
In the 1840s, the US was shipping ice as far as cuba, so the ice could have come from Hakodate; Industrial freezers were running by the 1860s, so there might have been a factory in Japan by 1914.
@mythguard6865
@mythguard6865 Год назад
I love your reactions to all of the children running around!
@jaypeedesuyo662
@jaypeedesuyo662 Год назад
Meiji and Taisho era Japan is the time when Japan's population was growing rapidly. Hence why their are lots of kids in this old footages.
@michaelnuzzo5698
@michaelnuzzo5698 Год назад
The balls disappearing from the frame probably isn't because of how fast they were moving. Programs that detect and remove dust, dirt, and scratches from film often mistake things that are moving a lot for dust, dirt, and scratches and remove them from the frame during restoration. This is why restorations often still require manual intervention.
@NoircatMask
@NoircatMask Год назад
The amount of kids compared to the aging community nowadays is soo wild to me
@mickeymickey9914
@mickeymickey9914 Год назад
Depressing
@wargriffin5
@wargriffin5 Год назад
Why? Its the same people. 😉
@jaypeedesuyo662
@jaypeedesuyo662 Год назад
​@@wargriffin5 Same people, Different era.
@draganskoda3338
@draganskoda3338 Год назад
@@wargriffin5 It means they're dying out.Just as South-Korea and the West. What happened in the last 50 years? It is a real shame that a people can disappear like that.
@Luischocolatier
@Luischocolatier Год назад
One of the things I love about watching old videos and reading primary historical sources about everyday stuff is that you realize that both people from the past were very close to how we are today, and that many things we call "traditions" and "how the world has always been" are actually very recent and much more strict than in the past! Things in Japan like how the kimono was worn, rules of different sports, but also in Europe things like who and and how certain clothes like dresses or heeled shoes were worn, or how the hair was put up! The past is much much more different than how we usually think it was, and at the same much, much more similar than how we are today!
@KardoganLR
@KardoganLR Год назад
It's so interesting to see videos from Japan's past! I really hope that Japan will take care to preserve its traditions. That includes the geisha culture, the festivals and many other things. The look of the kimonos is great and the fact that they just combined the kimono with western clothes already around 1900, I think is great! Your video on the combination of kimono/Western clothing was also fantastic!
@robertconsley6814
@robertconsley6814 Год назад
I know the reason why the figures were moving a little fast, cameras they would’ve used were hand cranked. I looked up on world fairs in Japan there was an expo in 1871, 1851 There was a start in international expositions this would explain why there was different country flags in the ladies hairs.
@JAB6322
@JAB6322 Год назад
Harumi with her new haircut looks amazing! 😍
@Laarye
@Laarye Год назад
The really old footage has sound and music added. Film from that time didn't record sound. Some of it looks sped up because the person recording was cranking too fast. The camera at that time would be hand-cranked so speeds would vary. The early days of film, a cameraman that was consistent would earn more as a professional.
@DaveLopez575
@DaveLopez575 День назад
My great grandparents moved to Japan in the early 1900s. I don’t know if they had filmed anything while they were there but watching this reminded me of them and the Japanese culture passed down to us by them. Thank you!
@user-so5tb1hy8r
@user-so5tb1hy8r Год назад
4:43 "the number of kids!" Yes truly a rarity in Japan today
@LifeOfCin
@LifeOfCin Год назад
I was really intrigued by the hair styles. Could you do a video exploring old vs new vs traditional hair styles for men, women, and children? Thanks for making great videos!
@doktoruecker
@doktoruecker Год назад
I would be interested in that too!
@Nothingbutdust92
@Nothingbutdust92 Год назад
Yes, that would be interesting!
@lexi7912
@lexi7912 Год назад
I'd love this video!
@LetsaskShogo
@LetsaskShogo Год назад
That sounds like a great idea! Thank you so much!
@Soul1Heart
@Soul1Heart Год назад
Also adding the different hair accessories used and how they varied depending on status/ role in society?
@Theorof
@Theorof Год назад
This is probably one of my favorite reaction videos. I know there are a lot more of these old film restorations out there. I would really like to see more. 👍
@thekingofmed1a
@thekingofmed1a Год назад
Fun fact: both my parents are Québecois (French Canadian) but they decided to live in Kyoto for 3 years before I was born, but they left to come back to Montreal 4 months before I was born, so I would’ve been born in Kyoto
@gantzisballs
@gantzisballs Год назад
Speaking of old Japanese entertainment forms, I would be interested in learning more about kamishibai. I don't believe it's as well known outside Japan as kabuki, Noh, and bunraku.
@MiyamotoMusashi9
@MiyamotoMusashi9 Год назад
It's the film stip frame and speed that is moving the dancer fast.
@Omni0404
@Omni0404 Год назад
This was a really fun video idea! I'd love to see more like this. 12:21 Their reaction was so perfect!
@lingeringquestions519
@lingeringquestions519 Год назад
This was so great! I like watching videos from around that time too. It's a big thing to see their faces and to see them living. They were as alive as I am now.
@elsie3538
@elsie3538 Год назад
It’s so interesting to see how much things have changed since then
@Soul1Heart
@Soul1Heart Год назад
I went to the Japanese Cultural exhibition in London at Buckingham palace, which displayed items received by the royal family for a few centuries as well as spoke about what people believe Japanese people looked like as well as the cultural exchange between Japan and UK around the Meiji period. Very interesting.
@DavidCruickshank
@DavidCruickshank Год назад
Britain and Japan were Allies back in the day, so 15:12 may be a diplomatic meeting between the two countries. Very interesting!
@joshuakrusiewicz2447
@joshuakrusiewicz2447 Год назад
What a door to the past! It's awesome to see that all those traditional arts and practices were a part of daily life in Japan at that time, thank you for showing us this!
@rachellight1186
@rachellight1186 Год назад
Seeing old videos like this is cool😁 You can learn allot by watching old videos such as these. What I would find interesting is if anyone living in Japan who watched these if they might happen to catch old family relatives in these videos by chance and what their thoughts and reactions would be?
@LinRuiEn
@LinRuiEn Год назад
It was so interesting how you bring up the number of kids. I know about the aging population, but I never even thought about how on the street you must see so few kids! Where I live you see tons of kids out during the day so I couldn't imagine how different it would be without seeing and hearing them.
@Larper64
@Larper64 Год назад
It is interesting to see the differences in fashion between the Taishō, Shōwa, and Meiji eras. Edit: Also I agree with your assessment, in the Meiji video they do seem more relaxed and particularly noticeable for me with the kyūdō demonstration. In many of the group demonstrations I have seen, they tend to either release at regular intervals or in some sort of order, while in this one they all seemed to be drawing and releasing at their own individual pace, but it also felt more natural because of that.
@mollye
@mollye Год назад
4:40 in the 1800s and early 1900s, before electrical fridges were invented, people used big blocks of ice to cool down and perserve food, at least in the west. For this purpose ice was brought from far up north. It was sawed from lakes and rivers, insulated with saw dust and shipped down to the cities. 15:00 they might be celebrating the Anglo-Japanese alliance of 1902, looking at the flags.
Год назад
Honestly: I am quite surprised how most of those "special rules" about traditional culture you guys have today were not there a century ago. O.=.o Seems like all those leaders of all those cultural arts kinda made them up just to be relevant (hough probably also to streamline the teaching of it. It's kind of the same as teaching normal things at schools I guess. If each school would teach something totally different or in a completely different way, it'd be difficult for everyone to be able to learn what they need to learn. =/c )
@LetsaskShogo
@LetsaskShogo Год назад
▼Please support me through Ko-fi (a donation platform like Patreon)▼ ko-fi.com/letsaskshogo ▼Let's ask Shogo Merchandise Shop▼ Where you can buy t-shirts, hoodies, mugs, stickers, etc. of cute Ukiyoe animal characters and logos of Let’s ask Shogo: suzuri.jp/lets_ask_shogo ▼The BEST online katana shop for martial arts (Iaido, Kendo, etc.): Tozando▼ tozandoshop.com/letsaskshogo Everything I use for my katana training is bought at this shop! I still use the first training katana I bought in 2016, and it is still in good shape! ▼The recommended online katana shop for decorations and cosplay: Mini Katana▼ minikatana.com/SHOGO *Get 15% OFF off all their products by purchasing through my affiliate link ▼Where you can meet me in Kyoto, Japan | Yushinkan Samurai Experience with Modern-day Musashi▼ A 90-minute experience in Japan where beginners can learn how to wield, draw, sheath, and swing the katana from the modern-day Musashi! I, Shogo, will be your interpreter to lead you into the wonderful world of samurai martial arts! Make your reservation here: www.airbnb.com/experiences/4577764?locale=en A video of me visiting this experience: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-MqBCAC42zAM.html ▼Who is Shogo? What is this channel about?▼ ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nhEamHfzyyg.html ▼Related videos on this channel▼ -Is Duolingo Really a Good Way to Study Japanese? | A Japanese Man Reacts to Duolingo ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-j1fNAA8mdFY.html -What You MUST KNOW Before Traveling Japan | Japanese React to Paolo fromTOKYO’s Video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CO2URFozdFg.html -Why It's So Hard to Conform to Japanese Social Norms | Japanese React to Paolo fromTokyo’s Video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5DaLRL41CuE.html ▼MY DREAM▼ ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-EgowIV_kagA.html “To make every Japan lovers’ dream come true, by making Japan a more secure, comfortable, and safer place for everyone to visit, study, and live in” I will be using the profit I gain from this channel at restaurants, hotels, and cultural facilities in Kyoto to introduce them. The more you watch the videos on this channel, Kyoto and Japan will become a more exciting place, and you can support your own and others’ dreams in the future even more. ▼Join our Membership▼ ru-vid.com/show-UCn7DCb9ttrcw9h3vh9dfnVwjoin The ticket to the front row seats to Shogo's rapid adventure to make his dream come true! Through the videos, lives, and zoom chats your ideas and opinions will be adopted for Shogo to make the right decisions for his challenges! ●Membership benefits -Limited behind-the-scene videos -Weekly Zoom call or live stream -Priority reply to comments ▼Sub-channel: “Shogo’s Podcast”▼ ru-vid.com/show-UCZAe1VayWxp5NLO4Net78DA ▼Instagram▼ instagram.com/lets_ask_shogo/ *Please ask me questions through the DM here!(⚠I do not use e-mail)
@petergarcia8225
@petergarcia8225 Год назад
If you think about it before western modernization, Japan was already modernized with a certain style and education. The balancing post might have been preparation for fishing boats.
@KikyoSamaLover05
@KikyoSamaLover05 Год назад
I love this video!! It was so amazingly done! I laughed so hard when the man squeezed himself between the maikos and then they ran away like "Nope"😂 Also love how they put Gion Kouta in the background on the third vid. As much as I like modern Japan, traditional Japan is the real deal for me! It has the feeling and the vibe like no other ❤
@CyberMercy
@CyberMercy Год назад
great fun! Canada Archives has 1900-1920 restored videos & it is fascinating even when not of my city. Happy Hollidays
@doktoruecker
@doktoruecker Год назад
What is normal today, will be tradition tomorrow. It is fascinating, what you said about wearing a Kimono/Yukata. How normal daylife can be ruled later
@_BenJaminCroft_
@_BenJaminCroft_ Год назад
It is also tradition that times _must_ and always do change.
@PrehistoricMeatEater
@PrehistoricMeatEater Год назад
So, that was the standard sign for kakigori (i.e., just the kori kanji). And this was the popular fashion to have Hakodate style kakigori. This was Tokyo actually. The Meiji vid dances are taken by the British Embassy and was a diplomatic thingie.
@izabela.wilson
@izabela.wilson Год назад
Shogo Team, I heard about some ancient buildings being abandoned or sold too cheap in Kyoto, and some foreigners are investing in restoration. Can I suggest you to talk about it? There's too many historical sites, belongins and interesting objects inside this buildings (I saw once a building with old samurai swords forgotten within)... Thank you so much for bringing so many valuable contents to us. Harumi-san looks so bright and beautiful, just waiting for Zen-chan to come 🥰 Regards from Brazil!
@ColonelMarcellus
@ColonelMarcellus Год назад
So many children wearing hats in the early 20th Century. I remember wearing hats to school (taking them off when entering a classroom) and I recall that it was difficult to keep one's hat because of all the children (and adults) who would snatch them.
@mobey56
@mobey56 Год назад
It is quite comforting to know that I am not the only one who enjoys watching old videos to see how times have changed. However after watching your reaction video, I have to say that the culture is quite similar to my own country.
@Allasomorph
@Allasomorph Год назад
I find the markets most fascinating. Thanks 😄
@bishop51807
@bishop51807 Год назад
Mrs Eats did a video on how Japan went from traditional markets to having 7-Elevens.
@catherinebutler4819
@catherinebutler4819 Год назад
I wonder if the combination of Japanese and British flags in the women's hair was to commemorate the Anglo-Japanese pact, but that was just a little later, in 1902, I think.
@DominicanStud101
@DominicanStud101 Год назад
To me it was just interesting seeing how many Japanese children there were and what they wore. Isn’t it amazing we have this footage? It’s like using a Time Machine.
@monicab204
@monicab204 Год назад
So interesting to see the videos and your discussion/evaluation. Thank you!
@Dustin_Frost
@Dustin_Frost 10 месяцев назад
My suspicion is that these cultures which were much more natural and relaxed at the time became enforced as a means of self preservation. In these videos we see the introduction of western culture in Japan and I'm sure some worried that those differences would be lost to the blob if nothing was done about it. So I believe that's the reason they became so strict but if they hadn't, many of the things that people love about Japan would have been lost and we probably wouldn't be here enjoying Shogo's content.
@danielbengtsson9833
@danielbengtsson9833 Год назад
It's unfortunaly alot darker than it seems. Infant mortality rate was more than 90 times greater than it is today, and 40% of children died before the age of 5. And with the wars during this time there would have been alot of orphans too, skewing the perspective even more. Bear that in mind when you think there are few children in Japan today compared to back then.
@JohnDoe-yq9rt
@JohnDoe-yq9rt Год назад
Awesome idea for a video! It's great to get both a male and female perspective on Japanese history
@biondakersemakers4016
@biondakersemakers4016 Год назад
I've seen these old video's, loved watching them. Now I get the change to watch it again.
@nsk660
@nsk660 Год назад
Sad reality is that today people are getting amazed by seeing so many kids , without youth the fate of a nation is doomed as seen in most East asia
@marklaurenzi1609
@marklaurenzi1609 Год назад
The flag might have been to support their allies in WW1
@katharynemartins565
@katharynemartins565 Год назад
That probably happened before the ww1. I think It was 1912.
@SarmonOflynn
@SarmonOflynn Год назад
I can just imagine one of the martial arts practitioners from those times walking into a modern training session where everything is formal, and almost mythological, and just being baffled, or laughing at how serious the atmosphere is.
@tsumaranaiartists
@tsumaranaiartists Год назад
i first thought this was 7 months ago but nevermind it was actually pretty early
@maximevancampenhout5214
@maximevancampenhout5214 11 месяцев назад
there is also a picture online of samurai at the sphinx that was photographed in 1864
@lililinda6947
@lililinda6947 Год назад
Love this video, I was a history major and it’s always incredible to see what you read about in action if possible !
@ritahertzberg5762
@ritahertzberg5762 Год назад
Fascinating!
@marw9541
@marw9541 Год назад
By 1913 there was already a very robust movie industry. There is a fair chance the thing you are thinking is Kabuki (specifically that advertisement for a story about people on a train) could have just been movies
@Freaky0Nina
@Freaky0Nina Год назад
Can we upvote this? I remember reading papers on early cinema culture in Japan. I'd love for him to do a video on Benshi and Kabuki influences in early motion pictures^^
@ladysiege
@ladysiege 9 месяцев назад
they move really fast in the 1900s videos because of the frame rate. Same with the kids playing with the ball that the ball is almost invisible, the film is just not fast enough to capture it. Anything more than a 12 FPS we register it as a motion and old films usually have 14-24 frames per second, which gives the effect that everyone moves faster.
@KMO325
@KMO325 Год назад
I would love for you guys to react to more videos like these.
@IKuraiKuraiI
@IKuraiKuraiI Год назад
Excellent Video! 😁 I seen this video before i was amazed to see a video camera from that day of age. eveything has such vintage look.very interesting watch.
@MurakamiTenshi
@MurakamiTenshi Год назад
These videos of life back then are so precious!
@S1L3NTG4M3R
@S1L3NTG4M3R Год назад
Thanks Shogo... Have a Happy New Year
@Lightice1
@Lightice1 Год назад
4:30 - Before modern refridgerators, selling ice from cold regions was a commonplace practice. In Britain they got their ice from Norway, from example. It was shipped in large bricks packed in sawdust for insulation and though there was some loss on the way, the bulk of the produce could stay frozen for months. I'm sure that was also the case with ice from Hakodate.
@Sammzor
@Sammzor Год назад
Your excited reaction to the cherry blossoms was so cute.
@martindrew3513
@martindrew3513 Год назад
March 14'th, 1885 Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado staged in London. This was one of their smash hit musicals, HMS Pinafore, Pirates of Penzance and The Mikado were the three biggies of many, many plays. The plays were knocked-off everywhere in The United States. The Mikado started a true love affair between Japan and The West. We see the two girls dancing with naive union jacks across from radiating sun flags in their hair. The fellow who flirts with the ladies and is humorously rejected is wearing what I would call an English cut of suit. His face has a bright strip of white down the nose, he may be a westerner or a mock-westerner.
@jeannerogers7085
@jeannerogers7085 Год назад
I love old pix and videos of anywhere.
@marcuslunsford-od8se
@marcuslunsford-od8se Год назад
I have always thought the Japanese People have such an Honorable Culture...Also it really is amazing how much the Culture has in so many ways remained unchanged...
@dominicreid4gg.90
@dominicreid4gg.90 Год назад
British flag could be due to visitors from the UK when they were developing a relationship which formed an official alliance 1902-1923.
@feral_shade
@feral_shade Год назад
I'm just guessing, but I think early cameras had mechanical limitations that caused a frame rate that's much slower than human vision, so the sequences had to be sped up to compensate I'm not a video photographer or anything so I don't know for sure :) This is a great video though... I enjoyed seeing a modern perspective and more of Shogo's humorous side... also it's so fantastic seeing Harumi being more vocal! You two have wonderful chemistry in these videos!
@jeffreyalansantos2335
@jeffreyalansantos2335 Год назад
Merry Christmas and happy new year to all of you Japanese people and people from other countries!✌❤🎄🎁 greetings from Philippines!🇵🇭👋
@gameshow4030
@gameshow4030 Год назад
Oooo i have feeling like i Saw you Can stretch pinky thats Nice!!!!
@mustang22velorex
@mustang22velorex Год назад
Hi Shogo! Can you tell me what are the wooden weapons (tsuburitos?) Behind you in these videos. Are they mock guns? I don't find them a form
@kaim2437
@kaim2437 Год назад
It is a shakuhachi, its a type of flute
@j.q.higgins2245
@j.q.higgins2245 Год назад
@@kaim2437 Rumour has it that these (like any instrument) in the hands of an uninitiated player can be considered a weapon.😋
@LetsaskShogo
@LetsaskShogo Год назад
Those are my Shakuhachi bamboo flutes! I’ve been training the flute for about a year and half now too😊 But as you say some may have used it as a secret weapon too!
@mustang22velorex
@mustang22velorex Год назад
@@LetsaskShogo thanks Shogo!
@MissesWitch
@MissesWitch Год назад
Old Japan: All kids , No elders New Japan: All elders, No kids. And the inbetweeners in both scenarios are the adults!
@jaypeedesuyo662
@jaypeedesuyo662 Год назад
Pretty much
@turtlebot10000
@turtlebot10000 Год назад
Harumi is so pretty! Love videos with her!
@christiestratton8005
@christiestratton8005 Год назад
I very much enjoyed the archery scene. I felt surprised when you said that the archers held a second arrow "in their pinky finger." And the archers kept hold of that second arrow while they used the first arrow. Arigato gozaimasu (*bows*)
@celeste8360
@celeste8360 Год назад
Going down the river on logs reminds me of the lumberjack games that happen in the old logging towns😂 They look so dangerous!
@lunarebony6122
@lunarebony6122 Год назад
Kimono now: THERE IS 1MM CREASE IN THE OBI 😭😭 Kimono then: WHO CAN TIE OBI THE FASTEST
@rudymenchaca9340
@rudymenchaca9340 Год назад
Hello Shogo your friend from the USA Rudy thanks again for your video it looks awesome some great footage of the pass ❤
@rudymenchaca9340
@rudymenchaca9340 Год назад
Gracias my friend thanks ok
@tokyorosa
@tokyorosa Год назад
So cool!
@MisterVyle
@MisterVyle Год назад
Its really neat seeing different cultural perspectives. Really enjoy these videos Shogo.
@mikeroman5208
@mikeroman5208 Год назад
It's all shot outside because there probably wasn't enough lighting inside for the cameras of that time to pick anything up
@professorsassafras
@professorsassafras Год назад
Hey shogo I know that on RU-vid michigan gets a bad rap but don't judge a book by its cover. I've been to michigan myself and as long as you avoid Detroit and don't go there I think michigan is worth visiting at least once. I think the bad rap is mainly due to the city Detroit. They only visit that one city, give it a try! Or a thumbs up if you'll at least think about it
@floriehazel4712
@floriehazel4712 Год назад
Awesome! Albert Kahn's work is a must for old photos and videos. He took them all around the world. I can only advise you all to take a look 😊✨
@austinjones7434
@austinjones7434 Год назад
Loved the cameo in mini katana
@jackstone112
@jackstone112 Год назад
Fitting upload as iam replaying shogun 2 totalwar fall of the samurai!
@shaider1982
@shaider1982 Год назад
Michael Rogge has lots of videos he personally made of t Japan in the 1960's. I and my wife like visting Japan now and then. Sad that some stores we visted in Akihabara is now gone.
@danielbengtsson9833
@danielbengtsson9833 Год назад
I think the school was he school that was turned into the international manga museum in Kyoto.
@fri5kas
@fri5kas Год назад
Amazing insight to ancient Japan! Unfortunatly, less children is a worldwide problem...
@orbitalbutt6757
@orbitalbutt6757 Год назад
(Points to a guy who looks like he was alive before people invented agriculture) Yeah he's probably 40 or 50
@lisapocock5753
@lisapocock5753 Год назад
Hi
@jjll9306
@jjll9306 Год назад
Nice video
@evilovexvx
@evilovexvx Год назад
So nice!! ❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥
@cantsay
@cantsay Год назад
18:00 really insightful comments of cultural evolution. Why are certain periods chosen, or 'held on a pedestal' as traditional?
@JoseNunez-mo9zf
@JoseNunez-mo9zf Год назад
Super cool awesome I loved it and very interesting❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️⚔️✌️
@GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube
15:12 British flag, not English.
@ChrisOsberg
@ChrisOsberg Год назад
Wow, those are fascinating videos! It's very interesting to see that the mixing of Japanese and Western clothing happened within ~50 years. It's not that surprising, but cool nevertheless.
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