Giant Robot Store and GR2 News
“Last year, for the first time, sales of adult diapers in Japan exceeded those for babies.” This isn’t an article about diapers unfortunately, it’s just worth reading for this single sentence. (Business week – Diapers)
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Yesterday, over 600,000 Korean seniors strapped themselves in for day long testing. It’s over nine hours long and known as Suneung, the College Scholastic Ability Test. For these kids and their parents, this is one of the most important days of their entire lives. Some will get suitable scores their first time around. Others will take the test multiple times (it’s offered once a year), repeating the stress and expense of preparation over and over until their scores are high enough to get them into a “decent” national university. The Korean educational system is an intense one. Everything builds up to Suneung, when the die are cast. Will your life be worth living? Is your future bright? Will you be doomed to live a life of blue collar mediocrity, or will you rise to corporate greatness? These are questions that are asked in Junior High, and prepared for in grade school with extra-curriculars and tutoring that make a kid’s work day about as long (sometimes longer) as that of their parents. On Suneung, parents, younger students and empathetic citizens rally in support of the students taking the test. Juniors, second year students who are soon to face the same fate, line up outside the testing centers before dawn to get a good spot to yell rallying cheers, and offer snacks and juice to the students heading in for the test. Parents pray outside the testing centers. They pray in Christian churches and at Buddhist temples. In Jeju, the airport avoids takeoffs and landings during the listening portion of the test. I’m not sure if today is any easier for the kids that tested yesterday. I want to believe they slept well last night, with the hurdle of Suneung completed, but it’s not over yet. Their test results will be released in December. The admissions process continues for those with scores they can live with. For everyone else… it’ll be ok. Relax, and try to take it easy while you get ready for November 2013. Don’t do anything crazy, and don’t let your parents get you down. You can do it! FIGHTING!
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Japan has 51,376 centenarians – over 100 years of age. 87% are women. The average age keeps going up. (WSJ – Japanese)
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“The Industry” is seeing older customers who are paying for “companionship” by the ladies. Customers are in the 60+ range and some business cater specifically to this age group. . The prices are about $200 an hour and don’t boast much more than massages or platonic companionship, although “handjobs” are happening as part of some “courses.” (Tokyo Times – Senioritis)
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Japan is a society that’s good to the elders. Life expectancy is among the highest in the world and this one elder has been gifted a job that most his age can’t fathom. It’s in the sex industry. Veiled as an article that includes aging in Japan, this Guardian article is really just about porno star Shigeo Tokuda who at 77, is still working. He’s had a bypass surgery, but is still shooting scenes with actresses much, much younger. (Guardian UK – Shigeo Tokuda)
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