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Yurichan from Japan
Japan
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 5 พ.ย. 2022
The real voice of Japan, delivered to you
リアルな日本の声、届けます
ーーーーーーーーーー
Instagram☞ i.am.yurichan?r=nametag
💌: i.am.yurichan1998@gmail.com
リアルな日本の声、届けます
ーーーーーーーーーー
Instagram☞ i.am.yurichan?r=nametag
💌: i.am.yurichan1998@gmail.com
วีดีโอ
Against All Odds: Albino Model Sakura’s Fight with a 1-in-20,000 Rare Disease
มุมมอง 2.2K3 หลายเดือนก่อน
Against All Odds: Albino Model Sakura’s Fight with a 1-in-20,000 Rare Disease
"What's Your Favorite Japanese Food? - Interview Series"
มุมมอง 1.5K4 หลายเดือนก่อน
"What's Your Favorite Japanese Food? - Interview Series"
"Interview: Exploring Discrimination Against Foreigners in Japan"
มุมมอง 14K5 หลายเดือนก่อน
"Interview: Exploring Discrimination Against Foreigners in Japan"
"Interview: Culture Shock Experiences in Japan"
มุมมอง 8K6 หลายเดือนก่อน
"Interview: Culture Shock Experiences in Japan"
"Exploring Japanese Beauty Standards: How Do They Compare with the Rest of the World?"
มุมมอง 19K6 หลายเดือนก่อน
"Exploring Japanese Beauty Standards: How Do They Compare with the Rest of the World?"
"How Much Money Do You Need to Live in Japan? - Essential Living Costs Revealed!"
มุมมอง 23K6 หลายเดือนก่อน
"How Much Money Do You Need to Live in Japan? - Essential Living Costs Revealed!"
Why Do Japanese People Slurp Noodles? Exploring Cultural Norms | Interview Insights
มุมมอง 3.3K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Why Do Japanese People Slurp Noodles? Exploring Cultural Norms | Interview Insights
Exploring Japan: Likes and Dislikes Through the Eyes of Foreigners and Locals
มุมมอง 4.1K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Exploring Japan: Likes and Dislikes Through the Eyes of Foreigners and Locals
"Interviewing Japanese Language Learning Methods: Insights and Tips"
มุมมอง 53K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
"Interviewing Japanese Language Learning Methods: Insights and Tips"
"Love and Betrayal in Japan: Candid Interviews on Infidelity"
มุมมอง 74K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
"Love and Betrayal in Japan: Candid Interviews on Infidelity"
”What are the manners for hot springs? ” Interviews with people working in hot springs
มุมมอง 2.2K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
”What are the manners for hot springs? ” Interviews with people working in hot springs
”What are popular anime in Japan? What is your favorite anime?”Japanese interview
มุมมอง 36K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
”What are popular anime in Japan? What is your favorite anime?”Japanese interview
"Where is Ninja?" Japanese Ninja Girl Interview
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"Where is Ninja?" Japanese Ninja Girl Interview
"What do people in Japan think about transgender individuals?" Intervews
มุมมอง 7K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
"What do people in Japan think about transgender individuals?" Intervews
Interviewing Adorable Japanese Girls Working at an Akihabara Maid Cafe
มุมมอง 6K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
Interviewing Adorable Japanese Girls Working at an Akihabara Maid Cafe
"What do Japanese people think about tattoos on foreigners?"-Japanese interview
มุมมอง 7K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
"What do Japanese people think about tattoos on foreigners?"-Japanese interview
"What do Japanese think about foreigners wearing kimonos?"-Japanese interview
มุมมอง 7K10 หลายเดือนก่อน
"What do Japanese think about foreigners wearing kimonos?"-Japanese interview
What an inspiring girl! 私の息子の年齢に近くて、その世代の良い代表者ですね!
As a 6’2” dude.. I hear you!! :)
いじめを受けたのはたぶん人種によってというよりは、日本の文化の空気を読むとかができなくていじめられたとかな気がする
The tree guy is amazing 😅😅😅
Very nice girl the blonde
Even if someone’s meaning is Japanese speakers not Japanese people that is still discriminatory
帰ってきました?
As a foreigner in Japan, I'm happy that Japanese people appreciate when we wear kimono or yukata. However, we should learn to wear them properly if we want to show respect to their culture. I know they don't mind whatever way we want to wear it but better if we wear it properly, that would make them happier.
これは1ヶ月分の合計でしょうかな
I recently bought a black one. I want to wear it with my Vans. I realize it won’t be traditional but my appreciation for Japanese culture while being westerner. Some people might see it as strange but if you appreciate that culture it’s a compliment. A few years ago I got very excited when I saw kimonos with Nordic and Baltic patterns. I was flattered that someone in Japan was using patterns of my heritage. I saw it as a compliment because it shows that they like that culture. It wasn’t cultural appropriation whatever that is. It’s cultural appreciation infused with the local culture.
More power❤️🇯🇵
We do not discriminate based on skin color or race. However, Japanese hate and avoid "rude people," "insane people," and "people with bad manners." The point is, if you're an "ordinary tourist", you shouldn't feel discriminated against by Japanese people.
Hello Yuri chan. I hope you’re doing well. It’s been a while since the last time you posted a shorts video. Hopefully you’re all and well in the states. I assume you’ll be here until the 22nd. I think. I got worried. 😅 Please let me know that you’re OK. 💔❤️🩹
I changed my Japanese name because people kept mispronouncing it or I had to spell it out every time. How would you like to be called Yukiro instead of Yuriko all the time, like for years and years every time you meet a new person.
that "phew" "yay" is so cute
I know the metric system makes more sense in terms of adding and subtracting and multiplying. But in terms of getting a "sense" of how large, hot, etc. something is, the American system is better. I am sure it is just a holdover from our being a British colony originally, but I think we keep it because the subtely of "sense of space, heat, etc." is more human. Saying someone is 180 centimeters seems a bit weird and out of the scale of human sensiblity. Same with the weather. The difference between 32 degrees, 60 degrees, and 90 degrees fahrenheit is very clear and to the scale of human subjective feeling in terms of how the weather feels on a particular day. The difference in celsius is something you can learn and get used to, but it is just not subtle enough to be analgous to the actual nuance as you would feel it in daily life. I think that is why we keep it. I was watching a video where someone said a counter was 600 millimeters, which is something we would probably say was 24 inches (or 2 feet). 600 just sounds like such a huge number to describe something that is relatively small. Do you see what I mean? Our measurments fit the actual scale of daily life conceptually.
New York really tests you and moreover people who are tourists often just stay in Manhattan. There's the other 4 "boroughs" visitors don't realize exists and you can actually find unique experiences. Given you interact with the right people who like & trust you enough to show you a different side. Take consideration unlike Japan and its major cities. New York has over 100 years of cultural migration and industry development built on top of each other. It's been called the "world capital" for that reason. Multicultural family background presently is common. You find yourself either speaking 2 languages or interacting with different ethnicities that speak only English because they were raised here (😅). So much creative and industrial ambitions. Values and customs consistently clashing and intermixing to form new ones. Pockets of neighborhood & communities varying one from another that range from young ones forming a new one and those who's roots trace back to 1880s. It's a city that's always changing yet never loses it's identity because the people who become part of it honor bringing new things and preserving traditions. A delicate balance.
You interviewed a bunch of nice, thoughtful people!
Mou hisashiburi Dana ❤❤
Good, that rental, otherwise that Jeep is an unreliable @$$ vehicle which has many engine failures and other various technical faults 😂
Japanese Toyotas and Korean Hyundais are way better in reliability 😅than that Piece of showoff junk 😂
Not disrespecting another city for clicks?
Operation Meetinghouse took place on the nights of March 9 and 10, 1945, where US bombers dropped 1,665 tons of bombs on the wooden city of Tokyo. Firebombing burst the city into flames. Wood and paper constructions fueled the blazing fire. A Strong breeze whipped the individual blazes into a firestorm. Canals boiled, Sumida River ran red with blood, water bodies became boiling hotpots where people were simply boiled alive, bridges fell, metal melted and everything, whether living or non-living, burst spontaneously into flames. Tokyo was flattened and burnt to ashes. Hell could not have been hotter than Tokyo, where temperatures reached 1,800 degrees. As per the records, 105,400 died, 125,000 were injured and 1.5 million lost their homes. The US Firebombing killed more people than the atomic bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki five months later.
The capital of tacky and cluttered.
Tacky
Why so many suicides then?
I’m so glad I found your channel! I just started learning Japanese recently. Sadly, my Japanese grandmother didn’t really try too much for us to learn Japanese. Also, sadly my mother and her sisters didn’t try too much to learn. Now my grandmother has passed, and now I have decided that I will not let this part of me go. It matters and I want to know it. So now I am here to learn it. Thank you for offering a truly interesting way for me to learn! Much love 💕
It's only cheap in Japan if you travel there after earning money from most other developed countries. For the Japanese themselves, it's expensive AF, because wages in Japan are lower than virtually all other developed countries - it's all relative
🎮
He is lying, even white people are discriminated in Japanese trains let alone him
Yeah going to America will really make you appreciate Japan...
This video is useless, everyone forces themselves to be politically correct, so their answers are not honest or truthful.
you realize japan has different politics than america or wherever else your basing the "politically correct" stuff off, right?
📃🎽✉️🔴✉️🚏🏷
A video interviewing transgender people would be a great sequel to this one!
It's called OMOTENASHI .
What about places like conbini, restaurants, cafés, etc. in Japan...if someone needs water, is it free?
welcome to capitalism. It's free if you pay.
@@lieutenantpepper2734 capitalism is clearly corrupt, but that doesn't answer my question...
@@lieutenantpepper2734 also....it's free if you pay? Sounds like the jaded response of someone who is too cynical to find out whether or not free water is available in any of those places. It's clearly not free if you've already paid 🤭😄
Each time a Japanese complains about their country, I ask them where else would they go, they just give me blank stares
Sugoi Yuri-chan! I want to leave in a place in Japan like Kyoto. With love from Brazil
アメリカ人は自由が好きすぎて日本に住むことができません。法律は良くなく、多くの習慣は古くて時代遅れだと私たちは考えています。 「奇妙な」出来事が多すぎる。日本人男性は(おそらく希少性のため)女性を極端に崇拝し、10歳の少女さえも崇拝するが、それが許されるならアメリカも同じだろう。家が小さすぎる。人々はフレンドリーですが、極端な場合、下心があるのでしょうか?
What will it take for me to your camera man🎉❤💪
Japanese Rocks🎉❤😎 🗾
ありがとうございます 楽しみ move there in Japan I am very respectful.🤗😆
Boku kimitachi no duresu mou sugoku daisuki desu
Imagine they're just talking shit this whole time😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂❤
You went to the right place first - Chickadee Ridge is a lot of fun and the sights are obviously amazing. But NYC is a complete dump - don't bother. Instead, go see the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, or Yellowstone. Zion is a good choice as well.
Canada is free also lol
It is often difficult to appreciate what is good about home until you don't have it anymore. The same applies to people as well.
声が心地よい
Agreed!
ありがとうございまニガす
Sugoi Yuri-chan! I am happy that more foreings like me love Japan. With love from Brazil