Push the buttons before you fall into hot water…
A new wacky clip from “Haneru no Tobira”, with comedians trying to press buttons and inflate floating platforms before they slide down a slippery incline:
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Categories: Japanese TV
Kickboard scooter challenge
The crazy crew from “Haneru no Tobira” put on bug suits and try to ride a kickboard scooter through a 45-centimeter wide corridor:
Those who knock down walls or can’t make it all the way through the corridor are punished by having stinky spider breath blown into their faces.
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Categories: Odd / Strange
Spinning around on a lubricated platform
The latest wacky Haneru no tobira challenge appears to involve forcing comedians to spin around on a platform covered with lubricating lotion:
Just like most of their past challenges, it was pretty much impossible.
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Categories: Japanese TV
Butt jump rope man & balance ball girl
Two mildly stupid but nonetheless impressive feats:
1. Butt jump rope for 30 seconds
2. Bouncing on a balance ball for 30 seconds without touching the ground
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Categories: Japanese TV, Odd / Strange
Tug of War – Stupid Version
A creative use of nylon stockings on Japanese TV:
(Kids, don’t try this at home!)
Categories: Japanese TV, Odd / Strange
Surviving a fake Japanese game show
W. David Marx has written a great review of ABC’s I Survived A Japanese Game Show:
Let’s say an enterprising Romanian television network wanted to make a “reality show” in the American mold. For authenticity’s sake, Executive Producer Bogoescu and his team travel to the United States, where they work with a few lower-level TV hands. Although they base the central concept on ideas gleaned from American TV, their production ultimately aims to exaggerate the “reality show” experience to the point of absurd parody, where half the appeal is poking fun at the “conventions” of American TV and the other half is “playing around” within someone else’s television morality. I mean, Romanian networks would never do such terrible things to their cast members. To reinforce the “otherness” of the material, every backdrop of the Romanian show would be made up of Stars-and-Stripes and a rousing Sousa march would provide the opening theme. The audience would have Uncle Sam stovepipe hats and fake guns to shoot in the air. With no real American celebrities willing to host such a two-bit fiasco, the production team would have to bring in a few Romanian-American ringers to act like “real American hosts.” The final product — American Reality Show: I Want to Learn to Torture Terror Suspects and Eat Big Steaks — would retain some elements of North American reality shows, but would be, honestly speaking, a completely Romanian creation.
This “hypothetical situation” is not some strange post-Borat fantasy: this completely explains what American TV network ABC did to make its new reality/game show I Survived a Japanese Game Show…
If you’re interested in watching it, the first episode of I Survived A Japanese Game Show can be viewed online at ABC.com (American IP addresses only).
Categories: Foreigners in Japan
