Japan-based Entertainment Producer
Anime / Games / Cosplay / Events
Exploring the communities behind Japanese pop culture.
Connecting Japan and the world throug
Visited the solo exhibition of legendary Japanese manga artist Sho-U Tajima. 🇯🇵
After waiting in line, I had the chance to speak with him and receive his autograph.
Experiences like this remind me how close fans can be to Japan's greatest creators.
#ST40
If you've never seen AKIRA, now is the time.
Nearly 40 years later, it's still one of Japan's most influential works, loved by fans around the world.
Enjoy a masterpiece that helped shape global anime culture. 🇯🇵
I support performers who are expanding into writing and creating original stories
Actors often have unique insight into emotions, characters, and audiences.
That perspective can become powerful storytelling.
I’m excited to see more Japanese creators share their stories globally
Visited Content Tokyo today.
One thing was clear: Many companies from Japan and overseas are actively looking for Japanese IP, creators, and entertainment projects.
The demand for Japanese content remains strong. 🇯🇵
The event runs until tomorrow at Tokyo Big Sight.
Many people imagine anime events are built around stages.
In Japan, the strongest events are often built around communities.
The stage is only one part of the experience.
Walking through places like Ikebukuro reminds me of something:
Japanese pop culture isn't built by companies.
It's built by communities.
Companies create products. Communities create movements.
That's one reason Japanese IPs survive for decades.
I spend around ¥100,000 at Comiket every time I attend.
Not because I have to.
Because I want to support creators.
Thousands of fans do the same.
That's the culture that built Comiket.