The other day I saw a post about the newest in wacky fruit goodness from Japan, a high quality yubari melon with Hello Kitty’s face embossed into the skin. For those not used to Japan’s world of high-end fruit, the price of this rare treat — a cool $55 — might have seemed excessive, although it was pretty much what anyone would pay for a really delicious hand-grown melon shipped in a special gift box. Japan is really into gift giving, and there are two gift seasons called chugen (in the summer) and oseibo (in the winter) during which families give gifts to people who have helped them especially, like neighbors or teachers or anyone whose sesame seeds they want to grind up. (The way to express the idea of “brown nosing” someone in Japanese is goma o suru, lit. to grind sesame seeds for someone.) Popular gifts include delicious boxed fruit, gift boxes of beer or sake, useful household items lke detergent or soy sauce, rare steaks of Kobe beef, and other really awesome stuff. It’s also common for employees to give gifts to their bosses, to butter them up before the summer and winter bonuses seasons. You can even find gift items on J-List’s popular Anime and Gift Snacks page…In Japan, giving $50 melons as gifts is an important part of the culture.
Why Cats are Good and Polite Japanese is Bad
One of the sleeper gems of the current anime season is My Roommate is a Cat (Japanese title Dokyonin ha Hiza,...