I was in Tokyo over the weekend, waiting for a friend at the most famous meeting place in Japan, the statue of Loyal Dog Hachiko in Shibuya. Hachiko was an Akita-ken owned by a university professor in the 1920s, who would wait patiently for his master to return on the train every evening. One day the man failed to return, having died of a heart attack while at work, yet the loyal dog continued to wait for his master for years until he eventually died, too. Local residents erected a statue to the dog which has become such a famous landmark that you can tell anyone in Tokyo “meet me at Hachiko” and they’ll know the exact spot. I noticed that the Japanese Ministry of Finance was putting Hachiko to work this tax season, using his famous image to encourage civic-minded Japanese to accurately declare their income via a sign around his neck that read, “Have you filed your income tax declaration with the Tax Ministry yet? Please be sure and do it as soon as possible!”
The Origins of Ecchi: 12 Groundbreaking Anime in Fan Service History
Over the past three decades, anime has evolved from a niche subculture to a mainstream phenomenon, even making its way...