jeudi 9 juin 2016

TV presenter Kobayashi has advanced cancer, says actor husband Ebizo


Popular television presenter Mao Kobayashi, 33, has been battling “serious” breast cancer for the past 20 months and is undergoing treatment, her kabuki actor husband, Ichikawa Ebizo, said Thursday.
He said the disease is “spreading really fast,” and doctors have warned the couple that they face a tough road ahead.
The mother of two is receiving chemotherapy and has contemplated surgery, Ebizo told a hastily arranged news conference.
He said Kobayashi’s ordeal is compounded by her separation from their children.
“As a mother, she can’t be with her little kids. I believe she is battling a sense of devastation I can’t possibly imagine,” he said.
“I won’t run away from this ordeal. I will tackle it head-on,” he added.
The 38-year-old kabuki actor, known for his outspoken style and brash demeanor, maintained his composure while speaking before around 200 reporters.
But he confessed he was “completely at a loss” when he first learned of his wife’s cancer through a health checkup.
The family had tried to keep Kobayashi’s condition “top secret” but decided to go public after the tabloid daily Sports Hochi ran a front-page scoop about her ordeal on Thursday. Even their two children, 4-year-old daughter Reika and 3-year-old son Kangen, have only just begun to understand that their mother is ill, he said.
Ebizo called the past 20 months excruciating, but said that while the ordeal is not over, there is still hope for a positive result. “I hope that, someday, our family can all look back on this hard period of time and say it was a good experience after all. This is the kind of thought that gives us hope,” he said.
Kobayashi, a freelance anchorwoman, married Ebizo in March 2010. She has an announcer sister, Maya, 36.
Ebizo is a superstar of the kabuki world. Before marrying Kobayashi, he was notoriously linked with a string of prominent actresses. In 2010 he ended up with a bloodshot eye after a late-night brawl in a Roppongi bar.
Ebizo ended the news conference with a plea to journalists: “This year, depending on my wife’s condition, I want to do something I’ve never done, which is to take days off for a vacation. So please don’t follow us around.
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Can Netflix’s ‘Hibana’ spark a revolution in Japanese TV?





With the recent announcements made by both Netflix Japan and Amazon Japan that they will be putting out original locally made content, the country seems to be moving further into the age of internet-based TV. And it appears that the team at Netflix could be one step ahead with the recent release of its latest homegrown show.
“Hibana” (“Spark”) became available to stream via the service on June 3, and the title is currently available in 190 countries and territories — a first for Netflix Japan — and subtitled in 19 languages, with the ultimate aim to have that number reach 24. The 10-episode drama is based on the Akutagawa Prize-winning novel by comedian Naoki Matayoshi, which has sold more than 2.5 million copies, and Netflix is hopeful for a high viewer count both at home and abroad.
“It’s just a really good story, when it comes down to it,” Greg Peters, president of Netflix Japan, tells The Japan Times at the company’s office in Tokyo’s Aoyama neighborhood. “While it’s set in this manzai (Japanese stand-up comedy) world, which can seem extremely domestic in one sense, the core story elements are really about the interaction between two people. And this human interaction is set in a broader theme of what happens when you fall in love with an art form and pursue it despite all rational reasons not to. I think that these two elements have a degree of universality to them.”
The two characters Peters is referring to are aspiring comedian Tokunaga (Kento Hayashi) and manzai talent Kamiya (Kazuki Namioka). After a chance meeting, Tokunaga pleads with Kamiya to take him on as an apprentice. The older comic agrees and their journey together begins, but the pair eventually follow different paths.
“The mentor-apprentice, or senpai-kōhai relationship, as well as the passion in pursuing something are also very Japanese,” Peters says. “So it’s a great opportunity to present a story that is authentically Japanese, but relatable to a much broader audience.”
The production team on “Hibana” is also promising. Although the episodes have been split up between five directors, Ryuichi Hiroki — known for “Tokyo Trash Baby” (2000), “Vibrator” (2003) and “Yawarakai Seikatsu” (2005) — is at the helm of the creative alliance.
“Basically, you can consider this a 10-hour Japanese art movie,” Peters says. “The (leading) director, Ryuichi Hiroki, makes visually stylized, emotional, atmospheric works, and people around the world love his films. With this project we can give them a drama that has the same sensibilities, and connect them to the story.”
And he’s positive that Netflix will even be able to reach out to film fans that are new to Japanese content and culture. Peters believes that “Hibana” will make its way to screens around the world, with a little help from its ever-expanding user database.
“Because of the nature of our service, global availability and, more importantly, our recommendation system (at Netflix), we can have people who love French movies or art movies and have never seen a Japanese drama in their life,” he explains. “But we know the kinds of stories and treatments that they like, so we can recommend ‘Hibana’ to them, and find a much bigger audience.”
But can the project appeal to a mass audience?
“I think the thing you don’t want to do is shift away from something that is authentic to make it globally appealing,” Peters says. “It’s about being authentic and giving the creators all the tools to tell the story at a really high level of quality, both in terms of a production and technical standpoint.”
Sure enough, Peters is confident that Netflix provides creators with the necessary financial backing to make a quality production.
“We have around $6 billion to spend on licensing and production this year,” he says, referring to a recent announcement by the head office. “And our job is to find the places to make the best of that. In fact with ‘Hibana,’ when there were opportunities to, we would spend more. We didn’t want to be limited by budget.”
And with the production being led by entertainment conglomerate Yoshimoto Kogyo, which represents the country’s most popular comedians, there are no doubts with regard to the show’s cultural credibility.
“The things that make people laugh differ between countries,” says Katsuaki Yamaji, the director of content business and production at Yoshimoto’s creative arm. “So we put our effort in trying to make something that is not forced to adapt to an international audience, but to show that ‘Hibana’ is funny in Japan. Manzai is simply about talking into a mic — it’s something that anyone can try their hand at if they want to. It’s a job full of dreams and we want to express the appeal of manzai to the world through this series.”
When it comes to quality entertainment, however, many internationally minded film and TV show aficionados might be cautiously skeptical when it comes to Japanese drama and mass-media entertainment in general. A firmly established commercial tie-up system in addition to predictable casting from the same pool of big-name actors and, in many cases, tarento (showbiz personalities) and teen pop stars, are often seen as major detriments to the industry’s reputation.
“It’s important that the team has artistic freedom, and they’re not restrained by what the sponsor is going to think or other ‘administrative’ people around them,” Peters insists. “So they can realize the potential in their work, which I think makes something globally attractive. Our job is to be ‘creator-enabling'; the team’s job is to have a vision, and then execute it. Ours is to enable them and then get out of the way. And I think the creators are excited by it and enjoy the freedom.”
Indeed, Yamaji agrees that Netflix’ creative process has allowed for a solid adaptation of Matayoshi’s novel.
“We like the ‘creativity first’ attitude that Netflix has,” he says. “We were able to express the story while staying true to the original work.”
And when it comes to casting, the roster has a distinctly indie feel to it — though there is the arguably questionable addition of Sayaka Yamamoto, who belongs to mega-idol group AKB48’s sister unit NMB48. Peters admits that Japan’s is a talent-driven entertainment world.
“We don’t know yet if it’s because this is inherent to Japan, as in its viewer preference, or if it’s an artifact of the ‘structures’ in the industry,” Peters says. “But I think what we’ll be able to do is experiment and see how a great story told by unknown actors does, and discover exactly what it is that people get attracted to when they want to watch a piece of content.”
And again, when it comes to authenticity, the team paid special care to a certain linguistic criterion.
“We made sure that the cast could all speak in the Kansai dialect,” Yamaji says. “With Yoshimoto productions, there sometimes tends to be comedians cast for leading roles. However, with ‘Hibana’ we made sure that the main characters were played by professional actors, and added more reality by casting real comedians for supporting parts.”
The era of online television continues to grow overseas, but it’s still too early to tell if it will be as big in Japan. “Underwear” (“Atelier”), a series that was produced by Fuji Television for Netflix Japan, received some good reviews from critics abroad but who knows if a local production will be able to manage to create the kind of international buzz a series like “House of Cards” or “Orange is the New Black” has received.
“The global virtual audience that now exists spans all these borders,” Peters says as he spreads his arms out. “Just as there are fans of Hollywood in Japan, there are die-hard anime fans in France, Brazil, the U.S. and all over the world. There’s this tremendous potential in Japan; so many stories — the manga, the novels — and now we have the opportunity to unlock this potential in a way that hasn’t been able to be done before.”
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Mammals thrived long before the dinosaurs died: teeth study




The prevailing theory that mammals only flourished after an asteroid strike wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago is doubly wrong, according to a study published Wednesday.
Our warm-blooded predecessors thrived and spread over millions of years even as Tyrannosaurus and other flesh-ripping monsters lorded over the planet, researchers reported.
Moreover, these mammals took a big hit when the asteroid slammed into Earth, creating a hemispheric firestorm followed by a prolonged, bone-chilling drop in global temperatures.
“The traditional view is that mammals were suppressed during the ‘age of dinosaurs,’ ” and thus held in check, said coauthor Elis Newham, a doctoral student in evolutionary biology at the University of Chicago.
“However, our findings were that therian mammals — the ancestors of most modern mammals — were already diversifying considerably before the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event,” also known as the K-Pg boundary.
The researchers pulled together dozens of studies that challenged and chipped away at the old theory. But key to the new conclusion, they said, was teeth.
An analysis of hundreds of molars from mammals alive during the 20 million years before the K-Pg boundary revealed a huge variety of shapes — a telltale sign of varied diets and species diversity.
The scientists were surprised to find a sharp decline in the number of mammals after the asteroid crash.
“I didn’t expect to see any sort of drop,” said lead author David Grossnickle, also of the University of Chicago.
“It didn’t match the traditional view that after the extinction, mammals hit the ground running.”
Once again, teeth told a story, this time revealing which mammals made it across the K-Pg boundary, and which did not.
Those with molars indicating a specialized diet — only bugs or only plants, for example — were less likely to weather the disaster than those with all-purpose chompers ready to eat whatever was available.
The findings, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, may hold a lesson for today’s world, Grossnickle said.
Scientists say Earth is experiencing another mass extinction event, driven mainly by climate change — only the sixth in the last half billion years, he pointed out.
“The types of survivors that made it 66 million years ago, mostly generalists, might be indicative of what will survive in the next hundred years, or the next thousand,” Grossnickle said in a statement.
The Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction wiped out three-quarters of the plant and animal species on Earth, including all dinosaurs that could not fly.
With the exception of a few crocodiles and sea turtles, there is no evidence that tetrapods — four-limbed vertebrates — weighing more than 25 kilos (55 pounds) survived.
The discovery in the 1990s of the 180-km (110-mile) wide Chicxulub crater straddling the Yucatan Peninsula and the Gulf of Mexico, pinpointed the likely spot where the asteroid hit.
After the K-Pg event, new forms of mammals such as horses, whales, bats, and primates emerged and spread in a dinosaur-free world.
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Technology is the name of the game at International Tokyo Toy Show



Technology is the name of the game at International Tokyo Toy Show


As technology creeps into every aspect of life, the toy industry is putting up no defense. The invasion was on full display as the International Tokyo Toy Show kicked off Thursday.
The nation’s foremost toy trade show drew 160 exhibitors and about 35,000 toys at Tokyo Big Sight, an exhibition center in the city’s Koto Ward.
Toy makers are incorporating technology into products across the board.
For instance, Tomy Co. has a new virtual reality set on show that takes people on a virtual trip into space. The device goes on sale this winter.
A headgear device, it has a socket for a smartphone connection and displays video from an app on the phone that gives a 360-degree view of space.
“We’ve been wanting to create VR toys for quite some time,” said Eiichi Sugawa, an assistant section manager of a product planning team at Tomy. “As people are calling this year the beginning of the VR era, we wanted to release a product this year.”
VR is indeed a hot topic in the tech and video game industries.
Facebook-owned Oculus and Taiwan-based smartphone maker HTC have already released VR devices and Sony is set to launch its PlayStation VR later this year.
But the Oculus and HTC devices cost around ¥100,000 and require a user to set up a high-specification computer.
PlayStation VR will be priced around ¥45,000, but the user must have a PlayStation 4.
By contrast, Tomy said its VR gadget will retail for around ¥10,000, and needs only a smartphone to pair with.
The firm’s goal is “to provide the latest gadgets that people can use casually, at a reasonable price,” Sugawa said, adding that their product targets adults who want to use virtual travel to relax.
MegaHouse Corp. is showcasing a VR headset with smartphone socket that enables people to play video games.
So strong is the trend of technology in the world of toys that it can be traced in sales figures.
According to the Japan Toy Association, sales of high-tech toys soared by 31.8 percent in fiscal 2015.
In line with this, companies are even adding tech updates to traditional toys.
At first glance, MegaHouse’s Oekaki Artist (Drawing Artist) resembles a drawing board for small children.
But it has more than a few tricks up its sleeve and is essentially a tablet computer.
For instance, the board can add digital motion to images drawn on it, and users can make animations.
The board is also equipped with a camera and can render photographed objects as drawings that people can then embellish with lines and color.
Shuji Kobayashi, chief of new business creative projects at MegaHouse, said the company wanted to create something that lowers the barrier for children who are not skilled at drawing and who might otherwise get no pleasure from it.
Another fusion of technology and tradition is seen in Robotist, from Artec Co., which consists of Lego-like blocks that join to build robots with the help of a circuit board.
Once connected to a circuit, the robots can be programmed with a computer to move — an activity that facilitates programming education for children.
Yusuke Shimokata of Tokyo-based Artec, a maker of educational materials, said the firm came up with the toy so children can see their programming enacted by real objects.
Other tech-related toys on show include drones and a radio-controlled submarine with an under-water camera.
There were also many gadgets that work with smartphones.
The show runs through Sunday.
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