Dubai Telegraph - Hit TV satire reveals how Japanese society has changed

EUR -
AED 4.222531
AFN 73.008395
ALL 93.878671
AMD 423.356686
ANG 2.058552
AOA 1054.917519
ARS 1651.91745
AUD 1.639507
AWG 2.069586
AZN 1.953626
BAM 1.937566
BBD 2.316897
BDT 141.212338
BGN 1.944124
BHD 0.433583
BIF 3438.96207
BMD 1.14977
BND 1.473731
BOB 7.977923
BRL 5.85325
BSD 1.150374
BTN 108.722855
BWP 15.413946
BYN 3.184829
BYR 22535.492
BZD 2.313627
CAD 1.621348
CDF 2667.466539
CHF 0.919989
CLF 0.025876
CLP 1018.420127
CNY 7.769514
CNH 7.791698
COP 3949.45995
CRC 523.969148
CUC 1.14977
CUP 30.468905
CVE 109.630659
CZK 23.917573
DJF 204.336971
DKK 7.400081
DOP 67.376457
DZD 152.780257
EGP 57.382948
ERN 17.24655
ETB 182.094848
FJD 2.568242
FKP 0.855574
GBP 0.865055
GEL 3.041141
GGP 0.855574
GHS 12.989756
GIP 0.855574
GMD 83.932847
GNF 10092.105043
GTQ 8.768559
GYD 240.635481
HKD 9.009488
HNL 30.695636
HRK 7.53791
HTG 150.236191
HUF 345.677939
IDR 20406.807822
ILS 3.3968
IMP 0.855574
INR 108.434231
IQD 1506.1987
IRR 1580933.749934
ISK 142.95094
JEP 0.855574
JMD 181.93786
JOD 0.815209
JPY 184.265588
KES 148.918415
KGS 100.547112
KHR 4613.444151
KMF 488.652034
KPW 1034.793402
KRW 1738.297018
KWD 0.354242
KYD 0.958678
KZT 560.995826
LAK 25329.432874
LBP 102961.903562
LKR 385.386641
LRD 209.43041
LSL 18.620362
LTL 3.394971
LVL 0.695484
LYD 7.329806
MAD 10.629644
MDL 20.074091
MGA 4829.033941
MKD 61.037423
MMK 2413.881132
MNT 4113.101912
MOP 9.281456
MRU 46.082833
MUR 54.188937
MVR 17.775725
MWK 1996.001016
MXN 19.912755
MYR 4.67359
MZN 73.472723
NAD 18.628478
NGN 1562.675001
NIO 42.093194
NOK 11.063203
NPR 173.955466
NZD 1.993533
OMR 0.442084
PAB 1.150374
PEN 3.923602
PGK 5.044904
PHP 69.415075
PKR 319.978906
PLN 4.193981
PYG 7019.938324
QAR 4.18574
RON 5.182055
RSD 116.208466
RUB 83.900495
RWF 1710.85776
SAR 4.313815
SBD 9.268784
SCR 16.229145
SDG 690.436107
SEK 10.942815
SGD 1.474039
SHP 0.858419
SLE 28.457143
SLL 24110.106228
SOS 657.102209
SRD 42.923244
STD 23797.917624
STN 24.605078
SVC 10.065367
SYP 127.08649
SZL 18.622687
THB 37.407193
TJS 10.663847
TMT 4.035693
TND 3.347843
TOP 2.768371
TRY 53.247545
TTD 7.814461
TWD 36.285019
TZS 3018.149665
UAH 51.519916
UGX 4255.94906
USD 1.14977
UYU 46.443345
UZS 13802.988686
VES 685.304768
VND 30268.84502
VUV 137.113321
WST 3.150041
XAF 649.841615
XAG 0.016919
XAU 0.00027
XCD 3.107311
XCG 2.073271
XDR 0.80909
XOF 649.620256
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.363895
ZAR 18.85421
ZMK 10349.317503
ZMW 20.332658
ZWL 370.225471
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    62.87

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    22.32

    -0.2%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    70.81

    -1.06%

  • NGG

    -1.6000

    80.68

    -1.98%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    52.15

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    -1.8900

    59.49

    -3.18%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    177.89

    -0.46%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.28

    -2.32%

  • RELX

    -0.7900

    32.01

    -2.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    18.55

    -0.43%

  • RIO

    -3.0700

    102.67

    -2.99%

  • JRI

    -0.1900

    12.62

    -1.51%

  • BP

    -1.0100

    40.14

    -2.52%

  • VOD

    -0.3600

    14.53

    -2.48%

Hit TV satire reveals how Japanese society has changed
Hit TV satire reveals how Japanese society has changed / Photo: Toshifumi KITAMURA - AFP

Hit TV satire reveals how Japanese society has changed

A time-travelling TV comedy with a bawdy middle-aged hero has become a big hit in Japan, juxtaposing the country's brash 1980s boom years with its more politically correct present day.

Text size:

In the series, titled "Extremely Inappropriate", the past isn't rose-tinted: there's smoking on the bus, boobs on television and corporal punishment galore.

But modern Japan doesn't get a free pass either.

When schoolteacher and father Ichiro Ogawa is catapulted from 1986 to 2024, he scandalises millennials and Gen Z-ers with his disregard for their views on gender, family and labour rights.

Implicit in his candid words is a question: is society today, with its good intentions around issues like diversity and work-life balance, really all it's cracked up to be?

The show's satire of how Japan has changed over the decades has struck a chord with viewers young and old.

Last month, it became the first programme made by major broadcaster TBS to top Netflix's most-watched list in Japan for three weeks running.

Producer Aki Isoyama, who is 56, initially thought it would be "very challenging" to poke fun at today's progressive values without triggering a backlash from the public.

The show isn't meant as a verdict on the superiority of one era over the other, she told AFP.

But one inspiration for her and screenwriter Kankuro Kudo, 53, was the idea that "life has become more difficult in some aspects today".

"Our society has certainly gotten better, but in a way more restrictive, too, with everything dictated by compliance and protocols," Isoyama said.

Today, when something is pronounced unacceptable, "we often unquestioningly accept that explanation and refrain from saying or doing it," she added.

"The show will hopefully make viewers stop and ask themselves: 'Why was it banned in the first place?'"

- Harassment and sexism -

One 25-year-old fan, Mao Yamada, said the show is a reminder that "our society has become more accepting of diversity, including LGBTQ rights".

"It's good we're now more mindful of things like sexual harassment," she told AFP, adding that she understands why some might feel "too many things are perhaps restricted and kept unsaid".

Workplace pep talks to Gen-Z hires are denounced as harassment in "Extremely Inappropriate", and an exasperated TV producer tries to censor everything said on air.

Meanwhile, freewheeling Ogawa -- who in his own bygone world yells "grow a pair!" at male students and teases women about menopause -- is lambasted by today's generation, including a feminist sociologist.

He is enlightened on the concepts of gender neutrality and sexual consent. Marriage, he learns, is no longer the definition of happiness.

Viewer Kyo Maeda, 68, called the show's 1980s scenes an accurate portrayal of "what our everyday life used to be like".

"Our life was full of what could easily be seen as harassment and sexism by today's morals," he told AFP.

In 1986, Japan was basking in the glow of its post-war evolution into an economic superpower, with many workers fixated on success, no matter the hours required.

On "Extremely Inappropriate", young recruits -- a generation shaped by Japan's "lost decades" of stagnation from the early 1990s -- matter-of-factly clock off on time.

In the 80s, "I loved going to work, you know," Maeda reminisced, chuckling. "The economy was still picking up and we were all-out at work."

"I feel like there was more hope and excitement about the future in the 80s than there is now," he said.

- Bold themes -

"Extremely Inappropriate", whose final episode airs Friday, has received its share of criticism in the real world.

Some say concepts like feminism or discrimination based on appearance are oversimplified, and that political correctness is treated as little more than a shackle on free speech.

Interspersed throughout the show are musical performances and jokey disclaimers excusing Ogawa's gaffes and insults.

But beneath the levity is a serious message, said Takahiko Kageyama, a media studies professor at Doshisha Women's College of Liberal Arts.

"The creators obviously wanted us to reflect on the status quo of our society," he told AFP.

"But if this intent had come off too straightforward or preachy, it would've just fallen flat."

The show's themes are "bold" given the sensitive landscape of Japan's entertainment industry today, he said.

Boy-band empire Johnny's and Associates faced an existential crisis last year over a sexual abuse scandal involving its late founder.

Allegations of workplace bullying have also disgraced the prestigious theatre troupe Takarazuka Revue.

Producer Isoyama said that making the show in parallel with these events had sometimes felt uncanny.

"With Johnny's and Takarazuka, it was like facts far stranger than fiction were unfolding around us," she said.

But "this made us feel that the timing of the release would be fitting, considering how the industry is changing, the way it should".

H.Nadeem--DT