15 episodes

A weekly look at the lesser-seen side of the trains, history and culture of the world's most interesting city

Tokyo Confidential Allan

    • History
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A weekly look at the lesser-seen side of the trains, history and culture of the world's most interesting city

    Kokura: The Japanese town that twice escaped atomic destruction

    Kokura: The Japanese town that twice escaped atomic destruction

    In the closing days of 1945, the Japanese town of Kokura escaped atomic destruction not once, but twice, due to fortunate turns in weather. 
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    • 8 min
    July 30, 1978: The day Okinawa switched to driving on the left-hand side of the road

    July 30, 1978: The day Okinawa switched to driving on the left-hand side of the road

    Among other Americanisms adopted by Okinawa during the post-War administration by US forces—such as an abiding love of A&W restaurants and SPAM—was the requirement to drive on the right, in contrast to the rest of Japan.

    With the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic entering into force in 1977, and earlier 1949 Geneva Convention on Road Traffic, both requiring member states to have a uniform traffic direction throughout the country, post-occupation Japan was obliged to bring Okinawa in line with the rest of the country and international practice. Owing to assorted bureaucratic wrinkles, however, it was not until 1978 that Okinawa finally made the switch to left-hand drive.

    Today, that switch is commemorated by the "730 Monument" in Ishigaki-jima, in the far south of Japan.
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    • 4 min
    Shimi - Okinawa's lively spring festival of the dead

    Shimi - Okinawa's lively spring festival of the dead

    THIS PAST APRIL, FAMILIES ACROSS Okinawa gathered as they do each spring at island cemeteries for a lively graveside party. Family members sat under canopies and on blue tarps, laid out neatly in small courtyards in front of family tombs. Children dashed around the crypts, while the adults laughed and ate elaborate meals prepared for the occasion. Even in famously festive Okinawa, the cheerful sight was striking in a space usually thought of as solemn.
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    • 9 min
    Japan's "Queen Day" celebration

    Japan's "Queen Day" celebration

    THERE ARE FEW FOREIGN BANDS that whip Japan’s famously stoic audiences into a frenzy the way that English rockers Queen traditionally have. 

    Every April 17 is Queen Day there, with a slate of events to celebrate the day that the band first arrived in the country, back in 1975. 

    While the global pandemic has changed the celebration of Queen Day, it hasn’t blunted the intensity of Japanese fans’ love of the band.
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    • 7 min
    The beautiful, ornate manhole covers of Japan

    The beautiful, ornate manhole covers of Japan

    In Japan, even something as mundane as manhole covers can be turned into beautiful works of urban art. 

    Join us as we discuss the history and philosophy of ornate, enameled manhole covers found in 95% of Japanese municipalities.
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    • 7 min
    How one Canadian's mistake almost botched the Japanese instrument of surrender at the end of WWII

    How one Canadian's mistake almost botched the Japanese instrument of surrender at the end of WWII

    September 2nd – known to history as VJ Day – marks the signing on-board the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay of Japan's formal surrender. Under the watchful eye of the 31-star American flag that had accompanied Matthew Perry and his Black Ships into that same bay in 1853, the ceremony was brief and solemn as Allied and Japanese representatives signed the two copies of the instrument of surrender.
    Amidst the solemnity of the occasion, however, came an unusual historical footnote courtesy of the Canadian representative, Colonel Lawrence Moore Cosgrave. When signing the Japanese copy, Col. Cosgrave – perhaps owing to blindness in one eye – placed his scrawl below the line reserved for the Canadian signature and instead signed on the line of the French representative. 
    Each subsequent delegate eventually signed on the next available – if incorrect – line; the final delegate from New Zealand simply signing his name in a blank space underneath the others, his signature line having been commandeered by the Dutch.

    When the Japanese delegation protested – could they accept a botched surrender document? – Douglas MacArthur's famously brusque chief of staff General Richard Sutherland scratched out the now-incorrect list of Allied delegates and handwrote the correct titles under each signature, adding his initials to each correction to forestall further protest. The Japanese were then dismissed from the USS Missouri with a short "Now it's all fine" from Gen. Sutherland.
    It was a quirky end to an otherwise dark chapter of human history. Canada's contribution to the historical blooper reel can be seen by the public at Japan's Edo-Tokyo Museum, where the surrender document remains on display. The Allied copy of the document, it should be noted, was signed without incident.
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    • 3 min

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