There are many recreational activities in Japan but the following three would have to be the most popular.
Karaoke
Karaoke (カラオケ) was invented in Japan and is the most popular form of entertainment for young Japanese. Most cities in Japan will have some kind of Karaoke Bar or Karaoke Box. The bigger cities will have karaoke boxes that occupy several floors of a building. You and your friends can rent a room to yourself for an hourly rate that often also includes all you can drink, with refills ordered through a phone on the wall. The major chains all have a good selection of English language songs along with the classic Japanese pop songs and enka.
Pachinko
Pachinko is a form of gambling that involves dropping little steel balls into a machine. Pachinko is extremely popular among middle aged Japanese men. Prizes are awarded depending on where the little steel balls land. Pachinko is worth giving a try just for the unusual experience alone, but be aware because most pachinko parlours are full of ear splitting noise and a toxic cloud of nicotine smoke.
Baseball
Baseball is hugely popular in Japan and is easily the most popular sport. Baseball was first introduced to Japan around 1870 by an American professor. Baseball is played in most if not all Junior High Schools and High Schools in Japan with the National High School baseball tournament the most watched sporting event on TV during the summer. Japan has its own professional baseball league known as Nippon Professional Baseball with several Japanese players such as Ichiro Suzuki and Hideki Matsui going on to become top players in Major League Baseball in the US.
This is my submission to the October 2011 J-Festa Entertainment in Japan
Karaoke can be a bit of fun for me. Baseball too. But I'll pass on pachinko. xD
ReplyDeleteThanks Lina, Karaoke is a blast with a big group of people and I love the atmosphere of a baseball game in Japan. Pachinko was fun but very smokey and noisy :)
ReplyDeleteI have a very lackluster want to try pachinko some day, lol. Baseball and karaoke are pretty cool though. Combining them would be boss.
ReplyDeleteThanks AngryGaijin, Pachinko is worth a try but I couldn't stand all the noise and smoke for more than 5 mins. Baseball and Karaoke combined. Now that would be a sport :)
ReplyDeletethanks for participating in the october j-festa! when i first got to japan many moons ago i dreaded the thought of singing in front of a group of people. now you can't pry the microphone from my hands! ^^
ReplyDeleteThanks Reesan, Not a problem always love participating in the J-Festa.
ReplyDeleteI was very much like you, but after a few beers that microphone is stuck in my hands and I can sing the night away :)