I will let the American people, who don't know about the Japanese people, know the true heart of the Japanese people.
March 12, 2025
The level of the Japanese mass media, especially the TV stations, is far too low.
It is not an exaggeration to say that the music is unwatchable.
September 28, 2020
On Saturday morning, September 26, I had a dream in which I was starring in a film by Akira Kurosawa.
It was a little earlier than planned, but the dream was so wonderful that I decided to stay in it.
A few days before that, I had something I felt I had to write for the American people.
I decided to write it as a rough draft, and I wrote, "One of the best in the world in the United States is music.
As usual, I listened to YouTube while writing, and recently, I made the best discovery.
This dream brought me here.
Reina del Cid is a 32-year-old woman who graduated from the English Literature Department at the University of Minnesota.
Her name comes from her real name, Reina, which means "Queen" in Spanish, and the name of her favorite guitar, del Cid, which means "Queen of the Guitars"
Yoshiko Sakurai is a treasure of Japan, and Reina del Cid is a treasure of the United States.
Everything is excellent, but the song "Bernadette" I sent out late at night is remarkable.
My close friends must have heard me say the following several times.
"My life was the opposite of smooth sailing, but I don't regret my life. The only thing is, I wish I had been born into a family of pianists. If that had been the case, I would have become Japan's Bob Dylan or John Lennon, and I would have raised the level of Japanese music to one of the highest in the world."
All real singers are born singers.
I was one of them.
So for 26 years, except for Wednesdays and Sundays, I spent almost every day in Kita Shinchi, Osaka, my second home, spending an unbelievable amount of money, half of it on food and the other half on singing with a pianist.
I mainly went to the same places.
In some places, I sang songs like "Strangers in the Night" with a band playing in the background.
I also sang various songs at a place run by a professional guitarist.
The bar's owner, where a professional jazz singer from Osaka College of Music was singing, was also a professional pianist.
On the street in Kitashinchi, I bumped into an old classmate who had been working as a lawyer at a famous law firm in New York.
We had a great night catching up with old friends.
He said, "There's nothing like this atmosphere in New York," and it was really great.
I was always made to sing last at this bar.
♪Unchanged Melody♪, ♪Smoke gets in your eyes♪, etc. etc.
Incidentally, the first song I sang at my regular bar, accompanied by the pianist, was the Beatles' ♪While My Guitar Gently Weeps.♪
Not many people sing a song like that as a greeting.
When I was a golf fanatic, I went to Hawaii countless times.
When I was visiting Maui and the Kapalua Bay Course as my favorite course, a good friend working for a world-class company in Japan said that the Kapalua Bay Hotel was the best.
"What, was there a resort hotel that was good there?
I immediately visited there on my next day off.
Since then, I have visited there dozens of times.
This hotel had a pleasant arcade at the entrance.
The shop at the entrance was replaced by a sushi bar where you could sing your heart out to a live band on the weekend.
My singing spirit was immediately stimulated.
After all, I sang every night in Kitashinchi, Osaka, with a piano accompaniment.
When a young American woman sang a song by the then-huge hit artist Sheryl Crow, I made up my mind.
I wanted to let the American audience, who knew nothing about the Japanese, know what the Japanese people were really like.
She sang as the best diplomat of the people.
I ended up singing three songs in a row.
I chose three songs: "Let It Be Me," sung by Elvis Presley and Bob Dylan (I sang it imagining Bob Dylan), "Don't Let Me Down" by John Lennon, and "Purple Rain" by Prince.
On September 26, after discovering Reina del Cid, I sang "Let it be me" in their key from the bottom of my heart.
It had been a long time since I last sang in harmony with them, but I harmonized beautifully with them.
I received a round of applause from the audience.
The next day, when I visited for dinner, the owner, a pianist, praised me, saying, "You have a big voice." It was a delightful compliment.
Enough of that digression
It is no exaggeration to say that Reina del Cid is a national treasure of the United States, but I had never heard of her until September 26.
The level of the Japanese mass media, especially the TV stations, is far too low.
It is not an exaggeration to say that the level of music is also far too low.
The essence of Johnny's Music Agency, a production company started by a homosexual pedophile, dominates the Japanese TV stations.
South Korea, which continues to practice anti-Japanese education in the name of Nazism, knows that the period of Japanese rule was the best time in Korean history and that it was thanks to Japan that they were able to become a modern nation in a short space of time.
Deep down, it is a country that has a stronger yearning for Japan than any other country.
The majority of what they call Korean dramas are plagiarized Japanese dramas.
All of their historical dramas are lies and imitate Japanese dramas.
They started copying Johnny's Entertainment under the guise of "Korean dramas."
In the case of Korea, almost all of them are plastic surgery celebrities.
As a representative of Americans at the time who could not tell the difference between Japan, China, and Korea, MacArthur, who had landed at Atsugi Airport as the ruler of defeated Japan, said, "The Japanese have a mental age of 12 (that's why they started the war).
He put Japan's mass media under thorough control.
He issued the WGIP, with the Asahi Shimbun and NHK at the forefront, and in just a few days, he created and gave Japan a Constitution that continues to cause Japan pain and weaken it.
Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the post-war world, tells us that this Constitution was created in imitation of the story of the Roman Empire destroying Carthage.
It is an undeniable fact that China and the Korean Peninsula, countries of abysmal evil and plausible lies, have made great use of this in their anti-Japanese propaganda.
The best tool they have for trivializing Japan and dividing it up is the Japanese Constitution given to us by the United States.
Why had I never heard of Reina del Cid, a treasure of the United States, until September 26?
The mass media in Japan, especially music programs on TV, continue to faithfully follow the teachings of MacArthur to this day to keep the Japanese at a genuine mental age of 12.
The symbol of this is the domination of Japanese TV stations by Johnny's Entertainment.
It is no mere coincidence that the founder of this company, who recently passed away, was also a spy for the US at the time.
Anyway, the Japanese music scene is terrible, the height of spiritual poverty, a group of children who are trying to keep the Japanese people at the mental age of 12.
A group from South Korea, which is trying to export its music by calling it "Korean Wave" and using national funds, has taken the number one spot in the US hit charts, and South Korea reported it as if it were a major news story.
The Japanese media reported it without any suspicion.
There is no need to verify that South Korea, including Koreans living in the US, would have carried out its usual extensive maneuvering to become number one in the US charts.
It is outrageous to call that kind of thing music.
It is also a symbol of left-wing childishness.
This article continues.
March 12, 2025
The level of the Japanese mass media, especially the TV stations, is far too low.
It is not an exaggeration to say that the music is unwatchable.
September 28, 2020
On Saturday morning, September 26, I had a dream in which I was starring in a film by Akira Kurosawa.
It was a little earlier than planned, but the dream was so wonderful that I decided to stay in it.
A few days before that, I had something I felt I had to write for the American people.
I decided to write it as a rough draft, and I wrote, "One of the best in the world in the United States is music.
As usual, I listened to YouTube while writing, and recently, I made the best discovery.
This dream brought me here.
Reina del Cid is a 32-year-old woman who graduated from the English Literature Department at the University of Minnesota.
Her name comes from her real name, Reina, which means "Queen" in Spanish, and the name of her favorite guitar, del Cid, which means "Queen of the Guitars"
Yoshiko Sakurai is a treasure of Japan, and Reina del Cid is a treasure of the United States.
Everything is excellent, but the song "Bernadette" I sent out late at night is remarkable.
My close friends must have heard me say the following several times.
"My life was the opposite of smooth sailing, but I don't regret my life. The only thing is, I wish I had been born into a family of pianists. If that had been the case, I would have become Japan's Bob Dylan or John Lennon, and I would have raised the level of Japanese music to one of the highest in the world."
All real singers are born singers.
I was one of them.
So for 26 years, except for Wednesdays and Sundays, I spent almost every day in Kita Shinchi, Osaka, my second home, spending an unbelievable amount of money, half of it on food and the other half on singing with a pianist.
I mainly went to the same places.
In some places, I sang songs like "Strangers in the Night" with a band playing in the background.
I also sang various songs at a place run by a professional guitarist.
The bar's owner, where a professional jazz singer from Osaka College of Music was singing, was also a professional pianist.
On the street in Kitashinchi, I bumped into an old classmate who had been working as a lawyer at a famous law firm in New York.
We had a great night catching up with old friends.
He said, "There's nothing like this atmosphere in New York," and it was really great.
I was always made to sing last at this bar.
♪Unchanged Melody♪, ♪Smoke gets in your eyes♪, etc. etc.
Incidentally, the first song I sang at my regular bar, accompanied by the pianist, was the Beatles' ♪While My Guitar Gently Weeps.♪
Not many people sing a song like that as a greeting.
When I was a golf fanatic, I went to Hawaii countless times.
When I was visiting Maui and the Kapalua Bay Course as my favorite course, a good friend working for a world-class company in Japan said that the Kapalua Bay Hotel was the best.
"What, was there a resort hotel that was good there?
I immediately visited there on my next day off.
Since then, I have visited there dozens of times.
This hotel had a pleasant arcade at the entrance.
The shop at the entrance was replaced by a sushi bar where you could sing your heart out to a live band on the weekend.
My singing spirit was immediately stimulated.
After all, I sang every night in Kitashinchi, Osaka, with a piano accompaniment.
When a young American woman sang a song by the then-huge hit artist Sheryl Crow, I made up my mind.
I wanted to let the American audience, who knew nothing about the Japanese, know what the Japanese people were really like.
She sang as the best diplomat of the people.
I ended up singing three songs in a row.
I chose three songs: "Let It Be Me," sung by Elvis Presley and Bob Dylan (I sang it imagining Bob Dylan), "Don't Let Me Down" by John Lennon, and "Purple Rain" by Prince.
On September 26, after discovering Reina del Cid, I sang "Let it be me" in their key from the bottom of my heart.
It had been a long time since I last sang in harmony with them, but I harmonized beautifully with them.
I received a round of applause from the audience.
The next day, when I visited for dinner, the owner, a pianist, praised me, saying, "You have a big voice." It was a delightful compliment.
Enough of that digression
It is no exaggeration to say that Reina del Cid is a national treasure of the United States, but I had never heard of her until September 26.
The level of the Japanese mass media, especially the TV stations, is far too low.
It is not an exaggeration to say that the level of music is also far too low.
The essence of Johnny's Music Agency, a production company started by a homosexual pedophile, dominates the Japanese TV stations.
South Korea, which continues to practice anti-Japanese education in the name of Nazism, knows that the period of Japanese rule was the best time in Korean history and that it was thanks to Japan that they were able to become a modern nation in a short space of time.
Deep down, it is a country that has a stronger yearning for Japan than any other country.
The majority of what they call Korean dramas are plagiarized Japanese dramas.
All of their historical dramas are lies and imitate Japanese dramas.
They started copying Johnny's Entertainment under the guise of "Korean dramas."
In the case of Korea, almost all of them are plastic surgery celebrities.
As a representative of Americans at the time who could not tell the difference between Japan, China, and Korea, MacArthur, who had landed at Atsugi Airport as the ruler of defeated Japan, said, "The Japanese have a mental age of 12 (that's why they started the war).
He put Japan's mass media under thorough control.
He issued the WGIP, with the Asahi Shimbun and NHK at the forefront, and in just a few days, he created and gave Japan a Constitution that continues to cause Japan pain and weaken it.
Masayuki Takayama, the one and only journalist in the post-war world, tells us that this Constitution was created in imitation of the story of the Roman Empire destroying Carthage.
It is an undeniable fact that China and the Korean Peninsula, countries of abysmal evil and plausible lies, have made great use of this in their anti-Japanese propaganda.
The best tool they have for trivializing Japan and dividing it up is the Japanese Constitution given to us by the United States.
Why had I never heard of Reina del Cid, a treasure of the United States, until September 26?
The mass media in Japan, especially music programs on TV, continue to faithfully follow the teachings of MacArthur to this day to keep the Japanese at a genuine mental age of 12.
The symbol of this is the domination of Japanese TV stations by Johnny's Entertainment.
It is no mere coincidence that the founder of this company, who recently passed away, was also a spy for the US at the time.
Anyway, the Japanese music scene is terrible, the height of spiritual poverty, a group of children who are trying to keep the Japanese people at the mental age of 12.
A group from South Korea, which is trying to export its music by calling it "Korean Wave" and using national funds, has taken the number one spot in the US hit charts, and South Korea reported it as if it were a major news story.
The Japanese media reported it without any suspicion.
There is no need to verify that South Korea, including Koreans living in the US, would have carried out its usual extensive maneuvering to become number one in the US charts.
It is outrageous to call that kind of thing music.
It is also a symbol of left-wing childishness.
This article continues.