Exploring Japan’s Hidden Kimono City in Niigata Prefecture
We explored the hidden & unknown kimono city in Tokamachi, Niigata Prefecture! There are three main areas in Japan that are famous for kimonos; Kyoto, Kanazawa and Tokamachi. If you guys are interested in learning more about the spots shown in this video or want more information about the area in general, please check the below links!
Follow Kay the Kimono model!
Top 5 Things To Do In Tokamachi: Japan’s Hidden Kimono City in Niigata Prefecture:
Watch as they make a kimono from scratch:
Beautiful nature forest:
Learn to wear a kimono:
Check out some beautiful terraced rice fields:
Learn about the history in Tokamachi:
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A Case Study of Postwar Japanese Art | Michio Hayashi
Art history professor Michio Hayashi examines the mechanism through which postwar Japanese art has been introduced and received by the international audience.
‘Historical Determinations and the Porosity of Cultural Boundaries — A Case Study of Postwar Japanese Art’ was delivered as part of the M+ Matters event ‘Theorising Art Histories Globally’. This symposium brought together three important thinkers/practitioners, building new intellectual frameworks for understanding today’s art world, which is undergoing continuous—if uneven—globalisation. M+ is shaped by the particular historical conditions of Hong Kong, with its unique postcolonial context and global nature. As contemporary Chinese art matures, evolving beyond an explosive market phenomenon to become a well-regarded area of studies and research, and as the contemporary Hong Kong art gains legitimacy, respect, and even urgency, this event considers the topic of globalisation in art in more critical ways.
Transcript:
Date: 18 October 2014
Venue: Rayson Huang Theatre, The University of Hong Kong
Link to paper and further information:
M+ is a new museum of visual culture in Hong Kong featuring 20th and 21st century art, design and architecture, and moving image. Building under construction.
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What To Do In Japan: Tokyo, Hakone, Mt. Fuji, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka, Kanazawa, Takayama, Nagano
Japan travel guide to Tokyo, Hakone, Mt. Fuji, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka, Kanazawa, Takayama, Nagano and Shirakawa-go.
All Japan Tours:
Use IME18 for $50 off any tour :)
Tour I went on:
If you are planning a trip to Japan, it can be really hard to choose where to go to so here are some of the main places you should visit if it is your first time here!
TOKYO
- Asakusa
・Sensoji Temple
・Nakamise Shopping Street
・Asakusa Tourist Information Center Free View
・Sumida Park
- Ueno
・Ueno Park (Zoo, museums and temples)
- Meiji Shrine
・Nearby there is Omotesando, Harajuku, Takeshita-dori, Yoyogi park
- Tokyo Imperial Palace
- Tokyo Tower
- Odaiba (Couldn't make it in the video, but I love this area personally!)
HAKONE & MT. FUJI
- Togendai to Owakundani Ropeway
- Owakudani Station (Top of volcano)
- Gotemba Peace Park
- Fujisan World Heritage Site
- Mt. Fuji First Station and Fifth Station (If weather is good)
- Fuji Five Lakes (Lake Kawaguchi)
MATSUMOTO (NAGANO)
- Matsumoto Castle
TAKAYAMA (GIFU)
- Old Town of Takayama
- Takayama Jinya
- Takayama Morning Market
SHIRAKAWA-GO (GIFU)
- Shiroyama Viewpoint
- Gassho-zukuri Minkaen open air museum
KANAZAWA (ISHIKAWA)
- Kenrokuen (Kenroku Gardens)
KYOTO
- Kiyomizu Temple
- Nishijin Textile Center
・Nishijin Kimono Show
- Heian Shrine/Heian Shrine Garden
- Golden Pavilion Kinkakuji
- Gion
・Miyako Odori - Cherry Blossom Dancing Performance Show
- Kamogawa River
NARA
- Todaiji Temple
- Deer Park
OSAKA
- Dotonbori
- Shinsaibashi
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Japanese Shaved Ice: A Must Go Tokyo Local Shop For Summer | 昔ながらのかき氷
Here's what a summer's day is like in Japan :) A lot of people in Japan eat shaved ice (snow cone) aka kakigori on a hot summer's day to cool themselves down.
Seeing people lining up for shaved ice or hearing the sound of the shaved ice machine just makes it feel like a typical Japanese summer :)
This local shop Ishibashi is located in Sangenchaya Station (2 stops from Shibuya).
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I found how to go to Mt. Moiwa! At night
Kutani Kosen kiln Kanazawa Japan
Visit of the Kosen kiln in Kanazawa - June 2012
Alphawood Gallery ASL Tour: Incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII Sebastian Izquierdo
Tour led by excellent tour guides Yehonatan & Cicely at AlphawoodGallery.org in Chicago.
Then They Came for Me: Incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII and the Demise of Civil Liberties
What does an American look like? Who is welcome in this country? What is every American’s duty in the face of racist government action?
Alphawood Gallery has partnered with the Japanese American Service Committee (JASC) to produce the Gallery’s first original exhibition, Then They Came for Me: Incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII and the Demise of Civil Liberties. This exhibition examines a dark episode in U.S. history when, in the name of national security, the government incarcerated 120,000 citizens and legal residents during World War II without due process or other constitutional protections to which they were entitled. Executive Order 9066, signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, set in motion the forced removal and imprisonment of all people of Japanese ancestry living on or near the West Coast. During this 75thanniversary year of the executive order, we look back at this shameful past to learn lessons for our present and future in the face of new challenges encouraged by fearmongering and racism at the highest levels of government.
Then They Came for Me presents this historical event from multiple perspectives. Drawing upon the powerful images culled from the book Un-American: The Incarceration of Japanese Americans During World War II by Chicago-based photo historians Richard Cahan and Michael Williams, the exhibition features works by renowned American photographers Dorothea Lange, Ansel Adams and others documenting the eviction of Japanese Americans from their homes and their subsequent lives in incarceration camps. These photographers were hired by the U.S. Government’s War Relocation Authority (WRA) to record the “evacuation” and “internment” process. In addition to the WRA photographers, the exhibition presents views of the incarceration by Japanese American artists Toyo Miyatake and Miné Okubo. A significant group of images by Miyatake, a professional photographer who was incarcerated at the Manzanar Relocation Center, reveal details of the camps prohibited in WRA photography such as barbed wire and guard towers, and are shown alongside his illuminating images of the imprisoned residents’ daily lives. And pages from Miné Okubo’s remarkable illustrated memoir Citizen 13660 document her own incarceration experience with poignant drawings and forthright text.
The JASC and a number of collectors from the Chicago area have generously lent art, objects, documents and other historical materials that provide glimpses into the personal experiences of those who were incarcerated. Highlights include ID cards and tags, anti-Japanese propaganda, suitcases, diaries, handmade furniture, wood carvings and other works of art, high school yearbooks and newsletters produced by camp inmates, military accoutrements, indefinite leave clearances, materials related to resettlement in Chicago and eventual redress and reparation. Specially compiled video testimonies by former inmates, their family members and community leaders are installed throughout the exhibition. And the new documentary film And Then They Came for Us by Abby Ginzberg and Ken Schneider, screened daily, makes explicit connections between the Japanese American incarceration story and current concerns with regard to the treatment of Muslims and Muslim Americans.
21 SURREAL Strange Places To See In Japan
FROM Mysterious Deep Sea Locations; to Giant Statues and Temples; These are 21 SURREAL Strange Places To See in Japan !
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8. Mount Koya
The first to settle on Mount Koya was a monk in the year 819. Over time, it became the headquarters for the Koyasan Shingon sect of Japanese Buddhism. On the mountain, you’ll find a plethora of notable locations, including the Okunoin mausoleum, as seen here, and the Kongobu-ji--a major Koyason Shingon temple. Mount Koya has a long and deeply spiritual history as well as a lot of picturesque views. Many people love coming here during the winter when the whole settlement gets covered in snow.
7. Ueno Park
In the Ueno district of Tokyo, we find Ueno Park, an enormously popular public park in the country’s capital city where some of the best sights for cherry blossom trees can be marveled at. The park takes in over 10 million visitors every year. Established back in 1873, the park now features nearly 9,000 trees, such as at least 3 types of cherry trees. Major museums located at the park also help bring in the many visitors it does, like the Tokyo National Museum and the National Museum of Nature and Science. Not only does it attract humans, but a myriad of birds take to Ueno Park for their wintering ground.
6. Itsukushima Shrine
A most magical sight awaits anyone who comes across the Shinto Shrine’s floating gates along the the island of Itsukushima’s coast. The actual Itsukushima Shrine has been destroyed many times over the years, with a history that started in the 6th century. The shrine of the modern day was first designed and built in 1168. The gate on the bay is a favorite landmark, which only looks like it gloats on the water during high tide. You’ll have to wait until low tide to be able to walk to it without getting wet.
5. The Yonaguni Monument
The sear near the coast of Yonaguni already rose to prominence as a favorite diving spot well before the discovery of the Yonaguni Monument. The mysterious geometrical landmark was discovered by the director of the area’s tourism association as he was trying to find a nice place to just watch hammerhead sharks swim by. The discovery was made in 1987 and since then, the pyramid-like structure has baffled historians as to how it got there. A collection of stone structures have been found here, with no one knowing where they came from.
4. Aoiike
In one season, the Blue Pond or Aoiike in Hokkaido might look more blue in the next season. And it also depends on the wind. Sometimes, the pond may look like a flat mirror against the sky--while at other times, it may flow this iridescent blue. This man-made pond is located in Biei and was created so that the nearby town could be protected from harmful volcanic mudflow. It gets so blue sometimes that it almost doesn’t even look real. To explain why it gets so vibrant, speculation says that the blue comes from the colloidal aluminum hydroxide. Once, the pond even turned brown from a drop in the water, mixing it with more sand and mud.
3. The Hakkoda Mountains
More volcanoes. Just south of the city of Aomori sit the volcanic mountain range known as the Hakkoda Mountains that dates back to the Pleistocene era. The highest peak, Mount Odake, takes about four or so hours to climb. But one of the best things to see here can be experienced during the winters when the trees get submerged in snow, making strange standing shapes along the mountainside that look like figures rising from the mountains, bending and life-like. You can also find high altitude wetlands such as Tamo, Kenashi, and Suiren Lake.
2. Fushimi Inari Shrine
Within this head shrine dedicated to the god Inari is also associated with 32,000 other sub shrines scattered across the country. The Fushimi Inari Taisha, located in the Fushimi Ward in Kyoto, was built at the base of thea mountain. Its earliest structures date back to the 8th century, ThIn the mythology, foxes, or kitsune, are considered messengers, and a handful of fox sculptures can be seen all over Fushimi Inari. During the Japanese new year, millions of people arrive to worship at this shrine.
1.Hitachi Seaside Park
While most people come here for the baby blue eyes flower field that bloom on Miharashi Hill throughout the year, one of the oddest yet beautiful things you can also see include a field of Bassia scoparia that turns a bright magenta during the autumn season and only get redder as the climate gets colder. The Hitachi Seaside Park, in Hitachinaka, requires you to enter through the Hitachinaka Nature Forest before you get to the flowered hills.
VLOG: Edo Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum
Period Rooms on a whole other level! I had so much fun at this architectural museum in Tokyo and learned a lot. Although this museum states the restored buildings are from the Edo period (1603-1868), a lot of the buildings were constructed later than 1868. If you're in Tokyo and want to get away from the hustle and bustle of the city but still get your learning on, I'd advise you to check this place out!
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YOSHITERU OTANI SENSEI 大谷 芳照 先生 1929 – 2004
written by Stanley Chin (Interview and collaboration with Phil Ortiz.)
Yoshiteru Otani Sensei was born on November 17, 1929, in Osaka, Japan, and passed away on June 29, 2004 at 75 years old.
He came from a Samurai family lineage. At age 6, his father began training him in the martial arts. Kumao Ohno Sensei trained him from age 15, and at 20 he studied Iaido with Tadatsugu Shimizu Sensei, 9th dan Iaido, 9th dan Kendo and 9th dan Ju Jitsu. Other training was acquired with Takeshi Mitsuzuka Sensei. He became the All-Japan Sumo Wrestling champion in his age group at 31. By the age of 45 Otani Sensei had an 8th dan in Iaido, 7th dan in Kendo, and 6th dan in Judo.
Otani Sensei received a Bachelor’s degree in Law from Kwansei University in Japan, and because of his love of writing, he had ambitions of someday becoming a journalist. Otani Sensei was a close friend of Dr. Masaaki Hatsumi Soke and the author Yukio Mishima. He knew Ueshiba Morihei Sensei and Donn Draeger. In Japan, he served as the Secretary to the Speaker of the House. He later resigned this post and founded one of Japan’s largest camera equipment firms. Otani Sensei studied Zen philosophy and Samurai history and taught this along with Iaido. He gave many lectures to massive audiences. He was also an advocate of bringing quality higher education to Japan.
Otani Sensei came to America in 1954 to help promote sales for his company. While here, he taught Judo at the McBurney YMCA in New York City. He also served as Director of the AAU Judo Championship Committee.
In 1972 he founded The Japan Cultural Center, with 3 floors devoted to different martial arts. It became the largest martial arts school in America. Otani Sensei taught Iaido, Kendo, and Jodo. He founded his own dojo, New York Iaikai, in the 1970’s. Otani Sensei created “kumadachi” katas (partner forms using bokkens) based on Ono-ha Itto Ryu and other schools. These forms are practiced exclusively at New York Budokai.
From 1974 to 1986, Otani Sensei was featured in and wrote articles for many martial arts publications, including Black Belt magazine. He was also featured in a 1993 book; “The Original Martial Arts Encyclopedia: Tradition, History, Pioneers” by John Corcoran. In the 1970’s Otani Sensei was featured on the television talk show, “The Mike Douglas Show”. One of his demonstrations was in cutting a watermelon in half with a one-handed “Do-Giri” (horizontal) cut. Otani Sensei was a true pioneer and leader. He was the first to teach Iaido and Kendo on the East Coast.
He taught Zen philosophy, Samurai spirit, and history to his students and the world. He believed that the practice of Iaido would increase your concentration due to the intense focus necessary to draw, cut, and return, a live blade to the scabbard with lightning speed. He also believed this would develop your character and spirit so you would have the courage to pursue your ambitions. But most importantly, he believed it is about helping others find their path. Otani Sensei inspired his students to the end to strive to be their very best, to do their best Iaido, and to always seek excellence, and his spirit endures.
Gotemba Premium Outlets,Shizuoka | Japan Travel Guide
Gotemba Premium Outlets ( 御殿場プレミアム・アウトレット )
Description
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The mall is separated into a West Zone and an East Zone. The interior has the image of the streets with the history of North America where you can enjoy shopping for the whole day.
Nearby Spots:
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Sengokubara
Hakone Ropeway
Pola Museum of Art
Hakone Glass Museum
Owakudani
Hakone Botanical Garden of Wetlands
Hakone Museum of Art
Hakone Gora Park
The Hakone Open-Air Museum
Hakone-en Garden
Mount Fuji City Travel Guide:
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Mount Fuji
Mount Fuji Itineraries:
Mount Fuji Tours & Activities
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Islands and Villages | Toyo Ito in Omishima
In Japan, architects are looking beyond the city in order to reinvent their practice. In this documentary series, Kayoko Ota visits some of the rural sites where this experimentation is taking place, interviewing practitioners to understand how this posturban turn might help articulate a new architecture for today.
Since building a small museum on the island of Omishima in 2011, Toyo Ito has been traveling regularly to the remote community to work on various renovation projects that address the area’s aging and shrinking population. In this video, the architect explains his fascination with the island as a space for work sheltered from the market pressures of the city, the possibilities of the non-urban as a testing ground for new ways of life, and his shift towards participatory practices as a result of his experiences on the island.
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Introduction to the Exhibition—The Life of Animals in Japanese Art
Robert T. Singer, curator and head, department of Japanese art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Artworks representing animals—real or imaginary, religious or secular—span the full breadth and splendor of Japanese artistic production. As the first exhibition devoted to the subject, The Life of Animals in Japanese Art covers 17 centuries (from the sixth century to the present day) and a wide variety of media—sculpture, painting, lacquerwork, ceramics, metalwork, textile, and the woodblock print. A selection of some 315 works, drawn from Japanese and American public and private collections, includes seven that are designated as Important Cultural Property by the Japanese government. The artists represented range from Sesson Shūkei, Itō Jakuchū, Soga Shōhaku, Katsushika Hokusai, Utagawa Kuniyoshi, to Okamoto Tarō, Kusama Yayoi, Issey Miyake, Nara Yoshitomo, and Murakami Takashi. To celebrate the opening on June 2, 2019, Robert T. Singer introduces the exhibition curated with Masatomo Kawai, director, Chiba City Museum of Art, in consultation with a team of esteemed of Japanese art historians. The Life of Animals in Japanese Art is on view through August 18, 2019.
Road To King of Iron Fist - Tekken 7 Documentary
In 2016, Bandai Namco put together a North American tour for Tekken 7 before its console release, bringing arcade boards to tournaments around the country to give players a chance to play the game before release and also win a spot in the King of Iron Fist finals in Tokyo, Japan. Now for the first time, watch the stories of those tournaments on Youtube!
Quick ad note: Some of you might be seeing ads on this video due to some of the original music. Please note that any monetization from these ads are going straight to the artists in question and not to Hold Back to Block. Thanks for your understanding!
Special Thanks to Bandai Namco US!
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Japan's Cat Island - Incredible!
This is the first video of a special video series featuring Japan's Cat Island! To experience the amazing history and culture of Japan's Cat Island, watch the acclaimed Japanese documentary Cat Heaven Island (English Subtitled):
Watch the Cat Island Video Series. New episodes will be added so be sure to subscribe!
Like Tashirojima, Aoshima island (青島), Ehime, has become one of the popular destinations for the cat lovers. The island has 15 people (between 50-80 years old) and more than 100 cats. There is neither inn, restaurant nor vending machine.
During WWII, many people escaped to the island from the main land. The island population hit the highest of 655 people in 1960. There have not been enough job so many people left the island. On 1976 the island's only primary school shut down. In early 2000 the cat population started to grow while the human population hit then new low, 50. Today you only see 15 people( 4 fishermen and the rest retirees) on the island.
There are nos car or even a bike on the island, so there are real threats to the cats, where they live peacefully among the many abandoned houses.
Another cat island in Japan is Tashirojima Island (田代島) in Ishinomaki, Miyagi, with 86 inhabitants and more than 100 cats. On this island, the cat is enshrined. There is a cat shrine and also a cat photo competition!
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Kittens and bunnies, what's not to love?
Tajima: Where Kobe Beef is from ☆ LIVE #11
While hitchhiking, my ride (Ishii-san) brought to a farm where he knew the CEO. TAJIMA is home to all Kuro Wagyu and Mikata Farm is one of the places where some of Kobe beef is selected.
Here I got a chance to see the wagyu's living conditions and meet some of the babies, too. Amazing and totally unexpected experience in Hyogo prefecture.
Support this trip by buying the DVD on Kickstarter.
Peter Maravelis - Bastard Children of Dada, Part 1/3
Opening presentation by Peter Maravelis at the Bastard Children of Dada discussion in the San Francisco Main Library.
A discussion with Emily Hage, John Law, Winston Smith, Kal Spelletich, and V. Vale, moderated by Peter Maravelis (City Lights)
Dada’s influence upon the 20th century avant-garde has been immeasurable. Its political and aesthetic stance, as well as its confrontational approach to the art world and bourgeois sensibilities, has spread widely amongst artists, musicians, writers, poets, and performers. From the Beat Generation to Punk and beyond, Dada’s bastard children are with us to this day. Five voices that are firmly embedded in the theory, history, and practice of the avante garde will explore the artistic movements that followed Dada into the 21st century.
Bastard Children of Dada is presented in conjunction with Dada World Fair, City Lights Bookstore's centennial celebration of Dada.
Archive footage of Hiroshima bombing
The Boeing B29 Stratofortress bomber aircraft 'Enola Gay' dropped the first atomic weapon used in combat over the Japanese city of Hiroshima at 08:15 local time on 6 August 1945.
Between 80,000 and 250,000 people perished in the attack and its immediate aftermath.
Original footage filmed at the time shows a vast mushroom cloud rising up out of the city, while images captured in the days and weeks after show both the terrible human cost of the bombing, and the incredible scale of the devastation wrought on the city.
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Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture.
Japan: Where Gods Aren't Gods and Worshipers Aren't Religious (Shinto Explained)
Have you ever wondered about all the gates (torii) you see around Japan? They are entrances to the sacred ground of Shinto shrines (jinja). While some might see Japan's traditional practices of Shinto as a religion, and their various kami as gods, it's not quite as simple as that.
Special thanks to David Chart for explaining the ins and outs of Shinto. Find out more about Shinto on his blog at and support his writing on Patreon at
Also a big thanks to Yushima Tenjin and Shirahata-san for letting us film on their sacred grounds. As mentioned in the video, tourists snapshots at jinja are fine, but you should get permission to film within the sacred space if you'll be using for the commercial or YouTube purposes.
Lastly, thanks to my Patreon supporters who help me make videos like this. Become a patron yourself at
Additional Sources
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- Emperor Akihito, Daijosai By Website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, CC 表示 4.0,
- Emperor Akihito 20140424 By State Department photo by William Ng / Public domainEast Asia and Pacific Media Hub - President Obama and Emperor of Japan at the Welcome Ceremony in Japan | Flickr - Photo Sharing!, Public Domain,
- The First Lady guided through torii (Official White House Photo by Amanda Lucidon)
- Kyoto Gion Matsuri J09 060 By Corpse Reviver - Own work, CC BY 3.0,
- Kyoto Gion Matsuri J09 111 By Corpse Reviver - 投稿者自身による作品, CC 表示 3.0,
- Kyoto Gion Matsuri J09 136 By Corpse Reviver - 投稿者自身による作品, CC 表示 3.0,
- 國輝画「本朝英雄傳」より「牛頭天皇 稲田姫」、大判錦絵 By 歌川国輝 - パブリック・ドメイン,
- Drawing of Sugawara no Michizane By 菊池容斎 - Kikuchi Yosai, パブリック・ドメイン,
- 岩戸神楽ノ起顕(三代豊国)By 歌川国貞 - [1], パブリック・ドメイン,
- 玉鬘図 (『源氏物語』画帖の内)-“The Jeweled Chaplet” (“Tamakazura”), from The Tale of Genji (Genji monogatari) MET DP361161.jpg By Creator:Tosa Mitsuyoshi - This file was donated to Wikimedia Commons as part of a project by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. See the Image and Data Resources Open Access Policy, CC0,
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Free Japanese Language Classes + Learning Japanese Advice - internationallyME | 日本語教室・国際交流
I think this is such a great way to learn Japanese and also interact and get to know your local community in Japan.
Check out your local ward near you to see what events/classes are happening.
Just go to the homepage by searching (your ward) japanese classes 日本語教室 or (your ward) international events 国際交流
Here are the links mentioned in the video:
Japanese Class I Attended
NHK News for Japanese Learners
Hope you could take something away from this video!!
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