Silicone testicle covers banned from Japanese sauna following cups being left behind and on shelves

“People don’t forget to take their testicles with them when they go home” says sauna in explaining new policy.

Most of the posts made through the official Twitter account of Sauna Monkey, a sauna and bathhouse located in downtown Nagoya, are pretty mundane. There’s information about limited-time discounts, promotional events, and other little everyday updates. But on February 28, Sauna Monkey put out a much more unique announcement:

“Thank you very much for your continued patronage of Sauna Monkey. Based on careful consideration of hygiene factors, we would like to take this opportunity to ask that customers refrain from using covers for certain specific parts of the body, made of silicone or other materials, within the bath and sauna areas.”

Just what “specific parts of the body” are the covers in question for? The balls.

Pictured above are the colorful offerings from Tamamall, a Japanese company that offers what it calls “sauna-use male protective devices.” To brush aside the delicately worded descriptions from Sauna Monkey and Tamamall, these are silicone cups for men to rest their testicles in while in a sauna, so as to keep the sensitive skin of the scrotum off the heated surface of the bench that sauna users sit on (though officially Romanized as “Tamamall,” the product is pronounced “Tamamoru” in Japanese, a mashup of the Japanese words tama (“balls”) and mamoru (“protect”).

Sauna Monkey’s rationale of banning the covers’ use for hygiene reasons had one Twitter commenting whether this meant that the management had judged that having silicone on the sauna benches is less hygienic than having uncovered testicles on them, to which Sauna Monkey replied:

“People don’t forget to take their testicles with them when they go home, or leave them on the rack. That’s why we came to this decision.”

So the problem here doesn’t seem to be the covers themselves, so much as that apparently Sauna Monkey has had to deal with people leaving their ball covers behind, meaning the cleaning staff has to pick them up and throw them away, or that customers have been leaving their covers on the common-use racks/shelves for personal items, where they’re a bit too close for comfort to other people’s belongings.

Just one day after Sauna Monkey announced the new policy, though, Tamamall itself tweeted back a question in response, asking:

“The sauna mats provided by sauna facilities, as well as customers’ own personal sauna mats that they bring, are also in direct contact with the user’s private parts, and are left on common-use racks. Please explain the rational difference between these and Tamamall. Isn’t it an overly strict policy to ban a specific product at a stage where no concrete negative effects have occurred?”

Despite the aggressive tone of Tamamall’s question, Sauna Monkey replied that it could see the validity of it. To clarify its position, Sauna Monkey explained that sauna mats and towels do come into direct contact with one’s private parts, they don’t have the purpose-built design of holding just the balls. As such, there’s a greater likelihood of customers finding the sight of testicle covers lying around the facility to be “psychologically uncomfortable,” or, in more visceral terms, just plain gross, and this, more so than scientific hygiene concerns, is the primary reason for the policy. Aside from Tamamall’s, the majority of the reactions to Sauna Monkey’s tweet about the ball cover ban have been in support of it, so it seems as though the management does have a pretty good sense of what its potential customers would find icky.

However, Sauna Monkey isn’t opposed to ball covers on a conceptual level, and in its response to Tamamall’s query said that they think their design is excellent, and that customers are welcome to use the covers in the facility’s private saunas (so long as they remember to take them home when their session is done).

In addition to Sauna Monkey, Sauna Tokyo, located in downtown Tokyo’s upscale Akasaka neighborhood, has recently enacted a policy banning the use of testicle covers too. A commenter replying to Sauna Monkey’s announcement said that a number of saunas he’s recently visited had similar rules, so if you’re headed to a sauna and planning to plop your boys into a cup, it might be a good idea to check what the house rules are first.

Source: Twitter/@SAUNA_MONKEY_, Twitter/@tamamall_sauna, Chunichi Sports
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Japan asked to vote on what to officially call insanely hot days

Good idea to hold the election before it’s too hot to think.

The days are starting to warm up here in Japan, and while that used to be a nice thing, I can’t help but be filled with a sense of dread at what’s to come. I think I’m at the bargaining stage of grief, where I’m praying for even a few weeks of bone-chilling weather just so we can make winter last a little bit longer.

It’s pretty much a given that this will be the hottest year on record, because every year has been the hottest year on record for quite a while now. To make matters worse, Japan has this really special blend of heat and humidity you don’t find in many other places, the kind where your sweat constantly clings to you and also starts to heat up, making everything feel twice as hot as it normally would.

▼ It’s really the kind of heat that makes you consider switching to 19th-century fashions.

It’s truly a horrible time of year to look forward to, but the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) has decided to try an have a little fun by holding a naming contest for the lethal heat to come. It’s like the ending of Ghostbusters, where we get to choose the name of the thing that kills us all.

Currently, the JMA calls days over 25 degrees Celsius (77 Fahrenheit) natsubi, meaning “summer days,” and when the temperature rises over 30 degrees (86 Fahrenheit), it becomes a manatsubi/“midsummer day.” Once we surpass 35 degrees (95 Fahrenheit), we get into moshobi/“extremely hot day” territory.

Now, the question is what to call the growing number of days where the thermometer cracks the 40-degree (104 Fahrenheit) line. The JMA currently has an online form for anyone to choose their favorite name from a field of 13 nominees.

Here is the full list of candidates. Bear in mind that these use kanji characters that can sometimes be open to interpretation and don’t necessarily have a universally correct English translation, but I’ll do my best to approximate them.

1.  enshobi (blazing hot day)
2. gekishobi (dramatically hot day)
3. gekishobi (intensely hot day) *different kanji than the one above
4. genshobi (severely hot day)
5. kokushobi (cruelly hot day)
6. gokushobi (drastically hot day)
7.  jinshobi (immensely hot day)
8. seishobi (fully hot day)
9. taishobi (big hot day)
10. nesshobi (extra hot day)
11. hanshobi (overly hot day)
12. resshobi (fiercely hot day)
13. chomoshobi (super extremely hot day)

In addition to these candidates, write-in votes are also possible. Readers of the news online have been full of ideas.

“I want ‘bonjobi [“annoyingly hot day” and an obvious reference to Bon Jovi].”
“Let’s go with ‘super extremely hot day’ and when it gets over 45 degrees, we can call it ‘super extremely hot day 2.’”
“I was going to say ‘extremely hot day,’ but was shocked to learn that’s already an official designation.”
“How about just ‘hell day?’”
“I think ‘don’t go out day’ is most effective.”
“I voted honestly, but I really wanted to write in ‘death day.”’
“‘Super’ sounds cool, so I vote for ‘super extremely hot day.’”
“It’s intensely gross, so I like ‘intensely hot day.’”
“Since we can write in votes, can we agree on ‘super-hot-hot death day?’”
“‘Super extremely hot day’ has a real 90s vibe to it.”

Personally, I feel this really should go to “bonjobi” if there’s any justice in the world. It’s certainly a time that we’re all slippery when wet. But judging by the comments, “chomoshobi” is looking like an odds-on favorite in this contest. Whichever term does end up winning, it’s important to remember that we’re all huge losers when next summer rolls around.

Source: JMA, Hachima Kiko
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Japanese government planning higher ticket prices for foreign tourists at Tokyo National Museum

Agency for Cultural Affairs wants two-tiered ticket pricing system at 12 National Museums.

Located in Tokyo’s Ueno Park, the Tokyo National Museum is considered by many to be the finest museum in Japan. Filled with centuries’ worth of historically significant artwork and artifacts, it’s a must-visit for anyone with an interest in Japan’s cultural legacy, but if you’re a foreign tourist, the Japanese government wants you to start paying more than locals do for a ticket.

The Tokyo National Museum is part of Japan’s National Museum Network, which receives funds from the national government. Multiple media organizations are now reporting that the Agency for Cultural Affairs, part of Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, wants the museums to reduce their reliance on government funding, and instead cover a greater proportion of their operating expenses through self-generated revenue such as ticket and merchandise sales. Museums that fail to meet their targets will face restructuring, and possibly even closure.

The initiative affects the following 12 art, history, and science museums, three of which are located in Ueno Park.
● Tokyo National Museum (Ueno)
● Kyoto National Museum
● Nara National Museum
● Kyushu National Museum
● The Museum of the Imperial Collections, Sannomaru Shozokan
● National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
● National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
● National Film Archive of Japan
● National Museum of Western Art (Ueno)
● National Museum of Art, Osaka
● The National Art Center, Tokyo
● National Museum of Nature and Science (Ueno)

The Agency for Cultural Affairs wants the museums to be generating revenue equal to 65 percent of their operating costs by 2030, which is roughly 10 percent higher than their current performance. Under the plan, those which are under 40 percent at the end of fiscal year 2029 will undergo restructuring, with an exception made for the National Museum of Nature and Science, for which a minimum allowable percentage has not been disclosed.

Several ideas have been proposed to boost ticket revenue. Starting with the visitor-friendly ones, the agency has discussed keeping museums open later at night and extending the runs of special exhibitions to allow more guests to visit.

The thousand-year-old katana Dojigiri, during a special exhibition at the Tokyo National Museum

However, raising all ticket prices is also an avenue being explored, and the agency says it wants a two-tier ticket pricing system, in which foreign tourists pay more than Japanese guests, to be put in place no later than March of 2031.

Two-tiered pricing has become a topic of more intense discussion in Japan recently. Record-breaking numbers of foreign tourists arriving in the country while the yen is at its lowest value in decades represents an immense economic opportunity for tourist attractions and tourism-adjacent facilities and businesses, such as museums and restaurants. At the same time, Japanese residents are seeing their own buying power eroded by rapid inflation and stagnant wages. This puts facility operators in a quandary. Do they raise prices to better profit from foreign tourists, for whom the extra cost will still feel acceptable, and possibly even negligible, while alienating Japanese residents in the process? Or do they keep their prices low in order to remain accessible to locals, and leave all that tourist cash on the table?

The situation gets further complicated with Japan now having a larger number of foreign (i.e. not ethnically Japanese) residents than ever before. Ostensibly, under a two-tiered pricing system foreign residents would pay the same price for National Museum tickets as Japanese citizens, but could possibly be required to show proof of residence when making their ticket purchase, which might not feel like a particularly welcoming atmosphere to some.

It appears that after weighing all those factors, the Agency for Cultural Affairs has still come to the conclusion that two-tiered pricing for the National Museum is the right decision.

Source: NewsJP/Kyodo, NHK, Yomiuri Shimbun
Top image: Wikipedia/Wiiii
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Studio Ghibli now sells Ursula’s backpack from Kiki’s Delivery Service at its anime shop in Japan

Channel the cool confidence of a Ghibli character with a real-world bag…that comes with a giant price tag.

Journeys, both figurative and literal, are a recurring motif in a lot of Studio Ghibli movies, and it’s not just limited to the main characters, as members of the supporting cast are keen to explore new worlds too. While some journeys are treacherous, others are filled with fun experiences, and one character who makes travel seem like an exciting adventure is Ursula from Kiki’s Delivery Service.

No obstacle is too great for Ursula, who travels to Kiki’s place for a surprise visit and then offers to cheer the young witch up by taking her home with her. During this part of the narrative, where the two travel by bus and hitchhike on the side of the road, there’s another companion by their side throughout the journey – Ursula’s giant backpack.

Image: Studio Ghibli

Now, we can channel Ursula’s sprightly confidence in our own real-world adventures, thanks to a new backpack from Ghibli’s cool streetwear label GBL.

Simply called “Ursula’s Backpack“, or “Ursula no Ryukku” in Japanese, this new product has been carefully designed to replicate the one worn by the character in the movie.


With two large pockets on the side, and three leather clasps keeping the main sections secure, this bag really does look like Ursula’s backpack.

Though the overall look is simple, there are sweet details to be found throughout, with a woven label on the back showing Ursula herself, offering up a piece of bubblegum just as she does in the movie.

Other details include embroidered images of Ursula’s signature motifs on the underside of the pocket flaps, with paintbrushes on the pocket to your left…

▼ …and bubble gum on the right.

Like Ursula’s anime bag, this real-world version sits on the larger end of the spectrum, but not so large to be uncomfortable. According to GBL, the bag is designed for everyday use, and can withstand a lot as it’s made of the same durable, water-resistant fabric used for outdoor tents, so it can remain a mainstay in your wardrobe for years to come.

▼ The bag’s measurements are approximately 35 x 50 x 20 centimetres (13.8 x 19.7 x 7.9 inches).

Metal fittings and sturdy straps add to the bag’s durability, while a handy side zip gives you easy access to everything inside.

The sturdy material has excellent water resistant qualities, so you can venture out on rainy days without any worries, and the muted colour scheme makes it easy to incorporate into your existing wardrobe.

Sturdy, reliable and filled with fun details, this backpack has everything you’d want in a travel companion. It does come at a price though, and that price is 38,500 yen (US$244.34).

While that might sound like a lot, this backpack is everything fast fashion is not, with quality materials giving you years of use in return for the investment. Pre-orders are only available online, as applications aren’t being accepted at physical stores, with delivery scheduled for mid to late March. If your love for Ursula is as big as the backpack but without the budget to match, you can always opt to wrap yourself up in her real-world blanket, which is slightly more affordable.

Source, images: Donguri Kyowakoku
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Visiting Japan’s one-and-only, and only-for-a-limited-time, Dragon Ball noodle restaurant[Photos]

Marugame Seimen branch in downtown Tokyo transforms into an anime eatery with awesome artwork inside and out.

One of Japan’s most popular udon noodle restaurant chains is named Marugame Seimen, with the Marugame part meaning “circle turtle.” For anime fans, though, the combination of “circle” and “turtle” might also have them thinking of Dragon Ball, since hero Goku and the other disciples of Master Roshi, a.k.a. the Turtle Sage, wear uniforms bearing the kanji character for “turtle,” 亀, inside a circle.

Marugame and Dragon Ball have taken this as a sign that they were destined to join forces, and this week the restaurant added edible Dragon Balls and tempura Senzu Beans to its menu (which you can read our taste-test impressions of right here). While these anime-inspired delicacies are available at all of Marugame’s 800-plus branches across Japan, there’s one location that’s particularly appropriate to head to, the Marugame Seimen Dragon Ball Z branch in downtown Tokyo!

This is a temporary rebranding of Marugame’s Shinjuku Gyoen-mae branch, located not far from Shinjuku Station and very close to Shinjuku Gyoen, one of the city’s most popular parks.

There’s really no missing the place, what with the giant banner of wish-granting dragon Shenron and multiple other pieces of anime artwork adorning the exterior of the building.

The theming continues on the inside, with pretty much every vertical surface plastered with Dragon Ball artwork.

▼ Shenron stretches across three walls of the place.

With so many members of the cast represented, it’s a safe bet that your personal favorite will be present, so you’ll want to pick a seat where you can get the feeling of dining together with them, or at least gazing at them in admiration as you enjoy your meal.

Even the staff has gotten into the spirit, as they’re outfitted with special Marugame/Dragon Ball crossover T-shirts during the collaboration.

▼ Sadly, there’s been no announcement of the shirts going on sale to the general public yet.

If you’re a fan, you probably recognized that the staff member in the above photo is striking the Spirit Bomb pose. That’s not just a bit of fan service, but also a reference to the Spirit Bomb Rice Balls that Marugame has created for the collaboration, a rice ball with a soft-boiled egg at the center that’s coated with tempura batter and fried to make it extra-decadent and satisfying.

▼ You can eat the Spirit Bomb Rice Ball as-is, but since it also qualifies as a piece of tempura, you can also dip it into the broth of any udon noodles you’re ordering at the same time.

We actually got to try the Spirit Bomb Rice Ball as part of a special sneak-peek for the press, as it doesn’t officially go on sale until March 17. The Dragon Ball Marugame branch is welcoming customers right now, though, and it’s theming is scheduled to continue until April 6.

Location information
Marugame Seimen (Shinjuku Gyoen-mae branch) / 丸亀製麺(新宿御苑前店)
Address: Tokyo-to, Shinjuku-ku, Shinjuku 1-4-13
東京都新宿区新宿1-4-13
Open 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Website

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Over four billion yen in lost cash was found in Tokyo last year, setting new record

Billions turned in to police, and billions returned to owners.

Botanists and economists agree that money doesn’t grow on trees, but it turns out that there’s actually a whole lot of cash to be found in the concrete jungle of Tokyo. With March being the start of the fiscal year, the Tokyo Metropolitan Police have released their annual statistics regarding lost and found property in the city, and a record-breaking amount of yen was turned in over the past year.

In total, the police received more than 4.5 billion yen (US$29 million) in cash that was turned in after being lost or left behind in Tokyo. This edges out the 4.49 billion yen that was turned in last year, and is the largest amount ever recorded, with statistical data going back all the way to 1940.

It’s worth noting that this doesn’t mean that 4.5 billion yen in loose bills and change was found unattended on Tokyo’s streets, public benches, and other flat surfaces, as it includes money contained in wallets, purses, and bags that were turned in as lost property as well. Even then 4.5 billion is a startling number, but with cash still being used for so many transactions in Japan (you can even pay your utility and tax bills in cash at convenience stores), and with Tokyo having very little street crime compared to the world’s other major cities, it’s not unusual for the average adult Tokyoite to have a sizable amount of cash on them when out and about, so if they do lose their wallet, it’ll probably have a lot in it. The police say that the increased number of overseas tourists visiting Japan these days is also a contributing factor, as the combination of excitement and lack of familiarity in one’s surroundings can sometimes lead to forgetfulness.

The police also reported that the total number of items of lost property that were turned in during the year came to roughly 4.5 million, also the highest number on record, with an increase in small electronic devices such as wireless earphones.

Thanks to the impressive honesty of those who discovered lost cash, the police managed to track down the original owners for roughly 70 percent of the money, with approximately 3.23 billion returned (though a portion of that, under Japanese law, might have been given to the finders as reward payments). So if, after a day out in Japan, you realize you lost your wallet, smartphone, or Totoro key holder, make sure to file a missing property report with the police, which you can do by following the process explained here, and if you happen to find someone else’s, the procedure for turning it in can be found here.

Source: FNN Prime Online via Hachima Kiko
Top image: Pakutaso
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Japan’s Human Washing Machine pods are now on sale for home use, and they’re not cheap

But can you really put a price on this kind of science fiction-grade luxury?

When visitors to last year’s Expo 2025 world’s fair in Osaka saw that Japanese company Science was displaying a human washing machine pod, it must have felt like a vision of the future, and it was. However, this wasn’t a vision of the future of many centuries, decades, or even years ahead, but actually just a sneak-peak at what was coming in a few months, as you can now officially walk into one of Japan’s most popular electronics chains and buy a human washing machine of your own.

The Mirai Ningen Sentakki, which translates to Future Human Washing Machine and has also been called the Human Washing Machine of the Future by Science, is just what is says it is: a pod that you sit down in, close the canopy of, and then sit back while the tub fills with water and the device automatically lathers, rinses, and dries you using jets of water and air. There’s even a program of soothing images and music that plays while you’re being washed to make the whole thing extra relaxing.

The first hotel Human Washing Machine went into service in December, but as of February 26, electronics retailer Yamada Denki is taking orders for home-use human washing pods. They won’t be cheap, as they’re priced at 60 million yen (approximately US$387,000), but that price does include installation and maintenance for the first year.

Having a pod that washes you was, until very recently, a luxury so firmly of the science-fiction variety that it’s hard to say whether 60 million yen is actually asking a lot for this kind of tecno-decadence. Still, that’s quite a large financial commitment to make for something without having any personal frame of reference for how much you enjoy it, and so Yamada Denki will be holding free trial sessions of the Future Human Washing Machine at the Yamada Denki Labi Ikebukuro Main branch in downtown Tokyo’s Ikebukuro neighborhood this month. The test-bath sessions will be held on March 16, 18, 23, 27, and 30, but due to expected high demand participants will be chosen randomly through a lottery system, and entries can be made online here between now and March 9. While the demonstrations are only being held at the Ikebukuro location, the Future Human Washing Machine itself can be ordered at any Yamada Denki branch,

Source: Denfamico Gamer via Jin, Yamada Denki (1, 2)
Top image: Science
Insert images: Science, Yamada Denki
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