Japanese Mom And Sons Game

Japanese Mom And Sons Game




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The Most Insane Game Shows In Japanese History
The Most Insane Game Shows In Japanese History
By Scott Harris-King/June 15, 2016 11:48 pm EDT/Updated: July 14, 2017 6:18 pm EDT
Japan is famous for many things: samurai, anime, robots, sushi, and its huge array of incredibly bizarre game shows. Take the weirdest idea you have ever come up with, then add costumes, flashing lights, screaming announcers, and some kind of angry animal, and you've just invented a surefire hit contest. Think we're exaggerating? Then take a look at some of the weirdest Japanese game shows of all time, and prepare to be astounded.
The concept behind the hit show Tore! is pretty simple: contestants have to solve puzzles or answers riddles ... while slowly being mummified. It makes you wonder how Alex Trebek might handle Ken Jennings bring right in the middle of an answer (or rather, a question), when suddenly he was completely wrapped in gauze. At least we finally know the real secret behind the building of the pyramids.
In Japan, many game shows are actually segments of variety shows, rather than their own separate entity. One of the most famous of these shows is Downtown no Gaki no Tsukai ya Arahende!!, which features a number of popular comedians doing skits, pulling pranks, and inventing ever-stranger game show segments to eternal amusement of everyone. Best example ever? That'd have to be the Ass Game, where sweaty men in diapers slowly grind their butts into the faces of losing contestants. If only we could introduce this to American politics.
The granddaddy of Japanese games shows as we know them is Takeshi's Castle. Originally airing in the late 1980's, Takeshi's Castle featured a massive squad of contestants competing in crazy games, like smashing themselves into walls, using their own bodies as living bowling balls, or dressing up as huge hands and slapping each other. It only lasted a few years in Japan, but has since spawned imitators in nearly 30 other countries, including ABC's Wipeout. Nothing can match the twisted genius of the original, though.
Before Tore!, there was Dero!, which challenged contestants to make their way out of a booby-trapped building in order to gain fame, fortune, and presumably the right to live. It was essentially the Saw franchise played for laughs, which might seem redundant until you take a gander at Dero!'s infamous death trap room, where the floor vanishes, plunging contestants into oblivion. That's fantastic. SyFy tried to copy its success with the Americanized imitation Exit, but you must see the real thing to truly understand its power.
It's a simple question: is that thing candy, or is it not candy? Here in America, it's usually pretty easy to figure out. But not so in Japan, thanks to an art form called Sokkuri, where cruel confectioners create candy that looks exactly like everyday household objects. In the show Candy or Not Candy?, celebrity contestants are put in a room and challenged to eat their way out. Will their next bite be chocolate, or will it be wood, glass leather, or couch stuffing? It's such a simple, stupid premise, but so ridiculously entertaining.
Team Fight! is exactly what the title promises. Teams—which often consist of popular band members or other celebrities—compete against each other for prizes. But it's the nature of the competition that makes this one a keeper. Every fight has completely different, random rules, from dodging bowling balls, to being pummeled by boxing gloves, to... well, whatever the heck they're doing in the above clip. Just imagine if, every week, you got to see something like the members of One Direction face off against the stars of NCIS: Los Angeles in the Hunger Games, and you'll start to get an idea what Team Fight! is like.
Let's Go to the End of the World is just like Amazing Race, except there's no race. It's just people wandering around the planet, meeting strangers, and doing bizarre tasks because ... well ... they're on television and we need to be entertained. Just how far are contestants willing to go to earn a few Yen? Not only will they literally go around the entire world, they'll obligingly fight angry bears in the process for our amusement. Thanks, Japan!
Like the Ass Game, Silent Library originally debuted as a segment on Downtown no Gaki no Tsukai ya Arahende!! It proved so popular, though, that it soon became its own TV show, here in America. Why? Well, the premise is basically Jackass inside a library—a team of dupes do painful and embarrassing stunts, but with the twist that they can't make any sounds, because those students over there are studying for a test, okay? MTV loved it, and it's easy to see why. Dewey Decimal System, eat your heart out!
Finally, there's AKBingo! AKBingo! This is part of a subgenre of a subgenre of a subgenre: a variety show starring famous pop singers that features game shows. It's not the first of its kind, as the band Morning Musume gained viral fame thanks to a game show segment on their series Hello! Morning, where they were attacked, strapped down, and assaulted by a wild lizard. AKBingo!, though, took things to a new level, with an awesome game where band members competed to blow dead bugs into each other's mouths through a tube. Are you listening, Rolling Stones? We can only hear "Jumping Jack Flash" so many times before we demand a little more variety next tour.

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You Have To See These Japanese Game Shows To Believe Them. But Even Then You Won’t.
To the West, the world of Japanese game shows is best known as a technicolored whirlwind of half-naked bodies, sadomasochistic physical challenges, and the occasional whimsical bunny rabbit head. In short, any reasonable person would assume they couldn’t be real. The stereotype today is a bit of a misnomer — this brand of scandalizing, borderline-torturous television is being phased out after reaching its apex in the ‘90s. That said, it’s far from completely dead. Every so often a Japanese show like last year’s “Orgasm Wars” surfaces to remind the world that, when it comes to baffling, jaw-dropping game shows, Japan truly has no rival (don’t worry, the U.S. still has a lock on terrible reality TV).
Below, we offer you some highlights:
In this deliciously hilarious and straightforwardly titled game, celebrity contestants must guess which of several apparently inanimate objects are candy, and which are not candy. They must then take a big, ravenous bite of the objects they believe to be candy, thus ending up with a yummy hunk of sugary goodness or a humiliating mouthful of whatever random item that actually is. The candy is made from Japanese “sokkuri sweets” that can be molded into crazy-intricate shapes. Below, is he biting into any old picture frame, or one delectable piece of chocolate?
Oh. Just a picture frame. Try again! Shoe or chocolate?
In “Orgasm Wars,” gay men attempt to bring straight men to orgasm, and prove that ... well, we’re not really sure what they want to prove. But the narrators sure make it sound like the ultimate sexuality showdown. Below, the straight contestant, who is also a porn star, swears that he will er, come out on top. (Sorry.)
So, after some introductions and trash talk, the challenge commences, each man trying to humiliate the other — an apparent trend in Japanese game shows:
Will one man’s staunch heterosexuality be impeached by another man’s sexual prowess? You’ll have to find out for yourselves, cause we stopped watching. Sexuality’s a spectrum, dudes.
In this charming bit of highbrow entertainment, a lube-soaked middle-aged man attempts to slide across a slippery row of young, bikini-clad women.
That’s one way to turn your midlife crisis into split-second, small-screen fame.
This competition appeared on Japanese variety show “Downtown no Gaki no Tsukai ya Arahende!!” which has brought you pain, humiliation and vaguely cruel hilarity since October 3, 1989. Players are supposed to catch the marshmallows with their mouths, while their heads are attached to a rubber band. If this isn’t sickeningly funny for you to watch, you probably won’t like many other Japanese game shows.
Ah, yes. The classic trivia game, with a “loser gets a face full of winner’s butt” twist. The competition also appeared on Japanese variety show “Downtown no Gaki no Tsukai ya Arahende!!.”
It sounds like exactly what it is: The perfect consolation prize for anybody who’s pissed they didn’t qualify for luging in the Winter Olympics. Contestants are launched at enormous bowling pins and pushed down this sloped lane. The finale of U.S. reality show “The Amazing Race 23” spotlighted the sport, cause, of course.
“Human Tetris” is the Western nickname for the game, which appeared on Japanese game show “Tonneruzu no Minasan no Okage deshita.” As you may have guessed, it’s basically the human version of your favorite GameBoy time waster. Contestants must jump and maneuver their bodies through the moving gaps in the wall. Unfortunately, they are not human-friendly shaped gaps, so this game appears to be a lost cause.
That said, it’s still pretty entertaining to watch. It even made its way to the U.S., where for some reason, it didn’t last.
Hey, I wonder what happens when you strap binoculars to people’s heads and make them play soccer?
In “DERO! DERO!”, contestants must solve difficult puzzles while in extremely high-pressure situations. Below, an innocent -looking average floor turns into quickly retracting planks, revealing a bottomless pit. You know, the usual heart-pumping competition stuff.
Hey, if you’re the weakest link.....
How many coins can your cleavage hold is the name of the game in this fabulous mix of capitalism and objectification of women.
How many coins does it take to buy back one’s dignity?
Here, men attempt to knock down blocks, behind which stands a naked woman. Meanwhile, they are attached to ropes, which other men use to pull them into a nice, warm bathtub of tar.
Another favorite genre of Japanese game shows involves fantastically creative pranks. Below, a giant dinosaur surprises some contestants:
These clips show just some of the best moments in a sometimes whimsical, sometimes depraved or sadistic, but always at the very least ... creative genre, in which Japan truly has no equal.
Bemused? Want more unbelievable sights from Japan? Look no further:
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Japanese Mom And Sons Game


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