The announcement of his resignation is as follows. I am pleased to announce that I will be leaving Fuji Television Network, which I have worked for for the past seven years. /I will graduate from “Mezamashi TV” and “Sanma’s Comedy Improvement Committee” at the end of December, and from “Mr. Sunday” in March next year. /I have had a variety of experiences in information programs, news programs, and variety programs. I am filled with gratitude to the company for nurturing me to this point, sometimes gently and sometimes strictly, even though I was still inexperienced both as a member of society and as an announcer. /I would like to express my sincere gratitude to everyone I have met and nurtured through the program, and to those who always send me warm messages. /Thank you so much. /From now on, I will cherish my family life and my time for myself, while working in my own way. /I will devote myself to my work without forgetting what I have learned at Fuji TV. /Thank you very much for your continued support. /Marino Fujimoto, a producer of a commercial TV station, said. The day before this, she appeared on “Mr. Sunday,” for which she serves as an assistant anchor, but did not mention anything about her departure. That’s why I was surprised by the sudden announcement.
Newlywed Life is Not Enough
Well, it seems that “Mr. Sunday” will continue until next March. …… However, in the “Brain Fatigue” feature on this day’s broadcast, the level of brain fatigue was checked on the performers, and she was found to be “making more minor mistakes lately,” “light-headed,” “easily irritated,” and so on. She was found to have 8 out of 10 items, including “I have been making more minor mistakes lately,” “I feel lightheaded,” and “I get irritated easily,” and it was impressive that the main anchor, Seiji Miyane, expressed his sympathy. It is true that a graduate of the University of Tokyo’s Faculty of Medicine is a bit too smart for his own good, but he is not a graduate of the University of Tokyo’s Faculty of Medicine. He said, “It is true that she is a graduate of the University of Tokyo’s Faculty of Medicine, but she entered the second class of science and graduated from the Faculty of Medicine’s Department of Health Sciences, so it is a four-year program. It is different from the six-year course of the medical department of the Faculty of Medicine, where one aims to become a doctor. The same is true for former NHK announcer Takako Zemba, who in fact is often looked down upon within the University of Tokyo. Incidentally, Fujimoto has to work on “Mezamashi TV” (5:25-8:14) live from Tuesday to Thursday, “Mr. Sunday” (20:54-23:09) live on Sunday, and even tame a “comedy monster” on “Sanma’s Comedy Improvement Committee. This must be tiring for the brain, too. When terrestrial broadcasting was still in its heyday, station announcers earned more than 10 million yen a year in their late 20s, but nowadays their income is at most 7 to 8 million yen. Of course, the income is probably higher than that of an ordinary company employee, but she has to get up at 3:00 in the morning and enter the TV station at 4:00 to work on “Mezamashi TV,” and on Sunday nights she has to deal with peculiar old men on “Mr. Sunday. She just announced her marriage to a doctor who was a classmate at the University of Tokyo School of Medicine this past August. She can’t even have a pleasant life with her newlywed husband, and it’s not worth the salary.