Information program commentators are under fire over the issue of foreign immigration and the new president, Sanae Takaichi. Top 10 Cultural Commentators Women Do Not Want to See: “On the October 12 broadcast of “Beat Takeshi’s TV Tackle,” Chinese-born actress Gao Yangzi said, “(It would be) fine if we were under Chinese rule!” which was picked up by the Internet news and criticized. Since it was a taped broadcast, it could have been cut from the program, so I wonder if the show’s producers were aiming for a flame war.
A number of harsh opinions such as “painful” and “old man” were expressed.
This comment alone could have led to a major firestorm, but the uproar has already died down, probably due to the fact that he is not well known. The sociologist Rurei Miura was a regular on the list of commentators that women disliked a while ago, but since her husband was arrested and she left the scene, there is no one to replace her. We surveyed 1,000 women at …… and found that “I’d rather watch Ms. Nakajima’s comments. The fifth-ranked commentator was Naomi Matsushima (53), a TV personality. She debuted in 1993 as the comedy duo Othello from Shochiku Entertainments, but the duo dissolved in 2001. While her former partner, Tomoko Nakajima, showed her sharpness as an MC, she was active as a natural blur. Haruko Tsuda, a writer well versed in entertainment information, commented, “Matsushima-san was funny because of the synergy with Nakajima-san, Shofukutei Tsurube-san, and others with whom she worked. If it was just Mr. Matsushima, he would just be out of sync and would not generate any laughs, and people would be turned off. If he was a good MC, he might be able to shine, but he is over 50 years old and natural is just too painful. In fourth place, “He is too biased and not qualified to be a commentator. He is an old man” (Chiba, age 59), “Does he get money from Koizumi Shinjiro? (Political commentator Shiro Tasaki, 75, ranked in the top four. He was the head of the commentary committee of Jiji Press and spent his life as a reporter before becoming a political journalist. He was popular for his steady comments, but “during the LDP presidential election, he made only pro-Koizumi comments and predicted a new prime minister, Koizumi, and when a new president, Takaichi, was elected, he apologized in an information program the next day. Mr. Tasaki was also said to be a purported critic of Mr. Koizumi’s side. I feel that more and more comments that I don’t think are fair are coming out,” said a source in Nagata-cho.