If you didn’t know already, Japan is by far the oddest country on this planet. Whether it be the game show wherewoman jerked off men while they sang karaoke, or the strange food they eat, Japan is just bloody crazy.
You would think that their beauty products would be relatively normal though? I mean nobody wants to mess with their face. But apparently people in Japan are quite happy to try literally anything in the pursuit of the perfect look.
BuzzFeed decided that it would be a good idea to get some British people to try out some of the latest Japanese beauty products on the market and things kicked off. First they tried the Octopus sucker massager, they weren’t exactly impressed with its performance.
After this they had a go at the Kogao, which is designed to shrink your face. Mental.
Then the Eyelid trainer… WTF?
And finally they had a go at the Slimmer Face Exercise Mouthpiece
It’s official, the Japanese are certified mental
I’m going to repeat this again incase you missed it, if you haven’t seen the video where woman jerk off men while they sang karaoke, it really is a must watch!
Retiring to Costa Rica, making a killing in Hong Kong, hanging out with other anime nerds in Japan—the reasons for moving abroad are legion and frequently awesome. Itâs estimated that 2.2 million to 6.8 million Americans are currently enjoying the expat lifestyle, and most of them probably wouldnât have it any other way.
But living abroad isnât all sunshine and lollipops and guilt-free sex with hot locals. Plenty of the worldâs most popular expat destinations have a darker, hidden side to them. Have a bad experience in one of these countries, and your dream life abroad could turn into a screaming nightmare.
10 Japanâs Justice System Is Built On False Confessions
Japan is a country so safe that it makes Canada look like Somalia. Its intentional homicide rate is around 0.3 per 100,000 people, far less than Americaâs 4.7. It has barely any terrorism. In 2013, only 12 people were shot to death, and even that paltry number was a massive increase. In 2012, the total number of shooting deaths was three.There are many complex reasons why Japan is a nonviolent society. One is that its police force is utterly terrifying.
If youâre going to have a run-in with the law, pray it isnât in Japan. Police have the right to hold you without charge for 23 days, and theyâll spend most of that time torturing you. Suspects have tables rammed into them, their feet stomped on, and threats bellowed into their ears. Sleep deprivation is common, and choosing to remain silent is taken as admission of guilt.
The only way to stop this onslaught is to sign a confession, and good luck retracting it later. Courts assume that a confession is an admission of guilt and will sentence you accordingly. People frequently go down for decades for crimes they clearly didnât commit. Itâs estimated that one-tenth of all Japanese prisoners are in jail due to false confessions, and the government has no interest in reopening their cases.
9 Thailand Will Jail You For Insulting The Kingâs Dog
Thailand is often portrayed as an east Asian paradise—a country where the girls are beautiful, the cost of living is low, and the weather is great. All of this is true. Itâs also a country where you can be thrown in jail for over a decade for insulting the kingâs dog.
The love the Thais have for their king makes the British seem like a nation of royalty-hating republicans. Strict lese-majeste laws hand down substantial penalties to anyone who criticizes or insults the royal family. Since the 2014 coup, the military junta has extended these laws to even cover the kingâs pets. In December 2015, Thanakorn Siripaiboon was charged before a military court for making a âsarcasticâ Internet post about Copper, the kingâs dog. Itâs expected that he will receive several years in prison.
You better believe these laws apply to foreigners. In 2007, a Swiss expat was jailed for 10 years after he spray-painted over a picture of the king. The current US ambassador, Glyn Davies, is being investigated for criticizing the mere existence of these dumb laws.
8 Vietnamâs Drug Laws Are Utterly Brutal
Compared to many of its neighbors, where drug possession can lead to execution, Vietnam has a pretty relaxed drugs policy. Users are sent to rehabilitation centers instead of jails, where they cure their addictions through work. Sounds pretty progressive, right? Maybe in theory. In practice, the “rehabilitation centers” are brutal forced labor camps.
Those whoâve been through the system have reported beatings, torture, and being forced to work extremely long hours, making products for private companies. Missing a work quota can get you beaten. Complaining can get you beaten. Basically, just showing your face can result in some random guard deciding to put his fist into it, and thereâs nothing you can do about it.
In some ways, the centers are even worse than prison, where at least you have a release date. Some in Vietnamâs rehabilitation program have been held for years without due process or any end in sight. Perhaps itâs no surprise that inmates frequently stage violent mass breakouts from these facilities.
7 Italyâs Taxes Are Staggeringly High
With its endless sun, world-class culture, and relaxed lifestyle, Italy might seem like the perfect country. So it may come as a shock to realize that it frequently features in polls about the worst countries for expats. The reason for this is likely financial. Any foreigner who moves to Italy can expect to be hammered with crippling taxes.
Tax rates in general are high in Italy. By some estimates, theyâre the highest of all the G20 nations. A high wage earner can expect to take home only slightly more than half their salary, compared to around 60 percent in the US. This isnât even the worst aspect. Thanks to its byzantine bureaucracy, filing tax returns in Italy is filled with hidden charges seemingly designed to catch foreigners out.
Since 2013, expats have had to declare all overseas assets. This includes the $14 floating around in your old US bank account. Forget to declare that spare change, and you can get slapped with a hefty fine. Same deal with foreign earnings. If you make $13.68 selling a T-shirt on eBay while living in Italy, the government will take a chunk of that sweet pocket change off you. Forget to tell them about it, and youâll find yourself facing legal action.
6 India Has A Terrifying Number Of Traffic Accidents
The 2011 film The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel opened peopleâs eyes to the idea of retiring to India. The story revolves around a bunch of British pensioners who move to the subcontinent and have heartwarming adventures. In real life, those adventures would more likely come with the appellation “death-defying.” India is the top destination on Earth for deadly traffic accidents.
According to data collected by the World Health Organization (WHO), more people die on Indian roads than anywhere else in the world. In 2009, the country recorded 105,725 fatal traffic accidents, with the WHO estimating the real number as closer to 200,000. By way of comparison, the US had the third-highest number with a mere 42,642. In a single typical year, bad driving kills more people in India than malaria does in the entire world.
This isnât helped by the governmentâs recent decision to relax road safety laws. Since spring 2015, running over and killing a child gets you a $780 fine and a single year in prison. Thatâs the maximum penalty. There are many reports of wealthy teenagers hitting and killing homeless people and not even having their licenses suspended.
5 Nicaragua Suffers Endemic Corruption
Nicaragua is one of the worldâs current retirement hot spots, thanks to the tons of incentives that the government is offering foreigners to settle there. On top of that, itâs beautiful, cheap, and hot all year round. Whatâs not to love?
Corruption. That’s whatâs not to love.
According to Transparency International, Nicaragua is one of the most corrupt societies in the Americas. Their 2014 rankings placed it at 133rd out of 175 nations globally, only one place ahead of notoriously corrupt Russia. Only Venezuela and Haiti scored worse in Latin America, and the number of people retiring to either of those nations is practically zero.
Although this corruption rarely touches foreign residents, it still rears its ugly head from time to time. Almost everyone living in the country has a story to tell about police shaking them down for a bribe, and throwing cash around to get stuff done is a common fact of life. Still, plenty of people think itâs worth it for views as stunning as this one.
4 Singapore Has Absurdly Strict Laws
Tiny Singapore is one of the wealthiest, cleanest, and safest nations on Earth. Itâs also a top destination for expats looking to make a killing and come home filthy rich. But all that cleanliness and wealth creation comes at a price. Singapore is governed by laws that are often bizarre and always strict.
Some of the strictest have to do with keeping the city clean. Littering and spitting both carry fines, as do chewing gum and tossing cigarette butts away. These arenât the sort of fines you can shrug off with a quick wave of a US dollar and a mumbled, âSorry, tourist.â Singapore is a vastly rich country, and their fines reflect this. Anyone caught littering is forced to cough up a cool $1,000. Anyone caught urinating in an elevator is arrested.
These laws are certainly tough, but we imagine some of our readers might be behind them in principle. Littering and spitting are pretty disgusting, after all. But then there are laws that require stuff like flushing public toilets after use. Failure to do so can result in a $150 fine.
3 Britain Is Effectively Unaffordable
With its quaint villages, rolling hills, and bustling mega-capital of London, Britain can seem like a haven. Thereâs tea to drink, a queen to fawn over, and terrible food to complain about. Sounds perfect.
Of course, that’s all assuming that you can afford to live there. And weâre here to tell you that you almost certainly canât.
The UK is currently in the middle of a massive housing bubble. Thanks to rich Russians, Chinese, and Saudis sinking all of their money into property in London, buying a home almost anywhere in the country is essentially unaffordable. The Guardian recently crunched the numbers for people looking to buy a house at the median price while earning the average British wage of £26,500 ($40,200) a year. For someone in those circumstances, they found that 91 percent of England and Wales would be beyond their means.
Of course, an expat would likely be making significantly above the UK average wage, but the problem persists. A worker on £45,000 a year ($68,300) would still find over half the country beyond their means, despite being in the top 20 percent of all UK earners.
Itâs not until you hit the top 10 percent of earners at £60,500 ($91,800) a year that most of the country becomes affordable. Even then, 29 percent of it would still be out of reach. This includes most of the area around London—exactly where an expatâs job is most likely to be.
2 Dubaiâs Drug Laws Are Fundamentally Insane
The easiest way to not fall afoul of other countriesâ drug laws is to not do drugs while abroad, or so youâd think. Dubai is different in that you can still get in trouble without actually breaking the law.
Across the UAE, itâs common for authorities to check the bloodstreams of people entering their country. Under Emirati law, having even trace amounts of drugs in your blood counts as possession. Possession carries a mandatory four-year prison sentence.
The simple solution would be to not do drugs at all, but the list of things that the UAE considers “drugs” is long and absurdly complex. Herbal Spice will get you jail time, as will many types of painkillers. In 2005, a British woman was held for several weeks after medication for her back pain showed up during a random screening. It transpired that sheâd taken some prescribed codeine before setting off on her vacation. While being held in jail, she contracted dysentery.
Sometimes, you donât even need to take a banned substance to land yourself some jail time. One Swiss national was jailed after three poppy seeds from an airport bread roll were found clinging to his clothes.
1 Chinaâs Air Wants To Kill You
As the next emerging superpower, China is a hot destination for Americans and Europeans. Thereâs history to be seen and money to be made, all while getting a fascinating peek at one of the few surviving communist regimes on Earth. All this comes with a price. Chinaâs air will go out of its way to kill you stone dead.
Weâve all seen the images of Beijing suffocating under thick clouds of pollution, but few of us realize just how bad things really are. In November 2015, air pollution in northeastern China reached 50 times the WHO-recommended safe level. This is a level so high that most outlets described it as an “airpocalypse.” Chinaâs own state-run news agency, which almost never criticizes anything, called it “doomsday.” When a similar smog hit Beijing in December, authorities issued a red alert, complete with wailing air raid–style sirens. Schools were closed, offices were shut, and millions of people were warned to stay indoors at all costs.
These smogs are deadly in a way that most of us canât even imagine. A summer 2015 study published in the scientific journal PLOS One claimed that pollution was killing 1.6 million people in China each year—roughly 4,400 a day. That’s comparable to how many people were killed in the Ukrainian civil war in 2015. Those who donât die can still find themselves suffering from long-term health problems even after theyâve moved away. Emigrating to a country like China may seem like a dream come true. Just be sure to pack your gas mask.
When a bunch of turtles were found riding the rails near the Suma Aqualife Park in Kobe, Japan, something had to be done. Because of the park’s proximity to the ocean, these cute critters often end up climbing over one of the train tracks, becoming stuck between the two.
With nowhere to go though, they previously had to walk along the track where either they were run over by a train, or ended up destroying railway switches. At least that was until the West Japan Railway Company came up with a solution that has the Internet abuzz.
Because the turtles could hurt themselves, the train, or the switches, all causing major delays, the railway company worked hard with marine experts to determine a viable and cost-effective solution.
Sumasui
Their eventual idea? Create escape ditches for turtles all throughout the region.
Sumasui
And the results have been phenomenal. In just a few months, the passageways have saved the lives of at least ten turtles, not to mention the monetary benefits associated with trains arriving on time.
One thing’s for sure: this is definitely a better long-term fix compared to getting seeing-eye dogs for all the turtles…
Giphy
Thanks to the ingenuity of a few, everyone in this situation comes out a winner.
The world “hostel” makes many people think of small, dingy hotels in western Europe…or possibly a very violent Eli Roth movie. The truth is, hostels can be a wonderful place to stay during a trip. More often than not, they are inexpensive. Not only that, but if you look hard enough, you can find truly wonderful places — like Book And Bed Tokyo.
According to their website, Book And Bed is “an accommodation bookshop.”
“Our concept is thus a reader’s haven – an accommodation bookshop. (Books aren’t sold, though. It’s just an expression.) Dozing off obliviously during your treasured pastime is the finest ‘moment of sleep,’ don’t you agree?”
A Compact shelf compartment is 80.7 x 33.5 inches and the Standard is 80.7 x 50.8 inches.
The hostel will be opening its doors on November 5, 2015. World travelers and bookworms alike should stop by this unique hostel — your evening will be relaxing, that is certain! Have a book day…and have a book night!
We’ve all been there. You’re shopping for some new paint for your living room, and you’re bombarded with hundreds of paint samples that come complete with confusing names. “Sweet whispers”? “Jazzberry”? “Springtime laughter”? None of those are colors! Can’t there just be a number system or something?
All of that is a bit easier when it comes to the paints that artists use, but even those names can be a bit hard to understand sometimes. What’s even harder to figure out is how these bizarrely named paints will react to each other if you mix them. That’s why Japanese design studio Imai Moteki developed a system called Nameless Paints, which identifies colors by how they’re made.
These paint tubes are marked with the primary colors used to make them. This takes all of those annoying names out of the equation. Can you figure out what color each tube holds?
It also makes people more aware of how to mix their own colors by using a few primaries. In pigments (inks and paints), the primary colors are magenta, yellow, and cyan.
Aside from the three primaries, black, and white, the kit comes with a variety of hues, which are all combinations of the main five.
The creators behind Nameless Paint, Yusuke Imai and Ayami Moteki, believe that labeling colors with distinct names can be confusing for children, which can discourage them from experimenting with paint.
“By not assigning names to the colors, we want to expand the definition of what a color can be, and the various shades they can create by mixing them,” explains Imai.
Here are some of the paints. It’s a pretty great selection, and it’s also an educational one!
The end of summer signals the beginning of Japan’s annual rice harvest in the Niigata Prefecture. The only bad thing about it is that people are left with tons of unusable straw, which is called wara in Japanese. So what should you do with all that waste? Make art, of course!
On the last day of August, Niigata holds the Straw Art Festival, during which artists gather to create sculptures out of the material. These massive pieces adorn the fields until early November.
The sculptures are open to the public, and people are welcome to climb on them and interact with them when they visit Uwasekigata Park in Niigata City. You can see more images of the festival on Amy Goda’s Twitter.
If you’ve owned a dog, you know that they get themselves into some pretty wacky situations. They’re incredibly curious creatures, always sniffing things out, going wherever their little noses lead them.
For this pup, though, it led him into a slightly sticky situation. A shiba inu followed his nose right into a bush…where he proceeded to become stuck. His reaction, though, is the funniest part of the whole situation.
Perhaps this dog will learn not to trust his nose so much after this experience. Hopefully he got out of the bush in time for dinner because that can’t be too comfortable and I’m sure he got hungry eventually.
3D technology is touted as a modern invention, but it’s far from it. Making a two-dimensional image look like it has depth is nothing new. In fact, people have been fascinated with 3D-seeming images for a century and a half thanks to stereoscopes, which use two images to create a 3D one. You might remember them as View-Masters, the toys that came with a wheel of images.
The first stereoscope was invented in 1838, but they really blew up in 1851, when David Brewster used lenses to unite the double images. He was crucial in developing the lenticular stereoscope, and thousands of stereoscope images were made. Queen Victoria herself was a fan, and if the queen liked it, everyone liked it.
The lenticular stereoscope shows two images at once, one image in front of each eye.
Each image is taken from a slightly different angle, so when they are viewed at the same time, the viewer’s brain “stitches” the images together, forming a 3D effect.
Since you’re looking at a screen, though, we have to show them to you in .gif form.
The images you see here were taken in the 1850s in Japan, which had just been opened up from a self-imposed isolation period. This was also the time when people in England, the U.S., and Europe were fascinated with all things Eastern and were hungry to know more about the “exotic” cultures (although they weren’t always very respectful about it). Therefore, images of far-off lands were wildly popular, with stereoscopes and stereoscope images sold under the slogan “See the world from your parlour!”
Obviously, these photos were also colorized to add to their appeal. While the technology might seem quaint now, there’s still something pleasing about being able to create a 3D image using just regular photographs and your brain. It’s also pretty cool that you can enjoy them without a stereoscope, thanks to modern technology! While we can see images from all over the world with a single click now, images like these allow us, like the Victorians, to peek into a foreign world — one separated by time, not space.
Making 2D things seem 3D is apparently a big deal to humans. Here are more tricks we’ve figured out:
We cover a lot of tiny living spaces on ViralNova, and we’ve seen a lot of stuff crammed into some very tiny places. But even we’re amazed by the tininess of the homes you’re about to see. These tiny cubicles look like they could be bunks on an old ship or in some kind of post-apocalyptic bunker.
But they’re neither. These little cubes of personal space are actually “rooms” in a guesthouse designed specifically for backpackers in Japan, a place known for its space efficiency in the form of capsule hotels. When we say they’re no-frills, we mean it. They don’t even have windows or a door, just a curtain at the entrance off a long hallway of identical plywood boxes.
The privacy issue doesn’t stop people from staying in them, and that’s what fascinated photographer Won Kim, creator of the series Enclosed: Living Small.
Kim said that in his experience, he found that the spaces were comforting, rather than claustrophobic, and described them as “womb-like.” He also found that even in such small, bare-bones quarters, the residents managed to make the most of their spaces, and that their spaces reflected their personalities and circumstances.
The residents varied in circumstance, Kim found. Some were only passing through, visiting Tokyo on the cheap or saving money to rent a better apartment. Others were more long-term residents, and they typically had more belongings packed into the little space. Some were orderly, others chaotic. Some people had rigged up shelving and hangers for more storage. Some even decorated as much as possible in such a small space.
Kim was struck by the way the people in the guesthouse, living in little more than crates, were able to make the most out of their small quarters and function so well. The guests’ untold stories, which can be guessed at only by these images of their possessions, remind us of the transience of life and the journey that all people are undertaking.
You can see more of Kim’s work on his website, and keep up with his latest projects on Twitter and Instagram.