
The End of Japan's 100-Yen Sushi
Japan's 100-yen sushi era is ending — and the big chains are fighting back.▼ About This EpisodeFor decades, a hundred-yen plate was Japan's everyday luxury — affordable, reliable, almost a birthright....
25 Kesä 5min

Why Japan Loves Its Most Divisive Flavor
Chocolate mint — "chocomint" — is Japan's most polarizing flavor: people either adore it or swear it tastes like mouthwash. So why is it suddenly everywhere in the summer of 2026? In this episode of N...
18 Kesä 5min

Japan's Minpaku Gold Rush Meets the Law
Japan has nine million empty homes — and welcomed a record forty-three million tourists last year. In an empty factory locker room on the first day of new safety rules, Haru and Sakura unpack how vaca...
16 Kesä 6min

Japan's $1 Ice Bar vs Inflation
Why does a humble red-bean ice bar keep breaking records while everything else gets pricier? In this episode of Narrative Japan, Haru and Sakura settle in at a closing-time izakaya counter to unpack t...
11 Kesä 5min

Streaming Won, But Japan Fills Cinemas
Streaming was supposed to kill the movie theater. In Japan, it didn't. In this episode of Narrative Japan, Haru and Sakura meet inside a decommissioned solar power plant — where old panels are being t...
9 Kesä 5min

Men vs. Parasols: Japan's Last Taboo
Japan's parasol market is being quietly rewritten — and the story goes far beyond sunscreen. In summer 2025, 44% of Tokyo men used a parasol for the first time, driven not by vanity but by necessity: ...
4 Kesä 4min

Japan's 10M Dancers Started With One Law
In 2012, Japan mandated dance for every middle school student. Fourteen years later, that single policy decision has created a nation of ten million street dancers, a sold-out professional dance leagu...
2 Kesä 5min



















