How Tokyo's Subway Keeps On-time, Clean, and Safe

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  • čas přidán 7. 05. 2020
  • Today we talk with Tokyo's train and bus staff and learn a bit about how their subway system is is kept on-time, clean, safe.
    Thanks to TOEI for sponsoring this video!
    提供:Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation
       www.kotsu.metro.tokyo.jp/eng/
       www.kotsu.metro.tokyo.jp/fra/
       www.kotsu.metro.tokyo.jp/esp/
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Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @LifeWhereImFrom
    @LifeWhereImFrom  Před 4 lety +3099

    FYI: This was filmed mostly in February and a little bit in early March, much before Tokyo was put into a state of emergency. The family is all doing safe and well at home nowadays. EDIT Also hit that CC button for subtitles!

    • @EdsonYamamoto
      @EdsonYamamoto Před 4 lety +9

      stay home. stay save :D

    • @mynameisdudge
      @mynameisdudge Před 4 lety +7

      How are the trains running at the moment?

    • @mujtabarizvi4388
      @mujtabarizvi4388 Před 4 lety +9

      I wish that japanese stay safe from corona.Love and condolences from India

    • @danielmay7266
      @danielmay7266 Před 4 lety +5

      Stay healthy Greg!
      Also, I love Metropolitian transit systems and especially subways. This alone makes me want to go to Tokyo to see the subway system in action.
      Why can't San Fransisco have this?

    • @oreo5347
      @oreo5347 Před 4 lety +3

      Great Work!

  • @pedrofayolle
    @pedrofayolle Před 4 lety +8833

    "What's the transportation like where you are from?"
    * cries *

    • @lindskells
      @lindskells Před 4 lety +249

      LOL same..... crap taxi's and the odd buses

    • @kurorintenshi
      @kurorintenshi Před 4 lety +362

      Urine Scented

    • @ovinophile
      @ovinophile Před 4 lety +345

      It’s a lot of pretending you don’t see the person walking through the train begging for money.

    • @burgeulfassal1523
      @burgeulfassal1523 Před 4 lety +9

      Pedro Fayolle yeay i live in a 3rd w

    • @gabrielpriest5925
      @gabrielpriest5925 Před 4 lety +18

      another balkan guy maybe? :)

  • @ianc2091
    @ianc2091 Před 4 lety +6587

    I left my mobile phone in a taxi in Tokyo. The driver drove around till he found me to give it back. I love Japan and the people. So respectful.

    • @fishussugon3215
      @fishussugon3215 Před 4 lety +385

      that man was truly a legend, given how big Tokyo is and all.

    • @bgstsmlman7474
      @bgstsmlman7474 Před 4 lety +276

      In spite of that, in Japan, the boss of that driver would blame him that he didn't check around the seat BEFORE the customers' gone .

    • @fishussugon3215
      @fishussugon3215 Před 4 lety +41

      @@bgstsmlman7474 wait taxi drivers aren't freelance (with licensing)?

    • @alteffour872
      @alteffour872 Před 3 lety +33

      @@fishussugon3215 probably, they may have operatorz

    • @romnicklazatin3679
      @romnicklazatin3679 Před 3 lety +9

      But what their ancestors did to us was atrocious.

  • @mugis6327
    @mugis6327 Před 3 lety +2013

    Fun Fact: Japanese train stations, as seen in the video, have gates leading to the platform that open when your tram card or ticket is scanned. Usually the machines make a light beeping sound to validate the ticket, but childrens' tickets (they have tickets especially for young children) make a cute chick sound, like "tweet tweet tweet"! As a child I had fun riding the trains and hearing the tweeting sound as I passed the gates :D
    Edit: I believe 6:48 shows the tweeting sound!

    • @RealNameNeverUsed
      @RealNameNeverUsed Před 3 lety +44

      Cool! I saw in another video that you don't have to scan your card if you don't want to and nobody would bother. Because the society has such high expectations on people's honesty. Can you verify this?

    • @mugis6327
      @mugis6327 Před 3 lety +94

      @@RealNameNeverUsed Thanks for the reply! I believe this only applies in rural train stops. Indeed we value honesty very much; many Japanese people feel guilt easily to doing something bad. In another video it is shown how many Japanese passerby would deliver a lost wallet to a person, and we often do so just because we feel good after doing good. However we still have those occasional "bad" people especially in big cities like Tokyo. So unfortunately, you do have to scan your card when going through the gate in Tokyo, but if you go to rural prefectures with rural trains stops, it is often left up to the person whether to scan or not.

    • @hironeko
      @hironeko Před 3 lety +80

      Largely because children’s ticket can only be used by a certain age and the sound is a heads up for the station staff to look up and see if the rider is actually a child.

    • @artursdobrecovs
      @artursdobrecovs Před 3 lety +41

      Here in London, oyster cards for those under 11, and those that are 11-15 years old, also have a different beeping sound than normal cards, but this is largely for revenue inspection staff so they can recognise that this is a heavily discounted card so they can easily spot adults trying to avoid paying the proper fare. Not as fun as the tweeting sound in Japan, but still pretty cool to know!

    • @knightsljx
      @knightsljx Před 2 lety +7

      @@RealNameNeverUsed you always have to scan your card. they just leave the gates open during rush hour to speed up entry/exit. almost everyone still taps their card

  • @lalilulelo
    @lalilulelo Před 3 lety +97

    7:33 "You're always expected to think about how your actions affect others."
    The world should learn from this.

  • @Finedeserthouses
    @Finedeserthouses Před 3 lety +3605

    “Why is it okay for small children to ride trains alone?”
    “Why isn’t it safe for the kids to ride trains by themselves?😅”
    That....just speaks everything about Japan 🇯🇵

    • @insert_username_here
      @insert_username_here Před 3 lety +326

      And how shitty the rest of the world is.

    • @nousername5673
      @nousername5673 Před 3 lety +34

      @@insert_username_here Dubai’s train system appears to be quire sophisticated also.

    • @scooterbob4432
      @scooterbob4432 Před 2 lety +209

      Some years ago, my coworker and I were riding a Tokyo subway train when in one station, 3 tiny kids in very neat school uniforms, who looked like kindergartens to us, came in and happily sat in front of us. To our surprise, there was no adult accompanying them. They were on their own and it seems they knew their way around in that huge metropolis.

    • @kiryuunaga1olivians100
      @kiryuunaga1olivians100 Před 2 lety +51

      in America not only is public transportation unsafe for young children, schools even have training for safety in the event of a mass shooting

    • @DJN4CER
      @DJN4CER Před 2 lety +197

      @@kiryuunaga1olivians100 im I’m from NYC and not only is public transportation unsafe for kids, it’s unsafe for adults as well. Every day in the news you’ll hear about an adult getting pushed onto the tracks right before a train comes, someone being robbed, being assaulted, or being raped. The train conductors and bus drivers are undoubtedly the nastiest and most unprofessional workers you’ll ever see. The stations are some of the dirtiest places you’ll see where even the rats roam the platforms like normal. This is why I stopped riding the public transportation system nearly 10 years ago and drive everywhere. Nothing’s improved either because I still hear the same complaints from people who have no other choice but to take a bus or train.

  • @sharonkim9421
    @sharonkim9421 Před 4 lety +2136

    Everyone keeps saying, “What’s the transportation system like where you’re from?” But they forget to realize that the most important piece of a clean and reliable subway is the PASSENGERS. You can’t fix the subway without fixing the people first.

    • @valmar01
      @valmar01 Před 4 lety +245

      *stares at NYC*

    • @branor04
      @branor04 Před 4 lety +56

      i dont really agree. i dont see people littering at clean stations, but at dirty ones they do.

    • @Kenionatus
      @Kenionatus Před 4 lety +190

      It works both ways. People have more respect for clean and functioning facilities and respectful people make those facilities cleaner and functioning better.

    • @SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath
      @SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath Před 4 lety +89

      This can be applied to entire countries as well. A country is only as good as the people who live there. Demographics matter.

    • @Yusuke_Denton
      @Yusuke_Denton Před 4 lety +22

      He kind of touched on this, and yeah it requires both passengers who give a damn and workers doing their job.

  • @furtherdefinitions1
    @furtherdefinitions1 Před 2 lety +1027

    Having lived in Tokyo for 4 years, I found their transportation system to be the best anywhere. Returning to NYC and experiencing the dirty, mismanaged and inept transportation system again was a real let down. I had gotten used to clean, efficient on time trains

    • @azabujuban-hito8085
      @azabujuban-hito8085 Před 2 lety +108

      I live in Tokyo and I remember how shock I was when I visited NYC for the first time , I saw a rat on a subway' platform ! 😁😁

    • @seanconery8836
      @seanconery8836 Před 2 lety +1

      Japan = zero immigration.
      This explains that.

    • @Fluterra
      @Fluterra Před 2 lety +17

      @@seanconery8836 WRONG. Tons of immigration to Japan. Have you lived under a rock for the past 50 years?

    • @b3eframen179
      @b3eframen179 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Fluterra judging by the fact they are blaming immigration for something that has zero possible correlation with it they probably do

    • @Fat_Catt
      @Fat_Catt Před 2 lety +24

      and nyc subway is extremely dangerous! esp after covid. 6 stabbings just this past weekend.

  • @takehironagayama5311
    @takehironagayama5311 Před 3 lety +346

    毎日、当たり前のように乗ってるけど、当たり前じゃないんだなーって改めて思わせてくれる。日本のいい所はこれからも続いてほしいな。

    • @user-hk1wx1hn9j
      @user-hk1wx1hn9j Před 11 měsíci +8

      電車に関しては場所によってはいつも運行遅れたり汚い所があるのは日本でも汚い所とか比較的民度悪い所はあるしわかるけど、外国のトイレとか見ると日本以外での生活が考えられないってなる

  • @evaristoabrahao2216
    @evaristoabrahao2216 Před 4 lety +569

    Suzuki-san didn't even consider the possibility that someone could harm a kid, so he thought it was about trains!

    • @noddye1764
      @noddye1764 Před 4 lety +97

      japan is precious

    • @christian9365
      @christian9365 Před 4 lety +74

      i just realized it. mind blown. please protect japan by all cost.

    • @mPDC-gh8jy
      @mPDC-gh8jy Před 4 lety +43

      > so he thought it was about trains!
      As a Japanese guy, I don't think so and I know that he has understood the meaning of the question correctly, judged from the words he spoke in Japanese.

    • @Vivi-xn9iz
      @Vivi-xn9iz Před 4 lety +10

      @@mPDC-gh8jy but do japanese people are still afraid of letting little kids use trains by themselves? I mean, even in japan there are weirdos, there are weirdos everywhere in the world

    • @brixxjones8093
      @brixxjones8093 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Vivi-xn9iz my son go to school by his self here in Hiroshima Japan and come alone too he rides bus and street car alone too! Ppl here dont bother or harm the kids and especially in the cities tons on CCTV and ppl can see it if something happen! ppl knows and its normal to see kids riding buses or trains and streetcar here and i never heard that the kidz are harms or in danger

  • @manapouriman
    @manapouriman Před 4 lety +715

    " workers can issue themselves a late slip if there train is late "
    In Sydney if your train is late or delayed
    NSW Rail "You should have left earlier then"

    • @depressedking5841
      @depressedking5841 Před 4 lety

      Bro Australia is more developed and better than Japan in most things

    • @WasephWastar
      @WasephWastar Před 4 lety +138

      @@depressedking5841 no

    • @sheevpalpatine9532
      @sheevpalpatine9532 Před 4 lety +100

      @@depressedking5841 That's Hilarious friend, you mustn't be from Australia. Or if you are you've never been to Japan. Pretty much all their public transport systems are better than ours by a long shot.

    • @subhakantbehura727
      @subhakantbehura727 Před 4 lety +27

      Well Japan is like maybe 5 or 10 years ahead from the whole world

    • @julius8886
      @julius8886 Před 4 lety +4

      Subhakant Behura their websites arent

  • @KikiTay
    @KikiTay Před 2 lety +1033

    I love how every job in Japan is treated with dignity..

    • @alouisschafer7212
      @alouisschafer7212 Před 2 lety +106

      This country has more honor and dignity than any other in the world

    • @el19_
      @el19_ Před 2 lety +53

      I couldn't agree more and they're so polite... unbelievable 🥺

    • @venomtang
      @venomtang Před 2 lety +35

      that's the culture, when you respect what you do you respect yourself, whatever it is

    • @DV-zv4ox
      @DV-zv4ox Před 2 lety +32

      I don't really agree with one "culture" taking over the planet, but I think if I had to honestly choose one it would be Japan. I'd be more than happy to learn Japanese and adopt their way of living.

    • @regentregent1905
      @regentregent1905 Před 2 lety +47

      @@DV-zv4ox then you better adopt 60-hour work week, social inequality, racial prejudice, sexism and patriarchy too - those are essentials of Japanese culture as well.

  • @Spyduck
    @Spyduck Před rokem +371

    The finger pointing that Japanese staff anywhere does, is actually important. It forces your attention to what you are trying to examine, and makes you aware of what you're mentally processing.
    Because let's face it, while many of us do a decent job at cursory or visual checks, we can get complacent when we think our eyes get the job done 100% of the time, and then we realise we missed something important

    • @russellzingg1585
      @russellzingg1585 Před rokem +21

      I've actually adopted 'pointing out' items when reviewing finished tasks and it has help me form missing items tremendously!

    • @aerohk
      @aerohk Před rokem +11

      I saw NYC subway operators and Chinese flight attendants do finger pointing too. I think it is common in any job everywhere, whenever a human is tasked to conduct safety related, routine robotic tasks. Because human is bad at repeating the same thing over and over again, this gesture helps against derailing the routines.

    • @modtwentyeight
      @modtwentyeight Před rokem +3

      @@aerohk NYCMTA started that recently. It is for making sure the train is positioned in the correct place.

    • @youcanpunchmeintheface
      @youcanpunchmeintheface Před rokem +2

      ​​@@aerohk At least, East Asian countries have adopted the system. I have seen the finger point and call in South Korea and China too

  • @coolnewpants
    @coolnewpants Před 4 lety +3137

    God, that poor guy would have breakdown if he had to experience the NYC subway system

    • @justapersonhere9269
      @justapersonhere9269 Před 4 lety +62

      How does the NYC system work?

    • @sophisticatedluna6503
      @sophisticatedluna6503 Před 4 lety +7

      @@justapersonhere9269 like

    • @go_away510
      @go_away510 Před 4 lety +427

      Justaperson here It doesn’t work.

    • @MatthewWunderlich
      @MatthewWunderlich Před 4 lety +217

      @@justapersonhere9269 It doesn't.

    • @kimmyseon46
      @kimmyseon46 Před 4 lety +380

      @@justapersonhere9269 its gross there's rats and piss and there's always that one homeless junkie tripping out on every cart also before the pandemic the subway hasn't had a deep cleaning in 115 years
      well that's one thing coronavirus is good for

  • @SB-dd8db
    @SB-dd8db Před 4 lety +2682

    On our very last day in Tokyo last year while we were on our way to the airport to go home, in the rush to swap over trains with our big cases we ended up leaving the backpack with our passports and bording passes on the first train and by the time we relised we had already been on the 2nd train for nearly half an hour! we quickly got off and went to the information desk in a total near tears panic and were met by some of the most kind and helpfull people ive ever met who were able to track down the train we had been on and get our bag back in less than half an hour. Public transport in Japan is for sure some of the best in the world!

    • @mistybuttercup110
      @mistybuttercup110 Před 4 lety +52

      Stephanie D
      WOWWWWWWWW

    • @d5486
      @d5486 Před 4 lety +65

      Good to know that it is possible elsewhere. Sigh.

    • @H44rold
      @H44rold Před 4 lety +25

      Wow, that might have been a huge stress :x
      I guess that also for this kind of things that we go to airport sooner ahah
      Well, glad they could help you :)

    • @muslihat2487
      @muslihat2487 Před 4 lety +36

      hahaha it hapend to me and my wife too!, they are so awesome. it happend while we are going to nara from kyoto we accidently left our belonging in kyoto station

    • @hipsterchic
      @hipsterchic Před 4 lety +21

      I completely agree Stephanie. I travelled around Japan last year and used the Shinkansen, metro trains, buses, etc and it was all such an enjoyable experience, even when it was Golden Week and the stations were packed. I also found the staff to be kind and helpful. Glad you got your backpack back quickly 😀.

  • @martinthoburn1089
    @martinthoburn1089 Před rokem +101

    Been to Japan and Tokyo several times. The whole transport system is extremely efficient, ultra clean and very easy to use. We went to buy a ticket at the many ticket machines and were just working out how much when a staff member behind the ticket machines opened a little door and asked if we were ok. We had only been standing looking for less than a minute. I have always found Japan to be the most polite, cleanest and efficient country I have visited.

  • @LAKD
    @LAKD Před rokem +117

    The Tokyo area has the best public transport system from any place I've been. Clean, on time and most importantly, people actually behave.

    • @w1z4rd9
      @w1z4rd9 Před rokem +1

      Thing is, it's also one of the most complicated subway system in the country.

  • @DolceDolce
    @DolceDolce Před 4 lety +2311

    Japan has a way making of things look so honorable.

    • @juanok2775
      @juanok2775 Před 4 lety +86

      For example hentai

    • @codeninja100
      @codeninja100 Před 4 lety +133

      Its so admirable. Everyone takes pride in their job and are taught from a young age that what they do affects the greater whole

    • @coachafella
      @coachafella Před 4 lety +84

      @@codeninja100 Exactly. Just go there and you will see virtually everyone takes their job very seriously. So much focus on attention to details, and effort put into routine tasks. It's very impressive, and a stark contrast to what you see in the US and much of Europe.

    • @brooklynbound0
      @brooklynbound0 Před 4 lety +68

      coachafella they also overwork themselves to death and work overtime going home later because they see their coworkers still working as “respect”. It’s admirable but at the same time it’s toxic.

    • @user-pd9ju5dk5s
      @user-pd9ju5dk5s Před 4 lety +11

      Like the Nanking Massacre

  • @nestylinmedel456
    @nestylinmedel456 Před 4 lety +2570

    Japanese Train guy is insulting the whole world calmly in a good way 😂

    • @budoumurasaki5856
      @budoumurasaki5856 Před 3 lety +170

      Another day Japan politely roasting others 😂

    • @MforMovesets
      @MforMovesets Před 3 lety +156

      He isn't wrong though. "Are there scary people outside?" I wouldn't even send my kid to the supermarket alone after the nutballs I've seen there. There was one guy who was about to start a fight with the manager because his favorite juice wasn't there. And another guy during Corona outbreak who wanted to start a riot because they wouldn't sell him more than one bag of toilet paper. And yet another guy behind me at the cashier whispered threats and insults at me the whole time which was creepy af. And yes, they were all white, before someone asks.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před 3 lety +5

      @@MforMovesets Was thinking about the mafia (_yakuza_) since I've heard stories about them causing arson & a case where they entered a hospital & assassinated the wrong person

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 Před 3 lety +64

      Zhi Han Lee People abroad have totally unrealistic fear of Yakuza. They might kill one or two people in a year, and I’m talking about in the entire Japan (population: 100 million). In the US, gang violence could claim several lives a week in a single city.

    • @marciashiraishi5891
      @marciashiraishi5891 Před 3 lety +69

      Zhi Han Lee they (the Yakuza guys) don't get involved with ordinary people. They are infiltrated in many sectors, mainly in the business of games and bars but do not kill anyone. The possession of firearms is prohibited in Japan, so when you read some news about bullet deaths you can be sure it was internal fights for power with other gangsters. I live in Kobe, the city of Yamaguchigumi, the largest yakuza corporation in Japan and have never heard of cases against the general population.

  • @stephenhill1716
    @stephenhill1716 Před 2 lety +58

    “Are there scary people out there? That broke my heart. Japan is too pure for this world.

  • @HeliNoir
    @HeliNoir Před 3 lety +92

    6:59 Suzuki-san calmly and politely roasting the rest of us
    BTW those animations were just so precious! Easy to understand even if you don't speak Japanese.

  • @C_M_R
    @C_M_R Před 4 lety +480

    When I was in Japan in Sept 2019, my friend and I got lost trying to find the Shinkansen to Kyoto in Tokyo Station. This Japanese man tapped me on the shoulder and asked if I needed help. I said yes and he looked my ticket, and hurried us to the correct station. With his help, we got on the bullet train literally seconds before the doors closed. 👍🏿

    • @coachafella
      @coachafella Před 4 lety +100

      I approached a stranger on a train platform in Tokyo to ask if this train went to the station I wanted. He said yes, I will show you. He got on the train with me, we rode about 20 min, and he motioned that this was the stop I wanted. He also got off, and as I walked away I saw him walk over to the other side of the platform and stand waiting to take the train back the way we had just come. He had gone at least 40 min out of his way just to show me where to get off for my stop. I've traveled on subways all over the world and never had someone do that.

    • @celinevanruyskensvelde7448
      @celinevanruyskensvelde7448 Před 4 lety +21

      I had the same in 2010. I was supposed to be picked up by my host family but due to something they couldn't meet me at the airport. So after being lost for an hour a lady who could speak English kindly took me with her to the correct stations, wrote down the right names of stations I needed and even got me the correct ticket since I bought the wrong one.
      In most other countries I would have still been standing at that airport station completely lost.

    • @youcanpunchmeintheface
      @youcanpunchmeintheface Před 4 lety +11

      I was lost in Tokyo Station searching for Tokyo Metro Pass Office. Asked a police officer and he didn't mind to take us thru the underground maze to the Ticket Office. Amazing.

  • @panhem7149
    @panhem7149 Před 4 lety +1468

    "Why do you want to go to Japan"
    I like trains

  • @Drewster327
    @Drewster327 Před 3 lety +312

    When i visited japan i was amazed of how much train station were like airports in terms of busyness and cleanliness. The Japanese culture really is something else we could learn a lot from them

    • @chloeeng6811
      @chloeeng6811 Před rokem +5

      Yes I love their mannerisms in japan

    • @adamyami2902
      @adamyami2902 Před 9 měsíci +1

      For example how safe it is for Japanese molesters harassing women in trains thanks to their culture.

  • @twelve11
    @twelve11 Před 2 lety +426

    Was in Japan in 2018 and each and every station (actually every single location visited) was so clean: in two weeks, I never saw litter on the ground or anywhere, the toilets were impeccable, there wasn't a bad smell, no vermin anywhere; not to mention every single person was well-mannered, generous, kind, quiet, but friendly. Lost my wallet on a train platform and it had been handed into lost and found, came back and collected it, every single thing was inside. Truly a paradise.

    • @s70driver2005
      @s70driver2005 Před rokem +2

      Then you didn't run into any drunk people late at night!!

    • @Lubin-md4ml
      @Lubin-md4ml Před rokem +16

      Japan is one of the best countries in the world for alot of reasons :) They are absolute masters at keeping things clean, being polite and friendly!

    • @s70driver2005
      @s70driver2005 Před rokem +8

      @@Lubin-md4ml I will say they can be very xenophobic at times. I love Japan but every country has its flaws.

    • @Lubin-md4ml
      @Lubin-md4ml Před rokem +7

      @@s70driver2005 That is true, Japanese people tend to not like foreigners, and I've noticed that, but regardless, they are still very nice people. Despite being overworked and xenophobic.

    • @s70driver2005
      @s70driver2005 Před rokem +5

      @@Lubin-md4ml oh yes they are very polite!

  • @Mew178
    @Mew178 Před 4 lety +283

    >Whats the transportation system like where you're from?
    You don't wanna know...

    • @JaffarTube
      @JaffarTube Před 4 lety

      +1 😂

    • @veronicaaragon8610
      @veronicaaragon8610 Před 4 lety +2

      You from Atlanta too?

    • @chiffoncake-2342
      @chiffoncake-2342 Před 4 lety

      Same lol I’m from NYC

    • @Mew178
      @Mew178 Před 4 lety

      @@veronicaaragon8610 Way worse czcams.com/video/jN5fFjmObno/video.html

    • @amanohashidate3298
      @amanohashidate3298 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Mew178 that doesn't seem that bad actually. Of course it's not a modern mass transit system but it's looking like a charming little train for rural lines. Definetly want to visit Croatia one day, maybe by train.

  • @kangwenhao7
    @kangwenhao7 Před 4 lety +628

    Hey, just FYI, ホーム, in the context of trains, does not mean “home,” it’s short for プラットホーム, “platform.” It’s a Japanese-style shortening of an English word, like エアコン for “air conditioner.” The doors in the video are “platform doors,” not “home doors.” Love the video, glad you’re doing ok right now.

    • @BlueNanoBox
      @BlueNanoBox Před 4 lety +32

      That's makes so much more sense!

    • @JiSiN3000
      @JiSiN3000 Před 4 lety +15

      True... in all those years i still don't know why they decided to write it that way in Katakana 😆
      Would have preferred プラットフォーム
      Or shortened フォアム instead of ホーム

    • @hallejohn
      @hallejohn Před 4 lety +4

      Thank you.
      Now I have a solution for the german translation.

    • @zam023
      @zam023 Před 4 lety +6

      @@JiSiN3000 Because that is where the trains come home, i.e. to stop.
      I have not come across a Japanese who use the word プラットホーム. More likely they would say プラットフォーム.

    • @JiSiN3000
      @JiSiN3000 Před 4 lety

      @@zam023 yep i agree about japanese don't say it that way... still doesn't make it right. Katakana is used for foreign words.
      That is what they are not good in (foreign language). Logically.. it's foreign.
      Not trying to say specifically that Japanese (people) not being good in foreign languages just that usually mistakes will be made. And there are plenty of those. Katakana is very limited...

  • @Samuraistar92
    @Samuraistar92 Před 4 měsíci +11

    That conductor seems very kind gentle and respectable.

  • @niki_no_channel
    @niki_no_channel Před rokem +62

    I’m a Japanese and living in Tokyo for over 20 years, and I’ve taken all of this for granted. But once again look at it , I realised that so many people have been working hard and supporting me in ways that I can’t see. I almost cried😭 I’m proud to be born in Japan 🇯🇵 🥰

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Před rokem +2

      That's good. Japanology and NHK Japan shows a lot that Japan has a lot of great things and culture.
      Watch Not Just Bikes. There's comments from Dutch people saying they took their walkable and bikeable cities for granted too, and now found appreciation for them. Especially learning not every country has them, and people saying they want them or that they wanted to move to the Nederlands for them.

    • @mouse8618
      @mouse8618 Před rokem +1

      Me too! 当たり前じゃあないんだ。😍

    • @JustSomeRandomIdiot
      @JustSomeRandomIdiot Před 7 měsíci

      Yup you should absolutely be proud of it too. I'm Australian but fascinated by Japan and been learning about it's culture and trying to learn the language. I can tell you that our public transport is mostly a joke in comparison to how efficient and clean Japan's is! Hopefully one day I'll get to visit.

  • @NikhilShirgaonkar
    @NikhilShirgaonkar Před 4 lety +1077

    "What's the transportation like where you are from?"
    Survival of the fittest

    • @gladsondsouza9106
      @gladsondsouza9106 Před 4 lety +10

      @Punita Rathi He is talking about Mumbai Right? haha

    • @j134679
      @j134679 Před 3 lety +17

      Manila too. Elderly, pregnant, disabled, and those with small children have to wait for rush hour to end if they want to use a bus to get home during workday.

    • @faytaliti
      @faytaliti Před 3 lety +1

      Your name says it all. Mumbai locals right?

    • @redwoodthomas5943
      @redwoodthomas5943 Před 3 lety

      Mumbai is one of the worst cities in the world..so can understand.

    • @NikhilShirgaonkar
      @NikhilShirgaonkar Před 3 lety +5

      Oooo yes Amchi Mumbai!!!!
      @@redwoodthomas5943 n u cursing my city helps me understand ur weak who could not survive 🤣

  • @JohnTitor2036
    @JohnTitor2036 Před 4 lety +714

    "What's the transportation system like where you're from ?"
    Me : *Start crying*

    • @HalleluJah337
      @HalleluJah337 Před 4 lety +17

      Me: *cries with you*

    • @chaosdivinity
      @chaosdivinity Před 4 lety +11

      Me: From LA, crying for sure.

    • @daphnesagun2523
      @daphnesagun2523 Před 4 lety +8

      In Manila, a 30-minute commute can go up to 2 hours

    • @adegokudae8620
      @adegokudae8620 Před 4 lety +1

      Me: from Boston.....cHuCkle

    • @AccountInactive
      @AccountInactive Před 4 lety +6

      It's amazing what a people can do when they have similar goals and interests. America will never been on this level as long as it's communists VS capitalists.

  • @Ruddpocalypse
    @Ruddpocalypse Před 3 lety +178

    I visited Tokyo before Covid, and the three things that stood out to me, was how polite everyone was especially to a tourist, how clean everything was, and how efficient their public transit is. It makes me want to live in Tokyo so much

    • @thecapone45
      @thecapone45 Před rokem +2

      Something I think about is how I’d like to be like that myself towards others in big cities but some people just make it so hard.
      I was in NYC some years ago and while walking a sidewalk, as usual you have people trying to sell you thinks because they know you’re a tourist. There was this middle aged middle eastern man who tried to get my attention and spoke to me, perhaps he was lost or looking for someone. I continued walking because I didn’t know if I should trust the person. On his own, the person maybe have actually needed help. But in a setting where you have so many strangers coming at you… It’s so easy to withdrawal a helping hand.
      I still think of that person, maybe they were scamming me or maybe they were actually lost. I’ll never know.

    • @richardg1426
      @richardg1426 Před rokem +1

      Maybe they teach the kids at a young age, respecting other people and the city they live in is the right thing to do !

  • @RafaeIly
    @RafaeIly Před 9 měsíci +10

    A bit of an embarrassing story: Back in 2022, I visited Japan and left my backpack with my passport, about 1,000 USD, and some other personal belongings. You see, trains in Singapore do not have the overhead compartments like Japanese trains do and I had left my backpack above this one time so I forgot about it 😂 I immediately went to the control station and got help, they didn't understand English but had some sort of aid and translating device; THIS IS THE BEST PART THOUGH, a young Japanese female stranger must have noticed my frantic nature and came over to help translate (she was Japanese but proficient in English) which greatly sped up the search process. My bag was found by another station master soon enough and I made my way there. I am very happy and lucky to have met such friendly and helpful people in Japan!

  • @kadafi4lyf
    @kadafi4lyf Před 4 lety +1274

    7:08 "are there scary people out there?"
    me: *laughs like a crackling witch in NY subway

    • @meurhioandarasti0955
      @meurhioandarasti0955 Před 3 lety +25

      LOOOOOOOOOL

    • @alphasiera1757
      @alphasiera1757 Před 3 lety +1

      Lol

    • @xc9zf
      @xc9zf Před 3 lety +32

      I mean tbh they aren’t that scary. After a while, you get numb to it.

    • @Kisamaism
      @Kisamaism Před 3 lety +3

      crackling witch. snap crackle pop!
      I think you mean cackling ^_^

    • @gzmo0
      @gzmo0 Před 3 lety +16

      A few months ago I was on the train, and this guy stumbles in, sits down across from me, and just lights a blunt.

  • @VicJuarez88
    @VicJuarez88 Před 4 lety +1214

    "So how security take care of drunk people in your city?"
    Me: Security??

    • @fabi.6080
      @fabi.6080 Před 3 lety +43

      lmao ikr.. some drunk dude spilled his beer on me one time. Wasn't fun

    • @thundurr
      @thundurr Před 3 lety +12

      @@fabi.6080 alchohol isn't allowed on London Underground and a tube (train) arrives every 1 minute.

    • @cherryq4129
      @cherryq4129 Před 3 lety +14

      knife in my pocket is the security

    • @ianmoseley9910
      @ianmoseley9910 Před 3 lety +11

      Cherry Q As long as you keep it in your pocket. Gives you a false sense of security so you do not run when you should. Why people who carry weapons are more likely to get injured, not less.

    • @ianmoseley9910
      @ianmoseley9910 Před 3 lety +2

      British Transport Police

  • @NM-zo6gi
    @NM-zo6gi Před rokem +20

    I love how the Japanese people take their job seriously & take pride in their work. We have a lot to learn from them. Watching your videos inspire to go to Japan.

  • @worldbreaker3606
    @worldbreaker3606 Před 2 lety +49

    I am a filipino and our government entrusted our nation's most ambitious project in the history to Japan. And that project is building an underground subway in Metro Manila. By watching this, I got more excited for the outcome of that project. Salute to every Japanese people.

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Před rokem +3

      I agree with using more Japanese ideas. Like from NHK Japan or Japanology. I heard Japanese toilets save more water. Japan is famous for lots of good ideas and good mannerisms so Idk why people and countries aren't using their ideas more right now.

    • @kunihame
      @kunihame Před 8 měsíci

      Nagpapa salamat 😊

  • @jaxlone997
    @jaxlone997 Před 4 lety +80

    9:17 haha, in Paris when you realise you dropped an item like 5s later, it's already been re sold by the robber 😂

    • @rext8949
      @rext8949 Před 4 lety +13

      that's called robbery efficiency .

  • @UemuraYuu
    @UemuraYuu Před 4 lety +284

    The thing I love about Japanese day to day life is that every single job, as small as it is, is done with honor and pride, always trying to prefect their craft and doing it with joy

    • @djsantos8798
      @djsantos8798 Před 4 lety +22

      Very true!, Unlike where I live and employees give you an attitude to simply provide service for an establishment they're employed at?!?!?

    • @Warriorette12
      @Warriorette12 Před 4 lety +23

      Fudori Toki Service workers are also treated with a greater deal of respect than in other parts of the world because, in a society that values the whole over the individual, people who directly help society run are respected.
      Its even down to the white gloves you see the bus drivers and train station attendants (and sometimes even garbage men) wear; its a symbol of them having a ‘pure’ job worthy of respect

    • @buttarain27
      @buttarain27 Před 4 lety +7

      @@djsantos8798 Sound like here (U.S.), people will get snooty even if you just ask for extra napkins!

    • @eggizgud
      @eggizgud Před 4 lety +9

      THIS! Especially during these times, when people all over the world are seeing for themselves who are the essential workers. Not the ones who wear suits but the ones who maintain and operate all our modern facilities.

    • @user-hu7tj8su5r
      @user-hu7tj8su5r Před 4 lety +5

      Thank you for loving japan🎵

  • @DimaRakesah
    @DimaRakesah Před rokem +12

    The section about children riding alone and how they are taught to be considerate and helpful was really heartwarming from an American standpoint. Here we barely let kids play in their own neighborhoods and people are frequently inconsiderate, sometimes to the point of being blatantly rude and selfish. Something as simple as not taking up the entire grocery aisle while people are trying to get by is a common frustration here.

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c Před rokem

      Not Just Bikes talked about cops or child services called on parents for letting their kids play on their yards, alone, or traveling alone in Canada. I get protecting but there's the other extreme of paranoia and stifling kids too. Also watch NJB's third place video and other videos to learn why North American culture created that terrible, isolated, and stifling culture.

  • @CielP_Channel
    @CielP_Channel Před rokem +63

    日本人の私にとっても、感動的な動画でした。私達が普段から何気なく使っている鉄道やバスは、沢山の人達の努力と工夫の積み重ね、そして思いやりによって成り立っているのだなと感じます。働いている沢山の方々に感謝!!

    • @naoyahikoshima
      @naoyahikoshima Před rokem +7

      優秀な人たちが毎日を一歩一歩懸命に努力して安全と定時性を確保してくれていると感じます

    • @pseudotatsuya
      @pseudotatsuya Před rokem

      痴漢のおっさんと満員電車が無くなれば完璧

  • @San-jn6bm
    @San-jn6bm Před 4 lety +353

    Japan trains system: clean, safe and on time
    My country: "uno reverse card" *it is what it is*

  • @helpme8993
    @helpme8993 Před 4 lety +170

    The train where I live is where you go to get stabbed, robbed or yelled at. Sometimes all three!

  • @TwitterRehab
    @TwitterRehab Před 10 měsíci +10

    The people of Japan have a lot to be proud of with their transport. The amount of effort and skill that goes into creating this is amazing.

  • @RipperGER
    @RipperGER Před 3 lety +40

    Always nice to see how efficient Japan works. You sure can get jealous, seeing the "Deutsche Bahn" operating in here in Germany - always late or whole trains getting cancelled. Must be nice using such a great, reliable system!

    • @azabujuban-hito8085
      @azabujuban-hito8085 Před 2 lety +2

      Remember that in 2018, the railway company here in Tokyo issued a public apology on a national TV, because on that day one of their train departed two seconds earlier than the schedule. Yes, two seconds 😁

    • @lehua16
      @lehua16 Před rokem +1

      Omg 😂 line leader!!!
      My tea ceremony teacher told me this funny story… She attended formal ceremony (5 guests invited) then the most senior guest - she enters first to the tea room- tripped over on kimono before seated… so rest of the guests followed and tripped over before seated 😂 just to make the most senior guest don’t feel bad for respect. In Japan this could be true!!!

  • @aryasamarth
    @aryasamarth Před 4 lety +245

    "What's the transportation system like where you're from?"
    --Your Trains have doors?

  • @stoneofhelp23
    @stoneofhelp23 Před 4 lety +229

    "What's the transportation system like where you're from?"
    Survival of the fittest. 🇵🇭

  • @danieljakubik3428
    @danieljakubik3428 Před rokem +239

    Japan operates one of the, if not the cleanest, safest and most efficient public train system in the world. Much of this is due to Japan's highly homogenous and polite culture. Items left on trains have a very high probability of being found and returned to their owners.

    • @onebigsnowball
      @onebigsnowball Před rokem

      Straight up racist

    • @birbies
      @birbies Před rokem

      just say you think black people make the subways gross. you dont have to hide behind words like homogenous

    • @jaflob6610
      @jaflob6610 Před rokem +11

      What having a homogeneous society does too a society

    • @TheMrKeksLp
      @TheMrKeksLp Před rokem +1

      Das racist!!! /s

    • @elfullin
      @elfullin Před rokem +11

      @@birbies that’s not what he said. And I’m black. There’s less friction so to speak when the culture is homogenous. I mean, look at the U.S, you’re kidding yourself if you think we would ever achieve something like this. Our media purposely divides us, and we purposely create barriers and stereotypes of all kinds of ppl.
      Japan has been known to be racist towards black and brown people; and certain areas do not like tourists. The difference is that the brain has a hard time processing new and unknown stimuli. Many don’t succumb to racist responses but unfortunately others do. The U.S tho, I mean, we’re screwed lol

  • @Bothomas-vm5hz
    @Bothomas-vm5hz Před 8 měsíci +9

    i was in the Air Force living and working in japan for 14 years at Yakota Ab in Fussa, Tokyo. I really miss the politeness and professional structure from the Japanese citizen and especially their govt. If you ever get lost as a foreigner in their subway system, don't worry the attendants at the info kiosk which are clearly labeled speak English and they are very helpful. I have nothing but excellent things to say about japan.

  • @cyin974
    @cyin974 Před 4 lety +332

    "What's your transportation like where you are from?"
    me: "Pretty good, my feet are usually on-time."

    • @TrixityMcLight
      @TrixityMcLight Před 3 lety +20

      Imagine your feet not being on-time :D - *Gotta go walk somewhere?* _Can't my feet aren't here yet_

    • @danepher
      @danepher Před 3 lety +4

      @@TrixityMcLight Well you just print a late slip

    • @JNJNRobin1337
      @JNJNRobin1337 Před 2 lety

      Sorry I Dont Have Feet Only Car

  • @juddosborne305
    @juddosborne305 Před 4 lety +161

    Wow, the bus stuff was just as cool and interesting as the train stuff.

    • @vformarallo
      @vformarallo Před 4 lety +13

      I was more impressed with the buses haha so clean and well mantained. They had readily available spares, all the tools and calibrating tools, every bolt torqued to spec.They even wore gloves!

    • @juddosborne305
      @juddosborne305 Před 4 lety +6

      Felipe C the brushless motors is what got me excited.

    • @maksymtt
      @maksymtt Před 4 lety +1

      I wonder if it's in Japan where they use those buses for their first kms before they get sent to other countries

  • @itskatoga3829
    @itskatoga3829 Před rokem +9

    The bus footage was amazing, because I work as a bus technician in germany. So it was very fascinating to see how they work. Greate video.

  • @SuperFredAZ
    @SuperFredAZ Před 2 lety +61

    I have been to Japan many times, it never fail to amaze me how engaged the workers are and the safety factors included. The barriers are brilliant.

  • @riisuba
    @riisuba Před 4 lety +88

    “What’s the transportation system like where you’re from?”
    Me, a Pilipino: laughs in tricycle, trisikad, and jeepney congested roads
    Jokes aside, when he said “If they think it’s surprising to see kids ride by themselves, I’m actually surprised why it’s not happening in other countries.”, I felt that. As a kid, I didn’t experience going to school alone. I thank my parents for keeping me safe but it still stuck on to me till this day and lack independence. I’m fine going out alone (only for short distances though) but I still feel uneasy even when there’s no danger evident around the area

    • @bsbx
      @bsbx Před 4 lety +6

      philippine government:
      b e c r e a t i v e w h i l e c o m m u t i n g
      also ph gov't: *going to office in expensive cars while majority of the population cannot afford one*
      --
      yes, i also agree. i want to experience commuting alone as young as i could be.

    • @agentrikamcgee
      @agentrikamcgee Před 4 lety +3

      Heck even as an adult, my family is wary of me commuting alone in the Philippines. I've been doing it for 3 years now, and my parents are still scared for my safety as well. They even forced me to use an anti-theft bag...
      It's especially worse for me because I'm a PWD, and public transport here is so PWD-unfriendly. People don't even have the attitude of automatically giving up their seats to people who clearly need it more, just because there's "priority seating". "Sorry na lang" if you happen to have the bad luck of being the person who gets on after the last of the priority seating gets taken.

    • @chromenine
      @chromenine Před 4 lety +2

      ​@@agentrikamcgee There are those people who don't have a habit of giving up their seats to people who need it more because they're selfish enough to think their own daily struggle makes them more "deserving" to sit down.

    • @HackerArmy03
      @HackerArmy03 Před 4 lety

      @@chromenine I think its more of a "First come first serve" mindset but that's the same as well.

  • @cosakita6120
    @cosakita6120 Před 4 lety +77

    Meanwhile in Boston:
    - train arrives at the station half an hour late
    - Doors get stuck halfway open
    - 50/50 chance your train will catch fire at some point
    - you slip on garbage that has been piled up in the station for a month

    • @omkarprabhu9252
      @omkarprabhu9252 Před 4 lety

      @Cosakita The blue line aint bad

    • @alexandergu7797
      @alexandergu7797 Před 4 lety +2

      Must suck at the lines you use. Yes, the corridors smell like piss, but I have yet to experience most of the issues you described at the red line. Yes, the trains here are also occasionally late, and yes, the smell of marijuana is pretty frequent in the buses where I’m at. Wow, I’m starting to see some flaws with the public transportation system here (no intent to undermine the hard work the staff members put into it).

    • @Pyrus425
      @Pyrus425 Před 4 lety

      My first use of the T resulted in the train getting derailed

  • @fred6907
    @fred6907 Před 2 lety +42

    What amazes me is how EVERYTHING is so clean and organized, not just the train system. The attention to details is mindblowing. Especially how workers view their jobs, to truly serve their customers to the max. So polite and welcoming! I've yet to visit Japan, but I can already tell I will love it there. It's like being in an anime watching these videos.
    I know they have their own issues (people working themselves to death and so on), but we sure have much to learn from them.

  • @JayS96Bruh
    @JayS96Bruh Před 3 lety +5

    That they can leave the controls for the safety equipment sitting out in the open really shows you the marvels of a trusting and cooperative people and culture.

  • @dragslayers
    @dragslayers Před 4 lety +245

    it always amaze me and i always think that we should learn from other countries culture (in this case japan) because here (i live in france) public transport is so bad, it's dirty, the staff are unwelcoming and you would never allow a children to ride a train alone. And most importantly the etiquette, i mean here people just don't care about other, they put their music at full blast, they're yelling to call a friend. i think this video illustrate why some people wants to live in japan. The etiquette, the politness, the manner, the respect

    • @Sayahope546
      @Sayahope546 Před 4 lety +33

      The same goes here in England where I live, people do not care about others, playing music, chatting with each other and speaking on phone loudly inside the public transport. Some people if they are told off even though politely, they can get really offended. I think the rules likewise in Japan should be implement in early age in the school all over the world.

    • @Sunnykiwi07
      @Sunnykiwi07 Před 4 lety +19

      I live in the U.S. Similarly to the situation you describe, people have very little consideration for others around them. I would also be hesitant to leave a young child on their own to take public transportation. This video makes me wish that we could adopt more of the Japanse culture in terms of etiquette and consideration.

    • @ForUploadin
      @ForUploadin Před 4 lety

      Mais ils sont nuls politicalement

    • @ProtoMan137
      @ProtoMan137 Před 4 lety +6

      Hey, last year I have ridden on a french tram, and tbh, you can be lucky about how it is. It's worse in Germany - for example the whole ticket system is f'd up. In France I had a NFC card and you'd just hold it up to a reader. It was so beautiful I almost cried (okay maybe not)

    • @1Thunderfire
      @1Thunderfire Před 4 lety

      @@Sayahope546 Not to mention how expensive it is too.

  • @zonnm
    @zonnm Před 4 lety +300

    "I'm actually surprised why it's not happening in other countries. are there scary people out there? bcs trains are basically safe travel vehicles"
    *_*heart beat intensifies, sweating simutanously, sudden coldness*_*

    • @Yusuke_Denton
      @Yusuke_Denton Před 4 lety +8

      Yeah it's pretty funny cause he's basically saying a train IS the safe form of transportation compared to others.

    • @Kev_the_panda
      @Kev_the_panda Před 4 lety

      Zabe Denton it is relatively safe it is the season most safe after planes

    • @Yusuke_Denton
      @Yusuke_Denton Před 4 lety

      @@Kev_the_panda Yes?

    • @rebeccahudson87
      @rebeccahudson87 Před 4 lety +13

      Where Im from not even adults want to travel by themselves.

    • @Kev_the_panda
      @Kev_the_panda Před 4 lety

      Zabe Denton it is one of the safest for each of transportation

  • @jaecaldwell5667
    @jaecaldwell5667 Před rokem +3

    the universal design, as a disabled person is... Beautiful to me. What we should all be seeing everywhere.

  • @tonymallis2185
    @tonymallis2185 Před 2 lety +12

    I have been going to Japan almost every year for the past 16 years or so. Sadly, due to COVID I haven't been able to return this year and I miss it so much. Watching this video brought back so many fond memories of the place. I remember one trip I had bought some chocolates but left them behind at Haneda airport at the bus terminus. They managed to find them and sent them out on the next bus over to Narita, just before my departure. How great is the Japanese culture. A stark contrast to the "me culture" of most western nations.

  • @LynnHermione
    @LynnHermione Před 4 lety +894

    me: sees people cleaning a bus
    me: what is this sorcery
    our buses have dirt older than I am T_T

    • @jakarina2012
      @jakarina2012 Před 4 lety +13

      I spoke to a bus driver once and he told me that there service like is 40 years (aud Qld)

    • @SleepySnapbody
      @SleepySnapbody Před 4 lety +15

      ikr why cant everybody be like japan

    • @ionutolteanu824
      @ionutolteanu824 Před 4 lety +1

      OMG YES! =)))

    • @SkaffaS
      @SkaffaS Před 4 lety +5

      @@SleepySnapbody public transportation in the Netherlands is pretty clean, though not at the level of Japanese Public transport.

    • @swgar
      @swgar Před 3 lety +7

      Snapbody The Artist I'm so happy that not every country is like Japan. Have you ever traveled there? Though it is incredibly clean it's very depressing country.
      It's great experience to travel there for a couple of weeks, but live there? No, thanks.

  • @Brain4Zombie
    @Brain4Zombie Před 4 lety +158

    It impresses me more that the trains and stations are so clean. No stickers, no graffiti, no cigarette bums and most noticeable: no bubble gum stains at the floors. Japan might not be a perfect country (none is actually), but their people care about their environment more than others.

    • @trevork3386
      @trevork3386 Před 3 lety +9

      They do be struggling with the vast amount of plastic they use tho

    • @m.i7211
      @m.i7211 Před rokem +4

      Stickers, graffiti, and cigarette bums are all common types of trash in Japan, but bubble gum isn’t very popular here so you wouldn’t see bubble gum stains much at all 😂

  • @unebonnevie
    @unebonnevie Před 8 měsíci +7

    I accidentally left my bag on the Shinkansen during one of my rides this last August. 15 minutes LATER, I got it back exactly how it was at the lost-and-found office! Amazing! I LOVE JAPAN!

  • @jck1232
    @jck1232 Před 11 měsíci +12

    Just came back from a trip to Japan earlier this month and I'm absolutely astonished by the train system. It really puts America to shame in more ways than one and I'm highly envious of the Japanese for having such a system. Makes me want to move there at some point lol

  • @miyashita291
    @miyashita291 Před 4 lety +2018

    Japan is so precious. It’s people are precious. How diligent he is working is admirable.

    • @dha1223
      @dha1223 Před 3 lety +70

      Theres no love in japan, birthrate is declining

    • @pritamacharya18
      @pritamacharya18 Před 3 lety +101

      They're also incredibly racist.

    • @w1z4rd9
      @w1z4rd9 Před 3 lety +23

      Pritam Acharya Source ?

    • @w1z4rd9
      @w1z4rd9 Před 3 lety +18

      dha1223 Of course. Do you even realize their system economically and the job of an Average Japanese person and how expensive it is ? Stress is almighty her af You can blame the tradition and culture too

    • @pritamacharya18
      @pritamacharya18 Před 3 lety +75

      @@w1z4rd9 my brother used to work in Panasonic back in 2009, we had gone to visit him and he decided to take us out to a high-end restaurant. when we reached there was a long line so we waited for about 30 minutes, then when we arrived at the entrance we were told that there is no vacant table, but from the glass panes you could easily have a look at the main dining area of the hotel and there was in fact more than one table vacant. My brother talked to her about it and she just denied, this agitated my brother and he demanded to see the manager, after a few exchanges the manager told us that: 'if we dine there then it will make their other guests feel uncomfortable'. (Not to mention that all the 'other guests' were Japanese). Nevertheless, I really liked Japan.

  • @Angelfeather100
    @Angelfeather100 Před rokem +3

    I lived in Japan for 7 years. Once I’ve lost my wallet on a subway in Sapporo and lingered in the station, when I heard an anouncement over the speakers saying “the person who lost ¥10000 ($100) should come at lost & found to collect them” ! ( I had to describe my wallet). This was back in 1987. My son lost his mobile repeatedly and each time the police contacted us to let us know it can be picked up at the local police station, this was in 2003. My husband forgot his belt in a big department store after trying on some trousers. The salesperson run down 5 levels to find my husband and return his belt. There’s no place like Japan in the whole world, I miss it so much! ❤️

  • @wanglelife
    @wanglelife Před 11 měsíci +3

    I love how much pride they take in their work. It certainly helps when everyone is cooperating with good etiquette!

  • @jemand8462
    @jemand8462 Před 3 lety +191

    When I was in Japan 2 years ago, I started a line right in front of nothing without even knowing it. I was just thinking about stuff, looking around and after a few minutes, 5 or 6 people were standing behind me in a straight line even though I wasn't standing anywhere close where a train door would be opening. I was just the only one there so they accepted me as their line leader. It was so nice and embarrasing at the same time :D

  • @trainerkai1313
    @trainerkai1313 Před 4 lety +79

    Much better subway system than the one in New York City. So clean and efficient.

    • @CaptainBill22
      @CaptainBill22 Před 4 lety +3

      As a New Yorker I despise almost everything Albany and below except for the Catskills and Long Island. I've only visited NYC a couple times, and I really do like the LIRR and the Subway system.

    • @cboy0394
      @cboy0394 Před 4 lety +4

      Wade Wilson has nothing to do with it being a homogenous society. more to do with a society that is so open to investing in public works unlike our own that’s only interested in “cutting taxes and balancing budgets”. you can narrow it down to selflessness/community vs selfishness/unbridled individualism

    • @ashsi9625
      @ashsi9625 Před 4 lety

      @@wadewilson6628 more to do with a socity that's metro is modern tbh. NY's subway was started in 1901, Tokyo's in 1950. Tokyo (along with other cities such as Taipei, Hong Kong and Seoul) could activly look from other cities on how to build an effective and efficient metro system.

    • @themightyflog
      @themightyflog Před 4 lety +2

      @@ashsi9625 And yet New York could never upgrade. I was laughing how these trains are so clean and NYC was so proud they did one big cleaning during the COVID breakout.

    • @moguramimi1541
      @moguramimi1541 Před 4 lety

      @@themightyflog lol

  • @gunnynow
    @gunnynow Před 3 lety +29

    I was fortunate to live in Tokyo as an ex pat kid and I road buses trains and subway to get to and from school daily. It is an incredible transportation system in an incredible country.

  • @tglenn3121
    @tglenn3121 Před 2 lety +13

    When I visited Japan for the first time, I had never used any kind of subway or train because I live in an area where they don't exist. I found navigating the subway systems and riding the trains to be very easy and navigable. Since I was a tourist, I chose to avoid riding during rush hour, but other times were very convenient and enjoyable.

  • @chris-hayes
    @chris-hayes Před 3 lety +452

    The Japanese take so much pride in the work they do.

  • @Denverman1
    @Denverman1 Před 3 lety +956

    Japan is a unique planet by itself.

    • @ryank1273
      @ryank1273 Před 3 lety +13

      I wonder why... ☢️

    • @user-nj8sr6fx3c
      @user-nj8sr6fx3c Před 3 lety +50

      In Japanese school, they volunteer to clean the city and clean the school themself. I also want to pick it up when the trash is falling😅

    • @omgean
      @omgean Před 3 lety +21

      @@user-nj8sr6fx3c yes I remember going to school in setagaya I was so confused on my first day when we were cleaning the bathrooms and everything

    • @giudicedredd9195
      @giudicedredd9195 Před rokem +6

      @@user-nj8sr6fx3c They do not volunteer, they are forced to clean the school

    • @takecham5155
      @takecham5155 Před rokem +8

      @@giudicedredd9195 Cooperating and cleaning itself is incorporated into education.
      I didn't like cleaning time, but I hate a dirty environment even more. I was educated without realizing it. 笑

  • @gdayriz
    @gdayriz Před 2 lety +4

    i feel like everyone is working at their best. much respect!

  • @alfred0231
    @alfred0231 Před 2 lety

    Wow. Was not expecting that high quality montage at the end of the interview. Glad I watched till the end.

  • @ProtoMan137
    @ProtoMan137 Před 4 lety +740

    I swear Japan is 200 years ahead of the rest of the world

    • @ProtoMan137
      @ProtoMan137 Před 4 lety +50

      @AniMeusic I wrote 'ahead' in a sense that people realized, that it's no use being selfish, etc.

    • @samiulislam1791
      @samiulislam1791 Před 4 lety +9

      Proof is Playstation.

    • @QED_
      @QED_ Před 4 lety +6

      @Proto Man: I think you're mistaken. Almost everything is on a spectrum -- the more of something you get, the less of something else. What the Japanese do well . . . they do at a cost. For example, if you like "selflessness" -- fine. But you pay for it in less individuality and creativity . . .

    • @Name-jw4sj
      @Name-jw4sj Před 4 lety +31

      No they aren’t! You fanboys of Japan are blind. Just because they have clean transportation and clean streets doesn’t mean they are far advanced. Japan has a serious labor rights issue that European countries already fixed over 50 years ago. Japan has a series sexual harassment issue. Japan has a serious xenophobia issue. Japan has a serious science based graduates issue-among the developed countries they are one of the lowest. And many more other issues. Just because they have vending machines and 7-11 doesn’t mean they are more advanced than other developed countries.

    • @christopersigit
      @christopersigit Před 4 lety +19

      @@Name-jw4sj Yeah right. So lets compare Japan with USA. LOL !!

  • @lemagnifique1573
    @lemagnifique1573 Před 4 lety +113

    Japanese has strong cultures : discipline is their DNA, perfection is their daily breakfast. Love Japan from Indonesia 🇮🇩 ❤️ 🇯🇵

    • @user-hu7tj8su5r
      @user-hu7tj8su5r Před 4 lety +6

      Thanks🎵

    • @poksi360
      @poksi360 Před 4 lety +2

      Liberal asswipe: Let us see what we can destroy.
      1 week later: Chaos in Japan. Tokyo has changed name to Chaz.

  • @KamiKitsuneVA
    @KamiKitsuneVA Před rokem +2

    Being used to the grittiness of the NYC subway and then seeing these pristine and clean stations and trains is absolutely amazing. The efficiency is mind blowing

  • @senseisharktv7380
    @senseisharktv7380 Před 3 lety +2

    This is amazing! Like this is something that rivals certain television programs. Great work to all involved!

  • @arvsss_
    @arvsss_ Před 4 lety +44

    "What's the transportationn system like where you're from"
    A lot of options, but you'll still get late everytime. One of the things I love when I went to Japan was how reliable the transportation system was. We were never late for our itinerary... Except that one time I was in Akiba...

    • @Kimse05
      @Kimse05 Před 4 lety +6

      Well then, ill be the one to ask.
      Whats happened in Akiba? :)

  • @mechikaboombayah4960
    @mechikaboombayah4960 Před 4 lety +64

    Even the bus garage is so damn clean.

  • @rs646dd
    @rs646dd Před 4 měsíci +1

    I live in Osaka, and while passengers on Tokyo's Yamanote Line are tense and nervous, those on Osaka's Midosuji Line seem relaxed and at ease. That is why I feel relieved when I come back to Osaka.
    Stations and train cars are clean all over Japan.

  • @Psiros
    @Psiros Před rokem +4

    I remember riding the system in New York back in the 90s and just being stressed out as a kid because of all the news reports of violence back then. Not sure if it's better now or not in New York, but the only stress I experience with the system in Japan is navigating through the large crowds in the Tokyo area. The density of the crowds can be intimidating, but the thought of being mugged or attacked never crosses my mind. Most of the time, the only ones who don't follow manners are foreigners. Most probably aren't aware what they're doing is wrong, though.

  • @lilomimi94
    @lilomimi94 Před 4 lety +201

    “What’s like the transportation system like?”
    **cries in NYC**

    • @CowTipper898
      @CowTipper898 Před 4 lety +13

      NYC is lucky to even have a transportation system, lol

    • @MrMeatyHD
      @MrMeatyHD Před 4 lety +1

      @TheDeluxe guy they look like a stank fart too. You are lucky to get on the new ones

    • @anindrapratama
      @anindrapratama Před 4 lety +5

      Ironically Tokyo's first subway line is inspired by the New York Subway back in the 1920's

    • @CrayonHarts
      @CrayonHarts Před 4 lety +2

      when nyc's subway should look like this ...

    • @toshi7220
      @toshi7220 Před 4 lety

      nyc subway first needs to xomtrol that emergency door lol ppl just missused them like crazy.

  • @ServantOfOdin
    @ServantOfOdin Před 4 lety +138

    "What's the transportation system like where you're from?"
    Well, Germany here. According to the official pages of the various public transport companies, also always on-time, clean, courteous and precise. But the reality looks quite, quite different......

    • @flockenlp1
      @flockenlp1 Před 4 lety +11

      Sank ju for träveling wis deutsche bahn

    • @simis5294
      @simis5294 Před 3 lety +2

      I think Switzerland is a bit better off with the SBB :D

    • @TheAerozot
      @TheAerozot Před 3 lety +13

      Come on guys. You are like the Japan of Europe. You need to lead by example otherwise we are all fu****

    • @damagedlykin
      @damagedlykin Před 3 lety +2

      Deutsche Bahn lmao

    • @chrisholmes1339
      @chrisholmes1339 Před 3 lety +15

      I am from Japan. My second language is German. And I expected Germany would be like Japan, punctual and clean. But I got truly shocked when I went to Frankfurt last year. 50% trains delayed around 20-30 minutes, I asked the local why, they said me because it's in Germany. My impressions about Germany are dirty, not secure and delay. Sorry for this.

  • @jjejet
    @jjejet Před 11 měsíci +6

    What a pleasant man, it was a delight listening to him and his experience about his work and trains ^///^
    Japan is a planet unto itself, and as such it should be revered and respected with tumost humbleness! Can't wait to get back to Tokyo!

  • @ianwallace16
    @ianwallace16 Před rokem +1

    Not only the subway but the entire rail system is on time n spotless.👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @nikosxi
    @nikosxi Před 4 lety +79

    14:09 Was that an alcohol test for the bus driver? That's standard procedure?
    That is amazing.
    As is the video. Great quality and very informative content.

    • @zam023
      @zam023 Před 4 lety +3

      Yes it was. I did not know bus drivers have to take it. I know pilots do, and we had several bad JAL pilots last year.

    • @zangorajura
      @zangorajura Před 4 lety +16

      Yes and its not only for bus driver. Many Japanese companies where their business involve in driving vehicle (be it cargo service, courier, bus, train, etc.) will most likely have this.

    • @peteru18
      @peteru18 Před 4 lety +4

      Since 1 May 2011, alcohol testing of all drivers is legally compulsory in Japan. When I say drivers, I mean drivers working for a company, be it passenger or freight transport. While the Ministry for Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism doesn't mention it in its online guidelines, I'm almost certain railway drivers are also included (not so sure on guards/conductors).

  • @anthonychilders9549
    @anthonychilders9549 Před 4 lety +40

    “Are there scary people out there?” My dude, you have no idea.

  • @Napsteraspx
    @Napsteraspx Před 2 lety +13

    That's awesome that they clean each component of the busses and trains. My grandfather was a craftsman that built machine components and he would say how just dirt and grime alone left unchecked can cause the most damage to any mechanism, even a rather simple one.

  • @arkaprava2561
    @arkaprava2561 Před rokem

    Such a great documentry ✌️
    Thanks 👍

  • @GeneralMerc
    @GeneralMerc Před 4 lety +490

    Tokyo Subway: A well-dressed elegant watchman says: "Thank you for riding. This is the final stop :D"
    Mexico City Metro: Instead here, a overweight poorly dressed taco-smelling security guard:
    "Move on! This is the final stop. Get out of here quickly"

    • @campkira
      @campkira Před 3 lety +8

      yeah.. at least they look like they working there...

    • @stephanideleon7215
      @stephanideleon7215 Před 3 lety +3

      a ustedes alguien les dicen algo? aqui en Panama namas suena en los altavoces que es la ultima parada y los demas pasajeros tienen que despertar a los dormidos XD

    • @laeihbvaljefhbvalejfhbv
      @laeihbvaljefhbvalejfhbv Před 3 lety +9

      I see a lot of comments pointing to lazy and conservative, but in my perspective both countries are pretty conservative and both are among the most hardworking countries in the world. One thing Mexico lacks is etiquette, I would love to see Mexico implement more Japanese manners in public transport and urban planning.

    • @brownbear1657
      @brownbear1657 Před 3 lety +1

      @@stephanideleon7215 en Barcelona también, nadie sube ni baja

    • @BabyHannah05
      @BabyHannah05 Před 3 lety +4

      New York City : giant rats, urine smell, chewed gum all over the floor, homeless people!

  • @leeunioa
    @leeunioa Před 4 lety +32

    When I was in Japan, me and my parents where looking at a map to go back to our hotel. Then one kind man asked us if we need help and showed us a train we needed to go to. That is why I love Japan they are very kind, I wanna go there at least once more💛

  • @joker6solitaire
    @joker6solitaire Před 2 lety +1

    I'm so impressed at the immense human touch on such high-tech trains.

  • @erwinasafitri9473
    @erwinasafitri9473 Před 2 lety +3

    Went to tokyo in 2017, my friend and me were traveling from tokyo to kyoto at that time. We were going to the bus station, but we lost our ways. Then 2 nihonjin came and accompanied us to the bus station, they even helped us to bring our belongings. Japan is very nice place to live or to travel.

  • @HelenaE
    @HelenaE Před 3 lety +94

    I am from Medellín, Colombia, our train system is basically what keeps the city together. It is clean, secure and we are so proud of it. However due to poverty and the lobist trying to get us to use cars, we cannot expand the lines, thus hindering the progress. Kudos to Japan a great Inspiration

    • @taroyamikishida1982
      @taroyamikishida1982 Před 2 lety +3

      Love to Colombia:)

    • @sorryitsmoops
      @sorryitsmoops Před rokem +1

      My friends was just in Medellín and she posted about how impressive the train system was.

  • @josephlogue9175
    @josephlogue9175 Před 2 lety

    Really engaging and informative. Suzuki-San is charming and now I want to go just to ride the subway.

  • @TheRedgtv2000
    @TheRedgtv2000 Před 3 lety

    Very impressive, so organized and clean!

  • @Likosak
    @Likosak Před 3 lety +202

    I live in Prague, Czech Republic and it's normal for kids to travel on their own using public transport. Quite honestly I am surprised how similar our travel etiquette is. I never realized how ours transportation system is similar to Tokyo's one.

    • @bachiistsho2940
      @bachiistsho2940 Před 2 lety +14

      Good to know! I admire Czech plastic models. So precise yet affordable!

    • @mikan3156
      @mikan3156 Před 2 lety +23

      I know the Czech Republic is a wonderful country! from Japan

    • @Likosak
      @Likosak Před 2 lety +22

      @@mikan3156 Japan too! Culture wise, nature wise, always admired Japanese people for their life philosophy. Hardworking nation. Always wanted to see Tokyo and meet car enthusiasts in Japan.

    • @azabujuban-hito8085
      @azabujuban-hito8085 Před 2 lety +9

      I live in Tokyo. I had been to Prague before a long time ago ( 2014 ). It's such a beautiful city with beautiful people. Hope I can go back there again in the future.

    • @yuliayulia9661
      @yuliayulia9661 Před 2 lety +8

      Czech Republic and Japan? 😂😂😂😂