[If you thought Star Trek fans were a bit odd, this one's for you.]

Popular Cartoon Series Makes Japanese Shrine a Magnet for Fans
Devotees Are Mainly Young Men, Who Dress Like the Characters -- in Miniskirts

By HIROKO TABUCHI
Wall Street Journal

July 30, 2008; Page A1

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121737740486095275.html?mod=hps_us_pageone


WASHIMIYA, Japan -- For many years, Washinomiya Shrine has been a quiet 
place of worship, attracting just a trickle of sightseers to this sleepy 
town outside Tokyo. Then last summer, priests started noticing a new kind 
of visitor.

Young men, some clad in miniskirts, stockings and pastel-colored wigs, were 
lining up for photos at the shrine's vermilion gate. Over the big New 
Year's holiday in January, nearly 300,000 such visitors -- almost 10 times 
the town's population -- showed up, scores of them clad in outfits 
resembling schoolgirl uniforms.

Discerning fans had figured out that Washinomiya Shrine is regularly 
featured in "Lucky Star," a wildly popular animated comic that aired as a 
television series last year. Like the fans of other popular comics, Lucky 
Star's most ardent followers -- often men in their 20s and 30s -- 
demonstrate their commitment to the show by engaging in "costume play," or 
"cosplay," the popular pastime of dressing up as various characters.

Lucky Star's main characters are all female. "For us, this is a holy site," 
declared a young man named Shigeki Ito, strolling through the shrine one 
recent weekend in a wig of blue tresses, a red-and-white schoolgirl uniform 
and dark knee socks. The 20-something Tokyo office worker said dressing up 
as Konata, Lucky Star's easygoing main character, is "part of the 
experience." Accompanying him as Miyuki was friend Takashi Tanno, his pink 
wig slightly askew.

The unlikely attention lavished on this small town shows Japan's sometimes 
over-the-top obsession with anime, a style of animation that often features 
big-eyed characters delving into grown-up themes. Anime is one of Japan's 
hottest industries, expanding into blockbuster films, videogames, plastic 
figurines and fan fiction.

Sales of comics, anime and related games reached 186.8 billion yen, or 
$1.74 billion, in 2007, according to the Media Create Co., a research 
company. Anime such as Pokemon and Dragon Ball have become some of Japan's 
most visible cultural exports. Publishing giant Kadokawa Group Holdings 
Inc.'s U.S. arm launched Lucky Star DVDs in the U.S. in May, and sequels 
are due later this year.

Originally a series in a men's comic magazine, "Lucky Star" follows four 
girls at a high school near Tokyo who chat about videogames, copy each 
other's homework and sleep through class. There's no well-defined plot, no 
violence and none of the steamy scenes sometimes associated with anime. But 
the girls' laid-back humor and their blasé attitudes toward life took Japan 
by storm.

Soon, hardcore fans -- called otaku, or geeks -- were racing to identify 
the unnamed real-life locations where the show takes place. They swiftly 
zeroed in on Washimiya, in a region where Lucky Star's author, Kagami 
Yoshimizu, has lived. Washinomiya Shrine was fingered as the place that 
employs the family of Tsukasa and Kagami Hiiragi, two doe-eyed sisters with 
purple hair.

"I find it fun to share the same space as the anime characters and connect 
to their world," says Keitaro Osakabe, a pharmacy student who recently 
compiled a 50-page illustrated guide that identifies key scenes, such as 
bus stops and obscure paths through rice fields. His guide, which is sold 
to other fans, is packed with advice on the best camera angles to replicate 
Lucky Star scenes.


Spooked by the Deluge

At first, residents of Washimiya -- spelled differently than the shrine -- 
were spooked by the deluge, fearing the skirt-clad men were part of a 
religious cult. "I didn't know what it was all about," says Akemi Kishi, 
65, owner of a ramen-noodle shop near the shrine.

But it wasn't long before locals realized their unorthodox visitors could 
be a source of relief for a local economy still reeling from Japan's 
economic slump of the 1990s and early 2000s. Led by Atsushi Sakata, an 
enterprising official at the local chamber of commerce, a team of town 
employees studied the Lucky Star comics and brainstormed ways to court 
these new visitors.

"We realized this was a huge business opportunity for Washimiya," says Mr. 
Sakata, who says he knows the show's characters "like my own kids."


Lucky Star Bread Rolls

Now the town's small shops hawk Lucky Star chocolate bread rolls similar to 
the ones the characters like to eat. The town trotted out a Lucky 
Star-themed sake and, continuing its shrine theme, recruited a traditional 
carpenter to craft cellphone charms in the shape of tiny prayer tablets. 
Washimiya has sold some 20,000 charms so far, contributing to the 42 
million yen, or about $390,000, in income it has garnered to date from 
Lucky Star food and goods.

In an effort to quell local misgivings, Mr. Sakata also organized several 
Lucky Star festivals at the shrine, complete with talk shows by Lucky Star 
voice actors and a Lucky Star trivia quiz to bring locals and fans 
together. One event in April drew some 1,500 people, which included scores 
of curious townsfolk.

Soon, some residents noticed that even the most outlandish fans were 
generally well-behaved, and drew a firm line between the real and fantasy 
worlds. Fans stand in orderly lines at the shrine's gate to pose for 
pictures. There's a code of conduct among Lucky Star fans: Mr. Osakabe, the 
author of the illustrated guide, warns readers not to sing and dance in 
public so as to not disturb local residents.

Many fans travel on the train dressed in more-pedestrian attire, and then 
change into their costumes -- which costume shops sell for about $150 -- in 
the bathroom by the train station. Some shop owners started offering fans a 
place to change.

"They're so very friendly and very polite. They take home all their trash," 
says Tamotsu Tsukada, a 75-year-old retiree who lives near the shrine. Mr. 
Tsukada greeted Messrs. Ito and Tanno (dressed as Konata and Miyuki), 
explaining that they've become friendly after bumping into each other 
several times.

Some controversy remains. Some locals thought the town went too far last 
April, when it issued honorary residency cards to Lucky Star's main 
characters and held a lavish ceremony. "We had people calling in to say we 
should have better things to do than dealing with citizenship for anime 
characters," says Nobuaki Furuya, an official at the Washimiya town hall. 
(Town officials say fans loved it.)

Still, Mr. Kishi, the ramen chef, has been won over. A new entry on his 
menu, called Tsukasa's Miso Ramen with Heaps of Corn, is named after the 
Lucky Star character whose fictional family works at the shrine. Priced at 
700 yen, or about $6.50, it comes with an extra dollop of kernels that Mr. 
Kishi says younger diners like. A shelf in his shop displays a line of 
Lucky Star figurines.

"It's been a good change. It's good to talk to so many young people," he says.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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