Feb 23

Job: Account Manager/Assistant Sales Manager (Fort Lee, NJ)

Via Actus. Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London but is interested in hearing about any Japan-related opportunities across the globe.

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***Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.***


Job Position: Account Manager/Assistant Sales Manager (Fort Lee, NJ)

Job Details:

RAccount Manager/Assistant Sales Manager-Fort Lee, NJ

Company Information:
– Company Address: Fort Lee, NJ
– Established in 1930’s in Japan, Main product is industrial gas. Others include industrial machinery, communications and electronics, chemicals, ceramics, metals, and construction materials.
– Company size: Around 80 in Japan, 10 in the US.

Your Role with the Company:
Your main role is to maintain existing accounts in East Coast area.
Read More


Feb 23

Job: News Intern for Nippon TV (NYC)

Via Nippon TV. Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London but is interested in hearing about any Japan-related opportunities across the globe.

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Job Position: News Intern for Nippon TV (NYC)

Job Details:

Nippon TV (NTV), Japan’s oldest TV network has openings for enthusiastic news interns at New York News Bureau. The responsibility for the position is to assist our reporters in creating daily news stories, breaking news and longer feature stories to our Japanese audience. The ideal candidate would be fluent English speaker (Native/Business level) and conversational in Japanese, have great interests in news and be able to work long-term, more than 3 months. We don’t assist in any visa support.

How to apply:
Interested candidates should send their English and Japanese resume to ntvny@ntvic.com.


Feb 23

Job: Teach English via Skype

Posted by Dipika Soni (Ishikawa-ken, 2003-06). Dipika has recently moved back to London but is interested in hearing about any Japan-related opportunities across the globe.

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***Note: If you apply for this position, please let them know you learned of it from JETwit. Thanks.***

Job Position: Teach English via Skype

Job Details:

Teachers teach with their own computer, Internet connection, and at their own home via Skype. Lessons are custom, so teachers are responsible for meeting with the student and deciding the best path forward. Lessons range anywhere from English conversation practice to test preparation.

Very flexible job. Teachers get their own online calendar to manage. They choose when they work each week. Dependability is a must though. Base pay is $13 / 50 minute lesson, however with bonuses from student sign-ups and renewals it works out to be around $16 – $20 / lesson.

Here is the school website: www.gotravelenglish.com

For more details contact: brian@gotravelenglish.com


Feb 21

Taylor Anderson/Japan Foundation Lecture to be hosted by Randolph-Macon College on 3/11

Thanks to Andy Anderson for sharing the following:

“Randolph-Macon College will host the Taylor Anderson/Japan Foundation Lecture, “Postscripts from Japan: Stories that Endure After the Earthquake and Tsunami,” on Sunday, March 11, 2012 at 4:00 p.m. in Blackwell Auditorium, R-MC Center for the Performing Arts. This lecture will commemorate the one year anniversary of the Great East Japan Earthquake which took the life of R-MC alumna Taylor Anderson ’08.”

Taylor’s father Andy Anderson will be speaking, as will NPR’s Yuki Noguchi and Ambassador Ichiro Fujisaki. Andy said it would be great to see lots of JET alumni at the event.

More details here:  http://www.rmc.edu/News/12-02-10%20-%20Japan%20Commemoration%203,-d-,11.aspx


Feb 21

volunteerAKITA Scholarship Fund Update 02.21.12

JET Paul Yoo, founder of volunteerAKITA, recently shared this update about fundraising for the volunteerAKITA Scholarship Fund which aims to send a boy from one of the orphanages they work with to university (the first boy from the orphanage to ever express interest in going to college):

“Hey everyone! A BIG THANKS for all the support! With all the donations that came in this week we have ¥695,461 left to raise for our scholarship fund. Please help us continue to spread the word and for more information regarding the scholarship fund please check out our website at www.volunteerakita.org or feel free to contact me anytime! (volunteerakita [at] gmail.com).”

 

Click here to read the previous JETwit post about Paul Yoo and the volunteerAKITA Scholarship Fund.


Feb 21

JETAA Southeast to hold JLPT language course in March

Via JETAA Southeast:

The JETAASE chapter will have a JLPT language course in March. If you are near JLPT N2 level or aspiring to be, this course is for you!

Dates:
March 5th
March 12th
March 26th

Time: 7:45pm – 9:15pm (90 minutes)

Class location: Healey Building downstairs conference room (the corner of Forsyth and Walton)
Address: 57th Forsyth St. NW, Atlanta, GA

The in-person class will be open to the first 10 participants. For those residing outside of the Atlanta area, a long distance learning option may be available. The class will be taught by Japanese language instructor Sakiko Suzuki

Please sign up at the form below if you are interested in participating.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGJxUHFWQWRJSDIxczNiYVltVHR0aWc6MQ#gid=0


Feb 21

Justin’s Japan: Interview with DJ Krush on His 20th Anniversary Tour

"Everyone’s using computers these days, but when I was young analog was king. Today everyone’s using the same software, so it can sound a bit dull. On the other hand, there’s plenty of surprising music you can create, so that’s what I’m aiming to do." (Justin Tedaldi)

 

By JQ magazine editor Justin Tedaldi (CIR Kobe-shi, 2001-02) for Examiner.com. Visit his Japanese culture page here for related stories.

Born Hideaki Ishi in Tokyo, DJ Krush is one of the world’s most acclaimed electronic music artists and producers. He first made his name in hip-hop in the 1980s as the founder of Krush Posse, and his style now transcends category much like his idol Miles Davis, who dropped the “jazz” label for “music” in the late 1960s.

Continuing his world tour, DJ Krush plays at The MID in Chicago tonight (Feb 21). In this exclusive interview conducted Sunday backstage at the Music Hall of Williamsburg in Brooklyn (his first New York City gig in four years), I spoke with the artist during sound check about his two decades as a solo artist, his shocking yakuza past, and this thoughts on the future of music.

Last year you celebrated your 20th anniversary as a solo artist. What did it mean to you?

It’s endless—I didn’t expect it would last this long, so when I realized that it was now 20 years I was surprised. My history as a DJ is 25 years, but I’ve been a solo artist for 20 years.

Before you began your career you became involved with the yakuza. Did having this reputation make it difficult to enter or be successful in the music business at first?

I didn’t want to mimic American style hip-hop; I wanted to create a style unique from everyone else. At first, I didn’t have a good reputation and they wanted to attack me, so it was really tough.

What are the central differences between Japanese and American hip-hop?

The style is the same, but the culture, lifestyle and background is different. It’s tricky to explain, but the differences are there.

For the complete story, click here.


Feb 19

 

Amy at Soma, Fukushima, with Mr. Tanji, August 2011.

By Amy Cameron (Fukushima-ken, 1998-2000) for JQ magazine. Amy was one of eight American JET alums selected for the Tohoku Invitational Program sponsored by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Japan Tourism Agency.

I will always remember the day back in 1998 that I received my JET ALT assignment. I immediately rushed to a map to see where I would be living. I hadn’t studied Japanese before, so it was hard to pronounce the words: Nihonmatsu-shi, Fukushima-ken. My tongue tripped on the syllables and I laughed. I found the spot on a map, about halfway between Tokyo and Aomori, 35 miles or so from the coast, between some mountains. I tried to imagine what it would be like to live there. As my departure approached, friends and family asked where in Japan I was heading, but no one had ever heard of Fukushima.

Fast forward to the days following March 11, 2011, and suddenly the whole world had heard of Fukushima. Amidst the media overload of earthquake, tsunami, and radiation disaster images, friends and family called and e-mailed me, “Was that where you used to live?” I scrambled to contact friends and coworkers in the region. My former supervisor cried when he heard that I was thinking of him. People in Nihonmatsu were okay, he assured me. The earthquake had not done as much damage as in some other areas, and Nihonmatsu was far enough from the coast that it had not been hit by the tsunami.  Radiation, on the other hand, was a growing concern.

At this time, my heart ached to return to Fukushima to visit the people and land I loved so dearly. I had spent two amazing years there as an ALT, and it had been hard to leave.  Even as news of the disasters began to fade from the headlines, I felt distracted from my life in Boston, part of me emotionally back in Fukushima. When I heard about the Tohoku Invitational Program for JET alums a few months later, I was so excited that I had a hard time sleeping. This was it: a real opportunity to return to my Japanese hometown, much sooner than I had thought would be possible.

Read More


Feb 17

Justin’s Japan: L’Arc~en~Ciel Rocks Madison Square Garden March 25

Courtesy of BAM!

By JQ magazine editor Justin Tedaldi (CIR Kobe-shi, 2001-02). Visit his Japanese culture page on Examiner.com here for related stories.

After 20 years, 13 million albums and 16 million singles sold, famed rock group L’Arc~en~Ciel is gearing up for a historic performance as the very first Japanese act to headline New York¹s legendary Madison Square Garden.

Formed in Osaka in 1991, L’Arc~en~Ciel (the name means “rainbow” in French) gained acclaim for their glam-influenced stage fashions, frenetic live shows, and punk/new wave inspired music. The group has achieved legendary status at home and abroad, and its new album BUTTERFLY will be released on iTunes in much of the world outside of Japan in March.

The album also includes the hit song “Good Luck My Way” as featured in the movie  version of the iconic and highly popular anime full-length feature film, Fullmetal Alchemist: The Star of Milos. This band¹s hit single “Ready Steady Go” was used in the soundtrack of the original Fullmetal Alchemist television series featured on Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim.

L¹Arc-en-Ciel¹s lead singer and occasional guitarist hyde has called BUTTERFLY “a monumental album, it’s great that we can release the album just at the right time.”

For more details and tickets, click the banner image or visit www.larc-en-ciel.com.


Feb 17

Zen Monk Fights Radiation in Japan

Via MSNBC website:  http://photoblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/10/10368444-zen-monk-fights-radiation-in-japan?chromedomain=worldnews

Any JETs have experiences to share about dealing with or fighting against ongoing radiation in Japan? Have any JETs met this zen monk?


Feb 17

“Pray For Japan” documentary screening coming to your town

Thanks to  Jessica Kennett Cork (CIR, 1997-2000, Hiroshima-ken) who works for the Consulate General of Japan in Atlanta for sharing the below information about a documentary film by an American living in Japan called Pray for Japan which will be screened throughout the US March 11 and 14:

On March 11, 2011, Japan’s Tohoku coastal region was destroyed by a 9.0 magnitude earthquake and devastating tsunami that followed.  PRAY FOR JAPAN takes place in the devastated region of Ishinomaki, Miyagi – the largest coastal city in Tohoku with a population of over 160,000 people. Filmmaker Stu Levy – an American living in Japan – filmed the tsunami aftermath during his trips to Tohoku as a volunteer and over a period of 6 weeks, captured over 50 hours of footage.

PRAY FOR JAPAN focuses on four key perspectives of the tragedy – School, Shelter, Family, and Volunteers. With each perspective we meet victims who faced significant obstacles and fought to overcome them. Through these four vantage points, the audience is able to understand the vast ramifications of this large-scale natural disaster – and the battle these real-life heroes fought on behalf of their loved ones and their hometown.

Find a screening near you: http://prayforjapan-film.org/page/screenings


Feb 15

The future of education and the future of JET

I just came across this RSAnimate video about a progressive way to think about education in an era where we really don’t know what’s coming next, and the main skills people will need are the ability to see lots of possibilities and be prepared to adapt and evolve.  It seems particularly relevant as more attention is paid to what the future of JET will look like.


Feb 15

JET Prefecture Round-up 2.16.12

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Sam Brewster, (Akita-ken, Kazuno-shi, 2011-present), gives a little taste of what JETs are doing around Japan. To submit items for future JET Prefecture Round-up posts, e-mail Sam at jetinfogather [at] gmail.com.

Events by Region

Chubu Region

Nagano

  • Snow Splash party in Hakuba at The Pub on February 25th.

Shizuoka

  • The 22nd Annual Sakura Kawazu Matsuri will take place from February 5th to March 10th.
  • Ski trip 2 – Le Retour at the Aqua Alpine Hotel and Lady Diana Hotel from February 17th to 19th.
  • Shizuoka JETs are heading to this year’s Fujinishiki Sake Matsuri on Sunday 18th March in Fujinomiya-shi.

Kansai Region

Nara

  • Nara JETs take on Hadaka Matsuri – the Naked Man Festival – in Okayama on February 18th.
  • Nara Bunkasai 2012 takes place this year on February 25th at Loco Loco, showcasing the best of Nara ALTs’ talents for charity!

Kantou Region

Ibaraki

  • Makabe Hina Doll Festival in Sakuragawa, from February 4th to March 3rd.

Kyushu Region

Kagoshima

  • Charity Party for Earthquake Disaster at Recife Bar On Sunday 19th February
  • The KAJET Annual Pub Quiz takes place this year on March 10th

Kumamoto

  • KumAJET is auctioning off its ALTs for charity at this year’s Valentine’s Day Auction, held on February 18th. Last year they raised a whopping 238,000yen!
  • The Kumamoto City International Center Japanese cooking workshop is being held this year on February 26th

Nagasaki

  • Nagasaki JETs are holding a three day intensive English course for students to take part in various cultural activities and games, beginning February 15th.

Shikoku Region

Ehime

  • Ehime Jets are volunteering on February 26th, playing games and doing crafts with children at the Hatadera Children’s Center.
 *Note to all JETs and JET alumni:  Click here to find your JET prefecture group on LinkedIn.

Feb 15

JET humor

Most of you have probably seen these two things going around on Facebook and elsewhere.  But just in case you haven’t….

1.  The 101 Signs You’ve Been in Japan Too Long

2.  ALT in Japan


Feb 15

Justin’s Japan: Robert Whiting Brings ‘Tokyo Underworld’ to Japan Society

Tokyo Underworld 2012: An Evening with Robert Whiting will be held Feb. 16 at Japan Society. Continue reading on Examiner.com Robert Whiting brings ‘Tokyo Underworld’ to Japan Society. (Courtesy of Japan Society)

 

By JQ magazine editor Justin Tedaldi (CIR Kobe-shi, 2001-02) for Examiner.com. Visit his Japanese culture page here for related stories.

Japan Society of New York becomes your gateway to the seamy side of Japan on Feb. 16 with Tokyo Underworld 2012: An Evening with Robert Whiting. At this special appearance, the celebrated author will discuss the intractable role of yakuza in virtually all areas of modern day society in Japan. (It also echoes a 2011 Japan Society lecture by crime expert and Tokyo Vice author Jake Adelstein.)

Whiting first came to Japan with U.S. Air Force intelligence in 1962, where he was assigned to work for the National Security Agency in the U-2 program. He graduated from Tokyo’s Sophia University in 1969 with a degree in Japanese politics. His research into the ties binding Japan’s leading politicians to Yakuza bosses gained him entrée into the Higashi Nakano wing of Tokyo’s largest criminal gang, the Sumiyoshi-kai, where he became an “informal advisor.” He worked for Encyclopedia Britannica Japan as an editor until 1972, whereupon he moved to New York City and wrote his first book, The Chrysanthemum and the Bat. He later worked for Time-Life in Tokyo for a year before becoming a professional author.

For the complete story, click here.

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