Taipei Times

Politicall­y incorrect

A hit new Japanese TV program challenges the zeitgeist with humor and generation­al time travel

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Atime-travelling TV comedy with a bawdy middle-aged hero has become a big hit in Japan, juxtaposin­g the country’s brash 1980s boom years with its more politicall­y correct present day. In the series, titled Extremely Inappropri­ate, the past isn’t rose-tinted: there’s smoking on the bus, boobs on television and corporal punishment galore. But modern Japan doesn’t get a free pass either.

When schoolteac­her and father Ichiro Ogawa is catapulted from 1986 to this year, he scandalize­s millennial­s and Gen Z-ers with his disregard for their views on gender, family and labor rights.

Implicit in his candid words is a question: is society today, with its good intentions around issues like diversity and work-life balance, really all it’s cracked up to be?

The show’s satire of how Japan has changed over the decades has struck a chord with viewers young and old.

Last month, it became the first program made by major broadcaste­r TBS to top Netflix’s most-watched list in Japan for three weeks running.

Producer Aki Isoyama, who is 56, initially thought it would be “very challengin­g” to poke fun at today’s progressiv­e values without triggering a backlash from the public.

The show isn’t meant as a verdict on the superiorit­y of one era over the other, she said.

But one inspiratio­n for her and screenwrit­er Kankuro Kudo, 53, was the idea that “life has become more difficult in some aspects today.”

“Our society has certainly gotten better, but in a way more restrictiv­e, too, with everything dictated by compliance and protocols,” Isoyama said.

Today, when something is pronounced unacceptab­le, “we often unquestion­ingly accept that explanatio­n and refrain from saying or doing it,” she added.

“The show will hopefully make viewers stop and ask themselves: ‘Why was it banned in the first place?’”

HARASSMENT AND SEXISM

One 25-year-old fan, Mao Yamada, said the show is a reminder that “our society has become more accepting of diversity, including LGBTQ rights.”

“It’s good we’re now more mindful of things like sexual harassment,” she said, adding that she understand­s why some might feel “too many things are perhaps restricted and kept unsaid.”

Workplace pep talks to Gen-Z hires are denounced as harassment in Extremely Inappropri­ate, and an exasperate­d TV producer tries to censor everything said on air.

Meanwhile, freewheeli­ng Ogawa — who in his own bygone world yells “grow a pair!” at male students and teases women about menopause — is lambasted by today’s generation, including a feminist sociologis­t.

He is enlightene­d on the concepts of gender neutrality and sexual consent. Marriage, he learns, is no longer the definition of happiness.

Viewer Kyo Maeda, 68, called the show’s 1980s scenes an accurate portrayal of “what our everyday life used to be like.”

“Our life was full of what could easily be seen as harassment and sexism by today’s morals,” he said.

In 1986, Japan was basking in the glow of its post-war evolution into an economic superpower, with many workers fixated on success, no matter the hours required.

On Extremely Inappropri­ate young recruits — a generation shaped by Japan’s “lost decades” of stagnation from the early 1990s — matter-offactly clock off on time.

In the 80s, “I loved going to work, you know,” Maeda reminisced, chuckling. “The economy was still picking up and we were all-out at work.”

“I feel like there was more hope and excitement about the future in the 80s than there is now,” he said.

BOLDER THEMES

Extremely Inappropri­ate, whose final episode aired yesterday, has received its share of criticism in the real world.

Some say concepts like feminism or discrimina­tion based on appearance are oversimpli­fied, and that political correctnes­s is treated as little more than a shackle on free speech.

Interspers­ed throughout the show are musical performanc­es and jokey disclaimer­s excusing Ogawa’s gaffes and insults.

But beneath the levity is a serious message, said Takahiko Kageyama, a media studies professor at Doshisha Women’s College of Liberal Arts.

“The creators obviously wanted us to reflect on the status quo of our society,” he said.

“But if this intent had come off too straightfo­rward or preachy, it would’ve just fallen flat.”

The show’s themes are “bold” given the sensitive landscape of Japan’s entertainm­ent industry today, he said.

Boy-band empire Johnny’s and Associates faced an existentia­l crisis last year over a sexual abuse scandal involving its late founder.

Allegation­s of workplace bullying have also disgraced the prestigiou­s theatre troupe Takarazuka Revue.

Producer Isoyama said that making the show in parallel with these events had sometimes felt uncanny.

“With Johnny’s and Takarazuka, it was like facts far stranger than fiction were unfolding around us,” she said.

But “this made us feel that the timing of the release would be fitting, considerin­g how the industry is changing, the way it should.”

 ?? PHOTO: EPA ?? A cosplayer poses during the AnimeJapan 2024 in Tokyo. Extremely Inappropri­ate has struck a chord with viewers young and old by depicting how Japan has changed over the decades.
PHOTO: EPA A cosplayer poses during the AnimeJapan 2024 in Tokyo. Extremely Inappropri­ate has struck a chord with viewers young and old by depicting how Japan has changed over the decades.

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