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00:00Teleto
00:30Teleto is a cultural property listed in the textbook.
00:34What is the evaluation of the client who fell in love with the treasure?
00:39I say it's fake.
00:43Is it real?
00:46The business trip to Ishikawa Prefecture, Kahoku City.
00:51There are a lot of interesting clients.
00:56What is the evaluation of the client who fell in love with the treasure?
01:09Hello.
01:11Welcome to the show.
01:15Did you see Tsugai's seriousness?
01:18I'm not serious.
01:20You even checked the treasure.
01:22I checked it in advance.
01:25You don't know which one is real.
01:27I don't know.
01:29If you had told me, it would have been easier.
01:31It would have been easier.
01:32This is a good one.
01:38Today's guest is
01:42Nakano of Sunplaza, a rock singer.
01:48He formed a band with Akawai Pappara, a guitarist, while he was studying at Kaseda University.
01:54In 1982, he formed Bakufu Slump.
01:58He made his major debut at Weekly Tokyo Shoujo A.
02:05Powerful and punk sound.
02:08He throws watermelons from the stage to the audience.
02:12He puts gunpowder in a skinhead and sets it on fire.
02:17He is a human match stick.
02:20He became a very popular band with his extreme performance.
02:25In 1988, he released RUNNER.
02:29He appeared in this year's Kouhaku Uta Gassen.
02:33He sold 340,000 copies.
02:37In addition, he released hits such as Risoraba and Habibito Yo.
02:43However, he stopped his activities in 1999.
02:50After that, he published books in various genres such as novels, health, and property management.
02:59His current goal is to live to be 125 years old.
03:06Last year, he celebrated his 40th anniversary of his debut.
03:10He resumed his activities as a member of Bakufu Slump.
03:14He released his new single, Ikigai.
03:19In addition, he released his second single, Ikigai.
03:24He released his new single, Ikigai.
03:28In addition, he released his new single, Ikigai.
03:33He released his new single, Ikigai.
03:40It's a love story of a miracle created by the warmth of the past.
03:45Not someday, but now.
03:47I want to see you.
03:50Under the big onion.
03:53He is a great man.
03:55He is Mr. Nakano, a singer from Tokyo.
04:00Congratulations.
04:04Under the big onion.
04:06That's Mr. Nakano's song, isn't it?
04:08I wrote the song.
04:10It's been 40 years since I released it.
04:12It became a movie.
04:14That's amazing.
04:15It's good for young people.
04:19Penfriend is very fresh.
04:21I don't listen to Penfriend now.
04:23I listened to the lyrics.
04:26I didn't know what Penfriend was.
04:28I was wondering if I was listening to it.
04:31I'm listening to it now.
04:34I put it in the envelope, cut it, paste it, and put it out.
04:37I'm wondering when it will arrive.
04:40I'm looking at the mail.
04:43I don't get a reply.
04:45I send a message saying, did you send it?
04:49Let's look at the treasure.
04:51Treasure open.
04:53What is this?
04:55This is a crystal in the shape of a skull.
04:59It's called a crystal skull.
05:01It's like Indy Jones.
05:03It's a crystal skull.
05:05I went to Sedona, USA about 20 years ago.
05:09I'm Japanese.
05:11I was sold by a person who has a certificate as a Native American shaman.
05:17It was about 200,000 yen at that time.
05:19Can you buy it at that price?
05:21It's not a skull, it's a crystal.
05:23It's a crystal.
05:24If you look at the back of the skull, you can see it.
05:27It's just a crystal.
05:29The back of the skull is rough.
05:32It's a crystal from this side.
05:35If you look at the cheek, you can see the rainbow.
05:40It's beautiful.
05:42I can see it.
05:44No, it's this.
05:46I saw this.
05:49It's amazing.
05:51I've never seen glass like that.
05:54It's called a kneaded object.
05:57It's a glass made of fake crystals.
05:59I don't know what you're kneading.
06:01It's plastic.
06:02How much is it?
06:04It's 1 million yen.
06:06It's 1 million yen.
06:09Open the price.
06:11The price is...
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10:27Yah, I am.
10:29Seito-san said he would like to buy the car for 7,000,000 yen.
10:34He would buy it for 7,000,000 yen?
10:36I have heard that it is very good for a new car.
10:38I would buy it for 7,000,000 yen.
10:39So, let's see the car with the most favorite.
10:43Open the treasure!
10:48I have never seen it before.
10:51This is a B-Class of Daihatsu Industries.
10:53This is a three-wheel drive car.
10:55Yes, it's a three-wheeled car.
10:57It has three tires.
10:59This car was released in 1951 in Showa 26.
11:05It has a futuristic feel.
11:07It's cute.
11:08It looks like it's going to appear in Tetsuwa Atom.
11:10Did it move when you bought it?
11:12No, it didn't move.
11:14The engine didn't start, so I disassembled it a few times.
11:17You repaired it, right?
11:19Yes, that's right.
11:20I've seen a few three-wheeled trucks on this show, but this is a normal car.
11:24This is the first time I've seen a three-wheeled truck.
11:27This is the first time I've seen a three-wheeled truck.
11:29Now, it's time to get in the car.
11:32There are two big people.
11:35It's big.
11:36But the ceiling is still a little roomy.
11:40It's a little cramped.
11:42Hello.
11:45Is this your second drive?
11:48That's right.
11:50This is like a movie.
11:52Is this okay?
11:53It's fluffy.
11:57It's good.
11:58It's good.
12:01I want to go somewhere.
12:02It's good.
12:03It's comfortable to sit in.
12:04No, no, no.
12:05I'm bored with 400 meters.
12:08And then, in that place.
12:11This.
12:12That's it.
12:13That's the direction.
12:14Please do it with energy and strength.
12:20That's it.
12:23Please do it with energy and strength.
12:27That's it.
12:30I'll turn right.
12:36A three-wheeled car is a car that runs on three wheels, regardless of its front and rear.
12:44In those days, it was commonplace all over Japan.
12:50The first three-wheeled car to appear in Japan was in the Taisho era.
12:56It was called a front car because it had a small American-made engine on the front two wheels and the rear one.
13:07However, due to its instability, a rear two-wheel type was immediately introduced.
13:13When the domestic engine was developed, the three-wheeled car became popular all over the country.
13:23And after the war, the three-wheeled truck was the first to be used for reconstruction.
13:28It was a three-wheeled truck that could be used in narrow alleys and dirt roads.
13:37Since GHQ limited the production of commercial vehicles and the cost was lower than that of four-wheeled vehicles, many manufacturers released three-wheeled trucks.
13:53The representative manufacturer was Osaka's Daihatsu.
13:59The Mitsubishi Mitsubishi, which appeared in 1957, was small and easy to drive.
14:07It was also a hot topic for advertising, and it was a big hit by chance.
14:15In addition, it applied technology to fire trucks, vacuum cars, garbage collectors, and special vehicles such as dump cars to develop a variety of three-wheeled vehicles.
14:30In fact, Daihatsu also sold three-wheeled commercial vehicles six years before the Mi-Z was released.
14:40When GHQ limited the production of commercial vehicles, it released the BDR in 1951.
14:53It was a two-door sedan type with a top speed of 70 km.
15:00It was a truck that carried cargo, and it was very comfortable to ride.
15:07The name was decided on the B, which means Mitsubachi, and Daihatsu raised the car and sold it.
15:17However, the number of sales did not increase as expected, and sales were suspended for about a year.
15:25The number of production vehicles was only about 300.
15:32In the 1960s, the automobile industry entered the era of four-wheel drive, and three-wheeled cars gradually disappeared from the city.
15:47Let's take a look at the items we ordered.
15:50Daihatsu's first three-wheeled commercial vehicle, the BDR.
15:56What catches the eye is the streamlined body with a characteristic long front nose.
16:04It is also said to be a design that was influenced by American three-wheeled cars.
16:12The engine behind the car was developed for the B, and the displacement is 540 cc.
16:22Each tire has an independent suspension.
16:27This makes it a comfortable ride that has never been found in a three-wheeled car.
16:36The four-seater car has three seats in the driver's seat, and it is a very simple design.
16:45It is a car built 74 years ago, but it is still in good shape, and it can still run on public roads.
16:55What does it look like?
17:15Let's take a look at the items we ordered.
17:30I don't think it's worth 7 million yen.
17:32I don't think it's worth 7 million yen either.
17:34I mean, when you buy it, you won't be surprised.
17:38It is said that you want this car, but the price is...
17:44When did you say that?
17:46No, I didn't say that.
17:48No way!
17:49Ma'am!
17:51This is the price of the car. How much is it?
17:547 million yen.
17:55The price of 7 million yen.
17:56Yes.
17:57Open the price.
17:587 million yen.
18:01One, two, three.
18:06600 million yen!
18:09Wow!
18:11Thank you very much.
18:13The cost of the car is 600 million yen?
18:15Anyway, it's a very valuable car.
18:18Only three of them.
18:20One has the culprit of the car.
18:22And this is the only one that moves.
18:25It was made in 1951, but it has a very sophisticated design.
18:31The engine is in the back.
18:33It's called a rear engine.
18:35It's a horizontal engine.
18:37Most of the current cars' pistons move up and down.
18:41But this one is horizontal.
18:44That's why the center of gravity is lowered.
18:47That's why it's so stable.
18:49To purify the oil, we use a dry sump.
18:55We don't use it much in the current cars.
18:58We use it in racing cars and super high-performance cars.
19:02The car that has the same layout and mechanism as this one is called Porsche.
19:07It's so valuable, but at the same time, it has a very sophisticated design.
19:12Please keep it safe.
19:15We didn't get 700, but it's enough.
19:19I don't know what my wife would say.
19:22Small Nyantero Family in Kahoku!
19:30This time, we will visit Kahoku City, Ishikawa Prefecture, which is located at the foot of the Noto Peninsula.
19:37Nyantero, the mascot character of Kahoku City, will introduce you to the city's attractions.
19:44First of all, the third place.
19:46Ebisu Daimyojin
19:49The Japanese sea in front of you is really magnificent.
19:53If you're lucky, you'll get a great view like this.
19:56I want everyone to see the setting sun setting over the tower.
20:02The second place is...
20:05Nishida Hitaro Memorial Museum
20:09The remains and manuscripts of Nishida Hitaro, a philosopher known for his research on Zen, are on display.
20:19The design was done by architect Tadao Ando.
20:23At night, the entire museum lights up and you'll be healed by the fantastic atmosphere.
20:33And the first place is...
20:36Kano Crab
20:40Kano Crab is one of the best crabs in the world.
20:44It is said that it is the best crab in the world.
20:50It is said that it is the best crab in the world.
20:56These two people are going to eat Kano Crab sashimi, which is only available during this season.
21:04Mmm!
21:06Mmm!
21:07It's really good!
21:09It's sweet!
21:10Right?
21:11Mmm!
21:12I can't get enough of it!
21:14It's thick and sweet.
21:16Mr. Mori said he wanted to come here.
21:20First, let's meet Mr. Nishida, who collects household catalogs.
21:25Hello.
21:26Hello.
21:27Nice to meet you.
21:28Nice to meet you.
21:31I'm sorry. I'm shaking.
21:34Thank you very much.
21:36Household catalogs?
21:37That's right.
21:38My family was poor.
21:40So I couldn't buy it.
21:42I couldn't buy it.
21:43So I brought a catalog.
21:45I put it on my house and looked at it.
21:47I enjoyed the feeling that I made it my own.
21:50Oh!
21:51Since elementary school, he has been to many electric shops in the neighborhood.
21:56There are 400 of them.
22:00Look at this.
22:01This is all free.
22:04I thought I bought it.
22:06It was fun to imagine it in my head.
22:09That's right.
22:10Even if you become an idol fan, you will feel like you have been married for a long time by putting up a poster.
22:15No, I don't feel like that.
22:18I can't get enough of it from a person with a retro sense of Showa.
22:21Mr. Kitagawa.
22:22Yes.
22:23What do you think of this?
22:24It's good, isn't it?
22:27It's like a master.
22:30Here are the treasures.
22:37It's a bowling game.
22:39It was a bowling boom that happened 50 years ago.
22:43When I was in elementary school, my parents asked me to buy it.
22:48It's a mechanism that pushes the ball in front of the doll with the power of a spring.
22:54I like it very much, so I haven't used it for more than 50 years.
23:00I put it up in a hurry.
23:02Did you put it up in a hurry?
23:04Yes.
23:05Don't you keep it for a long time?
23:07Yes.
23:08The box is also broken.
23:09Isn't it crushed?
23:12It's hard, isn't it?
23:13You're scribbling as much as you can.
23:17Now, let's have a one-frame serious game.
23:22Mr. Ishida is in the lead.
23:27Three points.
23:33It's broken.
23:35I'll fix it.
23:38The result is 7 points.
23:40Mr. Ishida, who is in the lead, wins if he hits more than 8 points.
23:45How many points will he get?
23:51It's a sudden victory.
23:54And...
23:59It's a perfect score.
24:01It's perfect.
24:03The estimated value of the doll is 54,000 yen, which is the same as buying it 54 years ago.
24:09Just like the household catalog, it's full of memories.
24:13Even if it's in a bad condition, I don't intend to dispose of it.
24:16What's the result?
24:19Ta-da!
24:20It's 54,000 yen.
24:23It's a shame.
24:26Nikko is a company that was founded in 1971.
24:31There are still pictures of men and women.
24:35And this trophy is really gone.
24:38It's still there.
24:40Even so, bowling games don't cost much.
24:44There are few collectors.
24:46There was a catalog, right?
24:48Yes, there was.
24:49That one is more expensive.
24:52Next is Ms. Miyasaka, who is pregnant with the third child.
24:57The third child.
24:59How old is the child now?
25:01She will be 3 years old and 2 years old soon.
25:04Wow!
25:05It's amazing.
25:06Ta-da!
25:07Ta-da!
25:08Her previous birth was due to COVID-19.
25:11So she worked hard on her own.
25:13This time, she wants her husband to help her.
25:15What do you want your husband to do?
25:18I want him to think,
25:20I want him to think,
25:21I see.
25:24Here are the treasures.
25:29What kind of watch is this?
25:31Grandpa's watch.
25:33Isn't it?
25:34It's like a grandpa's old watch.
25:36Shigeo's grandfather collected dozens of watches.
25:43This is the most important one.
25:47By the way, do you know when this watch was made?
25:50I heard it was made in the Edo period.
25:53You heard it, but...
25:55Yes.
25:56It's quite loose.
25:58How much did your grandfather say it was worth?
26:013 million yen.
26:02Wow!
26:05I'm getting dizzy.
26:07However, she is not interested in this at all.
26:12Do you have a favorite point?
26:14No, I don't.
26:20Her evaluation is 3 million yen,
26:23because she believes what her grandfather said.
26:26If she gets a lot of money,
26:28she would like to sell it to her grandfather
26:30and go to Disneyland with her family.
26:33What is the result?
26:35Ta-da!
26:371.5 million yen!
26:39What a shame!
26:43However...
26:45It wasn't 3 million yen,
26:47but it was worth it.
26:51It's a watch of Suwasozan,
26:53which is one of the most famous watches of the modern era.
26:57There is a name Suwasozan on the back.
27:00Did you notice it?
27:04She is from the country of Kaga.
27:06She left a great work in Meiji and Taisho.
27:10This is probably a work of Taisho.
27:14It's a pink-colored medicine on the ear.
27:18This is rare.
27:20It's a difficult medicine.
27:22She was a master at controlling this medicine.
27:26It's a good thing,
27:28so please take good care of it.
27:31Next is Ms. Tanaka,
27:33who has been nervous since her appearance.
27:37Please go to the front.
27:40Don't turn around.
27:42Please go to the front.
27:44Are you nervous?
27:46Yes.
27:47But you were applied, weren't you?
27:50Yes, I was.
27:52Did you become stiff?
27:54Yes.
27:55When did you decide?
27:57Ten days ago.
27:59Did you have a fever?
28:01I slept.
28:03You slept, didn't you?
28:05Did you eat?
28:07Yes, I did.
28:08You ate, didn't you?
28:12These are the treasures.
28:14It's so beautiful.
28:17These are the two masters' works.
28:21This is a painting of Wajima.
28:24This is Goichi Mitani.
28:27This is a painting of Toshiro Aijo.
28:31Goichi Mitani is a representative artist of Wajima,
28:34and he is good at the technique of Chin-Kin.
28:38Toshiro Aijo is also active in Wajima,
28:41and he often uses his motif.
28:47Is this always displayed at home?
28:49No.
28:51It's at my parents' house.
28:53At your parents' house?
28:54Yes.
28:55Has it always been at your parents' house?
28:57Yes, I think so.
29:01Last year, the Noto Peninsula earthquake destroyed my parents' house.
29:06It was a miracle that the house was intact.
29:10So I took a picture to apply for the program.
29:15When I looked at the screen,
29:17I was surprised that the picture was displayed.
29:20Here is the picture.
29:22Wow!
29:24The picture is displayed!
29:26It's really scary.
29:28I was wondering who it was.
29:30Absolutely.
29:31What is this outfit?
29:33It's a pajama.
29:35Wow!
29:37Can I hear your evaluation?
29:39Yes.
29:40Can I?
29:44Her evaluation is 500,000 yen.
29:47Please tell me why you chose 500,000 yen.
29:51I don't know.
29:54It was a little embarrassing picture,
29:57but it was applied for the program,
29:59so the result is all right.
30:01What will happen?
30:03After this, the audience is excited about the shocking evaluation results.
30:08Noto Peninsula Earthquake
30:19I said 200,000 yen.
30:21Noto Peninsula Earthquake
30:25Goichi Mitani and Toshiro Aijo, who were unharmed after the Noto Peninsula earthquake,
30:30applied for the program.
30:33What is the result?
30:36The result is...
30:38Wow!
30:391.5 million yen!
30:41This is amazing!
30:50I think there are very few works
30:53in which two famous wajima artists collaborate.
30:58Although it is a simple picture,
31:00Mitani used the motif of a butterfly
31:04in 1968.
31:08He observed and studied
31:11the butterfly pattern and transparency
31:14with a microscope.
31:18This is what he expressed
31:22with his skillful close-up technique.
31:25On the other hand,
31:27Toshiro Aijo is good at his motif.
31:32He drew a three-dimensional picture
31:35using a 3D model.
31:37This is the best among Aijo's works.
31:41I think it will be a treasure in Ishikawa Prefecture.
31:45Next is Yamashita,
31:47who collects 1,500 Showa retro goods.
31:51I have something I want to show you today.
31:54Can I ask you a favor?
31:58What is it?
32:01Oh!
32:03I see!
32:06It brings back memories!
32:08It is a super car bicycle
32:10that was popular among children
32:12in the 1970s.
32:15In addition to five-speed transmission,
32:17it has a brake lamp
32:19and a turn signal.
32:22I couldn't buy it
32:24when I was poor.
32:26I couldn't buy it either.
32:27Really?
32:28It's a strange story.
32:30That's right.
32:32Here is the treasure!
32:36It is a brick seven-sided lantern
32:38made in the 1950s.
32:41I bought it about 10 years ago
32:43on the Internet.
32:44It's on the Internet!
32:46The price is 6,000 yen.
32:49It still works
32:51if you wind the wick.
32:55Oh!
32:57The wings open.
32:59It's amazing!
33:04It's very cute,
33:06but at home,
33:08it's overflowing with toys.
33:10My wife said,
33:11do something until you die.
33:15The price is 10,000 yen,
33:17which is a little low.
33:20At the toy event held regularly,
33:23the seven-sided lantern
33:25won the prize.
33:27What is the result?
33:29Here it is!
33:31It's 5,000 yen!
33:33Ohamatsu!
33:35I got it!
33:37I got it!
33:42It's a really wonderful toy
33:44that can move this much
33:46with just one wick.
33:48It moves forward,
33:50and the wings behind it open
33:52and lift up
33:55It's from the 1950s.
33:57It's a toy made in Germany
33:59under the occupation.
34:01It's a 3D toy
34:03that was copied in Japan.
34:05It's a toy that conveys
34:07Japanese technology.
34:10I was impressed.
34:14Next,
34:15Mr. Ikeda,
34:16who was in danger
34:17due to a light-current shift.
34:19I was in danger three times.
34:21Three times?
34:23You were in danger three times,
34:25but you didn't quit fishing, did you?
34:27No, I didn't.
34:28The most terrifying event
34:30was when I crossed
34:32a river that was flooded
34:34with rain.
34:36The water was coming
34:38from my knees.
34:40I was swept away.
34:42However,
34:44a man was crossing
34:46a few meters below.
34:48I was swept away
34:50in front of him.
34:52That's how I was saved.
34:54That's great.
34:55I was in danger.
34:57Stop fishing!
35:01The treasure is
35:03the kimono of Yamakawa Kouji,
35:05a famous goldsmith.
35:07Yamakawa Kouji
35:09became popular
35:11because he made
35:13three kagazoogans.
35:15Where did you get this?
35:17When I was in my infancy,
35:19no one celebrated
35:21my birthday.
35:23I wanted to celebrate
35:25my birthday myself.
35:27So, he visited a kottou store
35:29and bought a kakejuku
35:31of Kusumi Morikage,
35:33a painter from the Edo period,
35:35for 250,000 yen.
35:37However, he lost confidence
35:39in his vision,
35:41so the next day,
35:43he went to the kottou store
35:45to return the kakejuku.
35:47He found this treasure
35:49and asked me
35:51to give it to him
35:53in exchange for the kakejuku.
35:55He told me
35:57that the kakejuku
35:59was on a pillow,
36:01so I thought
36:03I might be lucky.
36:07He still wonders
36:09if his decision
36:11to exchange the kakejuku
36:13with the kakejuku
36:15was the right one.
36:17The kakejuku
36:19was sold for 300,000 yen.
36:21If Takane got the kakejuku,
36:23his family and friends
36:25would have celebrated
36:27his birthday with him.
36:29The result is...
36:31500,000 yen!
36:33He did it!
36:37This is definitely
36:39the masterpiece of
36:41the famous painter
36:43Koji Yamakawa.
36:45You can tell
36:47by looking at the gold
36:49on the towel.
36:51His work is very
36:53meticulous and beautiful.
36:55You can tell
36:57by looking at
36:59the fine details
37:01of his handwork.
37:03That's what makes
37:05kakazoogan.
37:07When he cuts the jigane,
37:09he makes the bottom part
37:11wider than the surface
37:13of the kakazoogan.
37:15That's why you can't
37:17take it off.
37:19It's a part of the culture
37:21of Ishikawa Prefecture.
37:23Please keep it well.
37:31Next,
37:33we visited
37:35this building
37:37one minute walk
37:39from Kichijoji Station.
37:41The first thing we saw
37:43was a kitsuke classroom.
37:45The next client
37:47was a 70-year-old
37:49Fumiko Sakata
37:51who is taking lessons
37:53with a serious face.
37:57Kimono Lady Kitsuke Gakuin
37:59is a classroom
38:01where anyone can learn
38:03regardless of their experience.
38:05The motto is
38:07to not look at the mirror
38:09Sakata has been
38:11coming here for 6 years.
38:13My daughter
38:15is making tea,
38:17so I thought
38:19I'd teach her
38:21how to make kitsuke.
38:23My daughter is doing
38:25much better than me.
38:27My granddaughter,
38:29Hichigo-san,
38:31is making kitsuke.
38:33Today,
38:35we challenged
38:37Senju.
38:39This innovative
38:41accordion is the key point.
38:47It takes 15 minutes.
38:51Is it done?
38:53Yes, it is.
38:55How is it?
38:57You did well today.
38:59Today,
39:01you did well.
39:03Don't emphasize it.
39:05I think it's well-balanced.
39:07I'll give you 85 points.
39:09Yay!
39:11By the way,
39:13what's the treasure?
39:15It's a cultural asset
39:17in the textbook.
39:19I found it
39:21when I went to Kotoichi
39:23last year.
39:25My daughter is
39:27doing interior design and
39:29grocery shopping in Paris.
39:31I was looking for
39:33something like interior design.
39:35When I saw it,
39:37I was surprised.
39:39I really wanted it.
39:41However,
39:43the selling price was
39:45650,000 yen,
39:47which was quite expensive.
39:49I lost half of the price.
39:53When I went back home
39:55and checked,
39:57I was surprised to find
39:59only 90 points in the world.
40:01I'm wondering
40:03if I can send it to my daughter.
40:07What's the treasure
40:09in the textbook?
40:11Let's see it in the studio.
40:13Here's the client.
40:15She's Fumiko Takata
40:17from Tokyo.
40:19Nice to meet you.
40:21Nice to meet you.
40:23Nice to meet you.
40:25Nice to meet you.
40:27How did you do today?
40:29As you can see,
40:31I got 100 points.
40:33Let's take a look at the back.
40:35Let's take a look at the back.
40:37It's beautiful.
40:39100 points.
40:41What's the treasure
40:43in the textbook?
40:45Are you doing grocery shopping
40:47in Paris?
40:49I was looking for
40:51something like interior design.
40:53I was looking for something like interior design.
40:55I don't know what it is.
40:57I got it.
40:59Let's open the treasure.
41:03What's this?
41:05It's a Namban-byobu.
41:07It's a Namban-byobu.
41:09Portuguese people
41:11brought their goods to Japan
41:13and brought them back.
41:15It's a picture of the Namban trade.
41:17I see.
41:19It's around Azuchi and Momoyama.
41:21You can see this picture
41:23in Japanese history textbooks.
41:25It's very well-made.
41:27It is.
41:29It's a picture of the sea in Japan
41:31and the KINPAKU.
41:33Some people are sleeping on the boat.
41:35The flag is very detailed.
41:37Each person
41:39has a different facial expression.
41:41The one on the right
41:43is a boss.
41:45He's sitting on a chair.
41:47Each person has a different kimono.
41:49Each person has a different kimono.
41:51It's a fun place to enjoy
41:53I'm looking forward to it.
41:55How much did you buy it for?
41:57Last year, it was sold for 650,000 yen.
42:02It was the last day, so I thought I'd take it home if it was 350,000 yen, but it was 350,000 yen.
42:10Did the Parisian lady tell you that she would send it to you if she liked it?
42:14Yes, she did.
42:15She said, this is a good one.
42:16She said, this is a good one.
42:17She said she wanted it.
42:19But if it's a work of art, you have to pay insurance.
42:24What would you do if you got a good price?
42:27How much would you pay?
42:30I'd say 20 million yen.
42:34Don't laugh after I say a good price.
42:38What?
42:41A huge black ship,
42:45a funeral chapel,
42:48and strange-looking foreigners.
42:53The Nanban Byobu is an attached painting depicting the trade with foreigners in the late 16th century to the mid-17th century.
43:06In the first place, the word Nanban comes from the Chinese philosophy.
43:10It originates from the fact that the people of that region were called the East, West, North, and South in China.
43:21In Japan after the mid-16th century, foreigners who came through the south of China,
43:28especially Spanish and Portuguese, were called Nanban people.
43:35Oda Nobunaga was the first to incorporate the Nanban culture,
43:40but it was around the time when Toyotomi Hideyoshi unified the country that Byobu began to be popularly produced.
43:51Let's take a closer look at what is written here.
43:57This is a tatami-jiki.
44:02A statue of Jesus is displayed in the altar, and a mass is being held right now.
44:10Many of the monks are wearing a cross and rosary, a symbol of faith.
44:17Some are wearing a colorful cloak with embroidery patterns.
44:26Most of the goods were not from the West.
44:30They were mainly pottery, silk, and dyeing tools from China and Southeast Asia.
44:37The Nanban people were in the middle of the trade.
44:42Here is a statue of an imported animal.
44:47This statue was erected in 1597 by a Spanish organization in Osaka,
44:56and it is more realistic than other animals.
45:02The Arabian horse is equipped with a white horse and steel, which were not available in Japan until then.
45:09It is also highly athletic, so it was used as a military horse.
45:14The monks protected the Christian faith and became believers in order to obtain these goods.
45:25However, in 1587, Hideyoshi issued the Bateren Exile Order, and Byobu also changed.
45:35The Seido window was closed, and the captain, who was in charge of summoning, turned back.
45:44The Christian motif of the cross was omitted.
45:50In the Edo period, Ieyasu Tokugawa also issued the Bateren Exile Order.
45:58The Portuguese were banned from traveling in Japan,
46:02and when the war broke out, the Nanban Myobu itself was no longer written.
46:09Let's take a look at the goods again.
46:13This is the Nanban Myobu, a one-piece.
46:17It is unknown who wrote it, but it shows the pride of the Nanban line that arrived in Japan.
46:24People in colorful costumes are drawn on it.
46:30The way they are dressed and sold is also careful.
46:37Nanban Myobu can still be found sometimes,
46:42but in 2011, the Myobu, which came out of a private house in Kansai,
46:47was sold at an auction in New York for 340 million yen.
46:54If a new item has been discovered, it must be super expensive.
46:59How much will it cost?
47:12Ieyasu Tokugawa's Nanban Myobu
47:19How much is the price of the Myobu?
47:22Yes, it's 20 million yen.
47:24It's 340 million yen at auction.
47:26Let's open the price.
47:3735 million yen!
47:4035 million yen!
47:42It's exactly the price of the Myobu.
47:45This is a work that was made after the Meiji era.
47:48It's a work that can't be called a small piece of art.
47:51The material is different.
47:53If you look at the pine green,
47:55this color is a modern color with a bad quality.
47:58The gold-plated Myobu from the Momoyama period
48:01has a gold leaf of about 6 cm square.
48:05This is a piece of gold-plated paper.
48:08It's not gold-plated.
48:09It's not gold-plated.
48:10If you look at the contents of the picture,
48:12the half line on the left is the wind-blown Myobu
48:16that spread when the land of foreign countries was exported.
48:20On the right is the Myobu that arrived in Japan
48:22and unloaded cargo at the port of Nagasaki.
48:25Originally, the Myobu should be drawn on the left and right seats,
48:29but it was drawn in a good position.
48:34But it's drawn properly in the second room.
48:37I think it's good as a souvenir.
48:39I would like you to display it in Paris.
48:41Thank you very much.
48:43You can rest assured.
48:44In an air ticket.
48:45In an air ticket.
48:46In an air ticket.
48:47Yes.
48:48We are looking for a client.
48:50If you want to sell a treasure,
48:54please apply for it with a picture and an episode of the treasure.
49:01We are waiting for you.
49:03Please see the program homepage for details.

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