• 2 days ago
ブラマヨ弾話室~ニッポン、どうかしてるぜ!~ 第275回 2025年3月23日
#EnglishMovie #cdrama #drama #engsub #chinesedramaengsub #movieshortfull

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Transcript
00:00This program is brought to you by Black Mayonnaise and the worry-stricken young comedians.
00:07We talk about Japan's worries with Zak Baran.
00:12And the members of Bunkajin-zu will teach us a lot about Uramayo and Shinpaisu.
00:19This program is brought to you by Black Mayonnaise and the worry-stricken young comedians.
00:50David Hosein is from Iran, and he's looking at things from a foreign perspective.
00:58Is there anything you're worried about?
01:00Osaka Banpaku is scheduled to be held from April this year.
01:04Before a big event like the Olympics or Banpaku, it's always a negative topic.
01:09I wonder if this nationality will not change.
01:12The theme is being hated? I'm worried about Gorin and Banpaku.
01:17Let's get started.
01:19At the Tokyo Olympics, there was the Seikari Day.
01:23At that time, there were people who claimed that Tokyo would be a cluster that would spread the infection all over the world.
01:37Speaking of this year's big event, I think it's Osaka Banpaku.
01:43According to the survey, the opposing opinion is that it has little effect on the budget.
01:52In Japan's current situation, I think it's inappropriate to spend a large budget.
01:59There are many people who raise this as a reason.
02:03There must be some people who don't like the system that governs it.
02:08At that time, the party called Osaka Ishin was very strong.
02:13The governor and mayor of Osaka were from the Ishin party.
02:17When this Banpaku was decided, the four people were very close.
02:29The governor of Osaka, the mayor of Osaka, Mr. Abe, and Mr. Suga.
02:33I think there's a reaction to that.
02:40I'm looking forward to it.
02:46I think there are many people who think that the government should call the Olympics or other sports events.
02:56I think it's a culture talent that the people in the hierarchy of the class decide on their own.
03:05I think it's a culture talent that the people in the hierarchy of the class decide on their own.
03:11I think there are many people who feel that way.
03:16Other countries can't do such a big event.
03:23There are many countries that want to do it, but they can't do it because they don't have the economic power.
03:32Everyone thinks it's great.
03:35But Japan is not at that level.
03:38Japan is a country where you can do anything.
03:42Please be a little excited.
03:44What kind of culture talent have you been doing for six years?
03:47I'm not against it.
03:49I often say, please do it, but don't let me participate until you pull your arm.
03:54Let's do it all together.
03:56My name is Osaka Banpaku.
04:00But the official name is Osaka Kansai Banpaku.
04:03I'm participating in the Kansai prefecture.
04:07I'm actually participating in Wakayama Prefecture.
04:09Our university also participates in Wakayama Prefecture.
04:12What kind of participation is it?
04:14For the sake of the revitalization of Wakayama Prefecture,
04:16Our students go to the seven provinces in Wakayama Prefecture.
04:21I talked to the 10 prefectural governors and the 10 university students.
04:26I talked to the 10 prefectural governors and the 10 university students.
04:30I went to the local area and had a lot of meetings.
04:32I will announce the announcement at the Banpaku venue.
04:37I will let the world know about Wakayama Prefecture.
04:39It's a university student's idea, so there are a lot of ideas.
04:44Please come.
04:45Is it AI or machine?
04:47Of course, there will be a presentation by machine.
04:52Of course, the idea is an initiative.
04:55I can't imagine it at all.
04:57So please come and see.
05:00Please see all the pavilions.
05:05Suddenly, there are more and more people who oppose the Tokyo Olympics.
05:12No one opposed it at the Japan World Cup.
05:17I had a lot of fun.
05:20I had a lot of fun, so I wondered why there were so many opposing opinions at the Olympics.
05:26There is only a bright future for Osaka Banpaku.
05:33I was told at the Olympics that the work was slow.
05:38But some people were wondering why I was told that it was slow.
05:45I thought it would be a problem if I succeeded.
05:48In the past, there was a case where the Olympic Games were canceled.
05:51In 1996, the Tokyo Olympics were supposed to be held in Tokyo.
05:56But there was a lot of opposition, so it was canceled.
06:00There was one point in that case.
06:02It was after the collapse of the bubble.
06:04After the collapse of the Japanese bubble, the economy was in a difficult state.
06:07There was a lot of opposition, so it was canceled.
06:14But this time, it's after COVID-19.
06:16Some people don't have money when they're in a difficult situation.
06:20Some people are trying to build a house.
06:23But I think that's the only way to cheer people up.
06:27I had a lot of fun at the Japan World Cup in 2002.
06:32But there were people who didn't like it at that time.
06:36There were people who didn't like the Olympics.
06:38I don't know if it's because of social media, but I think people's voices have grown.
06:43I don't think there's enough explanation for those people.
06:48You're making fun of me.
06:52I'm just saying I'm not going.
06:55I want you to succeed.
06:57Come on.
06:58But I don't have enough material to make me go.
07:03Come on.
07:05You're making fun of me.
07:08The theme is still hated.
07:12I'm worried about the Olympics.
07:15Let's have a chat.
07:18You announced a car for the future.
07:22Don't you think it's the same?
07:24It's like you did it earlier.
07:26I was going to do it.
07:28It's not just a car that flies in the sky.
07:32Do you want something else?
07:34In the old days, there was an automatic washing machine.
07:39It's been announced that way.
07:42I think it's been summarized.
07:44Maybe it's getting closer to the near future.
07:48There are floating shoes.
07:50It was flowing.
07:51Is there such a thing?
07:52Yes.
07:53It's moving.
07:54It's floating.
07:55But it can't stand the weight of people.
07:58Only shoes float?
07:59It's self-reliance.
08:01It floats with self-reliance.
08:05It's going to be old-fashioned.
08:09The management is not good.
08:11The opening ceremony of the Olympics was weak.
08:15There was a story about the closing ceremony.
08:18There was a story about the closing ceremony of the Olympics.
08:20When Mario came out at the closing ceremony of the Rio Olympics,
08:24It's like Japan.
08:26I've seen it many times.
08:27The opening ceremony of the Olympics started in Japan.
08:29I think it's not good.
08:31I put out a help message.
08:34Originally, it was a huge opening ceremony.
08:39There were a lot of people.
08:41However, the opening ceremony was reduced in size due to COVID-19.
08:46That's why the contents were small.
08:50Is this a nationality?
08:52I don't think so.
08:54It's a waste anyway.
08:56There are people who think so.
08:59For example, the opening ceremony of the Olympics 100 years ago.
09:02If I didn't go to the opening ceremony, I wouldn't have been able to see it.
09:06But now I can see it on the Internet every day.
09:09The role of the opening ceremony itself is reduced.
09:12But there's a lot of criticism.
09:14It's completely different from seeing the real thing on the Internet.
09:17So I think I have to go to the scene.
09:20I think there are a lot of white-haired nationalities.
09:23It's not like a festival.
09:26White-haired people are cool.
09:28It's like being cool.
09:30I think there are a lot of people like that.
09:37You're not cool with that.
09:39You're like a Tokyo comedian.
09:43I'm embarrassed.
09:45You don't look like you're from Tokyo.
09:48I'm embarrassed.
09:50Please do your best.
09:52The events in the country are basically the same every time.
09:59So I thought I might have slipped once.
10:03Next time, I'll do it here.
10:07I don't feel like I've changed.
10:10If you pay the entrance fee, you can enter.
10:14You can't get paid for watching various events.
10:18If you enter, you won't get anything.
10:20Is that so?
10:22That's what it is.
10:24Where do you get the money to do that event?
10:28As I said earlier, the advertising agency is good at gathering sponsors and setting PR.
10:38But it's not easy for the general public to do that.
10:43If you don't have an advertising client, you won't be able to show the event for free.
10:53That's one dilemma.
10:55Minami, what do you think of women in Tokyo?
11:01To be honest, I'm not interested yet.
11:06At first, I thought it would be fun to be a reporter.
11:12Then I thought I'd go to a hot place.
11:16But I don't feel that way yet.
11:19Why do you treat it like a cafe?
11:23I'm looking forward to the World Cup.
11:26I'm looking forward to Messi.
11:29I'm looking forward to the Olympics.
11:32I don't think there's anything worth it now.
11:36It's not a flying car, it's a drone.
11:40It's about that roof.
11:42And the will of Mars.
11:44It turns into the will of the moon.
11:46Don't you have any information, Fujimoto?
11:48It's hard to do technical things.
11:52If you say you've done this cutting-edge technology,
11:55If you say you're doing that kind of research, you might get caught.
12:00I don't want to publish it.
12:03That's the company's opinion.
12:05Until the opening?
12:06I want to accumulate technology.
12:08I think the event organizers will tell me to publish it.
12:11I think there's a lot of talk about whether or not to publish it.
12:16So when it opens, it might be announced?
12:20I think so.
12:21A few months ago, it was just about to be released.
12:25I don't think it's a technology that can be stolen.
12:29I think it's up to the publisher to decide.
12:31I think it's still in the middle.
12:33If you look at it this time, it's a small release.
12:36So there's a possibility that something interesting will come from that day.
12:40Then it's like a preview of the next episode of the anime.
12:43Wow, what's this?
12:46If you're going to talk about Japanese anime culture for young people,
12:52I hope you can come up with something more exciting.
12:56That's right.
12:57I didn't expect that much.
12:59But I'm excited just thinking about this story.
13:03I want to go.
13:04Let's go.
13:06If the Banpaku itself flies in the sky and comes to Tokyo, I'll go.
13:11You come.
13:12You fly.
13:14What is it?
13:16What is it?
13:17What is it?
13:19What is it?
13:21Is there anything else?
13:23Tokyo will be forced to install solar panels in new houses from April.
13:29I don't know much about solar power, but is this okay?
13:33The next theme is, I'm worried that I don't know much about solar power.
13:39Let's start the discussion.
13:42Tokyo will be forced to install solar panels in new houses from April.
13:50The goal is to reduce the number of greenhouse gases in the city and promote the use of renewable energy.
14:00As for the price, this is a model case.
14:04For example, if you install a 4kW solar panel, the initial cost is about 1.17 million yen.
14:14It is said that it can be recovered in about 13 years.
14:19And there is also a subsidy.
14:21That's right.
14:24The electricity bill has been rising for a long time.
14:29I think everyone has a feeling that the electricity bill is rising.
14:34If you generate electricity at your own place, you can make a lot of money.
14:42In fact, you can generate electricity at your own place.
14:47If you think about the fact that you can reduce the electricity bill, there are many benefits.
14:53Electricity will deteriorate year after year.
14:58Will you be able to generate electricity in the same way as in the first year after 15 years?
15:05Of course, there are parts that can't be replaced.
15:07That's right.
15:08Hey, don't talk to me.
15:09Basically, it is said that it will last for 30 years.
15:12It is said that it will last for 30 years in terms of solar energy.
15:16Of course, there may be cars that deteriorate or break.
15:20There are not only good things about solar energy.
15:24What do you think, Ms. Momose?
15:26I just built a house and a house.
15:29Is it your house?
15:30Yes, it's my husband's house.
15:34Is it in Tokyo?
15:35Yes, it's in Tokyo.
15:36Is it a duty?
15:37But it's natural.
15:39When I built a house in Kagawa, it was 13 years ago.
15:43It was expensive, so I didn't install it.
15:45But now it's natural.
15:48It's a matter of whether to install it or not.
15:50I will install it.
15:51What kind of house do you want to build?
15:53Have you decided?
15:54Yes, I have decided.
15:55It's a house that goes well with the house.
15:57Also, when there is a disaster, the electricity will be reduced a little.
16:05When I think about it, I think it's okay to install it.
16:09I see.
16:10Isn't there a story that solar panels don't go out when there is a fire?
16:17There was information that solar panels can't be extinguished with water.
16:23But in fact, it can be extinguished with water.
16:25It can be extinguished?
16:26When the fire is extinguished with water, it is extinguished with water.
16:30So the fire doesn't change.
16:33It doesn't burn as much as wood.
16:34It doesn't burn as much as wood.
16:37I heard that the CO2 emission when building a house is very high.
16:43That's right.
16:45But overall, the benefits of not emitting CO2 for 30 years and the benefits of emitting CO2 only at the end are overwhelmingly better for the environment.
16:56Even when you think about the cost of building a house?
16:59That's what I was told.
17:00I read a lot of conspiracy theories that the panels were bought from China and made into Chinese food.
17:12It seems that all the panels were bought from China.
17:17If our ideas are solid, would you give us a chance?
17:23I think it's a bad idea.
17:27But I don't think China has done that much.
17:31However, you said that Japanese companies should do their best.
17:34It is true that there are many Chinese panels now.
17:36However, the Chinese companies are more likely to participate in the price competition.
17:43There are several large companies in China.
17:47The price competition is also happening in China.
17:50At the time of import, the price will be as high as the original price.
17:54There are some companies that dare to come to get the price while cutting the water.
18:01It's a reality that we can't fight while keeping some technology in Japan.
18:07Then why do you think it's okay to pay subsidies in Japan?
18:14Is it normal to do it in Japan to make the country better?
18:18Even if it's a little expensive, I think it's one of the things to pay subsidies.
18:21I think it's one of the things to pay subsidies in Japan to make the country better.
18:25Local first economy is being born recently.
18:28The movement to protect local and domestic companies is also being born recently.
18:33I don't think China is a bad idea.
18:35I don't hate China.
18:37I like China.
18:39I think it's okay to choose.
18:41I think it's because of the budget that China can't do it.
18:46Then why do you have to do that?
18:48In terms of renewable energy, solar energy is increasing like a star player.
18:55Japan doesn't have a lot of renewable energy in the first place.
18:58Because Japan is a country with very little hydropower and wind power.
19:01In Europe, wind power is used a lot, and half of it is used for hydropower.
19:06Japan doesn't have much of that.
19:08We have no choice but to rely on solar panels.
19:10That's why it's like that.
19:14Japan is a small country, right?
19:16If you turn a big propeller here and there,
19:19There's a problem with the sound.
19:21There's a problem with the wind noise.
19:23There's a problem with the low frequency.
19:25There's a lot going on, and it's hard to put it in place.
19:27And on the coastline,
19:29It's like the North Sea in England.
19:33It's a very wide place.
19:35It's advantageous to be able to line up a lot in places where the wind is usually strong.
19:38The wind power of Japanese propellers is...
19:41It's like a pop in the mountains.
19:43That's the only image I have.
19:45It's not efficient.
19:47I like solar panels.
19:50I think natural energy is a very good thing.
19:56If you're forced to do something like that,
19:59There's a little bit of resistance.
20:01If so,
20:03The roof of a public toilet in a park somewhere in town.
20:07I think we should set it up in a place like that.
20:12Actually, we're not solar panels.
20:14I don't know if we know what's good or bad.
20:17Isn't there another way?
20:19There's a bike in the gym.
20:23I think it would be good to generate all of that.
20:26Something like this.
20:28Turn on the motor.
20:30I don't think that's a good idea.
20:31I think it's a good idea.
20:35I think the value of solar power generation as a renewable energy is very high.
20:45That's why we're trying to spread it out and increase the ratio.
20:51Japan's ratio of nuclear power plants is...
20:55At most, it was more than 30%.
20:58There was a big accident in the Great East Japan Earthquake.
21:01All the nuclear power plants stopped.
21:04It's coming back little by little, but it's only about 5%.
21:07Actually, electricity is raw.
21:09I can't store it.
21:11I have no choice but to use the electricity I made at that time.
21:14If that happens, it's bad if it suddenly shuts down somewhere.
21:20At the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake, there was a so-called planned maintenance.
21:24To prevent that from happening, we need to give a little bit of electricity.
21:28To do that, we need to increase the number of nuclear power plants or increase the energy of nature.
21:35Nuclear power generation costs a lot of materials.
21:38We burn coal and oil.
21:40If we do that, we can't increase it any more.
21:42I'm sure we're at a time when we have to think about how to stabilize Japanese electricity.
21:48Is there a way to increase the safety of nuclear power plants, including their durability, and increase the number of nuclear power plants?
21:57Yes, there is.
21:58How did nuclear power plants increase in the first place?
22:02It's safe and cheap.
22:06There's no CO2.
22:07And it's good for the environment.
22:09It's true that it's good for the environment, but it's safe and cheap.
22:12In other words, the premise was that accidents wouldn't happen.
22:16In the meantime, an accident actually happened.
22:18In order not to happen, a lot of money was spent on safety equipment that hadn't been paid much attention to.
22:26Nuclear power plants are not cheap at all.
22:29And if there's an accident, it's not like Fukushima is completely restored.
22:35The people who live there aren't coming back.
22:38So there's a lot of risk.
22:40If that's the case, the people who live near the nuclear power plant can't say,
22:45Yes, I'll do it.
22:46Yes, please.
22:47It doesn't feel good.
22:50Nuclear power plants are safe, clean, and cheap.
22:56But it's scary to cut down mountains and the environment.
23:05So it's very risky to put a lot of solar panels in nature.
23:10So the city has a long time to generate electricity.
23:15If you generate electricity little by little and have a lot of it, you'll be able to live a stable life.
23:21It's the idea that the electricity in your life will be stable.
23:24So you're saying you can't do a single power plant, right?
23:27That's right.
23:28There are people who have a lot of money to build a single power plant, so they can ask for help.
23:35If you can do that, you'll be able to do it in Japan.
23:38I don't know if I can do it in Japan yet.
23:42I think it's a good idea to have a solar panel in Japan.
23:51I think it's a good idea to have a solar panel in Japan.
23:58Did you develop the solar panel in Japan?
24:01Yes, I did.
24:02I think it's a good idea to have a solar panel in Japan.
24:05But if you have a price competition, you can't win in the market.
24:09Because it's much cheaper over there.
24:11And China is still cheap.
24:14When I asked a Chinese student how much his hourly wage was when he returned to his country, he said 300 yen.
24:20So the hourly wage is 200 to 300 yen per person.
24:23So it's cheap to build a solar panel in such a place.
24:26You should do it for 200 yen.
24:29I'm doing it for Japan.
24:32How much can you do?
24:35I'll collect the money.
24:37What should we do?
24:40People don't know much about solar panels.
24:46They don't know much about the situation and the structure.
24:50So they have to build it according to the instructions.
24:53There is a semiconductor.
24:55For example, LED lights change to light when electricity flows.
25:00The structure is in the opposite direction.
25:03So we use a semiconductor to make it.
25:06It's a level that even children can understand.
25:10It's like a child making a solar panel at home.
25:15And if you learn physics and electricity in the process and attach it to your house,
25:21you can understand the content and talk to your parents.
25:24And you can make it at home.
25:28Why don't you make a solar panel at home?
25:32It's true.
25:33It's a solar panel for Sunday.
25:36It's a panel for D.I.P.
25:39It's a solar panel for the Ministry of Defense.
25:43It's a panel made by the Japanese people.
25:47You can say that in the city.
25:50D.I.P. has decided to build a house.
25:53Let's make a solar panel together.
25:55I feel a little humiliated.
25:58Why do you have to be a subordinate of that house?
26:02It was almost not adopted.

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