[Entertainment] Anja Watanabe criticizes weekly magazine reporter “What a pitiful life. Taking pictures and breaking traffic rules. My children aren’t growing up with a fair income either.”
Anja Watanabe criticizes weekly magazine reporter, saying, “What a pitiful life. How can I show my back to my children?’
Watabe Ken (51) of the comedy duo “Unjash” appeared on Abema’s “Chance Time” broadcast on the 18th, where he poured out his feelings towards a weekly magazine reporter. The project is called “The Angry Advice Center with Long Waiting Lines” and involves listening to celebrities’ troubles. A person came to him for advice saying, “I was confused when a reporter asked me a rude question,” but Watanabe held up a flip chart and said, “Don’t lose your temper.” “I’ve confronted almost all the weekly magazines. I thought, “I’m going to devote my life to defeating it.” But then one day I suddenly started imagining the lives of these people. They take photos of people without permission and chase them, breaking traffic rules. Even these guys have wives and kids,” he said. “This is an amazing life I’ve lived. There is no one with a pure face. Everyone had a look on their face, as if they were carrying a burden, their karma clearly showing. When I saw that, I thought what a pitiful life. How do you show your back to your kids? “It’s not like her children are growing up with a decent income,” he said, arguing that she shouldn’t have gotten angry, saying, “I felt like she was a friend walking through the same difficult life.”
The reality is that for the entertainment industry, which has no self-cleaning ability, and for those who are victimized by it, weekly magazines have become a necessary evil. In fact, they should be appreciated.
>>11 Someone who harasses celebrities to make a living, or someone who causes trouble for disabled people for their sexual desires. Who is more guilty?
Someday my kids will find out what their dad did to get them in trouble, but before that happens I need to give them an education that won’t change their mind even if they find out. It’s tough.
What a pitiful life. He betrayed the woman he had pledged his life to and indulged in an affair. He broke the rules of public facilities and caused a nuisance. His children will find out about it in the future and be disillusioned.
I read a memoir by a former Bunshun journalist. He graduated from Tokyo University and wanted to join Bungeishunju, which awards the Akutagawa Prize and the Naoki Prize, and become a literary editor. He ended up being assigned to the Weekly Bunshun editorial department. He went to work every day wondering what he was doing. He was transferred after a few years, but apparently within Bungeishunju, employees assigned to the Weekly Bunshun editorial department are referred to as “prisoners.”
>>34 Tachibana Takashi said that he ended up quitting because of that. He said that he enjoyed it because he was always reading literature, and now he’s writing for Bunshun.
Well, that’s true. Daigo was also furious that all weekly magazine reporters are psychopaths. In other words, it’s a job that only a psychopath could do. You can’t do it with a normal mind because you make a living off other people’s misfortunes.
>>47 You can be proud of yourself. You’re exposing the misdeeds of shitty celebrities. Most decent celebrities have nothing to do with weekly magazines. Don’t forget that.
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