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00:00Bikubiku is becoming a normal mode, isn't it?
00:03It definitely opens up the sense of distance between humans.
00:06It's a strange relationship between humans.
00:08Why did it end up like this?
00:11I'm overwhelmed by the ever-changing daily life.
00:15I wonder why this happened now.
00:19Why did Japan go through such a downturn?
00:23I work, I work, but my salary doesn't increase.
00:26Why is that?
00:27I wonder how many K-pop idols have become popular.
00:31I wonder why the number of matches has increased.
00:34Do you like men?
00:36I love them.
00:37Isn't that great?
00:39The answer to the current question is in the past.
00:44Watabayashi, a genius who throws questions.
00:47I think the current situation is based on such a psychological aspect.
00:51Hayashi Osamu, a genius who explains all kinds of questions.
00:56Why in the world?
00:59The answer is in the modern history.
01:02The first question is,
01:04Why has compliance changed so much?
01:12Hayashi Osamu, Watabayashi's question of the people.
01:15Why did it happen now?
01:18Why is this happening?
01:20First of all, we need to dig into the modern history.
01:23We need to learn about history.
01:24Not only that,
01:26but we need to predict what will happen in the future.
01:29That's the main goal of this show.
01:31Learn about history and the future.
01:34I'm not the one who predicts that,
01:36but this person.
01:40Mr. Ueno.
01:42This is AI Hayashi Osamu.
01:44AI?
01:45He collects information about the world, social situations, and laws in real time.
01:49Based on today's theme, he inputs past data and theories.
01:52Based on that, he predicts the future.
01:57Nice to meet you.
01:59Nice to meet you, too.
02:02When are you going to do it?
02:03Right now.
02:06Today, as AI Hayashi Osamu,
02:08I'm looking forward to spending fun time with you all.
02:13Isn't that amazing?
02:14Wow.
02:15What is this?
02:16Two AI Hayashi Osamus on the screen.
02:18It's a little noisy.
02:21It's good to be alone.
02:22It's hot.
02:23It's hot, right?
02:24It's hot.
02:25It's hot.
02:27What is the future of Japan that AI Hayashi Osamu, who studied for this show, predicts?
02:34The question of the people.
02:36Why did this happen now?
02:38The first theme is...
02:40In the same age, we still have a Showa-like way of thinking.
02:44Why has compliance changed so much?
02:51In the old days, I would invite people to go drinking after work.
02:55But now, I'm worried about compliance.
03:00It's hard to invite people.
03:03There are people who want to be invited.
03:05What is compliance like?
03:08It's like a power word.
03:11Elementary school and junior high school teachers behave differently.
03:16I think the situation has changed a lot.
03:19Why has compliance changed so much?
03:26As a result of national surveys all over the country,
03:29about 80% of people have questions about this.
03:34In the old days, it was hard to raise my voice.
03:37I think there were a lot of people who cried.
03:39I think it's a great thing to be able to speak without holding back.
03:43I think it's a good thing.
03:46There are no more power words.
03:49I think it's easier to work.
03:55Compliance has changed with the times.
03:59At work, the boss was strict with his wife.
04:04At school, he couldn't give her a nickname that would lead to bullying.
04:10At the park,
04:17it was hard for children to play outside.
04:21What was the situation like in the old days of compliance?
04:26In 1961, at the zoo in Sapporo,
04:29there was a show where children raised their voices.
04:41Now, it's a boxing match with kangaroos that can never be held.
04:48At first glance, it looks like a joke event.
04:55A serious right straight to the kangaroo opponent.
05:00Kangaroos fight with kicks.
05:02It's an unbelievable scene now, but the children...
05:08This smile.
05:10And now that I think about it, it's an event full of steam.
05:15It was held in front of an audience that filled the venue.
05:25A beer drinking competition.
05:36The judges are seriously judging something.
05:41It's a competition that doesn't even feel a little bit of compliance.
05:47The audience is blown away.
05:51Now, it's a compliance event that can never be held.
05:57Compliance has changed even in the educational field.
06:02A long time ago, if there was a problem in class,
06:05it was natural that the teacher would take full responsibility.
06:14At school, if the problem was wrong,
06:17the teacher would yell and hit the head.
06:21In addition, in this new school,
06:28the teacher is always in the city.
06:31The teacher teaches from the angle of the bow.
06:38And in the middle of the study,
06:47Wow, that's strong!
06:51The teacher bathes in cold water and hits the back with a bamboo stick.
06:54This is called a water splash.
06:56What is it?
06:58At that time, I was hit by a wooden stick.
07:02And I was punched in the back.
07:04This is natural.
07:06So I thought it was normal.
07:09Why has the way of compliance changed so much?
07:13Hirai-chan, you must have been surprised at school.
07:16I was surprised.
07:18Now, there are few clubs that are noisy.
07:22On the contrary, such clubs are hated by everyone.
07:29There was a teacher in the city.
07:31He was walking all the time.
07:34He sat down and raised his hand all the time.
07:37He was hit in the butt with a wooden stick.
07:40When I went to the club,
07:42the teacher told me not to talk about the old days.
07:48It was not a big deal.
07:50But it was natural.
07:54When you were in class,
07:56there was a student who was noisy.
07:59Did you go to him?
08:02I was in charge of the upper class.
08:05There was no noisy student in class.
08:08Don't get carried away.
08:12Mr. Wakabayashi,
08:13do you know when compliance started?
08:16It was about 10 years ago.
08:21No, it was before that.
08:23Really?
08:25In the announcement of the government of Mori government in 2000,
08:32it was written that Japan should move toward self-monitoring society.
08:37Self-monitoring?
08:39Until then, Japan had strict regulations.
08:41So, Japan decided to loosen the restrictions.
08:43However, Japan was in trouble if Japan did whatever it wanted.
08:46So, Japan decided to do whatever it wanted.
08:48However, Japan decided to check the system later.
08:52So, Japan moved toward self-monitoring society.
08:54While everyone was monitoring the system,
08:56the idea of compliance gradually spread.
08:59After the government of Mori government in 2000,
09:01the government of Koizumi government in 2001
09:03started to improve the system.
09:05So, Japan moved toward self-monitoring society.
09:07That was one of the reasons.
09:09So, Japan loosened the restrictions
09:11in order to balance self-monitoring.
09:13Yes.
09:14Self-monitoring from pre-regulation.
09:16This is a saying of Professor Ito of Seikei University.
09:21It's a proper expression.
09:23It's a proper expression.
09:26Then, why did the compliance change?
09:29Is that the reason why Osamu Hayashi
09:32was ranked as a modernist?
09:35That's why it became like this.
09:37Why did the compliance change?
09:41What is the third cause that Professor Hayashi thinks?
09:47Food disguising incident that occurred in 2000.
09:51Food disguising incident that occurred in 2000.
09:53What is the relationship between food disguising and compliance?
10:00I found out the fact that
10:03Australian beef was put in the box of our domestic beef.
10:102001.
10:11Food disguising incident by a major company discovered in Aitsui.
10:18Due to the BSE problem that occurred at that time,
10:21the government started to buy domestic beef
10:26for the rescue of local farmers.
10:31However, there were many incidents that
10:33the government misused this system
10:36and made foreign beef bought by the government.
10:41The trust of the companies that handled the food
10:44was lost due to the discovery of the incident.
10:46The safety of food was re-evaluated.
10:50In addition, in 2007,
10:52meat fork incident was discovered
10:56that was sold as 100% beef
10:59and meat fork incident was sold as 100% pork and chicken.
11:04It's a great incident.
11:08It became a social problem as the biggest food disguising incident in Japan.
11:14These food disguising incidents.
11:18In fact, there were 8 internal complaints.
11:24And the company increased the number of complaints
11:28due to the food disguising problem.
11:30The company has a window for internal reporting.
11:34The company has a specialized department
11:36and we can consult with them even if it's anonymous.
11:39If you have something, please contact us.
11:42There is a contact information.
11:45We can do it anonymously.
11:47I think that the atmosphere has changed
11:50to make it easier to say something.
11:53By incorporating a system that the company can't hide,
11:58the employees were aware that the company would be exposed someday.
12:04Mr. Hayashi was able to create a social atmosphere
12:07and I think the compliance has changed.
12:12Since 2000, the number of cases of the company's failure has increased.
12:16The background is internal complaints.
12:18Before that, there were few leaks.
12:21I think there were many cases of being concealed.
12:25I think it gradually changed.
12:29Looking at the news now,
12:31I think it was a big deal.
12:34It was about 20 to 25 years ago.
12:38I thought there was no one to stop it,
12:41but there was no place to say it,
12:43so I had to keep quiet.
12:45Looking at the situation now,
12:47I think the company will definitely be exposed.
12:52If the company was able to suppress it,
12:55it may be a little overstatement,
12:57but it may not have leaked out.
13:01That possibility is high.
13:03There may have been worse things,
13:06but now there is no way to make it clear.
13:09That's right.
13:12However, the company implements compliance training for employees
13:16and is able to prevent deception and fraud.
13:19It is not a betrayal of internal complaints.
13:22It's the right thing to do.
13:24As an action to protect the company's health,
13:27it is the right thing to do.
13:29I think history has changed little by little
13:32so that everyone can gradually understand
13:35that it is not a betrayal of internal complaints.
13:38In 2001, it was the beginning of the lost 10 years.
13:41Was there an incident?
13:43I think it has something to do with it.
13:45When it was profitable,
13:47I didn't have to be stingy about it.
13:49However, if the result is bad,
13:51there is a saying that if you deny it, you will be punished,
13:54but if you become poor,
13:56you will be punished.
13:58I think there is a reason why
14:01the information has come out.
14:04At that time, I didn't know what kind of agency
14:07and what kind of color the entertainers were.
14:10It was like taking an audition and going in.
14:13But now, young people have a lot of information
14:16about the color of the agency and how to do it,
14:19so they know a lot about it,
14:22but they don't choose my agency.
14:26Don't you choose it?
14:28It's not like that.
14:31Why has compliance changed?
14:34The second episode that Hayashi thinks about is
14:37the 1989 Shingo Ryukougo Award.
14:43What does Ryukougo have to do with compliance?
14:48Shingo category, gold medal, sexual harassment
14:55Oh!
14:57Was it that long ago?
15:00In 1989, sexual harassment won the gold medal in the Shingo category.
15:06Who got it?
15:08A woman who worked at a high-end publisher
15:11sued her boss for sexual harassment.
15:16This was the trigger,
15:18and the word sexual harassment spread to the world.
15:23Twelve years later, the word was born.
15:28Power harassment.
15:32In fact, power harassment is a Japanese-made term.
15:39At the time, she was a member of the Power Harassment Committee of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare,
15:44and she created the word power harassment.
15:47Mr. Okada said this.
15:50I created the word power harassment in 2001.
15:53At that time, the workplace was terrible.
15:56For example, throwing a dish,
15:58cutting the door open,
16:00shouting loudly,
16:02being dragged around,
16:04working until late at night.
16:07There were many people who were suffering from it.
16:10On the other hand, young men and women
16:14can say,
16:16It's sexual harassment, so please stop.
16:19But we can't say anything about it because it's impossible.
16:23That's what I heard.
16:28That's how I came up with the word.
16:31Regardless of gender,
16:33power harassment was born to raise voices against abuse from women.
16:39And with the birth of the word sexual harassment,
16:45Moraharai, who suffers from mental pain from sexual harassment,
16:50and Matahara, who sexually harasses pregnant women,
16:55various types of harassment have been defined in the world.
17:00I think there are a lot of people who haven't been able to say that because they've had bad feelings.
17:05I think it's great that it's easier to speak up.
17:10A long time ago,
17:20people used to drink at the same table as their friends.
17:25Now, it's a great form of alcohol harassment.
17:30It was common at work,
17:32but now it's known as smoke harassment.
17:37Various harassments have permeated and created an environment where it is easy to say no to unpleasant things.
17:44Now that I think about it,
17:47He feels uncomfortable when he slurps noodles.
17:51What is this?
17:54He says it is unpleasant to be confessed to by an innocent person.
17:58Confession harassment.
18:00The voice of being re-cultivated.
18:04Compared to the past, I feel that it has become a little more strict.
18:09I think it's a little harder for me.
18:12Now I can't say I cut my hair.
18:16I can't ask if I have a girlfriend.
18:18The number of people who are afraid of harassment is increasing.
18:23How did the permeation of the word harassment change compliance?
18:29Tell me, Mr. Hayashi.
18:32Japanese is a language with a lot of absorption.
18:36Many foreigners are absorbed in it.
18:39It also has a high ability to interpret.
18:41If you can do one thing, even if it starts with sexual harassment,
18:44The number of relatives is increasing.
18:47What I didn't realize is that the situation has become a language.
18:51I see.
18:52What do you think, Mr. Imori?
18:54I think it's delicious to slurp noodles.
18:58That's right.
18:59There is also a culture.
19:01I think the judge is different depending on the person.
19:04That's right.
19:05It depends on where you think it is.
19:07I don't think so, but I wonder if there is a possibility of doing that.
19:13I'm worried that I won't be able to say what I really want to say.
19:18That's right.
19:19That's exactly what you just said.
19:22I think it's a good thing that people who couldn't say what they wanted to say can say what they want to say.
19:29But it's also true that we have to live in fear.
19:33I see.
19:35But if you say that, you're afraid because you're doing something wrong.
19:40Confessing to someone you don't love.
19:44If you think about it, love itself is like harassment.
19:50That's right.
19:52That's why love is getting less and less.
19:56That's right.
19:57In the past, love dramas were almost impossible.
20:00That's right.
20:01Harassment.
20:02Forcing someone to go on a date.
20:05Or waiting in front of the house.
20:07Oh, no.
20:08There was a scene like that.
20:11That's scary.
20:13Kasuga was waiting in front of the house.
20:16He didn't want to go out, so he wrote it on a post-it and came back.
20:20At a party, when a female announcer in her 20s was sitting in front of her,
20:25there was no common topic.
20:27As a result of going around in circles,
20:30she asked, where do you live?
20:32That's the worst.
20:34That's not good.
20:36That's definitely not good.
20:38The bad thing was that she went around in circles.
20:41That's right.
20:42Be careful.
20:43She heard the worst thing.
20:45She didn't say she didn't want to cut her hair.
20:47She didn't want to cut her hair.
20:49That's not good.
20:51Do you want to say it, Makino-san?
20:53I'll say it right away.
20:55It's beautiful.
20:56I'll notice it right away.
20:58There are people who want you to notice it.
21:00I think there's a sense of purity when you say it.
21:04Makino-san will probably be fine.
21:06She won't be allowed to do anything.
21:08She won't be able to cut her hair.
21:09But if I were to ask a female talent,
21:12did you cut your hair?
21:14That's a little scary.
21:16That's a young talent.
21:18That's not good.
21:19That's not good.
21:21If you think the receiver is a harassment,
21:24you might end up being harassed.
21:28I've heard this before, so it's hard to explain.
21:31The director couldn't tell the AD that it was completely different.
21:38So the TV station made a compliance room.
21:44Then the harassment came like every day.
21:48But when I heard it, it was a teacher or an education group,
21:52so there was a way to perceive it.
21:56But I've heard that young people are worried that they won't get angry.
22:03It definitely opens up the sense of distance between people.
22:07Bikubiku is becoming a normal mode.
22:11Bikubiku, that's right.
22:13If that happens, you'll have to record everything.
22:16That's right.
22:17I don't think it's a problem because it's this way of saying it.
22:21I don't know where it's being recorded.
22:25But I think it's being recorded, so I talk a lot.
22:30I don't stop talking.
22:35I think you should be careful.
22:38You look like you're going to make an appearance.
22:42How many words do you think are harassment?
22:47It's hard to think about that.
22:50I don't know much about it.
22:55Here are the main types of harassment recognized by the Japan Compliance Promotion Association.
23:00The number of reports from those prohibited by law to those that have increased rapidly in recent years is more than 100.
23:07Isn't Omuhara like omelet rice?
23:11There was Omuhara.
23:13It's Omutsu harassment.
23:15Experienced people say,
23:17I don't think it's a good idea to change Omutsu.
23:21I don't think it's a good idea.
23:23Omuhara said,
23:25What's that?
23:26Can I go to Omuhara if I receive it from my wife?
23:30I can't say that.
23:31I said no.
23:33Please deal with it in your family.
23:36I think it's different from my wife.
23:3937, Harahara,
23:41Does that mean you're going to the point where you're going?
23:44It's harassment.
23:46If you say too much, that's what happens.
23:47You've already gone around.
23:49That's harassment.
23:52Personally, I think it's number 31.
23:56It's logical harassment.
23:58It's a way of talking that's too logical to corner the other person.
24:02How many did you have today?
24:09I'd like to give you a quiz here.
24:11Think about how many pictures you're going to get.
24:16Next week's schedule is from the manager.
24:18I noticed that it hadn't arrived.
24:20Kasuga
24:22Please tell me next week's schedule.
24:24Send a LINE message.
24:25What's this?
24:27This is harassment.
24:30I do this a lot.
24:32I did this about two days ago.
24:36What is the harassment hidden in this LINE?
24:40Most people do this, don't they?
24:42Check the schedule.
24:44It's a circle.
24:46You noticed, didn't you?
24:48It looks like a LINE circle is angry.
24:51What is this?
24:53Recently, young people are afraid of circles.
24:57If you end the message with a circle, it will give the other person pressure and relieve stress.
25:04Isn't it kinder to have a circle?
25:08I'm scared.
25:10I'm afraid of circles.
25:12So I end the message with an emoji or a stretch mark.
25:17Stretch mark.
25:19If you say, please tell me next week's schedule.
25:22I think it's kind.
25:24The feeling of a circle is really different from us.
25:29There are a lot of people who are limited to circles in the after-school test.
25:33Because they can't wear it.
25:35Mr. Hayashi can't wear it.
25:37I can't wear it, but I'll limit it without mercy.
25:40Mr. Hayashi is a limited person.
25:42Do you end the sentence with a stretch mark?
25:44It's Rojihara.
25:49Maruhara and Rojihara are double.
25:51It's a combo.
25:53I see.
25:56Why has the compliance changed?
25:59What is the first place that Mr. Hayashi thinks?
26:021995
26:04Release
26:241995
26:26Windows 95 is on sale in Japan.
26:31The appearance of the Internet has changed Japanese society.
26:35This year was called the Internet Year of the Dog.
26:39What is the change in compliance caused by the release of Windows 95?
26:46After 15 years, the Internet has spread.
26:49Twitter and SNS are getting more and more popular.
26:52The basis was Windows.
26:56Various computers have started to spread.
27:00It's easy to raise the voice that compliance is a violation.
27:04That's right.
27:06Even if the hardware and the system are in place,
27:10I don't think it would be the same situation without the psychological aspect of trying to do it actively.
27:17In this exposed society,
27:20the so-called senior citizens are doing whatever they want.
27:25As in the old days, if you work hard, you can go up.
27:28There is no prejudice.
27:29It's decreasing.
27:30The word of parents is popular.
27:33If you can't go up when that happens,
27:35you have no choice but to lower your opponent.
27:38That's why people who are doing it in a good mood fail.
27:41Oh, it's a violation of compliance.
27:43I think it's a psychological situation like this.
27:47That's my hypothesis.
27:49I see.
27:50If you work hard, you can raise your salary and make a profit.
27:53It's hard to live in an era where coexistence is maintained.
27:56It's harder to hit someone and drag them down.
27:59You think you're going up.
28:01I thought I was going up.
28:03It's an exaggeration.
28:05The judicial system is different from the national law.
28:09I think it's an era where the internet world is running in two directions.
28:14The judicial system of the public is more speedy than the national law.
28:19It's pretty scary.
28:20It's decided by the air.
28:22It's the same with witch hunting.
28:24Human beings are like that.
28:26Something that was in the air will be prosecuted.
28:29You can make a law that says,
28:31Let's do it properly in history.
28:34I wonder if the feeling of the internet world being judged will continue in the future.
28:42People who think they can't do it even if they try really hard.
28:45You can be in a position like a judge when you're injured.
28:49If you give up justice, you'll get the result you want.
28:53It's a pleasure.
28:54That's right.
28:56It's going to happen again.
29:01What will happen to Japan if compliance continues to change?
29:07AI Hayashi Osamu, who was developed for this program,
29:10analyzes various research and papers and predicts the future.
29:15Tell me, AI Hayashi Osamu.
29:17What will happen to Japan if compliance continues to change?
29:22By changing the cost of compliance management to the price,
29:25the price of all products will go up.
29:29For example, it also affects food and beverages.
29:32In particular, in the case of imported food,
29:34there is a possibility that the cost of importing will increase due to the strengthening of compliance.
29:40That's right.
29:41TV is an advertising business, isn't it?
29:45When a violation of compliance occurs,
29:47TV will be banned.
29:49But paid content may not be banned.
29:54So paid content may increase.
29:58If the expression is narrowed, the flow will be that way.
30:02As this change progresses,
30:04companies and society will respond to new standards.
30:09In particular, the traffic rules will evolve with the spread of autonomous driving technology.
30:14For example, in Los Angeles,
30:16even if an accident occurs while driving an unmanned taxi,
30:19the law and regulations that clarify the place of responsibility are in place,
30:23so new technology can be deployed relatively smoothly.
30:27It was born in the future Japan where compliance has changed.
30:32What is an unmanned taxi?
30:37A.I. Hayashi Osamu predicts the birth of an unmanned taxi in the future Japan where compliance has changed.
30:44In fact, it has already been realized in Los Angeles.
30:48Local coverage to know the reality.
30:51It's a big street called Venice, which has a lot of traffic.
30:56This car is running on unmanned.
31:00Oh, it started to move.
31:02It's scary.
31:03Oh, it turned left.
31:05This is an unmanned taxi called Waymo, which was started to operate in some cities in the United States, such as Los Angeles.
31:14You can register your destination in advance by using the app.
31:19Of course, there is no driver in the car.
31:23If you press the start button,
31:29the steering wheel will automatically move and the car will start to run.
31:34What will happen if an accident occurs?
31:39Will it be the company's responsibility?
31:41The responsibility for that is extremely clear.
31:45It's a rule.
31:46Even humans don't cause accidents.
31:48It's a comparison of the rate.
31:51The question of the people.
31:54Why did this happen now?
31:56The next theme is...
31:58There are more men around me who have hair loss.
32:02I was wondering why.
32:04I heard that someone said, you do it.
32:08Why are there more people who have hair loss?
32:12My husband has hair loss, too.
32:15I do it to trim my beard.
32:19Why did this happen?
32:22Why do men hate hair loss?
32:30We did a national survey to see if there are more men who have hair loss.
32:35It's really increased.
32:37The answer is that 70% of people have hair loss.
32:40I thought it was about half.
32:42I asked a man if he had hair loss.
32:45I have hair loss.
32:47Now I have hair loss on my face and beard.
32:50I do it at the clinic.
32:53How old are you?
32:54I'm 42 years old.
32:56You're 42 years old?
32:58You're young.
33:00How are you doing?
33:02I'm going to start when I'm 40 years old.
33:06You're 30 years old.
33:08By the way...
33:09This is the last request.
33:12I'll give you a gift card worth 20,000 yen.
33:15I'm sure you're wearing a short skirt.
33:18It's an advertisement for a hair loss salon.
33:24I'll take a good look at this.
33:27At a drinking party.
33:30There were a lot of people who had hair loss when I went to the hot spring the other day.
33:35You guys haven't done it yet?
33:38People who have hair loss and people who don't have hair loss.
33:45This is also a common occurrence in modern society.
33:48How about your age?
33:51I'm 60 years old.
33:53You're not 60 years old.
33:55This is not hair loss.
33:57It's hair loss.
34:01Why did men start to hate hair?
34:05Why did men start to hate hair?
34:07Have you ever had hair loss?
34:09No, I haven't.
34:11You can't imagine it.
34:13How about you?
34:14I had a hair loss once.
34:18I felt like I lost to something big.
34:24Don't you want to see a hair loss?
34:26A beard.
34:29What do you think?
34:31It depends on how you look at it.
34:34Sometimes I'm surprised.
34:36It depends on how you look at it.
34:38Sometimes I think about it.
34:40I think it's better for women to have hair loss.
34:44I think it's better for women to have hair loss.
34:46Everyone has hair loss.
34:48Everyone has hair loss.
34:50I've seen a lot of people who don't have hair loss.
34:56When I saw a comedian who was taking off his hair, I was surprised.
35:03I'm used to seeing it.
35:05I see.
35:07I was surprised.
35:09I think so, too.
35:11It's a rumor that he's bald.
35:13It's hard to laugh.
35:15It's a rumor that he's bald.
35:17It's a rumor that he's bald.
35:19It's a rumor that he's bald.
35:21It's a rumor that he's bald.
35:23When I saw a person suddenly growing a moustache,
35:26It was like an animal.
35:28It was like an animal.
35:30It's become a rumor.
35:32It may lead to harassment.
35:34It may lead to harassment.
35:36It may be compared to beard hair but also to see it as freedom of expression.
35:40It may be compared to beard hair but also to see it as freedom of expression.
35:42I'm afraid that the memory will change.
35:44I'm afraid that the memory will change.
35:46There's no other way to balance it.
35:47Why did men start to hate hair?
35:50Why do you think that Mr. Hayashi hates men?
35:55That's why this happened.
35:59Why do you think that Mr. Hayashi hates men?
36:02The reason Mr. Hayashi thinks is
36:06One person is
36:08Hon-kyo-no?
36:10Hon-kyo-no?
36:12Why do you think that Mr. Hayashi hates men?
36:17The reason why Hayashi-sensei chose the 3rd place is...
36:21Why did Hayashi-sensei choose the 3rd place for the thin eyebrows boy boom?
36:27In the 2000s, Kazuya Kamenashi, Hayato Uchihara.
36:32In the early 2010s, Jiro Mizushima.
36:37At that time, the condition of a handsome man was, in other words, thin eyebrows.
36:42Not only entertainers, but also ordinary people had thin eyebrows.
36:47The thin eyebrows boy was the top.
36:51It's 2005.
36:53A boy in his teens is crouching, holding a razor blade, and touching his eyebrows.
37:01He is brazenly trimming his eyebrows.
37:05It's a little too thick, and it's a little out of place.
37:10Why does thin eyebrows and hair loss have something to do with each other?
37:15I think it's good to think that thin eyebrows have the primitive experience of pulling out your hair.
37:21I think it was a very big turning point that I thought it was okay to have thin eyebrows.
37:29Is there such a sense of presence?
37:32When I was a student, my eyebrows were thin.
37:35I used to trim my eyebrows like every day.
37:38It's very beautiful.
37:40It's beautiful.
37:44It's very thick.
37:47This is probably about 15 years old.
37:54I don't think I have any hesitation or attachment to my hair.
38:01The primitive experience of having thin eyebrows has lowered the hurdle of hair loss.
38:08There was a thin eyebrow boom in 2005.
38:13I haven't seen the first episode of Rookies in a long time.
38:16Everyone has very thin eyebrows.
38:19I thought it was a little more aesthetic.
38:23I didn't know it was a trend.
38:28Why do men hate hair?
38:33The second reason why Hayashi thinks.
38:44Because Shinji Kagawa went to Germany in 2010.
38:51Why did Hayashi choose this reason as the second reason?
38:57Kagawa moved to Dortmund in Germany in 2010.
39:02Two years later.
39:04I joined Manchester United.
39:06I think it's a great club.
39:09The first Japanese to join the British big club Manchester United.
39:15In fact, he made this confession on a soccer program that he appeared in in 2010.
39:21I'm Sol.
39:25I'm Kanawa Purun.
39:28He confessed that he had lost his hair.
39:33At that time, it was hard to say that he had lost his hair.
39:37What was the influence of the word Kanawa Purun?
39:41I feel like I've changed my mind since he went over there.
39:47It's hard to see foreign athletes in real time.
39:51Now you can see it in various tools.
39:53The influence has become very strong.
39:56Kagawa, who was a star of the time, openly expressed his hair loss.
40:01It was said to have influenced the consciousness of the people of the world.
40:06It was a little hard to say at the time, but when you look at the world.
40:12Cristiano Ronaldo, the representative of Portugal.
40:16The former representative of England, Rooney.
40:19And Mohamed Salah, the representative of Egypt.
40:23For a star player, hair loss is a given.
40:26The timing of hair loss in the last 10 years and the fact that Japanese people are really starting to play an active role.
40:31I think the timing is quite overlapping.
40:36Mr. Hayashi thinks that the number of people in the world has increased due to the hair loss of the stars of that era.
40:45When I say that a star of the time made a trend, I remember it clearly.
40:49It's Seiko.
40:52Seiko was all over the city.
40:55And Takuya Kimura.
40:58There were a lot of people.
41:00Mr. Makino, is there any influence of Kagawa?
41:04Of course, there may be a reason why Shinji Kagawa went to the Olympics.
41:09The soccer world has always been like that.
41:14I don't have a beard, but I'm basically doing everything.
41:18Really?
41:20I'm doing my whole body.
41:22So you're just doing what you can.
41:24I think it's better to have no hair than to have my hair touched and treated.
41:32I think that's a little different from what you think.
41:38Sometimes I think soccer players are beautiful, but that's it.
41:43The reason why the recent hair loss boom was born is because of a thought unique to young people today.
41:55Why do men hate their hair?
41:59The first reason Mr. Hayashi thinks is...
42:04I watch YouTube at 1.5x speed.
42:07I also watch Netflix.
42:09I also watch dramas.
42:11I don't care about time, so I watch it fast.
42:15He has a lot of values in the Z generation, such as watching at double speed.
42:19In 2022, he won the grand prize for this year.
42:24He started to look for a big fan.
42:29Why is he number one?
42:33For young people today, they don't need an intro even if it's music.
42:38They can just listen to the chorus.
42:40Or they want to know the result of the movie at double speed.
42:44They want to spend their time like this.
42:48This is called time performance.
42:51It's a waste of time to shave or trim your beard.
42:58So, if you get rid of it, you can save time.
43:02Why is the word typer so popular?
43:06The desire to do something is based on information.
43:11I always say that information is the mother of desire.
43:15If you can get more information than before,
43:19you can do more things.
43:23But you don't have more time in a day.
43:25So, you want to shave your beard and spend more time doing what you want to do.
43:31That's why the word typer is so popular.
43:34I think it's related to the recent topic of sleep cancellation.
43:39Kirari, what do you think about the word typer?
43:42When I was in school, the only thing that was popular was a TV drama.
43:49But now, I have to have information such as a song or an idol.
43:56So, I don't want to make everyone talk about it.
43:59I see.
44:00There are so many things to do.
44:02Everyone is watching this.
44:04Do you care about the word typer?
44:07When I search the movie theater on my smartphone,
44:09I always check the time.
44:11To be honest,
44:13if it says 147 minutes or 110 minutes,
44:20I think I should go there.
44:22I see.
44:23I can see how valuable it is to take someone's 2 hours.
44:29That's right.
44:30That's a good idea.
44:31I think so.
44:32But,
44:33I don't know how many people can say they are confident about the word typer.
44:47What will happen to Japan if men continue to hate hair?
44:52A.I. Hayashi Osamu predicts the future.
45:00Tell me, A.I. Hayashi Osamu.
45:02What will happen to Japan if men continue to hate hair?
45:07A.I. Hayashi Osamu predicts the future.
45:10What will happen to Japan if men continue to hate hair?
45:21A.I. Hayashi Osamu predicts the future.
45:24Tell me, A.I. Hayashi Osamu.
45:29The hair loss culture of men will continue to evolve.
45:33Not only mustache, but also hair loss,
45:35and smooth skin will be the standard.
45:39The era of smooth skin men may come.
45:44Specifically, kids hair loss will be generalized.
45:47It will be like prevention.
45:49It will be the era of hair loss from childhood to prevent future complexes.
45:55Hair loss will be the same as future health management.
45:59It will spread to children.
46:03Do parents have such experience?
46:05Yes.
46:06When I talk with my friends,
46:08I talk about how much my parents will pay me for hair loss.
46:17If I can do it when I'm young without talking about it,
46:21I think it's good for children.
46:27The future of hair loss in convenience stores is coming.
46:30Mobile hair loss services can be easily used in the city.
46:35It's a convenient era for busy modern people.
46:40It's scary to be able to go to a convenience store and get hair loss.
46:45Hair loss causes burns when exposed to the sun.
46:50It can also cause skin inflammation.
46:56If there is such a problem,
46:59technology that can deal with it may develop and spread.
47:03That's right.
47:05If you want to see this program again, please go to TVER.

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