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The rise of social media is eroding the amount of face-to-face communication between people. In Japan, one upshot of this phenomenon is that younger people are finding it increasingly difficult to share their problems with those around them. In essence, they feel as though they have no one to turn to for advice.É罻ýÌåµÄÐËÆðÕýÔÚ¼õÉÙÈËÓëÈËÖ®¼äÃæ¶ÔÃæ½»Á÷µÄƵÂÊ¡£ÔÚÈÕ±¾£¬¸ÃÏÖÏóÔì³ÉµÄÒ»¸öºó¹û¾ÍÊÇ£ºÄêÇáÒ»´ú·¢ÏÖ£¬ÒªÓë×Ô¼ºÖÜΧµÄÅóÓÑÇãËß×Ô¼ºÓöµ½µÄÎÊÌâÔ½À´Ô½ÄÑÁË¡£ÊµÖÊÉÏ£¬ËûÃǾÍÊǸоõÎÞÈËÄܸø×Ô¼º½¨Òé¡£
A new breed of morale-boosting services catering to such people has emerged. And while some of these offerings verge on the comical, their existence is a perhaps grim reflection of what appears to be a growing sense of disconnection from society among younger Japanese.Ò»ÖÖÐÂÐÍÃæÏòÕâÀàÈËȺ¡¢Ö¼ÔÚÕñ·Ü¾«ÉñµÄ·þÎñÒÑÈ»ÐËÆð¡£È»¶ø£¬ÆäÖеÄÒ»Ð©ÕæÊÇÈÃÈËÌäЦ½Ô·Ç£¬ËüÃǵĴæÔÚÒ²¿ÉÄÜ·´Ó¦ÁËһЩ²Ð¿áµÄÏÖʵ£ºÈÕ±¾ÇàÄêÒ»´úÓëÉç»áµÄ¶Ï´øÔ½À´Ô½Ã÷ÏÔ¡£
Get your kicksżÏñÌß
Hitomi Nogata, a 24-year-old professional kickboxer, has a unique side job. She offers a service that involves literally giving people a hard kick in the caboose. One person seeking her services recently was Akira Muramoto, the 22-year-old representative of a Tokyo venture company.24ËêµÄÒ°ÐÎÈÊÃÀÊÇÒ»¸öרҵµÄ×ÔÓɲ«»÷Ñ¡ÊÖ£¬ÓÐ×ÅÒ»·ÝÌØ±ðµÄ¸±Òµ¡£ËýÌṩµÄ·þÎñ¾ÍÊǸøÈËµÄÆ¨¹ÉÉÏÖØÖØµØÌßÒ»½Å¡£×î½ü£¬Ò»¸öѰÇóÆä·þÎñµÄ½ÐÄêÇáÈ˽ÐAkira Muramoto£¬22Ë꣬ÊǶ«¾©Ò»¼Ò·çͶ¹«Ë¾µÄ´ú±í¡£
As he stood in front of her, Nogata lifted her muscular right leg and said, "Here I go!" before unleashing a monster kick to Muramoto's buttocks. µ±Akira MuramotoÕ¾ÔÚÒ°ÐÎÈÊÃÀÃæÇ°£¬Ò°ÐÎÈÊÃÀ̧ÆðËýÄǽ¡×³µÄÓÒÍÈ˵£¬¡°ÎÒÀ´À²£¡¡±Ö®ºó¾ÍÔÚAkira MuramotoµÄƨ¹ÉÉÏÖØÖØÒ»»÷¡£
Middle-aged man for rent ÖÐÄêÄÐ×Ó³ö×â
Takanobu Nishimoto, a 47-year-old fashion producer, offers a coaching service called "Rent a Middle-Aged Man." He rents out his spare time for 1,000 yen ($8) per hour. While some of his customers take him out dining or shopping, Nishimoto said most of them talk to him about their romantic or family problems.47ËêµÄTakanobu Nishimoto´ÓÊ·þ×°ÐÐÒµ£¬ËûΪÈËÌṩһ¸ö½Ð¡°³ö×âÖÐÄêÄÐ×Ó¡±µÄÖ¸µ¼·þÎñ¡£Ëû³ö×â×Ô¼ºµÄ¿ÕÓàʱ¼ä£¬Ã¿¸öСʱ1000ÈÕÔª£¨8ÃÀÔª£©¡£ËûµÄһЩ¿Í»§»á´øËû³öÈ¥³Ô·¹»ò¹ºÎNishimoto˵£¬´ó²¿·ÖÈË»áÏòËûÇãËß×Ô¼ºµÄÇé¸ÐÎÊÌâ»ò¼ÒÍ¥ÎÊÌâ¡£
So far, he has met more than 1,500 people, mostly women and young men. He listens to them and gives them his honest opinion. He said he does not try to sugarcoat his advice.µ½Ä¿Ç°ÎªÖ¹£¬ËûµÄ¿Í»§ÒѾ³¬¹ýÁË1500룬ÆäÖд󲿷ÖÊÇÅ®ÐÔºÍÄêÇáÄÐÐÔ¡£ËûÇãÌý¿Í»§£¬»á¸øËûÃÇһЩ³Ï¿ÏµÄ½¨Òé¡£Ëû˵Ëû´Ó²»·ÛÊÎ×Ô¼ºµÄÒâ¼û¡£
Scream and shout¾ªÉù¼â½Ð
On TV Tokyo, a program called "I Want To Be Scolded By Risa Yoshiki" has generated considerable buzz since its launch in August last year. In the show, Yoshiki, a female TV celebrity, yells at TV audiences through a camera lens, tossing out such admonishments as, "Who do you think you are?"¶«¾©µçÊǪ́ÓеµµçÊÓ½ÚÄ¿Ãû½Ð¡¶ºÃÏë±»¼ªÄ¾ÀæÉ´ÈèÂî¡·£¬×Ô´ÓÈ¥Äê8ÔÂÍÆ³öÒÔÀ´£¬ÒýÆðÇ¿ÁÒ·´Ïì¡£½ÚÄ¿ÖУ¬µçÊÓÅ®ÐǼªÄ¾Í¨¹ý¾µÍ·¶Ô¹ÛÖÚ´óÂ¡°ÄãÒÔΪÄãÊÇË£¿¡±µÈÒ»´ó¶ÑÄÑÌýµÄ»°¡£
Hiroki Takahashi, a TV Tokyo official in charge of the program, suggested people are hungry for a good berating. ¶«¾©µçÊǪ́¹ÜÀíÕâµµ½ÚÄ¿µÄ¹«ÎñÔ±¸ßÇŹãÊ÷³Æ£¬¹ÛÖÚÃÇ¿ÊÍûÉÆÒâµÄÅúÆÀ¡£
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