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  • Update Street Fighter Assassin's Fist - Kickstarter campaign

    Sunday, Apr 21, 2013 4:02AM / Standard Entry

    Exciting News!

    We've got some very exciting news to announce. Although the KickStarter campaign has built a little slowly it has brought a couple of supporters to us who really love what we are trying to do. In fact they love it so much they are going to back us with the money we need to get started. So we are pleased to announce that we look like we are good to go, and our vision of a Street Fighter series made by fans for fans will happen.

    So we'd like to thank everyone who has pledged. Your support has been amazingly encouraging, and we really feel that without you we'd not be where we are. So we've taken the decision not to delay getting on with things, by letting the campaign run, and we are going to withdraw the project.

    It also means that you, our friends, will not have to dig into your own pockets to help us out, much as we know you were happy to do so. Your pledges will be cancelled. Most of the rewards we've published will be available later through commercial channels, so DVDs, t-shirts and books will still be available to you at some point.

    We really want you to keep in touch so please check out our Facebook page, and website regularly. We'll have some more cast announcements shortly which we think you'll love and of course even more news as we start filming. Thanks again you've been brilliant supporters and in a very real way have made it all happen.

    Love, hugs and Shoryukens to you all!

    応援していただいていた、ストリートファイターのキックスターターキャンペーンは、いくつかの会社から融資を受けられる事になり、このキャンペーンはキャンセルになりました。応援していただいている方達のためにも、スタッフ、キャスト一同、心を込めて、魂焦がして素晴しい作品を作ります!これからも、どうぞよろしく御願いいたします。晃

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  • The arrest of AI WEIWEI Hampstead Theatre

    Saturday, Apr 20, 2013 9:00AM / Standard Entry

    To tell you the truth , sometimes its so funny , on the other hand, sometimes we need to really break through and make that change . This is one of the best shows on theatre in London right now !
    真実を語る事は,時にそれを見ている者に滑稽に映るが、
    時には、立ち上がり、その事実を変えて行かなければならない私
    ...See More
    www.thetimes.co.uk
    Howard Brenton’s play goes for the slow burn as it depicts the banality of evil and the tedium of confinement

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  • Street Fighter Assassin's Fist. Kickstarter campaign.

    Thursday, Apr 11, 2013 12:14AM / Standard Entry


    Hello everyone ! my next project is on the way and we need support from everyone to make this film . please visit kickstarter and check  Street fighter assassin's fist campaign and Let's make this epic film together !!!

    僕の次回出演予定の”ストリートファイター 暗殺拳”が、制作の協力を募る事になりました。
    壮大な武道家たちの人生を描くこの作品にどうぞ協力してください。詳しくは、kickstarter のウェブサイトで、street fighter asassin's fist と入れてください。内容は、日本語でも記されています。どうぞよろしく御願いいたします。

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1689785997/street-fighter-assassins-fist-kickstarter-campaign


    Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAlJyj4EGW0






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  • Happy New Year 2013!!!

    Sunday, Feb 10, 2013 10:09PM / Standard Entry

    Wishing everyone's a very happy new year 2013!!!
    May this year bring happiness , opportunity and achievement .
    笑角福来
    皆さんに取って健康で実りある幸せな年となりますように!!!

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  • Strong demonstration in Japan

    Sunday, Jul 1, 2012 3:30AM / Standard Entry

    Hello everyone how are you doing ? I HOPE we can find safe way and  choose it for our future !!!

    Have wonderful weekend!!!

    Lots of love!!!

    Akira.



    Video: http://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q5p283KZGa8


    TOKYO — Shouting antinuclear slogans and beating drums, tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered in front of the Japanese prime minister’s residence on Friday in the largest display yet of public anger at the government’s decision to restart a nuclear power plant.

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    Koji Sasahara/Associated Press

    Protesters shouted, "No to restart!" as they held up banners outside Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's residence on Friday.

    The crowd, including women with small children and men in suits coming from work, chanted “No more Fukushimas!” as it filled the broad boulevards near the residence and the national Parliament building, which were cordoned off by the police.

    Estimates of the crowd’s size varied widely, with organizers claiming 150,000 participants, while the police put the number at 17,000. Local news media estimated the crowd at between 20,000 and 45,000, which they described as the largest protest in central Tokyo since the 1960s.

    Protests of any size are rare in Japan, which has long been politically apathetic. However, there has been growing discontent among many Japanese who feel that Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda ignored public concerns about safety this month when he ordered the restarting of the Ohi power station in western Japan.

    Ohi was the first plant to go back online since last year’s accident in Fukushima led to the idling of all of Japan’s 50 operational nuclear reactors, which supplied a third of the nation’s electricity. Three reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi plant melted down after a huge earthquake and tsunami knocked out crucial cooling systems.

    Mr. Noda said he ordered the restarting of two of Ohi’s reactors to avoid power shortages that could cause blackouts during the sweltering summer and cripple industry. However, political analysts have warned of a public backlash after opinion polls showed that two-thirds of Japanese opposed the restart, with many saying that the government had failed to convince them that the plant had been made safe.

    On Friday, many of the protesters complained that Mr. Noda was trying to take Japan back to its political business-as-usual of powerful bureaucrats and industry executives making decisions behind closed doors. Some described their outrage over the restart decision as a moment of political awakening, saying they were taking to the streets for the first time.

    “Japanese have not spoken out against the national government,” said Yoko Kajiyama, a 29-year-old homemaker who carried her 1-year-old son. “Now, we have to speak out, or the government will endanger us all.”

    “To restart the nuclear plant without ensuring its safety is crazy,” said Naomi Yamazaki, 37, another homemaker and first-time demonstrator. “I know we need these plants for power and jobs, but I don’t trust the authorities now to protect us.”

    Organizers said such mistrust had led to a quick growth in the size of the protests, which have been held every week since late March. The protests began with a few hundred participants, but rose into the thousands after Mr. Noda’s restart decision, said one organizer, Misao Redwolf, a illustrator based here in Tokyo.

    Tetsunari Iida, director of the Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies, an energy policy group based in Tokyo, said the protests reflected wider discontent toward the government, which many say failed to protect public health after the accident, and then rushed to get the country’s reactors back online.

    “There is anger and a loss of confidence in the government,” Mr. Iida said. “This is an irreversible change, and I expect this type of movement to continue.”

    For his part, the prime minister seemed unfazed by the protests. “They’re making lots of noise,” Mr. Noda remarked to reporters as he left his office for his private quarters.

    While noisy, the protesters on Friday demonstrated Japan’s penchant for being well organized and fastidiously polite. In many places, they kept passages clear for pedestrians and stood in neat lines along sidewalks. When the protest ended at 8 p.m., organizers quickly dispersed participants using megaphones, with hardly a scrap of garbage left behind.

    Hiroko Tabuchi contributed reporting.


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  • Drink Like a Fish and Dance Like a Dog ! Music !
  • Occupation:  Actor
  • Age: 44
  • Gender: Male
  • Total visits: 128,011

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