字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント (John Daub): So here we are in Tokyo during the Olympics 2020 in 2021. It's been a pretty surreal experience for the host city and for its residents. No international tourism. The streets have been pretty quiet throughout. The Olympic athletes and the international press are inside of a protective bubble. There are no spectators at any of the venues. There's a state of emergency. But, it's not a lockdown. There are some things to see and do in the city of Tokyo during the Olympics. I'm at Nihonbashi right now. Behind me are the Olympic rings. There are several other monuments all around the city that have lit up and brought some Olympic spirit. Down the street there's an exhibit open to the public that I'm going to show you. I'm going to be having my own Olympic event as well by climbing a mountain. And this is what it was like to live through the Tokyo 2020 Olympics in summer 2021. ♬ Intro music ♬ Irrashaimase! (Welcome!) Peter von Gomm: ONLY in Japan John: Tonight is the closing ceremony for the Olympic Games, August 8. That's the new National Stadium, Tokyo 2020 Olympic Stadium, where the closing ceremony and the events have been taking place during a typhoon today, which is a fitting ending for an unusual two weeks living in the host city at this time. I came here during the opening ceremony to see how much of that I could really take in. The Olympic Stadium sits on the exact spot as the 1964 National Stadium and has become one of the symbols of Tokyo. On arrival, in front of the Olympic Museum, I was surprised at how many other people turned up to try to catch some of the feeling with living in a host city. (man speaking Japanese) John: I'm just a short bicycle ride from the stadium and, like me, most people here live locally and didn't have to travel very far. Some media were here after completing their 14 day quarantine earlier this month. Tokyo police officers did a good job reminding people to stay safe with masks and distancing. A very hard, but necessary, task. Media with passes trickled into the stadium checkpoints. Hundreds of busses dropped off athletes and volunteers parking on Aoyama Avenue outside the stadium towards the Imperial Palace. There were a lot of busses. I was in the very front with the hope of seeing some fireworks, an Olympic torch runner, or even an athlete procession. After 20 minutes, I caught one of three. Spectators were banned from going inside the stadium and this was as close as someone like me could get. Woah that was awesome! Some who came had the local broadcast going so we could see what was going on inside. I did feel it was worth it to come and feel close to an important moment in the history of my city. The new National Stadium is just one of the many things we could see and experience during the summer games. Around Tokyo Bay at Odaiba the venues had no spectators but in the center sat the Olympic cauldron. Many with the international media broadcasted from the balcony of the Hilton hotel. The Olympic rings in the bay offering the best skyline backdrop for on-air scenes. We'll be back here shortly. Passing Rainbow Bridge at Harumi is the athlete's village. This is one of the things we could see from a distance. A new tradition started recently in the last Olympics: decorating the balconies and floors with the national flags, colors, and spirit. I'd waited for years to see this area come to life and despite the fortifications, locals could come and take a look at our guests' residences inside of the bubble. Many of Tokyo's bridges and towers were decked out in Olympic-colored LEDs. The accent on the city skyline was impossible to miss, especially the 634-meter high Tokyo Skytree. At Asakusa, just in front of Sensoji Temple's Kaminarimon gate, the games blended with Tokyo's historic neighborhood. Up on the first deck we see the Olympic rings, a sight I may never seen again in my lifetime. Seeing this brought back a lot of emotion for those around for the 1964 games and have witnessed the changes the city has gone through for the fast-paced half century. Tokyo Tower was also in the spirit. As was the Tsukiji Great Bridge, the newest on the Sumida River. Back in Odaiba, as the sun set, the Olympic rings lit up daily at 7pm. Most days offered colors in the sky as Tokyo switched on the lights. It's the perfect place for taking in the beauty of the city twinkling on the other side of the bay. A 15 minute walk from here sat the Olympic cauldron on display burning clean hydrogen fuel. A beautiful design with a lot of symbolism of unity. It was quietly moved during the middle of the night after Naomi Osaka lit it at the opening ceremony. It was a popular attraction to visit for locals and visiting media. It was sometimes a little crowded so signs telling people to stay distant reminded us of the times we lived in. I heard the best time to visit was in the middle of the night when the cauldron stood all alone. Shifting back to Nihonbashi where I opened this episode in the heart of the city. The rings here were a chance to snap a selfie but there's a lot more in this neighborhood than just this. Down Chuo Avenue a little ways was the Olympic Agora exhibit. Open and free to the public with an online reservation code to prevent overcrowding. A 10 meter high gold medal in the entrance of the Mitsui Tower. I'm not sure if it's real gold, but what do you think? Olympic art was all over the area. This called, Solidarity and Collaboration, with Makoto Tojiki in Fukutoku Garden. The Tokyo Olympic Agora exhibit was a place I could capture some of the historic spirit to the games. The torch room was incredible. From the first one used in the 1896 games in Athens, you can see not just the technology evolve but each nation's culture in a symbol of the games. The Tokyo 1964 torch looked like a sword, certainly the tallest. Moscow 1980 looked like a space rocket to me. Barcelona [1992, Atlanta] 1996, and Sydney 2000 [Correction from audio] Tokyo 2020 torch was sleek. Cherry blossom petal shape on the top., Clothing from the recent opening ceremonies. Just before the medal room dating back to the first one. The inaugural games in Athens gave out a silver medal with an olive branch. Copper medals and a laurel branch to the runner up. No gold. The 1900 Olympics is unique in being the only Olympic games to feature rectangular medals. The guild silver medal looked like gold. Not all sports received medals. The record books corrected this later with the top three athletes being recognized. St Louis medals in 1904. Berlin 1936. The medals were larger. When I looked at the gold, I got goosebumps as an alumni of the Ohio State University knowing Jesse Owens traveled here to compete in Nazi Germany winning many of these. A great scene in sports history when German long jumper Luz Long shook Owens' hand and patted him on the back after his defeat. A very historically significant gesture given the times the world was in. Owens was later quoted saying, "It took a lot of courage for him to befriend me in front of Hitler. "I would melt down all the medals and cup I have and they wouldn't be a plating on "the 24 carat friendship that I felt for Luz Long at that moment." The medals got larger and larger. Not made of pure gold, silver, and bronze, but its value: a symbol of the achievement on the world largest stage. Each medal set highlighting the times we lived in and the culture of the host city. The Tokyo 2020 medals are beautiful. The games' logo immortalized on the silver and bronze. The gold plating made from gold recycled electronic parts. Central Tokyo wasn't the only place to see the rings. There was one on the top of a mountain in Tokyo's countryside. It's now 4:37. I'm going to ride the Chuo line all the way to Mt. Takao. This is my Olympic moment. You can see the light is starting to come up. The sun is coming up. This is why it's called, the land of the rising sun. Let's board this train. This is the first train on the line to depart. Almost empty. A way to stay safe and avoid the crowds but also avoid Tokyo's horrendous humidity and sun at midday. There's nobody here. I love this. Ah, so I'm going to hike to the top Get to those Olympic rings. Again this is my... these are my Olympics right here. I have to hike up and get to those rings before the crowds come. I'm gonna come down by cable car so this should be pretty interesting. Couple of hours of hiking. Mt Takao is the most hiked mountain in the world. With over 3 million climbers, it's not a hard one to summit. The air was cool and fresh here. Lower humidity than in the city. The sounds of summer all around me. Relaxing, except when it got steep. Those wind chimes made passing through Takao-san Yakuoin temple really nice. (Sound of wind chimes) The sounds cool you down. (♫ Dramatic music ♫) (♫ Heroic music ♫) It was a good feeling to get to the top, reach my goal. A reminder that Tokyo is more than just the city. It's a prefecture that goes from the Pacific islands to the mountains. So these are the Olympic rings of Mt Takao, 599 meters up. It's pretty special to see these, and if you look through the center of it you get a nice view of Mt Fuji. (♫ Heroic music ♫) The cable car was also in the Olympic spirit. It climbs 271 meters in 6 minutes at 31.18 degrees, making it the steepest cable car in Japan. Back in the city, one of the places we could all visit was the Tokyo 2020 official Olympics store. There were many around the city. Mascots Miraitowa and Someity were on nearly everything. Some of the products I saw were certainly only in Japan reflecting the culture of the host city. Did anything here catch your eye? Let me know in the comments below. One event many Tokyoites could attend happened in the sky. Blue Impulse, an aerobatic demonstration team, of the Japan's air self defense force did a fly by through the city with Olympic-colored smoke making the rings above the stadium. They did this for the Paralympics too. It was possible to see some of the visiting athletes despite the bubble around them. Busses constantly departed the venue, shuttling them around the city. On the corner of Harumi and Ariake, you can see the most busses and even get a wave! Welcome to Tokyo! Some locals came out to give their support, including this man out daily. "Good morning athletes "Even if you don't get a medal, you're still the best. "So believe in yourself." This man impressed a lot of athletes and yours truly who lives just down the street from here. John: Amanda, who's visiting Japan, and one of the first visitors I've managed to see in a very long time, who's traveling from Miami. She's a reporter and ..... I met up with a friend who came to Tokyo to report on the games sharing her unique experience here. Amanda: Coming to Japan in the past it was... you just go right in. But this time, because of the pandemic and all of the restrictions, we had to take two negative tests before even arriving in Japan so 72 hours and 48 hours before, and then at the airport it was a long process. About 3 hours because we also had to get tested and once you proved you were negative, then you can enter this country. So it was very, very, long process and then once in Japan also we had to get tested every single day. Put our information, our temperature, in a health reporting app and also a contact tracing app so pretty extensive. The hardest part was actually being a journalist trying to bring stories about Japan in that soft quarantine. So we lived with it and we still figured out a way around it. But there were some challenges. There's checkpoints even just to get inside Temperature checks and hand sanitizing checks and then also the subway. We were not allowed to use the subway for the first 14 days and then after we finally passed through all the tests we were given a special press card. So it's not like a Suica card, it's like your own press card to get on and off the subway. And I think that might also track us as well just to make sure we we're not going off the beaten path. But yeah, just very restrictive of what we can do. I think it was definitely very strange. It was an eery feeling being in the stadiums with no one around. I think the biggest highlight that i remembered was watching women's soccer and hearing the women's voices on the field like I felt like they were right next to me. And they would play some low crowd noise But it just wasn't the same, that same energy that you get from fans and the crowds. So that was definitely disappointing because I know so many people wanted to see these events. I felt lucky to be there so I felt like that extra pressure like, I've got to bring those stories to the public so they know kinda like what the feeling what was going on in the venue. Being in Tokyo, finally when I got out of that soft quarantine just the cuisine, the culture, everyone's just so kind here especially to a foreigner and a press because I know this wasn't that popular. That's been the most. And eating okonomiyaki, takoyaki, taiyaki, you got it. The Japanese snacks you can't beat them. John: It was really nice to finally meet somebody visiting Japan and I'm sure Amanda will be back for a visit in better times. We watched events on TV as much as we could, sharing it with my son Leo, who is too young to enjoy it but I hope dancing in front of the rings will help jog his memory that he was here for this too. So the Tokyo Olympics are over. The Olympic rings have left and the Paralympic Agitas are here. The games are about to start for the Paralympians. I hope this episode could be a historical look back on what it was like in 2021 to host these Olympics from the point of view of a resident. And for me, as a Youtube creator, it has been extremely difficult to go around the country and bring you the episodes that you expect here for ONLY in Japan. A lot of them have canceled. Most of them have asked me to come after the state of emergency has lifted. And I'm pretty much limited to just local content creation. Which is fine and I hope that things turn around for this country and for you, wherever you are in the world. Until then, please stay safe everybody. Mata ne! (See you later!) (♫ Outro music ♫)
B1 中級 米 Tokyo Experience Outside the Olympic Bubble | Summer 2021 Story ★ ONLY in JAPAN 5 1 Yiu Fung Chow に公開 2021 年 09 月 26 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語