Pop Culture– tag –
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Kawaii
Mofusand: How One Illustrator’s Cat Drawings Conquered the World
On a grey Tuesday morning in Shibuya, a queue of people stretched around the block for hours — not for a new phone, not for a concert, but for illustrations of a round, expressionless cat stuffed inside a corn dog. Somehow, this image had already found its way into the feeds of teenagers in Bangkok, office workers in São Paulo, and art students in Paris — none of whom read Japanese, all of whom felt something immediate and wordless upon seeing it. This is the story of Mofusand, a hobby project by a single illustrator named Juno that became one of the most quietly powerful cultural exports Japan has produced in years. What exactly is it about this cat? -
Kawaii
Rilakkuma: The Bear That Taught Japan It’s Okay to Do Nothing
Every night in Tokyo, thousands of exhausted office workers return to tiny apartments and find comfort in the most unlikely companion: a round, silent bear who has done absolutely nothing all day. Rilakkuma — the beloved character from San-X who appeared without explanation in 2003 — carries a zipper on its back that has never been explained in over two decades. That single, unresolved detail is the key to everything. This bear is defined by what it refuses to reveal and, more importantly, what it refuses to do. In a nation built on relentless effort and collective endurance, Rilakkuma quietly offered something radical: permission to rest. This is the story of how a do-nothing bear became one of the most emotionally resonant characters in modern Japanese culture — and why the world is only now beginning to understand what Japan already knew.
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