Last week, the chosen JLBs, Rob Jung (UK) and Jeremy Angelier (France), touched down in Tokyo for their whirlwind 5 day stay. Lena Oishi caught up with the jet-setting boys to find out what theyâve been up to.
Briefly sum up what youâve been doing in Japan.
Rob: Itâs all a blurâŠ
Jeremy: The first thing we did after we landed was to go and eat raw fish off a naked womanâs body*. The next day we fought sumo-wrestlers and ate chanko, visited temples, then went to a party with lots of girls. Weâve also seen maids in Akihabara and popped into a manga cafĂ©.
(* A Japanese practice called ânyotaimoriâ or body-sushi.)
Youâve visited Italy, Costa Rica, both the East and West coast of the US, and Iceland so far. How do they visually compare to Tokyo?
Jeremy: Weâve seen so many different landscapes and architecture. Iceland was like the moon. Lots of craters and vast land. New York was another world with all those skyscrapers. And then you have Tokyo⊠Here itâs like New York City times two, with a big spotlight on it.
Rob: The style of New York and Tokyo are very similar, but at the street level itâs really different, especially at dusk, because the neons here are so much more intense. So much colour! Even taxis come in varying colours, for example. And those transparent umbrellas you have here reflect the neon signs and intensify everything. Tokyo is very vibrant.
Jeremy: I felt like I was in one of those car-racing video games set in 2030 when we hit that huge highway during our drive from the airport.
So do you think Tokyo is a futuristic city?
Rob: Actually, itâs not as futuristic as I thought it was going to be. Oh, but you have those jet toilets here with buttons and water shooting out, thatâs cool! I guess I was expecting to see many more gadgets like these. Perhaps the rest of the world is catching up?
Jeremy, I hear you were fascinated by all the sounds in the shops.
Jeremy: One thing that I will remember about Tokyo is the sound. Itâs something Iâve never experienced before. On the street-level, people are talking into microphones everywhereâŠ
Rob: Those big screens on buildings have speakers as well! You donât get that elsewhere.
Jeremy: The traffic, people selling stuff on the street, regular people having a conversation⊠Itâs basically a mix of very regular sounds, but I find it very distinctive. Maybe itâs because I donât understand what theyâre saying.
Which place so far is most different to Tokyo?
Rob: Reykjavik, Iceland. Itâs so deserted. We drove for 2 hours without seeing another car. There were no trees, let alone buildings. Apparently they chopped down all the trees many years ago without planning ahead, so now itâs a very tree-less country. Sigur RĂłs played a free concert just a few days before we arrived, I was so upset!
Youâve been filming and taking photographs each day to upload onto the website, right?
Rob: Yeah, we always crack up when we watch them at the end of the day!
Jeremy: Weâre a little behind schedule so weâre actually editing footage from the last country. I guess that adds to our feeling of disorientation. Weâre only in one place for 2 or 3 days, and barely learn to say âthank youâ before we fly off to the next country. But we still have to keep the last country in mind because at night, we have to edit the footage we took there. I think this influences the way it edit our videos⊠like, if we had a very traditionally âJapaneseâ day today, and then go and edit footage from America tonight, it would probably be quite different to if we edited it there and then.
Anything you keep in mind when filming?
Jeremy: I try to have an idea of the video I want in mind before I begin filming. Otherwise weâll have too much footage to go through. Also, the 55DSL website has a worldwide audience so we have to make it as âinternationalâ as possible, with a universal humor. I donât understand Robâs sense of humor sometimes, soâŠ
Rob: The British humor is too hard for him!
Jeremy â being a filmmaker back home, have you gotten any inspiration from this trip?
Jeremy: Incidentally, before I entered this competition I had written a series of travel documentaries, so this is like a dream come true! I intend to re-visit each country in the future and make a more in-depth documentary. So this is like the teaser for my next project.
Rob, you studied graphic design in school. What next?
Rob: I donât necessarily want to stick to graphics, Iâm open to all things creative. Illustration, design, anything reallyâŠI only graduated last year so Iâm still trying to figure it all out. And now this trip has totally thrown me off kilter!
Youâve finished a third of your 55 day trip. Are you sick of each other yet?
Jeremy: I donât talk to Rob in the morningâŠ
Rob: The mornings are very fuzzy.
Jeremy: I like the fact that weâre artistically very compatible. He knows things I donât, and vice versaâŠ
Rob: But seriously, for the last 6 weeks or so, weâve been together 24 hours a day. And you know what? I think weâre doing alright!
Good luck with the rest of your trip!
Check out the 55DSL website for regular updates by the JLBs: 55DSL Junior Lucky Bastards

Capoon
2006-08-30
wowww . this seams like one hell of a trip ..good luck to u on the rest of it .. hope u enjoy it
))
James
2009-04-10
My two good friends and I are going to japan aug and would like to find Nyotaimori aswell. However I hear it is hidden have a suggested location for us to go and a price range??