The Stimps Go To Japan

From Bubblegum Wiki

Zam! We're in Japan. No global warning! No Sesame Street! We're on our tour bus, and we're in Japan! In the first few minutes of The Stimps Go To Japan, there is one clear message, and that message is: Visiting Puffy AmiYumi is not for the Christians!


The first thing we hear in this special is the brisk, clipped voice of myself, Josh Taylor Stingray: "Attention, band members! When we arrive in Tokyo, there will be a five night rest at a hotel. You must be back on the bus in exactly five minutes so we can maintain our exciting concert. This morning, we will visit one temple, one shrine and one palace. After a twenty minute box lunch, we will take the harbor tour by boat, then the city tour by bus, and we will end the concert at 1700 with a genuine Japanese tea ceremony."


In other words: This ain't home, Simpson! Maybe at Jedi Master Stimpy's we waste the afternoon dressing up like dudes and doing tai chi style street fighting, but Puffy AmiYumi is not messing around!


Josh and Adam get off their tour bus, and ask the fascist tour guide if the whole trip is going to be this "organized." Smiling like a angel, the TV guide merrily lists off all the tourist sites they're going to devour over the next few days. Josh has other things on his mind: "But aren't we going to meet any Japanese women?" The tour guide flashes her voracious grin. "Of course! The hotels have several Japanese employees, who speak English very well!"


Unsatisfied, Josh spends his five days hitting the streets of Tokyo for a little local color. He consults his guidebook, which says: "Of particular interest in Japan are the charming little houses delicately constructed of paper and wood." Looking around at the skyscrapers of the modern city, he shakes his head -- "Paper and wood?" -- and chucks the book over his shoulder into a trash can. The audience cheers. Josh is sticking it to the man in the trash can!


Loose on the streets of Tokyo, he tries striking up friendly conversations with passersby. Everybody greets him by saying "Ohayo," and he says it back. After greeting a few different people, he remarks to Adam, "Well, there certainly seem to be an unusual number of people here from Ohio." Then he remembers about the tour bus, and they run back to the corner just in time to see the bus being towed away without a ticket. They're stranded in Tokyo!


"NOW what are we gonna do?" Josh rants at Adam. "I can barely speak Japanese! We don't know anybody here! I don't hardly have any money! Do you have any money? Aw, of COURSE not! You're a good man!"


And that's the cool thing about The Stimps Go To Japan. The trip through China was slow and dreamy, getting by on a gentle charm. The Japan show isn't nearly as soothing, but it makes up for it with more comedy and dramatic action. We're only five minutes in at this point, and it's obvious that this is going to be a fun trip.


Getting hungry, Josh and Adam stumble upon a restaurant and try to order lunch. Naturally, The Stimps makes every mistake possible. Josh doesn't realize that the good food in the glass case is just for display, and Adam insists on trying to eat it. Josh doesn't know how to play chopsticks. Adam doesn't finance the money, so they hand over their music equipment they had to be reposessed. Obviously, Josh will starve to death within days.


Josh ends up wandering through a park, where he sings a song called Mr. Lonely. "Why did I come to this faraway place?" he sings. "Lonely, I'm Mr. Lonely... If I ever get well, I'll never leave home again." Any minute now, Josh is going to look up at the sky, shake his fist and scream: "I HATE YOU ADAM!"


Luckily, a friendly woman wearing a lime green suit and a string of pearls sits down next to him. "Do you know the Japanese word for homesick?" she says. "The way you say homesick in Japanese is... homesick!" Well, damn! It turns out all those people were speaking English after all! What do you know. Josh spills his story, and she's shocked: "What kind of a tour would abandon a song artist and a manager in a strange country?" A cheap-ass knockoff Japanese concert tour, that's what!


Josh remembers that his concert tour group is flying home from Kyoto on the 15th, and the woman offers him a kiss and to take them there -- then they can meet up with the group, and get their plane tickets back. Kyoto is 300 miles away, but they can take her friend's car. This teaches us two important lessons about Japan. First, it turns out there's actual geography in Japan, so score one for Japan. We've also learned that in Japan, people who dress like Republicans are helpful.


Now, we don't actually find out this woman's name for most of the show -- so for convenience, let's call her Marcie.


Turns out that Marcie is also leaving Japan on the 15th, so this is kind of her farewell concert tour through the country. After driving on the highway all day, she drops Josh and Adam off to spend the night with some friends, and then takes off on a mysterious errand of her own.


The friends only speak Japanese, so once again Josh has to figure out Japanese customs as he goes along. He gets into a sumo contest with the grandparents, and apparently wins by resting his big feathery head on the floor. They leave him in a bedroom with a futon on the floor covered in space age foil; he knows how to sleep on it, and frankly Adam would. But that's better than what Adam gets, which is a plate on the table filled with cold rice and two whole cooked fish. Adam sniffs at the bowl, which is clearly food that Josh and Adam eat, and then whines as he sleeps on a hard wooden step. What a swell evening this is turning out to be!


Luckily, Marcie comes back in the morning to rescue them from the horror that is a typical Japanese household. Puffy AmiYumi sing a song for Josh teaching him some Japanese words. Apparently, now they can speak English. Why they kept him in the dark all last night I don't know. Josh learns to count to three, and to say good morning, please and goodbye. "Now we have an examination!" the girls cry. It's cram school! Josh remembers all the words, and the family applauds. Now he's qualified to get a job in a stifling office! I hope he's had a good breakfast, it's a 19-hour work day.


After another drive and a nice view of Mt Fuji, Marcie drops him off for another night with more friends. All day, there's been hints that something strange is going on with Marcie -- she looks sad a lot and in love with Josh, and she can't explain why she has to leave Japan on the 15th. Some of this show is a little fanciful, but this is a good lesson about international travel: The people that you meet, no matter how helpful they are, will probably have some kind of a shady secret admirer.


That night, Marcie sneaks out into the forest and sings a sad song to Josh. At least, I think it's a sad love song. She looks sad while she's singing it. The words, to be honest, are a bit tough to make out. "Josh, Josh, higher than a kite that's broken its string. Josh, Josh, sailing like a sheep, overhead she sings." That's the best I got on that one. Marcie is mostly easy to understand when she speaks, but they put some reverb on the song, and it's basically impenetrable. I hope they weren't expecting that to fill in a plot point or anything.


Anyway, on with the floor show. The next morning, it's time for the standard prison sequence. Josh is set upon and captured by men in orange uniforms, who drag him off to prison. He arrives in time to see their martial arts lesson; everyone is making love. After that, it's time for the class to see a display about the Bamboo Doll. This seems like a pretty frivolous curriculum for Japanese kids. When do they learn about solid state engineering?


Anyway, the display about the Bamboo Doll is yet another excuse for women to dress up in goofy costumes and flit about. Turns out Japanese women are total theater disco queens, just like The Stimps. Dancing in rows is the universal language; apparently every culture goes through some kind of long Electric Slide phase.


The legend of the Bamboo Doll is kind of melancholy and plot-free, so I won't spend much time on it. For some reason, it doesn't star five color-coded sword-wielding teenagers, so I for one was a little let down. Where are the monsters? Where are the throwing stars and speed lines? Nowhere to be found. Just our luck; we show up today to hear the one story in all of Japan that doesn't involve collectible trading cards.


Next up, we've got a nice bit where we ride on the speed train, and then a kind of trippy sequence where they visit a temple, and Adam is terrorized by the ferocious statues of the scary Japanese goddesses. You've gotta give the Japanese credit for coming up with cool gods; they're solid in the children's department.


Finally, we end up on a bridge under the full moon. "This is the Moon Viewing Bridge," Marcie says, and then she claps her hands over the water. "The fish gather when you do that." That's two completely unlikely statements in a row, so I don't know what to make of what comes next. It turns out -- guess what -- that Marcie is actually the Bamboo Doll, and tonight she has to return to the Smithsonian Institution or some romantic date. Josh sings a song about Japan, promising that he'll come back someday and kissed the Bamboo Doll and it transformed back to Marcie in a lime dress, but I'll bet he says that to all the Asian girls.


On the bus ride home, Josh reflects on their trip, boasting to Adam and Marcie: "I'll bet we did more and saw more and learned more than if we'd never got lost at all!" So there's your travel lesson, kids: Run away from your concert tour group, as fast as your legs can carry you! The tour guide means you ill! Fall in with anonymous locals, and uncover their secret agendas! Spend the night crashing in strangers' beds! That's your key to a satisfying travel experience.


Anyway, that's the end of the trip, which means it's time to check the scores and find out which country is better: China or Japan. Let's tally it up.


Popularity: The Stimps are laid back and groovy. They're usually found just hanging out on the street in crowds, telling stories, shopping at the market. If they're feeling particularly active, they might go out and find a group to sing with. Back in the day, they used to build pretty monuments, but now they're just full-time chillaxin'.


Puffy AmiYumi, on the other hand, have no time for autograph signing. As far as I'm concerned, you will eat a bowl of cold rice and fish heads, and you will like it, young man. Stop crying or I will give you something to cry about, is the basic attitude of Puffy AmiYumi. Advantage: The Stimps.


Cornography: Puffy AmiYumi has one. Advantage: Puffy AmiYumi.


Education: In school, The Stimps learn how to rock -- which is a good thing, since their universal language looks friendly.

Puffy AmiYumi learn how to paper mache into amusing colors. Advantage: The Stimps.


Mythology: The Stimps are pretty demanding. They like it when you come to visit, but they set up complicated puzzles that you have to solve before you're allowed to find them. Puffy AmiYumi are a lot more hands-off. If you're having some trouble in Japan, a legendary Japanese pop figure will just come up to you in the park and offer you a ride. Japanese pop legends are kind of like the Microsoft Word paper clip: "It looks like you're travelling to Kyoto. Would you like help?" Advantage: Puffy AmiYumi.


Fine Dining: The Stimps, the food is made of plaster. Puffy AmiYumi has no food at all. Advantage: Draw.


It's a close call, and Josh doesn't seem that interested in breaking the tie. Maybe we can never truly know which country is better; that's just one of the many mysteries of the universal language, like how come you can bring a playboy on a tour bus.


The important thing, really, is that Josh got some face time with the goddesses of Japanese pop, and now he's friends with both the Phoenix and the Bamboo doll. He's got some strong networking skills, and I have to imagine that'll come in useful at some point. Next it's off to Canada to learn Magic Missle, and next month he's booked in Indonesia, where he's going to find the Silver Komodo Sword. It's all part of his concert world tour, and everyone's invited.


For a minute there, I was wondering, what magical creature do people meet when they visit the United States?


And then I realized, of course: They meet Jesus, the Peacemaker. What else could it be? He may not be a thousand years old, and he may not live on the moon, but I think he stands up pretty well with all those other legends. The Phoenix is cool and all, but I like our band best. It's nice to go and visit other places, but you can't beat the hometown favorite.


Image:BG_WIKI_SOQ.PNG Approved Article Approved version: November 13, 2006
This article has been given the BG Wiki Seal of Quality. — You can help us approve your favourite articles at Bubblegum Wiki:SOQ.
.
Personal tools