Video deep dive · interview2020-06-30 · 5 years ago

Gay Guys Talk about Racism in Japan

The Brief

A rare honest dissection of racism inside a doubly-marginalized community — guest Parris reframes dating-app blocks and police stops as symptoms of the same ordering system, not isolated bad manners.

55.2% of comments are personal testimony, meaning the video functioned as a public confessional; viewers arrived with their own police stops, housing rejections, and bathhouse recoils already bottled up.

Parris's structural definition of racism — 'a system that orders people in a certain way to keep one class on top using skin color as the mechanism' — gave viewers a framework to re-categorize experiences they had previously excused as preference.

Watch outThe framing stays almost entirely within the gay male experience; several top comments push back that broader non-queer racism and Japanese internal hierarchy are underaddressed, which could cap the video's reach beyond the niche.

If a video from 2020 is still debating whether racial preference on a dating app counts as racism, what happens to that conversation when Japan's immigration numbers actually begin to rise?

Summary

Hosts Andrew and Meng invite their friend Parris, a Black gay man living in Japan, to discuss racism as experienced by gay foreigners in the country. The three share personal accounts of police stops, housing rejections, social exclusions, and dating discrimination. Parris offers a framework for understanding racism as a systemic hierarchy, not just individual prejudice. The conversation spans experiences specific to Japan and broader patterns in the gay community internationally.

  • ·Parris recounts being stopped by police in Japan eight or nine times over the years, typically while waiting in public spaces.
  • ·Japanese law requires foreign residents to carry their residence card at all times; police use the absence of this card as a legal pretext to question and search individuals.
  • ·The hosts describe this as a gray area: police technically cannot search someone without cause, but not carrying the card is itself a minor violation they can exploit.
  • ·Meng recounts that when searching for housing, agents routinely check with landlords about whether they accept Chinese tenants, and are sometimes rejected on nationality alone.
  • ·Parris notes that while all foreigners face housing discrimination in Japan, the degree varies by nationality — he suggests Chinese applicants may face rejection from roughly 90% of properties versus around 80% for Americans.
  • ·At bathhouses and onsens, Parris describes incidents where other patrons physically recoil or show visible shock when a foreigner brushes past them, which he distinguishes from how Japanese people respond to unwanted contact from each other.
  • ·Parris shares an anecdote about being excluded from a social gathering because the host specified the party was only for Asian and white attendees.
  • ·Meng describes being blocked on dating apps after disclosing he is Chinese rather than Japanese, even after conversations had already begun.
  • ·The group discusses how racial filtering on dating apps goes beyond Chinese people — dark-skinned individuals, including North Vietnamese, Indian, and Indonesian men, are frequently blocked or never approached at all.
  • ·Andrew shares his experience of being stereotyped as a 'top' in gay sexual dynamics because he is white, and encountering expressed disappointment when he does not conform to that expectation.
  • ·Parris challenges the framing that stereotyping and racism are separate issues, arguing that racism functions as a systemic ordering of people by skin color that keeps certain groups on top and others below — stereotypes operate within that structure.
  • ·Parris points out that even white people face constraints within the racial hierarchy, being expected to behave in ways that maintain their position on the perceived pedestal.
  • ·The group acknowledges that Black gay men in Japan face compounding layers of discrimination beyond what white, Chinese, or other Asian gay men encounter.
  • ·Parris frames the experience as everyone having their own baseline personal struggles, with racism adding an additional burden on top of those — rather than competing struggles being directly comparable.
  • ·Meng recounts that a white ex-partner admitted he had been afraid of what friends would think if he dated a Black person, illustrating how racism operates through social policing within friend groups.
  • ·The hosts describe a pattern where some individuals privately pursue sexual relationships across racial lines while publicly excluding those same people from their social circles to avoid judgment.
  • ·Parris distinguishes between being kept as a secret sexual partner versus being publicly shown off as a 'white trophy,' framing both as expressions of racialized dynamics rather than genuine connection.
  • ·The video closes with the hosts encouraging viewers not to limit themselves by racial preference, suggesting openness to all people regardless of appearance.
Views
26k
26,061 total
Likes
929
3.56% like rate
Comments
125
0.48% comment rate
Gay Guys Talk about Racism in Japan
Comment deep diveExplore all 125 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

Three gay foreigners in Tokyo — hosts Andrew and Meng plus Black American guest Parris — compare notes on racial discrimination across police stops, housing rejections by nationality, physical recoil in bathhouses, and being blocked on dating apps the moment Chinese heritage is disclosed. Parris introduces a structural lens, distinguishing systemic racism from stereotyping and naming sexual fetishization of Black men as an expression of the same hierarchy. The conversation closes on an appeal to individual openness, but not before naming that Black gay men carry every foreigner's base struggle plus a compounding layer on top.

Content pillars
racismgay community Japanexpat lifepersonal testimony
§02

Engagement vs the rest of the channel

How this video's like-and-comment rate compares to this channel's running average.

Engagement vs channel avg 4.04pp
4.04% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
3.56%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.48%
of viewers leave a comment
§03

The hook

weak

Opening 15 seconds — the bit that decides whether a viewer keeps watching.

[0:00] Hi Andrew here. Meng. [0:03] Actually we have a special guest today that we'd like to bring in [0:07] Parris Prism Power, Make up! [0:16] hey guys.

Assessment

The Sailor Moon gag is charming in-group fun but burns the opening 15 seconds on a setup joke rather than the topic — racism in Japan isn't named until 0:25, past the algorithm's earliest drop-off window. Compared to stronger TokyoBTM entries, this hook gives the audience nothing to hold: no tension, no question, no stake.

Hook quality
weak
Call-to-action
absent
Archetype
scene
Composite score
2.5/10
Hook score · 6 dimensions
character presence
5/10
clarity
2/10
curiosity
3/10
specificity
2/10
stakes
1/10
time to payoff
2/10
Anti-patterns detected
greetingself introslow context
§03b

Hook rewrites

Three alternative openings, each in a different archetype. Each is under 40 words — completable in 15 seconds.

Rewrite №1 · investigatortechnique: lead_with_outcome

I've been stopped by Japanese police nine times — once for every year I've lived here. Three gay foreigners of different races compare what racism actually looks like inside Tokyo's gay community.

WhyOpens on the highest-specificity data point in the video — the tally of police stops — proving immediately that this conversation has receipts, not just opinions.

Rewrite №2 · stakeholdertechnique: identity_callout

If you're planning to move to Japan as a person of color — gay or straight — there are things the expat universe won't tell you. We're telling you now.

WhyDirectly answers the latent question commenter @Skittlebutt714 articulates ('would I even be welcome?'), converting passive viewers into invested ones before the first cut.

Rewrite №3 · scenetechnique: cold_open

I got invited to a party in Tokyo. Then the host said: it's only for Asian and white guys. I'm Black. I found out through my hookup, who was apologizing.

WhyDrops straight into Parris's most visceral anecdote with zero setup — the injustice is self-evident and hooks instantly on moral tension before the audience can scroll away.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 62 · undersell

The title promises a general conversation; the content delivers systematic personal evidence — police stops counted by year, apartments rejected by nationality within minutes of inquiry, bathhouse flinch reactions, party invitations rescinded by race. Commenters consistently praise the specificity and depth of the discussion, none of which the title signals.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · stopped by the police (4 mentions across comments)
  • · racism in the gay community (3 mentions)
  • · bathhouse / onsen (2 mentions)
Anti-patterns in current title
vague identityimplied universal
Thumbnail recommendation

A freeze-frame or staged shot of all three hosts mid-reaction — faces showing discomfort or disbelief — with their visible racial diversity as the immediate visual hook; the panel composition is the argument, and it should be readable before a viewer reads a single word.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · I've Been Stopped by Police 9 Times in Japan
    number
    Leads with the single most concrete data point in the video — the annual tally that commenter @robertdailey7248 immediately corroborated with his own police-stop story, signalling the video's credibility.
  2. 02 · Japan Has No Racism (And That's the Problem)
    contrarian
    Mirrors the video's own deadpan at 0:31 ('Japan doesn't have any racism apparently so we could just go home') and the gap between official narrative and lived experience that anchors 55% of the comment cluster.
  3. 03 · Being Black, Chinese, and White in Tokyo's Gay Scene
    specificity
    Makes the panel's racial diversity — the entire premise — immediately legible in the title, matching @CitrusAnyone's top comment framing about why this cross-racial conversation is uniquely valuable.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

125 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly mixed

positive 78%neutral 21%negative 1%
Real breakdown over 67 of 67 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

Viewers repeatedly praised Parris for bringing intellectual rigor to a personal topic — 'SO WELL SAID,' 'so damn smart,' 'amazing the way he can articulate this personal & unpleasant topic and all the little nuances he finds.' The three-perspective format (white/Chinese/Black gay men) was explicitly valued: 'A great discussion coming from 3 gay foreigners who can really portray the issue.' The channel's niche itself drew subscribers on this video alone — 'The idea of a channel about being gay in Tokyo in English is so niche and so good.'

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Police racial profiling of foreigners in Japan (~15 mentions) — Parris's 8-9 stops, Robert Dailey stopped twice at train stations, others confirming pattern
  2. 02
    Racial filtering on gay dating apps / Grindr (~12 mentions) — Chinese blocked mid-conversation, dark-skinned men pre-emptively blocked
  3. 03
    Praise for Parris's articulation of racism concepts (~12 mentions) — 'so damn smart,' 'amazing the way he can articulate,' 'the best'
  4. 04
    Housing discrimination against Chinese and other foreigners in Japan (~10 mentions) — AirBnB cancellation, agents checking nationality with landlords
  5. 05
    Gay bathhouse / onsen foreigner exclusion (~8 mentions) — 'Japanese speaking only' rules, physical recoil at touch, outright bans
§04a

Audience pulse

How the audience feels — a Net Sentiment mood score, how split the room is, and an early churn signal. All from the comments, not YouTube analytics.

+73Warmly receivedmood · −100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+76
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.53
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.03
is the room split?
Warmth
42%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
67
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal0 comments flagged dissatisfaction (0.0% — channel norm 2.8%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    39%
  2. Sad
    27%
  3. Curious
    15%
  4. Funny
    4%
  5. Angry
    3%
  6. Concerned
    3%
  7. Neutral
    3%
  8. Nostalgic
    3%

Net Sentiment Score over 67 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

★ algo-friendly · +77

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 67 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Sharing a story
    25%
  2. Relating personally
    12%
  3. Devoted fan
    4%
  4. Mentions subscribing
    3%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Other
    100%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    100%
Algorithm signal · proxy

How YouTube’s satisfaction model likely reads this

★ algo-friendly · +77

YouTube’s 2025 discovery shift now weights satisfaction signals — comment sentiment, tone, and depth. We can’t see the model, but we can estimate its inputs. Directional only.

Positive ratio
78%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
57%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
1%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+77
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
§04b

Moments that landed

Key transcript moments — tap a timestamp to jump to that point in the video.

1:07Parris states he has been stopped by police 8–9 times — the first hard data point that anchors the discussion in lived experience rather than abstraction.2:03Meng reveals housing agents routinely check whether landlords accept Chinese tenants — shifts the frame from individual bias to structural gatekeeping.3:09Parris describes the physical 'shock and disgust' reaction at bathhouses when brushed by a foreigner — the most visceral and specific moment in the video.4:27The party exclusion story — 'only for Asian and white guys' — introduces the concept of erasure and makes abstract discrimination personal and social.7:42Parris defines racism as a system that orders people by skin color to keep one class above another — the analytical pivot that recontextualizes every prior anecdote.9:21Meng shares his white ex's 'jungle fever' comment — the emotional peak of the video, personal and vulnerable, landing the systemic argument at an intimate scale.10:02The 'sucking a black dick' line breaks register deliberately, then immediately pivots to a critique of fetishization — the sharpest rhetorical move in the video.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

Each comment theme mapped to the transcript moment that sparked it.

Personal experiences with racism (55.2%)

Each specific, named incident — police stops with the residence card trap, housing agents checking nationality, the bathhouse physical recoil, the party exclusion text message, dating app mid-conversation ghosting, and the 'jungle fever' ex story — generated personal confession replies confirming the same pattern.

1:071:582:534:055:059:21
Praise for video and hosts (44.8%)

Praise was directed at Parris's conceptual clarity (the stereotype-vs.-racism distinction at 7:31–7:52) and the overall three-perspective format rather than any single timestamp.

§05

Friction points

All criticism →

Severity × frequency — ranked. Each point has an evidence quote and a concrete before/after suggestion.

Host (white) perceived as minimizing the other two hosts' experiences and turning racism into 'everyone struggles' equivalencesev 4/5 · 3 mentions
it's kind of sad how the dude in the middle tried to make the racism into a competition and kept on trying to minimise the experiences of the two hosts. not the kind of person i would want to be around.↗ view
FixCut or re-frame the 8:38–9:08 'everyone has the same struggles' monologue — keep it short, let Parris/Meng respond on camera instead of moving on
Police-stop section gives no practical advice on how to handle being stopped (rights, what to carry, what to say)sev 3/5 · 3 mentions
OMG, I can't even count how many times I've been stopped by the police here for no reason.↗ view
FixAdd a 30-sec lower-third checklist: always carry residence card, your right to refuse a bag search, the legal gray area Parris referenced
Host (Andrew) questions whether Meng's Grindr block experiences and Parris's stereotype examples 'count' as racism, undermining guest testimonysev 4/5 · 2 mentions
Meng's feeligns are valid. I believe him when he says that he is being dismissed because he is Chinese specifically, as opposed to just a foreigner. Racism has no color and I think his experience should be respected.↗ view
FixEdit out the 'that sucks, but do you think that's racism?' (7:28) skeptical interjections — they read as gaslighting; trust the guests' framing
Missing the internalized white-supremacy / Japan-as-west-colonized angle that viewers expectedsev 3/5 · 2 mentions
If this is a topic of racism in japan, I wanted the aspect of internalized white-supremacy in japan. I think japan portrays so much of white-supremacist ideology but it still is colonized by west.↗ view
FixAdd a chapter or follow-up specifically on Japanese media/beauty standards praising white features (anime, ads, idol industry)
Anti-Chinese bias is asserted but never explained — viewers want the historical/political 'why'sev 3/5 · 2 mentions
I wonder why Chinese people are more discriminated against than any other race in Japan? I don't want to go down the invasion war path…but it's hard not to…↗ view
FixAdd a 60-second segment naming WW2 history, Sino-Japanese tourism friction, and 'new money' tourist stereotype as causal factors
No actionable guidance for Black / disabled / brown / Muslim travelers asking 'should I even come'sev 3/5 · 2 mentions
I'm asking as an African American gay man who has a disability.... If i were to let's say visit Japan (post pandemic) would I be even welcome in? Or will I be met with other unkind experiences?↗ view
FixEnd with a 'should you visit / what to expect' practical bullet list per demographic — pin the answer in comments
Channel discoverability — fans repeatedly say they wish they'd found it earliersev 2/5 · 2 mentions
The idea of a channel about being gay in Tokyo in English is so niche and so good. Wish I would have known about you earlier.↗ view
FixAdd SEO-friendly title prefix ('Gay in Japan:') and link the channel in pinned comment of every video
Dating-app racism discussion stays Grindr/9monsters-centric — viewers in UK, multiracial countries want broader scopesev 2/5 · 2 mentions
In the UK, a majority do not engage with Asians by often writing "not fancying GAM, sorry". It's not occasional but rather the majority's behaviour.↗ view
FixPlan a follow-up 'gay dating-app racism: global tour' episode pulling viewer testimony from UK / SEA / US
Tonal whiplash — closing 'Neapolitan ice cream / strawberry / chocolate chip cookie dough' bit lands as flippant after heavy testimonysev 2/5 · 1 mentions
Love the Sailor Says segment at the end. Haha ❤️❤️❤️↗ view
FixEither lengthen the wind-down (real call-to-action) or cut the ice-cream metaphor — let the last spoken beat be substantive
Beep on a friend's name (8:25) breaks the flow and makes the referenced 'Black bottom in Japan' story land as hearsay without a namesev 2/5 · 0 mentions
I want to hear (beep, a friend's name)'s story
FixRe-record the line as 'a friend of mine' or get permission to use the name — the beep draws attention to itself
No on-screen text or chapter markers — long-form discussion is hard to navigate or share by timestampsev 2/5 · 0 mentions
These men of color are not letting this white guy have his 😂↗ view
FixAdd YouTube chapters: Police stops / Housing / Bathhouse / Dating apps / Top–bottom stereotypes / Fetishization
Sailor Moon transformation cold-open is fun but disorients first-time viewers expecting a serious discussion videosev 1/5 · 1 mentions
Wow! The opening 😳😅
FixAdd a 5-second 'today we're talking about…' title card right after the transformation so the hook lands
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Build first · 58/100

What a brand or agency would see evaluating this video — which sponsors to pitch, why, what to charge, and what's safe.

Audience shows deep parasocial engagement and trust (44.8% of comments are praise/appreciation, multiple 'subscribed' confirmations from this single video) but ZERO unprompted product, service, or brand requests in the 125 comments. They're here for identity, community, and articulate analysis — not shopping recs. Ad tolerance is unproven; sponsors must lead with values, not product.

Integration rate
$750–$1,100
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$1,200–$1,800
full sponsored video
Basis: 26,000 people watched this video — that's a small audience by mainstream standards, but a 4% engagement rate (likes + comments / views) is double the YouTube average, meaning the people who DID watch were paying close attention and felt strongly enough to react. They are also extremely hard for brands to reach anywhere else: English-speaking gay foreigners living in or interested in Japan is a tiny, scattered audience that no Facebook ad can target cleanly. That scarcity is what pushes the fee well above the raw view-count math — brands pay for who watches, not just how many.
Brands to pitch
SurfsharkVPN / privacySurfshark explicitly courts LGBTQ+ creators and pride-month placements; this audience is gay, international, dating-app heavy ('Grindr', '9 monsters' mentioned at 5:05), and includes commenters from countries where queer privacy matters (Philippines, Malaysia, South Asia).
AiraloTravel eSIMAudience is mobile cross-border — commenter @Skittlebutt714 and @stevenbabe4666 explicitly ask about visiting Japan; @robertdailey7248 visited for work; @philph3592 booked AirBnBs. eSIM = the #1 travel-niche YouTube sponsor and fits an arriving-foreigner narrative.
WiseMulti-currency bankingAudience is expats in Japan + visitors from US/UK/Philippines/Canada/Germany dealing with rent and cross-border money (housing-rejection discussion at 2:00, multiple expat commenters). Wise is the dominant expat-creator sponsor.
Ground NewsNews literacyAudience self-selects for nuanced systemic analysis — @CitrusAnyone's top comment (46 likes) praises the distinction between 'stereotyping and racism'; @IanCunningham92 talks about subtle racism vs overt hatred. Ground News targets exactly this 'I want media-bias context' reader.
italkiLanguage learning marketplaceForeigners-in-Japan audience consistently overlaps with Japanese-learner audience; italki's tutor-marketplace model (vs Babbel's app) fits gay men hooking up locally and needing real conversational Japanese (referenced at 5:18 'I tell them I'm Chinese... they disappear' implies dating-in-Japanese context).
SquarespaceWebsite / portfolio builderGuest Parris ('Prism Power') is a drag/persona creator; audience includes self-presenting LGBTQ+ creators (commenter @ICONICPARIS, @V1rtu4L0ut on OnlyFans-as-narrative-control). Squarespace runs heavy LGBTQ+ creator sponsorships and is brand-safe alongside sex/identity content.
BetterHelp / TalkspaceTherapy appComment @hiuu explicitly mentions 'helps with the depression' from racial exclusion; topic surface area is racial trauma, dating rejection, microaggressions. Mental-health sponsors are a natural fit IF disclosed carefully (BetterHelp has FTC history — script must be tight).
Avoid
  • Alcohol / nightlife brandsVideo discusses bathhouse and bar exclusion of foreigners (2:53, comment @josuke9219 on 'Japanese speaking only' clubs); pairing with a club/alcohol sponsor would feel tone-deaf.
  • Mainstream dating apps (Tinder, Bumble, Hinge)Comments explicitly describe being filtered/blocked on dating apps for race (5:05–6:48); a dating-app sponsor would land as gallows humor at best, complicit at worst.
  • Japan tourism boards / JNTOVideo is critical of Japanese institutions (police profiling at 1:07, housing discrimination at 2:00); government tourism partnerships would compromise editorial credibility this audience explicitly values.
  • Skin-lightening / 'beauty' cosmeticsComment @katekusala raises 'internalized white-supremacy' in Japan re: skin tone; any whitening adjacency is a brand-safety landmine.
  • Crypto / high-risk fintechAudience skews thoughtful, anti-hype; multiple commenters are 50+ (@lazarocedeno5270, '84 years young'); crypto reads as exploitative here.
How to integrate

60-second mid-roll between the police-stop section and the dating-apps section (~5:00) — audience is locked in for discussion, not skipping; pre-roll would be skipped in this format and a dedicated video doesn't fit this channel's editorial cadence.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean — 125 comments, zero slurs or hostile pile-ons; the most pointed criticism (@KJ-js7pi) is directed at a participant's framing, not at any group.
Controversy
Topic is racism and gay sex (BBC reference 10:39, 'sucking black dicks' 10:02) — not FTC/disclosure risk, but a values-aligned-sponsors-only situation; family-brand pairing would be off.
Audience conduct
On-topic ~95% (both clustered themes — racism experiences 55.2% and praise 44.8% — are on-brief); near-zero spam, one off-topic Japanese-language comment thanking translators.
Sponsor evidence quotes
The idea of a channel about being gay in Tokyo in English is so niche and so good. Wish I would have known about you earlier.
44-like comment proves audience perceives the channel as a hard-to-find resource — exactly the trust signal a niche sponsor (Surfshark, Ground News) pays for.↗ view
Subscribed.
@michaelw1 and @ICONICPARIS converted from this single video — conversion-to-subscriber from one watch is the highest-value sponsor signal.↗ view
If i were to let's say visit Japan (post pandemic) would I be even welcome in?
@Skittlebutt714 is in active travel-decision mode — direct purchase-intent surface for travel/eSIM/banking sponsors.↗ view
I just don't tick anyone's box at all. I hang around cats mostly now. Helps with the depression.
@hiuu surfaces explicit mental-health language — mental-health sponsor (BetterHelp/Talkspace) lands here, but requires careful script.↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Strong Performer · score 76/100

high
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Cut a 45–60s Short of the housing-discrimination beat (1:58–2:39, '80% unrentable vs 90% unrentable') and post with title 'Why landlords in Japan reject foreigners'
    Housing rejection is the single most universal foreigner experience in the comments (@perdidoatlantic, @stevenbabe4666, @athippatiboyjirakongpipat1867 all reference it) — highest probability of out-of-bubble reach
    WatchShort CTR + comments from non-subscribers naming their own country's version
  2. Day 2-3
    Pin a comment asking 'Has this happened to you? Drop your country and one experience' and reply to the top 10 long-form stories already in the thread (@robertdailey7248, @oisheekhan5241, @philph3592)
    Creator replies trigger notification re-engagement and signal to the algorithm that the comment section is alive 3 days post-publish
    WatchComment count growth 48–72h vs first 24h baseline (target +20%)
  3. Day 4-7
    Publish a follow-up video specifically on the 'black bottoms in Japan' thread Andrew tees up at 8:15 but doesn't deliver — bring on the friend referenced in beep at 8:25
    Audience explicitly asks for this (@romynardmendoza5043 'Thanks for mentioning... the struggle is real'); the unresolved teaser is a session-extending sequel hook
    WatchWhether this video's view count re-accelerates (related-video traffic from the sequel)
  4. Day 7-14
    Submit the video + a brief pitch to LGBTQ+ Asian creator newsletters (Slay, Plus Magazine APAC) and to r/lgbt / r/japanlife for one-time distribution; do not repost
    Audience is dispersed and hard to algorithmically cluster; external referral traffic backfills the geographic gap and the comment-graph fragmentation
    WatchTraffic-source breakdown for 'External' in YouTube Studio — target it crossing 8% of total views
Why it could lift
  • +4.0% engagement rate is roughly 2× YouTube average for talking-head content at this view count
  • +44.8% of comment volume is unprompted praise — strongest possible satisfaction signal short of share-rate data
  • +Multiple long-form personal stories in comments (@robertdailey7248, @stevenbabe4666, @oisheekhan5241) — long comments correlate with high session-watch-time and 'meaningful interaction' classifier weight
  • +Net-new subscriber conversions visible inline (@michaelw1 'subscribed!', @ICONICPARIS 'Subscribed') — direct conversion from a single video is rare and the algorithm rewards it
  • +Topic has long shelf-life — discussions of racism in Japan re-surface every news cycle (Olympics, BLM anniversaries, anti-Asian hate spikes); 2020 upload still attracts current commentary
Why it might stall
  • Title 'Gay Guys Talk about Racism in Japan' is explicit — YouTube's brand-safety classifier may limit ad-eligibility and therefore promotion to high-yield slots
  • 26k views in absolute terms is modest — algorithm needs a re-surfacing event (shorts cut, podcast clip, news tie-in) to push past a likely soft ceiling
  • Heavy discussion content (no chapters, 11+ minutes of talking heads) has weaker retention curves than vlog/B-roll content of equivalent quality
  • Audience is geographically dispersed (US, UK, Canada, Germany, Philippines, Malaysia, Brazil per comment names) — fragments the 'related video' co-watching graph that YouTube uses to cluster
  • One contrarian framing-criticism comment (@KJ-js7pi, 12 likes, calling out 'the dude in the middle') may seed comment-section friction at scale and depress sentiment classifier on re-promotion

Algorithm Signal is a proxy. YouTube’s satisfaction scores aren’t public. Directional, not predictive.

§05

The audience asked & asked for

All questions →

Unanswered questions and explicit requests from the comment thread — fuel for the next upload.

Questions

13 unanswered

  • ?Would a Black gay man with a disability be welcomed in Japan at all, or face compounded hostility? (Skittlebutt714, ~4 likes — unanswered in video)
  • ?Why are Chinese specifically discriminated against more than other Asian nationalities in Japan? (~3 comments raising this)
  • ?Does the 'Japanese speaking only' rule at bathhouses/clubs still apply if you are a fluent non-Japanese foreigner? (josuke9219, 13 likes)
  • ?How does racism in Japan's gay community compare structurally to the US or UK gay communities?
  • ?Is the racial hierarchy in Japan's gay spaces the same for heterosexuals, or specific to gay culture? (mousykatka)
  • ?What specifically happened to the Black friend (name bleeped) whose story was hinted at but not told?
  • ?How does anime and Japanese pop culture actively reinforce white skin preference — is that a separate video? (CitrusAnyone, 46 likes — explicit ask)
  • ?What is the experience of South Asian / Muslim-presenting gay men in Japan specifically? (oisheekhan, 2 likes)
  • ?Has anything changed in Japan's tolerance since the 1990s, or is progress minimal? (alexthomas, 4 likes)
  • ?How does one actually build gay community as a foreign non-white person in Japan? (perfume-tengoku, 44 likes — implicit gap)
  • ?Is the Chinese tourist behavior explanation for anti-Chinese bias legitimate, or post-hoc rationalization? (stevenbabe, 2 likes)
  • ?Does the racial preference dynamic extend to Japan's straight dating culture equally?
  • ?What recourse, if any, exists when a housing agent or landlord rejects based on nationality?
Requests

8 explicit asks

  • askDedicated episode on anime/Japanese pop culture's promotion of white skin ideals — explicitly requested by top commenter CitrusAnyone (46 likes)
  • askInvite Parris back for more discussions — multiple comments ('I miss Parris already,' 'I hope he'll be TokyoBTM's friend for a long time')
  • askTell the Black friend's (bleeped name) full story — teased but cut in the video, viewers noticed
  • askMore content specifically about Black gay men's experience in Japan / Asia — 'the struggle is real' (romynardmendoza, 5 likes)
  • askEpisode on gay bathhouses and onsen — foreigner exclusion rules, what actually happens
  • askHow to actually navigate gay community in Tokyo as a non-Japanese foreigner — practical guide framing
  • askDiscussion of racism WITHIN minority gay communities (not just white-on-POC) — internalized hierarchies
  • askEpisode on fetishization in gay porn and how OnlyFans is changing the narrative for Black creators (V1rtu4L0ut)
§06

What to make next

Three video ideas pulled directly from what the comments asked for.

01

Anime, J-pop, and white skin: how Japanese pop culture exports a racial hierarchy

TitleHow Anime Teaches the World That White Skin Is Beautiful
HookJapan doesn't just have racism — it exports it through anime and idol culture worldwide
Why nowTop commenter with 46 likes explicitly requested this as a follow-up, and no gay-in-Japan channel has covered it.
02

Being Black and gay in Japan — the full story (feature Parris's bleeped friend or find a Black gay resident)

TitleWhat It's Actually Like to Be Black and Gay in Japan
HookEverything the three of us experienced — plus all the extra
Why nowThe video itself teased this story and cut it; viewers noticed and asked; romynardmendoza and others confirmed the gap.
03

Gay bathhouses and onsen in Japan — the foreigner experience

TitleGay Onsens in Japan: What Happens When You're Not Japanese
HookThey'll let you pay. They won't let you in.
Why nowjosuke9219 (13 likes) raised the 'Japanese speaking only' loophole; the video touched bathhouses but never went deep; it's a concrete, filmable format.
04

Dating apps in Japan as a non-Japanese man — race, nationality, and the block button

TitleGrindr in Japan: The Racial Hierarchy No One Talks About
HookI told him I was Chinese. That was the last message I ever got.
Why nowDating app discrimination was the most relatable thread for international viewers and generated multiple personal confession comments.
05

Practical guide: how to actually build gay community in Tokyo as a foreigner

TitleHow to Actually Find Gay Community in Tokyo (As a Foreigner)
HookI tried Tinder. I never found my way in. Here's what I wish I'd known.
Why nowperfume-tengoku (44 likes) named this exact gap — knows the channel exists but had no roadmap; this converts viewers into loyal subscribers.
06

Racism inside minority communities — when the oppressed discriminate

TitleWhy the Gay Community Has Its Own Racism Problem
HookThe people who know what discrimination feels like — doing it to each other
Why nowlanazambrano (5 likes) voiced the most emotionally charged question in the comments; the video touched it but never resolved it; it scales beyond Japan.
§07

Creator action items

Concrete, testable changes for the next upload. Each cites a timestamp, a comment quote, or a metric — and names what to watch.

Do 01

Add chapter markers (Police stops, Housing, Dating apps, Stereotypes vs racism, Fetishization, Resolution) — this video has none

Evidence11-minute talking-head with no chapters; multiple commenters reference specific moments by paraphrase, signaling they wanted to skip back
Watch forAverage view duration +5–10% within 7 days of edit
Do 02

Deliver the promised 'black bottoms in Japan' follow-up Andrew teases at 8:15

EvidenceAndrew at 8:25: 'I want to hear [friend's name]'s story' — explicit unresolved teaser; @romynardmendoza5043 (5 likes) directly thanks them for raising it
Watch forNew video views vs channel median in first 7 days; this video's referral views from sequel
Do 03

Tighten the cold open — 'Prism Power, Make up!' bit (0:07–0:16) is in-group and likely loses outside viewers in the first 15 seconds

EvidenceFirst 15 seconds are the highest-drop-off zone on YouTube; this cold open requires Sailor Moon literacy
Watch for30-second retention rate on re-edited version (if A/B tested via Shorts cut) vs original
Do 04

Pre-write a pinned comment that names the distinction between stereotyping and racism

Evidence@CitrusAnyone (46 likes, top comment) explicitly praises Parris for making this distinction; @KJ-js7pi (12 likes) attacks a participant for blurring it — pinning the framing pre-empts the debate
Watch forReduction in critical/argumentative comments as a share of total within 7 days
Do 05

Caption/subtitle the video in Japanese

Evidence@mimi-tx7mk: 'この翻訳が素晴らしくて感動です。英語がわからないので、有難う' (already grateful for some translation; signals demand)
Watch forShare of views from Japan in YouTube Studio Demographics
Do 06

Make Parris a recurring guest tag

Evidence@spinalcrackerbox: 'I hope he'll be Tokyo BTM's friend for a long time'; @Chivaughn13: 'I miss Paris already'; @Jimmack16 (44 likes) on his articulation — three independent loyalty signals for one guest
Watch forSub-graph lift on next Parris-featuring video (within-30-day views vs non-Parris baseline)
Do 07

Add an end-screen 'If you've experienced this, comment your country' CTA

EvidenceComment section organically self-organized by country (UK, Philippines, Germany, Canada, Brazil) — the channel can amplify this pattern instead of relying on it
Watch forComment count per 1000 views on next 2 uploads
Do 08

Build a 'foreigner safety in Japan' explainer (residence card law, what police can/can't ask)

Evidence0:57–1:58 is dense practical info ('police can't search without cause but card law creates gray area'); @stevenbabe4666: 'I have been told if we go to always have it with us' — actionable info gets shared
Watch forExternal shares + Reddit/forum referral traffic for the new video
Do 09

Stop using 'beep' to censor the friend's name at 8:25 — either name them or cut the reference

EvidenceBeep mid-sentence breaks immersion and is a known watch-time drag; if naming is a privacy issue, edit the sentence out
Watch forRetention curve smoothness at 8:00–8:30 mark
Do 10

Test a less explicit title for the algorithm — e.g. 'The unwritten rules foreigners face in Japan (gay edition)'

EvidenceCurrent title triggers brand-safety throttling; explicit-tagged videos under-promote; @selfconcept9803 'I just now realize how diverse this video is' suggests viewers don't surface it via title
Watch forCTR + impressions on retitled version after 14 days
Do 11

Reply with a single sentence to each of the 10+ long-form comments sharing a story

Evidence@robertdailey7248, @oisheekhan5241, @stevenbabe4666, @andyt8216, @philph3592 all wrote 80+ word personal accounts — creator replies on long comments are the highest-yield engagement action
Watch forRepeat-commenter rate on next video
Do 12

Repurpose the 'Neapolitan ice cream' close (11:05–11:13) as the Shorts hook instead of the racism beat — soft outro, high shareability

EvidenceLightest moment in the video; @dearlover: 'Love the Sailor Says segment at the end. Haha' — viewers liked the warmth-after-weight pattern
Watch forShorts completion rate vs the housing-discrimination Shorts cut
Do 13

Re-link this video from any 2025–2026 video on dating in Japan

Evidence5:05–6:48 dating-app race-filtering content is evergreen and currently buried; commenters @World-trotter124 (UK), @manny1456 still reference it years later
Watch forOld-video re-surfacing views in Studio's 'External + Suggested' tab
Do 14

Add a description-box paragraph linking to organizations (Stop AAPI Hate, Tokyo Rainbow Pride) — current description is presumably bare

EvidenceAudience is socially engaged (@red1031986, @lanazambrano4759, @CanadaKeith reference systemic issues); resource links are a trust-deepening micro-action
Watch forComment sentiment on next race/identity video
§R1

Reply queue

Who to reply to first — ranked by impact, with a ready-to-send draft in your voice.

Skittlebutt714 · high↗ view

I watched this the whole way through and I am so glad you guys did this. I do have a question though. I'm asking as an African American gay man who has a disability.... If i were to let's say visit Japan (post pandemic) would I be even welcome in? Or will I be met with other unkind experiences?

Why: Direct, sincere question from someone with an intersecting identity (Black, gay, disabled) who engaged with the whole video — answering this publicly helps many silent viewers with the same fear
Draft reply

You'd be welcome — Japan is absolutely worth visiting, and most interactions will be positive. That said, the experiences we talked about are real, so going in with eyes open (and a thick skin for the occasional awkward moment) is the move. If you ever make it out, we'd love to hear how it goes.

CitrusAnyone · high↗ view

SO WELL SAID! I love that he corrected the differences between stereotyping and racism. So often white gay men consider themselves a struggling minority and sort of "forget" that even in the LGBTQIA community they are the least marginalized, the least disenfranchised, and the most public. One day we'll discuss how anime and Japanese pop culture caters to and praises white skin and features, but that's for another time. I really do love the channel! Lol

Why: Highest-liked comment, adds a compelling follow-up topic (anime/whiteness) that's practically a video pitch — engaging here signals that follow-up is coming
Draft reply

That anime and whiteness thread is 100% on our list — you've basically written the brief for us. Really glad Parris's framing landed; we felt that clarity in the room too.

KJ-js7pi · high↗ view

it's kind of sad how the dude in the middle tried to make the racism into a competition and kept on trying to minimise the experiences of the two hosts. not the kind of person i would want to be around.

Why: Sharp, fair criticism with 12 likes that could shape how new viewers read Andrew's role in the video — a calm, specific reply reframes his intent without being defensive
Draft reply

Totally hear this read, and it's worth sitting with. Andrew was genuinely trying to understand where stereotyping ends and racism begins — but you're right that intent doesn't always land as impact. We'll be more careful about that framing in future conversations.

hiuu · high↗ view

In the multiracial country that I'm from it's pretty apparent as well. I'm a minority here and I'm not considered for jobs and rental rooms and even making gay friends because of my brown skin and minority race. Doesn't help that I'm also short and chunky. I just don't tick anyone's box at all. I hang around cats mostly now. Helps with the depression.

Why: Vulnerable, emotional comment about isolation and depression — a warm reply here is just the right thing, and it will resonate deeply with others who feel similarly invisible
Draft reply

This hit us hard. The cats are lucky to have you, and honestly so is this comment section — you said something a lot of people feel but rarely say out loud. You tick our box.

josuke9219 · high↗ view

Let's not forget the bathhouses & clubs that use "Japanese speaking only" to keep foreigners out, bc even if you're a Japanese speaking foreigner, they still won't let you in.

Why: Adds a dimension the video didn't fully cover (language as a proxy for exclusion) with 13 likes — acknowledging it validates commenters and primes a follow-up video
Draft reply

Such an important add — using language fluency as the excuse is a whole extra layer, because even when you pass that test, you know the real reason. We glossed over this and we shouldn't have.

perfume-tengoku2455 · medium↗ view

The idea of a channel about being gay in Tokyo in English is so niche and so good. Wish I would have known about you earlier. all i tried in Jp was Tinder and never found a way to get into the local lgbt community

Why: Second-highest liked comment, a genuine new fan who just discovered the channel — reply with a resource or future topic tease keeps them coming back
Draft reply

Welcome! Tinder is honestly brutal in Tokyo for this — we should do a whole video on actually finding community here. Stay tuned for that.

robertdailey7248 · medium↗ view

I got stopped by the police the last two times when I visited Japan. Both stops occurred while I was walking through a train station in the Tokyo area. In both cases, they were concerned that I was Argentine. One of the officers had a card that described Argentines as having the following characteristics: "short, thin, brown hair, handsome face." So, I guess I should have taken it as a compliment that I was stopped.

Why: 38 likes, detailed and specific personal account that richly extends Parris's police story — engaging gives it more visibility and signals appreciation for substantive shares
Draft reply

The profiling card is such a specific detail — that's exactly the kind of thing that shows it's a system, not a gut feeling. Thank you for sharing this; it adds so much to what Parris was describing.

lanazambrano4759 · medium↗ view

I will never understand the racism in the gay community. how can a group that faces discrimination, be this way with other gay people

Why: Genuine question with 5 likes that many viewers share — answering it briefly here (or teasing Parris's framework) builds goodwill
Draft reply

Parris actually has the most useful answer to this: oppression doesn't automatically make people fair to each other — people internalize the same hierarchies they're harmed by. It's one of the most painful parts of community.

romynardmendoza5043 · medium↗ view

Thanks for mentioning about black bottoms coming to not only Japan, also whole asia!!! The struggle is real

Why: Appreciates a specific moment in the video that many channels ignore — a quick reply affirms that these voices matter
Draft reply

That part of the conversation is one we want to keep going — it's a story that doesn't get told enough. Thank you for saying this.

mlu007 · medium↗ view

I don't think Japanese people are more racist than others. Japanese society is highly hierarchical, organized and "anal" to a certain extent. Everyone has a role and is expected to behave in a specific manner. Everything must fit in boxes. Being creative and crossing boundaries is not always rewarded. I think some Japanese people become anxious whenever they deal with a person that doesn't fit in a specific box or whose behaviour is not consistent with their preconceived notions.

Why: 12 likes, a thoughtful alternative framing — engaging with it shows intellectual openness and can spark a productive thread
Draft reply

This is a generous read and probably true for a lot of individuals — but Parris's point is that the system still produces the same harm regardless of whether the motivation is anxiety or hatred. Both framings can be right at once.

minosonoo1445 · low↗ view

i love your video's get to learn a lot thank you ! Also even though you guys are a smaller channel you're videos quality level is always top notch thank you and i hope you guys get the recognition and following you deserve

Why: Sweet loyal fan comment worth a quick acknowledgment to build retention
Draft reply

This means a lot — honestly comments like this are what keep us making them. Thank you for being here from early on.

DED_Search · low↗ view

I wonder why Chinese people are more discriminated against than any other race in Japan? I don't want to go down the invasion war path…but it's hard not to…

Why: 3 likes, asks a historically loaded question that deserves a careful, non-dismissive reply — teasing a future video works well here
Draft reply

The history path is honestly the right one and it's complicated — there's a full video in this question alone. Short answer: yes, history is part of it, but media, trade tensions, and stereotypes about Chinese tourists all pile on top.

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

Shareable social-proof quotes — ready for thumbnails, community posts, or a sponsor deck.

Gods, Paris is so damn smart. Both in terms of the overall insightfulness, but also to share his experiences in a personal, approachable way. Very amazing.

Jimmack16 · pinned comment↗ view

The idea of a channel about being gay in Tokyo in English is so niche and so good. Wish I would have known about you earlier.

perfume-tengoku2455 · community post↗ view

Wow, Parris is amazing the way he can articulate this personal & unpleasant topic and all the little nuances he finds. Really great to watch

spinalcrackerbox · sponsor deck↗ view

A great discussion coming from 3 gay foreigners who can really portray the issue in Japan. Keep up the good work guys!

2600BC. · community post↗ view

SO WELL SAID! I love that he corrected the differences between stereotyping and racism.

CitrusAnyone · thumbnail↗ view

even though you guys are a smaller channel you're videos quality level is always top notch thank you and i hope you guys get the recognition and following you deserve

minosonoo1445 · sponsor deck↗ view

This is so insightful 🍆 subscribed!

michaelw1 · pinned comment↗ view

You guys are the best. Besides being very smart and loving and caring and very cute, extremely helpful with valuable information and encouragement.

lazarocedeno5270 · community post↗ view
§R3

Clip & Shorts finder

Moments worth cutting into Shorts — each with a title and a ready hook line. Timestamps link to the video.

[1:07] ↗Stopped by Japanese police 8 times — for being Black~60s
HookI have been stopped eight or nine times — on average at least once a year, sometimes twice a year.
Parris's police-stop account is the most concrete, repeatable experience in the video and directly mirrors @robertdailey7248's top-liked comment — comments prove this moment travels
[2:49] ↗The bathhouse flinch — racism in gay spaces in Japan~45s
HookI've brushed by people and people literally jumped — and that's a really hurtful reaction.
Visceral, specific, emotionally resonant moment that provoked @josuke9219's top comment about language-exclusion bathhouses — high comment engagement signals this clip would land
[4:00] ↗"Asian and white guys only" — excluded from a party in Tokyo~35s
HookThey said the party was only for Asian and white guys, so I had to respect the wishes of the host.
The 'erasure' concept becomes concrete and personal here — short enough to clip cleanly, specific enough to be unforgettable, mirrors the 44% praise cluster's reaction to Parris's storytelling ability
[5:05] ↗Dating apps in Japan: blocked for being Chinese~50s
HookWe were having a nice conversation — then I told them I'm Chinese, and they disappeared.
Meng's dating-app story is relatable across many countries and audiences; @pompommania's comment validating Meng shows this moment resonated with viewers already
[7:37] ↗What racism actually is — the clearest explanation you'll hear~40s
HookThe system of racism is the system that orders people in a certain way in order to keep one class of people on the top and other class of people on the bottom.
Parris's definition lands as the intellectual peak of the video — @CitrusAnyone's top comment is essentially a direct response to this moment; educational clips like this get saved and reshared
[8:38] ↗Everyone has the same struggles being human and gay — then you get extra shit piled on~25s
HookEveryone has the same exact struggles of being human and being gay — and then you get extra shit pile.
Punchy, quotable, universal — this line earned the most cross-group agreement in the conversation and works as a standalone statement with no context needed
[9:21] ↗"I was worried my friends would think I had jungle fever" — racism inside gay relationships~55s
HookHe said: I was really worried about dating you because I was worried my friends would think that I had jungle fever.
The most shocking verbal moment in the video — shock-value combined with real insight; comments like @lanazambrano4759's show viewers are processing racism inside the gay community, exactly what this clip surfaces
[10:54] ↗Don't limit yourself — like Neapolitan ice cream~30s
HookGive each person a chance for who they are and you can find yourself liking anybody and any color.
The uplifting close lands as a palate cleanser after a heavy video — the ice cream metaphor is shareable and light, and ending on a positive note helps the clip avoid platform suppression for sensitive topics
§08

Top comments

Explore all 125 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

@CitrusAnyone46 · positive↗ view

SO WELL SAID! I love that he corrected the differences between stereotyping and racism. So often white gay men consider themselves a struggling minority and sort of "forget" that even in the LGBTQIA community they are the least marginalized, the least disenfranchised, and the most public. One day we'll discuss how anime and Japanese pop culture caters to and praises white skin and features, but that's for another time. I really do love the channel! Lol

Why picked: highest-liked comment — names the stereotype/racism distinction Parris drew at 7:31
@perfume-tengoku245544 · positive↗ view

The idea of a channel about being gay in Tokyo in English is so niche and so good. Wish I would have known about you earlier. all i tried in Jp was Tinder and never found a way to get into the local lgbt community

Why picked: names the channel's niche positioning + audience-acquisition signal (Tinder-only viewer)
@Jimmack1644 · positive↗ view

Gods, Paris is so damn smart. Both in terms of the overall insightfulness, but also to share his experiences in a personal, approachable way. Very amazing.

Why picked: guest-specific praise — Parris is the breakout draw
@robertdailey724838 · negative↗ view

I got stopped by the police the last two times when I visited Japan. Both stops occurred while I was walking through a train station in the Tokyo area. In both cases, they were concerned that I was Argentine. One of the officers had a card that described Argentines as having the following characteristics: "short, thin, brown hair, handsome face." So, I guess I should have taken it as a compliment that I was stopped. Even so, it made me feel uncomfortable. So, I asked my employer to reassign me to a different project that didn't require visiting Japan. That said, my colleagues who were taller and bigger had no issues. It seems like Japanese are more comfortable with Westerners whose features are more stereotypically Northern European. That said, I'm certain,y wary of going back to Japan.

Why picked: detailed corroborating police-stop story — viewer changed career path to avoid Japan
@josuke921913 · negative↗ view

Let's not forget the bathhouses & clubs that use "Japanese speaking only" to keep foreigners out, bc even if you're a Japanese speaking foreigner, they still won't let you in.

Why picked: extends the bathhouse discussion at 2:53 with a specific exclusion mechanism
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 125 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 58 replies across 34 roots · max chain 4 deep · creator replied to 40%

01 · @ayorkii6 replies · ♥ 3· creator replied↗ view

Parris seems so cool & so smart. I just love this amazing cast of bottoms.

02 · @katekusala5 replies · ♥ 11· creator replied↗ view

Omg racism in japan is real and the frustration and disrespect you all expressed are so painful. If this is a topic of racism in japan, I wanted the aspect of internalized white-supremacy in japan. I think japan portrays so much of white-supremacist ideology but it still is …

03 · @yuzhang38385 replies · ♥ 3· creator replied↗ view

Racism exists everywhere, I wonder how it formed.

04 · @stevenbabe46665 replies · ♥ 2↗ view

I have heard from many people who have gone to Japan that they were stopped by the police asking for passports. I have been told if we go to always have it with us and expect this to happen. I have also been told many gay bars will say no to foreigners or English-speaking pe…

05 · @renatoalves82363 replies · ♥ 7· creator replied↗ view

OMG, I can't even count how many times I've been stopped by the police here for no reason.

§09

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Sydney Mardi Gras 2025: Wild Nights & Morning Glory!
№32 · travel

Sydney Mardi Gras 2025: Wild Nights & Morning Glory!

14k
views
577
likes
4.8%
engagement
1 year ago
Suddenly All the Gays in Japan Want Me…Here's What Changed
№33 · vlog

Suddenly All the Gays in Japan Want Me…Here's What Changed

39k
views
1.3k
likes
3.6%
engagement
1 year ago
How Japanese Straight Muscle Boys Stole Our Hearts
№34 · vlog

How Japanese Straight Muscle Boys Stole Our Hearts

25k
views
901
likes
4.1%
engagement
1 year ago
Gay Tokyo Nightlife Guide 2025 | Best Parties, Clubs & Where to Go
№35 · explainer

Gay Tokyo Nightlife Guide 2025 | Best Parties, Clubs & Where to Go

19k
views
601
likes
3.5%
engagement
1 year ago
What happened in Bangkok, stays in Bangkok😏
№36 · travel

What happened in Bangkok, stays in Bangkok😏

17k
views
534
likes
3.6%
engagement
1 year ago
Hot or Not? Gays React to Thirst Traps
№37 · other

Hot or Not? Gays React to Thirst Traps

29k
views
1.1k
likes
4.4%
engagement
1 year ago
White Party Bangkok 2025 Was Amazing, But…
№38 · vlog

White Party Bangkok 2025 Was Amazing, But…

35k
views
950
likes
3.0%
engagement
1 year ago
White Party Bangkok: Worth the Hype?
№39 · vlog

White Party Bangkok: Worth the Hype?

37k
views
1.1k
likes
3.3%
engagement
1 year ago
Love Hotels in Japan are NEXT LEVEL!
№40 · vlog

Love Hotels in Japan are NEXT LEVEL!

27k
views
940
likes
3.9%
engagement
1 year ago
Why Japanese Gay Bars Reject Foreigners
№41 · interview

Why Japanese Gay Bars Reject Foreigners

326k
views
6.3k
likes
2.2%
engagement
4 years ago
Gay Bottoms: Where are all the Tops?
№42 · culture_comparison

Gay Bottoms: Where are all the Tops?

74k
views
2.2k
likes
4.0%
engagement
5 years ago
Gay Vlog: Travel during COVID in Japan
№43 · vlog

Gay Vlog: Travel during COVID in Japan

11k
views
384
likes
3.9%
engagement
5 years ago
Avoid these 5 Types of Guys on Grindr: Gay Dating App Advice
№44 · vlog

Avoid these 5 Types of Guys on Grindr: Gay Dating App Advice

68k
views
1.8k
likes
3.1%
engagement
5 years ago
Gay Party in Tokyo: VITA Penthouse Lounge
№45 · vlog

Gay Party in Tokyo: VITA Penthouse Lounge

12k
views
331
likes
3.0%
engagement
5 years ago
We Asked Straight Girls to Guess Japanese Gay Slang ~Part 2
№46 · culture_comparison

We Asked Straight Girls to Guess Japanese Gay Slang ~Part 2

7.2k
views
347
likes
5.2%
engagement
5 years ago
We Asked Straight Girls to Guess Japanese Gay Slang ~Part 1
№47 · other

We Asked Straight Girls to Guess Japanese Gay Slang ~Part 1

8.8k
views
292
likes
3.6%
engagement
5 years ago
Our Favorite Childhood Gay Awakening Anime
№48 · culture

Our Favorite Childhood Gay Awakening Anime

7.7k
views
384
likes
6.9%
engagement
5 years ago
Japanese Lesson for Gays: Type & Preference
№49 · language

Japanese Lesson for Gays: Type & Preference

16k
views
598
likes
4.2%
engagement
5 years ago
We Went to a Japanese Gay Bar in Shinjuku Nichome
№50 · travel

We Went to a Japanese Gay Bar in Shinjuku Nichome

190k
views
3.3k
likes
1.9%
engagement
5 years ago
Gays on Ghosting in Japan
№51 · culture_comparison

Gays on Ghosting in Japan

16k
views
710
likes
4.7%
engagement
5 years ago
Looking for Love in Japan: Gay Speed Dating
№52 · vlog

Looking for Love in Japan: Gay Speed Dating

26k
views
713
likes
3.1%
engagement
5 years ago
Thoughts on HIV and PrEP in Japan
№53 · explainer

Thoughts on HIV and PrEP in Japan

22k
views
693
likes
3.6%
engagement
5 years ago
How We Pick Up Gay Guys in Japan
№54 · culture_comparison

How We Pick Up Gay Guys in Japan

89k
views
2.1k
likes
2.6%
engagement
5 years ago
Gay Marriage in Japan 2020
№55 · culture_comparison

Gay Marriage in Japan 2020

12k
views
402
likes
3.9%
engagement
5 years ago
Popular Gay Dating Apps in Japan
№56 · explainer

Popular Gay Dating Apps in Japan

29k
views
615
likes
2.3%
engagement
5 years ago
Gay Japanese Slang Lesson: Top, Bottom, Vers
№57 · language

Gay Japanese Slang Lesson: Top, Bottom, Vers

23k
views
797
likes
3.7%
engagement
6 years ago