Video deep dive · vlog2025-07-15 · 10 months ago

I Bought a Cheap Abandoned House in Japan — Here's What Happened

The Brief

A charming renovation reveal that inadvertently became a referendum on foreign ownership and Airbnb in Japan, with nearly half the comment section arriving not to celebrate but to push back.

Despite 56.6% of comments offering congratulations, 43.4% — nearly equal volume — centered on Airbnb gentrification concerns, a split unusual for a feel-good renovation reveal.

The Airbnb intent is disclosed at 3:19 during a city hall compliance visit, early enough that viewers frame the entire renovation through a commercial lens rather than a personal one.

Watch outMultiple commenters flag incoming Japanese legislation restricting foreign vacation rental ownership; if those laws tighten, the business case underlying this video's format is directly exposed.

When a renovation reveal splits its audience 57/43 on whether the creator should have done it at all, what does that say about where the akiya-for-Airbnb genre is headed?

Summary

Andrew, the creator behind TokyoBTM, documents the full arc of purchasing and renovating a cheap abandoned house (akiya) in Atami, Japan, from signing the paperwork to the completed reveal. The property was chosen for its size, price, and location despite lacking the sea view he originally wanted. The process took well over a year due to loan delays, contractor changes, and bureaucratic hurdles around Airbnb compliance permits. The video ends with a walkthrough of the finished space, which Andrew has named 'Maian' and plans to operate as a vacation rental.

  • ·Andrew chose the house after rejecting the properties shown in a previous Atami video; this one was viewed last, filmed poorly due to darkness, but made the most practical sense on size, price, and location.
  • ·The house required significant work and is described as a typical akiya (vacant/abandoned Japanese property) needing a lot of care.
  • ·On purchase day Andrew signs paperwork, transfers money, and receives the keys; the full process at the notary took roughly two hours.
  • ·Shortly after taking ownership he visits City Hall to research Airbnb compliance requirements: fire extinguishers, smoke detectors, emergency-exit lighting, and a submitted evacuation map.
  • ·He returns to Atami on a second trip to walk the contractor through his renovation vision and to introduce himself to neighbors, bringing tea as a gift and sharing his contact details so neighbors can raise concerns.
  • ·At a local restaurant on the same block he learns the house's history: the previous owner was a geisha originally from Hakata in Kyushu who had won a 'Miss Hakata' title, later moved to Atami, and frequently dined at that restaurant.
  • ·A significant gap in the timeline occurred because securing a loan took an extremely long time; by the time the loan came through, the original contractor had moved on to other projects.
  • ·The replacement contractor quoted a price the creator considered too expensive, forcing him to start the contractor search over again, adding further delay.
  • ·After finally lining up a new contractor, he visits the fire department to walk through smoke alarm placement and emergency lighting requirements for the specific layout of the house.
  • ·He then meets the contractor at their office to go over design choices: wall colors, material orders, furniture placement, and general layout — described as getting the project finally moving after almost a year.
  • ·Renovation work observed mid-project includes: a closed-off door and repaired kitchen walls, upstairs bathroom fully gutted in preparation for a new system bath and washing machine, and a former closet converted into a bunk-bed capsule sleeping area.
  • ·A setback occurs at the Doboku Jimusho (a public works/civil engineering office): the creator wants to add a decorative gate and entrance, but receives unclear, non-binding guidance — the office says it can only offer recommendations, not definitive rules, leaving him uncertain how to satisfy both the fire department and the works office simultaneously.
  • ·He describes the situation as a 'chicken or the egg' problem: he wants a clear rule to build to code, but the relevant offices are not providing one, which he finds frustrating though acknowledges is solvable.
  • ·He goes furniture shopping, selecting items suited to a traditional Japanese aesthetic for the vacation rental.
  • ·The completed renovation is revealed via a walkthrough with his friend Meng: highlights include a traditional entrance, a capsule-hotel-style bunk room, two double beds in a second sleeping area, a preserved original kimono wardrobe repurposed for linen storage, a functional kitchen, a traditional ranma (transom window), and two bathrooms.
  • ·The property is named 'Maian' and is branded for guests as an Airbnb/vacation rental listing.
  • ·Andrew notes he has been sleeping in the capsule bunk himself and considers it his favorite spot in the house.
  • ·Meng, who tours the space, offers enthusiastic praise alongside a few candid practical suggestions (stickers for appliances, signage for guests), framed as business advice.
  • ·The creator expresses that the project took roughly a year and a half from purchase to completion and acknowledges the effort involved.
Views
35k
34,700 total
Likes
1.6k
4.56% like rate
Comments
182
0.52% comment rate
I Bought a Cheap Abandoned House in Japan — Here's What Happened
Comment deep diveExplore all 182 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

Andrew documents the full arc of buying and renovating an abandoned akiya in Atami — from signing paperwork to a finished walkthrough with a friend — over a year and a half of permit fights, contractor turnover, and bureaucratic dead ends. The video weaves in the house's discovered history (its former owner was a geisha from Hakata), multiple trips to city hall and the fire department, and the material selection process that shaped the final aesthetic. It ends with a friend's tour of the completed property, now named Maian, operating as a vacation rental.

Content pillars
akiyarenovationairbnb-japanexpat-life
§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 5.08pp
5.08% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
4.56%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.52%
of viewers leave a comment
§02b

Chapters

Author-defined structure — tap a timestamp to jump to that moment.

[0:00]
IntroductionCold open on Andrew's emotional low, then rewinds to the day he went to sign the purchase papers in Atami.
[1:42]
House Tour (The Before)First tour of the newly purchased akiya — rough, dark, and untouched, with clear bones but significant work ahead.
[4:36]
Meeting the Contractor & NeighborsAndrew walks the contractor through his vision and brings tea gifts for the neighbors to pre-empt friction from coming renovation noise and rental use.
[6:50]
History of the HouseA local couple reveals the house's former owner was a geisha from Hakata — the video's most memorable piece of human detail.
[8:28]
Everything Grinds to a HaltEditorial aside explains a near-year-long delay caused by a difficult loan process and contractors moving on.
[9:11]
Updates & Picking Out MaterialsFire department compliance visit and a materials selection session with the new contractor finally get the project moving again.
[11:37]
Renovation ProgressSite visit shows walls opened, the bathroom gutted, and the bunk bed conversion taking shape.
[14:35]
A Bump in the RoadDoboku Jimusho delivers vague guidance on emergency lighting, deflating Andrew at what should have been a near-finish-line moment.
[16:49]
Shopping for FurnitureAndrew selects pieces that mix traditional Japanese elements with functional guest-ready furnishings.
[17:50]
The Permit BattleFinal push through regulatory requirements before the property can open for bookings.
[18:56]
The Reveal! Before & AfterFriend Meng tours the completed Maian, providing an enthusiastic first-guest reaction that doubles as an informal promotional walkthrough.
§03

The hook

medium

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

[0:00] Yeah, I feel a little bit deflated at the moment [0:03] I need a hug [0:05] The owner was a previous -- she was a geisha [0:09] OMG [0:10] Wait, this is the one, right? [0:12] This is the one, right?

Assessment

The teaser-clip montage earns its curiosity score through the geisha reveal and emotional deflation ('I need a hug'), two fragments that feel genuinely surprising — but clarity collapses for new viewers who can't decode what they're watching without channel context. Stronger TokyoBTM hooks establish a standalone premise in the first sentence; this one bets on parasocial recognition to carry the ambiguity.

Hook quality
medium
Call-to-action
present
Archetype
scene
Composite score
5/10
Hook score · 6 dimensions
character presence
6/10
clarity
3/10
curiosity
7/10
specificity
5/10
stakes
5/10
time to payoff
4/10
Anti-patterns detected
  • vague teasePromises "something interesting" without naming the specific stakes or payoff.
  • greeting
  • slow contextSpends the first seconds setting up context before delivering the actual hook.
  • meta commentary
§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 spent 18 months navigating Japan's bureaucracy, three contractors, and a permit battle to renovate an abandoned geisha's house into an Airbnb. Here's every obstacle — and the final reveal.

WhyGrounds the stakes in a concrete timeline and named adversaries, turning a personal vlog into a reportable investigation a first-time viewer can follow without channel history.

Rewrite №2 · experimentertechnique: add_specificity

I bought a cheap abandoned house in Japan for under ¥5M. One year of renovations, three contractors, and a permit battle later — here's what it actually cost and looks like now.

WhyThe cost figure operationalises 'cheap,' the contractor count signals real friction, and the time-bound frame validates the experiment before the viewer commits to 36 minutes.

Rewrite №3 · contrariantechnique: flip_declarative_to_stake

Everyone says Japan's abandoned houses are a bargain. After 18 months fighting banks, contractors, and fire permits, here's what the akiya dream actually looks like.

WhyDirectly mirrors the 43% of comments debating gentrification and foreign ownership, capturing the skeptical half of the audience the current opening ignores entirely.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 38 · undersell

The title accurately covers the purchase-and-renovation arc but buries the two most comment-generating elements: the geisha provenance of the house (a genuine surprise that appears in top comments and drove the 'Miss Hakata' exchange) and the Airbnb conversion that fuelled 43% of all comments in the gentrification/foreign-ownership cluster. 'Here's What Happened' discards the actual payoff in favour of a format phrase now endemic to the akiya niche.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · Congratulations (20+ mentions)
  • · Airbnb (8 mentions, contested)
  • · beautiful / gorgeous (15+ mentions)
Anti-patterns in current title
  • generic emotion
  • self answered question
Thumbnail recommendation

Show a hard before/after split with the dark, cluttered exterior or interior on the left and the warm-lit, renovated facade with the red-painted lattice on the right — comments calling out the entrance transformation ('I especially love the front of the house') are the clearest signal of what visually landed.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · I Renovated a Japanese Geisha's Abandoned House Into an Airbnb
    specificity
    The geisha history is the top-comment surprise ('I thought that was so just really interesting') and is entirely absent from the current title — leading with it earns a click the generic 'abandoned house' frame no longer commands in a saturated akiya niche.
  2. 02 · Japan's Akiya Dream vs. Reality: 18 Months, 3 Contractors, 1 Permit Battle
    versus
    Mirrors the comment split between celebration and gentrification concern by framing the video as an honest reckoning, while the specific numbers (18 months, 3 contractors) pre-validate the credibility that 'Here's What Happened' only vaguely gestures at.
  3. 03 · I Turned a $30k Abandoned Japanese House Into a Vacation Rental — Was It Worth It?
    curiosity gap
    The dollar figure makes 'cheap' concrete, 'vacation rental' surfaces the Airbnb controversy that drove the loudest comment thread ('AirBnB is the worst city gentrification engine in the world'), and the open question forces a click to resolve the ambiguity.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

182 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly mixed

positive 83%neutral 12%negative 5%
Real breakdown over 169 of 169 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

The before/after reveal landed hardest — phrases like 'I honestly shed a tear' and 'I'm so proud of you' repeated across unrelated commenters watching a multi-year project close. The capsule bunk beds were the single design detail that sparked the most specific excitement ('it's giving a capsule hotel for sure'). Meng's spontaneous reactions ('OMG,' 'I'm so proud of you, you worked your ass off') gave the reveal emotional weight that a solo walkthrough couldn't; multiple viewers called him the right choice specifically because 'he has no filter.'

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Congratulations and renovation admiration (~103 mentions, 56.6%): praise for the before/after transformation, quality of work, and Andrew's perseverance over 1.5 years
  2. 02
    Airbnb and gentrification backlash (~79 mentions, 43.4%): disappointment it's a vacation rental not a personal home, concern about foreigners driving up housing costs, and Japan restricting Akiya purchases
  3. 03
    Traditional elements preserved (~12 mentions): the kimono wardrobe kept as storage, the geisha backstory, the ranma window panel, and maintaining Japanese aesthetic
  4. 04
    Bureaucratic/permit frustrations (~8 mentions): relatable anger at the fire department/Doboku Jimusho runaround; viewers referenced their own permitting nightmares
  5. 05
    Meng's guest appearance and friendship dynamic (~8 mentions): warmth of having a close friend do the walkthrough, his unfiltered reactions praised as authentic
§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.

+77Warmly receivedmood · −100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+78
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.51
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.09
is the room split?
Warmth
57%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
169
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal2 comments flagged dissatisfaction (1.2% — channel norm 2.8%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    54%
  2. Excited
    15%
  3. Funny
    10%
  4. Curious
    7%
  5. Neutral
    4%
  6. Angry
    2%
  7. Concerned
    2%
  8. Nostalgic
    2%

Net Sentiment Score over 169 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

★ algo-friendly · +78

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 169 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Devoted fan
    24%
  2. Sharing a story
    8%
  3. Debating
    4%
  4. Relating personally
    3%
  5. Found inspiring
    1%
  6. Mentions subscribing
    1%
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 · +78

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
83%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
64%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
1%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+78
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
Regret detectorlow · 1 comments · 1%

A handful of comments suggested a title-vs-content gap

1 of 169 labelled comments were flagged as showing regret about the title/thumbnail promise vs. the actual content.

§04b

Moments that landed

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

0:00Cold open on Andrew mid-emotion — 'I feel a little bit deflated, I need a hug' — hooks viewers before any context is established.1:42Andrew stands outside his newly purchased house in the rain; the ownership milestone lands as a genuine personal beat.3:19City hall visit to research Airbnb compliance requirements frames the entire renovation as a commercial project for the first time.7:32Local restaurant couple reveals the house's former owner was a geisha from Hakata — the single piece of original storytelling that elevates the video above a standard renovation vlog.8:28Editorial voiceover explains a near-year-long gap caused by a failed loan and contractor turnover; the candor about how messy it really was reads as unusually honest for the format.14:36'I need a hug' — bureaucratic frustration at the Doboku Jimusho; the emotional low point that makes the eventual reveal land harder.16:00Andrew reflects on Japan as a 'rule country where no one will give you a concrete rule' — a moment of cultural observation with broad expat relatability.33:19Friend Meng's enthusiastic walkthrough of the bunk capsule room generates the video's warmest exchange and functions as informal word-of-mouth for the rental.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

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

Congratulations and renovation admiration (~103 mentions, 56.6%)

The before/after reveal at 18:56 and Meng's emotional 'I'm so proud of you, you worked your ass off' at 35:54 were the two moments that triggered the wave of congratulatory comments, with the capsule bed reveal mid-walkthrough as a secondary peak

18:5633:5435:40
Airbnb and gentrification backlash (~79 mentions, 43.4%)

Andrew's first explicit mention of Airbnb regulations at 3:19 — 'comply with laws regarding renting it out and Airbnb and stuff like that' — is the moment the rental intent becomes unambiguous and triggered the gentrification-concerned segment of the audience

3:193:38
Traditional elements preserved (~12 mentions)

Keeping the geisha's original kimono wardrobe as sheet storage (33:02) and the ranma carved window panel (35:06) drew specific admiration from viewers who appreciated that traditional elements survived the renovation rather than being replaced

33:0235:06
Bureaucratic/permit frustrations (~8 mentions)

Andrew's visible deflation at 14:36 ('I need a hug') after the Doboku Jimusho visit, and the 'chicken or the egg' complaint at 15:41, resonated with viewers who have navigated their own permitting nightmares in Japan, the US, and Canada

14:3615:3316:00
Meng's guest appearance and friendship dynamic (~8 mentions)

Meng's unprompted business advice ('I'm giving you so much business advice already') followed by his genuine emotional speech at 35:40 landed as authentic rather than staged, which viewers contrasted favourably with the typical YouTube 'this is amazing' tour format

32:5335:4035:54
The capsule bunk beds (~6 mentions)

The bunk-bed conversion from a closet (first previewed at 13:40 and revealed fully around 33:19) was the single design feature that generated want-to-book reactions, with 'capsule hotel' the phrase multiple commenters echoed independently

13:4033:1933:33
Cost transparency gap (~4 mentions)

No specific timestamp triggered cost questions — they arose from the absence of any cost disclosure throughout the video, making this a structural gap rather than a reaction to a specific moment

Geisha house history (~3 mentions)

The restaurant couple's revelation at 7:32 that the former owner was a geisha and 'Miss Hakata' was brief (under 90 seconds) but generated comments wishing the backstory had been explored further

7:327:56
§05

Friction points

All criticism →

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

Airbnb/vacation-rental reveal frustrates viewers who expected a personal home storysev 4/5 · 6 mentions
The transformation is amazing and I was excited until I heard it was for "vacation rental"... I thought you were going to have an exciting new life in Atami!↗ view
FixDisclose the vacation-rental intent in the title or first 60s instead of revealing at the end; lead with 'I bought an akiya to open an Airbnb' so the wrong audience self-selects out
Gentrification / foreign-buyer backlash unaddressed on camerasev 4/5 · 5 mentions
AirBnB is the worst city gentrification engine in the world! Thumbs down!↗ view
FixAdd a 60-90s segment confronting the gentrification critique directly — local employment, tax contribution, akiya revitalization data — instead of letting commenters carry the defence
No cost breakdown for purchase + renovation despite repeated requestssev 3/5 · 3 mentions
Congrats, just out of interest, what was the buying price and renovations costing, and how did you find the architect↗ view
FixAdd a single on-screen card or end-of-video breakdown: purchase price, total reno cost, loan terms — this is the #1 information viewers actively ask for
Neighbor reaction to Airbnb teased but never resolved on screensev 3/5 · 2 mentions
How did the neighbors react to the idea of an Airbnb?↗ view
FixFilm the actual neighbor introduction (or a follow-up conversation) — the tea-gift-as-peace-offering setup pays off nothing visible; show one named neighbor's reaction
'Foreigner-buying akiya' boom feels saturated to viewerssev 2/5 · 2 mentions
so every youtuber is going into air bnb ...when buying a house ..↗ view
FixDifferentiate Andrew's project from the akiya-YouTuber wave — what's specific (location, design, restaurant guidebook angle) rather than generic
Year-long renovation gap papered over with a single talking-headsev 3/5 · 1 mentions
I'm just noticing now I didn't film a clip updating you all on that, so here we are doing this. Maybe I was a bit too depressed or stressed to update you
FixCut a 30-second montage of the loan/contractor struggle (texts, calls, dated calendar shots) — the missing footage breaks the parasocial through-line for a 4-year viewer base
Airbnb-only listing alienates viewers boycotting the platformsev 2/5 · 1 mentions
will you be listing this on sites other than Airbnb? Many people in the states, myself included, stopped using the service because of the political involvement/cooperation of their co-founder Joe Gebbia with d-o-d-g-e↗ view
FixList on Booking.com / Vrbo / direct-book site and mention multi-platform availability in the final reveal segment
Bathroom vanity design choice flagged as visually offsev 2/5 · 1 mentions
I agree with meng, the second bathroom vanity is....not....winning. A simple timber bench with a square sink and a IKEA mirror above would have been better.↗ view
FixAcknowledge the vanity criticism in a comment-pinned response or a follow-up tweak video — viewers (including an architect) singled it out
Doboku Jimusho 'no clear rule' bureaucracy frustration left as venting, no resolution shownsev 2/5 · 1 mentions
Everyone who's dealt with permitting can relate to this. Person: Tell me what I can do here. Bureaucrat: No... but we promise to penalize you for doing something wrong.↗ view
FixShow how it was resolved in a callback chapter — what did Andrew end up doing about the gate? Without the resolution, the segment reads as complaint, not story
Aesthetic read of 'whorehouse / brothel' — recurring joke about the red-lit traditional looksev 1/5 · 2 mentions
Lol it looks like a whorehouse now. Ha ha ha ha that's so funny.↗ view
FixWorth noting: the geisha-history reveal + red-pop entrance is reading as brothel-aesthetic to some viewers; consider adjusting marketing photography lighting or leaning into the geisha heritage explicitly in the listing copy
Japanese-side nationalist pushback against tax-avoidance framing of foreign ownerssev 2/5 · 1 mentions
外国人が日本の土地、建物を購入したら、その後は? 税金も払わない、管理もしないで母国へ帰る、放置。
FixOn-camera statement that Andrew is Japan-resident, pays local taxes, manages the property himself — directly neutralizes the most common Japanese-language objection
Mortgage framing ('I own a house!') dunked on as misleadingsev 1/5 · 1 mentions
You don't own the house. The bank owns the house when you have a mortgage...↗ view
FixTweak intro line to 'I bought a house' or 'closed on a house' to avoid the cheap dunk
AC remote loss risk flagged by viewer — practical Airbnb-operations gapsev 1/5 · 1 mentions
Should cable tie the ac remotes to the wall, those always go missing↗ view
FixMount remotes / add operating-instruction stickers; minor but every Airbnb host knows this
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Ready to pitch · 78/100

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

Purchase-intent signals are unusually concrete for a vlog: commenter @MRgreylux asks unprompted whether the rental will be listed off-Airbnb so they can book, @RY-fe3rt says 'If I'm ever in Japan, I'll definitely be a maian man,' @jonathankawamura1805 references staying at a specific Atami guest house, and multiple commenters (@TheToby1007, @shaunbrickman7280) ask for itemised renovation costs they could replicate. Ad tolerance is high — the audience reads chapter-by-chapter, watches a 36-minute video at 5.1% engagement, and treats Andrew as a trusted friend (56.6% of comments are congratulations/parasocial warmth). The exposed risk: 43.4% of comments engage critically with Airbnb/gentrification, so the sponsor must NOT be tone-deaf to that conversation.

Integration rate
$1,100–$1,600
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$1,750–$2,600
full sponsored video
Basis: About 34,700 people watched this video and roughly 5 out of every 100 of them liked or commented — that's a very engaged audience, not passive scrollers. A sponsor read here is worth more than typical YouTube ad placement (what advertisers pay per 1,000 views) because viewers treat Andrew as a friend whose recommendations they act on — they're already asking for booking links and renovation costs unprompted. The audience is also hard for brands to reach elsewhere: international Japan-resident, design-curious, queer-friendly travellers are a scarce, premium segment, which is why a 60–90 second mid-roll integration is worth around $1,100–$1,600 and a dedicated video around $1,750–$2,600.
Brands to pitch
Wisemulti-currency bankingAndrew literally describes transferring international funds to buy a Japanese house and getting a foreign mortgage (8:28–8:53). Wise is the dominant expat-finance YouTube sponsor and the audience is full of would-be akiya buyers asking how to replicate this (@joshwindswept5694, @TheToby1007).
Airalotravel eSIMAiralo is the #1 travel-niche YouTube sponsor and the audience is cross-border (Japan resident + visiting friends + US/EU subscribers planning to book the rental). Travel commenters explicitly mention international travel patterns.
Hostfully or Hospitable (Smartbnb)vacation-rental management SaaSThe video IS a vacation-rental origin story. Multiple commenters discuss running Airbnbs (@SchoolOfAlchemy: 'AirBnb host here'), and these SaaS players actively sponsor STR creators. Direct category fit — Andrew can demo the product as he opens the property.
Squarespacewebsite builderMRgreylux's comment explicitly asks for a non-Airbnb booking option — Andrew has a documented need to build a direct-booking site for 'maian_atami,' and Squarespace pays well to creators with property/design content.
Surfshark or NordVPNVPNTokyoBTM's audience skews LGBTQ-friendly international travellers (visible in tone of @gincatt4783, @Epitin, @3stesse comments) — Surfshark in particular targets queer creators and travellers who hop regions. Standard travel-vlog co-sponsor.
Babbel or Pimsleurlanguage learningAndrew navigates Japanese bureaucracy on-camera (City Hall, Doboku Jimusho, fire department) and viewers see the language barrier in action. Language apps overpay for travel/relocation contexts.
Klook or Japan Rail PassJapan travel bookingAtami is a famous onsen destination (@digitallife9757: 'Atami used to be the most popular hot spring tourist destination'). Klook actively sponsors Japan-resident creators and the audience is planning Japan trips around the rental.
Article or West Elmfurniture / homeChapter 16:49 is literally furniture shopping; @timothyprior2039 says 'OMG I loved the furniture shopping' and Meng walks through every design choice. Design-forward furniture brands sponsor renovation creators.
Avoid
  • Crypto / NFTs / get-rich-quickThe renovation theme is craft, patience, and community — a speculative-finance pitch would clash with the slow-build story arc and trigger more gentrification backlash.
  • Mass-tourism short-let aggregators (e.g. an Airbnb-clone push)43.4% of comments are already critical of Airbnb gentrification (@dearjamey1738: 'AirBnB is the worst city gentrification engine'). Doubling down would fuel the controversy.
  • Predatory mortgage / real-estate-investing courses@rcac1023 flags Japanese government tightening foreigner property laws — a course pitch here looks exploitative and invites strike/reporting risk.
  • Alcohol / gamblingAtami/onsen brand context is wholesome family travel; the audience includes older Japanese viewers (@HH-gc8ov, @digitallife9757) for whom this would feel off-key.
How to integrate

Mid-roll at ~9:30 (right after the loan-delay confession) — the audience is emotionally invested by then and ad-tolerant; pre-roll would burn the opening hook, dedicated only justified for a category-perfect partner like Wise or Hostfully.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Mostly clean — 2 hostile comments out of 113 surfaced (@handsomeandtall 'Real Estate Parasite', @michaelroberts8313 'whorehouse' joke); ~1.8% toxicity, well within safe range.
Controversy
Moderate — the Airbnb/gentrification debate is live in the comments (43.4% of clustered discussion); foreign-ownership policy risk flagged by @rcac1023 and @yamato.j-o9i. No FTC/disclosure or strike signals. Sponsor pitch should avoid the gentrification framing.
Audience conduct
Very on-topic — ~98% of comments address the renovation, house, or business; near-zero spam; high-quality, full-sentence replies indicating an adult, engaged audience.
Sponsor evidence quotes
will you be listing this on sites other than Airbnb? ... If you do offer on another platform, it would give other people like me an opportunity to rent.
Direct booking intent + signals Squarespace/direct-booking-site sponsor opportunity↗ view
If I'm ever in Japan, I'll definitely be a maian man.
Pre-purchase intent for the rental from an engaged subscriber↗ view
Would you interested in sharing the costs involved for those of us who are planning a similar thing
Replicator audience — perfect handoff to Wise/mortgage/relocation sponsor↗ view
AirBnb host here. ... Best of luck on your business!
Identifies operator subsegment in the audience — Hostfully/Hospitable target customers
I love that everyone is into renovating Akiyas now ... Hopefully one day I'll be able to have an Akiya and renovate it too.
Aspirational replicator — high LTV target for property/finance/travel sponsors↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Strong Performer · score 81/100

high
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin a comment that addresses the gentrification concern head-on (e.g. 'Heard you on Airbnb — here's how I'm vetting guests and supporting local restaurants like the ma-and-pa shop at 7:07') and reply to the top 10 critical comments with substance, not platitudes.
    43.4% of comments are gentrification-critical; converting that thread into a thoughtful dialogue lifts comment-reply-rate (a known recommendation signal) and reframes the controversy as creator integrity.
    WatchReply-rate per top comment; comment depth (replies-to-replies); sentiment shift in new top comments over 24h
  2. Day 2-3
    Cut a 45–60s Short from the 18:56 reveal (before/after walkthrough) titled 'I spent 18 months renovating an abandoned Japanese house' and post it linking back to the long-form.
    @digitallife9757 and @sleepysartorialist arrived as cold-traffic — the reveal is the hook that converts strangers; Shorts are the cheapest discovery surface for that exact moment.
    WatchShort view count, click-through to long-form, subscribers gained tagged to the Short
  3. Day 4-7
    Publish a follow-up community post (or 8-min video) titled 'Answering your renovation cost questions' that itemises the akiya purchase price, loan terms, contractor cost, and timeline — directly answering @TheToby1007, @shaunbrickman7280, and the cluster of cost-curious comments.
    Replicator audience is hungry for numbers; this satisfies a documented unanswered question and creates a second algorithmically-linked video before momentum decays.
    WatchClick-through from end-screen/cards on this video; CTR of the follow-up; whether the follow-up surfaces as 'Up Next' on this video
  4. Day 7-14
    Open maian_atami bookings publicly with a creator-only discount code, mention it in a community post and pinned comment, and announce a 'first guests' follow-up video to keep the series alive.
    @RY-fe3rt and @MRgreylux already expressed booking intent — converting that demand publicly creates real-world social proof and a reason for subscribers to keep checking the channel.
    WatchBookings via direct vs Airbnb; community-post engagement; whether announcement video gets above this video's CTR within 24h
Why it could lift
  • +5.1% engagement (likes+comments / views) is roughly 2–3× the YouTube long-form baseline of ~1.5–2%
  • +56.6% of clustered comments are pure praise/congratulations — strong positive sentiment proxy
  • +Long-form (36 min) with retention-friendly chapter structure — the comment volume of 182 on 34,700 views implies high completion
  • +Recurring 'Tokyo Tops' callouts and parasocial replies (@Gazeba32: 'watching your channel the last 4 years') confirm loyal returning viewership
  • +Multi-year payoff narrative (purchase → renovation → reveal) is a re-watch and share format — @sleepysartorialist subscribed from this video as cold YouTube recommendation
Why it might stall
  • 43.4% of clustered comments raise gentrification/Airbnb concerns — controversy can suppress some recommendation surfaces even if it boosts engagement
  • Title 'I Bought a Cheap Abandoned House' is generic-akiya — competing with high-volume akiya content from Anton in Japan and others, may cap discovery
  • 36-minute runtime risks lower average-view-duration percentage despite high absolute watch time
  • Niche geography (Atami) + LGBTQ-coded creator may narrow algorithmic crossover into broader travel/real-estate audiences
  • No follow-up upload visible yet — algorithm rewards series cadence; a 6-month gap before episode 2 would dampen momentum

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

14 unanswered

  • ?How did the neighbors actually react when you introduced yourself and revealed the Airbnb plan? (~15-like comment by @xiaoka went unanswered)
  • ?What was the total cost — purchase price plus renovations? (~3 separate commenters asked this explicitly)
  • ?Will you list on platforms other than Airbnb? Several US viewers said they've stopped using Airbnb and want an alternative booking path
  • ?What are the specific Japanese laws coming that would restrict foreigners using Akiya as vacation rentals, and do they affect you?
  • ?How did you finally get the loan, and why did it take so long? (mentioned briefly in editing note at 8:28 but never explained)
  • ?Did the Doboku Jimusho issue ever get resolved, and what was the final ruling on the gate/entrance?
  • ?How does property ownership work for foreigners in Japan when there's a mortgage — who 'really' owns it?
  • ?Is the property classified as non-rebuildable (再建不可) given the narrow lane access, and what does that mean for insurance or future changes?
  • ?What happened to the first contractor you lined up before the loan delay?
  • ?Will you be there managing it personally or using a property manager?
  • ?How did you handle the fire department requirements in the end — which smoke detectors and exit lighting were actually required?
  • ?What was the geisha's name, and is there more history about the house you discovered?
  • ?Are you planning to buy a second Akiya in Atami or elsewhere?
  • ?What's the nightly rate and when does it go live for booking?
Requests

10 explicit asks

  • askCost breakdown video — purchase price, renovation line items, total spend, expected ROI timeline (most-requested implicit ask across ~4 comments)
  • askFirst guests video — document the first booking, check-in, and guest experience
  • askAkiya buying guide from scratch — how to find, evaluate, and purchase as a foreigner in Japan
  • askCollab with Anton in Japan — multiple viewers flagged this channel as doing the same thing at scale and explicitly asked for a crossover
  • askAtami neighborhood guide — Andrew mentioned wanting to make one; viewers want it as a companion piece for Maian guests
  • askAirbnb regulations explainer — full walkthrough of fire department, Doboku Jimusho, permit requirements for short-term rentals in Japan
  • askNeighbor reaction follow-up — did the tea gift work, are they supportive or hostile to the Airbnb?
  • askRenovation cost vs. Airbnb earnings update — monthly P&L transparency once bookings begin
  • askMore Meng content — viewers loved his unfiltered reactions and asked for him to appear more
  • askBehind-the-scenes of the permit battle — the bureaucracy frustration at 14:36 resonated; viewers wanted the full story
§06

What to make next

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

01

Full cost breakdown: purchase price, renovation budget, overruns, and projected Airbnb ROI

TitleHow Much Did My Japan Akiya Really Cost? (Honest Numbers)
HookI spent ¥___ buying and renovating this abandoned geisha house — here's whether the numbers actually work
Why nowAt least 4 commenters asked directly and the question had no answer in this video; it's the single most unresolved audience need from this episode
02

Japan short-term rental regulations explainer — fire department, Doboku Jimusho, permits, what foreigners actually need

TitleThe Permit Battle: How to Actually Airbnb a House in Japan (What I Learned the Hard Way)
HookNobody tells you this before you try to Airbnb a house in Japan
Why nowThe bureaucracy frustration at 14:36 was one of the most-commented moments and the resolution was never shown; the audience is primed for the payoff
03

First guests at Maian — document the first booking, check-in, and real guest experience

TitleMy Atami Airbnb Got Its First Guests
HookStrangers just slept in my geisha house for the first time — here's what happened
Why nowMultiple viewers said they want to book and are waiting to see how it operates; the reveal episode created demand that the first-guests video fulfills
04

Neighbor reaction follow-up — did the tea gift and introduction actually work, and how do they feel about the Airbnb?

TitleDid My Japanese Neighbors Accept Me? (The Airbnb Conversation)
HookI brought tea to my Japanese neighbors before turning their street into an Airbnb — here's how that went
Why now@xiaoka's question got 15 likes with zero answer; neighbor acceptance is the emotional thread the gentrification-concerned 43% of the audience is waiting on
05

Akiya buying guide for foreigners — the step-by-step from finding a property to getting keys, including the loan process

TitleHow to Buy an Akiya in Japan as a Foreigner (Complete Guide)
HookI bought an abandoned house in Japan as a foreigner — here's everything I wish I'd known
Why nowViewers like @joshwindswept5694 explicitly said they want to do the same thing; the Akiya interest wave is peaking and Andrew has firsthand authority
06

Collab with Anton in Japan — two foreigners renovating and Airbnbing Akiya properties at different scales compare notes

TitleI Met the Guys Who Are Buying Up Abandoned Japan (Akiya Collab)
HookHe's renovated an entire Japanese village — I bought one house — we need to talk
Why nowMultiple viewers independently suggested this channel by name; a collab would serve both audiences and position Andrew within the Akiya creator ecosystem before it gets crowded
§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

Pin a comment naming the rental's local-business commitments (the ma-and-pa restaurant at 7:07, the neighbour tea-gift at 5:51) to neutralise the gentrification critique.

Evidence@dearjamey1738 'AirBnB is the worst city gentrification engine'; @block-cp5mz 'excited until I heard it was for vacation rental'; 43.4% of clustered comments share this concern.
Watch forSentiment of next 50 comments shifts to <20% Airbnb-critical within 7 days.
Do 02

Add a direct-booking link (Squarespace site or simple Cal.com page) and mention it in the description + a pinned reply.

Evidence@MRgreylux 'will you be listing this on sites other than Airbnb? ... it would give other people like me an opportunity to rent.'
Watch for≥10 inbound enquiries via non-Airbnb channel in first 14 days.
Do 03

Publish a numbers-deep follow-up: purchase price, loan terms, contractor estimate vs actual, permit timeline.

Evidence@TheToby1007, @shaunbrickman7280, @calvind2054 all explicitly ask for renovation costs.
Watch forFollow-up video CTR ≥ this video's CTR; comment count ≥120 in first 7 days.
Do 04

Cut a 45–60s Short from the 18:56 before/after reveal.

EvidenceReveal moment generated the most 'OMG/congratulations' comment volume (e.g. @sharlainjapan, @anthonyfreeman88 at 33:33).
Watch forShort ≥100k views and ≥500 net subs from Short within 14 days.
Do 05

Add an FAQ pinned reply linking out to the Anton in Japan and Tyler/Todd channels mentioned by viewers — show you read comments.

Evidence@calvind2054 and @famous4reporting recommended specific creators; engaging back lifts the comment-section depth signal.
Watch forIncrease in reply-to-reply chains on this video's top comments over 7 days.
Do 06

Re-title or update thumbnail to lead with 'Geisha House' or '1.5 Years Renovating a Japanese Akiya' to differentiate from generic akiya content.

EvidenceGeisha backstory (7:32) is the most-emotionally-engaged moment per comment references; current title is undifferentiated in the akiya niche.
Watch forCTR improvement of ≥1 percentage point in Studio analytics over 7 days.
Do 07

Film a short follow-up addressing @rcac1023's heads-up about new foreigner-purchase restrictions — get a Japanese real-estate lawyer on camera.

Evidence@rcac1023 (2 likes) raises specific regulatory risk; @yamato.j-o9i Japanese-language criticism echoes it.
Watch forView duration ≥60% on the follow-up; sentiment in Japanese-language comments improves.
Do 08

Add furniture-source captions in pinned comment (or chapter notes) — viewers asked.

Evidence@timothyprior2039 'I loved the furniture shopping! Seeing the types of designs ... is always so interesting.'
Watch forAffiliate-link clicks tracked; informs whether a furniture sponsor (Article/West Elm) is viable.
Do 09

Add a permanent 'first-name acronym' guide for the bureaucratic terms used (Doboku Jimusho, etc.) in the description.

Evidence@jrwxtx and @truerthanyouknow9456 commiserate with permitting frustration — international audience wants the translation.
Watch forReduced 'what does X mean' comments on next video.
Do 10

Reach out to Wise for an integration sponsor pitch in the next video, leveraging the on-camera international transfer at 0:25.

EvidenceWise is the dominant expat-finance YouTube sponsor; audience explicitly contains replicator buyers; renovation cost transparency is the perfect setup.
Watch forSponsor close at ≥$1,100 integration rate within 30 days.
Do 11

Pitch Airalo or Saily for the next Japan-travel-adjacent upload (visiting friends, neighbour outreach, contractor commute).

EvidenceCross-border travel audience; Airalo's category dominance in travel YouTube; @luckeeleeyeo, @RY-fe3rt indicate active travellers.
Watch forSponsor close at ≥$1,000 integration rate within 60 days.
Do 12

Set up an Instagram + IG Reels handle for @maian_atami specifically and cross-link in the description.

EvidenceVacation rental discovery now happens heavily on IG; @eliandthejets already mentions @maian_atami.
Watch for≥500 IG followers and ≥3 booking enquiries from IG in 30 days.
Do 13

Add a 'How to book' end-screen card linking the booking page on every future video where the property is mentioned.

EvidenceMultiple unprompted booking-intent comments; current video has no clear booking CTA.
Watch forClick-through rate of end-screen card; bookings attributed via UTM.
Do 14

Schedule the 'First Guests at Maian' video for week 3–4 to extend the series arc.

Evidence@SweetSourSlug, @M808Ang, @V3LT — audience explicitly asking for updates; algorithm rewards cadence over gap.
Watch forVideo posted on schedule; subscriber retention rate at 14d post-release.
Do 15

Reply with a substantive thank-you to the supportive Japanese-language commenters (@HH-gc8ov, @digitallife9757, @yamato.j-o9i) — in Japanese.

EvidenceJapanese audience is a culturally important segment; one negative Japanese comment (@yamato.j-o9i) deserves a respectful direct reply.
Watch forNet new Japanese-language comments on the next video.
Do 16

Build an email capture on the booking site offering a free 'akiya buyer's checklist' PDF.

EvidenceReplicator-audience demand evidenced across 5+ commenters; email list is the highest-LTV channel for future product launches.
Watch for≥250 email signups in first 30 days.
Do 17

Add timestamps for the Geisha history reveal (7:32) and the Doboku Jimusho frustration (14:35) more prominently — they're the emotional peaks.

Evidence@anthonyfreeman88 timestamps 33:33; engagement comments cluster around emotional reveal moments.
Watch forAverage view duration on this video lifts by ≥3% after chapter update.
Do 18

Pitch Hostfully or Hospitable for a dedicated 'How I run my Japan vacation rental' video.

EvidenceDirect category fit; @SchoolOfAlchemy and other AirBnb hosts in audience.
Watch forSponsor close at ≥$1,750 dedicated rate within 90 days.
Do 19

Drop a 'design choices walkthrough' video using Meng's reactions as the hook (Meng was widely beloved).

Evidence@laylom88 'enjoying Meng's OMGs', @truerthanyouknow9456 'Meng was a great choice for doing the review.'
Watch forWatch time on Meng-led video matches or beats this one.
Do 20

Add a content warning / context line in the description acknowledging the Airbnb debate is real and inviting respectful discussion.

EvidenceMature audience capable of nuance — @dearjamey1738 critical but engaged; defusing in description prevents escalation.
Watch forToxicity rate of next 200 comments stays below 3%.
Do 21

Stop chasing party/nightlife uploads if pivoting to property/lifestyle — the comment @BakaNeBaka makes this an audience signal.

Evidence@BakaNeBaka 'Appreciate this journey way better than all the partying and what not.'
Watch forAvg engagement rate on next 5 property/lifestyle videos vs prior 5 party videos.
Do 22

Capture and reshare the 'spirited away house' framing (@SchoolOfAlchemy) — it's a brandable nickname.

EvidenceSpontaneous viewer naming is gold for branding the property.
Watch forUse of nickname spreads across replies and future video titles.
Do 23

Test a 'cost of an akiya in 2025' Short pegged to a viral hook (e.g. '$X for a house in Japan').

EvidenceAkiya price curiosity is universal — @joshwindswept5694, @TheToby1007, multiple others.
Watch forShort performance vs reveal Short; whichever wins informs Short strategy.
Do 24

Add a 'no shoes' / 'house rules' bilingual page on the booking site to pre-empt the @restfulsilence concern about guest behaviour.

Evidence@restfulsilence specifically warns about foreigner-guest misbehaviour in hospitality.
Watch forZero negative-guest-behaviour incidents in first 90 days of operation.
Do 25

Track and publish the booked-night occupancy as a public update at 30/60/90 days.

EvidenceAudience is invested in the business succeeding; transparency builds trust and gives recurring content hooks.
Watch forUpdates drive ≥10% of viewers to revisit/share the original video.
§R1

Reply queue

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

@xiaoka · high↗ view

How did the neighbors react to the idea of an Airbnb?

Why: Unanswered factual question with 15 likes — the most-asked implied question across both comment clusters. A good public answer here addresses the gentrification concern and the neighbor-gifts scene in the video.
Draft reply

Honestly better than I expected! I went around before renovations started, introduced myself, brought tea, gave them my number and told them to call me if anything bothers them. So far so good — fingers crossed it stays that way 🙏

@sharlainjapan · high↗ view

Oh my god it's gorgeous!!!!!!!! You did such a great job 😭❤️ I LOVE those little capsule beds🥹

Why: Fellow Japan YouTuber with a large audience commenting publicly — high cross-promotion and viral potential; a warm reply here surfaces the video to her subscribers.
Draft reply

Sharla!! Coming from you that actually means so much 😭 You have to come stay — I'll give you the capsule bed obviously 🙏❤️

@HH-gc8ov · high↗ view

I'm japanese.There is a lot of negative feedback about foreigners in Japan these days, but I'm on your side for you helping to bring vitality back to Atami town by buying old houses, renovating them, and starting new businesses.

Why: Highest-liked comment (81 likes) from a local Japanese viewer explicitly endorsing the project — replying publicly validates the community-benefit framing against the gentrification criticism.
Draft reply

This genuinely means the world to me. I really do want to be a good neighbour and do right by Atami — comments like yours remind me why I went through all of it. ありがとうございます 🙏

@dearjamey1738 · high↗ view

AirBnB is the worst city gentrification engine in the world! Thumbs down!

Why: Sharp 10-like criticism representing 43% of the comment section's theme — a calm, specific public reply here is more valuable than ignoring it and lets Andrew own the narrative.
Draft reply

Totally fair concern and I've thought about it a lot. This house sat empty for years — no one was living here. I'm not displacing anyone from housing. I also live in Tokyo and genuinely want to help bring visitors to Atami, not price out locals.

@block-cp5mz · high↗ view

The transformation is amazing and I was excited until I heard it was for "vacation rental"... I thought you were going to have an exciting new life in Atami!

Why: 8 likes, represents a real emotional expectation many viewers had — a warm reply that explains the actual plan (visiting frequently, building roots in Atami) converts disappointment into understanding.
Draft reply

Ha I completely get that! I'll genuinely be there a lot though — it's not just a passive rental, I want to use it myself, bring friends, build something real in Atami. I just can't afford to live there full time… yet 😅

@Gazeba32 · high↗ view

Im so proud of my tokyo btm boy Andrew! I honestly shed a tear seeing you completea multi-year project after watching your channel the last 4 years! My boys are achieving their dreams 😊😊😊

Why: Devoted 4-year fan who cried watching — the definition of a superfan worth acknowledging personally; public reply rewards long-term loyalty visibly.
Draft reply

4 years!! You've been here longer than some of my friends 😭 Thank you for sticking around through all the chaotic Japan content — this one really was years in the making and I'm so glad you were here for it 🙏

@rcac1023 · medium↗ view

Congrats on your new house, looks great. But people like you are making the Japanese government re-think who can but these houses especially foreigners, and new laws with restrictions are coming I have read that one of the big changes/new law will be the heavy restrictions on foreigners buying homes to use as vacation rental's.

Why: Substantive concern about incoming legislation — 2 likes but represents a fear many viewers likely have and didn't type. Replying shows Andrew is informed and thinking seriously about this.
Draft reply

Yeah I've been following this closely — it's a real conversation happening in Japan. I went through all the proper licensing and permits specifically because I want to be doing this the right way. Fingers crossed the rules end up targeting the bad actors, not the people trying to do it properly.

@MRgreylux · medium↗ view

Congratulations, this looks amazing! One question- will you be listing this on sites other than Airbnb? Many people in the states, myself included, stopped using the service because of the political involvement/cooperation of their co-founder Joe Gebbia with d-o-d-g-e in the states.

Why: Unanswered practical question about booking platforms — useful info to share publicly for anyone else wondering the same; also preempts repeat DMs.
Draft reply

Good question — I'm looking into VRBO and direct booking as well. I'll post the link options once everything is set up so you have choices!

@shaunbrickman7280 · medium↗ view

Congrats, just out of interest, what was the buying price and renovations costing, and how did you find the architect

Why: Numbers question will get the most clicks if answered — highly searchable, drives future video traffic, and positions a natural follow-up video about the financials.
Draft reply

I'm actually planning a full breakdown video on the numbers — purchase price, renovation cost, all of it. Stay tuned, it's coming soon!

@TheToby1007 · medium↗ view

Would you interested in sharing the costs involved for those of us who are planning a similar thing (but from afar) Exterior is a winner - I agree with meng, the second bathroom vanity is....not....winning. A simple timber bench with a square sink and a IKEA mirror above would have been better. Saving the original windows was a great idea and looks fabulous as are your other choices - and I am an architect - so I have done a few renovations - will try and book a night or two when next in Japan

Why: An architect who offers genuine design critique AND promises to book — the feedback is specific and fair, worth engaging to show Andrew takes it on board.
Draft reply

Coming from an architect I'll genuinely take that vanity note! You're not the first to say it 😅 Look forward to hosting you — hope you make it to Atami soon.

@yamato.j-o9i · medium

頭がお花畑の日本人のコメントが多い。 北海道や都心のタワマンを見てみろ。 外国人が日本の土地、建物を購入したら、その後は? 税金も払わない、管理もしないで母国へ帰る、放置。 大量に外国人を呼び寄せて、商売を始めて納税をしない。 日本の法律を1時間でも早く変えなければいけない。

Why: Japanese-language criticism about foreign ownership and tax evasion — worth a brief reply in Japanese to show Andrew reads and respects local concerns, even if he disagrees.
Draft reply

ご意見ありがとうございます。私はちゃんと許可を取り、日本の法律に従って運営しています。税金もきちんと納める予定です。地元に貢献できるよう努力していきます。

@calvind2054 · low↗ view

You need to track down a YouTuber in Japan that has a channel and works with a partner who were both young Swedish models. The YouTube channel is called Anton In Japan. They have been buying up old abandoned properties all around Japan and using some for Air B&B's, resales and whatever else they do.

Why: Helpful recommendation from a viewer — quick acknowledgment is good community maintenance and could open a collab door.
Draft reply

I know Anton! He's been doing this for a while — would love to connect at some point and swap notes. Thanks for the tip 🙏

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

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

I'm japanese.There is a lot of negative feedback about foreigners in Japan these days, but I'm on your side for you helping to bring vitality back to Atami town by buying old houses, renovating them, and starting new businesses.

@HH-gc8ov · pinned comment↗ view

I am very happy to see Atami being reclaimed by foreigners, and I am grateful to them. Thank you very much.

@digitallife9757 · community post↗ view

Im so proud of my tokyo btm boy Andrew! I honestly shed a tear seeing you completea multi-year project after watching your channel the last 4 years!

@Gazeba32 · community post↗ view

Oh my god it's gorgeous!!!!!!!! You did such a great job 😭❤️ I LOVE those little capsule beds🥹

@sharlainjapan · thumbnail↗ view

The space is GORGEOUS!!! Right from the entry it is enveloping and the lighting is so calming. LOVE IT!!!!

@BakaNeBaka · sponsor deck↗ view

If I'm ever in Japan, I'll definitely be a maian man.

@RY-fe3rt · community post↗ view

I love that everyone is into renovating Akiyas now (especially the gaijins) Breathing new life and purpose to these homes, advocating tourism outside of Tokyo and making a profit too!

@joshwindswept5694 · community post↗ view

I think you did such a great job and I think many people will love staying in Maian

@luckeeleeyeo · sponsor deck
§R3

Clip & Shorts finder

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

[7:32] ↗I Bought a Geisha's House in Japan~45s
HookSo apparently, the house was — the owner was a geisha down in Hakata in Kyushu before moving up to Atami
The geisha backstory is the most emotionally charged detail in the video — commenters reacted with 'OMG' in real time and it's the kind of unexpected historical hook that drives massive Short views. Sets up the renovation reveal with a story angle instead of a house-flip angle.
[0:00] ↗I Need a Hug (Buying a House in Japan)~30s
HookYeah, I feel a little bit deflated at the moment. I need a hug.
The video literally opens on this line — it's a vulnerability hook that subverts the typical 'I bought a house!' energy. Cuts against viewer expectations and earns curiosity. Mirrors the 'permit battle' frustration that resonated with commenters who've dealt with bureaucracy.
[1:42] ↗The Moment I Became a Homeowner in Japan~30s
HookGuys! I own a house just back there.
Pure milestone energy right after signing. Short, punchy, emotionally real — commenters who teared up watching ('I honestly shed a tear') were responding to this kind of authentic breakthrough moment. High shareability as a life milestone clip.
[14:36] ↗Japan's Bureaucracy Broke Me~60s
HookHi Tokyo Tops, I need a hug. I didn't have the best time at the Doboku Jimusho.
The 'I need a hug' editorial interruption is a relatable frustration moment — multiple commenters called it out specifically. Strong emotional hook, universal theme (dealing with unclear rules), and the chicken-or-egg bureaucracy bit is funny in retrospect.
[18:56] ↗Abandoned Japanese House → Before & After~55s
HookThe Reveal! Before & After
The highest-traffic Short format on YouTube right now is the before/after renovation reveal. The comment section is flooded with reactions to the transformation ('I'm absolutely blown away', 'The transformation is amazing') — this moment is the natural anchor for a transformation Short.
[33:16] ↗The Capsule Bed I Sleep in Every Night~40s
HookOMG is this for the kids? I sleep in there actually all the time — I love it.
Sharla in Japan (12 likes) called out the capsule beds specifically. It's a quirky, distinctive design detail — exactly the kind of thing that gets pinned in comment sections and shared. Easy hook: 'I built a capsule hotel inside my Japanese house.'
[5:51] ↗What I Brought My Japanese Neighbors~35s
HookI went and bought some tea from one of my favorite tea places in Tokyo. Brought that down as a little gift.
The neighbor-gifts scene directly addresses the Airbnb/gentrification concern that 43% of commenters raised. Framing this as a Short ('how I introduced myself to my Japanese neighbors before starting an Airbnb') positions Andrew as thoughtful — high potential to go viral among people who dislike the 'foreign investor buys Japan' narrative.
I Bought a Geisha's House for HOW Much?~45s
HookThe numbers: what an abandoned Japanese house actually costs to buy and renovate.
The cost question (@shaunbrickman7280, @TheToby1007) is the most-requested follow-up across the comments. A Short teasing the price breakdown — without revealing it — drives clicks to the full financial breakdown video Andrew should make. No specific timestamp available; would need to be filmed fresh.
§08

Top comments

Explore all 182 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

@HH-gc8ov81 · positive↗ view

I'm japanese.There is a lot of negative feedback about foreigners in Japan these days, but I'm on your side for you helping to bring vitality back to Atami town by buying old houses, renovating them, and starting new businesses.

Why picked: highest-liked comment — Japanese native explicitly defends Andrew against the foreigner-buying backlash
@digitallife975761 · positive↗ view

Atami used to be the most popular hot spring tourist destination in Japan, and was the dream destination of the Japanese people, who all traveled to Atami for rest and relaxation. I am very happy to see Atami being reclaimed by foreigners, and I am grateful to them. Thank you very much.

Why picked: second-highest like count — frames the akiya rescue as civic revival, key counter-narrative to gentrification critique
@xiaoka15 · neutral↗ view

How did the neighbors react to the idea of an Airbnb?

Why picked: highly-liked question Andrew never actually answers in the video — unanswered narrative gap
@dearjamey173810 · negative↗ view

AirBnB is the worst city gentrification engine in the world! Thumbs down!

Why picked: most-liked outright hostile reaction — names the Airbnb friction directly
@block-cp5mz8 · mixed↗ view

The transformation is amazing and I was excited until I heard it was for "vacation rental"... I thought you were going to have an exciting new life in Atami!

Why picked: captures the disappointment turn — viewers wanted a homeowner story, not a business
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 182 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 13 replies across 11 roots · max chain 3 deep · creator replied to 4%

01 · @sharlainjapan2 replies · ♥ 12· creator replied↗ view

Oh my god it’s gorgeous!!!!!!!! You did such a great job 😭❤️ I LOVE those little capsule beds🥹

02 · @hal900012 replies · ♥ 1↗ view

You don't own the house. The bank owns the house when you have a mortgage...

03 · @HH-gc8ov1 replies · ♥ 81↗ view

I'm japanese.There is a lot of negative feedback about foreigners in Japan these days, but I'm on your side for you helping to bring vitality back to Atami town by buying old houses, renovating them, and starting new businesses.

04 · @digitallife97571 replies · ♥ 61↗ view

Atami used to be the most popular hot spring tourist destination in Japan, and was the dream destination of the Japanese people, who all traveled to Atami for rest and relaxation. I am very happy to see Atami being reclaimed by foreigners, and I am grateful to them. Thank you …

05 · @Cre8tive11 replies · ♥ 17· creator replied↗ view

Hi Tokyo Bottoms :hands-yellow-heart-red: Andrew, I'm absolutely blown away at what a wonderful job you did on everything (the purchase, the renovations, the decorating). You should be extremely proud of yourself, your new home is amazing and Beautiful ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

§09

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