Video deep dive · travel2021-01-26 · 5 years ago

Japanese Love Hotel for Cheap Gays

The Brief

A 4-minute solo hotel walkthrough became a 731K-view cultural artifact by making queer practicality feel like permission.

The top comment — 1,600 likes — isn't about Japan: it's 'The fact that this was recommended to me and I clicked on it lol,' confirming the title did the entire acquisition job.

The double meaning of 'cheap' (budget + reclaimed slur) collapsed curiosity, gay identity, and travel utility into one unsearchable but shareable title.

Watch outThe second-highest comment (1,200 likes) immediately corrects 'cheap gays' to 'Smart Gays who Know How to Budget' — a portion of the audience finds the self-deprecating framing uncomfortable.

If love hotels are genuinely the most affordable private overnight option for gay couples in Tokyo, is this a comedy travel vlog or an accidentally useful queer travel guide?

Views
731k
731,152 total
Likes
16k
2.21% like rate
Comments
1.0k
0.14% comment rate
Japanese Love Hotel for Cheap Gays
Comment deep diveExplore all 1,000 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

Meng checks into a Kabukicho love hotel alone, dressed as a salaryman to avoid suspicion, and walks the viewer through the room — karaoke machine, complimentary condoms, free-to-watch adult content categorized in Japanese. He explains the hotel's anonymity design (staff behind a wall, touchscreen room selection) and ends by pocketing every free amenity. The video holds no narrative arc; it's an excuse for a venue tour filtered through gay self-awareness.

Content pillars
japanlgbtqbudget_travelculture_explainer
§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 2.35pp
2.35% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
2.21%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.14%
of viewers leave a comment
§03

The hook

weak

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

[0:21] Ok, hey guys, so I just successfully arrived in Shinjuku. [0:25] So, we're heading to the love hotel right now. [0:28] It's gonna be, I think, a 10 minute walk from the station — it's in Kabukicho.

Assessment

The hook opens mid-walk with a greeting and logistical narration — it establishes location but squanders the inherent tension of a gay man entering a heterosexual-coded institution solo. The title does all the heavy lifting the hook should be doing; no premise, no question, and no personality signal land in the first 15 seconds.

Hook quality
weak
Call-to-action
absent
Archetype
scene
Composite score
4/10
Hook score · 6 dimensions
character presence
4/10
clarity
6/10
curiosity
4/10
specificity
5/10
stakes
2/10
time to payoff
3/10
Anti-patterns detected
greetingslow contextmeta commentary
§03b

Hook rewrites

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

Rewrite №1 · investigatortechnique: flip_declarative_to_stake

I spent an afternoon testing whether a solo gay man can actually use a Japanese love hotel — checking in alone, navigating the touch-panel room selector, and finding out if there's any gay porn.

WhyNames the exact investigative premise that comment #3 (1,100 likes) asks about, converting the most common viewer question into the hook's central tension before a single frame of the room.

Rewrite №2 · experimentertechnique: lead_with_outcome

I checked into a Shinjuku love hotel alone to find out if a gay man gets turned away at the door — or just handed a room key, free condoms, and a karaoke machine.

WhyThe binary outcome question (rejected vs welcomed) creates instant suspense, and the specific amenity list mirrors the 'free stuff' comment cluster that drove strong engagement.

Rewrite №3 · contrariantechnique: cold_open

Everyone says Japanese love hotels are strictly for straight couples. I walked into one solo in Kabukicho at 4pm to find out if that's actually true.

WhyDirectly challenges the received wisdom that top comment #3 explicitly raises, turning the audience's pre-existing question into the hook's central conflict.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 20 · undersell

The 'cheap' framing attracts budget-seekers but comments reveal the real appeal is the cultural novelty of gay access to a straight-coded institution plus Meng's comedic persona — seven-plus comments cite algorithmic discovery as their entry point, suggesting the title's humor lands but undersells the practical gay-access information and personality-driven entertainment that drove 731k views.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · cheap gays (4+ references — comments 2, 40, 74, 64)
  • · recommended to me / why is this in my recommended (7+ comments — 1, 11, 58, 75, 83, 89, 91)
  • · gay friendly / gay couples allowed (comments 3, 52, 25)
Thumbnail recommendation

Keep Meng's face prominent and direct-to-camera in the hotel's ambient neon lighting — comments 5, 7, and 62 explicitly name the thumbnail as the click driver, so the proven formula is Meng's face plus the hotel aesthetic, not the room details.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · Can a Gay Man Actually Use a Japanese Love Hotel?
    curiosity gap
    Converts comment #3's 1,100-liked question ('I often hear that love hotels aren't gay friendly') directly into a title — mirrors what the audience was already searching to learn.
  2. 02 · I Checked Into a Tokyo Love Hotel Alone (Gay Solo Room Tour)
    specificity
    Adds the solo-male angle that drives practical search intent and the identity marker 'Gay Solo' — addressing the lodging-as-hack angle in comment #13 (75 likes).
  3. 03 · Tokyo Love Hotel Solo: Free Condoms, Karaoke, and No Questions Asked
    payoff tease
    The specific amenity list mirrors the 'taking all the free stuff' comment cluster (comments 4, 19, 46, 80, 81) and sets a clear value expectation that the video delivers on.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

1,000 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly positive

positive 76%neutral 22%negative 2%
Real breakdown over 561 of 561 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

The editing humor carried the video — viewers called it 'the whole package: editing, references, humor, music, charisma, personality.' The porn-categories 'let's learn some Japanese' bit drew the most in-comment reactions ('I screamed at overseas lmaaoooooo'). The amenities-grab ending hit a universal nerve: the phrase 'if I don't use it this time I can use it next time' was quoted back by multiple commenters as deeply relatable.

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    YouTube algorithm discovery — 'why is this in my recommended' (~15 mentions)
  2. 02
    Presenter's attractiveness / physical appearance (~12 mentions)
  3. 03
    Amenities/free toiletries humor — taking everything at checkout (~10 mentions)
  4. 04
    Gay-friendliness of love hotels — will a male couple be allowed in (~8 mentions)
  5. 05
    Editing quality, humor, and cultural references praised (~8 mentions)
§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)
+74
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.57
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.04
is the room split?
Warmth
33%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
561
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal3 comments flagged dissatisfaction (0.5% — channel norm 2.8%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    31%
  2. Funny
    29%
  3. Curious
    15%
  4. Excited
    10%
  5. Neutral
    9%
  6. Concerned
    2%
  7. Nostalgic
    2%
  8. Sarcastic
    1%

Net Sentiment Score over 561 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

★ algo-friendly · +74

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 561 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Sharing a story
    6%
  2. Relating personally
    5%
  3. Devoted fan
    4%
  4. Mentions subscribing
    2%
  5. Found inspiring
    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 · +74

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
76%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
48%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
1%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+74
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
Regret detectorlow · 3 comments · 1%

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

3 of 561 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.

1:21Reveals he dressed as a salaryman to seem less suspicious — the video's only moment of vulnerability about being visibly gay in this space.2:16Starts reading Japanese porn categories aloud as a language lesson; this segment drove the most comment callbacks and likely the highest rewatch spike.2:42Deadpan: 'Unfortunately, I don't think there's any gay porn' — the punchline the title was building to.3:28Explains the anonymity wall with the small money-slot; reframes the love hotel as a designed system, not just a sex venue.4:37Pre-emptive 'I know some people are gonna judge me' — signals awareness of audience discomfort without apologizing, which likely drove the loyalty comments.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

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

Amenities/free toiletries humor — taking everything at checkout (~10 mentions)

The bathroom amenity tour (1:01–1:19) primed the joke; the payoff at 4:33 where Meng pockets everything triggered a wave of 'same energy' comments about taking hotel toiletries.

1:011:194:194:33
Porn categories 'Let's learn some Japanese' segment (~6 mentions)

The adult-menu zoom-in at 2:08 and the straight-faced vocabulary lesson through 2:42 — 'Overseas' specifically triggered the loudest reactions ('I screamed').

2:082:182:42
Gay-friendliness of love hotels — will a male couple be allowed in (~8 mentions)

The framing at 3:05–3:14 ('I was quite nervous because people associate it with sex') surfaced the unspoken question — if a straight-presenting solo visitor was nervous, commenters extrapolated to a same-sex couple scenario.

0:210:283:053:14
Hotel anonymity/check-in system (~4 mentions)

The wall-with-a-hole privacy system and touch-panel room selection at 3:28–3:46 fascinated viewers as distinctly Japanese design — drew admiring comments about technology and discretion.

3:283:46
SNSD / Girls' Generation music recognition (~6 mentions)

Run Devil Run playing at the karaoke-all-night joke (~1:49 context) triggered immediate K-pop fan recognition comments — 'when Run Devil Run played, it's over' and multiple SONEs calling each other out.

1:49
YouTube algorithm discovery — 'why is this in my recommended' (~15 mentions)

No single transcript moment — this is a meta-reaction to the title and thumbnail before play, not to content within the video.

Presenter's attractiveness / physical appearance (~12 mentions)

The salary-man costume reveal at 1:21 and the hotel selfie sequence concentrated the appearance comments — several referenced the thumbnail specifically as 'the hottest thumbnail in YouTube history.'

1:21
Historical nostalgia — older gay men sharing Shinjuku memories (~4 mentions)

Arriving in Kabukicho at 0:31 triggered autobiographical comments from men recounting gay love hotel experiences in the 1970s and 1980s — the location name alone unlocked the memory.

0:310:42
§05

Friction points

All criticism →

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

Core premise never tested: title promises a gay love hotel experience but host went solo — no same-sex couple use case demonstratedsev 5/5 · 8 mentions
I often hear that Love Hotels aren't gay friendly. Do you think if you went with another guy, you would still be allowed to get a room?↗ view
FixBefore: solo tour. After: bring a male friend (or date) and document the check-in as a same-sex pair, including whether staff ask for ID or react differently. The 1100-like question is the video's real product brief.
Price never stated clearly on camera — only glimpsed or alluded to, leaving viewers without the key budgeting data the title promisessev 3/5 · 4 mentions
My country's currency went down so much lately that 50 bucks are quite expensive for a love hotel lol↗ view
FixBefore: price implied. After: show the touch-panel screen with the room price, say it clearly (rest rate vs overnight rate vs weekend surcharge), and compare to a comparable Shinjuku business hotel.
Title word 'cheap' reads as a mild slur to part of the gay audience — two separate high-liked comments push back on itsev 3/5 · 3 mentions
"Cheap gays" I prefer "Smart Gays who Know How to Budget"↗ view
FixBefore: 'Japanese Love Hotel for Cheap Gays'. After: 'Japanese Love Hotel: Gay Guide to Staying for Less' or 'Budget Gay Tokyo: Love Hotel Review' — keeps the SEO hook without the slur read.
Gay discrimination at love hotels — real documented risk — not mentioned at all; a guest with first-person negative experience buried in commentssev 4/5 · 2 mentions
The lady at the counter straight us told us that 'contrary to straight couples (which enjoy full anonimity), we had to give all our personal information and our personal ID cards for security reasons'... We weren't denied a room, but they still made us feel like shit.↗ view
FixBefore: no warning. After: one spoken line acknowledging that policies vary by hotel and some may ask same-sex couples for ID; recommend verifiable gay-friendly options like Ni-chome hotels.
Ending is anticlimactic — selfie bait yielded nothing, closing loop is the amenity haul rather than any gay social payoff the title set upsev 2/5 · 3 mentions
OMG!!! I've actually been to one before. It's nice. Have everything ready! All you need to do is to relax and enjoy your lovely time there with your partner... Or do YouTube review if you don't have a partner lol↗ view
FixBefore: solo, ends with stolen toiletries. After: lean into the joke intentionally — a title card 'Result: 0 gays, 1 toothbrush' turns the anti-climax into the bit instead of a gap.
No gay-specific porn channels — host flags the absence but doesn't address workarounds or alternative gay-friendly hotelssev 2/5 · 2 mentions
But unfortunately, I don't think there's any gay porn.
FixBefore: mentioned and dropped. After: note that Shinjuku Ni-chome has explicitly gay-catering love hotels (multiple commenters documented this) and link to or name them.
Language barrier completely unaddressed — touch panels, genre menus, staff instructions all in Japanese only; non-Japanese travelers given no guidancesev 2/5 · 1 mentions
Also was there anything in English, Spanish, Chinese? How would the traveler be able to communicate?↗ view
FixBefore: ignored. After: hold camera on touch panel long enough for a subtitle overlay explaining which buttons matter; note that Google Translate camera mode works on the genre menu.
Room tour was standard-issue (basic hotel room) rather than themed/spectacular — viewer expectations primed by general Tokyo 'love hotel' reputation were not metsev 2/5 · 1 mentions
I was kind of let down. I expected an amusement park style love hotel in Tokyo. Everything is grandiose in Tokyo.↗ view
FixBefore: budget hotel chosen without context. After: acknowledge in the intro that Kabukicho budget rooms are functional not theatrical, and that themed rooms exist at higher price points — set expectation explicitly.
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Build first · 71/100

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

At least 12 comments describe active Japan travel plans or explicit intent to visit Tokyo—comment #90: 'I will DEFINITELY be checking these out when I (inevitably) go to tokyo!'—signaling a travel-ready audience that treats creator content as trip-planning research. Budget framing is load-bearing: comment #2 (1,200 likes) reframes 'cheap gays' as 'smart gays who know how to budget,' indicating a cost-conscious, value-responsive audience that acts on money-saving recommendations. No anti-sponsor sentiment anywhere in the 1,000-comment sample, and ad tolerance reads strong.

Integration rate
$10,000–$16,000
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$17,000–$25,000
full sponsored video
Basis: This video has been watched 731,000 times. When a brand pays for a sponsorship read, they're not buying raw ad views—they're buying the trust this creator has built with an audience that actively plans Japan trips and takes his recommendations seriously. Starting from a standard travel-creator rate of $25 per 1,000 views (already above what a regular YouTube ad pays, because viewers listen to creators more than they skip ads), the base is about $18,000. That gets bumped up because the LGBTQ-plus Japan-travel niche is genuinely hard to reach anywhere else—you can't just target this crowd on Google—so each view is worth more to a brand like Airalo or Surfshark than a generic travel video. A 30–60 second read built into the video (integration) lands at $10,000–$16,000; a full video built around the brand (dedicated) runs $17,000–$25,000.
Brands to pitch
AiraloTravel eSIMAiralo is the #1 travel-niche YouTube sponsor by volume; 12+ comments show concrete Japan travel intent, making this audience a direct match. The anonymous check-in system at [3:28] mirrors Airalo's privacy-first messaging naturally.
SurfsharkVPN / LGBTQ privacySurfshark runs a documented LGBTQ creator sponsorship program and actively partners with gay travel channels. This audience is explicitly LGBTQ-flagged by the title; the privacy subtext in the hotel's face-hidden check-in at [3:28–3:39] provides a natural integration hook.
italkiLanguage learningThe 'Let's learn some Japanese!' segment at [2:16–2:42] is the most-referenced comedic moment in the top comments—the audience already frames language learning as entertainment. italki's standard integration ('learn before you go') slots in with zero friction.
WiseInternational money transfer'Budget' and 'cheap' are central to the video's identity; comment #2 (1,200 likes) explicitly celebrates cost-consciousness. Wise is the standard expat/international-traveler finance sponsor in travel YouTube and fits the value-oriented framing.
NordVPNVPN / digital privacyComment #25 flags Japan's LGBTQ rights gap ('Thailand is now ahead of Japan for LGBT rights'); NordVPN's privacy-in-hostile-environments messaging has direct resonance with gay travelers managing legal or social risk while abroad.
SafetyWingTravel insuranceBudget-travel framing plus an international audience (European, Australian, Southeast Asian commenters visible) matches SafetyWing's nomad/backpacker positioning; comment #47 explicitly names 'cheap lodgings in Tokyo' as the problem being solved.
HostelworldBudget accommodationComments #13 and #47 treat love hotels as a legitimate budget accommodation strategy, not novelty—the audience is actively problem-solving around cheap sleep in an expensive city. Hostelworld's 'find adventure accommodation' angle is a direct content match.
Avoid
  • Gambling / sports bettingNo gambling signals in comments; the audience skews internationally diverse LGBTQ traveler—off-brand and low resonance with the budget/culture-curious framing.
  • Conservative or religious brandsVideo and audience are explicitly LGBTQ-forward; any brand with anti-LGBTQ associations would trigger immediate backlash from an audience that self-identifies in the title.
  • Adult subscription platformsDespite the adult-adjacent setting, the video's tone is comedic and informational—the 'karaoke all night without sex' framing at [1:49] signals mainstream appeal; an adult platform integration would alienate the majority curiosity/travel audience.
How to integrate

Mid-roll at the natural pause around [3:03] ('What do you guys think?') maximizes completion—this audience watches through the humor beats; inserting before the verdict lands the read at peak attention without disrupting the comedic flow.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean — one obvious bot/spam comment (#29, shorturl.ca link) in 1,000 sampled; all other edgy content is on-topic humor with no hate speech or pile-ons.
Controversy
Low-moderate — the video includes a simulated adult-content labeling segment at [2:16–2:42]; brands should be briefed that the integration appears in a non-explicit but adult-humor context. No FTC disclosure risk beyond standard sponsorship disclosure, no copyright strikes detected.
Audience conduct
Highly on-topic — estimated 90%+ of comments address Japan, love hotels, or LGBTQ travel; spam and troll rate under 2% of sampled comments.
Sponsor evidence quotes
I will DEFINITELY be checking these out when I (inevitably) go to tokyo!
Active travel intent — viewer treats creator content as trip-planning research, not passive entertainment↗ view
My grad school friend, and her husband, told me that the cheapest way to get lodging in Japan is through love hotels.
Word-of-mouth referral behavior — audience applies creator-adjacent information to real decisions and passes it on↗ view
Great editing, great references, humor, music, charisma, personality, this channel is the whole package! How come you don't have a million subscribers?
Parasocial warmth at scale — brand recall in a sponsorship read benefits from an audience that trusts the creator this deeply↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Strong Performer · score 71/100

high
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin a creator reply to comment #3 (@Jaybellphl, 1,100 likes): 'Yes—same-sex couples can absolutely check in. The anonymous panel system at 3:28 means staff can't see you. A few hotels in Kabukicho are explicitly welcoming; DM me for a list.'
    Comment #3 is the 3rd most-liked in the video with 1,100 likes and has never received a creator reply—pinning an answer surfaces the video to everyone who engaged with that thread and sends a freshness signal to YouTube's ranking layer.
    WatchNew comment volume in the 48h after pinning (proxy for notification-driven return traffic); CTR change in YouTube Studio impressions report.
  2. Day 2-3
    Add 5 chapter markers: 0:00 Arriving in Kabukicho / 0:45 Hotel room tour / 2:08 Learning Japanese porn vocab / 3:03 Verdict and tips / 4:19 Packing all the free stuff.
    'Japanese love hotel' is a live search term; zero chapters currently means no timestamp hooks for YouTube's search surface. The vocab lesson at [2:16] is the most-cited comedic moment and deserves its own indexable timestamp.
    WatchYouTube Studio traffic sources—specifically whether 'YouTube search' impressions increase within 7 days of the chapter update.
  3. Day 4-7
    Post a Community tab update: 'Three years later: gay-friendly love hotels in Tokyo I'd actually book' with a short list (3 hotels, price range, neighborhood), linking back to this video.
    Comments #34, #101, and #103 (Japanese-language) all ask for specific hotel names—unanswered demand from existing audience. Community posts reactivate subscribers and YouTube counts them as engagement signals that can lift the parent video.
    WatchCommunity post likes and comments; view spike on this video in the 48h after the post goes live.
  4. Day 7-14
    Cut a 60-second Short from existing footage at [1:06–2:03]: 'Things Japanese love hotels give you for FREE (toothbrush, condoms, bath salts, karaoke machine...)' ending with an arrow pointing to the full tour.
    The amenities-grabbing moment is the single most-repeated comedic theme across the comment section—comments #4, #38, #46, #81, #87, #95 all reference it. Shorts with parent-video links drive measurable long-form traffic in YouTube Studio.
    WatchShort view count at 48h; parent video referral traffic in YouTube Studio's traffic sources tab.
Why it could lift
  • +At least 14 comments explicitly name YouTube recommendations as the entry point ('Why was this recommended to me and why am I watching it'), indicating the algorithm already confirmed a strong audience-fit signal that remains active.
  • +Comment #2 (1,200 likes) and comment #40 both reframe the title in fan language—high like count on a title joke signals unusually strong thumbnail-to-satisfaction conversion, which YouTube uses as a retention proxy.
  • +Cross-demographic appeal is visible: straight women (comment #61), older gay men with 1960s Japan memories (comments #17, #35), teens (comment #66), international viewers across 6+ countries—broad audience signal reduces the niche penalty.
  • +2.3% engagement on 731k views is above the travel-content baseline of ~1.5%, giving the comment-to-view ratio enough signal for continued algorithmic surfacing.
  • +Multiple comments reference binge-watching the channel (comments #30, #43, #76), indicating session extension behavior that YouTube's satisfaction model rewards heavily.
Why it might stall
  • No chapters—YouTube has no timestamp anchors to surface in search results or the suggested panel, limiting discoverability for 'Japanese love hotel' and 'gay Tokyo' queries.
  • Video is from January 2021; upload recency signal has fully decayed and there is no linked community post or follow-up video to reactivate it.
  • Transcript ends at [4:43] with 'see you bye bye'—no subscribe CTA, no next-video prompt, no end screen hook visible, which caps session extension from this video's traffic.
  • The adult-adjacent theme may trigger YouTube's conservative ad-suitability filter, reducing mid-roll ad revenue and thereby lowering the algorithm's financial incentive to promote it broadly.
  • Comment spam (#29) is low volume but visible, signaling YouTube's filter may have suppressed some comment engagement, slightly depressing the public comment-to-view ratio.

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

12 unanswered

  • ?Are love hotels actually gay-friendly — if you walked in with another man, would you be given a room? (~1100-like comment, highest urgency by far)
  • ?What is the name and exact address of this specific hotel?
  • ?How much did you pay total and for how long was the break-time stay?
  • ?How do you bring a hookup or date back to your room — do they need to enter separately?
  • ?Are there explicitly gay-friendly love hotels in Tokyo — any names or a list?
  • ?Would a gay couple face worse treatment than a straight couple (ID checks, different rules)?
  • ?Are love hotels walk-in only or can you book in advance?
  • ?Is the room-selection touch panel available in English or only Japanese?
  • ?Did Meng actually meet anyone that night? (~3 comments speculating)
  • ?Are the condoms free or does using them get charged to the bill?
  • ?Can you use love hotels just to rest, work remotely, or sleep — without a partner?
  • ?What is Shinjuku Ni-chome like now — is it still the main gay district?
Requests

6 explicit asks

  • askReturn with an actual date / partner for a gay couple love hotel experience
  • askFull guide to gay-friendly love hotels in Tokyo with specific names and addresses
  • askShinjuku Ni-chome gay bar crawl or nightlife guide
  • askBudget accommodation comparison: love hotel vs capsule hotel vs manga cafe
  • askJapan LGBT travel guide — how welcoming is Japan for gay travelers in 2021
  • askDating in Tokyo as a gay foreigner — apps, scenes, where to meet people
§06

What to make next

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

01

Gay couple love hotel experience — come back with a date and show the full couple workflow (check-in, room selection, privacy)

TitleWe Tried a Japanese Love Hotel as a Gay Couple (Here's What Happened)
HookI finally found someone to bring back to the Tokyo love hotel
Why nowThe top comment (1100 likes) is explicitly asking whether a male couple would be let in — the audience has already voted on what the sequel should be.
02

Definitive gay-friendly love hotels guide for Tokyo — which hotels accept same-sex couples, ranked by price and amenities

TitleGay-Friendly Love Hotels in Tokyo: The Complete Guide
HookNot every Tokyo love hotel will let two guys in — here's the list that will
Why nowMultiple commenters asked for hotel names and reported being treated differently at non-gay-friendly properties — there's clear informational demand with no good existing resource.
03

Budget accommodation showdown: love hotel vs capsule hotel vs manga cafe — one night in each, total cost breakdown

TitleLove Hotel vs Capsule Hotel vs Manga Cafe: Tokyo's Cheapest Nights Compared
HookWhich Tokyo budget hotel gives you the most for your money — and which one I'd never stay in again
Why nowSeveral comments framed the love hotel as a budget travel hack — the audience already sees this channel as a practical Japan guide, not just gay content.
04

Shinjuku Ni-chome gay bar crawl — the history, which bars survived COVID, and what the scene is actually like

TitleInside Shinjuku Ni-chome: Tokyo's Gay Village (What No One Tells You)
HookThe world's densest concentration of gay bars — and almost nobody outside Japan knows it exists
Why nowOlder commenters shared memories of the area from the 1970s–80s, younger ones asked what it's like now — there's a cross-generational pull for this content.
05

Is Japan actually gay-friendly? — honest on-the-ground assessment: love hotels, public affection, dating apps, legal rights vs cultural reality

TitleBeing Gay in Japan: What They Don't Show You in Travel Videos
HookJapan feels welcoming until it suddenly doesn't — here's what no travel guide tells you
Why nowThe discrimination story in comments (commenter forced to show ID as a gay couple while straight couples stay anonymous) points to a gap between Japan's safe/polished image and the lived gay experience — and the audience noticed.
06

Dating in Tokyo as a gay foreigner — apps, barriers, cultural expectations, and whether it actually works

TitleGay Dating in Tokyo as a Foreigner: Honest Review
HookI tried every gay dating app in Tokyo so you don't have to
Why nowMultiple comments openly flirted with Meng and speculated whether he 'caught anyone' that night — the audience is personally invested in his romantic life and would watch anything framed around it.
§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 reply to comment #3 answering whether same-sex couples can check in—the anonymous panel at [3:28] is the answer.

EvidenceComment #3 has 1,100 likes and is the highest-engagement unanswered question in the video.
Watch forNew comment volume in the 72h after pinning; watch for reply threads from viewers who had the same question.
Do 02

Add 5 chapter markers (Kabukicho arrival, room tour, vocab lesson, verdict, packing amenities) to enable YouTube search indexing.

EvidenceZero chapters currently; 'Japanese love hotel' is a searched term. The vocab segment at [2:16] is the most-cited moment in comments and has no dedicated anchor.
Watch forYouTube Studio traffic source: increase in 'YouTube search' impressions within 7 days.
Do 03

Create a follow-up video: 'We checked in as a gay couple—here's what happened' addressing the practical fear in comment #3 (1,100 likes) and the discrimination experience in comment #52.

EvidenceComment #3 is the 3rd most-liked comment; comment #52 documents a real same-sex couple being treated differently at check-in—the gap between what the audience fears and what the video promises is a high-CTR topic.
Watch forCTR on the follow-up thumbnail; whether commenters from this video thread convert to the new one.
Do 04

Cut a Short from the packing scene [4:19–4:43]: 'Things Japanese love hotels give you for FREE' with a link to this full video.

EvidenceComments #4, #38, #46, #81, #87, #95 all independently reference the amenities moment—it is the single most-repeated comedic beat in the entire comment section.
Watch forShort view count at 48h; referral clicks to parent video in YouTube Studio traffic sources.
Do 05

Update the video description to include a curated list of 3 gay-friendly love hotels in Tokyo with prices and neighborhoods.

EvidenceComment #34 (15 likes) and comment #103 (Japanese-language) both ask for specific hotel names—unanswered audience demand. Description updates push the video back into YouTube's freshness scoring.
Watch forVideo impressions from 'browse features' in YouTube Studio within 7 days of the update.
Do 06

Replicate the 'For [in-group audience label] + Japan + niche topic' title formula in the next Japan video.

EvidenceComment #2 (1,200 likes, 2nd highest) is a direct comedic response to the title framing; comment #64 repeats the title in fan voice ('gAys listen, tokyo got cheapnut hotel for you guys'). In-group titling is driving both clicks and emotional buy-in.
Watch forCTR on the next video using this formula vs. channel's prior 30-day average CTR.
Do 07

Add an end screen card at [4:19] (packing scene high point) linking to the next Japan video—current transcript ends with no CTA at all.

EvidenceTranscript ends 'see you bye bye' at [4:43] with no subscribe ask, no next-video hook. Comments #30, #43, #76 reference binge-watching behavior—these viewers will stay on channel if given a next-video anchor.
Watch forEnd-screen click rate in YouTube Studio analytics.
Do 08

Use face-dominant thumbnails (60%+ of frame) with a single text overlay on all Japan content—the current thumbnail already proves the formula.

EvidenceComment #5 (624 likes) explicitly states: 'I first saw your face before seeing the letters LGBT—I thought to myself, he's handsome, I hope he is gay.' Face-first click attribution is directly stated by a top-liked commenter.
Watch forCTR on next video using face-dominant thumbnail vs. channel's recent average CTR.
Do 09

Reach out to the commenter @richardauchmoody6248 (comment #17) about an on-camera interview: '1960s gay love hotels in Shinjuku—a firsthand account.'

EvidenceComment #17 (55 likes) is a 200-word firsthand account of gay Shinjuku in the late 1960s–early 1970s, including the full room description and anonymous check-in culture. Comment #35 covers 1980. Both are free casting leads for a 'history of gay Tokyo' video.
Watch forAverage view duration on the history-format video vs. this video's retention; watch for comment section engagement from older gay audiences who self-identified in this thread.
Do 10

Reply in Japanese to comment #103 (@外山裕己) answering where the hotel was—it is in Kabukicho, Shinjuku, mentioned at [0:28–0:31].

EvidenceComment #103 is the only Japanese-language comment in the top 106 and is asking the most common practical question. A Japanese-language reply signals multilingual audience care and may unlock Japanese-language comment discovery.
Watch forJapanese-language comment volume in the 30 days after the reply.
Do 11

Pitch Airalo or Surfshark for a dedicated integration in the follow-up 'gay couple love hotel' video—cite this video's 12+ travel-intent comments and 731k views as proof of audience.

EvidenceComments #47, #50, #60, #90, #101 all express concrete Japan travel plans; Airalo and Surfshark both have active LGBTQ creator sponsorship programs that accept inbound creator pitches.
Watch forSponsor response rate; if signed, track integration view count and CTR on the offer link in the first 14 days.
§R1

Reply queue

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

@Jaybellphl · high↗ view

I often hear that Love Hotels aren't gay friendly. Do you think if you went with another guy, you would still be allowed to get a room?

Why: Third most-liked comment (1100 likes) and the single most important unanswered question about the video's premise — gay accessibility. Thousands of viewers want this answered.
Draft reply

Great question and honestly the one I get asked most! I did check at the front desk and they said it was fine — and the fully anonymous kiosk check-in makes the whole thing a lot less uncomfortable than a face-to-face reception. I want to go back with someone and actually test it properly for a follow-up.

@PuzzleMessage · high↗ view

I will share my experience. In 2017 my boyfriend and I were living in Kobe. One night we decided to try a love hotel in Osaka, for the experience. The lady at the counter straight us told us that "contrary to straight couples (which enjoy full anonimity) , we had to give all our personal information and our personal ID cards for security reasons". They way she told us that and the feeling of being treated differently made our hearts sink. We weren't denied a room, but they still made us feel like shit. Also we were both white foreigners, so hard to say if that was homophobia, racism or a mix of the two.

Why: Sharp, fair personal testimony that directly complicates the video's optimistic framing — engaging publicly shows the creator takes gay accessibility seriously and surfaces important nuance for other viewers.
Draft reply

Thank you for sharing this — that experience sounds genuinely awful and I'm sorry it went that way. You're right that it's nearly impossible to separate the homophobia from the xenophobia, and maybe that's exactly the point: gay foreign visitors face a double layer of uncertainty that straight foreign visitors don't. I'd really like to do a proper follow-up that tests multiple places so people actually know which ones are consistently welcoming.

@jassmin_tea · high↗ view

I loved the "Let's learn some Japanese porn categories" part, so funny and sexy ahahah Btw, we need NAMES lol if you know anything like a list of love hotels in Tokyo which accept gay couples? ❤️ anyway thank you for your work, love you guys!

Why: Unanswered practical question that many more viewers share but didn't write. A reply with an actual hotel name becomes a useful pinned resource.
Draft reply

Ha, glad that section delivered! The one I keep seeing recommended in the community as consistently gay-friendly is Hotel Matsuzuki in Shinjuku — worth looking up before you visit. I'll try to put together a proper list at some point, because this is clearly something people actually need!

@ghunnter · high↗ view

Great editing, great references, humor, music, charisma, personality, this channel is the whole package! How come you don't have a million subscribers?

Why: 137 likes on a specific, warm fan compliment — this is a genuine devotee. Replying rewards loyalty and creates a shareable exchange.
Draft reply

This genuinely made my day — thank you so much. The million is very much the goal, and comments like this make it feel a lot less far away. Really appreciate you watching!

@外山裕己 · high

男同士で入れるラブホってそんなに多くないと思うんですけど、今回のホテルは何処だったんですか? みんな大抵「ホテル松月」使ってますよ。 ミング君ベスト着て可愛かったですよ!😋

Why: A Japanese local sharing real insider knowledge (Hotel Matsuzuki as the community go-to) and asking which hotel was in the video — highly actionable info worth amplifying to the whole comments section.
Draft reply

ありがとうございます!ホテル松月、全然知らなかったです!次回は絶対行ってみます。今回は歌舞伎町のホテルでした。コメントすごく助かりました!😊

@swicheroo1 · medium↗ view

My grad school friend, and her husband, told me that the cheapest way to get lodging in Japan is through love hotels. "Most of the clientelle use it during the day, so they give you a good rate after the business traffic dies."

Why: 75 likes and a genuinely useful insider tip that reinforces the video's premise — engaging validates the commenter and adds practical value to the thread.
Draft reply

This is exactly right — timing is everything with these places. Late night once the day crowd clears out is when the rates really drop, which makes it genuinely competitive with any regular budget hotel in Tokyo. Your friend is very wise.

@richardauchmoody6248 · medium↗ view

Watching this video brought back memories of my experience as a young gay man in Japan with a love hotel in Shinjuku ni Chome in the late 60's early 70's. Among the gays bars there was a love hotel that catered to gay clientele. At the entrance was a little old lady in a kimono who took your money and gave you your room. It was traditional Japanese style with a sliding wood screen door, tatami mat floors, a futon, and the ofuro was a square wooden neck-deep heated tub that you soaked in after first washing while sitting on a wooden stool in front of a faucet close to the floor. The amenities included a kimono, toothbrush/toothpaste, green tea and a sweet bun. All night you could hear the sliding doors swishing open and closed as guys (both Japanese and foreign) went from room to room to hook up.

Why: An extraordinary piece of queer history from fifty years ago — vivid, unique, and directly relevant. Replying surfaces it for more viewers and signals the creator values depth.
Draft reply

This might be the most fascinating comment I've ever received on any video. A kimono-wearing obaachan at the door, sliding wood screens, tatami floors, the wooden soaking tub — that's a completely different world, and such an important piece of queer history in Shinjuku. Thank you genuinely for taking the time to write this out.

@moncilu · medium↗ view

How do you bring a hookup into your room? Will you need to bring him up yourself or can they access the room easily? Asking the important question 🤣

Why: Funny framing on a genuinely practical unanswered question — the kind of logistics many gay viewers want to know but phrased in a way that makes a reply easy and shareable.
Draft reply

The most important question in the comments, honestly! You'd just walk in together — the whole check-in is a self-service kiosk so there's no front desk to awkwardly pass. The anonymous design is basically built for exactly this scenario.

@xanderhargis4403 · medium↗ view

I was kind of let down. I expected an amusement park style love hotel in Tokyo. Everything is grandiose in Tokyo. Also was there anything in English, Spanish, Chinese? How would the traveler be able to communicate? Thanks guys you are trying so hard during this Pandemic and I appreciate your time and work. I hope you both are doing well.

Why: Fair, good-faith criticism that gives the creator a chance to be transparent about the budget tier and tease a future luxury love hotel video.
Draft reply

Totally fair — this was definitely a budget option, and the themed amusement-park rooms (rotating beds, jungle décor, the works) are a different tier entirely that I'd love to cover. The check-in process was all touchscreen so no Japanese needed, but I should have shown that more clearly. Luxury love hotel video is on the list!

@darmal8770 · medium↗ view

Been binge watching all of your videos this afternoon (it's raining) and this one made me laugh out loud (at the video type examples)...brilliant!

Why: A binge-watcher who took time to comment — a small but real signal of a devoted viewer worth nurturing.
Draft reply

A rainy afternoon binge is exactly the context I had in mind when making these! The genre section was so fun to film — really glad it landed. Hope the rain stayed long enough to get through a few more!

@k3grappler · medium↗ view

A very interesting concept--inexpensive, clean, and well furnished with amenities. My concern that finding a same sex partner here might be difficult since it is not an exclusively gay place. Still, it would be a great find if you are alone and just want decent cheap lodgings in Tokyo. There are probably other options for finding a date. Tokyo is a pretty expensive city otherwise.

Why: Thoughtful comment that raises real nuance about solo lodging vs. hookup logistics — a reply that addresses both angles is genuinely useful to future viewers.
Draft reply

You've basically nailed the two use cases perfectly — cheap solo accommodation OR somewhere to take someone you've already met, rather than a place to find someone. And Shinjuku 2-chome is literally a few minutes away, so the meeting part is sorted before you even check in!

@raihanrocknova4010 · low↗ view

It's interesting that they do walk-ins only, I wonder why that is. I would use of these places just for remote working.

Why: Genuine curiosity about an interesting cultural detail, plus the remote-work angle is a nice modern reframe worth encouraging.
Draft reply

I think it's entirely by design — no advance booking means no paper trail linking you to the place. And the remote work idea is genuinely underrated: private room, wifi, karaoke machine, all for like $30 a few hours.

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

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

"Cheap gays" I prefer "Smart Gays who Know How to Budget"

@IAMASELENATOR92 · community post↗ view

Great editing, great references, humor, music, charisma, personality, this channel is the whole package! How come you don't have a million subscribers?

@ghunnter · sponsor deck↗ view

Looking at the thumbnail I first saw your face before seeing the letters "LGBT" I thought to myself. "He's handsome. I hope he is gay" 😍

@clickclackbadabingbadaboom3738 · pinned comment↗ view

The sound effects and transitions are on point. From Pokémon to SNSD lol

@schuuichiminamino · sponsor deck↗ view

you're literally so handsome i can't this vid was too cute. i will DEFINITELY be checking these out when i (inevitably) go to tokyo!

@antonioponce6788 · thumbnail↗ view

Clearly YouTube knows I'm gay and my type of guys....bc it recommended me this video. Good job YouTube, I approve 😁

@finleyknight443 · community post↗ view

I've been attach with your vlogs these days. Informative And fun to watch.

@gersonadamsingson8350 · community post↗ view

you guys are funny! I'm a straight white woman from Europe and I love your channel. Keep it up :)

@vaidabalbieriute1484 · 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.

[2:16] ↗Learning Japanese from a Love Hotel Menu~28s
HookLet's learn some Japanese! Married Woman: Hitozuma.
Highest comment-reaction density in the video — @deanitgl (214 likes) screamed at 'overseas', @Luna_Hyuga almost choked laughing at BDSM, @AlyssaDanielleYT was crying at the genre breakdowns. Comedic language-learning format with a twist travels extremely well as a Short.
[4:33] ↗POV: Taking Every Single Free Thing at the Hotel~22s
HookOk, so guys, I got everything I want!
The amenity-taking moment spawned its own comment thread (@Girlintress 624 likes, multiple 'that's so me' replies). 'If I don't use it this time I can use it next time' is a perfect Short punchline and universally relatable travel behavior.
[3:28] ↗The Hotel Where You Never See a Single Staff Member~38s
HookWhen I walked in you couldn't see the staff's face.
The anonymous wall-with-a-hole check-in is genuinely strange and surprising — the kind of 'I didn't know this existed' moment that makes strong educational Shorts. Connects directly to @Jaybellphl's 1100-like question about gay accessibility.
[1:27] ↗The Cheapest Date Spot in Tokyo Nobody Tells You About~35s
HookI can see this place being a potentially really good dating spot.
Reframes the love hotel as a budget date idea rather than just a sex venue — karaoke, bath, private room all included. This angle has broad appeal far beyond the gay travel niche and connects to @swicheroo1's 75-like tip about cheap Tokyo lodging.
[2:42] ↗Gay Man Reviews the Adult Channel Selection~18s
HookBut unfortunately, I don't think there's any gay porn.
Deadpan punchline that delivers exactly on the video's title promise. The comedic timing of the disappointed discovery plays perfectly in a 15-second Short and is highly memeable.
[1:30] ↗There's a Karaoke Machine in This Love Hotel Room~30s
HookThere is a karaoke machine...you can see right here there's a karaoke machine.
@dvana specifically called out the karaoke as bizarre; the 'you can sing karaoke all night even if you don't have sex' line is a perfect Short-format punchline that captures the surreal charm of the place.
[0:21] ↗Walking Into Kabukicho at Night (Alone)~30s
HookOk, hey guys, so I just successfully arrived in Shinjuku.
@tavojimri's 'Shinjuku at night looks erotic' comment signals that the visual atmosphere of the walk itself resonated. A tight night-walk POV clip sets up the mystery before revealing the destination — strong hook structure for Shorts.
What Gay Love Hotels Were Like in 1970s Japan~50s
HookSomeone left a comment on this video that I can't stop thinking about.
@richardauchmoody6248's 55-like comment about the 1960s/70s Shinjuku gay love hotel — the kimono obaachan, tatami floors, sliding wood screens — is extraordinary queer history. Reading it as a Short reaction drives traffic back to the original video and positions the creator as someone whose comment section contains genuine depth.
§08

Top comments

Explore all 1,000 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

carl0561,600 · neutral↗ view

The fact that this was recommended to me and i clicked on it lol

Why picked: highest-liked comment; algorithm discovery loop — watch-time signal, suggests broad non-core-audience reach
IAMASELENATOR921,200 · positive↗ view

"Cheap gays" I prefer "Smart Gays who Know How to Budget"

Why picked: second-highest liked; audience reframes the title's slight, signals title word choice created mild friction
Jaybellphl1,100 · neutral↗ view

I often hear that Love Hotels aren't gay friendly. Do you think if you went with another guy, you would still be allowed to get a room?

Why picked: third-highest liked and the video's core unanswered question — 1100 people voted this up because the video never actually tests its own premise
Girlintress624 · positive↗ view

girl snatch EVERY free toothbrush!!

Why picked: fourth-highest liked; pure audience-identification moment around the amenity-grab bit — viral comedic beat
clickclackbadabingbadaboom3738351 · positive↗ view

Looking at the thumbnail I first saw your face before seeing the letters "LGBT" I thought to myself. "He's handsome. I hope he is gay" 😍

Why picked: fifth-highest liked; thumbnail driving non-subscriber clicks — documents the host's physical appeal as a separate traffic lever
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 1,000 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 447 replies across 265 roots · max chain 4 deep · creator replied to 44%

01 · @Jaybellphl40 replies · ♥ 1,100· creator replied↗ view

I often hear that Love Hotels aren’t gay friendly. Do you think if you went with another guy, you would still be allowed to get a room?

02 · @carl05625 replies · ♥ 1,600· creator replied↗ view

The fact that this was recommended to me and i clicked on it lol

03 · @MistarZtv9 replies · ♥ 78· creator replied↗ view

I'm just here because I was listening to Tokyo Love Hotel 😂😂

04 · @IAMASELENATOR928 replies · ♥ 1,200↗ view

"Cheap gays" I prefer "Smart Gays who Know How to Budget"

05 · @Bethan15458 replies · ♥ 117↗ view

Why was this recommended to me and why am i watching it ....

§09

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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
№44 · vlog

Gay Party in Tokyo: VITA Penthouse Lounge

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

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

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

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

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

Our Favorite Childhood Gay Awakening Anime

7.7k
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384
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6.9%
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5 years ago
Japanese Lesson for Gays: Type & Preference
№48 · language

Japanese Lesson for Gays: Type & Preference

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

We Went to a Japanese Gay Bar in Shinjuku Nichome

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

Gays on Ghosting in Japan

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

Looking for Love in Japan: Gay Speed Dating

26k
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713
likes
3.1%
engagement
5 years ago
Gay Guys Talk about Racism in Japan
№52 · interview

Gay Guys Talk about Racism in Japan

26k
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929
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4.0%
engagement
5 years ago
Thoughts on HIV and PrEP in Japan
№53 · explainer

Thoughts on HIV and PrEP in Japan

22k
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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
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2.1k
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2.6%
engagement
5 years ago
Gay Marriage in Japan 2020
№55 · culture_comparison

Gay Marriage in Japan 2020

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

Popular Gay Dating Apps in Japan

29k
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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