Categories
Anime

Tokyo Magnitude 8.0

I have almost finished watching Tokyo Magnitude 8.0, a 11 episode anime series released in 2009. It is a fiction series based in what could happen in Tokyo if there was a magnitude 8.0 earthquake in Tokyo bay.

The main characters of the series are two siblings that are enjoying a free day in Odaiba visiting a robots exhibition in Miraikan museum. When they go out of the museum the little brother goes to the bathroom, and his sister waits outside. That moment is when the magnitude 8.0 earthquake hits Tokyo bay. From that moment, a long way to walk back home awaits them to re-encounter with their parents (if they are alive).

The plot of the series is quite repetitive, sometimes even boring, but it is quite interesting to notice the similarities in a fiction series compared to what happened last month in Tokyo under a magnitude 9.0 earthquake (but with the epicenter very far away).

Some things that happen in the anime that also happened in Tokyo on the 11th of March:

  • People go back home walking after the earthquake (a third of the people in Tokyo came back home walking on the 11th of March)
  • Many people can’t get home before the night falls (a fifth of the people in Tokyo couldn’t get back home on the 11th of March)
  • Mobile phone networks stop working (in the series, the networks in Tokyo don’t work for several days because the magnitude of the earthquake is much greater. On the 11th of March we were around 10-15 hours without cell phone coverage)
  • Those affected use 1seg television on their cell phones to get information. Digital television for Japanese cell phones works even though there is no cell phone coverage. (On the 11th of March my colleagues and I got the news that there was a tsunami alert thanks to 1seg television on a cell phone)
  • People get together in assigned areas for shelter. (On the 11th of March, in Tokyo some of us were waiting for hours in “secure” areas to avoid the strongest aftershocks, others spent the night in shelters, schools and stadiums. In Tohoku area, a month and a half after the earthquake and tsunami there are still 100,000 people living in areas prepared by the government)
  • Neverending aftershocks (after a month and a half we are still experiencing many aftershocks)

Some things that were different in the anime Tokyo Magnitude 8.0 from the “real earthquake”

Categories
Technology

Windows 95 and MS-DOS 6.2 on sale in Akihabara

Seen at a hidden shop in Akihabara.

Windows 95 and MS-DOS 6.2 in Japan

Categories
History

Tower similar to Tokyo Sky Tree in a 19th century woodblock print

In this ukiyo-e woodblock print by Kuniyoshi Utagawa a mysterious structure can be seen in the horizon whose silhouette is very similar to the Tokyo Sky Tree, which is currently under construction.

Tokyo Sky Tree Kuniyoshi Utagawa
Woodblock print created by Kuniyoshi Utagawa in 1831.

Finished Tokyo Sky Tree
Tokyo Sky Tree as it will look when its construction is finished at the end of this year. It will be 634 meters tall, being the second highest man-made structure in the world.

Several historians believe that the tower portrayed in the woodblock print by Kuniyoshi Utagawa didn’t really exist, it was a creative product of the artist imagination. It turns out that in that time it was forbidden to build any structure taller than Edo castle; moreover this woodblock print is the only proof of the “supposed existence” of that tower.

Did Kuniyoshi Utagawa predict the construction of Tokyo Sky Tree almost 200 years ago?

Source: Mainichi.