Episode 250: A Japan-isode, featuring Mr. Dustin Travis White
Description
Hey! It's a little end of year treat: Mr. Dustin Travis White joins Amanda to talk about the two weeks they spent together in Japan, traveling from Nagoya to Fukuoka to Beppu to Tokyo. They touch on all kinds of things in this episode:
- How and why one can hear more Christmas music in one month in Japan than they have heard in their entire adult life
- What is Kentucky Christmas?
- Physical media and "extinct" media are still more relevant than ever in Japan: magazines, books, cassettes, cds, and more
- Secondhand shopping in Japan
- Finding vegetarian and gluten free food in Japan
- How to be thrifty while 6000 miles away from home
- How not to flood a hotel room in Fukuoka
- Weird dudes at the public foot bath
- Tourist traps are a global experience
- Yes, you CAN do laundry while you're traveling
And so much more!
Here's a guide to the places mentioned in this conversation:
Nagoya
Hotel Resol Nagoya
Stiff Slack (incredible record store and venue)
Aichi Art Triennale
Matsuzakaya Art Museum (museum in a department store)
Lee Jeans (Japan)
Fukuoka
Hello Kitty Shinkansen
Motorpool Records
The Lively Fukuoka (hotel)
With The Style Fukuoka (fancy hotel)
Sonu Sonu (vegan restaurant with great burgers and taco rice)
Evah Macrobiotic Vegan Deli (multiple locations in Fukuoka, including Hakata Station)
BOOKOFF
Beppu
Amanek Yula-Re Beppu (hotel that Amanda has stayed in multiple times)
Taco Nargo (Dustin's favorite meal)
Showa museum in Yufuin (you can take a city bus from Beppu Station to get there and the ride is epic)
Beppu Jigoku ("Hells of Beppu")
Tokyo
Hotel Graphy Nezu (Amanda and Dustin always stay here in Tokyo)
Extinct Media Museum
Parco (Shibuya)
Masaka Vegan Izakaya
2foods (Amanda's favorite meal...vegan!)
Loft
BEAMS
T's tantan (vegan ramen and curry, locations around Tokyo)
Punk Doily (Australian hand pies with vegan options)
AND ALSO...
Kentucky Fried Chicken Christmas (1981) Japanese Commercial
KFC Christmas Japan All Commercials
Yamanote Line Music
Amanda's "potage maker" (please note that the price on this website is WAY higher than the price in Japan)
"Jeans Town" Okayama
Yamato
Get your Clotheshorse merch here: https://clotheshorsepodcast.com/shop/
If you want to share your opinion/additional thoughts on the subjects we cover in each episode, feel free to email, whether it’s a typed out message or an audio recording: amanda@clotheshorse.world
Did you enjoy this episode? Consider "buying me a coffee" via Ko-fi: ko-fi.com/clotheshorse
Clotheshorse is brought to you with support from the following sustainable small businesses:
Slow Fashion Academy is a size-inclusive sewing and patternmaking studio based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Designer and fashion professor Ruby Gertz teaches workshops for hobbyists and aspiring designers, so that anyone can learn the foundational skills of making, mending, and altering their own clothes. Ruby also provides professional design and patternmaking services to emerging slow fashion brands, and occasionally takes commissions for custom garments and costume pieces. She has also released several PDF sewing patterns for original designs under her brands Spokes & Stitches, and Starling Petite Plus. Check the schedule for upcoming workshops, download PDF sewing patterns, and learn about additional sewing and design services at www.slowfashion.academy.
The Pewter Thimble Is there a little bit of Italy in your soul? Are you an enthusiast of pre-loved decor and accessories? Bring vintage Italian style — and history — into your space with The Pewter Thimble (@thepewterthimble). We source useful and beautiful things, and mend them where needed. We also find gorgeous illustrations, and make them print-worthy. Tarot cards, tea towels and handpicked treasures, available to you from the comfort of your own home. Responsibly sourced from across Rome, lovingly renewed by fairly paid artists and artisans, with something for every budget. Discover more at thepewterthimble.com
Deco Denim is a startup based out of San Francisco, selling clothing and accessories that are sustainable, gender fluid, size inclusive and high quality--made to last for years to come. Deco Denim is trying to change the way you think about buying clothes. Founder Sarah Mattes wants to empower people to ask important questions like, “Where was this made? Was this garment made ethically? Is this fabric made of plastic? Can this garment be upcycled and if not, can it be recycled?” Signup at decodenim.com to receive $20 off your first purchase. They promise not to spam you and send out no more than 3 emails a month, with 2 of them surrounding education or a personal note from the Founder. Find them on Instagram as @deco.denim.
Vagabond Vintage DTLV is a vinta...























