E10 - So Many Norms Source: Crunchyroll Translator: Editor: Timer: QC: (Please feel free to edit the speaker names if incomplete or inaccurate. Names are handled on a best-effort basis depending on the info on the source file. Dialogue is left as is.) SIGN    °     D     i     s     c     l     a     i     m     e     r SIGN    Many scenes in this program will appear to present a biased view of the people of Nagoya and the surrounding region. Please bear in mind that these scenes are strictly the opinions of the characters and may not represent reality, and enjoy it as a program filled with love for Nagoya. [00:02] Tsuji     Milady, it is time to leave. SIGN    "So Many Norms" [00:05] Serura     There's Narita a day I don't     wish I wasn't a Hills girl! [00:07] Tsuji     I see. [00:08] Serura     Roppongi Hills has fancy apartments,     a movie theater, and clothing stores! SIGN    Cinema     Mall     Food [00:12] Serura     I'd never have to go outside! [00:14] Tsuji     Milady, "Roppongi Hills" is the     name of an entire complex. [00:17] Tsuji     It is not a single building. [00:19] Tsuji     It is not a single building. [00:21] Tsuji     It is not a single building. SIGN    Yatoga SIGN    "Roppongi Hills" is not the     name of a building, but the     name given to a complex     housing many facilities,      including a 238m office     skyscraper, apartments,     hotels, a TV station,     commercial buildings, and      more. Many who live outside     of Tokyo fall into this trap! [00:23] Toshika     My name is Jin Toshika. [00:25] Toshika     I moved to this remote area, Nagoya, in the     spring of my first year of high school. [00:29] Toshika     Oh, now I'm at a convenience store     to buy something I can eat for lunch later! [00:33] Toshika     What is this?! SIGN    Shigure [00:34] Toshika     Shigure?! [00:35] Toshika     Is this meant to be an offering     to some death god SIGN    Yatoga SIGN    Shigureni is a type of     preserves made by     simmering shelled clams or     other shellfish with ginger.     It originated as a specialty of     Kuwana, Mie, where it is     traditionally made with     orient clams, and it spread to     the rest of Japan from there. [00:37] Toshika     that connects this world     with the afterlife?! [00:39] Toshika     Please spare my life... [00:40] Lady     Ma'am?! [00:41] Rika     Shonai-sensei, you brought     gyoza in your bento? [00:43] Rara     Yeah, though it's frozen gyoza     since I was short on time. [00:46] Rara     In Shizuoka, gyoza isn't complete     without boiled bean sprouts. SIGN    Nom Nom [00:50] Rika     Oh, speaking of... SIGN    With Lots      of Veggies [00:51] Rika     I had Utsunomiya gyoza when I went     to Tochigi, and it was super good! [00:56] Rara     I... see... SIGN    Yatoga SIGN    The cities of Hamamatsu,     Shizuoka, and Utsunomiya,     Tochigi, are rivals for the     highest gyoza consumption in     Japan. Hamamatsu held first     place for three years starting     in 2014, but it lost its throne     in 2017. The subject is a land     mine for Rara-chan! [00:57] Rika     Wait, Shonai-sensei, what... why?! [01:00] Kei     What're you drinking there, Kii-chan? [01:02] Kiina     Wataboku Coffee Milk.     It's a staple in Saitama. SIGN    Made with 90% Milk          Wataboku     Coffee Milk [01:05] Kei     A staple, huh? [01:06] Kei     I guess our staple in Chiba     would be Bakuga Jelly. SIGN    Bakuga Jelly [01:08] Kei     It's cocoa-flavored, and it's      really sweet and tasty. [01:10] Kei     What about you, Shou-chan? [01:12] Kei     Do you get shumai in school     lunches in Yokohama? [01:14] Shou     First of all, it's not "shumai."     It's "siu mai." SIGN    Shumai     Siu Mai [01:17] Shou     People in Kanagawa don't     eat a lot of siu mai, [01:19] Shou     though I do like it. [01:20] Kei     So nitpicky... [01:21] Shou     Also, very few public middle schools in      Kanagawa used to offer school lunches. SIGN    Yatoga SIGN    Every year, more and more     public middle schools in     Kanagawa offer school lunches,     many of them backing the     provision as a child support     program. Since different regions     offer different foods, such as     Wataboku and Bakuga Jelly,     future talks about school lunches     should prove quite interesting. [01:25] Shou     They thought lunches prepared     for children by their guardians, [01:29] Shou     who knew them well, were better. [01:30] Kei     Uh-huh. That's nice. [01:32] Shou     What is?! [01:32] Shiharu     Ugh! This is so irritatin'! [01:34] Nanaho     What's wrong? [01:35] Shiharu     I'm chattin' with Mona-nee right now, [01:37] Shiharu     but when I type "ya de," this happens! SIGN    "In the shop" [01:38] Nanaho     So? [01:39] Shiharu     It's so annoyin' when it autocorrects     me to somethin' normal! [01:42] Nanaho     You're always so energetic, Shiharu-chan. [01:44] Nanaho     Why don't ya go for a little run? [01:46] Shiharu     Huh? Why? SIGN    Yatoga SIGN    Other common autocorrects     of the Osaka dialect include     "honma ni" -> "in the room."     Also, "You're so energetic.     Why don't ya go for a run?"     really means "You're making     too much noise. Go away."     Who knows if that should be     considered ambiguous or     tactful? The meaning of any     word depends on who's     saying it. [01:48] Yanna     Sharing contact is important! Gyutora! [01:50] Jin     What song is that? SIGN    Sharing Contact Is Important SIGN    Gyutora [01:51] Yanna     The jingle for Gyutora,     a supermarket in southern Mie. [01:54] Jin     Seems like there are a lot of local     supermarkets in the country. [01:56] Jin     What about Gifu? [01:57] Mai     I don't think Gifu has a local supermarket. [01:59] Mai     They're almost all Valor. [02:00] Jin     Barlow? [02:01] Mai     Not Barlow! Valor! They're everywhere! [02:04] Yato     Ain't no way ya don't know Valor! [02:06] Yanna     It's in Mie, too. [02:07] Rara     Shizuoka also has them. [02:08] Mai     You drink Valor milk, don't you? [02:10] Jin     A drink I don't know     from a store I don't know! [02:12] Mai     Senpai, it's the local supermarket's     closeness to the region [02:15] Mai     that makes it the symbol of that region. [02:17] Yato     "Love your hometown" is Yoshizuya's slogan! [02:20] Jin     I see. [02:20] Yato     Nagoya has Nafco, Yamanaka,     Apita, Piago, and Kanesue! [02:24] Jin     How many local supermarkets do you need?! [02:25] Yato     There're a bunch more, too! [02:27] Na     The things that are the norm in each region [02:29] Na     are the norm to those     who live in that region. [02:31] Na     Even for people throughout Japan, [02:33] Na     things that are the norm to Japanese     people are just the norm to them. [02:36] Na     Cultural festivals, for example. [02:37] Na     Every student in Japan takes part in them,     but they're rare elsewhere in the world. [02:41] Na     But Japanese people don't know that.     They just see it as the norm. [02:45] Na     Learn things you don't know. [02:46] Na     The moment we realize that what we     consider the norm isn't the norm, [02:48] Na     perhaps that is when humans     and cultures truly come together. SIGN    Leave This Impure World SIGN    Seek Rebirth in the Pure Land SIGN    Matsudaira Motoyasu SIGN    Dagane High School     Dagane Festival [02:52] Teppei     Senpai, what are you looking at? [02:55] Jandara     Teppei-kun, are you free this weekend? [02:58] Teppei     Huh?!