Thursday 11 September 2014

Woman ninja warrior

Women of Ninja Warrior



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Women of Ninja Warrior is an edited version of KUNOICHI . created and shown by in the United States. Women of Ninja Warrior is usually drastically reduced in time and in content, and many errors in translation occur.



Format Edit



Like Ninja Warrior. each KUNOICHI tournament is split into several 30-minute episodes. The tournaments range from 2 to 4 episodes in length. The Japanese commentary is subtitled, although this is often incorrect or heavily stylized. Voice actor Dave Wittenberg provides introductions and analysis.



The running order of the competitors, which is usually direct in the original TBS broadcast, is shuffled around to give a wider range of results per episode. Episodes featuring the second and third stages usually begin with the competitor who failed the earliest, and the third stage usually ends with the competitor who got the furthest.



Distribution Edit



The Women of Ninja Warrior format is shown in many different countries, including the United Kingdom, France, Croatia. Germany, Greece, New Zealand, Italy, Finland, Malaysia, Spain, Serbia, Slovakia, Denmark, Singapore, Indonesia, Turkey, and South Africa.



Wednesday, January 16, 2008



Women of Ninja Warrior



100 Women Enter, 1 Woman Leaves



I am totally obsessed with the Japanese reality TV show Kuniochi. which has been rebranded in the U. S. as Women of Ninja Warrior and is screened exclusively on cable TV's G4 channel. I came across this athletic competition - in which female contestants try to survive a challenging obstacle course so they can be crowned Queen of Ninja Warrior - totally by accident last week during a four-hour weekend marathon, and now I can't get enough of each weekday's one-hour broadcast between 8:30 and 9:30 EST.



The show is filmed at "Mount Midoriyama," a large outdoor field that is part of TBS-TV's "Midoriyama Studio (city)" in Aoba-ku, Yokohama, Japan, where only family and friends of the contestants are allowed to be spectators. The contest is made up of three preliminary stages and a final stage (added in the third season) that involves climbing a steel tower in roughly half a minute. Along the way are increasingly difficult obstacles with such colorful names as Dancing Stones, Barrel Roll, Falling Pole, Windmill Cross, Domino Hill, Pendulum Bridge, Angle Run, Hop Rocket, Swinging Beams, Flying Pillar, Spinning Logs, Tornado Run, Super Jump, Spinning Slopes, Slippery Slide, Escape Ladder, and the sinister-sounding Unforgiving Wall.



The Domino Hill obstacle from WOMEN OF NINJA WARRIOR



Kunoichi / Women of Ninja Warrior is an offshoot of the popular Sasuke / Ninja Warrior show, which features male athletes competing in a similar obstacle course challenge. Call me sexist, but I can't dig watching the guys compete, American Gladiators style. There are too many of those type shows on American reality TV anyway and it just feels a little, oh homo-erotic to me, like watching Yukio Mishima do squats. No, I prefer watching the predominantly petite Japanese women competing. Some are as young as 13, some as "old" as 44. Some are as light as a feather while others (like the popular sumo wrestler who never makes it past the first obstacle course) clearly tip the scales at over 200 pounds. Many wear colorful-bordering-on-wacky costumes, from a surfer who totes along her surfboard to a female clown in full regalia.



The following clip, for example, shows a golfer and a skateboarder competing in their work clothes:



The most eye-catching for me, though is Blue Bikini Girl, who sports a thong bikini with knee-high boots ensemble, but always crashes in the first or second phase of the course - lucky for her she's dressed appropriately for her splash in the waters below her. Yes, failure means getting wet, as the point is to stay high and dry.



Splash-down, NINJA WARRIOR style



It's a tough contest, proven by the fact that only one woman has ever won it - and she made it a three-peat at that. That would be phenomenal pink-haired pixie Ayako Miyake. all of 5 foot 2 and 90 pounds, who won the tournament three times in a row, despite adjustments made after each tournament to up the difficulty factor.



Ayako Miyake is ichiban!



And you can watch her third triumph (achieved at the ripe old age of 30) here: Ayako Miyake Threepeat



G-Whiz!



Her day-job with Japan's G-Rockets - an acrobatic dance company formed in 1995 and comprised of gymnasts who express traditional Japanese customs of the Edo era in their own original style - certainly helped her get through Kunoichi 's demanding obstacles.



G-Rockets Acrobat Dance Company



But Ayako-chan really stands out because this tiny Tinkerbell dancer achieves so much with such a frail frame. In the words of one chat room fan, "She's like a video game super heroine come to life." Of course, she also stands out thanks to her day-glo locks. She's given each title run a different hair coloring - she was blonde for her first title, pink for her second, and pink-with-blonde highlights for her third-time's-the-charm threepeat.



In a word, she's friggin' hot - and, yes, I think I love her.



No time for losers, for she are the champions of the world!



Ayako does her Justin Timberlake impression



Ichiban Redux



The Queen of Ninja Warrior



Ayako charms even the wild beasts



Resting on her laurels?



A Star Is Born



Her athletic/dancing achievements have made her somewhat of a celebrity in Japan, where she has her own blog now: www. ranahouse. com/miyake



The site is in Japanese (natch!), but thanks to the wonderful blog YODC (Your Opinion Doesn't Count), here's a rare English post from Ayako:



Thank you for many messages from America!



I appear in Japanese Shibuya for the show of "Muscle Musical", now.



Come to see it for an opportunity to come to Japan if to be!



It is looking forward to meeting everyone.



Then, I do the show of the musical MATSURI which is the same as Japan in Las Vegas in Sahara.



Come by all means to see it, too. I do my best in the vigor fullness today, too!



What you said, Ayako-san!



Keeping it Real (Polite)



It's kind of a misnomer to call Women of Ninja Warrior a "reality TV" show, because there's hardly any backstory or analysis of the contestants' personalities. Instead, an announcer asks a quick question after each failure or triumph and the Japanese women answer with a bland politeness that would be irritating if it wasn't so ingrained as a cultural characteristic. There's no boasting or emotional loss of face on display here, as the Japanese are so excruciatingly polite they could all work for the diplomatic corps.



And, unlike American TV shows where it's always about the Benjamins, no one ever mentions what the winner wins in terms of monetary compensation. I guess it's considered too vulgar to tarnish the honor of athletic achievement by associating it with filthy lucre. I had to surf the Net to find out that besides being named "Queen of Ninja Warrior," Ayako Miyake won two million yen (about $20,000) for each of her titles.



Sasuke (TV series)



External links



Sasuke (stylized in Japan as SASUKE ) is a Japanese sports entertainment television special in which 100 competitors attempt to complete a four stage obstacle course. An edited version, named Ninja Warrior . is screened in at least 18 other countries. To date, Sasuke content has been aired in 157 countries.



Shot on location at Midoriyama studio in Yokohama. it airs on TBS between Japanese television drama seasons. Each 3-hour special covers an entire competition; there are normally 100 participants. There have been 30 specials produced, approximately one new special per season (twice per year). The show is produced by Monster9 and is one of the spin-offs of Muscle Ranking ( ????. Kinniku Banzuke ? ). another sports entertainment competition, which airs on G4 under the name Unbeatable Banzuke . Until the 10th competition, Sasuke was broadcast as a special part of Muscle Ranking . but it became an independent program when Muscle Ranking was discontinued. The first competition was held indoors, marking the only time Sasuke did not take place outside. Competitions generally start in the daytime and continue until completed regardless of weather or darkness. [ 2 ] After Monster9's bankruptcy on November 2011, all rights to the show fell completely into the hands of its broadcaster, Tokyo Broadcasting System. Following their acquisition of all rights to Sasuke . TBS renamed the show Sasuke Rising .



There have been several programs related to Sasuke . Kunoichi . perhaps the most well-known spin off, is a version of Sasuke restricted to female competitors only. There have also been competitions held for children and the elderly.



Applicants are interviewed or auditioned and trial rounds are held to test their physical ability until the field is narrowed to 100 competitors. Sasuke consists of four stages of increasing difficulty; competitors must complete a stage to advance. Before the 18th tournament, a 1200-meter run was held in order to determine the competitors' starting positions. Each competition is taped prior to the air date, edited for time, and broadcast as a 3-hour show.



An online game based on G4's edit of the show has been made and is available on the network's website. It is G4's highest rated show. [ 3 ]

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