Friday, November 25, 2011

パチンコ。ニホンジン。セーカツ。


Because of the storyboarding presentation, I had a reason to go into a pachinko store and play pachinko for the first time. I had been passing by different pachinko stores everyday in my daily routine during the first 3 months being in Japan.  And finally I walked into one last week. Since the entrances of all the pachinko stores I had seen were all automatic doors, I could always hear loud music from within the stores whenever the doors happened to open when I walked pass. But it was not until I walked into the store myself when I realized how loud the music was and how heavy the smell of cigarettes was. I thought that basically all pachinko players were male; however, I entered the store at the same time as several middle-aged women.  I also saw some bikes with seats for children parking right outside the pachinko stores. There might be some housewives who would like to spend their free time playing pachinko. It is not an entertainment for male only. But it is apparently an activity for adults only since all pachinko stores have signs warning that anyone under 18 is not allowed to enter the store. Sometimes on my way to school in the early morning, I can see people including both men and women lining up in front of a pachinko store.  There are always enough pachinko machines in the store for everyone. But they are lining up in order to play the “good” machines with which players have more chances to win. These “good” machines usually locate near the doors so that the sound of pachinko coming out of the machine and excitement of the players can attract more players from outside.

However, I think one can never understand pachinko and pachinko players merely by standing or walking around in the store. So I participated, and I finally understand how the players can bear to stay playing in such a noisy and smelly place for hours and hours. I was excited and nervous to a certain point as a first time player while the store manager was trying to introduce me the whole process of playing pachinko. Once I started turning the switch of the machine and pachinkos started bouncing around in the machine, the pachinkos had my full attention and I no longer felt that the place was noisy and smelly since I was completely attracted by the pachinkos. Maybe this is the reason why many people like spending time playing pachinko. It requires players’ full attention; and thus they do not have the mind to think about anything else. In this way, players may be able to relax and thus release stress from study, work or daily life as pachinko offers them another world to live. The machine that I played was one that used 1 yen pachinkos which cost the least in stores comparing with 2 yen, 4 yen and 5 yen pachinkos. These machines accept paper bills only starting from 1,000 yen to 10,000 yen. With 1000 pachinkos to start with, I played for less than 15 minutes with 998 pachinkos left. So I thought I might be able to get 998 yen cash back. But the exchange rate is different before and after playing. For each pachinko falling into the holes inside the machine, one to three pachinkos will be won. Therefore, even though a pachinko costs 1 yen at the beginning, it might only worth one third of 1 yen at the end when the number of pachinkos is exchanged into store points. As a result, I receive two mini Yakult drinks, a few candies and a small instant cheese fish sausage. Besides, I received a small bookmark like stick along with the snacks with which I was given 500 yen cash back from a little window counter right outside the back door of the store. So I spent 1000 yen cash and got 500 yen cash and some snacks back. I do not understand how everything turned out to be like this, but I assume that there is a complicated system based on which the pachinko stores operate.
I was lucky enough to get to know a part-time worker at the pachinko store who graduated from Kansai Gaidai two years ago with an English major. He was the only staff working in the store who is able to speak English. The manager asked him to help me out as soon as he was told that I am a foreigner. This Kansai Gaidai alumnus was thinking to quit his part time job at the pachinko store even though he had been working there for a month only. He did not want to continue the job because it was a boring one with the lowest hourly wage. According to him, most staffs except managers working in the pachinko store are young adults who generally work 7 hours a day.  This job is boring because all staffs are required to greet customers and keep a track on the pachinkos they won with big energetic smiles all the time.  Pachinko stores do not open 24 hours a day. The one I went to opens from 10am to 11pm every day. During the half hour talking with this part-time worker next to the back door of the store, I observed that more than 10 people walked through the back door of which 80 percent are male.  

After experiencing pachinko myself, I believe that the pachinko phenomenon in Japan should not be interpreted merely from its surface. I wish I can interview regular pachinko players and store staffs if I had the chance to know more about the pachinko culture.



1 comment:

  1. I think this post will be useful for all those foreigners walking by pachinko parlors not havng any idea of what's going on aside from the noise and smoke. Good use of participant observation. This is definitely a good subject for a film.

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