comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - All japan liquor merchants association - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Patterns of alcohol and alcohol-flavoured non-alcoholic beverage advertisements over Japanese free-to-air television networks | BMC Public Health

Alcohol use is a serious public health challenge worldwide. Japan has no government regulations or legal penalties against advertising alcoholic beverages on television (TV). Instead, advertisements depend on the Japanese alcohol industry’s self-regulation on airtime (no advertisements from 5 am to 6 pm) and the content of alcoholic beverages, which must not tempt minors. However, many adolescents (10 to 19 years old) watch TV from 6 pm to 11 pm. The aim of this study was to describe the pattern in the advertising of alcoholic beverages and alcohol-flavoured non-alcoholic beverages (AFNAB) in Japan during the popular TV viewing time for adolescents. A secondary analysis of advertising airtime data from five free-to-air Japanese TV networks in the Greater Tokyo area that aired between 12 August and 3 November 2019, was performed. During the study period, 5215 advertisements for alcoholic beverages and AFNABs aired (1451.75 min). In total, 2303 advertisements (44.2%) were

The surreal spectacle of Tokyo s COVID-19 Olympiad

The surreal spectacle of Tokyo’s COVID-19 Olympiad The Japanese government is spending big on an event that no one can attend. Banning alcohol in restaurants and bars makes the same amount of sense. Save Share As the world’s greatest athletes began to pour through the airport and a COVID-menaced Tokyo entered its final countdown to the Olympic Games this Friday, an immense, disembodied human head rose above the city to open the Cultural Olympiad. The merits of the giant hot air balloon as a piece of art are for others to decide. As a piece of airborne mega-dissonance, it is somewhere between the flying gargoyle in cult film

Japanese Government Accused Of Strong Arm Tactics As Tokyo Rebels Against Alcohol Ban

by Tyler Durden Apparently, Japan s decision Because after an association of liquor retailers complained to representatives of Japan s ruling Liberal Democratic Party about a demand from a government bureaucrat that distributors stop working with restaurants who continued to serve booze during the pandemic, it looks like the government has abandoned that request. The news was broken by the English-language media outlet the Mainichi: The All Japan Liquor Merchants Association demanded the LDP revise the request by economic revitalization minister Yasutoshi Nishimura, who is in charge of Japan s coronavirus response, saying that his remark was outrageous. The association s chairperson Kiyotaka Yoshida told Shimomura that liquor retailers were being targeted and added,

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.