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The Neon Glow of Tokyo Modified Car Culture (kottke.org)

Jason Kottke: New Zealand drift racer Mike Whiddett recently travelled to Japan to explore Tokyo's "extraordinary after-dark modified auto scene." He found people making California-style lowriders, Dekotora (my favorite, if only for the sheer spectacle), illegally modified cars, and a man who says with a straight face that "driving an unmodified Lamborghini is boring."

15 of 77 comments (clear)

  1. Clicky Clicky Clicky by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This "story" - such that it is - reminds me of websites targeted at mobile users that route you through dozens of pages with a little disappointing dabble at each stop, just enough carrot to convince you to click one more time... until halfway to what you maybe want to see, you just give up and bail out.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:Clicky Clicky Clicky by arth1 · · Score: 2

      In this case, the entire article is only twice the size of the very short story summary here. What's the relevance to slashdot? That ricers exist in Tokyo too? Hardly newsworthy, I should think. This would probably not even get a mention on Jalopnik.

    2. Re:Clicky Clicky Clicky by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Maybe better, most likely worse. Certainly worse if the mods are neon lights. And the car will be worth much, much less.

      Exotic cars were built 'collectable'. Modifying them in any way only reduces their resale value. About the only dumber thing to do with them would be to actually race them.

      Race cars are generally uncomfortable/impractical as hell and aren't much use as daily drivers. Street cars are always about finding the right compromise, for you. Different bores, and different strokes, for different folks.

      Also: Own a car trailer, 'trailer queens' are all sorts of fun. Only once you throw 'streetability' to the ground do things get really interesting.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    3. Re:Clicky Clicky Clicky by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 2

      You know....

      If you have a real car that can perform, it doesn't have to "glow" in the dark and look like some circus side show display....

      I'd think money would be better spend on things that actually make the car perform better, rather than adding a neon underglow light system, spinner hubcaps, and a coffee can exhaust that does nothing for performance or good engine note.

      You have a stunted definition of performance. Sad.

      I used to work in a Formula 1 team and I'm entirely familiar with what you do to an engine to make it perform better.

      Very little of this is done on normal cars because the design of the car doesn't accommodate all the pipework for the variable everything (per cylinder, per cycle variable trumpets, spark timing, injector timing, exhaust length etc) and the per engine mapping is a little expensive.

      This is fine because the reliability profile on a road car is dramatically different. I see no benefit in modding my car. It's fine for getting to work and not getting arrested.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    4. Re:Clicky Clicky Clicky by scottrocket · · Score: 2

      You know....

      If you have a real car that can perform, it doesn't have to "glow" in the dark and look like some circus side show display....

      I'd think money would be better spend on things that actually make the car perform better, rather than adding a neon underglow light system, spinner hubcaps, and a coffee can exhaust that does nothing for performance or good engine note.

      The submitter should have added the final copy/paste paragraph, it's wraps up their (the modders) sentiment nicely (or it's all bravado):

      "What’s interesting is that more than one of these guys in the video repeated some variation of “I don’t care what anyone thinks about me” I. ...don’t believe you? If there’s one thing most humans care deeply about, it’s what other people think about them, particularly when you’re driving million-dollar, pulsing-neon supercars around the world’s most populous city."

      Shallow, but likely true...

    5. Re:Clicky Clicky Clicky by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Million dollar Italian exotics? In Japan? The guys/girls you are thinking of, are blowing past these neon light parade clowns in GTRs and the like.

      Might as well plant grass on their 'Lambos'. These people are jumping up and down, going 'look at me'. The cars are just props. Too much money. Hope the people actually turning the wrenches are 'milking them' for all they're worth. Any fool that wants $2000 worth of JC whitney neon on his Lamborghini deserves to pay and pay for it.

      Only the Japanese would think a supercar/lowrider was cool. Next: A Lamborghini that hops.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    6. Re:Clicky Clicky Clicky by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Ricers driving million dollar 'Italian trash' exist in Tokyo. Still act like Ricers, glue on some JC whitney bullshit and call it 'custom'.

      I'd be more impressed with a smart car with a Lambo body kit, then add the extra bullshit on top of that steaming pile. Make it a rolling monument to 'hello kitty tentacle rape'. Then put the 'busa motor kit in it.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  2. Jason Kotke presents by the_skywise · · Score: 4, Informative

    a Jason Kotke blog posted by Jason Kotke

  3. Shinichi Morohoshi is a scumbag by SethJohnson · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The guy in the video with all the Lambos is widely described as a member of the Yakuza. No big surprise. When you look at those cars rolling down the street, understand that they are financed with the broken lives of a great many people.

  4. Other side of the story by sheetsda · · Score: 2

    From article: "more than one of these guys in the video repeated some variation of “I don’t care what anyone thinks about me”. I.don’t believe you? If there’s one thing most humans care deeply about, it’s what other people think about them, particularly when you’re driving million-dollar, pulsing-neon supercars around the world’s most populous city."

    I don't have the means to drive a anything close to a multi-million dollar car but I am a car enthusiast. So here's what I suspect the quoted person's response would be to reading this....

    This says more about the writer than the person being quoted. The writer's perspective is very self-centered - "you did a thing to impress me, and I will not accept any other explanation". No - I did it because *I* find it beautiful and enjoy having this fusion of art and engineering around, and would enjoy it even if even if I was the only person on the planet.

    1. Re:Other side of the story by infolation · · Score: 2
      To be honest, I stopped reading the article at the point where it claimed Tokyo is

      the world’s most populous city.

      Tokyo is nowhere near. By number of people, that's Mexico City. By overall density it's Dhaka. And by density in a single district it's Hong Kong.

  5. Re:Any asshole can buy a lambo by rogoshen1 · · Score: 2

    bringing whole new meaning to "explosive acceleration off the line" ?

  6. Based on people I have known in California... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Based on people I have known in California...
    Real street racers don't keep the same car for long, or in some cases even have them legally registered.

    Having a car that glows is explicitly for show. Either it is a trailer queen or it is rolling probable cause (Neons are illegal in most/all US states and are also illegal in most other parts of the world, especially red, blue, and yellow flashing, which are explicitly intended for emergency vehicles and public utility trucks/contractors who need to operate need the roadway and notify traffic so they can slow down/go around them.)

    People who are REALLY into street racing usually go out a few times a month, or run cars that can't be traced back to them and make as much of a game out of the cat and mouse of police involvement as they do the racing itself. Some will go out and bust donuts just to draw police attention, others only operate in the dead of night in abandoned areas of town, many of which are no longer so abandoned between security cameras and beefed up law enforcement presence (many industrial parks now have regular police patrols and beefed up patrol cars as a result of illegal car and bike activity and the risk of damage to property.) Some people regularly flip unregistered cars, or cars in the previous owners paperwork, fixing them up, using bolt-ons/illegal engines for power which they swap out before reselling the vehicle, the engine travelling between vehicles until they move to a different platform/wear them out. A decent number of the poorer indivudals also boost cars, using the joyrides back to the chop shops to try out different cars while getting paid a pittance at the end of the night. Given the criminal laws around street racing nowadays, as well as the risk of having your car crushed, it makes some amount of sense to just add a grand theft auto rap and use stolen cars for it. If they get confiscated/wrecked/chopped it is no skin off your back and nothing directly traces back to you.

    However, this activity is becoming increasingly risky. If you carry a cellphone you are providing location data tied to the theft and operation of the car. Combined with video footage and timestamps they can tie the cell phone to you. Combine the above with random passerbys with cell phones, as well as the general lack of thought to concealing one's identity and accidents, near escapes from police, etc leave you with a ticking timer until you're arrested, unless you are lucky enough to be well connected/have paid off the law enforcement for your region. Most of the United States that won't be true. Most of Japan, even if you're Yakuza that is no longer true (Yakuza is 1/3 their size from 20 years ago and more is being cracked down on each day.) Most of Europe and Britain it also isn't true. Anybody with priors will make a conviction stick easily, and most of the street racing/reckless driving laws can see you in jail or prison from 90 days to a few years. I know two different people who did 2+ years in prison over street racing related activities, and there are hundreds to thousands of other examples. Worse yet if someone else dies while participating in a street race you are on the hook at minimum as an accessory to murder and in some jurisdictions as a murderer yourself.

    1. Re: Based on people I have known in California... by Reverend+Green · · Score: 2

      Moral of the story: when doing something that offends a repressive regime, leave your cellphone at home.

  7. Driving by tquasar · · Score: 2

    Drifting is not racing. It is "Look at Me!!!!!" Dumb dumb dumb dumb dumb.