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I DOT Tokyo

$22.00 $18.95
All things Japanese are super-hip with the kids these days. Don't get left behind - let the world know that you, too, embrace anime, sushi, manga and bullet trains with this super kawaii shirt!
Maps, They Don't Love You Like I Love You
Zach Attack
Vegetarian Once Removed
Effing College
So-Cal Recovery Center
Soundboard Hero
Rogue Helicopter Pilot
GTL
Haitian Sunrise ($10 goes to the Red Cross' Haiti Relief Effort)
Free Hugs
4th Dimensional Space
It's Time for Daddy to Make Some Funny
USSA
Bel-Air
Curling Takes Stones
Kill Phil
The Most Dramatic Shirt in Bachelor History
A Shirt About Nothing
Erntedankfest
Jews - Make it Happen
Online Predator
Everywhere, Like, Such As
You Complete Me
The Formula for Real Power
Zzzzzzzzz...
Shalom
Marriage, the #1 Cause of Divorce
Abe Lincoln
Can You Hear Me Now?
Whatever Happens, Happens
Here Comes Treble - Class of '96
Also Available in Sober
Drop Anchor
Missing Poster
Pothead
My Life is a Long Complicated Drinking Game
Quick Rising
Rock Out
Schmuck
Sweatshops, Another Day, Another Dollar
The Quick Brown Fox
Viking Cat
Wish You Were Beer
Marijuana My Anti-drug
Love is Greater Than Money
Keg Stand Tee Shirt
Keep Healthcare for the Rich
Infinity MPG
In Wyoming, No One Can Hear You Scream
I'm Jewish, Wanna Check
I'm Donating My Body to Science Fiction
I Recycle Boys
I Love Love Love Polygamy
I (heart) Accuracy
Hellifiknow
Guns Don't Kill People, Bullets Kill People
Department of Redundancy Department
Come to Philly for the Crack
Censorship
Ceiling Cat is Watching
Cat Nip is a Gateway Drug
Big Mistake
100% Kosher Beefcake
Wish You Were Queer
Japanese popular culture not only reflects the attitudes and concerns of the present but also provides a link to the past. Japanese cinema, cuisine, television programs, manga, and J-pop all developed from older artistic and literary traditions, and many of their themes and styles of presentation can be traced to traditional art forms. Contemporary forms of popular culture, much like the traditional forms, provide not only entertainment but also an escape for the contemporary Japanese from the problems of an industrial world. When asked how they spent their leisure time, 80 percent of a sample of men and women surveyed by the government in 1986 said they averaged about two and one-half hours per weekday watching television, listening to the radio, and reading Japanese newspapers or magazines. Some 16 percent spent an average of two and one-quarter hours a day engaged in hobbies or amusements. Others spent leisure time participating in sports, socializing, and personal study. Teenagers and retired people reported spending more time on all of these activities than did other groups.