It is marching, and it is not Chinese. this is Japanese. Much like a drill squad. And Yes, Discipline is important in Japan, as it is nearly non-existent in Western nations.
I was on a D&C team in the Army and I have to say these guys are really good. The patterns are easy to learn but you can tell how good they are by how little they shuffle their feet when they measure their distance when forming back up.
They run 10-20ft into position and without looking down or shuffling they're already within an inch of where they need to be. Putting their arms up to measure is just a formality. Not bad at all.
To the moron who says this was in China, the announcer in the video is speaking Japanese. Please enlighten me as to when they started speaking Japanese in China.
Errr but it would be more likely that a person speaking Japanese would live in JAPAN rather than China, though. I'm not saying that it's impossible that a person who lives in China would speak Japanese, just that it's definitely more of a rarity.
you asked when they started speaking japanese in china. I love it how ppl act like know-it-alls until they are proved wrong and then they start adding all these ifs ands an buts like that's what they were implying the whole time.who's the moron now.
Marching band geeks of America support you, Japanese walking teams. But do you think you could add a little music to it? Or is the point that it needs to be done without an audible beat for reference?
Marching band, minus the instruments. ^^ i love those formations. my Director actually showed this to us during class. we had to take notes and everything.
I am astounded by several things, one being how many people came to see that event, two being how many people decided they wanted to train as synchronized walkers, and three how it was fascinating enough to watch the whole thing through!
Hehe. Im jnese ,living in Tokyo. Guys, This is taken in Japan,not in China. Judging by the language spoken by the announcer and the audience on the stadium. Not every jnese do this kind of exercise, i ve never had one. :)
The crowds love this because it looks just like the day in Japan where everyone, and I mean everyone, starts work. Same suits, ties, haircuts, on the SAME day. Individuality expressions not appreciated. All working men and women in lockstep.
Simon says....!
ReplyDeleteOHHHHH MY GOODDDD!!!
ReplyDeletebut....why??
ReplyDeletewhat's the point of dis....
ReplyDeleteWow, this is better than watching matching band formations!
ReplyDeleteI find this hard to masturbate too.
ReplyDeleteIf only my kids where obeying the same way...
ReplyDeletelol!
I watched this video several times already!
Mental!
ReplyDeletethis is china not japan '-'
ReplyDeleteThey are speaking Japanese...
Deleteand how is this not marching?
ReplyDeleteMarching band, minus the instruments.
ReplyDeleteDrill, in civilian dress. Good discipline, but not amazing - people just aren't used to seeing people who aren't wearing military uniforms do this.
ReplyDeleteIt is marching, and it is not Chinese. this is Japanese. Much like a drill squad.
ReplyDeleteAnd Yes, Discipline is important in Japan, as it is nearly non-existent in Western nations.
Japanese banker training
ReplyDeleteI was on a D&C team in the Army and I have to say these guys are really good. The patterns are easy to learn but you can tell how good they are by how little they shuffle their feet when they measure their distance when forming back up.
ReplyDeleteThey run 10-20ft into position and without looking down or shuffling they're already within an inch of where they need to be. Putting their arms up to measure is just a formality. Not bad at all.
Amazing!
ReplyDeleteThis is how you play life-sized snake.
ReplyDeleteTo the moron who says this was in China, the announcer in the video is speaking Japanese.
ReplyDeletePlease enlighten me as to when they started speaking Japanese in China.
1931 or even before, depending on where in China.
ReplyDeleteErrr but it would be more likely that a person speaking Japanese would live in JAPAN rather than China, though.
ReplyDeleteI'm not saying that it's impossible that a person who lives in China would speak Japanese, just that it's definitely more of a rarity.
you asked when they started speaking japanese in china. I love it how ppl act like know-it-alls until they are proved wrong and then they start adding all these ifs ands an buts like that's what they were implying the whole time.who's the moron now.
DeleteThis is graduation ceremony in Ishikawa province! I used to study and live there! :)
ReplyDeleteMarching band geeks of America support you, Japanese walking teams. But do you think you could add a little music to it? Or is the point that it needs to be done without an audible beat for reference?
ReplyDeleteNow I finally get why you had to do the synchronized walking and gun posing thing in Junon in Final Fantasy VII XD Japan, you're awesome.
ReplyDeleteJust to point this out, Tosh.0 showed this video and made a Chinese joke or two about it. That might be what is causing some confusion.
ReplyDeleteWow, what's amazing about it is they're still in Middle school and high school. Great coordination.
ReplyDeleteYOU COULD TOTALLY PLAY SNAKE WITH THIS!!!!!! <3
ReplyDeleteMarching band, minus the instruments. ^^ i love those formations. my Director actually showed this to us during class. we had to take notes and everything.
ReplyDeletei think so its an anniversary preparation test. some soviet country and totaliter statates doit like this, all anniversary.
ReplyDeleteI am astounded by several things, one being how many people came to see that event, two being how many people decided they wanted to train as synchronized walkers, and three how it was fascinating enough to watch the whole thing through!
ReplyDeleteРазвод пеших японских караулов с элементами цирка:-/
ReplyDeleteHehe. Im jnese ,living in Tokyo. Guys, This is taken in Japan,not in China. Judging by the language spoken by the announcer and the audience on the stadium.
ReplyDeleteNot every jnese do this kind of exercise, i ve never had one. :)
and they call me racist when i say all asians look the same :D
ReplyDeleteThe crowds love this because it looks just like the day in Japan where everyone, and I mean everyone, starts work. Same suits, ties, haircuts, on the SAME day. Individuality expressions not appreciated. All working men and women in lockstep.
ReplyDeleteSynchronized walking? We call this marching lol. This is marching band without instruments
ReplyDeletethis is like an extreme game of Simon Says xDD
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure half of the audience consists of rattle snakes.
ReplyDelete...So prepare for the chance of a life time, prepare for senATIonal news. a shining new era is tiptoeing nearer...
ReplyDeleteSo what, they are marching. It's called marching; it isn't a purely Japanese phenomenon.
ReplyDeletenow thats pretty cool
ReplyDelete