Day 14: One Final Day in Tokyo
One day in Tokyo. More so even than Kyoto, that’s not enough. But like Kyoto, I’ve visited Tokyo before, been to all its weird cosplay neighborhoods and its highfalutin museums, so for my final day in Japan I’ll just end up doing the most generic touristy things possible. By a large margin I’ll see more Americans today than in the entire last week, and I don’t enjoy many of these loudmouthed stereotypes. Dude, we’re in a Cultural Heritage Site, shut the
*&@*#$ up about Burning Man!
In preplanning, I had a few crazy ideas for this Tokyo day – see the Ghibli Museum, eat at the Robot Restaurant, see a sumo match – but reservations for each proved elusive. There’s always another time.
Today’s alternate thrown-together plan? Using the “free for me” JR Line, see as much as possible, starting with the furthest attraction.
Let’s begin at the Imperial Palace. Not that there’s much to see, because like Buckingham Palace in England it’s a private residence, and similarly it devours a gigantic amount of top-dollar urban real estate (over 1 square mile!). We’re here surrounded by the city’s (and country’s, and continent’s) greatest centers for finance, shopping and government, which makes the vast green space even leading up to the private grounds all the more striking. There’s honestly not much to be seen here, but don’t tell the crowds of gathered tourists. Just the famous, iconic double bridges, offering intriguing glimpses down a stone-lined canal of the unseen treasures beyond.
On its own, the Imperial Palace wouldn’t draw me out here, but there’s a ton within walking distance. My goal is to reach the Tokyo Fish Market by 10. Wandering that way carries me through Ginza, the most upscale boutique district in a city teeming with such things. On previous, slower-paced visits I’ve toured some of the department stores around here, not so much for the shopping (though previewing the then-new 3D TVs was pretty sick) but for the architecture and interior design. Like so much modern architecture, there’s plenty of stark minimalism on display, contrasting with the older Beaux Arts boutiques which jumpstarted Ginza’s reputation.
So, no upscale shopping now, not that 9 A.M. is a good time for that anyway. Onwards I trudge, passing the Kabuki-za Theatre. This is a Japanese baroque revivalist structure built in 1924, a modernist reinterpretation of classical styles. This is perhaps the premier theater venue in all of Japan, host to traditional kabuki drama. Crowds are gathering for a performance an hour out, and I am seriously, seriously tempted to join them…only they’re in fine suits while I’m, well, I’m dressed for walking 10 miles. Which is what I proceed to do.
Leaving Ginza, the city grows slightly more industrial towards the docks. This is the region surrounding the astounding Tokyo Fish Market, a multi-acre covered trading floor where daily the island’s fishermen arrive with their freshest sea catches, and the city’s sushi chefs haggle over their daily ingredients. There’s even the highly-coveted tuna auction, which only 100 tourists are allowed into, and they must line up 6 hours in advance beginning at 4 A.M. It’s at 10 when everyone else is allowed to wander the main floor.
It’s not quite 10 yet, by design. There are so, so many sushi restaurants surrounding the marketplace, all ideal for a delicious raw breakfast. In choosing one, I ignore the abrasive Americans and their timid selections and I go to the tiniest, busiest spot teeming with locals. It’s so narrow, the single dining counter is directly against the side wall. I order “omakase,” chef’s choice, and piecemeal for the next 30 minutes I’m given a dozen different sushi types, all guaranteed exceedingly fresh. It was delicious!
You’ll learn when eating sushi in Tokyo to do as the chef says. Don’t make those vats of soy sauce and wasabi and drench your roll like I’ve seen so many gringos do. Eat it as served, and
immediately. If the chef handled the sushi with his hand, he gave it a trace of warmth on purpose. Don’t let it cool! My last time near the Fish Market, I dined on “ikizukuri,” sushi
so fresh it was prepared alive (!) and was still wriggling while I ate it. That was certainly an interesting meal, but I feel a little gross about its ethics.
After breakfast, I wander the Market. I don’t buy, I’m not allowed to buy, and I only take pics on the sly. This place isn’t really meant for tourists (a new, tourist-centric market is opening next year), and you’re expected to steer clear of the forklifts and ice trucks and fishmongers racing about with sharpened cleavers. The odors are varied and bracing. There are countless tanks and tubs of live sea creatures. A few of them, like a Jacuzzi containing a huge pulsing, oozing Grimace blob, I don’t even know what that was…an animal, a fungus, a shoggoth?!
Satisfied with what I’ve seen, I proceed back toward Ginza, pausing along the way to snag some clay fish plate souvenirs for friends. From Ginza, I’m back on the JR Line circling west. Next stop? Tokyo Tower, which is actually a new thing for me!
You’ve maybe seen Mothra’s larva in the Tower’s rafters, or seen Godzilla’s atomic breath melting its steel girders. That’s because Tokyo Tower is a modern icon of the city, until recently the country’s tallest structure and a big cheesy tourist trap. It’s a shameless knockoff of the Eiffel Tower, made distinctive by its international orange paintjob. So playfully modern, contrasting nicely against an ancient temple complex which I wander through along my way to maximize sightseeing awesomenes
The Tower really is a cheesy thing. They’ve got these odd
kawaii fiberglass sculptures all around the base. The elevator to the observation platform is set amidst a whole shopping mall of Japanese pop cultural absurdity. If you didn’t know Godzilla attacked the Tower, they won’t let you forget it here! There’s also a so-called “One Piece theme park,” though it takes up just a few rooms of FootTown (the Tower’s mall), and costs the same to visit as Tokyo Disneyland. Yeah, I didn’t go in there. I paused for a while checking out the
otaku merchandise, all the elaborate anime figurines and other silliness (and I bought a Tokyo Tower Lego set for a friend’s kid).
Then it was up the elevator to the Main Observatory. Panoramic views on all sides of Tokyo below! To paraphrase an old French joke, the best views in town…because you can’t see Tokyo Tower.
Tokyo Tower reminded me of Hong Kong’s Peak Tower. Tourists are guaranteed to go here for the wonderful views and the iconography, so let’s fill it up with cheesy tacky nonsense like a Bubba Gump and a Guinness World Records Museum and laser tag. What is this, Orlando?!
No thanks, I’ll move on now instead for the city’s ancient, timeless Meiji Shrine, which dates back centuries into the mists of time…built in 1912.
Designed in the classical Shinto tradition widely seen in Kyoto, Meiji Shrine doesn’t feel all that recent. It’s helped by the sprawling evergreen forest setting, incongruously set just outside of Shibuya’s vibrant hyper-modern shopping district. Deep down long, wide, seemingly endless pilgrimage paths, you only get the occasional auditory hint of Tokyo’s bustle, like an ambulance siren or J-pop. It’s a quiet natural oasis within the city, and precious for that reason.
I slow down before even entering Meiji’s initial
torii gate, pausing for a light lunch at some rather innocuous touristy snack stand. (It’s like those eateries in National Forests; it’s just there.) I get another Kirin, because of course I do, and I opt for the menu’s oddest item – a fruit sandwich. Kiwis, strawberries and peaches with cream inside white bread…it was far better than I’d anticipated. Light, fluffy, and subtly sweet.
Then I wander on down the thick forested trails towards Meiji. This is a complex honoring Emperor Meiji and his wife, who in Shinto tradition I believe are now deified. In life, this was his personal iris garden. In his death, the Japanese people’s reverence is unmistakable. The pathway is dotted by prayer walls, and by scaffolding full of sake barrels erected in tribute. At the main shrine, there’s so much ceremony. Visitors cleanse with bronze cups of water. There are the incense sticks, the giant old bells, and priests performing solemn chants.
It’s all the more striking, as I’ve suggested, by Shibuya nearby. Even at midday, Shibuya teems with life. Here’s another shopping district, more youthful than Ginza. Neon signs and TV screens cover the skyscrapers. All walks of visitor – teenybopper locals, high-strung businessmen, rustic Western tourists, cosplaying lunatics – gather together. It’s like Tokyo’s Times Square. I roam and wander, delighting in the mixture of international brands and hole-in-the-wall dives and the ubiquitous Forever 21.
Shibuya is perhaps most famous for its “Shibuya scramble,” the busiest pedestrian crosswalk in the world. Every minute or two, the entire intersection shuts down and fills shoulder-to-shoulder with people. As seen in
Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift! It’s one of those so, so famous tourist sights, so iconic that you go mostly to say you did. There’s no real sense of discovery, but it’s a treat to witness firsthand something so famous and recognizable.
From Shibuya, I proceed back “home” to Shinjuku. Because I’m a goon, I do so on foot. There’s less to see in between these wards than I’d’ve expected. The only site which stands out is this amazing Art Deco clock tower, lookin’ like something I’d expect to see in the old “Batman” animated series…or possibly “Batman Beyond.”s I remember this particular clock more dearly from a previous visit, from touring Shinjuku at night during a fog, when the tower’s neon clockface shined through the mist in an eerie, hypnotic glow…highlighted by similar neon below my neo-Gothic balcony. Much like Dotonburi, that was one of those amazing transporting “cyberpunk” moments which I continually seem to experience in Japan.
It’s nearing nightfall as I return to Shinjuku and their neon is just starting to flicker on. Without the haze, that former lingering mystery is absent, but Shinjuku is no less alive. Another day, another 10 miles schlepped, and at the trip’s very tail end I am understandably exhausted. Looking to sit and eat, looking to relax, I find a restaurant using the tried-and-true “most locals” rule. The line I join means a 45 minute wait before seating, and it turns out this is a ramen restaurant. How perfect! A perfectly-seasoned bowl of steaming tonkatsu noodles, which warm the body after a chilly day, is an exceptional capper to a wild, wondrous whirlwind tour of Hong Kong and Japan!
Up next: Day 15 – Flight Back
Day 15
There’s nothing to tell about that. I flew from Haneda to LAX, with another unpleasant layover in Beijing. (Do not go there.) I ate Kit Kats and miso in the airport. I mostly slept. Customs in L.A. were a non-issue. The only interesting things in this whole final day? One, it was
earlier in L.A. when I landed than when I left. And two, after two weeks of visiting major international theme parks, what was the very first thing that greeted me in the United States?
Welcome home to Hollywood!
And that
CONCLUDES this epic Asian trip report! Thanks for sticking with me!