2024-02-27 52:11

#76 【後編】アメリカ&沖縄生活。ハーフって大変? Guest: Wayne & Tormas as Norman Brothers

Haitai Egg Lovers! * English below

うるま市より、卵で世界を救う最強のイケメン兄弟、『ノーマンブラサーズ』のウェイン&トーマスをゲスト回【後編】です。

沖縄&アメリカ両方で学生生活を経験した2人。

「沖縄のために何かできることを!」の情熱を感じる2人ですが、若い頃は沖縄があまり好きじゃない時期もあったそうな。

We're back with the second part featuring the strongest and most handsome brothers saving the world with eggs, the "Norman Brothers," Wayne & Thomas as our guests. The two have experienced student life in both Okinawa and the United States. They are passionate about doing something for Okinawa, although there was a time in their youth when they didn't like Okinawa much.

【About Norman Brothers】

たまご王国の未来を担うハーフの兄弟。兄のノーマン王子と弟のトーマス団長が”たまごで世界を笑顔に”する!

HP:徳森養鶏場 ノーマンブラサーズ

県内ではサンエーやうるマルシェ、オンラインではバームクーヘンとのセット購入も可能です。

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感想&お問い合わせは⁠⁠インスタ⁠⁠かiyasasaradio@gmail.comまで!

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#Mixed#NormanBrothers#EggFarm#Okinawa#FamilyBusiness#Biligual#ノーマンブラザーズ#沖縄#与勝#うるま市




00:01
Did you always have a strong motivation to make the world a better place?
I don't have a strong motivation, but...
I don't know.
You were born with a strong motivation?
I don't know if that's right.
I don't know if I had a strong motivation.
But I had a strong complex about my hometown.
I hated my hometown.
I hated both Okinawa and Urumashi.
There was a time like that.
So I went to Tokyo and challenged myself.
But when I came back to my hometown, I was like,
I was able to realize the strength of being away from my hometown.
Since then, as Minami said,
I've been able to get used to it.
Especially because President Wayne contributed to my hometown.
I hated my hometown as much as I hated myself.
But I had a lot of connections and opportunities.
I contributed to my hometown.
I think that's a good thing.
It's important that the local community helps us.
It's important that we do it for the local community.
It's said that we live in this era.
But we have to connect with people.
Except for special people.
There may be exceptions.
I don't know if it's a community or a big organization.
But I think it's important to have good connections.
When did you hate Okinawa?
I don't know if I hated Okinawa.
But I hated Yokatsu.
I wanted to get out of Yokatsu.
Was it because it was in the countryside?
I thought it was because it was in the countryside.
I transferred to Yokatsu from the U.S.
and came back to Yokatsu Junior High School.
There was a big gap.
I felt like I was abroad.
There were a lot of things that I didn't like about Okinawa.
There were a lot of things that I didn't like about Okinawa.
I was forced to emphasize it.
I didn't know what it meant.
I didn't know what it was for.
We were all together.
We didn't want to be apart.
We all went to the bathroom together.
We all went to the bathroom together.
It was like a drag queen.
03:00
I didn't have to go to the bathroom.
I didn't have to go to the bathroom.
Take my relationship as an example.
Can I think of one?
There might be other people who could ask it forever.
I was thinking about that too.
Rather than the one who could do it,
I thought about how to balance it with the others.
My teachers were kind of let down by it.
I think it depends on the person, but generally speaking,
it's better to be praised by someone who is good at cleaning than by someone who is good at doing it.
How can I put it?
It's not about the person who is good at doing it,
but it's about how much the person who is good at doing it is appreciated by the teacher.
Well, how can I put it?
There are a lot of things to think about.
I'm not sure if it's good or bad, but I have a strong sense of community.
I've been hanging out with the members since I was a kid in my hometown.
And since I came back from the U.S.,
how can I put it?
You have a different sense of values.
And it's kind of lame that I'm trying to do my best.
That's the most annoying thing.
You're doing your best on your own.
What's wrong with that?
What's wrong with that?
Well, at that time, there were a lot of things that I thought weren't really interesting.
I was like, what is this?
I wanted to get out of this place.
I went out for a while and went to a high school in Gushikawa.
Even then, my sense of community changed a bit.
And I went to university outside of the prefecture at first.
So, when I was about 20 years old,
my father...
My hometown...
But what was it from the middle?
My hometown...
What was it?
My father was also...
I mean, in Okinawa, just because you're a Yoka-chan,
you get teased a little.
Like, are you a Yoka-chan?
I still feel that way.
Even my father...
Even my American father...
He used to live in a Yoka-chan house.
So he was teased a lot.
He used to go out with his friends and people in the area.
Even my father was a Yoka-chan.
It was so unnatural for him to be teased just because he lived in a Yoka-chan house.
Why?
My father told me that.
Why do you just live in a Yoka-chan house?
Well, I mean...
When I told him that, he said he didn't understand why I was being teased.
He said,
don't you think people in Yoka-chan houses are trying to make it better?
He just kept telling me that.
So, let's make this Yoka-chan house better.
On the contrary, I wanted to look back.
I just wanted to live as I was.
Well, how can I say this?
When I was 20 years old, my father came to Okinawa.
06:02
He said, it doesn't matter how many years have passed, nothing has changed.
It might be a good thing.
But you were being teased and living in a Yoka-chan house.
I don't know if it's a good thing or not.
I don't know if it's a good thing to be teased.
I don't know what it is.
I was laughing while I was being teased.
I was thinking about what I should do.
I wanted to make this place better.
Even now, there are many kids who don't like Yoka-chan house.
I don't know why, but I think it's because my parents are trying to make it better.
I don't know if it's because I'm a Yoka-chan.
It's like half a joke.
Even now, when I go to a junior high school,
I don't like Yoka-chan house.
Maybe it's because I'm in the countryside.
I wish it would be better.
I'm trying to change the image of Yoka-chan.
Yoka-chan festival.
I just did it at Yoka-chan festival.
Even if I say Yoka-chan, my seniors will be surprised.
I don't use such words.
Is there any historical reason why people look down on people from Yokatsu?
Yokatsu was a land where only yankees could live.
It was like a tested land, Yokatsu.
It was like a country of yankees.
There are worst and yankee manga.
If you're not a yankee, you'll be licked and beaten up.
There was a very violent era.
I'm not a Banzoku.
There are a lot of episodes that are too violent to be true.
It's an era.
Maybe it wasn't just Yokatsu.
I think so.
Yokatsu was amazing.
It's already passed down to your parents.
Maybe it's because there were a lot of yankees in Yokatsu.
I think so.
I don't want to go to Yokatsu.
I used to go to Katsuage.
It's an era.
The area where yankees live has a culture that is protected.
For example, there are youth clubs, Acer, and Yokatsu culture.
I think it's cool from that perspective.
It's good, but it's too negative.
It's true, but the balance has collapsed.
So let's change that image as much as we can.
First, let's reverse the image of Yokatsu.
It would be nice if it was like,
09:02
Wow, it's Yokatsu.
I was told it was Yokatsu.
My high school classmates said it was Yokatsu.
But I don't feel like it's like Yoka-cha vibes.
It's like a place a little further away.
It goes up.
It's not like that now.
In the old days, it was more of a discriminatory term.
I think it was natural to use the word Yoka-cha.
But everyone knows it's Yoka-cha, so I think it's good to use it more and more.
I was told that wherever I went.
I was told that a lot even when I went to college.
But Norman Brothers are from Yoka-cha?
Sounds cool, in Japan.
Another person from outside.
Southern area.
Outside.
I'm sorry, but I don't have any negative image.
Yonabaru.
From the same generation,
I was told where Yonabaru was.
I was told that it was in the north.
So I don't like it anymore.
How do I put it?
It's not like Ikeikei.
I don't like it as a whole.
University is in the middle.
Ryudai and Okikoku are in Ginoan.
So I don't know where Yonabaru is.
I'm not familiar with Yonabaru until you become an adult.
I remember Yonabaru because I went to Nanjo.
I've been to Yoka-cha twice,
because there was Kyorei-mon.
But I just found out that there was a negative image.
When I was a kid,
I went to a Catholic school.
I was bullied a lot because of my name.
People from the area where the Yankees are shining.
I was bullied a lot because of my name.
You didn't like your name, did you?
Yes.
I was told that my English name was Mame.
I was told that I was smart.
Serious?
Yes.
I was told that I didn't want to go to a Catholic school.
At first, I didn't want to go to a Catholic school because there weren't many people in the school.
When I went to a Catholic school,
I was told where the Catholic school was.
You were interested.
Yes, I was told that.
But from the middle, I was told that the Catholic school was a rich school,
and the Catholic school was a very smart school, so I graduated.
You said the opposite.
I think we have a tendency to be inferior to others.
12:02
I think it was the same in Okinawa.
Compared to other prefectures, Okinawa is inferior.
In Okinawa, I was bullied because of my name.
But in Okinawa, I was bullied because of my name.
In the days when we were too inferior to others,
we tried to be nice to those who worked hard and those who were great.
We were all like that.
We were all like that.
We were conscious that we were inferior to others.
We were told that.
On the contrary, there is no such thing as a half-day.
Yes, there is.
We were told that we were going to the U.S. to speak English,
but it was a very rare opportunity.
Yes, it was a very rare opportunity.
At first, the middle school was a pre-hub.
We were building an air conditioner in the school building.
It was a pre-hub, so we entered the school with our shoes on.
When we said, ''Nice to meet you, everyone.''
When we said, ''We are from the U.S.,''
we entered the school with our shoes on, as shown in the picture.
It was a bad start from the beginning.
We were told that we were going to the U.S.
That's right.
I don't know why, but it felt like a pre-hub.
That's true.
We were told that, but...
You remember that, don't you?
I remember that it was a very good start for me.
I was like, ''We did it.''
We were told that we were going to the U.S.
We were told that we were going to the U.S.
We were told that we were going to the U.S.
I don't know what that means.
I don't know what that means.
I was so weak.
I was surrounded by people.
I was like, ''What's the point of fighting this guy?''
I was like, ''What is this time?''
I don't know if I was strong or not, but I was weak.
You were a tuber.
You were great in the U.S.
I was a tuber in the U.S.
I was a tuber?
Japanese?
Yellow monkey?
Yellow monkey.
There was a guy named Masaya.
I was a Yellow Monkey.
He was so strong.
Many people came to me.
I beat them all.
For a week?
I don't know, it wasn't like that, was it?
Yes, yes, yes.
And then?
He would always, always pick a fight with me.
Really?
Even in Japan?
Even here?
Because he was like that, we would fight.
I see.
That's how I learned.
You shouldn't fight.
There aren't many good things.
Right.
In America and in Japan,
he was so conspicuous that I wanted to pick a fight with him.
I see.
He was half-Japanese.
15:00
Even if he was here, he was half-Japanese.
Even if he was here, he was conspicuous.
If he was here, he was half-Japanese.
If he was here, he was half-American.
I don't know if it's good or bad,
but he was always busy.
I don't know if it's good or bad,
but he was always conspicuous.
There were times when I didn't like it.
But after a while, I didn't feel that way.
That's what we are.
We can change that.
If we can't change it,
let's make the most of it.
That's how it was.
I didn't think he was half-Saharan.
That was a little while ago.
But we are in the generation of half-Saharan.
We are blessed half-Saharan.
If you compare it with us,
we are so different.
When I hear the stories,
I feel regret that we were born as half-Saharan.
That's what I hear.
But we had these senior half-Saharan
who worked hard,
and the half-Saharan went to the entertainment world
and by doing that, we can make people envious of us.
That's how it started for us.
We were like, oh, thank you, but when we heard this episode,
we were like, wow, that's awesome.
I hope we can make the most of that and contribute to the world.
You two are half American and half Okinawan, right?
Yes, half American, half Okinawan.
You're saying the same thing.
My husband is also half American and half Okinawan.
I heard that he was bullied a lot.
But my mom never let him skip school.
I was told that I can understand people's pain.
I think I'm half American,
but I often hear that there were a lot of things that happened when I was a kid.
I think it's better not to listen to people's pain.
Well, that's true.
No, it's not.
It's true that it's a little scary.
It's different, but it's okay to be different.
I think everyone wants to do the same thing.
That's true.
I think there are more changes in Japan than in other countries.
That's true.
I'm half American, so I have a special feeling about good and bad things.
I thought I had a lot of good and bad things,
but when I went abroad, I was surprised.
When I went to China, I was surprised.
You're so thin-skinned.
Am I right?
So I thought I had to broaden my horizons.
18:01
There are white people, black people, Asian people, and Indian people.
There are so many people.
I thought I had to broaden my horizons.
I thought it would be better to go abroad if I had a chance.
You're right. I should have been a more Asian person.
You're thin-skinned, so it's okay.
You're thin-skinned, so it's okay.
What?
You're thin-skinned, so it's okay.
You're laughing.
Don't force me to laugh.
No, you've been smiling since the beginning.
That's right.
It's good to be half-Japanese.
I think it's okay to do what you want to do even if you're not half-Japanese.
I think it's totally okay.
Do you need to meet everyone?
I don't know what I'm going to talk about.
I think it's important for everyone to find what they want to do.
That's hard, too.
Yeah, it's really hard.
But if there are people who can't do what they want to do,
we'd like to hear from them.
We'd like to make a place for them.
We'd like to do what we can with Tamago.
We'd like to do what we can to make the most of our experience.
We don't usually talk this much.
But we've been thinking about a lot of things.
We'd like to make a place for everyone who can do what they want to do.
We'd like to make a place for everyone who can do what they want to do.
We'd like to make a place for everyone who can do what they want to do.
Wayne, you have kids, right?
Yes.
Do you teach them English or Japanese?
I teach them English.
It's about time.
I didn't just talk about the language.
I went to an American school, a Japanese school,
and an international school in Japan.
I went to all of them.
And I learned how to raise my own kids.
I've only been to a Japanese school.
So I have a lot of experience.
You said you had a hard time when you came back to Japan.
Is there anything good about coming back to Japan?
Like school education?
I think it's peaceful.
21:00
No fights?
You were involved in a fight.
I think it's good that there are no guns.
In the US, you could die from a gunshot.
In Japan, it was peaceful.
I had a gun.
I liked watching movies and games.
I went to a shooting range and experienced a gunshot.
It was scary.
The recoil was strong and my ears hurt.
I had a soundproof vest on.
I was so scared of guns.
Sometimes I couldn't sleep.
But now I'm fine.
I think Japan is peaceful.
I think that's what I felt.
What's good about Japan?
I think it's good that we have time to clean.
Like school lunches.
There's a lot of discipline.
It's a shame that no one can cook.
But everyone has a lot of skills.
It's good to have school lunches.
There's a lot of balance in nutrition.
There was a cafeteria over there.
But it's not as balanced as it is in Japan.
There's too much difference between the kids' school lunches.
There's a difference between an apple and a crispy biscuit with cheese.
There's lunchboxes.
There was a kid eating a carrot.
Do you know what that is?
I know what that is.
I think it was a sweet carrot.
Is he from Tsukenjima?
I only know American Tsukenjima.
I agree with you about the food.
The food in Japan is really good.
But in America, you can only use chopsticks and you're a hero.
Oh, I see.
What?
There weren't a lot of Japanese in that area.
Which part of North Carolina?
There weren't any.
There were Chinese classmates.
But there were mostly white and black people.
There were a lot of Hispanics.
A minority of Hispanics.
There weren't a lot of Japanese.
There weren't a lot of Asians.
I see.
So you were able to speak English at that time?
Not at all.
So you didn't have a problem with your butt?
To a certain extent, I was fine.
But I didn't have any practical experience.
So it was a bit difficult at first.
But I got used to it as we talked.
I think it changed a lot.
How did you make friends?
24:00
He was like, Yaibin!
What?
Were you like that before?
He was so cute.
He used to be.
You're a liar, Yaibin!
He was so cute.
I had a friend who talked to me.
He was from Tenko.
He was like, where are you from?
I was like, Japan.
He was like, what?
I had a friend who came to me a lot.
Thanks to him, I was able to get along with my friends.
I was lucky to have a friend like that.
I was like...
I don't know what to do.
I can't speak English well.
I was so nervous inside.
You look delicious.
I was nervous.
But thanks to him, I was able to relax.
I'm so glad.
Thank you, Bobby.
Bobby.
Thank you.
Bobby.
Cody.
I'm glad I had Cody.
I'm glad I had Cody.
I'm glad I had AJ.
There was an interesting guy with a high physical ability.
We lived in an apartment complex in the US.
Cody and AJ lived in the same building.
They came from New York.
AJ.
AJ helped me a lot.
He helped me to get used to the feeling of being a foreigner.
How did you make friends?
I don't think I had many friends.
We talked a lot.
We played skateboard together.
Cody was good at skateboarding.
That's about it.
We talked a lot.
ESL is an English class.
If you are not good at English, you can make friends there.
That's a big deal.
I went to an international school.
I made friends there.
I'm glad I made friends there.
That's how we got to know each other.
Everyone was naked in their school uniforms.
In the US?
In the US, everyone was naked.
Very sexy.
I was too young at that time.
I was attracted to the sexiness of Japan.
I was jealous of that.
That was almost a culture shock.
But you don't look like a Japanese girl in Japan.
I think I was mature.
27:01
I think so, too.
If you were like me in junior high school, I was worried about what would happen in high school.
I think it's because I'm in middle school, so I show my boobs as a joke.
What?
Because you're in middle school?
I don't know, but...
I think it's because you're in puberty, so you want to show off.
I think it's because I'm in puberty, so I want to show off.
I think it's because I'm in puberty, so I want to show off.
It might just be a coincidence, but...
You're the only one with that experience.
No, I'm not the only one.
It depends on the school year.
I was in elementary school and high school.
So I think it was you who showed off.
I wonder if I showed off.
Of course I showed off, too.
No one told me that.
But on the other hand, if you came back from the U.S., you'd be really popular.
That's true.
I don't know. I couldn't get a girlfriend.
Even in the U.S.?
That's right.
You're lying.
I couldn't get a girlfriend.
We were getting along, but...
I was able to get a girlfriend when I was in high school.
I was playing baseball.
When I came back, I was playing baseball all the time.
I was like a muscle-training boy.
I was playing baseball all the time.
I had a round face and black hair.
I was mistaken for a black person.
You were so muscular and cool.
I wonder if I was cool.
I wanted to be macho.
You were a muscle-training boy.
I thought you were really cool.
You can see it in the picture.
I thought you were really cool.
I thought you were really cool.
I think I had a stronger impression of Japan than I did of Japan.
You must have been in the same age group.
I was in elementary and junior high school.
There was a big difference between the two years.
I was a fun kid.
I felt like a kid.
When I came back, I was in elementary and junior high school.
After that, I felt like a dufufu.
I was a dufufu.
I was talking about being a dufufu.
No?
No?
I'm sorry.
Everyone is like that.
I think there was something like that.
Japan should be kind.
That's true.
America is not so different.
I think there was a big difference between being kind and being a dufufu.
Everyone has their own strong points.
I felt like I was close to being LGBTQ.
I think I was close to being LGBTQ.
I think I was close to being LGBTQ.
You were in middle school and high school, right?
I don't remember.
30:01
I don't remember.
I don't think so.
I was in elementary school until the 5th grade.
I think I was in middle school from the 6th grade.
It's a strange place in America.
There were middle school and high school students.
I think you have more experience in America than I do.
I think that's a good experience.
I think that's a good experience.
I think that's a good experience.
There were some people who were obsessed with the same school year.
There were people who were in the same class as me.
There were people who were in the same class as me.
No matter how naughty, no matter how much you pierce and how much you have a tattoo,
If you don't do it properly, you'll be obsessed and fall.
I was very...
I didn't have any mercy.
In Japan, we do something like this.
In Japan, we do something like this.
The students were like,
The students were like,
I think it's normal.
I think it's normal.
It's easy to understand.
At that time, it was very impressive.
I thought that was really good, so I came back to Japan.
It was an amazing gap.
We had to do it well together.
I thought we only did the good and bad.
I thought we only did the good and bad.
We have to do something on our own in America.
Japan looks like everyone is doing it together.
If we all do the same thing, we can be good students.
How did you feel when you went to a high school or a university?
Did you get used to it?
A Japanese school?
Well, I think I got used to it.
I changed my way of doing things.
I think I changed my way of doing things.
I think I was in a good high school
because I worked out and played baseball all the time.
33:02
There weren't many people in Ishikawa high school
who made fun of people who were serious about something.
I went to Maehara high school.
There weren't many people who made fun of people who were serious about something.
There were a lot of them.
I thought it was stupid.
Why did they have to make fun of people who were in the same club?
There were a lot of people who made fun of people who were in the same club.
I thought it was stupid.
I felt very uncomfortable.
I felt very uncomfortable.
I don't know if it's still the same in Maehara high school.
But there were people who were serious about it.
I was in the same English course as them.
There was one girl who studied English and studied abroad.
She was a very conscious and hard-working woman.
I thought she was really cool.
People change in the environment.
I think it's really important.
Did you start working as a talent after you finished school?
No.
Did you join an agency?
There was a time when I was a little bit into it.
It wasn't like you two were together.
We weren't together at all.
We were separate.
Did you say you wanted to do it yourself or were you scouted?
I was scouted.
I was in college.
You were very fashionable.
You were a fashionista.
I respect you a lot.
That's not true.
That's what I heard.
But it's true.
I'm a fashionable person.
I thought it was amazing.
I spent a lot of time choosing my jeans.
I was like, what's the difference?
I thought it was amazing.
As a result, I was scouted.
I thought it was amazing.
I liked it.
I was scouted by my family.
I was working.
I was wearing a bib.
36:00
You were wearing a bib.
I started with a bib.
I was a little bit into it.
Then I became a normal person.
I worked as a translator at an English global center.
I also did darts.
I worked at a darts shop.
I got a license to participate in professional games.
You had a license.
I had a license.
You drank alcohol.
Under the minimum conditions.
Under the minimum conditions.
To be honest, I was very nervous.
I drank alcohol and...
No? What was it?
I was supposed to drink alcohol.
I was supposed to drink alcohol.
I was supposed to drink alcohol.
I practiced while drinking.
I practiced while drinking.
You can't get drunk too much.
You have to keep it.
You have to relax.
If you relax, you'll get stronger.
You'll get stronger.
What do you call it?
You said it was a super mental sport.
It was terrifying.
When I was about to fall, everyone was like...
When I was about to fall, everyone was like...
My fingers were shaking.
I couldn't let go of my hands.
I see.
It was a big venue.
It was an experience.
It was an experience.
It was hard to throw as usual.
I know.
It was hard.
But I did darts.
I did a little bit of modeling.
But I did it because I wanted to.
Darts.
I wanted to be good at it.
I've been doing it for a long time.
I've been doing it for a long time.
8 times a week.
It's not 8.
It's 7.
I've been doing darts for a long time.
That's how hard it was.
I played baseball, did muscle training, and did darts.
Now I sing.
I play baseball, do egg, and sing.
You're going to be able to sing.
Farmer musician.
I guess that's what you call it.
The president is a farmer musician.
Thomas Koho is a farmer talent.
He's an action actor.
I guess it's like an action movie.
It's on TV, on the radio, on YouTube.
It's on TV, on the radio, on YouTube.
I guess it's like an action movie.
I guess it's like an action movie.
I guess it's like an action movie.
It's important to do fun things like that.
Getting money from that.
Want to have a nice meal.
A prepared temper kit will lead to a relaxed mind.
That's important.
39:01
That's how it is.
Some people get lukewarm.
Don't get sucked into the market.
As a mind, the base is important.
I don't want to lose sight of what's important to me.
I think everyone is like that.
I don't want to make a mistake.
So, in the future, while you're doing activities,
while you're raising the egg,
you want to spread the egg to the world?
Yes, I want to spread the egg to the world.
I want to spread the Japanese egg to the world.
I might go to Europe this year.
That's great.
I'm planning to go around the world while filming.
I saw Norman Brothers' channel on YouTube and went abroad.
It's also a way to show that farmers go abroad in that way.
There are a lot of foreign countries in Germany and Europe.
That's amazing.
Our equipment is also made in Germany.
It's a strange coincidence.
I'm planning to go to Germany in Europe.
I'm planning to go to Germany in Europe.
You're going to go everywhere.
I think there's a possibility.
I think you're going to go everywhere.
Can you eat European eggs raw?
No, I don't think I have a habit of eating them raw.
Basically, I don't think so.
It's supposed to be cooked.
It's unique.
It's only in Japan.
That's why it's so high quality nationwide.
That's amazing.
You can eat it raw.
Animal eggs.
Japanese yakitori comes out in half rolls.
But it's really good.
I don't get a stomachache.
I'm always impressed.
That's right.
It's a great management.
That's why you can eat it.
That's right.
It's because the culture is so rooted.
That's why the force is born.
It's national.
Everyone likes raw food.
It's because people eat raw food.
That's right.
There are people who pursue it.
The same goes for fish.
There has always been a raw food culture.
That's how far we've come.
The expiration date and the setting are all different.
For example, in the United States, it's a few months.
It's completely different.
The way to marinate is completely different.
The eggs that are exported from Japan are different from normal eggs.
It's called a heating egg.
If you export it as a heating egg, you can marinate it for 90 days.
42:03
The eggs themselves are amazing.
It's like an emergency food.
If you bake it, you can eat it.
If you want to get protein, humans are made of water and protein.
It's hard to manage meat and other things.
But you can get the cheapest and most protein.
Eggs are a superfood.
You can keep it for a long time.
If you work hard, you don't have to cook it.
I've never compared it to meat.
But if you look at the price,
if you compare it to the same amount of protein,
eggs are very cheap.
They should be very cheap.
It's a matter of logic.
Meat is also delicious.
So eggs are amazing.
If there are birds, humans can live.
If there are birds, humans can live.
As Bill Gates said,
if there is one thing you can take to an uninhabited island,
it's a bird.
It's like taking a chicken.
Then you can survive.
That's how strong eggs are.
Even if you look around the world,
Japan is a country with a strong egg culture.
I think it's going to be interesting.
If we broadcast on Brothers,
and if we represent Japan,
I think there will be people who will support us.
I think there will be a lot of fans.
I would be happy if you could promote Okinawa with that.
I think so.
What kind of content do you usually post on your YouTube channel?
It's a joke.
It's a joke.
It's a joke.
It's not an X-video.
It's YouTube.
I went to the first name.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I'm glad it was recorded.
I won't delete it.
I won't delete it, so it's okay.
Really?
You'll notice it, right?
It's about eggs.
It's an introduction.
It's an introduction to gourmet food.
It's our specialty.
It's a recommendation.
It's a project.
There are a lot of things.
It's a little rough.
Various stories.
It's a variety of stories.
It's a little old one.
It's about eggs.
45:02
What was it like recently?
I went to Taiwan this year.
Thomas reported the experience of Taiwan.
I got to know people.
I got a smartphone.
It's a project.
I was recruited.
I used this one key word.
I used this one key word.
We needed to interact with people.
We reached our destination.
We reached our destination.
It's a good result.
We have a lot of projects.
I talked about eggs.
We talked about eggs.
We spoke about egg-giving brothers.
We spoke about egg-giving brothers.
We did.
We played a game called Kurohige Kiki-Ippatsu with Honkid Brothers.
If we won, we would get a free egg.
We wanted them to eat the egg.
If we lost, we would treat them to a drink of their choice.
At that time, it was Jibago Coffee.
Sometimes, we would hang out in the city and ask them to eat the egg.
We did that.
We did a lot of things like that.
Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, etc.
Noman Brothers.
In Hiragana.
I think Twitter is Tokumori Yokeijo.
I think Tokumori Yokeijo or Noman Brothers will hit.
Where do you sell the Kugani eggs?
How do you buy them?
You can buy them at Urumaru.
San-Ei and Urumaru.
San-Ei has about 30 stores in the prefecture.
So you can buy them in Okinawa?
Yes, you can buy them in Okinawa.
We also have an online shop.
If you look at the website, you can buy them there.
If you can go to Yamato-san's shop, you can buy them there.
Yamato-san's black cat shop.
We have a set of eggs.
We use a lot of eggs.
We have a set of salt-balm and an egg set.
If Yamato-san's black cat shop is available.
That's right.
That's about it for the eggs.
You can also buy them at Uchimabaiten.
It's too local.
Uchimabaiten.
It's the way to Hatsune Elementary School.
You can also buy them at Nisetta Store.
Nisetta Store.
It's written Nesita Store on the rice field.
I thought it was in Katakana.
It's Nisiatta Store.
It's Nisetta Store.
You can order them on the phone.
Bring the eggs.
48:01
Nisetta Store.
The order is very smooth.
It's like a business card.
That's how it is.
That's how it is.
It's too local.
We also have a place to sell eggs.
We also have a place to sell eggs.
We also have a place to sell eggs.
We also have a place to sell eggs.
We also have a place to sell eggs.
But inside the store,
In restaurants,
they have many places to sell eggs.
People love eggs.
People love eggs.
There are more options now, right?
There are more options now, right?
Oh, I see!
I recommend you move to Okagome as in Okun波 facial.
Gome is in the middle of Kokusai Dori Road.
We have Higa Tsuka...
We have Higa Tsuka...
He uses our eggs for that too.
I know a lot about Higa-san.
I knew it.
The eggs are good and he's particular about the rice flour.
But Tsukasa-san's cream is really good.
It's like a crepe.
There's also a side dish crepe.
A side dish crepe is the best.
It's really good.
I think it goes well with the rice flour.
I haven't tried the side dish yet.
I think it was a tiramisu.
There was a sign menu.
The cream was really good.
Tsukasa-san is a model too.
He used to do commercials on TV.
He's a somewhat man.
A sour man.
Don't say that.
I don't know if it's okay to say that.
How old is he?
He has a lot of talents.
He's a good-looking guy.
He's funny.
Mom, I want you to come to Kuganitamago.
I want you to come to Urumaru-sha, San'e-san, Uchimabaiten, and Nisetta Store.
I want you to come.
It's used as a material for crepes.
There's a possibility that he's eating in places he doesn't know.
I don't think so.
He just hasn't noticed.
My mom usually buys it.
There's a red logo.
I want everyone to remember it.
I want them to think of it when they see it.
Golden egg.
That's right. Golden egg.
The chicken is a U in Roman.
U in Urumashi.
Oh, I see.
U in Urumashi.
Recently, the logo has become new.
I'm the logo now.
President Wayne.
Wayne has an egg.
I'm doing a pose called Kugani pose on YouTube.
Yes, Kugani.
I made a logo with that pose.
51:00
It's all in the package.
That's Colonel Sanders.
That's nice.
Also, Akane-san's Chashibi stamp.
Yes, Kugani.
Line stamp.
Line stamp.
I'm glad.
I'm the ambassador.
Thank you.
That's wonderful.
I'm going to do my best from now on.
I need you to know more.
That's right.
It's been about an hour now.
It's been two hours.
I can't stop talking.
Today, I'm going to show you the deliciousness of Urumashi eggs from all over the country to the world.
To the universe.
Universe!
Please enjoy Kugani eggs.
Thank you.
Thank you for coming.
Thank you for calling us.
We pay the bill.
Thank you.
Bye.
Kugani.
Don't do it.
Kugani.
52:11

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