Seriously, what? haha
Pics or it didn't happen :p Or maybe rather not!
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Well I didnt take any pics but well here are some cause this thing is televised
http://multimedia.asiaone.com/static...ages/pic26.jpg
http://multimedia.asiaone.com/static...mages/pic1.jpghttp://multimedia.asiaone.com/static...ages/pic28.jpg
Trust me this shit is weirder in person
Hahahaha, I have no words. Wonder how the job ad goes to be one of those girls?
oH jAPAN hOW wE lOVE yOU aND yOUR bACKWARDS THINKING:-
http://en.rocketnews24.com/2012/12/0...ra-goes-wrong/
Anybody know about Japanese time-share
How can you not post the video to this, its awesome!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0aecdnuY2k
Lol, I do trust u, this shit is freaky man.
I suppose it would start something like this; Do u want to be on national television in your bikini? lol
And this :D
No sorry dude, isn't time share that holiday destination stuff? Or am I stoned without even knowing it?
I have one question... What if he had a hard on? :eek:
A cop who repeatedly attempted to blackmail a woman he questioned for “suspicious” behaviour so he could pay off his huge social gaming debt has actually been jailed and fired.
The 44-year-old police sergeant in the employ of Hyogo prefecture was sacked and handed an 18 month prison sentence after his blackmail antics came to light.
According to the charges, the officer was on patrol when he happened upon a car parked in a quiet street.
On the pretext that the vehicle was “suspicious,” he proceeded to demand the female occupant present her license and tell him her address.
Although so far this differed little from more routine acts of police oppression, the next day he hatched upon the scheme of blackmailing her to pay for his social gaming debts, lying to his girlfriend and telling her he was “going to work” but instead heading to the woman’s address.
At first he lost his nerve and returned home, but some days later he gathered all his lawmanly courage and went to her house to extort money from her with the curious ruse of asking her if she “would buy the recording of me questioning her.”
Amazingly, he left this as a written demand on her car windscreen.
His victim became concerned and eventually reported the matter to police, whose tireless investigations soon uncovered the culprit despite his being astute enough not to reveal his name on the blackmail demand.
He was arrested for attempted extortion, and a further two demands he was in the process of preparing to inflict on her were uncovered.
He complained that he was “an old-school cop who couldn’t adapt to the new ways of doing things” and that social gaming was his only escape from the gruelling business of Japanese policing.
The 500,000 yen in charges he accrued playing Shingeki no Bahamut and other social games was said to have been the final straw.
Despite all this he has still launched an appeal against his sentence.
Combining police criminality and the wonders of social gaming has led to an acerbic reaction online: