Maeda Atsuko (Acchan) / 1st Generation

Discussion in 'AKB48 Graduated Members' started by xyish, Jun 5, 2007.

  1. Jun

    Jun Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Apr 8, 2012
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBhu-Itixcc[/yt]

    lol the Acchan and Tomochin parts :^^;:

    I don't know the name of the show though

    Found a video:

    [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7bDlAciHjpE[/yt]
     
  2. Tomokazu

    Tomokazu Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Jan 24, 2012
    Location:
    Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan - Auckland, New Zealand
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTYFc0xrtgQ[/yt]

    Different version of Nissin cup noodle ad featuring Maeda Atsuko.
     
  3. straawbeeryy

    straawbeeryy Kenkyuusei

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    Mar 4, 2012
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    Atsuko's letter to Takamina for her birthday (cr: whoever translated this, not mine)

    <3
     
  4. ilovetakamina

    ilovetakamina Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Jul 29, 2011
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    Cleveland, OHIO
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A


    Awww, what a beautiful letter Acchan.. I like Takamina the most too.. LOL [hehe]
     
  5. LovelyGaki

    LovelyGaki Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Oct 31, 2011
    Location:
    SoCali, US
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryMdzwPG2mI[/yt]

    Miichan starts reading Acchan's letter at 4:50

    When was Takamina's B-Day performance? Couple days ago?

    I love how Acchan is giving us all these AtsuMina stuff :blush:
     
  6. Tomokazu

    Tomokazu Kenkyuusei

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    Jan 24, 2012
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    Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan - Auckland, New Zealand
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    ^ thanks for sharing the link, wow acchans letter was so heart filled and warm. But I started tearing up a little at takaminas speech, when she started talking about her struggles of being in Akb.
     
  7. extomomi

    extomomi Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    May 6, 2009
    Location:
    Vancouver, Canada
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    I cried too. And I think those two things takamina mentioned which she described as "life is hard"were referring to Rina and takamina's mom ...thing
    Poor takamina QAQ
     
  8. Tomokazu

    Tomokazu Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Jan 24, 2012
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    Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan - Auckland, New Zealand
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    Yeah, I thought so too. Speaking of which, has there been much news about takaminas mum? [speechless]
     
  9. extomomi

    extomomi Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    May 6, 2009
    Location:
    Vancouver, Canada
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    I don't think so. I think Dentsu probably blocked the news few days after it was published in that scandal magazine.

    Dentsu: one of the largest advertising agencies in the world. Possibly a shareholder of AKB.
     
  10. Tomokazu

    Tomokazu Kenkyuusei

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    Jan 24, 2012
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    Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan - Auckland, New Zealand
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    Yeah, I'm familiar with dentsu but didn't know they may have been a possible shareholder of Akb. Do you reckon they own quite a large percentage of shares?

    In a sense I'm a little bit disappointed that they didn't follow up with that article, but I'm glad that they didn't at the same time because the media can do some real bad things to people's reputation and I don't think she needs that kind of trouble right now.
     
  11. 1337rice

    1337rice Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Apr 5, 2010
    Location:
    Toronto
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    It's because Dentsu is big, they can control a lot of things. If AKB48's main advertising firm is Dentsu, surely they don't want anything to happen to the group. If their own client is getting bullied, Dentsu is going threaten to revoke any contracts with other media sources = less money collected from advertising = bad

    So they now know how to stfu :lol:
     
  12. Tomokazu

    Tomokazu Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Jan 24, 2012
    Location:
    Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan - Auckland, New Zealand
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

     
  13. eyeless

    eyeless Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Dec 1, 2009
  14. haru9210

    haru9210 Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Jun 5, 2011
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    source: http://atsuholic.tumblr.com/
     
  15. Jun

    Jun Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Apr 8, 2012
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    Thanks to czy for translations!

    Btw, I need to join in acchan48 too :)
     
  16. wrxsti

    wrxsti Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Mar 28, 2012
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    Interesting Article i found cruzing reddit

    http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fd20120415pb.html

    An idol 'graduating' should not be front-page news


    By PHILIP BRASOR


    Following Atsuko Maeda's March 25 announcement that she was leaving the all-girl idol collective AKB48, a rumor circulated on Twitter that a male University of Tokyo student had committed suicide in response. The rumor was quickly exposed as a hoax, but the point had been made. People were taking the news way too seriously. No one was really surprised when the sports tabloids made it their front-page story, but did the national dailies have to report it in such detail?

    When Maeda said she was "graduating" from a group she joined as an original member at 14, she was already 20, the age of majority in Japan. As a commercial enterprise, AKB48 is fixated on adolescence, but there are members even older than Maeda who remain with the ship, so some commentators have been pondering the significance of her decision. She's nominally the group's most popular member and, more significantly, her endeavors as a solo entity have yet to meet with much success. In the past she said her main ambition was to be an actress, but the TV drama series she appeared in last summer, "Hanazakari ni Kimitachi," averaged a miserable 7 percent share per episode, and her big movie vehicle, "Moshi Koko Yakyu no Joshi Maneja ga Dorakka no 'Manejimento' wo Yondara," was a box-office dud. Adding insult to injury, the tabloid Sports Hochi awarded her its Hebi Ichigo Award — Japan's equivalent of Hollywood's Razzies for the worst film performances of the year.

    Some in the show-business press hold that Maeda may be unselfishly making room for young AKB members to rise higher in the organization, but gossip columnist Yoshiko Matsumoto thinks it might be something else. She sympathizes with Maeda and believes the young star wasn't happy in the group. It's lonely at the top, and the pressure to stay there is more emotionally vexing than it's worth. People misread her slightly contrarian attitude as the outward manifestation of a grouchy constitution, but the politics that rules AKB forces her to do things that must be trying on a day-to-day basis, such as putting up with colleagues' "overly considerate" attentions.

    The group's producer and songwriter, Yasushi Akimoto, once described Maeda as "stoical," adding she isn't comfortable with "wishy-washy relationships." When Akimoto talks about AKB, it's often difficult to tell if he's being naive or cynical. Like the comment he made to CNN several months ago that his sexually suggestive lyrics are merely a means of "depicting reality" so that the girls and their fans will think about such sensitive topics, his analysis of Maeda's personality glosses over what's obvious, which is that she's forced by circumstance to be Akimoto's point-person in a project that endeavors to explain how young Japanese women think and feel.

    By now nobody with half a gram of critical faculty believes AKB's appeal is purely musical. Any entertainment value derived from their records or performances is qualified by their mission to be both famous and accessible. Akimoto's boldest twist on the classic idol formula is to tie sales of AKB merchandise to involvement with the group, even if the involvement is heavily controlled: the meet-and-greet sessions after shows and, especially, the "elections" to decide which member is the most "popular."

    These elections may have had more to do with Maeda's decision than anything else. Contests to determine popularity are the cruelest kind, and it's said that the first time Maeda won an election the audience was clapping and calling her name just before the emcee announced the runner-up, meaning that, while everyone expected her to win, many vocalized their hope that she wouldn't. The next year, when her crown was taken away by Yuko Oshima, Maeda said she was relieved, and the year after that, when she got it back, she made a strange but revealing comment: She knew there were people who hated her, but "please don't hate AKB48."

    It was too late. The haters were out in force, and it appears most of them are women. It's no secret that, unlike past "people's idols" (kokumin-teki aidoru), such as Pink Lady or Morning Musume, AKB48 is designed to appeal specifically to a preadult male sensibility, regardless of actual age. Except for elementary school girls who aspire to be in the group, females seem to have a tough time empathizing with or appreciating AKB48.

    Part of it has to do with sex. Pundit and sex-paraphernalia entrepreneur Minori Kitahara has said that AKB doesn't demonstrate the "sexual self-awareness" of female K-pop artists since that would be intimidating to male fans, who still prefer their objects of desire to be demure and unyielding.

    Not to mix metaphors, but the catfight in the goldfish bowl that AKB's public activities showcase — from backstage documentaries to variety-show appearances — is what keeps those male fans riveted and female nonfans repulsed. In a feature article in Aera that diverged from Matsumoto's tack, AKB was said to symbolize the "lack of freedom" that young women still have to struggle with in Japanese society, though the writer also wondered if expressing such a viewpoint wasn't "being too mean."

    This cautious tone shows how tough it is to discuss the group with any sort of candor and not come across as being petty and nasty. Whatever one wants to make of Akimoto's questionable PR decisions — presenting his charges as, literally, fantasy bedmates, or having them smooch one another suggestively in TV commercials — the girls' main appeal is still their accessibility, which, in the context of Japanese show business, is a pretty good joke. The operating principle of idolhood is that fans don't feel the sort of distance from their heroes that they might feel toward performers with ambition and demonstrable talent. AKB48 just makes the relationship clearer. Consequently, Maeda's retirement seems contrived, so her fans shouldn't fret. Someone will find something for her to do
     
  17. maskedapple

    maskedapple Kenkyuusei

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    Oshimen:
    kawaeirina
  18. 1337rice

    1337rice Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Apr 5, 2010
    Location:
    Toronto
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    well, this article is no better...writing an article to talk about what other articles talked about

    tbh, if the dramas didn't have such a s*** or gloomy storyline, it wouldn't even matter who was the main actor/actress. Q10 still achieved a 10% rating, which isn't bad...why didn't he mention that?? Hana Kimi was horrible because it was just a pointless remake, YES WE NEED TO MENTION IT BECAUSE SHE'S IN IT AND IT GETS A 7% RATING :fp: Saikou no Jinsei got around 10% as well, NOPE let's NOT talk about that.

    Well, THERE YOU F***ING HAVE IT :lol: AKB48 was created by THAT fat man, DESIGNED with MALE fantasies in mind. Don't say that WOMEN hate Maeda Atsuko, they hate AKB48!

    Well no s*** Sherlock, she's not Goto Maki yet :lol:
     
  19. straawbeeryy

    straawbeeryy Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Mar 4, 2012
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    Ah, I read that article a while ago. I wouldn't really pay too much attention to it. It seems like one of those "stop liking what I don't like" kind of article. Rather biased with not a lot of research in my opinion. I practically scoffed at the part where he said that K-pop seems to have more "sexual-awareness" or whatever when they literally pull the same crap ("I was being sexy?!! I had no idea!!" kind of thing). Every girl group does that so it's not really fair to just target AKB.
     
  20. wrxsti

    wrxsti Kenkyuusei

    Joined:
    Mar 28, 2012
    Re: Maeda Atsuko / Team A

    if we started liking what this wackjob likes life would be boring.

    anddd

    Kpop is hilarious!especially when you spoof the korean lyrics into what you think they sound like in english.
    For Example GEE GEE GEE BABY BABYY becomes CHEESE CHEESE CHEESE BABY BABY BABY!!
    [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCv-NKl7uuQ[/yt]
     

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