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UPSETTING DAY

Japan’s Soul Tunnels

The Japanese version of anything is a beartrap baited with pocky and used panties: It might hurt you, sure, but pocky is sweet and those panties look salty. Itā€™s worth a shot! I would like you to carefully nurture that mindset as I take you throughā€¦ Japanese Soul Train.

Itā€™s called Soul Tunnels, I guess because thatā€™s what Soul Trains use to get through mountains? Thatā€™s actually a perfect title, since this is quite a bit like Soul Train, but not as expansive, way darker, and there will absolutely be phallic things going into dank orifices. 

We are in trouble so quickly: The very first thing you see after that shameless ripoff of the Soul Train title sequence is our announcer, DJ Problematik.

I know youā€™re squinting at all four of those terrible pixels and trying to figure out what youā€™re looking at. The fake afro could be pretty harmless, but is he…? No, this took place in the ā€˜90s, surely heā€™s not in blackface. And you know what? I just canā€™t tell. The DJ pixels never resolved enough for me to tell whether or not this whole show is an extremely racist reboot of a black institution. 

So please allow the host of Soul Tunnels to remove any doubt.

This isnā€™t just blackface, itā€™s the worst blackface Iā€™ve ever seen. Klan members tell that guy he doesnā€™t need the shoe polish AND nose prosthetics. He looks like somebody exaggerating blackface to try and make a point about how bad blackface really is, only he just realized the second he stepped on stage that it still means heā€™s doing blackface. Is it the laziness thatā€™s most disturbing? The uncolored ears poking out of the sides, the ill-fitting bald cap, the makeup that crudely ends in jagged smears on the neck? This is a man who has done blackface so many times that it doesnā€™t even give him a thrill anymore. He hastily slaps on racism like I slap on pants so the mailman canā€™t sue again.

I know the old excuse: That Japanā€™s relationship to blackface isnā€™t meant to be offensive, so itā€™s not offensive. Kind of like how Australians say ā€œcuntā€ and they really just mean ā€œany human being, anywhere, of any gender or disposition, dead or alive.ā€ But thatā€™s like saying that flashing the mailman isnā€™t offensive because you didnā€™t mean to have your dick out — he just happened to be at the bottom of the stairs on Kilt Day. It wonā€™t hold up in court, is what Iā€™m getting at here.

But while the blackface is – oh god, definitely the biggest thing here — there are a lot of other bizarre issues with Soul Tunnels. For example: everyone is wearing costumes that feel like stereotypes I donā€™t know about Americans, but that the rest of the world thinks are hilarious.

What is with all the cutesy overalls that look more like Adult Osh Kosh Bā€™Gosh than actual farm gear?

Is Disco a hillbilly thing in Japan? Because I would watch a program about Okinawan Disco Hicks and the minor tragedies of their day to day lives as long as the blackface was tastefully done. 

Itā€™s either huge toddlers playing farmtime dress-up, or itā€™s men in suits and dark sunglasses wearing fake afros, like somebody installed a funk mod in a John Woo game.

Hereā€™s the Japanese King of Soul:

Looking like an unsuccessful speedboat salesman. He always shows up with three henchmen dressed just like him, which is to say theyā€™re all dressed like background Robocop villains. Itā€™s the least Soul Train thing I can imagine, outside of an Intro to Business class at a Vermont Community College taught by a divorced, former unsuccessful speedboat salesman.

Every episode of Soul Tunnels opens with the Human Hatecrime in a new crazy costume, and so obviously in blackface that it feels weird even mentioning it. I might as well specify heā€™s not on fire. He then performs a wacky little skit that always feels like heā€™s mocking a cultural pun that gets lost in translation. Here he is angrily storming out, freezing in place:

Then dropping to the ground to mime the careful insertion of a microphone into his rectum. Itā€™s so specifically, slowly, grossly done that they actually had to pixelate it:

I donā€™t know what this is. Is the Japanese phrase for ā€œdance competitionā€ phonetically close to their phrase for ā€œsurprise analā€? Even if thatā€™s true, I can think of three skits to better capitalize on that observation, and only one of them needs to be digitally altered for decency. After a solid minute of silent, uncomfortable butt stuff, this Japanese man wearing blackface and Berry Gordyā€™s pajamas just gets up and goes about explaining the rules of this, again, dancing show.

Itā€™s too bad I was wildly distracted by the second worst mime routine in this article, because I really needed to know those rules. Sometimes it seems like Soul Train, where people just dance for the love of it. Sometimes itā€™s like Britainā€™s Got Talent, where bullshit and skill are put on equal footing. And other times itā€™s like MadTV, if they were allowed to air their first drafts. 

It is definitely a competition, but I have no idea who or what to root for. There are very good dancers going so hard they injure themselvesā€¦

Have to be carried off-stage…

And then later return to finish their routine, clearly in pain and using a crutch to Hustle.

This is the end of a tragic sports drama. This is the Disco version of collapsing and shitting yourself at the end of a marathon and then not giving up — crawling, screaming, shit-smearing yourself over that finish line as a testament to the human spirit. People are really trying in this competition, when bad dancers do exactly as well by doing nothing except sucking gently to music. Hold on, thatā€™s not fair: Sucking gently and committing race crimes.

These ladies get the same two-minutes of screentime, and they use it to lip sync badly, dance like an unwelcome aunt at a wedding, and run out of shoepolish at the neck. 

And yet they made it through, same as the dude that exploded his kneecap so hard he had to scotch tape the pieces back together and crutch-boogie the rest of his routine just so he could have the honor of finishing.

This high drama was wisely saved for the end of the season, but early episodes were more heavily into bad comedy sketches, like the Disco Mime:

Who combined two of everybodyā€™s least favorite things into something worse, much like racism and dry anal.

While the boneless dental assistants absolutely blew up the house:

They clearly cannot dance and arenā€™t trying, but the audience goes ballistic for them. This has to be a hilarious reference to something I donā€™t understand, because when the head labtech does the electrocuted octopus:

The crowd loses their shit! There is no explanation! Wearing your work uniform while having a seizure is the least Soul Train thing I can think of, except for maybe receiving a cancer diagnosis by text while standing in line at the bank.

But things really take a turn a few episodes in, when the biggest god damn twist in the world happens. You will never see this coming. You wonā€™t even believe me when I type it.

Soul Tunnelsā€¦

Gotā€¦

An actual black guy!

Heā€™s not the worst dancer on Soul Tunnels. He does two minutes of moving invisible boxes while trying to dislodge a wedgie. It looks like heā€™s about to start a dance forty-two times. Itā€™s kind of a freestyle Beavis and Butthead

And he makes it through!

Listen: He got up there and danced, possibly for the first time ever, while a Japanese man dressed like an old racist ad for cough medicine laughed at him ten feet away. Thatā€™s what courage looks like. He deserved this win. Though maybe not the next seven — even though he was so shocked by his victory that he never prepared another dance, they kept putting him through, all the way to the final. Where his brother and his brotherā€™s wife, dressed like theyā€™re making fun of white people, were watching from the crowd.

Thatā€™s the only thing he says, and he delivers it like an actor trying to read a line with a typo in it. Like he knows thereā€™s something wrong with what heā€™s saying but itā€™s not his job to think about it. Itā€™s such a strange and uneven moment that I am now questioning all of Soul Tunnels. Was I wrong about this whole thing? Was it ever a reality show, or was it a scripted Kaufman-esque spoof of a spoof? 

You know what? Thatā€™s what weā€™re going with. This was all a cutting meta-parody that ended with the only black contestant standing next to a hateful caricature of himself, smiling triumphantly because of his ability to do the Funky Forklift for up to two minutes, seven times. Because the other option is that this actually happened.

This post was brought to you by a hot tip from Br_At! Th…thanks?