Do it at home too, women tell Japanese fans who cleaned World Cup stadium

Some see a double standard: Japanese men who clean in public while their wives do all the housework.

BBC News - Asia
75
3 min čtení
0 zobrazení
Do it at home too, women tell Japanese fans who cleaned World Cup stadium

Do it at home too, women tell Japanese fans who cleaned World Cup stadium

4 hours ago

Kurumi Mori,Japan correspondent, Tokyoand

Koh Ewe

Getty Images Two Japanese football plans cleaning a World Cup stadium and placing their trash in trash bagsGetty Images

Japanese men rank the lowest among highly-developed countries in terms of time spent doing housework

For years, Japanese football fans have won praise for cleaning up stadiums after World Cup matches. But this time, they're catching heat at home.

When photos emerged this week of Japanese fans combing the stands with trash bags after a match, some saw a double standard: men who clean after themselves in public while leaving the burden at home to their wives.

A Japanese poster went viral soon after, juxtaposing a man picking litter at the stadium with the same guy reclined on a sofa at home, using his phone near a basket of laundry while his wife did the dishes.

Men in Japan should "pitch in more at home" as their time spent doing chores is among the shortest in the world, the poster text read.

That post has been liked 60,000 times on X.

"Everyone wants to save the world, but no one wants to help mom do the dishes," an X user commented, referencing a quote by American author PJ O'Rourke.

"There's probably a guy among these people picking up trash, who has a young kid at home and left his wife to look after them to come watch the World Cup," wrote another.

Cleanliness and cleaning up after oneself in public places is deeply ingrained in Japanese culture.

In terms of time spent doing housework, however, Japanese men rank the lowest among highly-developed countries.

According Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) data from 2021, Japanese women spend more than three hours per day on unpaid work - more than five times that of men, who clock 47 minutes a day.

This disparity is especially pronounced in young families. A government survey from 2021 found that in dual-income households with children under six years old, women spend more than seven hours a day on household chores while men spend less than two hours.

Getty Images Japan fans react in the stands during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group F match between Netherlands and Japan at Dallas StadiumGetty Images

The same blue bags that fans wave to support their team are later used to tidy up

Some social media users have also taken issue with what they see as the hypocrisy of picking up rubbish abroad, when Japan's public spaces are often lined with rubbish after large events.

But as the debate over the division of housework rages, many argue that Japanese fans' signature stadium cleanups should be encouraged, not nitpicked at.

"Where's the embarrassment in that?" an X user wrote. "It's way better than reports saying 'Japanese people are littering abroad.'"

Such cleanups appear to have influenced fans from other countries too.

A recent social media video shows Portuguese fans similarly collecting rubbish from the stands with large plastic bags, with many social media users crediting the Japanese with starting this trend.

Původní zdroj

BBC News - Asia

Sdílet tento článek

Související články

US, Iran sign peace deal; China’s C919 jets grounded for safety checks: SCMP’s 7 highlights
🇨🇳🇹🇼Čína vs Tchaj-wan
South China Morning Post

US, Iran sign peace deal; China’s C919 jets grounded for safety checks: SCMP’s 7 highlights

We have selected seven stories from this week’s news across Hong Kong, mainland China, the wider Asia region and beyond that resonated with our readers and shed light on topical issues. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing. 1. Iran and US sign peace deal, Strai

přibližně před 7 hodinami1 min
EU leaders ask Brussels to come up with new trade weapons to counter China shock
🇨🇳🇹🇼Čína vs Tchaj-wan
South China Morning Post

EU leaders ask Brussels to come up with new trade weapons to counter China shock

European Union national leaders have asked Brussels to come up with new trade instruments to deal with the economic threat posed by China, following a rare summit debate about Beijing late on Thursday night. After a two-hour discussion, the EU’s executive branch was told to engage with China to try

přibližně před 8 hodinami2 min
US-Iran talks in Switzerland delayed, White House says Vance remains ready to go
🇨🇳🇹🇼Čína vs Tchaj-wan
South China Morning Post

US-Iran talks in Switzerland delayed, White House says Vance remains ready to go

Plans for US Vice-President J.D. Vance to travel to Switzerland for a new round of talks with Iran have been delayed, according to the White House. In a statement on Thursday, the White House said the arrangements for the “technical talks” had not yet been finalised and that the US delegation remain

přibližně před 10 hodinami1 min
Fighting with Ghosts: Sar Sokha’s Belated Sanctions Panic
🇨🇳🇹🇼Čína vs Tchaj-wan
The Diplomat

Fighting with Ghosts: Sar Sokha’s Belated Sanctions Panic

Cambodia’s Interior Minister appears to have found an adversary in Washington: a sanctions list that no longer exists.

přibližně před 10 hodinami6 min