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Sushi pranks at Japan’s conveyor belt restaurants spark outrage

The videos appear to be a spillover of an existing Japanese YouTube trend, known as 'meiwaku-douga,' or nuisance videos

An employee selects a plate of tuna sushi from a conveyor belt at a Kura Corp. sushi restaurant in Kaizuka, Osaka prefecture, Japan Aug. 2017.
An employee selects a plate of tuna sushi from a conveyor belt at a Kura Corp. sushi restaurant in Kaizuka, Osaka prefecture, Japan Aug. 2017. Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi /Bloomberg

Japan’s famed conveyor-belt sushi restaurants are scrambling to tackle a craze for making viral videos in which customers commit unhygienic acts.

The phenomenon, dubbed “Sushi Terrorism,” gained steam earlier this week after a teenager posted a video to social media filmed in Japan’s largest conveyor belt sushi chain. In it, he licked communal items including a soy sauce bottle and a bowl, and touched sushi as it rolled past with fingers he had put in his mouth.

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The video, taken in Gifu city quickly went viral on platforms including Twitter, sparking a wave of copycat incidents and sending shares in the restaurant’s parent company down 4.8% on Tuesday.

The video pranks come at a particularly sensitive time for Japan, which is currently suffering its deadliest Covid outbreak since the pandemic began, and as restaurants struggle to survive amid surging inflation.

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Food & Life Cos., which owns Akindo Sushiro, the outlet where the incident occurred, said in a statement this week it had filed a police report and received an apology from the perpetrator.

A spokesperson for the firm told Bloomberg News the video had “caused a lot of anxiety among our customers and made them uncomfortable.” The chain said it will add acrylic screens at some outlets to deter tampering on its conveyor belts, and said it would provide fresh seasonings and cutlery to those who request it.

Still, investors are concerned. Despite paring some of its earlier losses, shares in Food & Life remained some 4% down on Thursday.

The conveyor belt sushi restaurant format “was not designed for the era when individuals can post videos on the internet,” said Citigroup Inc. analyst Shuhei Oba in a note this week.

“We believe demand for cheap and delicious sushi will continue to grow longer term, but costs could increase as operators strengthen their response to such campaigns,” Oba wrote.

Restaurant chains were this week attempting to enforce stricter hygiene measures as older videos emerged and wall-to-wall media coverage inspired copycats. The latest target involved a man using a communal spoon to eat his meal at a popular udon chain in southern Kitakyushu city.

A series of junior and senior high school students have been maliciously obstructing business at a conveyor-belt sushi restaurant in Japan.
The company has filed a damage report with the police. pic.twitter.com/RUNYHc99cu

— 🇯🇵Naoemon Japan (@woiiw) January 30, 2023

Spokespeople for two other major conveyor belt sushi chains, Zensho Holdings Co.-owned Hamasushi and Kura Sushi Inc., told Bloomberg News they were considering methods like deploying artificial intelligence and cameras to deter potential pranksters.

Sushi chains are facing an additional “weight of investment,” said Shun Tanaka, a restaurant industry analyst for SBI Securities Co. If businesses, already squeezed by having to maintain low prices, cannot maintain profitability, “it’s possible that the conveyor belt sushi business itself will disappear.”

The police complaints have led to a debate on social media about whether taking legal action against the pranksters – some of whom are minors – is a step too far. But others say legal action is necessary to show that other customers take such stunts seriously.

“Regarding the conveyor belt sushi videos,” read one tweet, which was retweeted or liked nearly 100,000 times. “Hamazushi, Kurasushi, Sushiro should file a lawsuit and demand millions of yen in damages and really make them suffer. Even if the other party is a parent. By letting this painful experience be widely known, hopefully it will stop future incidents from happening.”

The videos appear to be a spillover of an existing Japanese YouTube trend, known as “meiwaku-douga,” or nuisance videos. These YouTubers film videos just to get attention for causing trouble. Some show them eating food at a supermarket before paying, writing graffiti over a message board about someone’s memorial service or walking around during a covid wave without a mask.

Aside from such nuisance videos filmed at restaurants, there have been other troubling videos in recent weeks of Japanese TikTokers harassing homeless people for views, which have similarly sparked outrage online.

For example, in a video posted on Jan. 18, a young Japanese woman takes an older homeless woman to a convenience store in Nagoya, west of Tokyo, pretending to buy the woman food. But the young woman abandons her at the cash register and runs away, laughing.

Additional reporting from The Washington Post