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Posted by ranit 10 hours ago

The yoghurt delivery women combatting loneliness in Japan(www.bbc.com)
167 points | 118 commentspage 2
alephnerd 8 hours ago|
This seems to be a submarine article - all the images and quotes seem to be directly sourced from Yakult Honsha's strategic comms department.

Edit: yep, appears Yakult has just kicked off an ad campaign putting Yakult Ladies front and center [0]

[0] - https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=u8HNY7Ta4dA

cubefox 8 hours ago|
Completely unclear what "submarine article" could mean.
pja 8 hours ago||
Referencing this PG article: https://paulgraham.com/submarine.html
adampunk 7 hours ago||
Sometimes I forget that this place is a cult.
pipeline_peak 5 hours ago||
“The yoghurt delivery women combatting loneliness in Minnesota”

HN’s interest in this article is so “thing vs Japanese thing”

bigstrat2003 3 hours ago|
That trope only applies if the non-Japanese version of the thing exists. Which, if you live in the US, it doesn't. I would be just as interested in an article about Minnesota yogurt delivery women, but they don't exist, so...
dyauspitr 4 hours ago||
[flagged]
castral 3 hours ago|
This is a pretty sexist take considering the original article was not talking about the male loneliness epidemic, but elderly, and indeed the first example used was even of an elderly woman awaiting delivery. The commentary here is really something else.
paganel 5 hours ago||
Sometimes news like this is upvoted, because it involves Japan, towards each a lot of Western techies have an unhealthy obsession on, but the moment when those techies are advised to not use the self-service thing at the super-market they start going bananas.
ronnier 4 hours ago||
I also find it odd that there’s daily top ranked Japan related articles on HN.
haunter 4 hours ago||
HN is the breeding ground of the Thing Japan meme https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/thing-japan
AdrianB1 1 hour ago||
Japan is a very interesting country for Western people (US and Canada, Western Europe) because it is by far the most developed country that is not Western. In this regard, it is unique and intriguing.
tokyobreakfast 7 hours ago||
Japanese have lactose intolerance, almost universally.

They don't eat yogurt or dairy in general.

gramie 7 hours ago||
The annual consumption of ice cream in Japan was 6.7 litres per person in 2021 (compared to 10 litres/person in Canada and 20 litres/person in the U.S.). For all dairy, Japanese people each ate 94 kg in 2022.

They eat less dairy, but hardly none. I have heard people say that a scoop of ice cream or a glass of milk each day is not a problem, but more can be. Intolerance also seems to increase with age, so younger people can consume more dairy.

A 1975 study in Japan puts intolerance (unable to drink 200ml of milk comfortably) at 19% of the population. I would suspect that massive exposure over the past 50 years has lowered that percentage significantly.

wingerlang 7 hours ago|||
So does Thailand but we also have Yakult ladies here, they just sell the drinks though.
socalgal2 6 hours ago|||
A video on how it’s possible for lactose intolerant peoples to still eat lots of dairy.

Case in video: Chinese and milk tea

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=At_WjGosTNM

tokai 7 hours ago|||
How come Yakult is a nearly 100 years old Japanese company?

Most yogurt cultures reduces lactose content of the milk base during fermentation. Some cultures like the one Yakult uses supports increased lactose digestion in humans. At the same time lactose intolerance is not binary but a spectrum.

umanwizard 7 hours ago||
The first line is true, the second line is false.

Lactose intolerance is not absolute.