Marxy is celebrating the Golden Week holiday by doing a series of interviews, that he’s posting on a daily basis. He posted mine today.
Category: Web
Jean Snow lives and breathes design and pop culture in Tokyo -- sustained by an unhealthy addiction to magazines and frequent visits to his favorites cafes. He has reported on these obsessions for the following online/offline publications: Time, Inside (Australian Design Review), Gizmodo, Gridskipper, Kotaku, Tokyo Q, Superfuture, OK Fred, Arthur Frommer's Budget Travel, I.D. (International Design), Metropolis, Azure, MoCo Loco, Kateigaho International Edition, Game|Life, and The Japan Times. He also manages the gallery space at Cafe Pause.
Jean Snow is a daily contributor to Wired magazine's game blog, Game|Life, covering game news from Japan and beyond.

Tokyolife: Art and Design covers Tokyo's cultural output of the past few years, covering the works of over 80 influential creatives. Jean Snow provided coordination assistance.

The Superfuture Superguides are a series of PDF travel guides to some of your favorites cities, updated monthly, and obsessively compiling the best places to shop, eat, and drink. The Tokyo guide is edited by Jean Snow.

He is also the design/culture editor at Neojaponisme, a web journal covering social and cultural aspects of Japan. Read the manifesto, by founder and chief editor W. David Marx, here.
PauseTalk is a regular series of events that take place at Cafe Pause on the first Monday of every month, with a start time of 20:00. The idea is to create a forum where Tokyo-based creatives can get together and discuss their own projects, as well as cultural currents of the city. The next edition happens August 4 (there is no July edition).
Categories
Art & Design
Media
City Life
Tokyo Boy
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While speaking of Muji, for someone as addicted, you failed to mention the Brutus Casa Muji mook! I received a copy yesterday unexpectedly, from a friend in Tokyo. It’s got interesting features on everything Muji, including the use of Muji stuff in real homes, designers, the Muji+Infill house, and a CD (for peecees and Macs) that helps you outfit your home with Muji goodness in plan view. At least I think that’s what it says… Now, if only I could read Japanese.
I have both (there were two of them) CASA BRUTUS Muji mooks, and I believe I’ve mentioned them here in the past. They are indeed great.
I stand corrected and I withdraw my hasty criticism! :) Good job!