Japanese people who come depending on the night generally have enough English and sufficient cultural nows to get much of what is being said. There's a very small number of Japanese people who are doing stand up in English. So, they tend to get a better response from the Japanese audiences. Possibly, I think, just because the sense of humor is more similar. Okay. What kind of first stuff do you like to do? I've gone through a few things. I'm still kind of struggling for a direction, to be honest.
English teacher, travel writer, stand-up comic, learner of Japanese, DJ, native English speaker, Machester City fan and former flatmate of Luke from Luke's English Podcast - Peter Sidell is a guy who keeps himself busy! I lived with Peter in Tsujidou, Japan for nearly a year. I left at the end of 2003 and he stayed there and I hadn't seen him for about 11 years until he recently visited Paris and we got the chance to catch up with each other again. Of course I jumped at the chance to interview Peter for LEP, and you can now listen to our conversation here, now. Click here for more information
http://wp.me/p4IuUx-1Ss Sign up to LEP Premium on Acast+ and add the premium episodes to a podcast app on your phone. https://plus.acast.com/s/teacherluke.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.