The cultural myth: Japan’s endurance for the line
Don’t you hate waiting in line? It’s often cited as one of Japan’s charming features by foreigners: the sight of perfectly organized, silent queues of people waiting for ramen or the latest gadget. We Japanese have been rigorously disciplined to stand in line since kindergarten.
However, based on an old survey I recall, Japanese people are not actually significantly more tolerant of waiting than other Asian countries. We may queue neatly, but we are internally seething.
This brings me to a modern conundrum: The privatization of pleasure.

The trade show vs. dreamland: The rise of pay-to-play
Two weeks ago, I was in Milan for the Salone del Mobile (Milano Salone), the world’s biggest furniture trade show. I was astonished by the long queues in front of the most popular booths (Molteni, Minotti). As a professional queue-observer, I admit the lines were neat, but my professional concern was for the visitors’ internal endurance.
I overheard that these long queues were not due to popularity alone, but because many major exhibitors have begun to restrict entry strictly to loyal, high-paying clients.
This immediately reminded me of Tokyo Disney Land (TDL). TDL famously abolished its free Fast Pass system in favor of a paid priority-boarding service. Even in the magical dreamland, money makes the world go round.
The cost of a TDL ticket has almost doubled since my twenties. The operating company now proudly reports that the average spend per visitor exceeds ¥16,000 (approx. $105). For a family of four, this becomes a literal fortune. TDL has ceased to be an attainable dreamland for ordinary families. I understand that overcrowding ruins the experience, but is it ethical for Disney to explicitly exclude the masses based on their ability to pay?
The real value of the real show: Entertainment as the anchor
Milano Salone is not a dreamland; it’s a trade show. Exhibitors are fully entitled to restrict entry to loyal clients. Do I agree? As someone who was made to stand in those lines, absolutely not.
Trade shows worldwide are struggling: fashion, auto shows, even the previously unstoppable E3 (Electronic Entertainment Expo) in the US was canceled in 2023. Why is Salone succeeding while others decline?
My theory is simple: Salone dominates because it anchors itself in irresistible, non-business entertainment.
Milan in April offers comfortable weather, nice food, and beautiful streetscapes. It is a complete sensory experience. Though we are there for business, we are human; we don’t focus only on the job. Entertainment is not supplementary to the trade show; it is the precondition for its success.
The organizers must remember that even if they dominate now, entertainment always underlies human choice and behavior. My whiny complaint about the restrictive queues is a plea to keep the experience broad and inclusive.
Speaking of entertainment: Don’t forget Asahikawa Design Week here in Hokkaido every June. We offer comfortable weather, delicious local food and sake, and spectacular natural landscapes. We are much smaller than Milan, but I am confident we hold our own in the one thing that truly matters: pure, accessible entertainment that makes the business secondary.
I confess that I’m seething inside every time I stand in a Milanese queue, because I believe the best dreams shouldn’t be reserved for the few with the deepest pockets. At CondeHouse, we reject the ‘pay-to-play’ exclusivity of the trade show elites. Our Hatsune Miku Art Chair is our answer to the ‘Disney paradox’—a masterpiece of high-end entertainment that brings the vibrant, inclusive soul of a digital icon right into your home. No lines, no priority-boarding fees, just the pure, accessible comfort of Hokkaido wood and turquoise-green magic. Now, here is a portal to a dreamland you can actually own: the image below is your link to the special site. If you prefer the frustration of standing in line for someone else’s gate-kept luxury, do NOT click it. But if you’re ready for a business-class experience that celebrates the joy of the masses, go ahead. Skip the queue. —— The Hatsune Miku Art Chair.


Shungo Ijima
Global Connector | Reformed Bureaucrat | Professional Over-Thinker
After years of navigating the rigid hallways of Japan’s Ministry of Finance and surviving an MBA, he made a life-changing realization: spreadsheets are soulless, and wood has much better stories to tell.
Currently an Executive at CondeHouse, he travels the world decoding the “hidden DNA” of Japanese culture—though, in his travels, he’s becoming increasingly more skilled at decoding how to find the cheapest hotels than actual cultural mysteries.
He has a peculiar talent for finding deep philosophical meaning in things most people ignore as meaningless (and to be fair, they are often actually meaningless). He doesn’t just sell furniture; he’s on a mission to explain Japan to the world, one intellectually over-analyzed observation at a time. He writes for the curious, the skeptical, and anyone who suspects that a chair might actually be a manifesto in disguise.
Follow his journey as he bridges the gap between high-finance logic and the chaotic art of living!


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