jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn supplies. They >>> used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu!
Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items
from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered
with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the reasons he
was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty weird.
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked in his >>>> apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn supplies.
They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it showed >>>> on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items
-a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered
-a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the reasons he >> -a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is conformity focused on a day to day level.
On 6/23/26 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male
genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary
symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude
locked in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when
it showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant
Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show
Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by
winning items
-a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were
covered
-a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The
Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is
pretty weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
...to the point that it's honestly pretty weird
even spending like a month there just traveling was grinding me
from the way they get so uptight about things that don't really
matter all that much
dart200 wrote:
On 6/23/26 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. >>>>>>>> While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol >>>>>>>> in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked in >>>>>> his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn supplies. >>>>>> They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it
showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu! >>>> -a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items >>>> -a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered >>>> -a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty
weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
...to the point that it's honestly pretty weird
even spending like a month there just traveling was grinding me from
the way they get so uptight about things that don't really matter all
that much
oh you visited japan? which cities? what were you doing?
On 6/24/26 5:59 AM, jojo wrote:
dart200 wrote:
On 6/23/26 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. >>>>>>>>> While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol >>>>>>>>> in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked >>>>>>> in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it >>>>>>> showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu! >>>>> -a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items >>>>> -a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered >>>>> -a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty
weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
...to the point that it's honestly pretty weird
even spending like a month there just traveling was grinding me from
the way they get so uptight about things that don't really matter all
that much
oh you visited japan? which cities? what were you doing?
tokyo -> hiroshima -> himeji -> nagoya -> kyoto -> osaka -> tokyo
the shinkansen, the nuclear bomb museum, rabbit island, castles,
nagashima gardens, a music fest (mori, michi, ichiba), monkey park, saki brewery, nara temple/deer, 1000 torii shrine, more castles, hello kitty world, and a ton more stuff!
Dude wrote:
On 6/22/2026 12:21 AM, dart200 wrote:
On 6/21/26 7:45 PM, Dude wrote:Nick, I already told, you - I'm not gay, if you're soliciting.
On 6/18/2026 7:19 PM, dart200 wrote:
On 6/18/26 2:45 PM, Dude wrote:Take your porn emojis and go back to where you came from - with all
On 6/17/2026 7:11 PM, dart200 wrote:
On 6/17/26 5:23 PM, Dude wrote:Wait. You just sent a reply and cross-posted it to five boards! That >>>>>> doesn't make you hypocritical, Nick
On 6/17/2026 3:09 PM, % wrote:
Dawn Flood wrote:Wait. You just sent a reply and cross-posted it to five boards! >>>>>>>> That doesn't make you a troll.
On 6/16/2026 11:39 PM, Dude wrote:
On 6/16/2026 5:22 PM, Dawn Flood wrote:
On 6/15/2026 4:14 PM, jojo wrote:All that matters is you're here now, Dawn.
Dawn Flood wrote:
On 6/15/2026 11:00 AM, jojo wrote:
Dawn Flood wrote:
On 6/14/2026 8:00 PM, Dude wrote:
On 6/14/2026 1:31 PM, dart200 wrote:
On 6/14/26 1:27 PM, Dawn Flood wrote:
On 6/13/2026 3:29 PM, Dude wrote:
On 6/13/2026 11:51 AM, dart200 wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/13/26 9:48 AM, Dude wrote:Thank you!
You can't snip out the entire Usenet Archive, Nick. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> That would be the end of the world as we know it. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Everything is there, if you know the code to extract >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> it using SQL. All your porn emojis are there too. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>On 6/12/2026 8:56 PM, dart200 wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/12/26 4:25 PM, Dude wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/12/2026 2:56 PM, dart200 wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/12/26 12:27 PM, Dude wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/12/2026 10:46 AM, Dawn Flood wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/12/2026 10:35 AM, Dude wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/11/2026 8:28 PM, Dawn Flood wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 6/11/2026 6:55 PM, Dude wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Welcome to Usenet Opinion Board! >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>-a-a> great it's a blank slate for us to use! >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
In my opinion cross-posting to alt.messianic is a >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> waste of time. Nobody has posted there in decades >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> except you, Nick. There's no enlightenment there >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> or even any insider information from informants. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>You are entitled to your opinion, dud, Dawn said >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> it was lame. YMMV.Where's Nick?Even more lame!What about cross-posting to alt.messianic? >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>!"On these boards, the opinions expressed >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> by informants are their own and do not >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> necessarily represent the views of all >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Usenet."Cross-posting in alt.atheism is really lame! >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> -a>
Post your opinion here: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
no one respects duds anyways >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
sure dud
It looks like you changed the Subject; altered the >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> topic; and snipped almost all of the opinion posts >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> of the other informants; and then cross- posted to >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> three other boards and again added alt.messianic. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Let me say this about that - just my opinion: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Reports about oil and gas go in the Gas and Oil >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Thread and the opinions go in the Usenet Opinions >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Board Thread.
Thank you for your attention to this matter! >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
PS: In future you might consider not snipping out >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Dawn's comments or risk being not only lame, but >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> cringe.
-a-a> who isn't chronically cringe on this god forsaking >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> planet?
-a That's a really good point, Nick!
So, I've been stalking these Usenet boards since 1995 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> and almost everyone turned out to be a god forsaking >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> lame ass - it's not a bug.
You came here to get enlightened?
In the 3+ years that I have been here, I have learned >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> some new things, and so, no, it has not been a waste of >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> time. In fact, the largely unmoderated nature of Usenet >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> (Eternal September does kick people for egregious >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> offenses) is a plus over the moderated board that I came >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> from, where I got censored and/or ridiculed for some of >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> my ideas.
Dawn
really? what kind of things did you say?
Stuff that I say here!-a My last discussion there was >>>>>>>>>>>>>> really fun and fruitful!!
i think i know what happened, was the moderator there also >>>>>>>>>>>>> a girl?
Some were (are), but none of that matters anymore!
Some people feel better when they have someone to talk. Why >>>>>>>>>>> do you think Scientology is so popular? Auditing.
What's the difference between a cult and a religion? (Answer: >>>>>>>>>> About 100 years.)-a First off, Scientology is not popular; it's >>>>>>>>>> still a minority religion, but like Mormonism, it's popularity >>>>>>>>>> may increase over time. Why?-a Because, it fulfills the
individual & collective emotional needs of human beings.
crosspost troll
the dud coming in hot hypocritically calling out hypocrites
You came here to get enlightened?
You came here to get enlightened?
In fact, cross-posting is the backbone of-a Usenet.
On Usenet, cross-posting is the practice of sending a single
message to multiple, related newsgroups simultaneously.
Cross-posting is considered helpful because it gathers a diverse >>>>>>>> set of experts into a single thread, unifies the discussion so >>>>>>>> no one wastes time reading duplicates, and prevents the
fragmentation of knowledge across different groups.
where are the experts tho?
i came here to get enlightened? Efia
the other messianic religious freaks over there. YMMV.
ur just jelly EfiaEfAaEfiaEfiA
The Efia (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital communication
as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. While it officially
depicts a vegetable (also known as aubergine), internet culture has
adopted it as a primary symbol in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked in his apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked in his >>>> apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn supplies.
They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it showed >>>> on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items
-a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered
-a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the reasons he >> -a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is conformity focused on a day to day level.
On 6/24/26 5:59 AM, jojo wrote:
dart200 wrote:
On 6/23/26 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. >>>>>>>>> While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol >>>>>>>>> in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked >>>>>>> in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it >>>>>>> showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu! >>>>> -a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items >>>>> -a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered >>>>> -a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty
weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
...to the point that it's honestly pretty weird
even spending like a month there just traveling was grinding me from
the way they get so uptight about things that don't really matter all
that much
oh you visited japan? which cities? what were you doing?
tokyo -> hiroshima -> himeji -> nagoya -> kyoto -> osaka -> tokyo
the shinkansen, the nuclear bomb museum, rabbit island, castles,
nagashima gardens, a music fest (mori, michi, ichiba), monkey park, saki brewery, nara temple/deer, 1000 torii shrine, more castles, hello kitty world, and a ton more stuff!
On 6/23/2026 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:Finally! Something to talk about that's interesting. Good work!
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male
genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary
symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude
locked in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when
it showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant
Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show
Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by
winning items
-a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were
covered
-a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The
Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is
pretty weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
So, as a military brat, I spent over two years in Japan, when Dad
was stationed at Misawa AFB. At that time I just went crazy
Japanese: eating with chopsticks and doing zen under the
instruction of a zen karate master. One time we went to Budokan
and did some kowtowing at the Great Buddha statue.
Apparently, they invented emojis in Japan.
On 6/24/26 5:59 AM, jojo wrote:
dart200 wrote:
On 6/23/26 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male
genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary
symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude
locked in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick
when it showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant
Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality
show Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by
winning items
-a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals
were covered
-a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of
the reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The
Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is
pretty weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
...to the point that it's honestly pretty weird
even spending like a month there just traveling was grinding
me from the way they get so uptight about things that don't
really matter all that much
oh you visited japan? which cities? what were you doing?
tokyo -> hiroshima -> himeji -> nagoya -> kyoto -> osaka -> tokyo
the shinkansen, the nuclear bomb museum, rabbit island, castles,
nagashima gardens, a music fest (mori, michi, ichiba), monkey
park, saki brewery, nara temple/deer, 1000 torii shrine, more
castles, hello kitty world, and a ton more stuff!
dart200 wrote:
On 6/24/26 5:59 AM, jojo wrote:
dart200 wrote:
On 6/23/26 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. >>>>>>>>>> While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol >>>>>>>>>> in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked >>>>>>>> in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it >>>>>>>> showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki >>>>>> -a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show
Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items >>>>>> -a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered >>>>>> -a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant." >>>>>> -----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty >>>>>> weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
...to the point that it's honestly pretty weird
even spending like a month there just traveling was grinding me from
the way they get so uptight about things that don't really matter
all that much
oh you visited japan? which cities? what were you doing?
tokyo -> hiroshima -> himeji -> nagoya -> kyoto -> osaka -> tokyo
the shinkansen, the nuclear bomb museum, rabbit island, castles,
nagashima gardens, a music fest (mori, michi, ichiba), monkey park,
saki brewery, nara temple/deer, 1000 torii shrine, more castles, hello
kitty world, and a ton more stuff!
it sounds very expensive, but i want to at least see some places in
tokyo and... no tourist stuff, because its expensive.
Dude wrote:
On 6/23/2026 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:Finally! Something to talk about that's interesting. Good work!
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. >>>>>>>> While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol >>>>>>>> in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked in >>>>>> his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn supplies. >>>>>> They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it
showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show Susunu! >>>> -a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items >>>> -a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered >>>> -a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty
weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
So, as a military brat, I spent over two years in Japan, when Dad was
stationed at Misawa AFB. At that time I just went crazy Japanese:
eating with chopsticks and doing zen under the instruction of a zen
karate master. One time we went to Budokan and did some kowtowing at
the Great Buddha statue.
Apparently, they invented emojis in Japan.
did you learn kanji and the kanas?
On 6/25/2026 12:37 PM, jojo wrote:
Dude wrote:We practiced Zen Karate.
On 6/23/2026 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:Finally! Something to talk about that's interesting. Good work!
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male
genitalia.
While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary
symbol
in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude
locked in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick
when it showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant
Tomoaki
-a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality
show Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by
winning items
-a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals
were covered
-a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of
the reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The
Contestant."
-----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is
pretty weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
So, as a military brat, I spent over two years in Japan, when
Dad was stationed at Misawa AFB. At that time I just went
crazy Japanese: eating with chopsticks and doing zen under the
instruction of a zen karate master. One time we went to
Budokan and did some kowtowing at the Great Buddha statue.
Apparently, they invented emojis in Japan.
did you learn kanji and the kanas?
Dude wrote:
On 6/25/2026 12:37 PM, jojo wrote:
Dude wrote:We practiced Zen Karate.
On 6/23/2026 8:50 PM, jojo wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:Finally! Something to talk about that's interesting. Good work!
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
Mr |un!on wrote:
jojo <f00@0f0.00f> wrote:
[...]
The ? (eggplant) emoji is most widely used in digital
communication as a sexual innuendo to represent male genitalia. >>>>>>>>>> While it officially depicts a vegetable (also known as
aubergine), internet culture has adopted it as a primary symbol >>>>>>>>>> in flirting, sexting, and adult humor.
they should have just made a penis emoji, why didnt they?
It's from that weird Japanese TV show about a naked dude locked >>>>>>>> in his
apartment for a year and doing competition tasks to earn
supplies. They
used an aubergine (eggplant) emoji to cover up his dick when it >>>>>>>> showed
on screen.
If it was me, I'd have an On!on.
not aware of that show, but being locked inside their room all
day is essentially called hikikomori.
it is a subset of neet.
ChatGPT says:
-----
"You may be thinking of the Japanese reality-TV participant Tomoaki >>>>>> -a Hamatsu, better known as Nasubi ("eggplant" in Japanese)."
"In 1998, he was isolated in an apartment for the reality show
Susunu!
-a Denpa Sh?nen. He was kept naked and had to survive by winning items >>>>>> -a from magazine sweepstakes. On broadcasts, his genitals were covered >>>>>> -a with a cartoon eggplant (aubergine), which became one of the
reasons he
-a was nicknamed "Nasubi" ("eggplant")."
"The story was later revisited in the documentary The Contestant." >>>>>> -----
It's yet another reason why many westerners think Japan is pretty >>>>>> weird.
japan is not weird, it is the total opposite. everything is
conformity focused on a day to day level.
So, as a military brat, I spent over two years in Japan, when Dad
was stationed at Misawa AFB. At that time I just went crazy
Japanese: eating with chopsticks and doing zen under the instruction
of a zen karate master. One time we went to Budokan and did some
kowtowing at the Great Buddha statue.
Apparently, they invented emojis in Japan.
did you learn kanji and the kanas?
damn you should have learned some locale, i want to clear the jlpt n3
test, i failed it once.
but.. zen karate is like, what's that called?? damn i forgot. you do
super slow karate moves?
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