What’s the difference between girls who are “hot” in Japan and America? Two hot girls discuss
Put two hot Japanese girls on a couch and get them to talk about… hot girls.
The concept may be simple but we love this video, not least because things get pretty risque.
The two ladies are Gigi (on the right) and Mari (on the left).
Gigi says that guys in America prefer girls who use less makeup and have a natural look.
“Modesty is really important in Japan,” she claims. (Not sure that’s always accurate, take a trip to Roppongi or Shibuya).
The conversation moves onto sex and the old chestnut: Japanese girls who are passive are popular with the guys. Well, they’re not popular with us, but we don’t claim to speak for Japanese men.
In the States, the popular girls are the ones who are smart and intelligent AND sexy and sultry, and who can take the initiative in the bedroom… is the verdict the ladies reach.
Unfortunately, there’s no word on how to make Japanese girls more like this.
Gigi (aka April Iman), who works as a model, could just about pass as Japanese, we guess, but in her style, mannerism and even facial appearance she is very foreign — whatever her “origins” may be. In fact, she’s half Japanese and was born in Singapore. She grew in LA and says she feels very “Latin”, which makes sense.
Here she is in action…
She seems to have a German engineer boyfriend and, by the looks of this steamy photo shoot, he’s one lucky guy.
Mari, on the other hand, has a Japanese look — in a very Tokyo party girl sort of way — but has a strong American accent and definitely comes across as the kind of lady you’d expect to see on the arm of a gaijin as their latest squeeze. Not that we are judging, Mari (Mari Hikita, as our research revealed) is seriously, seriously hot and we would LOVE to meet her!
Mari appears in lots of the videos on the English-learning Listn.me portal, though we love how she is credited as the “sexy person” in her profile. Sadly no longer active!
But you can follow Mari Hikita on Instagram. She apparently went on to work for the Japanese branch of the Huffington Post.