- Tokyo world's starriest city
- DIY is tops in Tokyo
- The secret of izakaya is out
Food news
Cross-dressing waiters in Tokyo

"Welcome home, Master," a group of French maids sings out, bowing deeply to a customer entering their maid cafe.

This could be any of the dozens of maid cafes dotting Tokyo's Akihabara electronics district, where geeks engage in role-play with girls dressed as French maids. But don't be fooled by the frilly pinafores: all of the maids here are men.

In this novelty-hungry market catering to Japan's free-spending computer and comic book fans, cafe owners are coming up with ever more exotic formulas to satisfy booming demand.

It all started when the manager of "Hibari Tei" cafe, named after a bird, asked a few cross-dressing men to fill in for women working at a different maid cafe. To his surprise, no customer found out they were being served by a male waiter.

"The maids are too pretty to be men," said 33 year-old businessman Takao Mochizuki, who also cross-dresses while on vacation.

Maid cafes generally do not offer sexual services. Customers order typical cafe fare such as coffee, tea and sandwiches, served by giggling, girlish maids. In addition, they can ask the maids for special, non-sexual services, such as drawing pictures on an omelette using tomato ketchup.

They have grown into a booming business and are a core part of the Japanese "otaku" or "nerd" industry believed to be worth nearly $2 billion.

Most waitresses at the cafe have day-time jobs so the cafe opens only on weekends, depending on the maids' availability.

Would this style of service work in South Africa?

story by Reuters: Chika Osaka
image by Reuters

 
Great idea
I think this would work in SA - Cape Town for sure not sure about Benoni or Boksburg! - Gary
 
Tough choice
I'm all for it. It creates a sense of novelty to eating out, something that is sometimes sorely lacking in South Africa.
Unfortunately, South Africa does not have as vast a cosplay (dressing up as a favourite fictional character) as Japan. Cosplay seems to be one of the main attractions for Otaku.
Putting an "African" spin on it might allow it to boom in South Africa, although I fear our Right Wing fundamentalists would have heart attacks. - Jason
 
 
 
Name
Email
Subject
Comment
     
 


copyright Media 24 Ltd. All rights reserved.
terms and conditions | contact FOOD24™ | Advertise on Food24™ | Site Map