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Faithless
01-10-2004, 01:47 AM
...Restaurant's displays get women's group steamed (http://www.azcentral.com/home/food/articles/0110nakedsushi10.html)
SEATTLE - Saturday night at Bonzai in Seattle's Pioneer Square, a nearly naked woman is laid out on a table. A chef slices sushi behind her, to be arrayed on her torso, bare except for a sheath of plastic wrap and some decorative flower petals.

Chopsticks at the ready, patrons line up.

Hours earlier, across town on the campus of the University of Washington, eight activists, mostly Asian-American women, express outrage at what they call the prostitution of sushi and the exploitation of women. They plot their strategy.

Welcome to a clash of values - Seattle style.

While the promoter and the sushi model say this melding of prandial and sexual is performance art, Bonzai's patrons - men and women of various ethnicities - say it merely adds to the restaurant's sensual vibe.

Opponents say treating women like a serving platter reinforces attitudes that make domestic and sexual violence so prevalent.

"It's dehumanizing, the manner in which people are buying and selling sushi to be eaten off a woman's body. It's dehumanizing to be treated as a plate," said Cherry Cayabyab, president of the Seattle chapter of National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum.

The restaurant, which has featured naked sushi monthly since May and every Saturday night this fall, could be called a capital of the Seattle lounge kingdom.

Japanese animation art hangs from exposed brick walls. Bottles of high-end scotch are prominently displayed, awash in dusky light. Candles flicker. When the model arrives about midnight, wearing a thong, plastic wrap for sanitary safety and carefully placed flower petals, patrons line up, having paid a $5 cover charge and bought a drink.

Using chopsticks, they pick among salmon and ahi tuna, eel and California rolls. The model, one of a rotating group of seven, breathes softly, her eyes closed while she does her 30 minutes of work.

Bonzai chef and owner Jun Hong looks on with the promoter, Cheresa Nemitz. They enforce the rules: Respect the model; no hooting or hollering; no tips; and no talking to her.

By the looks of it, they don't need to be there - most of the 40 or 50 patrons are regulars.

Yet the spectacle carries harmful consequences, according to the women who gathered at the University of Washington's Women's Center.

"It provides a forum to see a human being as an object. And when women are viewed as objects, they are more likely to be violated," said Norma Timbang, executive director of the Asian and Pacific Islander Women and Family Safety Center.

The activists say they want to meet Nemitz and ask her to stop, and will be calling and e-mailing Hong, the owner. If they don't get the results they want, they say, they will launch a media campaign against the restaurant.

They appear to be the first organized opposition to naked sushi, which has its roots in Japan but has arrived more recently in Los Angeles and New York.

Nemitz said she's eager to meet with the women. She said she considers naked sushi performance art, using the nude human body - an ancient artistic subject - to form an aesthetic tableau altered as every piece of raw and lightly cooked fish is taken for consumption.

"As a woman, I can't ignore what other women are saying, but I think there are bigger fish to fry than performance art," Nemitz said.

The night's model, an Asian-American woman who won't say how much she is paid and asked not to be named, said the experience is relaxing, sensual and meditative.

"It's ridiculous to comment on it without experiencing it. It's hearsay," she said of her critics, who contend the model has "internalized her oppression."

Bonzai's patrons think otherwise.

"It's a visual art. It sounds worse than when you actually come here," said Shelly Eldredge, who did not partake Saturday night because she'd already eaten.

Naked sushi carries no connotation of exploitation in its native Japan, said Bonzai regular Danielle Kim of Newcastle, Wash.

Some men in the room were slightly more flip in their endorsement.

"It appeals to puerile interests, I suppose, but what the hell?" said Keith Ancker, 28, of Seattle. He said he'd never tried sushi until now.

That's part of the point, says Hong, the owner, to bring sushi to non-sushi-eaters. Sushi is a sensitive and artistic food, and he means no disrespect to women, he said.

Luke Janich, 26, said the last thing he wanted to do was disrespect women. Nevertheless, he said, "Seattle needs to relax."

Faithless
01-10-2004, 01:50 AM
I didn't even know there was such a thing as "naked sushi".

(Probably belongs in the food section.)

moJo
01-10-2004, 02:08 AM
yuck, yeah I heard about naked sushi on MM.com last year. It's a pretty gross premise, imo. There was a website called nakedsushi.com or something when I first read about it. I'm too lazy right now to see if it still exists. :)

Tao
01-10-2004, 02:15 AM
no it's not up anymore :( man....

teaz0r
01-10-2004, 06:44 AM
it's been going on for years in asia.

same goes for "no hands" restaurants.
naked or topless chicks feeding you.

am indifferent to those places. been
to a no hands restaurant once. it
was fun for the first 10 minutes. then
the novelty of it fades super fast.

Fireblade
01-10-2004, 07:42 AM
didn't we already have a thread about this?

Faithless
01-10-2004, 09:49 AM
It's possible, but I searched for "sushi" and looked through the four pages of threads and could find anything that seems similar.

The article I mentioned was dated Jan 10 2004. It's news to Seattle. :rolleyes:

kitty
01-10-2004, 11:23 AM
sorry... but my problem is hygenic. Why would you want to eat sushi (that has to be very clean so you don't get sick) off of a stranger's (possibly nasty, non-showering) body?

younggiftedandblack
01-10-2004, 11:27 AM
sorry... but my problem is hygenic. Why would you want to eat sushi (that has to be very clean so you don't get sick) off of a stranger's (possibly nasty, non-showering) body?

LOL!! I'm sure they shower. I can't remeber where I've seen one of these before. In was in some movie I think. There was a group of Japanese business men sitting around this naked chick eating sushi of her.

kitty
01-10-2004, 11:34 AM
LOL!! I'm sure they shower. I can't remeber where I've seen one of these before. In was in some movie I think. There was a group of Japanese business men sitting around this naked chick eating sushi of her.

yeah... but... eating off some stranger's stank ass? or... having your food near an unknown person's coochie?

yuck.

Faithless
01-10-2004, 11:36 AM
sorry... but my problem is hygenic. Why would you want to eat sushi (that has to be very clean so you don't get sick) off of a stranger's (possibly nasty, non-showering) body?

You got it! Whether it's eating from her tummy or l0weR ... :confused:

rice cracker
01-10-2004, 01:00 PM
LOL!! I'm sure they shower. I can't remeber where I've seen one of these before. In was in some movie I think. There was a group of Japanese business men sitting around this naked chick eating sushi of her.

Rising Sun. :rolleyes:

BeTheReds
01-10-2004, 01:08 PM
you can mix wasabi and soysauce in her bellybutton.

Anyway it's the person's personal choice if they want to do that profession.

A.R.A.M.
01-10-2004, 01:16 PM
Naked sushi was also in "Showdown in Little Tokyo." If I remember correctly, after visiting a restaurant featuring blonde chicks serving as tables, Brandon Lee's character says to Dolph Lungren, "Let's kick their ass and go back and eat sushi off of naked chicks!" Come to think of it, that movie had some real stupid lines.

Chris
01-10-2004, 02:09 PM
I thought we had a topic for this already.

mr. x
01-10-2004, 03:44 PM
Naked sushi was also in "Showdown in Little Tokyo." If I remember correctly, after visiting a restaurant featuring blonde chicks serving as tables, Brandon Lee's character says to Dolph Lungren, "Let's kick their ass and go back and eat sushi off of naked chicks!" Come to think of it, that movie had some real stupid lines.

"youve got the biggest dick ive seen on a man" or something to that effect

Faithless
01-10-2004, 06:16 PM
"youve got the biggest dick ive seen on a man" or something to that effect

Do they have naked sushi guys?

And if so, where do you put the tempura onion rings?

mr. x
01-10-2004, 08:18 PM
Do they have naked sushi guys?

And if so, where do you put the tempura onion rings?

theres a joke that goes like this:

Q: whos the most popular guy on the nudest beach?
A: the guy who can carry a cup of coffee in each hand a dozen donuts....

Q: whos the most popular girl?
A: the girl who can eat all 12 donuts!

course i think sex is illegal on nude beaches

Fireblade
01-10-2004, 09:49 PM
theres a joke that goes like this:

Q: whos the most popular guy on the nudest beach?
A: the guy who can carry a cup of coffee in each hand a dozen donuts....

Q: whos the most popular girl?
A: the girl who can eat all 12 donuts!

course i think sex is illegal on nude beaches

no it's not. Dogs hump each other all the time. On non-nude beaches too! :biggrin:

Faithless
01-11-2004, 09:39 AM
With naked sushi, I guess you can't complain if you do have a hair in your miso.

Faithless
01-11-2004, 09:44 AM
Good commentary. It's from November 2003, so I guess the issue is old in Seattle:

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/jamieson/147948_robert12.asp
By whichever name, I can't stomach eating off a stranger. And I prefer my sushi cool, not body temperature.

The female models wear thongs and are hermetically sealed with plastic wrap for health-code reasons. Flowers cover body parts that could distract from the dining experience.

Patrons aren't allowed to make catcalls or lewd comments. The lady lies on her back, closes her eyes and meditates as people nosh and stare.

"Sushi is so sensual," Bonzai manager Daniel Park tries to explain to me. He says the sushi show -- it occurs once a week and after midnight -- is "performance art."

"Art can provoke a reaction," Park says. "It gives you something to talk about." So let's talk about it.

Naked sushi objectifies women. Period.

The brains behind the scheme know that diners will not cozy up to a "human serving tray" that is too frumpy, lumpy or dumpy.

That's why the models are comely.

Sex is the selling point here -- just as it at places such as Hooters, except Hooters wisely keeps the food off the talent.

Defenders of Bonzai say eating sushi on women has roots in Japan.

Um, we're not in Japan, folks.

Japan permits sexist behavior that wouldn't be tolerated here -- not to mention the country's high rate of domestic violence and a carefree attitude about public misogyny.

On Tokyo streets, for example, men casually read sexually explicit magazines in front of women.

Bonzai's owner, Daniel Kim, says he didn't know the ins and outs of Japan's body sushi tradition, including feminist concerns it raises.

He says a promoter approached him about an opportunity for art, and he jumped. "It doesn't seem as if we are exploiting women," Kim insists.

One should have a better understanding of other cultural traditions before appropriating them.

One should market art as art if that's the true intention. Bonzai, despite claims, seems to be in it for titillating entertainment value.

Predictably, some local feminists are upset and are threatening to put national pressure on Bonzai unless the business says sayonara to sushi on women.

Here's one critic, Norma Timbang, executive director of the Asian and Pacific Islander Women and Family Safety Center:

"If people view the body as an object, then they will see it as less than human. If they see it as less than human, the people will be more inclined to be abusive."

Timbang says decades of studies support her contention that sexist attitudes lead to violent outcomes.

Bonzai folks report no problems with diners abusing their "tables," and they point out their models should have the choice to do this kind of work. "And it's tastefully done," Park says, adding: "It draws people in."

I asked Timbang what her experience was like at Bonzai. Turns out she hasn't been there for naked sushi, but "people who've been there informed us."

So we have a pub owner who didn't know about the sexist historical tradition from which naked sushi arises squaring off against an activist who has never cast eyes on one of the nearly nudes. What a pair!

At the end of the day, what Bonzai is doing is perfectly legal.

Naked sushi doesn't exactly whet my appetite. But hey, we've got choices. If people have a problem with the concept, they can take their business to a restaurant where sexism isn't served up with the sashimi.


So there!