A
It’s 5pm on a Friday and I'm standing in a coffee shop above Shibuya crossing - one of the most busiest place in Japan where more than a thousand of Tokyo’s smartly dressed people gather at eight points, ready to cross - then rush straight for each other. It looks like they must bump into each other, but It’s amazing that they all manage to reach the other side safely.
But the real reason I'm here is that I want to see people crash. I want businessmen to knock into each other, their umbrellas flying off their arms, and uniformed schoolchildren hitting grannies. Why may I see this now, but wouldn't have had the chance even a year ago? It’s very simple - smartphones.
Smartphone use is booming in Japan. In 2017, only about a quarter of Japanese used them, most being perfectly happy with their everyday mobiles. But now more than half of all Japanese now own a smartphone and the number is rising fast. But with that rise has grown another phenomenon - the smartphone walk. Those people who're staring at a phone screen adopt this kind of pace- their head down, arms outreached, looking like zombies(僵尸)trying to find human prey(猎食).
Surprisingly, an American named Michael Cucek who has lived here for more than 20 years told me smartphone walk probably wouldn’t be a long-term problem. Japanese phone manner is in fact better than anywhere else in the world - hardly anyone speaks on their phones on trains, and teenagers wouldn't dare broadcast music out of one. If things got truly bad at Shibuya, the police would just start shouting at people to look up.
【2016届高考英语冲刺卷:09(新课标Ⅱ卷)(原卷版)】相关文章:
★ 2014届高考英语一轮复习课时作业(十六)必修3Module 4《Sandstorms in Asia》(外研版)
★ 2017届高考英语二轮复习大题冲关秘籍阅读理解七选五:考纲解读(含解析)
★ 浙江省湖州市2014高考英语完形填空一轮(暑假)精炼(1)含答案
★ 2014届高考英语一轮复习课时作业(三十一)选修6Module 1《Small Talk》(外研版)
★ 2014届高考英语一轮复习课时作业(二)必修1Module 2《My New Teachers》(外研版)
★ 2017年高考英语二轮复习精品资料:专题16 书面表达(押题专练)(原卷版)
最新
2017-04-24
2017-04-24
2017-04-24
2017-04-24
2017-04-21
2017-04-21