(Page 3) Playback ’94] “Where are your clothes? Dancing around in the daytime in a state of undress… The reality of “Kogyaru Backstage Party | FRIDAY DIGITAL

Playback ’94] “Where are your clothes? Dancing around in the daytime in a state of undress… The reality of “Kogyaru Backstage Party

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It seems that they have the support of “adults” in their own way. The kogals, who are able to socialize with adults without resistance, are also aware of their value as high school girls, which they can only do while they are still in high school.

My friend bought a car with the money she made at a party. I’m going to make a lot of money and save it before I go to college.

In the 1980s, “gyaru” referred to all young women in general, as in “pichi pichi gyaru” and “ikeke gyaru. In the 1990s, high school girls who imitated “gyaru” and faked their age to go to clubs began to be called “kogyaru,” which is said to be the origin of the term “kogyaru. The year 1994 was also the year of the “kogyaru” boom.

At the time, there were quite a few parties organized by high school students, renting out discos and clubs and gathering only with their relatives. They were also called “subrocks” because they started at 3:00 p.m. and ended at 6:00 p.m. It had been common for college students to hold “dumper” parties before this, but it was no longer the high school students who played the leading role in these parties.

It was precisely because the adults were paying the price for the bubble economy and were not in high spirits that all kinds of girls, including honor students, delinquents, and high school girls with brucellas, were able to get into the party just by being called “high school girls” (although some of them were junior high school students, too, it seems). (Some of them were junior high school students.) It may be that all kinds of girls

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