(Page 2) Punk Boo Boo’ Comedy Duo Caught in University Festival “Lack of Effort” Controversy | FRIDAY DIGITAL

Punk Boo Boo’ Comedy Duo Caught in University Festival “Lack of Effort” Controversy

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Even so, Kurose was forced to take a “hiatus” for a while.

On January 18 this year, FBS Fukuoka Broadcasting System (Kyushu local, affiliated with Nippon Television Network Corporation) announced that the February 4 broadcast of “Koji Imada’s Suppin Tour,” in which Kurose appeared, would not be broadcast. The reason was “for programming reasons” (it was rescheduled for September 14).

After that, in June, Kurose posted on Instagram that he was “back with a bang” after revealing the program he would be appearing on at RKB Mainichi Broadcasting. Since then, she seems to have been operating “normally,” but the “corruption scandal” has brought back the news about Kurose and Matsumoto again,” said a TV station official.

(TV station insider) As for the “cutting corners” fiasco, Hiromasa Yashiki of the comedy duo “New York”, a junior comedian, posted a comment on You Tube saying, “I can’t believe that something like that would be trending.

I feel sorry for Punk Boo Boo that something like that would be trending,” he said on YouTube.

I feel sorry for Punk Boo Boo, too.

He’s more of a comic than anyone else. He’s a great comedian, and he doesn’t cut corners. It’s almost too much for us to say.

A person involved in the comedy industry also testified that he was a “good guy” and a “good guy.

A person involved in the comedy industry also said

He was making people laugh at the school festival. He was making fun of former Jungle Pocket member Shinji Saito just as if he were in his prime.

The same is true of the other comedians.

The business fee can be as much as 3 million yen.

Looking at the “burning” of the series of “cutting corners” at the school festival, it seems that the general public is under the impression that school festivals are local and that it is not surprising if comedians “cut corners,” rather than TV or broadcast programs that have the power to spread the word. However, this is not the case.

However, this is not the case. The foundation of Yoshimoto Kogyo and other comedy companies is supported by sales.

From New Year’s Day on January 1, all the comedians start working at once, performing at comedy festivals and events all over Japan to attract customers. The pay is good, sometimes reaching three digits of ten thousand yen, depending on the number of times the comedian performs. For comedians, school festivals and local business events are not places to cut corners, but are the foundation (of their art). If they were to cut corners, Yoshimoto would have fired them before the Internet did,” said a person involved in the comedy industry.

Speaking of Yoshimoto’s sales watchdogs, names such as Masumi Yagi of “Savannah,” “Joy Man,” and pin-up comedian Masashi Kumada can be mentioned. Their annual income is tens of millions of yen. Yoshio Kojima, who works for another agency but is a popular figure at kids’ events, is said to be in the billions.

“It’s in the hundreds of millions,” a source in the comedy business said.

“It’s a lot of money,” said a source in the comedy industry.

For comedians, the “school festival season” is a good time to make money. The unexpected attention they have received has led to a lot of talk in the comedian community.

If I slip up, I will be exposed.

The mood in the comedian community is more tense than ever.

  • PHOTO AP/Afro

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