Tuesday, November 20, 2007

For some, Auto Show's Attraction Is Girls:(+photos)




TOKYO -- Not everybody snapping pictures at the Tokyo Motor Show is focusing on the cars.Many of the camera-toting folks roaming the massive exhibit halls are more interested in the girls whom automakers and parts companies hire to adorn their exhibits.That's not surprising, of course. But in Japan, photographing lovely ladies in public places is pursued with such enthusiasm that there's a name for practitioners: camera kozo -- a kozo being a Buddhist disciple or a servant boy, though the word can be used in a derogatory way to refer to an inexperienced youth.At big car shows, camera kozo -- kameko for short -- can be seen mobbing the models -- known as event companions -- pressing in close with their telephoto lenses and snapping hundreds or even thousands of digital images in a single day. Many kameko run websites on which they post photos of event companions, invite comments from visitors and blog about their favorites.
The single-minded pursuit of nonvehicular beauty can be irritating to exhibitors who, after all, are trying to get visitors and reporters to focus on their products. Makuhari, for instance, has a driver's license but doesn't even own a car, making him what the Japanese call a "paper driver."Attractive and often scantily clad women have been a fixture at auto shows and racetracks worldwide for years. "Product specialists," as they're known in the U.S., will be on hand when the L.A. Auto Show begins its 10-day run next week.But in Japan they are something of a cultural phenomenon. Race queens, who work under contract for Japanese auto racing teams, are especially popular, with some attaining the status of minor celebrities, complete with websites, fan clubs and swimsuit videos.Event companions are generally less well known. They wear more risque outfits than their counterparts at auto shows in the U.S. and Europe, although many of the major automakers have toned down the sex factor in recent years. At this year's Tokyo Motor Show, which ends Sunday, hot pants and halter tops were largely confined to exhibits sponsored by motorcycle makers and tire companies.
"Those who are shy and quiet may not be suited for this work," said Saori Yoshimura of the Flash agency in Tokyo, which books event companions for auto shows, food exhibitions and other events.Makuhari discovered event companions nine years ago and has been hooked ever since. He goes to about 10 events a year, mostly car-related "because they're the easiest to take pictures at." He typically takes 800 shots a day, although he was shooting twice that number at the Tokyo show. He'll post many on his website (racequeen.seesaa.net), which he says gets 1,000 unique visitors a day.Miki Kataoka, who was working at the Tokyo Motor Show for the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Assn., said she liked the attention and the occasional gifts from her fans (one set up her website, happymikimiki.com, as a birthday present).
Shoko Hosoda, who was at the Tokyo show representing a maker of children's car seats, said photographers sometimes interfere with her job."Customers will be asking questions about the product," she said, "but the camera kozo are constantly asking us to pose for them." .