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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9Xg7ui5mLA
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1R0FanSTyOw
Crowds descending on the Tokyo subway during rush hour is so common, this passenger doesn't even react as the subway pushers on duty shove him into the train
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KSGkbkunTm8
SUBSCRIBE to ABC NEWS: Watch More on LIKE ABC News on FACEBOOK .Weekday morning in January 2006 at a Toyoko Line station between Shibuya and Yokohama (Naka M
https://jpbyrail.com/articles/train-pushers/
Jonny Holmes. Anyone who has taken Tokyo's subway during rush hour knows that it gets insanely crowded. Trains packed shoulder to shoulder with commuters are a daily occurrence. But what's truly fascinating is the train pushers—staff members whose entire job is to physically shove passengers into the cars to maximize capacity.
https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowTopic-g298184-i861-k14441365-Professional_pushers-Tokyo_Tokyo_Prefecture_Kanto.html
686 reviews. 411 helpful votes. Professional pushers. 1 year ago. I'm eager to see the professional pushers while in Tokyo. I don't want to be part of those being pushed, only want to watch from a distance in the station. In my research, it seems that the JR Ueno Station is the best place to see this.
https://forums.sherdog.com/threads/professional-pushers-shove-passengers-onto-busy-tokyo-train.4324555/
Professional Pushers Shove Passengers Onto Busy Tokyo Train Thread starter Takes Two To Tango; Start date Mar 7, 2024; Takes Two To Tango The one who doesn't fall, doesn't stand up. Platinum Member. ... I don't remember professional pushers but when I was in Japan boarding a train I do remember a lot of pushing. Kind of how they role there.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passenger_pusher
Historical use Japan. When pushers were first brought in at Shinjuku Station, they were called "passenger arrangement staff" (旅客整理係, ryokaku seiri gakari), and were largely made up of students working part-time; currently, station staff and/or part-time workers fill these roles during morning rush hours on many lines. During the run-up to the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, a special
https://allchronology.com/2023/07/14/guiding-the-way-the-tokyo-subway-pushers-and-passenger-safety/
Tokyo subway pushers, commonly known as "oshiya" or "pushmen," are individuals employed at crowded train stations in Tokyo, Japan, to help facilitate the smooth boarding of passengers onto packed subway trains. The primary role of subway pushers is to assist with the efficient boarding of passengers during rush hours when trains are often overcrowded.
https://www.esquire.com/lifestyle/videos/a51602/japanese-train-push-passenger/
We Are All This Man Being Shoved onto a Train. He has accepted his fate. There comes a time in every man's life when he must accept the fact that it takes three people to shove him onto the train
https://medium.com/@456anusharao/inside-the-fascinating-job-of-pushers-why-people-are-hired-to-shove-passengers-into-trains-in-657774690cbe
To ensure that everyone can get on the train in time, Japan has a unique solution to the overcrowding problem: people are hired to push people inside trains. Known as "oshiya" in Japanese
https://www.tripadvisor.in/ShowTopic-g298184-i861-k14441365-Professional_pushers-Tokyo_Tokyo_Prefecture_Kanto.html
I'm eager to see the professional pushers while in Tokyo. I don't want to be part of those being pushed, only want to watch from a distance in the station. ... The best way to encounter "pushers" is when there's a delay in the train (e.g. due to weather event or in our case, a door in Yamanote line was jammed due to suitcase), causing trains to
https://soranews24.com/2017/12/04/one-passenger-pusher-isnt-enough-for-tokyo-area-train-that-needs-three-man-team%E3%80%90video%E3%80%91/
Even for Japan, this is a crazy rush hour scene.. There's no better example of how incredibly crowded rush-hour trains in Tokyo are than the existence of oshiya (literally "pushers"), rail operator employees whose job it is push passengers into the train carriages to compact empty interior space in hopes of letting as many people get on the train before it departs.
https://www.amusingplanet.com/2016/08/subway-pushers-of-japan.html
The Japanese rail network is known throughout the world for its superiority and punctuality. In the capital city Tokyo, nearly 40 million passengers ride the rail every day, heavily outweighing other modes of transport like buses and private cars. Of these, 22% or 8.7 million take the subway. The Tokyo subway network is a transportation marvel.
https://www.reddit.com/r/JapanTravelTips/comments/13tndf7/tokyo_rush_hour_professional_people_pusher/
It really depends on what line and what time. Was a bit crowded on the Sobu line going to Tokyo at 9am but not that bad. Went to Kita-Senju from Akihabara on the Hibiya line at 6pm and was pushed pretty deep an vigorously by the crowd, no pusher. Other that that I never got especially crowded train.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7oE8z6eGzs
Professional Pushers Shove Passengers Onto Busy Tokyo Train. | #japan #japanrailway #job/Professional Pushers, Professional subway Pushers, Shove Passengers
http://www.gruntig.net/2017/01/professional-pushers.html
Professional Pushers. Subway pushers on duty at a busy Tokyo transit hub shove passengers into crammed train cars during rush hour. at 1/01/2017 03:00:00 PM. Labels: Entertainment. 1 comment:
https://www.reddit.com/r/transit/comments/pjmkvg/tokyo_subways_professional_train_pushers_at_work/
This is also not the subway, but a commuter train on a branch line somewhere in the suburbs. As you can clearly see, the "packing" takes forever, so it's not viable on busy lines with short headways. But if the next train is in half an hour, most passengers have no option but to get stuffed in. Obviously covid has affected this too, though.
https://www.straightdope.com/21341190/are-there-really-pushers-on-tokyo-subways
No need to apologize for "pushers"-that's the literal translation of "oshiya," the Japanese term for the guys who make their living cramming commuters into Tokyo's overcrowded subways and trains. As a rule, two oshiya are assigned to every downtown station, each man covering half of each two-car subway train. Since there are two
https://www.reddit.com/r/nextfuckinglevel/comments/pj8gnw/tokyo_subways_professional_train_pushers_at_work/
When you stop, the doors open, and everyone piles out. There are vertical bars on each side of the doors on the inside. So if you're not getting off at this stop, you hop out, grab on to that bar for dear life, then step to the side of the door. A mass of humanity piles out. And for a split second, there's not that many people in the train.
https://markozen.com/2019/10/26/subway-pushers-of-japan-2/
The Japanese rail network is known throughout the world for its superiority and punctuality. In the capital city Tokyo, nearly 40 million passengers ride the rail every day, heavily outweighing other modes of transport like buses and private cars. Of these, 22% or 8.7 million take the subway. The Tokyo subway network is a transportation marvel.
https://bentonenglish.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/9th-Exp-Lesson-Standards-1-3.pdf
professional pusher. A. 14 million people live in Tokyo, Japan. B. During rush hour in Tokyo trains are overloaded by 70-200 percent. C. When there are more bodies than can fit in the train, professional pushers shove the people into the train car so the doors can close. D. Within two weeks someone can be trained to be a professional pusher. 2.
https://forums.sherdog.com/forums/mayberry-lounge.48/page-35
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