Osaka

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Introducing Osaka

Osaka is the working heart of Kansai. Famous for its down-to-earth citizens and hearty cuisine, Osaka combines a few historical and cultural attractions with all the delights of a modern Japanese city. Indeed, Osaka is surpassed only by Tokyo as a showcase of the Japanese urban phenomenon.

This isn’t to say that Osaka is an attractive city; almost bombed flat in WWII, it appears an endless expanse of concrete boxes punctuated by pachinko (pinball) parlours and elevated highways. But the city somehow manages to rise above this and exert a peculiar charm. At night, Osaka really comes into its own; this is when all those drab streets and alleys come alive with flashing neon, beckoning residents and travellers alike with promises of tasty food and good times.

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Cook prepares tako-yaki, octopus balls, Dotombori.
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Cook prepares tako-yaki, octopus balls, Dotombori.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Brent Winebrenner
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Crowded pachinko parlor.
  • Famous wrestler Kinoshiki (right) and fellow sumo wrestler throwing salt to purify ring before their bout begins.
  • Naoko Yamamoto eating at Yukari, an Okonomiyaki-type (meaning cook what you like) restaurant, Osaka
  • Taiko drum performance at Nakano-shima 'Lark in Park' festival.
  • Osaka castle lit up at night, with cherry blossoms in the foreground.
  • A "Ko-gyaru" (literally "young gal") a follower of a trend that emulates the American Valley girls, in the Amerika-Mura district.
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