Japan’s sushi legend Jiro Ono turns 100 and is not ready for retirement – The Mainichi
Japan’s sushi legend Jiro Ono turns 100 and is not ready for retirement – The Mainichi
by kenmlin
7 Comments
eggsandbacon5
Guys like Ono make me feel like a lazy bum
[deleted]
[deleted]
-piso_mojado-
Feel bad for his son that’s been working with him for a lot of those years just waiting to take over. He’s probably retirement age himself.
Unsatisfactory_bread
I wonder how many thousands of rolls he has made in his lifetime.
rdldr1
Ever since Jiro Dreams of Sushi was released, Jiro’s restaurants are now just for top elite guests. He makes elitist Japanese cuisine.
Calm-Entertainment64
I want the woman standing next to me who ruined Tsukiji to retire immediately.
phillyyoggagirl
I have a friend who retired at 50, but then he got divorced a couple of years later and now lives like a pauper. He relied on his ex-wife’s income to pull him through. He refuses to go back to work because he believes the only thing he could do is do what he did for 20-something years, which is a parole officer. I tried to convince him to do something – anything – to keep his mind active; he would’ve been perfect as a bookstore clerk because of his knowledge of many things, but he seems to hate people. He likes to dwell in the past and say how great he was physically and mentally (he was a smart guy in his college years) but now he is anything but his former self. I am glad Ono found something he loves to do rather than feel miserable all the time like my friend.
7 Comments
Guys like Ono make me feel like a lazy bum
[deleted]
Feel bad for his son that’s been working with him for a lot of those years just waiting to take over. He’s probably retirement age himself.
I wonder how many thousands of rolls he has made in his lifetime.
Ever since Jiro Dreams of Sushi was released, Jiro’s restaurants are now just for top elite guests. He makes elitist Japanese cuisine.
I want the woman standing next to me who ruined Tsukiji to retire immediately.
I have a friend who retired at 50, but then he got divorced a couple of years later and now lives like a pauper. He relied on his ex-wife’s income to pull him through. He refuses to go back to work because he believes the only thing he could do is do what he did for 20-something years, which is a parole officer. I tried to convince him to do something – anything – to keep his mind active; he would’ve been perfect as a bookstore clerk because of his knowledge of many things, but he seems to hate people. He likes to dwell in the past and say how great he was physically and mentally (he was a smart guy in his college years) but now he is anything but his former self. I am glad Ono found something he loves to do rather than feel miserable all the time like my friend.