Yakitate!! Japan



""There is English bread, German bread, and French bread, but Japan's bread -- Ja-pan -- does not exist. In that case, there is no choice but to create it. This story is a serious, biographical ballad of a boy who possesses Solar Hands, Kazuma Azuma, who will create a Japanese bread made by and for the Japanese people, which can be presented to the world proudly.""

- Opening Narration

In the world of 'Yakitate!! Japan', bread is Serious Business. And no one takes it more seriously than Kazuma Azuma, a teenaged baker whose dream it is to create a national bread for his native country of Japan. It's an uphill battle however, as Japan is a land where rice has always ruled and where bread has never been held in very high regard. But all that is about to change thanks to the efforts of our gastronomically savantish hero, who, with his "solar hands" and ten years of self-study, has become a master of his craft.

The story begins with Kazuma heading to The Big City to apply for a position at Pantasia, one of Japan's biggest bakery franchises. Unfortunately, once he gets there he finds himself having to compete for the job with about thirty other applicants, most of whom have had some sort of formal training and education. Will a young, naive boy with pluck and determination be able to measure up in a Cooking Duel against Japan's finest up-and-coming breadmakers?

...Well duh. This is a Shonen series, after all...

During the course of the show, Kazuma gets to strut his stuff in several baking tournament arcs, as well as meet a cast of wacky characters, including:
 * Kyousuke Kawachi - The Idiot From Osaka. Kazuma's co-worker and one of his more lighthearted rivals.
 * Kai Suwabara - A grim-faced master swordsman who took up breadmaking for philosophical reasons. Rival to both Kazuma and Kyosuke and the series' Anti-Hero.
 * Shigeru Kanmuri - Harvard-trained Teen Genius who looks to the cold hand of Science to create the world's next Big Bread Breakthrough.
 * Tsukino Azusagawa - The Chick. Outcast granddaughter of the Pantasia chain owner. Is vying to become his heir along with her stepsisters, the annoying Mizuno and the psychotic Devil in Plain Sight, Yukino.
 * Kageto Kinoshita - (aka the "Mushroom-head" guy). Another of Kazuma's co-workers who usually gets stuck doing all of the work while everyone is off competing in tournaments. The series' Butt Monkey.
 * Ken Matsushiro - The Obi-Wan. Kazuma's boss and mentor. Wears a Funny Afro and has a thing for horses. (No, not that sort of a thing...) Is a MASSIVE Ham.
 * Ryo Kuroyanagi - Hard-assed tournament judge with a talent for making overblown and very elaborate pun-based reactions to anything he tastes. A Running Gag has Kazuma frequently calling him an "old man" even though he's only 22.
 * Spencer Henry Hokō - An Italian-American dude all the way from California and worked at the Nagoya branch of Pantasia. Thinks he is a true-blue Nagoya guy. He shows up during the first Tournament Arc and loses to Kazuma Azuma. He returns in the second Tournament Arc as a member of Team America.
 * Yuuichi Kirisaki- owner and Manipulative Bastard of St. Pierre's, rival of Pantasia. He looks like Gendō Ikari from Neon Genesis Evangelion and is voiced by the guy who did the voice of Gendō too. He tries sabotaging Team Japan during the Monaco Cup and hires the members of Team America to defeat them. He starts Yakitate 25!(9 in anime) as an attempt to humiliate Kazuma.

'Yakitate!! Japan' is notable for being a parody of the shonen fighting anime genre, skewering many of the traditional shonen character archetypes, and the overblown way in which even the most mundane turns of the plot are depicted. It's a fun—and at times, educational—action series. Watch it, and you'll never again think bread is boring.

This series has Wild Mass Guessing.

"Kuroyanagi: You only have one life to live, but you can get divorced as many times as you want. Oh how wonderful, divorces!"
 * Absolute Cleavage: Tsukino sports some as an elf during an Omake.
 * Affably Evil: Yuichi Kirisaki, who needs to keep up a polite profile in public. Evil, but very smart.
 * Anime Accent Absence: Heck, Spencer lives in Nagoya so long, he ends up talking in Nagoya-ben.
 * Art Shift: The Flash Back sequence where Kuroyanagi recalls being an exchange student in America. He's drawn in an anime style, yet his American classmates are all drawn in a more realistic "Western" style. The recurring character named "Kid" is also drawn in this style whenever he appears.
 * Bald Women: In manga only, shaves her head. It's not noticed until her wig falls off...
 * Baleful Polymorph: Food starts having this effect more and more once the Yakitate 25 arc rolls around, with the effects lasting longer and longer, to the point that the in-universe viewers are starting to wonder if it's all going too far.
 * Kawaichi spends the majority of said arc suffering various transformations.
 * Battle Aura: Although in this series, it should be called, "Baking Aura"
 * Bedmate Reveal: For Kawachi here why she's naked has no explanation.
 * Beyond the Impossible: The reactions people have to high-quality bread, which apparently can rewrite the very fabric of reality when sufficiently awesome.
 * Bishonen: Tsubozuka and Kanmuri. Kanmuri was featured in an omake where it was revealed that you can't tell him from Tsukino if you zoom in enough.
 * Biting the Handkerchief
 * Blank White Eyes: One of Kazuma's more "dramatic" breads can bring about this effect, with an accompanying Near-Death Experience.
 * And Shadow White.
 * Boke and Tsukkomi Routine: Kawachi and Azuma when they do the "What the hell?" routine a la Tomo.
 * But Not Too Foreign: Meister Silvan and Sophie Balzac Kirisaki.
 * S.H. Hokou is an example of an American based in Japan but not too American.
 * Butt Monkey: Kageto Kinoshita. The sad thing is that, with his talents and abilities, he could easily become cool and popular—if it wasn't for his generic looks.
 * Kawachi becomes this later on. His entire role in the manga essentially becomes to be less cool, less respected, and less fantastic than Azuma, Kai, and the others. Even his family starts insulting and looking down on him... that's just cruel.
 * But Your Hands Are Beautiful: Monica Adenauer, as a master confectioner, has heavily scarred hands due to cutting herself many times on her sugar creations, and is embarassed to let Suwabara see them. When he does, he finds them to be the hands of a dedicated craftswoman and calls them beautiful.
 * Calling Your Attacks: Calling out the name of one's bread while conjuring up dramatic backgrounds is a favorite tactic amongst tournament competitors.
 * Can't Catch Up: Kawachi is actually pretty good at baking bread overall: he did pull his own weight at various Pantasia branches, and he manages to win several matches on his own - in fact, his only outright loss to anyone other than Azuma was a result of sabotage. He's just not nearly as good as Azuma, who starts better and quickly surpasses pretty much the entire world of baking.
 * Catch Phrase: Kawachi's "What the heck?!" He's routinely mocked for it by the others.
 * Charles Atlas Superpower: Though he doesn't have any special innate abilities like Azuma has, Kawaichi is eventually able to gain his own version of the Solar Hands (called Solar Gauntlets) as well as superhuman finger dexterity, though grueling physical training.
 * Chekhov's Gun: Pierrot Bolnez's ring.
 * Chekhov's Skill: A meta example. Some of the early Omake include the author discussing some of his early work, which included a manga based on Street Fighter II.
 * Combat Commentator: Many characters in Yakitate! Japan, usually the Manager Ken Matsushiro and Ryo Kuroyanagi. Their explanations are usually triggered by Kawachi, The Idiot From Osaka, saying that he doesn't understand what's going on.
 * Contemptible Cover: Many, many manga covers, example here.
 * Cooking Duel
 * Cross-Dressing Voices: Yumiko Kobayashi voicing Kazuma Azuma and Marina Inoue voicing Shigeru Kanmuri.
 * Cross-Popping Veins
 * Defeat Means Friendship
 * They even mention this trope in the Yakitate 25 arc by name after Azuma defeats, "God's Child" in a pizza duel.
 * Devil in Plain Sight: Yukino.
 * Doppelganger Spin: A variation, in that Kageto Kinoshita doesn't use it to attack, but rather to make "clones" of himself so he can get his and everybody else's work done. Tournament Judge Pierrot Bolnez also has this talent used to taste all of the submissions at once. Both characters learned this technique while working in the circus, surprisingly.
 * The characters catch on to this, saying "Maybe all clowns can create clones of themselves these days." Or words to that effect.
 * Double Entendre: Tsukino subverts this. When Ken convinces Suwabara not to commit seppuku by telling him that Monica was pregnant, Ken says "when a man and a woman are living in the same house alone, there is nothing for them to do except--" She completes the sentence saying "play cards, right, Manager?"
 * Later played straight during the Yakitate 25 arc when Azuma and the gang are making a soft bread and their opponent is making a hard bread. Tsukino turns to the manager and says, "Between a hard and soft bread its obvious that hard is better, right?" To which Ken replies, "That's your preferment as a woman..." Mind you he is shirtless and she is wearing a bikini at the time to make it more suggestive.
 * Drill Sergeant Nasty: Examiner Kuroyanagi.
 * Enemy Mime: Shadow White, even though he doesn't dress the part, can imitate people just as well as Marcel Marceau.
 * Enemy Without:
 * Eureka Moment: Has inspired Kazuma more than a few times.
 * Kawachi gets a few as well.
 * Even the Girls Want Her: In an Omake, Tsukino Azusagawa is shown to be receiving a lot of love letters in her shoe box. She's in an all-girls school.
 * Exploding Calendar: Lampshaded when the cast notes their month-long Training Montage only took one page.
 * Eye Beams: Of bread.
 * Fighting From the Inside:
 * Also,
 * Flanderization: Kawachi, quickly morphing from Jerk with a Heart of Gold to The Idiot From Osaka to the point that it seems like they're two completely different characters.
 * Flag Bikini
 * Flash Back: Nearly every single time someone tastes bread.
 * ESPECIALLY with Pierrot Bolneze, who divulges practically all of his life whenever he tastes the Japan representatives' bread.
 * Four Is Death: Azuma's 44th variety of bread has the power to send people to heaven. Unless the person was at the end of their lifespan, however, they get better.
 * Fumihiko Tachiki: Yuuichi Kirisaki.
 * Funny Afro: Ken—and Kawachi, at one point.
 * Genius Ditz: Azuma's math skills and rice knowledge, anyone?
 * Suwabara isn't much better, seemingly knowing only two things - bread and swordsmanship.
 * Genki Girl: Mizuno Azusagawa.
 * Genre Savvy: In a recent omake Kazuma Azuma proves to be a little insightful to the world he lives in. Sometime when both he and Tsukino were kids they both ended up in a dry well. To escape Azuma fed her a piece of bread realizing that the pun would turn her into a tower to facilitate their escape.
 * Kirisaki takes the cake for this though.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: The that "doll" that Air!Yukino is put into after the Reverse Tart arc is a sex doll.
 * Giving Someone the Pointer Finger
 * Ghost Lights
 * Gratuitous Foreign Language: Tsubozuka. The language differs depending on what country the manga's published in.
 * Half-Human Hybrid: The hupans are half-human, half-bread.
 * Hey, It's That Voice!
 * Excel Excel as a brown-haired boy wearing a headband.
 * Yoko Ritona as a pink-haired boy genius.
 * Gilgamesh as a world famous clown and apparently Gendo Ikari is also a world class baker.
 * Hikaru Midorikawa (Shizuto Narumi {eps. 57-58})
 * Hopeless Boss Fight: The match against Norihei essentialy boils down into this, and it got mercilessly lampshaded.
 * Ho Yay: Ken-chan & Mokoyama, Kanmuri & Kuroyanagi-sempai.
 * Huge Guy, Tiny Girl (Leonhart XIV and Maetal)
 * Duh! Mokoyama and Mizuno.
 * Hurricane of Puns: Barely a chapter goes by without some horrendous pun, many of which are lost entirely in the English translations. Even the series title is a pun: "pan" is Japanese for "bread", so "Ja-pan" can be read as "Japanese bread", which plays on the names of other varieties of bread like "furansu pan" (lit. "French bread"), etc.
 * Idiot Hair: Kazuma and Monica Adenauer.
 * I'm a Humanitarian: Azuma takes a bite out of Kawachi when he turns into a monaka, some sort of wafer cake, thanks to the reaction. Then Kanmuri takes a bite too. Then Kawachi eats himself, and finds himself delicious.
 * Kuroyanagi does this to the hupan when he becomes one himself.
 * Important Haircut: Kawachi, from dyed blonde hair, to Afro (which, in reality, is a crewcut with an Afro wig on top), to shiny bald and back to dyed blonde hair again.
 * Impossibly Delicious Food: Chefs bake bread so good that anything can happen. One bite, and you'll literally...
 * Die and go to heaven (temporarily, of course);
 * Travel back in time;
 * Experience More Than Mind Control;
 * Physically undergo Shapeshifting.
 * Going Super-Saiyan.
 * Change the title of the manga for an entire tankobon.
 * Informed Ability: Kai Suwabara is mentioned from the get-go as being one of the greatest young breadmakers in a generation, having already won a major competition before even applying to work at Pantasia. He's then widely seen as the competitor to beat in the Pantasia rookie tournament. His actual victory count in-series?
 * Insane Troll Logic: After marrying and divorcing a woman for the sake of a reaction, Kuroyanagi defends his actions by claiming that since the prefecture they're in has the lowest divorce rate in the country, people should get divorced more to get closer to the national average.
 * Insane Troll Logic: After marrying and divorcing a woman for the sake of a reaction, Kuroyanagi defends his actions by claiming that since the prefecture they're in has the lowest divorce rate in the country, people should get divorced more to get closer to the national average.


 * He also argues that compared to the number of times Kawaichi says "What do you mean!?" in a single day, his divorce means nothing.
 * Invincible Hero: Azuma ties once the entire series. And has an implied loss twice, when people in other brackets (first Koala, then Shadow White) do better than him. He is never out right defeated in a direct competition, though.
 * Actually, the tie doesn't really count since Azuma didn't participate in the jam match against Tsutsumi
 * Didn't he lose against Miki Norihei in the yakitate 25 in a seaweed bread contest?
 * Does that count, since Mr. Norihei is from another dimension?
 * The Jimmy Hart Version: Does "Daybreak Symphony" remind you of any other songs with "symphony" in the title, by any chance?
 * Large Ham: MISTER KEN MATSUSHIRO!
 * Lawyer-Friendly Cameo: One of the enemies in the Yakitate!! 25 arc is the mascot for a certain brand of seaweed.
 * Lighter and Softer: While the manga's subject is rather tame, much of the contents from it deserved the Teens rating. However, the anime is clean enough to put on your typical Saturday morning slot.
 * Looming Silhouette of Rage
 * Manly Gay: Arguably Mokoyama, who likes to call Matsuhiro "Ken-chan"
 * Taken to Beyond the Impossible levels in the Philippine dub.
 * Marina Inoue: Kanmuri Shigeru
 * Mask Power: Meister Kirisaki, whose mask apparently contains Hammerspace where he keeps his "rating birds".
 * Medium Awareness (When the manga shifts to colour in the middle of a page,they wonder how they can suddenly see colours now).
 * Then there's volume 17.
 * This happens in the anime too, and they rewind back to the opening credits to see it.
 * Mind Control Eyes: A very subtle version:
 * Mirror Match: The battle against the ninja in the Yakitate!! 25 arc: Both sides made bread with the same ingredients and preparation techniques. The only difference was the way the bread was kneaded.
 * Miss Conception: is convinced that  is pregnant, despite them having only "embraced a number of times". It's clear from the context that he doesn't mean "had sex" when he thinks it, either.
 * It's revealed in the finale, though, that  did eventually catch on.
 * Missed Moment of Awesome: Preparing for a match against Azuma, Kawaichi undergoes physical training under Meister Kirisaki to gain superhuman finger dexterity on top of his Solar Gauntlets, possibly giving him a chance to finally compete on equal terms with Azuma. Unfortunately, Azuma's bread transforms the judge into a giant butterfly, rendering him unable to eat bread, and since the entire goal of the competition (to convince the judge, Azuma's grand-uncle, to hand over his special wheat,) was accomplished, Kawaichi didn't even get to do anything.
 * Monster Clown: Pierrot Bolnez isn't a villain, but his powers and abilities are so uncanny that he arguably qualifies.
 * Ms. Fanservice: Monica Adenauer, who tries to intimidate Suwabara using this. It fails.
 * Tsukino and her sisters! There is even a fan [ -y shot of Tsukino on the flap of every cover !
 * Azuma's sister is this on occasion.
 * For some bizarre reason Tsukino is wearing a shirt that says "hooker" on this page. Could be fun for some.
 * Mundane Made Awesome: It's safe to say that if most people reacted to tasting bread the way the people in this series do, bread would be immediately classified as a Schedule I Controlled Substance.
 * It's not just bread. In this series, any type of food can produce astounding reactions as long as the chef is good enough. Let's put it like this; one of the first reactions we saw was a guy bending himself to look like a crescent moon. Fast-forward a few arcs and we have a guy travelling through time. Fast-forward some more and we have people actually entering "reaction worlds" and Shapeshifting.
 * The Muse: Kawachi inspires the majority of Azuma's awesome bread ideas. Almost all the other ones come from him already having made it before.
 * Naughty Nuns: Mako Graham, the nun who taught Kawachi to go afro (sort of), is far from the nice nuns you see around everyday. She even hand-signals as if she was smoking.
 * Nobuyuki Hiyama: Iwashiro Tetsuo from the manga Wild Life {episode 58}
 * No Fourth Wall
 * Especially prevalent in the Omake (unless that is to what the above poster referred), Takitate! Gohan, such as when Shiroyagani excuses the taking of all ten points from almost every entry in the employment competition with it being an Omake (while abusing the trope of This... Is... SPARTA!!! in the process).
 * Noblewoman's Laugh:
 * Yukino.
 * Mokoyama.
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed: Michael Schumacher doing an Initial D before going to Formula One? Azuma mistaking Lake Iglesia with Julio Iglesias? Kaiser's fans behaving like the Detroit Tigers fans? They're all here.
 * Non-Standard Character Design: Brad Kidd
 * And Norihei Miki, being a corporate mascot and all.
 * One-Note Cook: Azuma can make bread and only bread. Luckily, he rarely has to make anything else.
 * Out of Focus: Kageto was never really focused on all that much, but by the Yakitate 25 arc he just sort of quietly disappears from the manga, even when the characters are hanging out at the store.
 * Painting the Fourth Wall: Once,when Azuma reacts after tasting an opponent's bread,.
 * Paper Fan of Doom: A Mecha version of Yukino wields one of these during a bread-reaction hallucination.
 * Peek-a-Bangs: Takumi Tsubozuka.
 * Perpetual Expression: Brad Kidd's face is exactly the same every time he appears.
 * The Power of Friendship
 * Power Perversion Potential: This Omake shows Kai Suwabara's German bread giving Mizuno Azusagawa some....large tracks of land
 * Quirky Miniboss Squad: CMAP is an invocation, as they were actually trained to become quirky because they were celebrities.
 * Reality Warper: Ryo Kuroyanagi
 * Rie Kugimiya: Monica Adenauer
 * Scary Shiny Glasses: Hiroshi Kaname and Yuuichi Kirisaki.
 * Scenery Censor: In a manga Omake,a cat nicks Tsukino's bra while she's changing and she chases after it into the main shop. Cue Beat Panel of the boys' beaten in faces.
 * Serious Business: Apparently it's serious enough that a cooking duel between breadmakers from two competing bakery chains can warrant a stadium-sized audience and "Death of Anna Nicole Smith"-level media coverage.
 * However, even more serious is the art of reacting to bread.
 * Kuroyanagi has made it clear that he's willing to risk bodily harm and even death for the sake of a reaction. Most evident in the jam match between Kanmuri and Tsutsumi, where his reactions consist of shoving his face into a bowl of boiling hot, flaming jam and suffering serious burns, and then trying to climb into a large pot in order to smoke himself to death.
 * Another reaction has him run off and marry a random Gonk woman with the last name Shima just so he can change his surname (he ends up divorcing her just in time to taste the competition's bread.)
 * Ship Tease: Could just be me but Tsukino licking her lips while baking an Azuma shaped bread seems like it to me.
 * She also licks her hand where Azuma touched her in the 3rd episode.
 * Shout-Out:
 * One of Kuroyanagi's overblown pun-based reactions to tasting a turtle-shaped dessert has him turning into Gamera, the giant, flying, fire-breathing turtle kaiju.
 * Episode 68 appears to be a The Lord of the Rings parody... with cooking.
 * One of the earlier episodes has the manager Matsushiro pulling a Kenshiro (Fist of the North Star) on Kawachi. Matsushiro Ken -> Kenshiro? It makes sense! 'Omae mo hatsuga suru'
 * The Black Tri-Stars from Mobile Suit Gundam show up as three expert bakers from St. Pierre's Kyūshū branch. They tasted Kazuma's Black Ja-pan and had a reaction where they fought the Nobel Gundam from G Gundam which was piloted by Yukino (and had a caption reminding people they were still watching Yakitate!! Japan. ) They quit after the reaction.
 * In one episode, Pierrot eats "Alexandria" Egyptian Bread, with Kodaimai Miso flavoring and turns into Detective Conan.
 * In another episode, Kuroyanagi turns into Super Kuroyanagi (a parody of Super Sayain) by eating Takumi Tsubodzuka's Super Toro Aburi. He fights Kawachi in a DBZ-style fight. He turns into Super Kuroyanagi 2 (a parody of Super Sayain 2) and Super Kuroyanagi 3 (a parody of Super Sayain 3) as a result of eating Urchin-roe Chawanmushi bread.
 * In another episode, Kuroynagi turns into a parody of Monkey D. Luffy by eating Kazuma Azuma's Ōkuchi Wafuu (Japanese-style) Ja-pan Man.
 * Kawachi Kyousuke tries some kelp marinated in soda and turns into Pepmiman, a parody of Pepsiman. He rescues a girl from drowning at sea. He also beats two sharks that tried to eat the girl.
 * And there was yet another sequence involving Kawachi as a blond ninja in bright orange clothes.
 * Then there's this, done in the style of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, which gets several other shout-outs, to the point where it is hard to believe the manga-ka isn't a fan.
 * When Meister Kirisaki decides to train Kawaichi, he talks about making him an iron man, complete with images of Kawaichi dressed as Gigantor
 * Shown Their Work:
 * They have a bakery consultant; nearly all of the facts, and the out-there ingredients and techniques used to make the breads are real. There's even a recipe in one of the manga volumes for Kazuma's rice-cooker bread.
 * The anime has a little segment at the end of each episode dedicated to showing off the research they did.
 * Skilled but Naive: Kazuma Azuma, who is a superb baker but starts off not even knowing what nan bread is.
 * Strictly Formula: The middle part of the Yakitate 25 arc starts falling into a strict formula after a while: Pantasia competes against someone who's the best in their field at a particular type of food, and both are tasked to make that exact type of food (because St. Pierre is cheating and manipulating the matches behind the scenes,) the Pantasia team ends up staying at a bizarre hotel, Azuma suddenly gets an inspiration for the match thanks to Kawachi, the story cuts to the competition, where Ken shows up late because of Yakuza business, Pantasia wins, and in later chapters their opponent is polymorphed, possibly permanently, while Azuma declares it a happy ending. There's an occasional variation in the formula, but it happens far and few between.
 * Talking Animal: Mokoyama turns into a talking panda as a reaction to smelling Kazuma's Triple Bamboo Leaf manju.
 * Takehito Koyasu: Ryo Kuroyanagi.
 * Thinker Pose: In episode 31, Kawachi Kyousuke was stripped of his clothes except for his underwear, and he was covered in bread and made to look like "The Thinker" by Rodin after he broke the bread "The Thinker" statue made by the rest of the group.
 * Time to Unlock More True Potential: Kyousuke Kawachi's visit to the "Afro Church"
 * Tomokazu Seki: Pierrot Bolneze
 * Trade Your Passion for Glory
 * Training from Hell: Kyosuke's attempts to give himself "solar gauntlets".
 * Tuckerization: Kanmuri is named after the author's editor and a minor character (Kanmuri's father) is named after the author himself (and even looks strongly like Hashiguchi).
 * Unusual Ears: Mokoyama's pointed ears give him a devilish appearance.
 * The Virus:
 * Wearing a Flag on Your Head: Monica Adenauer wears a two-piece bikini with American Flag Print in episodes 45-46.
 * Wham! Episode: The reveal that
 * Who's on First?: One dialogue sequence involves naan bread, which just happens to sound like the Japanese for "what"; another involves "croissant" being mistaken for a name ending in the honorific -san.
 * A Worldwide Punomenon: The various reactions to the dish are based on these.
 * E.g., on one of the earlier chapter someone tests their bread by offering it to a horse. Horse sniffs and goes blissfully ばく (common eating onomatopoeia), written as 馬食 ("horse eats"). Guess it's a male horse.)
 * Yakuza: Ken is eventually elected as the new leader of the yakuza group formerly headed by Kanmuri's father. Though he's reluctant at first, he eventually takes to it.
 * You Are Too Late:
 * Zettai Ryouiki: Tsukino, at school and at work.