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This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Japan’s ‘men’s concept cafes’ face scrutiny over unlicensed adult services

By operating as restaurants, these cafes have managed to skirt Japan’s adult entertainment law licensing requirements

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Staff from NiR Prince men’s concept cafe. Photo: X/@NiR Prince
SCMP’s Asia desk

Japan’s growing number of so-called men’s concept cafes – where male staff members offer to fulfil women patrons’ fantasies for as much as 1.65 million yen (US$11,500) a drink – has sparked scrutiny over their role in exploiting regulatory loopholes to provide unlicensed adult services.

Police arrested nine operators of several men’s concept cafes on Tuesday in downtown Osaka on suspicion of operating without proper adult entertainment business licenses and engaging in illegal customer service activities.

One of them, Masao Ota, ran a chain of five such cafes, according to commercial broadcaster KTV News. He was arrested for allowing employees to engage in prolonged customer entertainment without permits. Ota has denied the allegations.

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Often called “men-kon” or “men-ko”, men’s concept cafes are often described as the male equivalents of Japan’s iconic maid cafes, staffed with good-looking men dressed to provide services based on a specific concept or fantasy.

A promotional vehicle for a host club runs though Kabukicho, Shinjuku, in Tokyo, Japan. File photo: EPA-EFE
A promotional vehicle for a host club runs though Kabukicho, Shinjuku, in Tokyo, Japan. File photo: EPA-EFE

Unlike host clubs or boys’ bars, these cafes are not licensed to allow for prolonged interactions between customers and staff.

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