Outline
For the CJPF Awards, we recruited and reviewed Cool Japan initiatives that highlight the appeals of Japan.
We have now decided on the works and initiatives to award in the video and project categories.
*The CJPF Awards are a result of the integration of the former Cool Japan Video Contest and the former Cool Japan Matching Awards.
As the impact of the pandemic subsides, we are seeing heightened interest in Japan in the form of the recovery of inbound tourism, an increase in exports of Japanese agricultural, forestry, fishery and liquor products, and the worldwide success of Japanese anime titles. In light of these circumstances, the Cool Japan Public-Private Partnership Platform (CJPF) (*1) is hosting the CJPF Awards 2024 which aims to promote the Cool Japan Strategy (*2) to deliver the appeal of Japan to foreign countries and expand Japan’s fan base. On this page we introduce the winning works and initiatives.
*1: Established in December 2015 as a forum for strengthening public-private and cross-industry collaboration, with the objective of enhancing the Cool Japan Strategy and promoting a unified public-private sector approach towards Cool Japan initiatives. Current members include various private companies in industries such as content and food industries, and the platform is expected to match members with one other as well as with other parties closely involved in Cool Japan, while heightening the strategy’s appeal and creating new forms of value. While Cool Japan spans various aspects of culture, it was decided at the General Meeting in June 2021 that projects concerned with food and food culture are to be the focus of immediate Cool Japan activities for the time being.
*2: “Restructuring the Cool Japan Strategy” in the Cool Japan Strategy (decided September 2019) and the Intellectual Property Strategic Program 2021 (decided July 2021)
“Rebooting Cool Japan with an Eye on the Post-pandemic Era” in the Intellectual Property Strategic Program 2022 (decided June 2022)
“Full-scale Operation and Evolution of the Cool Japan Strategy” in the Intellectual Property Strategic Program 2023 (decided June 2023)
Video category
award results
The English subtitles, background music, and overall story work excellently, and the video carefully communicates the appeals of Japan in an easy to understand manner. With the temple setting the scene, the video shows off a quintessentially Japanese culture of subtraction. For foreign people seeing Japanese culture for the first time, it provides an excellent spiritual experience. Moreover, as temples and Zen Buddhism are a common visual topic for foreign people, I look forward to the use of new perspectives and expressive techniques to attract an even greater number of viewers.
I am incredibly grateful to receive this wonderful award. Through this video, I sought to shine a light on the excellent quality of the water from Sano, which is key to the ramen’s delicious taste, and the more than a century old aotake-uchi technique. The ultimate aim was to show off the ramen capital of Japan which has been lovingly developed by local citizens over time. The local Sanomaru mascot character, wearing a ramen bowl on its head, is a previous winner of the Yuru-Chara Grand Prix. With Sanomaru taking the lead, I look forward to working with local businesses to spread joy throughout the world with delicious bowls of Sano ramen.
The video did an excellent job of differentiating Sano City from other areas using Sano ramen as the hook. The high-speed visuals cleverly communicated the energy of the ramen culture in Sano City. Moreover, showing the vast number and qualities of Sano ramen shops in a simple manner is a great way to attract tourists to the area. Aotake-uchi workshops are very unique. Visuals of the aotake-uchi technique in action were a great way to showcase the uniqueness of Sano City. Overall, I think the video symbolized how ramen is a key part of the Cool Japan Strategy.
Using my experience in developing and supporting eco-tourism programs in 18 different countries, I started this eco tour and glamping facility with a desire to work with local craftspeople from Fujinomiya to communicate the intangible cultural value of Mt. Fuji to people worldwide. The video was produced by the visual production team 37 Frames as part of efforts to support our activities during the pandemic. I believe there is huge value in a small business like us receiving such as prestigious award.
It is a fantastic video that excellently balances music, visuals, and editorial skills to show off the diverse appeals of Japan, from its nature and food to its cultures and people. I was particularly impressed with how the visuals convinced the viewer that they would have an excellent time when they visit the facility. It was also great to see Masanori speaking in English and Kanako smiling next to him. They are both very likeable characters who you cannot help but want to meet. Congratulations on winning the award!
I am incredibly grateful to receive such a wonderful award. Miyama Town is around 90 minutes by car from Kyoto Station. It is a farming and mountain village with a population of approximately 3,300. Moving forward, working with local citizens, local businesses, and visitors from Japan and overseas, I will take pride in continuing to protect the original farming and mountain landscapes of Japan and our own unique lifestyles.
This video showcases the charms of the thatched roof village of Miyama in Kyoto, which was selected as one of the Best Tourism Villages by the UNWTO. The theme for the video was sustainability, and it uses stunning visuals, interviews with proud locals, and English narration to introduce the area. The video also introduces local food and workshops, making the viewer want to visit and live like a local.
With 29 different soy sauce brewers working together, we are working on branding and public relations activities to enhance the global popularity of KIOKE SHOYU. The production of KIOKE SHOYU, which is made using wooden barrels, was in danger of stopping completely. Rather than competing against each other in a limited market, we are working together to try and capture 1% of the overseas market. We hope to further promote understanding of the diversity and charms of soy sauce, as well as the history and culture that comes with the use of traditional wooden barrels.
First of all, congratulations on winning this award. The video had a great storyline and has great potential to popularize Japan’s leading soy sauce brands. Using the terroir concept, the video did an excellent job of promoting the KIOKE SHOYU brand. Moreover, I was particularly impressed with the indirect manner in which the video sought to simultaneously attract inbound tourists and promote export. I look forward to supporting the further promotion of KIOKE SHOYU to customers overseas.
Kuchu no Mura makes use of the unique topography and environment of Totsukawa in Nara Prefecture, and was established with a desire to allow visitors to experience the joy of doing absolutely nothing amid a stunning natural environment. By incorporating the ideas of someone who has moved to Japan from a different country, I was able to capture the charms of Japan from a completely different perspective. Moving forward, I will continue to communicate the wonders of Japanese culture and people’s ideas throughout the world.
Using relaxing music and visuals, the video expertly portrayed Jolan Ferreri’s love for Totsukawa and his passion and enthusiasm for the area. “There is such an abundance of forests but they are not being used.” “Japanese adults don’t go out of their way to play in nature.”The video helps to remind you of regional and Japanese charms that perhaps Japanese people might overlook.
I am overjoyed to be able to receive this award. While there were many positive reactions to the Nippon Foundation’s initiatives from foreign viewers, I was surprised to see some commenting that outside of Japan, these toilets would be defaced or destroyed. Aside from this innovative design, I realized that Japanese manners are an element of Japanese culture that we can be very proud of.
The Tokyo Toilet Project from the Nippon Foundation aims to create accessible public toilets for various people in Shibuya-ku. The video introduces the world’s first transparent toilets, designed by world-famous architect Shigeru Ban, that offer peace of mind for the user, via a foreign and a Japanese reporter. The report on the state-of-the-art Japanese toilet design and the initiatives aimed at creating a more inclusive society make the viewer want to visit the toilets as a tourist attraction.
The stage for this video was Tanabe City in Wakayama Prefecture, the birthplace of the founder of aikido, and the Nanki area of the Kumano Kodo. The “do” of aikido and the Kumano Kodo share many similarities. Through the eyes of travelers who have visited the area, I sought to showcase the values that can be obtained by syncing people, nature, and traditional cultures through travel.
The video mixed high-quality editing with animation elements for a highly creative outcome. In addition to promoting a return to the roots of aikido, it presents the martial art as a universal sport. With hundreds of thousands of aikidoka across the world, I have no doubt that this message with resonate with many people.
Following on from last year, I’m very happy to again receive this Excellence Award. Next year I will do everything I can to win the Grand Prize. Thank you.
Yanagibashi is a typical downtown neighborhood for working-class Japanese people. The video shows how eel and clam tsukudani is made in the area. The careful work of the chef, the significant impact seasons have on tsukudani, and the introduction of the region where tsukudani was first made will no doubt make foreign people watching the video want to visit the region and try it out for themselves.
I wanted to see if forests could make sounds akin to a pipe organ. Rather than having people play the music, I wanted nature to play the sounds.
As the Japanese phrase goes, “All five elements of nature have their own sound.” All things have their own sounds and vibrations. I want to create a global organ that resonates using these different sounds and vibrations. Hajime Sakita (Musician)
For inbound tourists, all of this year’s wonderful award entries combined beautiful visuals and specific experiences that described Japan’s stunning landscapes and cultures. Unlike other video s that highlighted the appeal of a specific location, the winner of this Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai, Japan Award was a documentary-like video that saw a musician work alongside engineers to bring shape to his idea of making forests play their own music. The idea to make music from trees was fascinating, and with the noises coming from the rich nature of the forests, the visuals were almost like an illusion. It was a pleasant, uniquely Japanese view of nature that was full of charm. The video portrayed the importance of the link between people and nature. It showed how all living things accept one another, and how by maximizing the potential of this relationship we can create a sustainable society. It was in perfect harmony with the theme for Expo 2025, Designing Future Society for Our Lives.
I selected this video for the award as it helps to enhance understanding of the different living things around us.
Project category
award results
Thank you so much for this incredible award. SUSHIDELIC combines the Japanese kawaii pop culture with traditional Japanese sushi. It is an entirely new restaurant where diners can experience culture through food. Regardless of race, religion, age, gender, or nationality, I hope it can become a place where people can learn about current Japanese culture.
Combining sushi and the kawaii culture to provide a new worldview and added value is a new form of creation for Cool Japan initiatives. The project is a fitting winner of this year’s Grand Prize award.
I am grateful to receive the Grand Prize Runner-up at the CJPF Awards 2024. First developed in Japan, VTuber content has grown in popularity both domestically and internationally. Demand for VTuber content is increasing year on year, and so I will do everything I can to create more content for fans in Japan and overseas, and in turn contribute to the continuous development of the VTuber industry as one of Japan’s leading cultures.
Congratulations on winning the Grand Prize Runner-up award! Recently, it has been said that Japan is falling behind in terms of innovation, but the technologies and content behind VTuber performances is garnering worldwide attention. The worldwide VTuber market is expected to grow by 35%, and the overseas performance put on by Cover Corporation, which sold out instantly, is one example of this potential growth. I look forward to seeing more overseas events in the future.
We invented the Cuzen Matcha machine to enable anyone to enjoy delicious matcha, and are working to promote domestic organic matcha worldwide. In the future, our aim is to develop a commercial matcha machine. In addition to its use overseas, we hope to continue contributing to the matcha industry by creating high-quality matcha experiences at hotels, cafes, restaurants, bars, and other places frequented by inbound tourists.
In Japan, demand for high quality matcha has continued to decrease and matcha in plastic bottles has become more mainstream. Against this backdrop, it was great to see the potential for delicious, healthy matcha using organic home-grown tea leaves to grow in popularity overseas. The traditional matcha culture in Japan is something spiritual and more than simply the action of consuming it. This culture will not be impacted by the spread of this machine, which will be a fantastic way to enable people to first get to know the quality of Japanese tea.
At SCRAP, we provide experiences where people can become the main characters in a real mystery-solving story, as well as opportunities for people to enter worlds they didn’t know existed. We created multilingual versions of our games to enable more people from overseas to enjoy them. On top of bringing more fun to our customers, we are incredibly grateful to receive this wonderful award. Moving forward, we will continue to create fun forms of entertainment for our customers.
This wonderful project involved the development of this world-first and Japan-first real escape game, which has proven to be very popular overseas. Moreover, through proactive collaborations, the games have accurately reproduced Japanese intellectual property including anime, video s, and games. These uniquely Japanese experiences and programs are one of the main reasons we selected the project for the award.
Thank you so much for this wonderful award. Through the Sonomono Natto series, we sought to create an advanced form of natto with enhanced benefits while eliminating any disadvantages that make it hard for foreign people to get to grips with. Natto is a traditional fermented food that has supported the longevity of Japanese lives for more than a thousand years. I hope this award can help to extend this circle of health worldwide.
Natto is a Japanese superfood but one that for people overseas can be hard to stomach everyday. Despite this, Sonomono Natto has amazingly taken first and second spot as a high-quality health supplement in the JAPAN STORE on the AMAZON US website. For me, it took around three years in Japan before I could eat natto, and so having a supplement like this is a major development. I look forward to continued efforts from Sonomono Natto so that it can contribute to increased sales for soy bean producers in Japan while enabling people across the world to enjoy the health benefits of natto. Congratulations!
For around 150 years since the Meiji Restoration, Japan as a whole has sought to incorporate Western approaches. However, Japanese people have combined other countries approaches with our original ones, for example by incorporating kanji to Japanese or by fusing Buddhism and Shintoism. Perhaps it is now time for us as Japanese people to mix elements of the quintessentially Japanese spirit for the benefit of the rest of the world. The world awaits!
The idea and concept to have foreign tourists help to restore the many remaining kayabuki thatched roofs in Japan’s regions is wonderful. The project is already managing six thatched roof buildings using the Albergo Diffuso method, and with the number of accommodation facilities increasing with the number of restored houses, the project can make significant contributions to the region. This is an excellent example of regenerative tourism in which travelers participate in carrying forward and restoring elements of regional nature and culture.
It is an honor to receive this fantastic award. Like the tea ceremony and ikebana, the Japanese sweet culture highlights the philosophy of the individual. Japanese sweets are something you enjoy with all your senses, and to communicate their charms to the next generation it is essential that we take pride in this Japanese culture. While Japanese sweets continue to change, it is important that we remember the “protect” element of the shuhari concept and move forward while accepting our traditions and cultures in a humble manner. Japanese sweets are very small, but I believe that each piece has unlimited potential to be a condensed form of time and space, people’s emotions, and old and new Japanese aesthetics.
Kado Ichika-ryu positions the making of Japanese sweets as a new artform known as kado, opening up an entirely new path for the culture. These outstanding works of art exceed the framework of traditional Japanese sweets. Through the combination of tradition and innovation, these impressive kado products offer a new interpretation of traditional Japanese beauty. Japanese concepts like these are very popular overseas and so I look forward to kado growing in popularity worldwide. Congratulations on winning the award!
I am incredibly grateful to receive this prestigious award. I would also like to use this opportunity to sincerely thank Tomohiro Sawada, director of the World Yuru Music Association, association members, and all the companies involved with the association for their continued cooperation and support. I will continue working to create a society where anyone can enjoy playing music.
Enabling anyone to benefit form the joys of playing music, whether it be people with psychological or physical constraints, this project embodies the Designing Future Society for Our Lives concept of Expo 2025. Based on its vision to unite the world through musical communication, the company is hosting hackathons, educational activities, and more overseas to promote co-creation through music. It has also participated in the Expo’s Co-creation Challenges and exhibited at the Team Expo Meeting held in December 2023. In this way it has proactively engaged in co-creation and collaboration with other organizations and projects. The company’s activities began in 2019, and with a stable structure in place, I look forward to their continued development beyond Expo 2025. Communicating worldwide the Japanese yuru concept and the Japanese approach to inclusion, the global yet uniquely Japanese project is a worthy winner at the CJPF Awards.
Certificates and prizes
「CJPF AWARD 表彰状」は、約1300年の歴史をもつ日本三大和紙「美濃和紙」の製法を用いて、一枚一枚ていねいに手すきで作っていただきました。その和紙に受賞カテゴリごとに、金・銀・銅で「CJPF AWARD」のロゴを箔押しし、書道家による筆入れで仕上げました。
※表彰状の写真は昨年のものです。
受賞者に送られた賞品「CJPF AWARD ノート」は、表紙に国産のヒノキの木を薄くスライスした木の紙を、無地の中紙に再生紙を再利用し、自然環境に配慮して作られたノートです。表紙には、CJPF AWARD の金を箔押しし、中表紙には美濃和紙を使用しています。
賞状・賞品ともに職人の想いを込め、新しい「日本の伝統」を体現する仕上げにこだわって仕上げました。
美濃和紙制作 :美濃竹紙工房(鈴木竹久氏/鈴木豊美氏)
印刷・製本・箔押し:新里製本所(新里知之氏)
Overall review
CJPF Awards 2024 Minister Comments
Cool Japan initiatives are an important way to communicate the appeal of Japan overseas, increase Japan fans, and reinforce Japan’s soft power. As such, the role of the creators and producers who applied for the CJPF Awards is paramount.
This year we received 294 applications in the Video Category and 112 in the Project Category. Thank you to all those involved in the awards, from the applicants and judges to everyone who offered their support.
This year, the Grand Prize winners in the VideoCategory were “Roots of Japan: The Eigen-ji Area—Japanese Landscapes of the Heart” and “The No.1 Ramen Town in Japan SANO” The former described the history and culture of Japan’s original landscapes and the latter highlighted the strengths of locally rooted food. Both stories did so through outstanding visuals and were fitting winners of the award.
Meanwhile, SUSHIDELIC NY, the Grand Prize winner in the Project Category, redefines a national Japanese food in a new pop culture context. It was a very refreshing means of communicating and developing Japan’s appeals overseas.
Through the Cool Japan Public-Private Partnership Platform website and overseas agencies, we will widely communicate these winning videos and projects both domestically and internationally to boost interest in Japan overseas.
Moving forward, working with the national government, regional public organizations, and private businesses, we will further promote Cool Japan initiatives.
Judges
Message from the Chair of the Judging Committee for the Video Category
For this year’s awards, we received numerous applications from videos highlighting the appeals of various parts of Japan, and all of us judges were very impressed with the unique viewpoints of each of the productions. The Grand Prize winners this year were “Roots of Japan: The Eigen-ji Area—Japanese Landscapes of the Heart,” which was based on Japan’s traditional cultures, and “The No.1 Ramen Town in Japan SANO,” which shined a light on Japan’s world-famous ramen culture. Both did an excellent job of showing off Japan’s tangible and intangible charms overseas. The Grand Prize Runner-up award was given to two productions, “Sustainable Experience in Kyoto Miyama” and the “Mt. Fuji Satoyama Vacation.” As interest in coexistence with nature grows, both videos presented new charming aspects of Japanese nature and culture. Elsewhere, Excellence Awards were given to videos highlighting aikido, natural landscapes, transparent toilets, traditional soy sauce, and tsukudani, for example, and these unique themes helped to highlight different appeals. Through visuals like this, these awards are showing the possibilities of communicating the contexts of Japanese culture worldwide. In the future, I look forward to even more authentic and outstanding productions.
Message from the Chair of the Judging Committee for the Project Category
Following on from last year, we were very grateful to again receive so many applications this year. With the end of the pandemic and the return of inbound demand, through the judging process we were able to see the creation of numerous new services offering unique and real experiences to tourists. The selection of projects that are helping to carry forward unique Japanese cultures like matcha, Japanese sweets, and thatched roofs was a great result for the further expansion of Cool Japan initiatives in the future. This year’s CJPF Awards solidified my belief that Japan will continue to garner attention moving forward. Thank you all very much.
Organizer and Supporters
Cool Japan Public-Private Partnership Platform (CJPF)
The CJPF, which is administered by the Cabinet Office’s Intellectual Property Strategy Headquarters, was established in December 2015 to pursue the Cool Japan Strategy via collaborative efforts that bring together the public and private sectors as well as numerous industries. Currently, CJPF members include many government agencies and organizations, and private-sector companies, organizations, institutions and individuals. All members provide support for information sharing and new business-project creation.
Located in the deep ravines of the Suzuka Mountains, Eigen-ji Temple in Higashiomi City in Shiga Prefecture has for many years been revered by followers of the Rinzai sect of Buddhism. The temple is blessed with the natural beauty of the four seasons, be it autumn foliage, verdant greens, or snowy landscapes, while it also offers vegetarian Buddhist cuisine, Mandokoro tea, which is grown using an age-old method carried down alongside Zen Buddhism from the Muromachi period, and a rich culture of water linking the Oku Eigen-ji area and Lake Biwa. To further communicate these charms worldwide, I will continue to communicate new sources of information using digital archives from cultural resource databases and others.