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      • Adelstein gave a Ted Talk on his experiences in 2012 and also acted as a chief investigator for a US Department of State investigation into human trafficking in Japan. He has reported on the topic regularly, now sitting on the board of the Polaris Project Japan, a non-profit that helps victims of human trafficking.
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    • What Actually Happened in Tokyo Vice
    • What Tokyo Vice Changes About The True Story
    • Did Jake Adelstein Really Work with An Older Police Detective?
    • Did The Yakuza Actually Threaten to Kill Jake Adelstein in Tokyo Vice?
    • What Happened After Jake Adelstein Left The Newspaper

    Adelstein was the first American to be hired to write for the Yomiuri Shinbun, and spent 12 years doing so, forming relationships with local police, reporters, gang members, and civilians. He worked the police beat throughout his time in Japan, which required 80-hour work weeks, navigating the world as a gaijin(outsider), and encountering the uniqu...

    While Adelstein remains the primary protagonist of the story and represents his actual journey, it is not a line-by-line adaptation of the book by any means. West Side Story's Elgort portrays Adelstein in a mostly accurate way, while still adding his own spin on the character. Everyone else in the story (including the name of the newspaper) has bee...

    In Tokyo Vice, Ken Watanabe's character is based on detective Chiaki Sekiguchi, a real police detective that mentored Adelstein throughout his time as a reporter for the Yomiuri Shinbun. Named Hiroto Katagiri in the show, Watanabe portrays the character as a mentor to Elgort's Adelstein, telling him at one point that he's like the son he never had....

    Throughout his time as a reporter, Adelstein leaned into investigating the Yakuza, despite the paper's aversion to it due to fear of retribution from the Tokyo crime syndicate. However, as police became more and more involved in cracking down on the Yakuza and new laws were introduced to restrict them, Adelstein was able to dig deeper into the crim...

    Tokyo Vice's Jake Adelstein continues to be a reporter, currently living in Tokyo and writing for The Daily Beast, Asia Times, Vice News, and The Japan Times. He worked as the chief investigator for a United States Department of State human trafficking investigation and currently sits on the board for the Polaris Project Japan, a nonprofit that hel...

    • Paul Shirey
  2. Oct 2, 2024 · In his second book, The Last Yakuza: A Life in the Japanese Underworld, Adelstein chronicles this decline in power. In the second podcast episode of our series Underworlds with Mark Shaw, the GI-TOC’s director spoke with Adelstein to discuss the book.

  3. Apr 7, 2022 · Where is Jake Adelstein Now? Adelstein still lives in Tokyo. He’s working now as an investigative journalist for The Daily Beast and Asia Times. In 2017, Adelstein became a Zen Buddhist priest.

    • Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
    • 4 min
  4. Jun 18, 2024 · Jake Adelstein’s latest book Tokyo Noir: In and Out of Japan’s Underworld is available now from Scribe Publications. The paperback release in the US will be on October 1st. Author’s note: While Tokyo Vice was not renewed by MAX, other networks are discussing a continuation of the show with the creators.

  5. After leaving the Yomiuri, Adelstein published an exposé of how an alleged crime boss, Tadamasa Goto, made a deal with the FBI to gain entry to the United States for a liver transplant at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).

  6. Mar 15, 2016 · 1. Today my father, Dr. Eddie Adelstein, 78, is in the hospital for hip replacement surgery. It’s not a complicated surgery — but it is necessary. Like the graveyard of SAABs on our...

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