We go to an underground car meet deep in Tokyo, Japan. Tokyo Motor Collective is what it's called & it's recently gained a lot of attention. This is real-life Fast & Furious Tokyo Drift but better!
Thousands of players enjoy Tokyo Xtreme Racer right now. However, players from Canada will have to wait a little bit longer. Developers informed that some legal issues are in the way of game’s launch in this country.
Tokyo stocks were mixed Tuesday morning, as selling after new U.S. President Donald Trump hinted at imposing tariffs on Mexico and Ca
Tokyo stocks ended slightly higher after choppy trading Tuesday, as optimism over a potential delay in U.S. tariffs faded after new U
Canada's National Arts Centre Orchestra will launch its latest international tour. This major tour will see the Orchestra, led by Music Director Alexander Shelley, return to Japan for the first time in 40 years.
Quinn, 29, won gold at the Tokyo Olympic Games and bronze at the Rio 2016 Games. According to a media release from Vancouver Rise FC, they've made more than 100 appearances on Canada's national team.
A longtime conductor and contributor of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra (VSO), Akiyama died in a hospital in Japan on Jan. 26 following a fall in his home on New Year’s Day. He was 84. At the time of his death, Akiyama was conductor laureate of the Tokyo, Vancouver, and Syracuse orchestras.
Japanese emergency crews worked through Tuesday to free a man driving a dump truck that fell through a large sinkhole that opened up at an intersection in Yashio, near Tokyo.
The dollar firmed against major currencies on Tuesday on new U.S. tariff threats, giving traders little time to catch their breath after Monday's big risk-off moves sparked by the emergence of a low-cost Chinese artificial intelligence model.
Asian shares were mixed in thin Lunar New Year trading on Tuesday after Wall Street’s tech superstars tumbled as a competitor from China raised
Five-time Olympic medalist Kylie Masse has joined Swimming Canada’s High Performance Athlete Advisory Council.
After two decades in Japan, one Canadian man shares some differences between life there and in his home country. Ron Reid, who is in his forties, grew up in Toronto. In 2005, he travelled to Japan for what was supposed to be a three-month stint.