A madcap Japanese great-grandmother armed with a camera and an appetite for mischief has shot to fame for taking side-splitting selfies — many of which appear to put her in harm’s way.
Closing in on her 90th birthday, Kimiko Nishimoto tweaks the nose of fear: She has amassed more than 41,000 followers in just two months since she started regularly posting her hilarious snaps on Instagram.
The goofy photos show the fun-loving pensioner riding a broomstick like Harry Potter or, even more alarmingly, knocked over in an apparent traffic accident.
Photo: AFP
“I’ve actually never injured myself taking a photo,” Nishimoto said in an interview at her home in Kumamoto, Kyushu. “I’m always focusing hard on taking a fun photo so I really don’t think about the danger too much.”
Nishimoto, who only took up photography at the age of 72, said that she quickly became hooked on the hobby after being invited to join a local class.
“I love my camera,” said the octogenarian, who has three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. “I even sleep with it by my bedside, just in case. I always have it close.”
A decade later she secured her first solo exhibition — held in her home town — but Nishimoto’s recent decision to showcase snaps of her daredevil stunts on social media has now catapulted her to stardom.
Such is her celebrity now that many fans were shut out of her exhibition at a Tokyo gallery in December as it struggled to cope with the crowds.
“At first I didn’t even know that my photos were that popular,” Nishimoto, a former housewife, said with a twinkle in her eye. “It’s not so much that I’m trying to shock people, I just take photos that I find funny. It’s just a bit of fun really.”
Born in 1928 — the year that former Japanese Emperor Hirohito was enthroned and Walt Disney created Mickey Mouse — Nishimoto is disarmingly young at heart and possesses a wicked sense of humor. She manages her social media accounts herself through her smartphone, while her son helps her to set up some of the shots.
Many of Nishimoto’s photos show her face contorted in mock anguish. In one instance she is shown having seemingly fallen off a bike as a car speeds past, narrowly avoiding catastrophe. In another, she is whizzing along on her motorized buggy while fighting off a flock of angry birds. In a more risque image that could pass for a kidnapper’s ransom photo, she is seen wrapped in a garbage bag.
“It’s not like ideas just suddenly pop into my head, but wherever I go I think about what it would be fun to dress up as in that place,” she said, chuckling.
If you thought modern technology and fancy editing gadgets were for kids, think again. Nishimoto’s mastery of montage techniques has her “levitating” in several pictures — sometimes as a frilly fairy, or while offering a prayer to her late husband’s shrine.
“My husband passed away five years ago, but even today I still show him photos I’ve taken,” Nishimoto said. “He was always so supportive of whatever I chose to do.”
These days Nishimoto lives with a humanoid robot called Pepper, a model sold in Japan to keep older people company and bought for her by her son — although she confesses she has little time for the chatty droid these days.
“Oh, I haven’t switched it on for quite a while,” she said, reaching for the power button. “It’s more trouble than it’s worth, the silly thing.”
After fetching her camera from her cluttered home studio, Nishimoto slipped into a fluffy one-piece dog suit to take photos of herself in costume chained to a post in her garden.
“To be honest I don’t think too deeply about what photography means to me,” she said. “I just want to try and bring joy to people. Taking photos is the secret of my happiness. I’ll keep doing it for as long as I’m alive.”
Packed crowds in India celebrating their cricket team’s victory ended in a deadly stampede on Wednesday, with 11 mainly young fans crushed to death, the local state’s chief minister said. Joyous cricket fans had come out to celebrate and welcome home their heroes, Royal Challengers Bengaluru, after they beat Punjab Kings in a roller-coaster Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket final on Tuesday night. However, the euphoria of the vast crowds in the southern tech city of Bengaluru ended in disaster, with Indian Prime Minister Narendra calling it “absolutely heartrending.” Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said most of the deceased are young, with 11 dead
By 2027, Denmark would relocate its foreign convicts to a prison in Kosovo under a 200-million-euro (US$228.6 million) agreement that has raised concerns among non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and residents, but which could serve as a model for the rest of the EU. The agreement, reached in 2022 and ratified by Kosovar lawmakers last year, provides for the reception of up to 300 foreign prisoners sentenced in Denmark. They must not have been convicted of terrorism or war crimes, or have a mental condition or terminal disease. Once their sentence is completed in Kosovan, they would be deported to their home country. In
Brazil, the world’s largest Roman Catholic country, saw its Catholic population decline further in 2022, while evangelical Christians and those with no religion continued to rise, census data released on Friday by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) showed. The census indicated that Brazil had 100.2 million Roman Catholics in 2022, accounting for 56.7 percent of the population, down from 65.1 percent or 105.4 million recorded in the 2010 census. Meanwhile, the share of evangelical Christians rose to 26.9 percent last year, up from 21.6 percent in 2010, adding 12 million followers to reach 47.4 million — the highest figure
LOST CONTACT: The mission carried payloads from Japan, the US and Taiwan’s National Central University, including a deep space radiation probe, ispace said Japanese company ispace said its uncrewed moon lander likely crashed onto the moon’s surface during its lunar touchdown attempt yesterday, marking another failure two years after its unsuccessful inaugural mission. Tokyo-based ispace had hoped to join US firms Intuitive Machines and Firefly Aerospace as companies that have accomplished commercial landings amid a global race for the moon, which includes state-run missions from China and India. A successful mission would have made ispace the first company outside the US to achieve a moon landing. Resilience, ispace’s second lunar lander, could not decelerate fast enough as it approached the moon, and the company has