Founded in 2008 by Brett Bull, a U.S. engineer working in Tokyo, the website translates or adapts reports by Japanese tabloid media about such topics as crime, sex and entertainment in Japan. The Washington Post described it as a "hybrid of the National Enquirer, the New York Post and Penthouse". The Post wrote that, because Japanese tabloids are less reliant on authorities for their content than Japanese mainstream media, and less concerned about the international reputation of the nation, Tokyo Reporter projects a less sanitized image of Japan to the outside world than the English language versions of mainstream media.[2]
On January 26, 2022, the closure of TokyoReporter was formally announced.[3] Since March 20, 2023, news articles were being released again on the website,[4] although at a lower frequency than before the closure period.
Bull, Brett; Kuriyama, Naohisa (2008). Small house Tokyo : how the Japanese live well in small spaces. Tokyo, Japan: Cocoro Books. ISBN9781932897456. Cocoro Books is an imprint of Tokyo-based DH Publishing
Bull, Brett; Janette, Misha; Clancy, Judith; Farris, Jay; Goss, Rob; Kitano, Noriko; Morel, Robert; Parker, Emma; Sasagawa, Annamarie; Wilson, Chris (2016). Fodor's Japan (22nd ed.). New York: Fodor's Travel. ISBN978-1-101-87971-9.
^Bull, Brett (31 August 2008). "The Gangster's Castle". Japan Inc. Japan Inc Communications, Inc. Retrieved 14 April 2022. The bizarre case of yakuza, property rights and fraud—scrabbling to make a fortune in Roppongi real estate
^"Archives 1999". Sake-Drenched Postcards. Retrieved 14 April 2022 – via bigempire.com.
^"Archives 2007". Sake-Drenched Postcards. Retrieved 14 April 2022 – via bigempire.com.