
A first glance, you’d think he’s just an ordinary bloke who earns a normal income just like very ordinary Japanese salarymen you see in the streets of Japan’s metropolitan cities like Tokyo.
However beneath that his youthful exterior, this man leads a life with an extraordinary life activity no one would imagine he would dare to undertake.
A man whose life’s passion is collecting walls of toys in his wardrobe.
Yes. That’s right! This man is a toy collector fanatic for over 35 years!!!
Simply amazing! Here’s the small clip of the CNN interview with the greatest toy collector of his generation, Kazunori Saito.
CNNGo: This is pretty impressive. Can you give us a brief overview of what’s on display here?
Kazunori Saito: In a nutshell, it’s a collection of merchandise from live-action and animated television shows that aired in Japan during the 1960s and 1970s. They’re toys of monsters and heroes that are familiar to any Japanese in their 30s and 40s.CNNGo: When did you start collecting all this stuff?
Saito: About two years after I graduated from school and started working. 25 years back.CNNGo: So these aren’t the toys you played with as a kid.
Saito: No! I started as an adult. I loved the shows as a kid. Like a lot of kids raised in the “golden age” I was mesmerized by them. But I wasn’t really into the toys back then, more into building model kits. Years later, as an adult, I read an article about vintage toys in a magazine. That really piqued my interest. So I went to a specialty store in Shimokitazawa that sold them… And now here we are today. (Laughs)
CNNGo: What’s the charm? What do you think gives these toys their power?
Saito: Well, they come from a powerful era. The immediate postwar period was tough, and these toys represent Japan making it through that. It was an era of rapid growth, not only economically but for popular culture such as children’s shows as well. The expressiveness and technology of anime and live-action shows was growing in leaps and bounds. The toys were born of that. I think they’re powerful because they came from a powerful time.
CNNGo: What’s your single favorite piece on display?
「サイクロン号」
Saito: That would be this little motorcycle toy, the “Cyclone.” It’s the bike Kamen Rider rode in the very first series. This was the first toy I bought when I started collecting. I paid four or five thousand yen for it and decided, “I’m just going to buy all the different bikes and then I’ll be done.” But…CNNGo: Looks like things didn’t exactly play out that way. How many toys are on display here altogether?
Saito: About 2,000 of them. This is about 99 percent of my collection of Showa era (pre-1989) toys. But I have another collection of Heisei (post-1989) toys at my house.CNNGo: What exactly is it that you do? Are you involved in the toy industry or the anime industry?
Saito: No, nothing like that! I’m the senior executive director of an advertising agency. I plan commercial campaigns, make commercials, things like that. Collecting toys is an escape from all of that for me. A sort of extreme one. (Laughs)CNNGo: So you have 2,000 toys here. Are you done? Is this it, finished, complete?
Saito: No. Not yet. The problem is, the things I need to complete it are incredibly difficult to find. The rarest of the rare.CNNGo: Even as a commercial director, it’s incredible to imagine how you afforded all of this…
Saito: Even I can’t afford this stuff anymore! I purchased the vast majority back in the late 1980s and early 1990s when it was cheaper, much more so than today. I was lucky to get the bug so early on. I couldn’t have done it if I’d started today.CNNGo: So where do you keep all of this stuff when it isn’t in a museum?
Saito: In my house. I display what I can, but my house is small and a lot of it has to be stored away.CNNGo: This is kind of a personal question, but what does your family think about your collection?
Saito: Oh, they’re used to it. (Laughs)
CNNGo: You never take any flack for it? None at all?
Saito: No, not really. But then again, keeping the collection was the only condition I insisted upon when I got married. Actually, when she agreed to it, I knew for sure I’d found “the one.” (Laughs)
Source: CNNGo.com
All of his toys onto display at the Showa Hero and Monster Toy Exhibition in one of Japan’s renowned doll-action-figure museums.
Source: CNNGo.com, Yokohama Doll Museum Website, All images are owned and copyrighted by CNN








































