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Fake Family for Hire: Japan's Loneliness Solution?

Summary

  • Rental families offer paid actors as stand-ins for family and friends.
  • The service helps combat loneliness and maintain social appearances.
  • The 'Rental Family' movie highlights this unique Japanese industry.
Fake Family for Hire: Japan's Loneliness Solution?

Ryuichi Ichinokawa founded the Heart Project in Japan nearly two decades ago, offering a "surrogate attendance service" that provides hired actors as family members and friends. This business caters to individuals experiencing loneliness or societal pressure to maintain specific appearances, offering a paid form of companionship.

These rental roles can range from simple attendance at events to more complex scenarios like posing as a boyfriend or a stand-in husband. While users report finding comfort and healing in these arrangements, the work for the actors can be stressful, requiring them to maintain fabricated identities and backstories.

The unique industry is being brought to wider attention by the film "Rental Family." The movie's director researched hundreds of such companies, finding that the demand for human connection through these services is likely to continue and potentially expand, even alongside AI companions.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
It's a business providing hired actors to act as family members or friends for clients needing companionship or to maintain social appearances.
It addresses widespread loneliness, social pressures, and the stigma around mental health in Japan, offering a form of paid connection.
Prices vary, with simpler roles costing around 9,800 yen ($63) for a few hours, and more elaborate services ranging from 20,000 to 30,000 yen ($130-$190) per person.

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