Seventeen-year-old Mana wasnât in school. Heck, she wasnât even in her school uniform. Wearing a white bikini, the student-by-day, idol-by-night took the stage earlier this month at the Sofmap in Tokyoâs geek district, Akihabara.
Holding her âimage DVDâ titled Kiss Me, one in which the DVDâs maker says she âtakes off a lotâ, Mana posed for the photographer pool. She didnât just smile, she pursed her lips together in a W-shape. She made her signature move, whatâs considered her charm point and whatâs known in Japan as âahiru-guchiâ. Literally, she made a âduck mouthâ.
The ahiru-guchi is both sexy and cute, itâs both exaggerated and expressive. As Patrick W. Galbraith, a researcher at the University of Tokyo and co-editor of an upcoming book on idols, recently told Kotaku, yes, the âduck mouthâ might be seen as a rough equivalent to the âpouty faceâ. It serves much of the same purpose, namely emphasizing the mouth and the cheekbones.
For Galbraith, the âduck mouthâ is a continuation of stylized posing thatâs so popular in Japanâsuch as the âdinosaur walkââwith toes pointing inwardâthat was so popular among teenage girls a few years back. âIt seems to me that the uniqueness of the duck mouth is its patent artificiality,â continued Galbraith, who is hosting an idol conference next month at University of Tokyo. âThe pose draws attention to itself, hence all the talk about it in the media. So it is not meant to be ânaturalâ like a pouty face, but unnatural, almost a parody of traditionally defined beauty that is both funny and cute.â
For young Japanese women, ahiru-guchi has fast become the facial equivalent of the peace sign. Itâs become so pervasive that women who make ahiru-guchi might not even realize it. âUnconsciously, I guess I make ahiru-guchi,â cosplayer Omi Gibson told Kotaku. âMaybe I do it because Iâm lonely, and I want guys to be nice to me,â she added, wryly.
Omi Gibson in a Metal Gear cosplay (ăă | Omi)
There is something very primal about the act of making the duck mouth, like how birds show plumage to attract mates. âI once heard that even after apes evolved into clothes-wearing humans, they still continued to use their lips to show affect to interest in mating. So, Iâd imagine itâs not that different for when women make ahiru-guchi for men.â
The pouty look has become the default pose for many when posing for pictures or simply when trying to look cute. Like the peace sign, the origin of the duck mouth is cloudy.
âMaybe I do it because Iâm lonely, and I want guys to be nice to me.â
As DannyChoo.com pointed out, the peace sign began in Japan might have began when actor Jun Inoue flashes the peace sign in a Nikon commercial during the early 1970s.
Even now, Japanese people continue to use the V-sign when posing in photosâseveral Japanese women have told me that they use the peace sign not because theyâre tree-hugging hippies, but because holding their hands out actually makes their faces appear smaller, a desirable trait, in photos.
Likewise, ahiru-guchiâs origin is difficult to pin-point. Within the last few years, itâs become en vogue, making a big splash in 2005~2006, when it started appearing in Japanese dictionaries. Last year, as pointed out by CNNGo, a book title Twitterâs Explosively Popular, Widely-Beloved Duck Mouth was published. But duck mouth, known in Japanese as âDonald Duck lipsâ, began appearing in the 1990s. Japanese schoolgirls, never ones to shy away from the cute, made the face while posing for snaps. The label was used to describe pouty popstar Ami Suzuki when she made her debut in 1998.
Emiri Okazaki (Emiri Okazakiâs Blog)
Yet, there is an aspect of since everyone else is doing, I better do it, too. âRight now, itâs because Tomomi Itano from AKB48, Japanâs most popular group, and pop singer Ayumi Hamasaki do ahiru-guchi,â popular model and actress Emiri Okazaki told Kotaku. Young girls see Tomomi Itano or Ayumi Hamasaki make duck faces, and copy them. Itâs a look, unlike designer threads, they can pull off free of charge.
https://lastchance.cc/lets-be-sensitive-about-height-mkay-453102320%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Though, in recent years, lip gloss makers have tried to cash in on the ahiru-guchi craze, either promising âcute ahiru-guchiâ or simply saying, âget duck mouthâ. There are ahiru-guchi make-up tips, and plastic surgeons now offer ahiru-guchi procedures. Apparently, patients are even asking doctors to give them duck lips like AKB48âs Tomomi Itano.
âSo it is not meant to be ânaturalâ like a pouty face, but unnatural, almost a parody of traditionally defined beauty that is both funny and cute.â
However, unlike the derisive English term âtrout poutâ, which refers to collagen injections gone horribly wrong, âduck mouthâ is not rude or derrogatory. Nor does it necessarily involve plastic surgery. At its most base element, itâs a goofy pose.
Duck mouth might be sweeping the country, but it hasnât quite caught on with Japanese dudes, like the peace sign did. Some famous male singers, notably rocker Masaharu Fukuyama, can pull it offâand without the irony of the Western male equivalent. Japanese website Rocketnews24, tongue planted firmly in cheek, attempted to see if a guy could pull off ahiru-guchi and look, coming to the conclusion that, um, no. Just no.
Instead, ahiru-guchi remains a signature of some Japanese women. Pulling it off can involved, but doesnât require surgery. Itâs a special move, used to be appealing, used to be cute, and, you bet, used when standing on an Akihabara stage in a bikini.
(Top photo: ăăŹă/TV Tokyo/NHK/Rocketnews24))
You can contact Brian Ashcraft, the author of this post, at [email protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.