A royal wedding usually involves celebration and pageantry, a ceremony steeped in tradition at an ancient and palatial building, and flag-waving in the streets by a public eager to see the newlywed couple.



But for Princess Mako, who married Kei Komuro on Tuesday this week, there was none of that. There was only the perfunctory stamping of documents, followed by a muted press conference.



Read more: 

What you need to know about the not-so-fairy tale of Princess Mako (Magdalena Osumi, The Japan Times)

Imperial Household Agency criticized for media strategy — or lack thereof (Magdalena Osumi, The Japan Times)

Princess Mako's marriage a 'warning sign' for Japan's imperial system (Ami Takahashi via The Japan Times)

The world’s oldest monarchy is running out of royals

(Marika Katanuma via The Japan Times )

On this episode:

Natsuko Fukue: Twitter

Oscar Boyd: Twitter | Articles | Instagram



Announcements:

Subscribe to the show and sign up to the Deep Dive mailing list to be notified when new episodes come out. Get in touch with us at [email protected].


Support the show! Rate us, review us and share this episode with a friend if you’ve enjoyed it. Follow us on Twitter, and give us feedback.


This episode of Deep Dive may be supported by advertising based on your location. Advertising is sourced by Audioboom and is not affiliated with The Japan Times.



Photo: Princess Mako (right) and her sister Princess Kako attend the enthronement ceremony for Emperor Naruhito at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo in October 2019. | POOL / AFP-JIJI

Twitter Mentions