Masked 'superhero' hauls bags, babies on Tokyo subway

Authored by nbcnews.com and submitted by Miskatonica
image for Masked 'superhero' hauls bags, babies on Tokyo subway

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Tadahiro Kanemasu, the Yuya Shino / Reuters

TOKYO - In a green outfit with silver trim and matching mask, a superhero waits by the stairs of a Tokyo subway station, lending his strength to the elderly, passengers lugging heavy packages and mothers with baby strollers.

"Japanese people find it hard to accept help, they feel obligated to the other person, so the mask really helps me out," said Tadahiro Kanemasu.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings. This site is protected by recaptcha

The slender 27-year-old has spent three months being a good Samaritan at the station on Tokyo's western side. Like many in the city, it has neither elevators nor escalators and a long flight of dimly lit stairs.

Inspiration came from the children he met at his job at an organic grocery store, which also prompted the color of his costume. He picked up the green Power Rangers suit and two spares at a discount store for $41 each.

Since Kanemasu can set aside only a couple of hours each day for his good deeds, he hopes to recruit others in different colored suits. Already he has inquiries about pink and red.

Kanemasu high-fives children at the station where he offers his services. Yuya Shino / Reuters

Hayato Ito, who works alongside Kanemasu at the greengrocer, said his kindness to others over the years meant his alter ego did not come as a complete surprise.

"There were hints of this from a long time ago but finally he flowered as a hero," Ito said.

Kanemasu admitted he got off to a bit of a rocky start.

"When I first began, people basically said 'Get away from me, you weirdo'," he said. "Now they still think I'm weird but in a good way."

williemctell on June 18th, 2020 at 16:56 UTC »

I was in Tokyo last year and helped a tiny, older Japanese lady who was really struggling with her luggage (it was a massive suitcase) at the airport. I picked it up off the carousel for her and kind of tried to say "no worries" with body language while she seemed to be thanking me in Japanese. She then started struggling to put it on a luggage cart so I put it on there for her as well. It was a funny interaction since we couldn't really communicate. Anyway, I felt nice about doing that for her, but now I wonder if I stressed her out :(

elfratar on June 18th, 2020 at 16:41 UTC »

"When I first began, people basically said 'Get away from me, you weirdo'," he said. "Now they still think I'm weird but in a good way."

What a genuinely good guy

JustPlainSimpleGarak on June 18th, 2020 at 14:39 UTC »

The slender 27-year-old has spent three months being a good Samaritan at the station on Tokyo's western side. Like many in the city, it has neither elevators nor escalators and a long flight of dimly lit stairs.

I'm kind of surprised Japan doesn't have an ADA-type law that would require accessibility