2025年10月5日日曜日

President's Gachon . Mr.Kensaku Fukui

■President's Gachon . Mr.Kensaku Fukui


He is the head of an entertainment lawyer firm. He is also a New York State attorney, and is always there when we have big entertainment-related discussions, such as the copyright business related to Hollywood, and he is also in the foreground at government meetings and on TV news. I often work with him on issues such as copyright protection period extension, AI intellectual property issues, and anti-piracy measures.


◆Entertainment Lawyer

I was acting. I didn't want to get a job. It was hard to make a living from acting, so I wanted to have a side job as a freelancer. I thought being a lawyer was a good way to earn money as a freelancer. It would be a good way to continue acting.

of university . I went to a training center for two years. When I graduated, the theater company disbanded, about half of the members were replaced, and we co-hosted a new theater company. While I was at the training center, I performed about 100 times. During the training, I was on the scene. I interrogated suspects, drafted verdicts, and negotiated settlements. I saw firsthand how tough it is to do both. At the same time, I realized that being a lawyer is interesting. I quit acting when I registered as a lawyer.

I wanted to work hard as a lawyer, but I had regrets. My friends had become professionals. I felt lonely. At that time, I heard that many executives of movie and record companies were lawyers, and that there were many entertainment lawyers in the United States who supported artists, so I thought I would become one of them.


◆Study Abroad

There was not a single book on entertainment lawyers in Japan. I knew that America was flourishing, so I had been thinking about studying abroad from the beginning. The classes I took at Sundai when I was a repeater and at Columbia University were the most interesting classes I have ever taken in my life. I had been studying abroad for 4 and a half years, so I was craving knowledge. I was able to learn everything I wanted to know.


◆School as a place

I didn't really appreciate the classes at Japanese universities. They didn't suit me at the time. But the university environment was amazing. The Komaba campus was really interesting.

Elementary school was the most boring. It's not interesting to have to sit at a desk and listen to lectures all the time. In junior high school, I had a little more freedom, but it was still boring. In high school, it got more interesting. In college, I could do whatever I wanted. Every day was interesting. Everything I experienced there shaped me more than any class ever could.

Humans retain knowledge when their minds are working. When you are tied to a desk and thinking it's boring, but you're taking classes, your mind isn't working. It's better to make that time as short as possible. Some kids concentrate on reading manga, while others concentrate on soccer. It may be true that you can't appreciate the fun of something without basic knowledge, so I don't have the courage to say that primary and secondary education should be eliminated, but we need to increase the time when our minds are working at full speed. It's fine to go to college after working, but since we have become an affluent society, is n't it okay to have a few years of time to do what you like, whether it's high school or college? Also, if you start working and want to learn something, it will be good if there is a place where there are teachers who can give you the knowledge you want.


◆Message for you guys


For me, college was the most interesting time of my life. I want you to treasure that. Rather than focusing on grades, I want you to spend those four years in a way that you can say at graduation that you had the most fun. The winner is the one who has fun in college and in life.


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