Keyword: Emperor Naruhito
Emperor Naruhito
has 77.3% among keywords.
BS Score: 5.6%.
Articles analyzed: 4.
Words analyzed: 2,312.
Analyzed articles
The Japan Times
- By Kanako Takahara
- 7/3/2026, 9:20 AM
Biased Writer Voice 100% - Negativity Bias 56.3% - Availability Heuristic 50.9%
Japan’s princesses are potentially facing life-changing legal revisions to their status from a set of bills that propose giving them the option of staying in the imperial family after marriage and carrying on with their official duties, instead of becoming commoners. The million-dollar question is, would they want to? The flip side of... more
The Japan Times
- By No Author
- 6/20/2026, 7:25 AM
Appeal to Authority 22.7% - Unattributed Quote 22.7% - Appeal to Emotion 18.2%
Amsterdam – Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako, currently on a state visit to the Netherlands, planted a cherry tree at a park near Amsterdam on Friday. At a monument in the Cherry Blossom Park for the victims of the March 2011 massive earthquake and tsunami that mainly struck northeastern Japan, the emperor and empress observed a... more
The Japan Times
- By Javier C. Hernandez, Hisako Ueno
- 6/14/2026, 7:38 AM
Appeal to Authority 48.2% - Optimism Bias 42.3% - Biased Writer Voice 40.9%
Japan’s imperial family, which has long maintained a male-only lineage for emperors, is running out of royals. Now the country has a plan to help revitalize its dwindling ranks: recruit more men. Japan’s legislature, hoping to avoid a succession crisis, moved forward with a proposal this past week to allow the imperial family to adopt... more
The Japan Times
- By Kanako Takahara
- 4/15/2026, 6:24 AM
Availability Heuristic 56.8% - Halo Effect 51.4% - Anecdotal 45.9%
When Princess Aiko visited the city of Niigata on her own last September, hundreds of people thronged Niigata Station in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the princess, shouting “Aiko-sama,” with the honorific added to her name, as is typical for addressing royal family members. A local broadcaster described the phenomenon as “Princess... more