What the tweet was about
The term ‘denchu joshi’ (utility pole women) was promoted by ABEMA, the streaming platform owned by CyberAgent, based on a survey of 3,000 women aged 20-39. The label describes women who remain passive in the dating market, waiting for men to approach rather than taking initiative, much like a utility pole standing in place. The survey found that 58% of respondents exhibited ‘utility pole’ traits, with 85% citing past romantic rejection as a factor in their passivity.
The coining follows a long tradition of Japanese media creating gendered buzzwords: ‘herbivore men’ (2006), ‘parasite singles’ (1999), ‘dried fish women’ (2007), and ‘konkatsu’ itself (2007). Critics note these terms invariably frame structural issues like wage stagnation, overwork, and inadequate childcare as personal failings. The ‘utility pole’ metaphor is particularly loaded: utility poles are being systematically buried underground across urban Japan, an irony several commenters seized upon.
Sentiment distribution (engagement-weighted)
are “utility poles”
as a factor
Highest-engagement comments
Activity timeline (JST · 2026-05-08)
Key themes in detail
🚫 “30-Year-Olds Aren’t ‘Girls'” · 36.0% of engagement
The thread’s most-liked comment (204 likes) zeroes in on the word ‘joshi’ (girls/women): ‘Why do they insist on calling women in their 30s girls? Would you call 30-something men boys?’ This reaction, echoed dozens of times throughout the thread, targets the infantilizing language that pervades Japanese media coverage of women’s choices. Several commenters note that the word ‘joshi’ softens what is essentially a critique of grown women’s life decisions, making it palatable as content while still delivering the sting.
🔌 “Utility Poles Are Actually Useful” · 11.7% of engagement
A sardonic refrain emerged as the thread’s signature joke: utility poles deliver electricity, support communications, and enable street lighting, so comparing them to passive daters is ‘insulting to poles.’ With over a dozen variations, this theme ranges from genuinely funny to deeply hostile. One highly-liked comment (71 likes) contrasts the pole’s vital infrastructure role with women who ‘just want to quit working after marriage.’ Another suggests ‘telephone booth women’ would be more apt, since telephone booths are ‘obsolete and unwanted.’ The humor serves as a vehicle for contempt, wrapped in the polite fiction of defending the honor of municipal infrastructure.
📰 Stop Making Up Buzzwords · 17.7% of engagement
A significant contingent rejected the entire premise. ‘The word sense and the mentality of trying to name and shame people are both completely outdated. In Tokyo, power lines are buried underground,’ wrote one commenter (116 likes), dismissing both the label and the practice of inventing it. Others called the ABEMA survey out as manufactured controversy, pointing to its track record of gender-baiting content. ‘Making up nonsensical buzzwords and relentlessly fueling hatred between men and women, who does this serve?’ asked one user. This backlash reflects a growing fatigue with media-manufactured gender discourse.
📉 Hostile Market Analysis · 14.5% of engagement
The thread’s darkest undercurrent was a flood of men treating the dating market as a commodity exchange where women’s ‘value’ depreciates with age. Comments compared women to expired eggs, overripe fruit, and used cars. The crudest reduced women to body parts, arguing their only ‘market value’ was sexual. This language echoes incel and ‘weak man’ discourse that has gained mainstream visibility in Japan, where terms like ‘anamoте’ (valued only for sex) are wielded as weapons. Several of the most extreme comments received significant engagement, suggesting this sentiment has an eager audience.
💬 Women’s Counterpoints · 12.7% of engagement
A smaller but vocal group pushed back. ‘It’s just that there aren’t men worth moving for. When a good one shows up, they’ll move,’ wrote one woman (52 likes), the highest-liked female-coded reply. Others argued that marriage is a ‘graveyard for women,’ that Japanese men are ‘infantile compared to foreign men,’ or that the real crisis is men who ‘can’t even maintain basic hygiene.’ These counterpoints mirror the structural arguments that gender scholars make: that women’s passivity in the marriage market is rational when the perceived return on effort is low.
🎮 Gaming the Metaphor · 7.4% of engagement
The thread produced a minor comedy festival of alternative metaphors. ‘In the Street Fighter II era, she’d be called a Guile-camper’ (17 likes) was the standout, referencing a notoriously passive fighting game strategy. Others suggested ‘jizo women’ (stone Buddhist statues), ‘traffic cone women,’ and ‘manhole women for those over 40.’ One commenter proposed that if women could ‘learn Sonic Boom and counterattack with a Sommersault,’ they’d do fine in dating. The humor undercuts the article’s earnest tone while revealing how eagerly Japanese internet culture reaches for creative cruelty.