Wagyu (comedy duo)

Wagyu (和牛, Wagyū) is a Japanese comedy duo (kombi) consisting of Shinji Mizuta (水田信二) and Kenshirō Kawanishi (川西賢志郎). They are employed by Yoshimoto Kogyo, and are mainly active in Tokyo. They were the runners-up of the M-1 Grand Prix for three years in a row from 2016 to 2018.[1]

Wagyu
Native nameWagyū (和牛)
Years active2006
EmployerYoshimoto Kogyo
GenresManzai
Conte
Members

Same year/generation as:
Kamaitachi
Tenjiku Nezumi
Fujisaki Market
Akina
Einstein
Bike Kawasaki Bike

Members

  • Shinji Mizuta (水田 信二), Born April 15, 1980 in Iyo, Ehime. Plays the boke. Mizuta worked as a chef for 7 seven years in Osaka and Kobe before becoming a comedian. He was appointed as the sightseeing ambassador of his hometown Iyo, Ehime in 2018.[2]
  • Kenshirō Kawanishi (川西 賢志郎), Born January 29, 1984 in Higashiōsaka, Osaka.Plays the tsukkomi. Kawanishi played rugby throughout middle school and university in the fly-half (stand-off) position.[3]

Life and career

Both Mizuta and Kawanishi were graduates of the Yoshimoto NSC Osaka's 26th generation class. They formed Wagyu in 2006 and spent the first year and a half struggling for performance opportunities in live theatres.

From 2008 to 2012, Wagyu gained popularity through various manzai and comedy competitions, making it to the semi-finals in the M-1 Grand Prix 2009 and King of Conte 2010. In 2013, Wagyu became regulars on various variety programs and were known mainly for their manzai, which got them to the finals of The Manzai in 2014 and M-1 Grand Prix in 2015.

Wagyu's popularity increased in 2016 after again making it to the finals of M-1 Grand Prix by winning the Second Chance competition. They were the fastest selling young comedians of Yoshimoto with live tickets often sold out instantly.[4] They then moved to Tokyo to further their career in 2017,[5] and held live tours across the country.[6] They were finalists in M-1 Grand Prix in 2017 and 2018, marking 4 consecutive years as a finalist and 3 consecutive runners-up from 2016 to 2018.[7]

gollark: I don't think the terms mean the weird cold-war-y definitions when most people actually use them.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_World
gollark: What, *gone*? Very <:MildPanic:579802652888662018>.
gollark: https://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?id=2781
gollark: Which would at least be funny.

References

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