Summary

  • Discover the amusing interpretation of the "I Want It That Way" song on Tokyo Vice season 1, episode 4.
  • Uncover the real meaning behind the confusing lyrics of "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys.
  • Explore the cultural differences highlighted in Tokyo Vice, showcasing language barriers and societal archetypes.

Tokyo Vice season 1, episode 4 has amusingly shed some light on the "I Want It That Way" meaning. Tokyo Vice stars Ansel Elgort as Jake Adelstein, an American reporter in Japan in the late '90s. Adelstein works for the largest newspaper in the world and gets pulled into the underworld of the Yakuza during his investigations. Loosely based on the memoir Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan by the real Adelstein, the show co-stars Ken Watanabe, Rachel Keller, Rinko Kikuchi, Shô Kasamatsu, Ella Rumpf, Shun Sugata, and Ayumi Tanida.

Tokyo Vice dives into the cultural differences between Adelstein and his Japanese colleagues, taking place at a time and era before smartphones or social media and when the Yakuza's influence was much deeper than it is today. The show addresses various societal archetypes, including the subservient roles forced upon women and the issue of suicide. Along with that, it explores multiple Tokyo Vice expat characters trying to fit into the Japanese way of life. However, while the show is a gripping crime drama for the most part, Tokyo Vice hilariously tackled the "I Want It That Way" meaning.

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How "I Want It That Way" Was Used In Tokyo Vice

Adelstein Learns That The Japanese Believe The Song Is About Sex When It's Played On The Radio

In Tokyo Vice season 1, episode 4, "I Want It That Way," the show highlights more of the cultural differences, including the interpretation of a famous Backstreet Boys song. While driving back from a meeting with a Yakuza oyabun, Sato (Kasamatsu) starts singing along to "I Want It That Way" by the Backstreet Boys, saying that no other band would have "the guts to do a song about a man and a woman doing that."

Sato emphasizes the "that" of the song, implying that it's about sex, to which Adelstein laughs, saying that the song isn't about that. Later, Tokyo Vice's Adelstein asks his Japanese newspaper friends what they think the song is about, and they believe the same thing as Sato. Adelstein relents, shaking his head but accepting that there's no convincing them otherwise.

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What "I Want It That Way" Is Really About

The Song Is About A Couple Struggling With Their Relationship

Backstreet Boys singing in their holiday special

The actual meaning of "I Want It That Way" has always been a source of confusion, even in the United States. The lyrics have been analyzed multiple times and the Backstreet Boys themselves have confided that the song doesn't make much sense. The amusing reason is that it was written by Swedish songwriter Max Martin, who barely spoke English at the time. Martin has written many hit songs, including popstar Britney Spears' "...Baby One More Time," The Weeknd's "Can't Feel My Face," and Backstreet Boys' other big hit, "Everybody."

Those songs, however, weren't hits because of the lyrics, so much as the beats and voices behind them. Interestingly, "I Want It That Way" was rewritten and redone to make more sense, but the group ultimately decided to go with the more confusing version as it simply sounded better. The alternate version of the Backstreet Boys song (via YouTube) makes much more sense and clarifies that it's ultimately about a couple in love working through their issues of distance and lies, and the singer wants to hear his significant other say that they want the same thing in their relationship.

Even that explanation can be somewhat confusing, but it makes more sense than the original version, which is ultimately really well-performed nonsense. That said, neither version makes any connection to sex or "wanting it that way" as an allusion to it, as Ansel Elgort's character tries to explain. As Americans are confused by the lyrics, it's not hard to imagine that a Japanese listener could misinterpret the song as being about sex. It's a perfect example of being lost in translation, which mirrors the themes of Tokyo Vice, making the funny moment a bigger commentary on the show's language barrier.

Tokyo Vice Season 2 Poster Featuring the Cast Standing in Front of Neon Lights
Tokyo Vice
Crime

Based on the novel and the true experiences of Jake Adelstein, Tokyo Vice is a drama thriller series that sees the first American journalist ever to join a Japanese newspaper, forced to start at the bottom of the totem pole to earn his place. Set loose under a vice detective's close tutelage and supervision, Jake steps into the Yakuza-led underworld of Tokyo and learns what it means to ask too many questions.

Cast
Ansel Elgort , Rachel Keller
Release Date
April 17, 2022
Seasons
2
Writers
Destin Daniel Cretton
Directors
Josef Kubota Wladyka , Michael Mann , Alan Poul , Hikari
Where To Watch
HBO Max