![Japan’s prime minister exchanges Dragon Ball kamehamehas with president of France[Video]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsoranews24.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2Fsites%2F3%2F2026%2F04%2Fkh-1.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Japan’s prime minister exchanges Dragon Ball kamehamehas with president of France[Video]
Archived Content: This article was published over 30 days ago. Travel rules and prices may have changed.Check official sources.
Leaders of world powers strike energy blast pose. There’s an interesting cultural question that pops up during international meetings in Japan: Should the participants shake hands at the end of their

Leaders of world powers strike energy blast pose.
There’s an interesting cultural question that pops up during international meetings in Japan: Should the participants shake hands at the end of their conversation? Japan isn’t ordinarily a hand-shaking society, with bowing instead being the gesture by which respect, gratitude, and similar earnest sentiments are conveyed. However, most Japanese people know that handshaking is common in much of the rest of the world, especially western countries…but then again, so too are many people from other nations aware that bowing is the norm in Japan.
There’s not a clear consensus, and it’s a question that only gets more complicated when both parties are prominent figures who frequently interact with each other’s culture, such as, say, Japanese prime minister Sanae Takaichi and French president Emmanuel Macron. As the pair wrapped up a joint press conference in Tokyo on Wednesday, it appeared that they’d subconsciously settled on a handshake…until Takaichi followed it with a third option.
Yes, that’s Dragon Ball’s kamehameha pose that the two world leaders exchanged. The gesture itself is more or less the same as Street Fighter’s hadouken, but it’s clearly Dragon Ball’s energy blast that Takaichi and Macron are emulating, as Takaichi can be faintly heard saying “kamehameha” through the audience’s applause. Macron himself, as a professed anime/manga fan, is also likely more familiar with the kamehameha than the hadouken.
▼ A clip of Macron at France’s Japan Expo event in 2025, where he met with Kazuhiko Torishima, Dragon Ball’s initial editor
Avec la légende Kazuhiko Torishima qui nous fait l’honneur de sa présence à la Japan Expo. Vive la culture qui nous rapproche ! pic.twitter.com/xi2aH9HWAf
— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) July 3, 2025
Following the press conference, Macron posted the kamehameha video to his Twitter account along with “Fusion” written in Japanese.
フュージョン! pic.twitter.com/8rz95S8Yzl
— Emmanuel Macron (@EmmanuelMacron) April 1, 2026
Of course, the French president didn’t come all the way to Japan for anime fandom, and the main purpose of his visit is to discuss cooperation between the French and Japanese governments regarding rare earth and energy procurement. Still, the sudden kamehameha shows that their worldwide recognition and popularity grow, anime and manga continue to be prominent goodwill cultural ambassadors for Japan.
Note: This article content is being automatically formatted. For the original source formatting, visit the link below.
Original source:SoraNews24 ↗
More Japan News

Embattled Nidec to suspend biz acquisitions
A panel of outside experts concluded that pressure to meet performance targets was among the factors behind the irregularities.

Japanese cellist Kitamura wins fifth prize in Brussels contest
Kitamura, 22, played Russian composer Sergey Prokofiev's Symphony-Concerto and other works with the Belgian National Orchestra.

Australian researchers teach brain cells to play Doom video game
Each so-called "biological computer" contains around 200,000 living human brain cells, grown from stem cells that were harvested from blood donations.