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No entry for ‘overweight’ customers in Tokyo’s ‘naked restaurant’

Japan’s first naked restaurant to be opened in Tokyo next month has issued a disclaimer warning that obese clients would be denied service and not admitted in the first place. In order to monitor the weight of patrons, they will be subjected to BMI calculations, and if they do not meet The Amrita’s strict requirement, hopeful diners will be kicked to the curb with no refunds.

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Customers must also be aged between 18-60 and tattoos are banned. Reservations and payments are made in advance via an online booking page on the site. A list of rules posted on the restaurant’s website says, “a weight check could be done if guests do not appear to be within the correct weight range”.

Fiat Argentina has agreed to withdraw one of it’s vehicle handbooks after it was termed sexist and slammed by women’s rights groups across the country. Phones and cameras should also be locked away in a table-top box.

The restaurant owners were not immediately available for comment when contacted by Agence France-Presse.

The restaurant, which opens on July 29, is similar to other nude restaurants that have opened in London and Melbourne, AFP reported. The food in Amrita will be served by muscle-bound men wearing g-strings.

Despite its unabashedly discriminatory entrance policy and not revealing their actual location, The Amrita has already sold out its dinner and dance show tickets, ranging from 12,000 to 80,000 yen ($112 to $563).

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The Bunyadi is the new project of the people behind ABQ, a Breaking Bad-inspired cocktail bar in trendy Shoreditch, where revellers mix their drinks using test tubes and conical flasks. The idea is to experience true liberation’.

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