Chapter 456: The Version That Airs
Chapter 456: The Version That Airs
By the time the van carrying Ryoma and his team clears the expressway, the footage has already arrived in Tokyo. Inside a television station in Shiodome, the breaking news department is settling into its morning tempo.
It isn’t chaotic, but it’s never still either; monitors cycling through live feeds, editors leaning toward screens, producers moving between desks with tablets and phones pressed to their ears. News doesn’t wait here. It accumulates.
A field reporter’s upload notification flashes across one of the central displays.
“Airport arrival,” a junior producer announces, stepping closer. “Takeda Ryoma. OPBF champion.”
That title is enough to pull attention. The section chief turns from his desk, coffee untouched beside him, and gestures toward the screen.
“Put it up.”
The raw footage fills the monitor. Ryoma stands amid microphones, posture straight despite the fatigue visible in his shoulders.
His voice carries cleanly through the noise, measured, careful. He thanks his sponsor. Acknowledges the circumstances of the fight. Mentions OPBF protocol, speaks about responsibility.
The room listens, but no one reacts. Nearly a minute passes before the chief exhales through his nose.
“This won’t hold,” he says, finally.
An editor glances over. “You want to shorten it?”
“I want to redirect it,” the chief replies. He leans closer to the screen, eyes narrowing as the footage continues. “People don’t watch breaking news to be reassured. They watch it to understand where the tension is.”
The editor scrolls forward, searching for the exchange involving Yoshizawa’s name. When it comes up, Ryoma’s tone hasn’t changed, but the implication has.
The chief straightens slightly. “There. That’s your angle.”
“But he was responding,” a producer points out. “There was a provocation.”
“There always is,” the chief says calmly. “We don’t erase context. We compress it.”
He gestures toward the scripting desk. “Narration needs to frame this as domestic friction. Champion camps at odds. Pressure building. Use neutral language, but let the implication do the work.”
Someone types. Another editor trims the clip, removing the earlier gratitude and explanation, isolating Ryoma’s words until they stand alone, sharper than they were in sequence.
“What about Yoshizawa?” someone asks from across the row of monitors. “Any response from his side yet?”
The chief doesn’t answer immediately. He scans the room instead, eyes settling on a producer near the assignment board.
“Do we have anyone in Utsunomiya?”
A hand goes up. “One stringer. Local sports desk. He’s free.”
“Good,” the chief says. “Send him to Tachibana Boxing Gym. Now.”
A pause follows, the intent clear even before he finishes.
“We’ll need their reaction,” he continues. “Not for this segment. For the next one.”
The producer nods, already typing out instructions.
The chief turns back to the screen, watching Ryoma’s clipped image loop once more. “This story doesn’t end at the airport,” he says calmly. “It moves where the friction is.”
A lower-third graphic is drafted, revised twice, and then finalized.
OPBF CHAMPION DRAWS LINE
The chief watches the edited segment play back, arms folded. Ryoma appears controlled, unwavering, but without the softening edges of context, the image tilts subtly toward confrontation.
“That’ll run,” he says. “Queue it.”
***
The anchor receives the finalized script just before airtime, the edits already locked, the timing already decided.
The footage from Narita has been sitting in the system for hours now, trimmed, reordered, and sharpened into something concise.
“Breaking news late this morning,” she begins, voice steady and practiced. “OPBF Lightweight Champion Ryoma Takeda has returned to Japan, and comments made upon his arrival are already stirring discussion across the boxing world.”
The footage rolls. Ryoma’s voice is stripped of its surroundings, lifted cleanly from the airport noise. “If Yanagimoto wants it, he’ll have to climb the ladder first.”
The anchor continues without pause. “Takeda’s remarks come in the wake of a statement from Daisuke Yoshizawa of Tachibana Boxing Gym, who earlier suggested a potential unification bout with Japanese Lightweight Champion Shinichi Yanagimoto.”
Another cut follows, tighter this time. “That’s how you lose a belt,” Ryoma says. “Usually in the most humiliating way.”
The anchor inclines her head slightly, as if acknowledging the weight of the words. “Strong language from a newly crowned champion. With visible tension now forming between camps, many are questioning how this developing rivalry may influence the future landscape of Japanese boxing.”
A graphic fades in behind her, clean and deliberate.
DOMESTIC RIVALRY EMERGING?
Back in the control room, the section chief watches the broadcast in silence. Around him, producers are already shifting attention to the next segment, the story released into circulation.
“Let it breathe,” he says quietly. “This kind of thing carries itself.”
Outside the studio, somewhere on the highway between Narita and Tokyo, Ryoma sits in the back of a van, unaware that a version of him is already reaching millions, carefully selected, precisely arranged.
It’s not invented, just refined into something sharper than he ever intended. And once released, it no longer belongs to him.
***
Tachibana Boxing Gym, Utsunomiya.
Shinichi Yanagimoto moves lightly across the ring, feet tapping in precise patterns as he circles an invisible opponent. His shoulders stay relaxed, chin tucked, eyes forward. Each step lands exactly where it should.
Daisuke Yoshizawa watches from the apron, arms folded. He doesn’t interrupt. Footwork drills demand patience, and Yanagimoto is the kind of fighter who sharpens best when left alone.
“Again,” Yoshizawa says after a beat. “Shorter steps.”
Yanagimoto adjusts without comment, the rhythm tightening.
That’s when Yoshizawa’s phone vibrates in his pocket.
He frowns slightly. People know better than to call him during training hours. He steps away from the ring and answers without looking at the screen.
“What is it?”
The voice on the other end sounds energized, barely containing itself. It’s someone from the media side, not a reporter, just one of those connectors who trades information before it becomes official.
[You might want to turn on a TV now.]
Yoshizawa exhales through his nose. “About what.”
[Takeda. Narita arrival. They ran his comments in this late afternoon breaking news.]
That gets his attention. Yoshizawa ends the call without another word and gestures to one of the younger staff.
“Turn on the TV,” he says. “News.”
The screen flickers to life near the corner of the gym, volume low at first. The anchor is already mid-sentence, posture composed, expression carefully neutral.
“…remarks are already stirring discussion across the boxing world.”
Yoshizawa steps closer as the footage rolls. Ryoma’s face fills the screen, calm and unhurried.
“If Yanagimoto wants it, he’ll have to climb the ladder first.”
Yoshizawa’s expression shifts immediately. His eyes narrow, jaw setting as recognition catches up.
Those were his words. The exact phrase he’d used last year when Ryoma challenged Sinichi, said publicly, dismissed cleanly, delivered without apology.
Yoshizawa’s lips press into a thin line. His gaze lingers on the screen, not angry yet, but clearly offended.
Then another cut follows, sharper this time.
“That’s how you lose a belt,” Ryoma continues. “Usually in the most humiliating way.”
The gym feels quieter than it should. Even Yanagimoto slows, glancing toward the screen as the anchor’s voice frames the exchange into something pointed.
“Domestic rivalry emerging,” the caption reads.
Yoshizawa’s jaw tightens, clearly looks offended. He reaches for the remote and lowers the volume further, eyes never leaving the image.
“So that’s how he wants to play it,” he mutters.
Behind him, Shinichi Yanagimoto steps down from the ring, eyes flicking once toward the screen, then back to Yoshizawa.
He doesn’t ask anything. But the irritation shows anyway, in the set of his mouth, in the way his hand tightens briefly around the towel.
Yoshizawa turns to him. “You better get prepared.”
“Prepared for what?” Sinichi asks.
“The press,” Yoshizawa says. “They are coming. I can feel it.”
Almost on cue, his phone vibrates again. This time the number isn’t saved.
“Yoshizawa speaking.”
[This is Tanabe from KNS Network. We’re heading to Tachibana Boxing Gym now. We’d like your response to Ryoma Takeda’s comments at Narita. Would you be available in about twenty minutes?]
Yoshizawa’s eyes drift back to the television, now showing an unrelated segment, the earlier clip already reduced to a headline ticker.
“I’ve seen it,” he says evenly. “And yes, I’ll comment. Twenty minutes is fine.”
He ends the call and slips the phone into his pocket.
Around him, the rhythm of the gym resumes, while the space between now and the press arrival quietly closes.
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