Meet
Khang.
Khang grew up in Vietnam with Japanese cars as an obsession — posters on the wall, forums at midnight, saving up for mods he couldn't afford yet.
Eventually he made it to Japan. Not as a tourist — as someone who intended to stay. He learned the language, found the community, and embedded himself in a car culture that most foreigners never get close to.
The Instagram account started as a personal diary. Canyon runs, Daikoku PA nights, random finds in Odaiba parking structures. The photos were real because the experiences were real. It grew from 400 followers to 3,000 in a few months — not because of algorithms, but because people recognized something authentic.
The tours came from the DMs. People kept asking: can I come with you? After the tenth message, the answer became yes — but properly, with structure, so the experience actually delivered.
That's The DeeJay. His life, opened up to the people who want the real version of Tokyo car culture.
Why it works.
The JDM Life
Khang didn't become a tour guide. He was already living the life — attending meets, running mountain passes, hunting rare cars in parking structures. The tours came after.
Tokyo Native
Years in Tokyo means knowing which parking garage has the cleanest R34s on a Tuesday night, and which ramen spot is worth the detour. That local depth is what you're actually booking.
Built for You
Most Japanese car culture is closed to outsiders — language barrier, unspoken rules, no entry points. Khang is the bridge. Everything runs in English, at your pace.