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Kyoko Ito Cuomo: Difference between revisions

Added some details gleaned from Riverpedia
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[[Image:Kyoko Ito.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Kyoko Ito, c. [[2005]].]]
[[Image:Kyoko Ito.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Kyoko Ito, c. [[2005]].]]
'''Kyoko Ito Cuomo''' is the wife of [[Rivers Cuomo]]. The two were married on June 18, [[2006]] in Malibu, CA. According to [[Weezer]] historian [[Karl Koch]], Kyoko Ito Cuomo met her husband in the fall of [[1997]] at a live [[Homie|solo performance]] of his at The Middle East Club in Cambridge, MA. She was a student at a local college at the time. The couple currently visits her parents in Japan several times a year.  Their only child, [[Mia Cuomo]], was born in [[2007]].
'''Kyoko Ito Cuomo''' is the wife of [[Rivers Cuomo]]. She was born in Kumamoto, Japan to parents Harutoshi and Kimiko Ito.
 
A student at a local college at the time, Ito met Cuomo in [[1997]] at a show that Cuomo performed in Cambridge, Massachusetts (likely either a [[Homie]] [[Homie concert: 11/04/1997 - Cambridge, MA|show at The Middle East]], according to [[Karl Koch]], or a solo Rivers Cuomo concert [[Rivers Cuomo concert: 10/08/1997 - Cambridge, MA|at T.T. the Bear's Place]], according to Cuomo). The two were married on [[June 18]], [[2006]] in Malibu, CA. The couple currently visits her parents in Japan several times a year.  They have two children, [[Mia Cuomo]] (born in [[2007]]) and [[Leo Cuomo]] (born in [[2012]]).


Before relocating to the United States, Kyoko worked for a Tokyo-based magazine called [http://pingmag.jp/2006/01/02/patient-dogs-for-ping-no5/ PingMag] as an editor and translator. Cuomo would visit her in Japan several times before her eventual relocation. Upon her permanent move to the United States, she became a contributor to PingMag up until its notice of indefinite hiatus on December 31, 2008.
Before relocating to the United States, Kyoko worked for a Tokyo-based magazine called [http://pingmag.jp/2006/01/02/patient-dogs-for-ping-no5/ PingMag] as an editor and translator. Cuomo would visit her in Japan several times before her eventual relocation. Upon her permanent move to the United States, she became a contributor to PingMag up until its notice of indefinite hiatus on December 31, 2008.