Japanese billionaire billionaire Yosaku Mizawa withdrew from research that was the subject of a documentary, about a sweetheart sharing a moon trip launched by SpaceX, owned by Elon Musk, and attributed his withdrawal to "mixed feelings" about participation.

Mizawa, 44, announced earlier this month that he was looking for an unmarried girl or lady over the age of twenty to enter a competition to be his girlfriend in order to prepare a documentary that would be shown by the "Abima TV" service for broadcast. About 28,000 girls bid for the competition.

Mizawa said he was "deeply sorry" for his decision to withdraw, and apologized to those who submitted to the competition and to (Obama TV) workers in his tweets on his Twitter account, which has the most follow-up in Japan, with more than seven million followers.

Meizawa is the founder and former CEO of Zuzu Fashion, and sold the site last year to SoftBank. He is known for offering controversial ideas, though sometimes not working.

For example, when he was CEO of the "Zuzu Electronic" website, he created a suit called the Zuzu suit, a narrow dotted suit that enables its user to define his body measurements to order custom-made clothes for him, but the idea did not succeed in practice. In what he described as a "social experience" to see if this would increase their happiness.