Sugami wrote:Buggered if I know, I saw that back at university so almost 10 years ago

Lazy cat
Sugami wrote:Mew Mew Power? That's not what the US called Tokyo Mew Mew is it? (which sucks BTW) 4kids hasn't done anything right, they even censored Pokémon. FUNimation was pretty diabolical a while back, now the ADR director is also a VA (usually) so they know the industry quite well and usually get a good result out of it.
Yes I know, and I know that FM has become a lot better over the years but that is because they did listen to the fanbase and most likely also added a few of them to their personel file.
Anime wise Funimation is becoming one of the bigger western players regarding licensed titles and merchandise.
5-10 years ago I might have agreed but now the general pubic = otaku, at least when it comes to watching anime. I don't really consider it unprofessional, especially when there's heavy use of honorifics and it'd be really hard to actually get around it.
No, it is the other way around, anime and manga is no longer the niche product exclusively for that select group..
Anime and manga up to 10 years ago were Otaku niche products, nowadays anime and manga are becoming more accessible and thankfully losing a lot of the reputation it built up back in the early 90's.
The last mainly thanks to Ghibli for their family friendly features getting renowned, but also the older anime fans taking people's attention to their own childhood cartoons and pointing out that a lot of those came from or were made in Japan.
Or telling them about the fact that the only part of the Power rangers that was truly American were the 'Beverly hills' teenagers in the scenes where they weren't wearing those silly suits and making acrobatic moves, the rest of the footage came from the Japanese sentai series called
Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger and was dubbed into English. Including Rita and her gang of villains. (Machiko Soga, May she rest in peace.)
Commercially:
In countries like Germany and France and even on the other side of the ocean on a continent called North-America Anime and Manga is dominant in the book and mediastores, and even over here in our little backwater country called the Netherlands the larger media stores are filling up 2x2 meter or larger displays with anime, also naming it such. But also placed right besides the Disney and other western cartoons instead of a dark hidden corner in the back of the shop with a dusty sign saying "Special interest" or *
cringe* Manga (Video).
The comic book stores are also starting to have racks and cases specifically for Manga and Manhua (Chinese and Korean comics) which are starting to take a large part of their shops and even the mainstream bookstores are starting to build a small but growing selection of localized and imported manga.
Fanbase:
Conventions have grown in the number of visitors and are still growing, but also the number of conventions has increased.
Holland itself currently has 4 anime specific conventions including one specialized in Yaoi and Yuri, until 2003 there was only one;
Namely our convention which back then had 700 visitors and we're hoping for 2000 or even 2100 visitors this year.
I also know that there are more organizations looking to get a spot setting up their own convention and I am not counting the seperate events like filmnights, dance events and concerts.
Conventions and other gatherings completely unrelated to anime and manga have been inviting our conventions' presence wether it be in the form of a table in the dealerroom or to help organize one or a set of events at their conventions. Of course we also return the favor.
So not only is it becoming more mainstream, other "niche" cultures like that of Comics and SciFi have also started accepting and even inviting the presence of anime and manga within their ranks.
Media:
Our own convention has been approached more than a few years by local and national media for coverage of our event and the media is also spending more time these days covering Japanese popular culture and thankfully mostly the positive aspects of it and not only the dark side of it like Hikikomori, Chikan and other perversities and social problems.
Although less again these days, Dutch TV had quite a few anime titles for a while, including Dragonball Z, Sailor Moon, Tonde Buurin, Gatchaman, Tekkaman and Card Captor Sakura.
Oh, and Holland may have a real Manga library soon.
Brittain doesn't differ that much from Holland when it comes to anime and manga from what I have seen last November.
I guess we'll have to agree to disagree

I guess we do.