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re: Anime fanbases be acting like their [sic] in gangs or something

Posted on 8/6/25 at 4:19 pm to
Posted by Carson123987
Middle Court at the Rec
Member since Jul 2011
68041 posts
Posted on 8/6/25 at 4:19 pm to
quote:

I mean, those are OK. The bottom 2 aren't really what I have in mind when making my criticism. And I'm not talking about just looking at drawings. I'm talking about the dumb shows.


Well you said manga so I included manga panels
Posted by Saint Alfonzo
Member since Jan 2019
30261 posts
Posted on 8/6/25 at 4:34 pm to
quote:

I continue to ask: how can anyone, anywhere from any walk of life take to watch anime?

I'm with you on this, I've never understood the appeal of anime.
Posted by OMLandshark
Member since Apr 2009
120445 posts
Posted on 8/6/25 at 6:31 pm to
(no message)
This post was edited on 5/6/26 at 7:52 pm
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
70485 posts
Posted on 8/6/25 at 7:11 pm to
Dragonball Z and Pokemon are shonen anime. Shonen is a genre that is all about superheros fighting, training, and the power of friendship. It’s western equivalent would be superhero cartoons or GI Joe. Most of them are aimed at 8-12 year old boys. Pokemon is usually targeted at a slightly younger audience while DBZ skews slightly older. At 6th grade, those animes should already seem somewhat tedious or childish to you because they’re literally aimed at children younger than you. There are more adult oriented shonen, but the most popular ones are largely aimed at children. Naruto, Yu Yu Hakisho, Inuyasha, Sailor Moon, My Hero Academia, etc are all shonen in one form or another. I largely grew out of the genre by the time I left middle school. Most of the shows that really stuck with me as an adult were sci-fy thrillers, slice of life rom coms, fantasy series, or straight up comedy/parody series that aren’t meant to be taken seriously.

Assuming all anime is as childish as pokemon would be like watching cocomelon at age 12 and thinking “wow, western animation is just for babies!” Yeah, some of it literally is.
This post was edited on 8/6/25 at 7:16 pm
Posted by Pettifogger
I don't really care, Margaret
Member since Feb 2012
87355 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 8:56 am to
quote:

The reality is that the people who grow up to be "influencers", "taste-makers", and "critics" usually weren't the mainstream popular kids in high school. It's the weird artsy or alternative kids who grow up to be the pop culture historians who retroactively define what was cool to the next generation 20 years later.

Anime (outside of sorta Dragon Ball Z) wasn't cool with the jocks or the preppy kids. Those people are now doctors, lawyers, blue collar workers, teachers, small business owners, etc. It was popular with the weird theater kids, the band geeks, the burnouts, and the artsy kids. Those are the people who grow up to be bloggers, journalists, and youtubers.


100%, this was definitely part of my theory too.

People who kept to themselves and didn't have much influence on the culture at my middle or high school may not be in the same life position as an adult. Nerdiness if you will, has gone mainstream for sure over the last 20-30 years.

And with that comes the mainstreaming of the content itself, and people probably project its popularity retrospectively.

I'm right at the edge of SpongeBob's popularity, but I've heard people younger than me say the same there.
Posted by boxcarbarney
Above all things, be a man
Member since Jul 2007
26721 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 9:11 am to
quote:

Miyazaki’s filmography says hello.



Spirited Away is such a beautiful film..











Posted by boxcarbarney
Above all things, be a man
Member since Jul 2007
26721 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 9:24 am to
quote:

A lot of the 80s cartoons were drawn by Japanese animation studios so if you grew up then you would already by accustomed to that style. Shows like Voltron and Thundercats aren't that far off from anime.



And some of them were originally Japanese shows that were taken and repurposed for American audiences. Like Robotech (originally Macross), Battle of the Planets (originally Gatchaman), and the various Voltrons were taken from different anime series.
Posted by Fewer Kilometers
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2007
38436 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 9:25 am to
I'm at the tail end of Bill Murray's generation.

Murray's SNL monologue:
quote:

While we were sleeping late, hanging in on Saturday mornings, the Japanese took away our cartoon shows! I mean, when you saw “Speed Racer”, didn’t something go, “Wait a second!”
Growing up with Gigantor, then Speed Racer came along, but then with the 80's we saw the anime and manga stuff beginning to appear in the comic shops. By the 90's it was everywhere. When Toonami hit in the late 90's you had teens who were experts or who'd at least sampled anime growing up.

I can appreciate the Miyazaki films, the more linear series like Cowboy Bebop and Paranoia Agent, and I still have nostalgia for Gigantor and Speed Racer, but I'll never be the anime expert that my son is.
Posted by hiltacular
NYC
Member since Jan 2011
20204 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 10:45 am to
quote:

I believe Frieren (fantasy), Vinland Saga (historical fiction), and Spy x Family (espionage/family comedy) are three very recent series that would be great introductions to anime for adults who have watched any anime before.


Eh I think something like Solo Leveling or Kaiju No. 8 has a better shot of capturing someone who has never watched anime. If you don't find either of those shows entertaining I just can't help you, they are straight to the point action thrill rides with some pretty impressive fights.
Posted by Fewer Kilometers
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2007
38436 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 11:09 am to
quote:

I continue to ask: how can anyone, anywhere from any walk of life take to watch anime?
Said by the sneering "winners" who are in the comics and cards shop to buy junk wax baseball cards in the 90's.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39859 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 11:19 am to
quote:

Said by the sneering "winners" who are in the comics and cards shop to buy junk wax baseball cards in the 90's.
nah
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
39859 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 11:19 am to
quote:

Give that one a shot, because I truly believe it’s the greatest animated movie ever made. It’s a real treat and gets right where so many blockbusters absolutely fail:
I might give it a whirl, but I'll be honest: I just find the actual animation itself offputting before we even start talking about storytelling.
Posted by This GUN for HIRE
Member since May 2022
6073 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 12:10 pm to
You got em writing novels in here defending anime.
Posted by kingbob
Sorrento, LA
Member since Nov 2010
70485 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 1:00 pm to
Solo Leveling is just a gateway anime to the most over the top weeb series of all time: Sister Leveling
Posted by mark65mc
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2007
11535 posts
Posted on 8/7/25 at 1:08 pm to
quote:

I continue to ask: how can anyone, anywhere from any walk of life take to watch anime?


Anime (One Piece) seems to be inspiring the average citizen of Indonesia to stand up against their government.

Yahoo/BBC Article



quote:

In the same way the pirates in the series, led by their leader Monkey D Luffy, raise the Jolly Rogers as a symbol of freedom against their government, some Indonesian residents say raising the flag is a "symbol that we love this country, but don't completely agree with its policies".

The anime reflects the injustice and inequality that Indonesians experience, said Ali Maulana, a resident of Jayapura city in the Papua province.

"Even though this country is officially independent, many of us have not truly experienced that freedom in our daily lives," he told BBC Indonesian.

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