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Worthless Guide To Anime – Part 2

<Continued from Part 1

The first thing most people notice about anime shows are the ridiculous names they’ve been given. Talk about a turn-off. I mean, who in the world is going to go see something called Ah, My Goddess in the listings and flip over to check it out? A bored seven-year-old girl maybe, and even then, it’s a stretch.

<Continued from Part 1

The first thing most people notice about anime shows are the ridiculous names they’ve been given. Talk about a turn-off. I mean, who in the world is going to go see something called Ah, My Goddess in the listings and flip over to check it out? A bored seven-year-old girl maybe, and even then, it’s a stretch.


One of the ways these titles are translated is to use a direct literal translation. This is not a good idea
because most of these titles are just nonsense in Japanese anyway. Well, either they mean nothing or they’re far too literal in a wide-eyed foreign tourist sort of way. For example, if the show were about a female fugitive name
Jumi, it might be titled “Jumi Crime Runner” which is not even remotely acceptable by any stretch.

Well, it might fly in Japan
(where tolerance for nonsense and gibberish seems high), but in
America we usually like titles of works to actually make sense. I wonder if the Japanese version of Heroes airs as Super Crazy Jump Jump Comic Punchout Magic Hero Map Arab. I sure hope so.

This Heading Exists

DersuJudging from the names of most anime shows though, it does not seem
to be so far-fetched to imagine that the people who “localize” anime
for America are deaf and dumb Germans who have learned a little
Japanese from the back of an action figure box, and then used this knowledge to
learn English from an elderly Asiatic man who wanders the
mountains of a lower Russian province.

The
creators of anime also have a strange propensity for choosing inane or
unimportant items from the show and using that word for the show’s
title. They also seem to like picking random English words out of thin
air and using a combination of those for the title as well. Here are
some examples of actual anime titles to show you what I’m talking about:

RATM

Combustible Campus Guardress

If
this show is not
about a security guard at a college who spontaneously combusts when she
becomes aroused, then this title is highly misleading. If this
show is about a security
guard at a college who spontaneously combusts when she becomes aroused:
I believe I’ve just managed to disprove God.

Dirty Pair Flash

Alright, at
first I was going to guess that this was a show about a girl who
flashed her unwashed bosoms at men in order to fight sex crime in rural
Japan, but this seemed to be a little too ridiculous. Then I remembered
that this was Japan we were talking about, and that
therefore its creators likely had no shame. So I think I’ll stick with
that guess after all.

Gunsmith Cats

This is about a band of merry
anthropomorphic cats who design, make, or repair small firearms. I know
I just made this up, but I have the feeling that’s probably what this
show is really about.

Manfaye

Cowboy Bebop

Certainly this is about the trials
and tribulations of the rough-and tumble cattlemen of the ooooold west.
In addition, it will also provide viewers with a visual history of
Bebop music (A style of
jazz characterized by fast tempos, complex harmonies, and intricate
melodies, in case you were wondering.)

I have to give the creators of this show credit though; at
least they’re trying to educate anime fans about something other than
how to shoot fireballs or denigrate women.

Neon Genesis Evengelion

Perhaps:
The Origin or coming into being (Genesis) of a Colorless, odorless gas
(Neon). Also there must be something about the winning or revival of
personal commitments to Christ in there I guess. Sounds like a winning
combination! It should also be noted that I do not believe Evengelion
to be an actual word.

RunnersDual! Parallel Trouble Adventure

The
most puzzling aspect of this title is it’s usage of the word dual, and
the midsentence exclamation point which follows it. Is the title trying
to inform us in
an excited manner that it consists of TWO parallel trouble adventures?

I don’t even know what a single parallel
trouble adventure would consist of, but I’m almost positive it would
involve the (mis)adventures of parentless white-skinned Japanese
children with tellingly western features. Or maybe they just meant
“duel” and just used the incorrect spelling of the
word. But I suppose that somehow makes even less sense.

Building the Master Race

No...Let’s
discuss the geography of anime, if only because many “anime fans” will
obstinately refuse to enjoy any animation which does not come directly
from the timid island of Japan itself. Obviously any rational person
will of course dismiss this as ridiculous, but it does raise a number
of logical questions that the serious-minded anime fan must answer,
aside from why Japanese animation is “superior” in the first place.
(Hint: Different = Better).

Wade
through a roomful of discarded fast food wrappers to your favorite
Japanese-only anime fan and see if they can answer these questions:

1. Must the production
team be 100% Japanese?

What if a few
Americans went over there and were working along with the animation
team to create it? Even better, what if they used to work for *gasp*
DISNEY!

2. Must the entire production company be Japanese? What about
the marketing department? CEO? Can the director be from a different
country? What if the idea guys take ideas from western sources, (of
course this never happens!) does this affect the quality of the anime?

3. Do
the animators have to be 100% Japanese?
What if they are half
Japanese, half American? What if they are half Japanese, half Chinese?
What if a Japanese guy has 1% Australian in him? If the Japanese create
better animation, surely a “mutt” would be a less effective
animator, wouldn’t he?


4. Does the animation have to be done
in Japan?
What if an all Japanese animation team came over to America
and created a show on American soil? Would it still be good? What if
they went out to sea in a ship? Would the anime still be good as long
as it were drawn in Japanese waters?

5. What would happen if…an experiment were conducted in which an American was made to live his
entire life locked in a room in America with no mirrors or other reflective
surfaces and was taught only Japanese, and told that he himself was
a Japanese man in Japan would this man be a better anime artist because of his belief
that he is in fact Japanese or would the impure American blood which
pollutes his veins cause him to animate only in the shockingly
hideous Aeon Flux style huh huh huh?

The Spent Shells of Hollowpoint Lives

VashMany people
believe that anime has become fairly popular lately.
This is false. See, the market for anime used to consist
solely of Japanese schoolchildren, grown men with hairy stomachs
hanging out of the front of their shirts, and a few other types of
fish-smelling misfit. But recently anime has also latched its
diseased, crotchfondling tentacles into stony-eyed young men who use
filesharing sites and troubled junkies who watch Cartoon Network at 3AM. This
seems to give people the false impression that anime has become popular
when in fact, it has not increased in popularity at all.

Imagine the distended belly of a
rotting corpse. Inspect it closely and you might see one or two
maggots crawling on the ground nearby, or a one curled snugly
inside the belly button; nothing too extreme. But pierce the wall of
the stomach with a sharp object, and thousands of plump, wriggling maggots coated with a thin layer of shiny
white pus will spill out onto your shoes as you unsuccessfully attempt to stifle a
sickly-sweet vomit belch with your closed fist. I realize this is an
extremely poor analogy for what I was just talking about, but I wanted
to work that image into your brains anyway for kicks.

Believing
anime to be popular is a mistake a lot of people make. If you just
delve a little deeper into the world of the internet, you will quickly
see why some things appear to be more popular than they actually are.
There thousands of insane anime fans who have NOTHING BUT free
time (most of
them being chained to a radiator behind a reinforced door in their
parent’s attic at which they claw and moan fruitlessly) and because of
this, they are able
to cumulatively allocate nearly 43,362% more time to preaching and
arguing
about anime than a normal, healthy human would be able to for their
chosen hobby. This creates a skewed popularity perception, mostly among
internet users.

Making Things Perfectly Clear (Crystal)

Gundam
If
you’re still confused, perhaps this hypothetical situation might help
you to understand. To put this in perspective, when you visit the
statistics page of the average anime message board, you might see
something like this:

Gundam erotic fanfiction message board statistics:

Number of topics created yesterday: 20,141

Messages posted yesterday: 999,129

Now,
if this was the only information you saw, it would not be unreasonable
for you to assume that anime is immensely popular. “Just imagine the
amazing number of people it would take to post all those Gundam-related
messages in one day!” you might be heard to remark as you closed your
browser window and went off to tell your friends how popular anime is.
But wait! If you would have continued reading you would have discovered
the well-kept secret of these boards:

 

Number of registered users: 235

Japanese Man
“But
surely there must be some kind of error in the statistics!” you cry,
tearing at your hair and beating your fists against the walls, “There’s
no way a little more than two hundred people could ever post that many
messages relating to cartoon robot-human intercourse in a single day!
That’s about an average of 4,250 messages per person! 177 message per
hour! 3 messages a minute! 0.05 messages per second! It’s impossible I
tell you! It’s a madness! MAAAADDNESSSS!

The door to your cell
bursts open, and the doctor rushes in, followed closely by three large
orderlies in white smocks. The men wrestle you roughly to the ground as
the doctor stands silhouetted in the doorway, flicking a dripping
hypodermic needle. He moves toward you, smiling slightly and
holding out his palms as if he were calming a spooked horse.

“Shh-shh-shhh,
it’s alright…” he coos. “Nobody’s going to hurt you, we’re here to
help, you see?” You lie pinned to the floor, thrashing and clicking
your teeth like a rabid fox. One orderly straddles you, sitting across
your chest
and pinning your arms to the ground. Another places his hand acrossyour
forehead and presses your head firmly to the floor. The doctor closes
in, smiling his clinical smile.

“This
will get rid of those nasty
dreams of yours.” He says, hovering over
you and blotting out the light, “Those nasty, nasty dreams.”

The room
begins to darken.

“Nighty night” he says.

Nighty night.

Black