Showing posts with label forum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forum. Show all posts

Friday, February 14, 2014

Rewind: The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya

The star of the show, Haruhi, in ep 8. Yes, she's always like this:
confident, cute, and sometimes abrasive. She tends to get her way.

It was early 2011, I believe, and I was on Anime-Planet all the time, active in the forums and frequently moving anime through my "watching" list to my "watched" list. Haruhi was a popular figure, featured in forum signatures and avatars. Her movie had just come out the year before. The year before that, a 28-episode version of the show aired.

I decided to check out The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. Before I could start watching on Crunchyroll, I had to do some research. What was the difference between the 2006 version and the 2009 version? The 2006 version only had 14 episodes, so what did they change? Was one a sequel? Which one did fans recommend I watch? What were those related anime, like Melancholy of Suzumiya Haruhi-chan, all about? Which one is her surname: Haruhi or Suzumiya? And why can't everyone agree which way to order her names in the translations?

I finally started watching the 2006 version of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. It was a fun ride. Unfortunately, I only remember bits and pieces of those thirteen episodes. I don't have any blog posts or even recommendations to use as sources for this post. But I know I laughed a bit and gave the show five stars (granted, I was more generous back then, so I don't know what I'd rate it now).

What I remember: poor Kyon is a normal guy surrounded by not-so-normal people. The important one, of course, is Suzumiya Haruhi. She's... well, here, read the Anime-Planet description. I'm tired, I have a cold, my memory is foggy, and I can't do Haruhi justice like this.

So, instead of saying anything else, Let me share a bit from my long-past adventures in Photoshop:

The theme for the Signature of the Week contest was "Insanity."
No, of course I didn't win, or even come close. But I had fun.
This one was just for fun. Look at those numbers! My watched
list was 83 titles long. That was quite some time ago.
I should probably get around to watching the 2009 version of The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya sometime soon. I'd like to see the movie, too. Eh, I'll get to it someday.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Is Online Anime Fandom Missing a Demographic?



Age is a powerful social status. It often decides who we hang out with, what we drink, where we can go, and how we travel. 

One thing I’ve found both interesting and wonderful is that, like other social statuses, age matters a lot less on the internet. Teens and grandparents may participate in the same forums, comment on the same blogs, and hang in the same social networking circles. Kids and responsible adults may play the same RPG, and plan strategy together as equals. They may be friends on the internet, to one extent or another, when in Real Life age would separate them.

I’ve had the most experience with this in the anime community, first on Anime-Planet forums, then on blogs and Twitter. Age, gender, religion, race, location... all these things become less important when we’re connected by the internet and a shared interest. It presents a great opportunity for discussions that wouldn’t happen otherwise.

I feel on equal footing with many of these people, even those decades older than me. I still have an underlying respect for my elders, but I can see beyond that. In groups away from my computer, I sometimes feel shy and awkward with mixed ages and genders. In front of my screen, these things don’t matter so much. I feel more at ease.

Yet, despite the diversity and welcoming spirit I’ve encountered among online anime fans, there’s one demographic I haven’t noticed: older women. I’ve seen men up to their early sixties in forums. I’ve found anibloggers that are in their forties, around my dad’s age. Today, I looked at the birthday list on Anime-Planet and found a user who just turned 59. But, as far as I know, I haven’t seen a woman beyond her thirties or so, and early thirties at that. There’s the possibility that I just don’t know the age behind the avatar, of course. I’ve been around other anime fans for less than three years, so it’s not like I have a vast experience to reflect on. Still, I’m curious.

Why do I notice older men in online fandom, and not older women? Is it some reflection of our society?

I wonder if, particularly in previous generations, women feel more pressure than men to grow out of “childish” or “unproductive” pass times. It seems like a lot of fandoms have been tolerated, even encouraged or expected, for men well into adulthood. The biggest example of this is sports. Some plan their days and weeks around catching the big game on TV. Their sports fandom takes priority. There are women among the fans, of course, but stereotype holds that the men will be in front of the TV, maybe even on Thanksgiving Day, while the women act like “grown-ups” and do the cooking.

Whenever guys get excited or sucked into their tools, cars, fandom, or whatever, we say “boys and their toys,” whatever that means in the given context. From tots to grown men, we expect them to have something non-responsible that they’re into.

What about women? Is there a saying for us? “Girls and their frills,” perhaps? Do our mothers and grandmothers feel the same freedom to follow sports or anime, collect fandom memorabilia, play video games, or explore the far corners of the internet? Or do they feel like they must stick to the expected hobbies, like reading, quilting, cooking, art, and perhaps (nowadays) fitness? Do they feel like they must be “adults” while their husbands and brothers and sons indulge the kids in their hearts? 

Maybe I don’t know enough, but it appears that fandom/geekdom/otakudom are underrepresented in the older generations of women. I don’t see them online, at least. Am I missing something? Or is this really a missing demographic in the online anime communities?

Bonus question: Do you know of any women anibloggers who are past (or even in) their thirties? If so, where can I find them? 

Friday, January 7, 2011

Trying to get this signature background to work


I made a background for an anime forum signature (my first ever), and I want to show it to my fellow forum users. It needs a URL if I want it to upload into the forum, which I means I need it to be online, and thus this blog post. Click on it if you're interested it the full size. It's a screen shot until right between the two identical trees, where I started using the "stamp" tool in Photoshop to do the rest. Actually took a while.
It's from the anime Gankutsuou:The Count of Monte Cristo. Not my favorite, but interesting art.

Edit 1/10/11:
And here's another one, this time with bits from Vampire Knight. Why does it have to have a URL?
Anyway, I really enjoy doing this. It's nice to have a mindless creative outlet between Calculus and We the People.