A weekly look into American otaku culture

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December 31, 2005

I’’s Uncensored! Proof that they are listening to us!

So I was reading through the newly released 5th volume of Masakazu Katsura’s series I’’s last night, and I came across an amazing discovery. There is one scene in which one of the primary female characters goes in front of an art class and offers to model in the nude for them. After much protest from the teacher, she takes off her towel, and… and…

There were nipples!

….

やった (゚∀゚)!
(We did it!)

Now for those of you that might be a little confused as to why this nudity is such a jovial event, let me recap the controversy that surrounded this series when it was first released. The first volume of I’’s had featured the female lead in a topless photograph. The company responsible for the American release, VIZ Entertainment, had chose to censor the picture by pasting little black stars over her nipples. This act had sent the fanboys going crazy, and the company received a lot of flack for it. Yours truly was at the forefront of this protest, including my fist ever anime editorial, and a news item that was eventually picked up by a couple of big named anime news sites. The company’s only response was that the censorship was done with the Katsura’s approval, and in fact was done quite similar to how the author handled a topless picture in the 3rd volume of the series. There wasn’t much news after that… until now!

Of course, there is a major twist to this particular scene of nudity that many may argue that it’s not truly VIZ caving in to the pressure. Since I’m not going to spoil it this post, you can talk about it in the comments. But I feel that this twist doesn’t make much of a difference. It was a pretty explicit full frontal shot that went uncensored this time around. This proves that the online anime community can make a difference with the way our favorite form of entertainment is treated here in our home county. VIZ didn’t ignore our complaints and arguments about censorship in the US, and now we all get to enjoy our manga the way it should be. (^_^)

A Very Otaku Christmas

Okay, so the holiday season was really a big bust for me this year. Everyone knew what I wanted this year: anime and manga. But the problem is that nobody knew exactly what kind of anime or manga to get me. So they had a very simple compromise, just get me gift cards. I was getting them from all over the place. Borders, Barnes & Noble, Amazon.com… which is good, because I sure as hell used up those gift cards the very first night they were placed into my hands.

Also, I decided to treat myself for some pretty big Christmas gifts. The whole reason why I haven’t been updating this journal lately is because I was working hard at my paid internship. So now that I got the money, I might as well spend it, huh? And so here is all the new stuff I got in the past couple of weeks. It’s a combination of gifts, gift cards, and mostly my own personal spending:


Click to Enlarge

DVD:
World of Narue Complete Set
Happy Lesson Complete Set
Doki Doki School Hours 1
DearS 2 + 3
Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi 2 + 3
Elfen Lied 2 + 3
Psychic Academy 1
Mouse 1 + 2

Manga:
Negima 8
Pastel 1
Gacha Gacha 2
I’’s 5
Kamichama Karin 2
Fruits Basket 12
Battle Royale 13 + 14
Tokyo Mew Mew a la Mode 1
Girls Bravo 2
Ranma ½ 15 + 16

Other:
30 gig Apple iPod with video (for anime on the go)
80 gig external hard drive (to hold fansubs)
Electronic Japanese Dictionary
Ai Yori Aoshi bishoujo video game

That’s 15 DVDs, 12 tankoubon, and a whole lot of digital bliss for this fanboy. A very Merry Christmas indeed! I’m sure this will keep me busy for a while. (^_^)

December 24, 2005

From: Me To: You

So the last couple of months have been hell to me, and since I had to take my last final exam yesterday, Christmas has snuck up on me without warning and put this blogger into one serious holiday funk.

But then a little anime came out of nowhere and really cheered me up and finally put me in the holiday spirit.

“Itsudatte (Always) My Santa” is a two-episode OVA based on a one-shot comic by “Love Hina” and “Negima” artist Ken Akamatsu. I’m very much a heterosexual male, but I absolutely love this man! “… Santa” is a very simple, but very cute, story about a lonely boy who runs into Mai Santa Claus, who, as you might have guess, is Santa Claus in the form of a moé anime girl.

I highly recommend all of you fanboys out there download this series right now right before the actual holiday. I feel it’s the “Charlie Brown Christmas” for the otaku heart.

So from this anime blogger to every one of you out there reading this:

メリー・クリスマス!
Merry Christmas!

December 4, 2005

Commentary: Child Pornography in Anime

ANN reports of a man found guilty of downloading real-life child pornography as well as anime images portraying such acts. This has been the first time that someone has been convicted under the Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to End the Exploitation of Children Today (PROTECT) act of 2003. According to ANN, the act states “computer images that are indistinguishable from real children engaging in sexually explicit conduct as child pornography, while simple drawings which are easily distinguishable from real children are not considered child pornography.” Apparently the judge felt that anime children were no different then real live children.

This brings up a taboo among the anime community about portraying children in sexual situations in works of anime and manga. It is a debate over artistic freedoms and personal moralities. I, for one, don’t support such material at all. I’m into shows that focus on children in a non-sexual loving way. I become uneasy when these shows have these underage (17 and younger, by American standards) characters in adult situations. Such examples for the frequent nudity of Chika-chan, a girl from “Ai Yori Aoshi” in her mid-adolescence, or the very explicit sexual fantasies involving the high school protagonist of “My Wife is a High School Girl”. I love both of these series to death, and yet I personally can’t shake off the thought of that teenaged sex should not be watched. If it’s like this for mid to post-adolescence children, I can’t even imagine how pre-adolescence sex in anime would be tolerated.

Such fear is also evident in the US anime industry as well. With all the hentai that is imported to this country, very few, if any, feature underage characters having sex. Since PROTECT is still not completely clear at the moment as to what’s acceptable, companies don’t want to risk it. Such an example would be the US release of the anime OVA series, “Kite.” When this blood, gore, and sex fest was first released in the US, it came with everything but the sex. You see, in America, violence is tolerated much more easily then sex, and so the show was release with just a “mature” rating instead of the “adult” it would have received with the sex added. Upon the demands of the fans, a “Director’s Cut” version was later release that include the sex scenes. Well, that is, all the sex scenes besides one. That’s because they feared that since it was an explicit scene showing a mid-adolescent girl being raped, they would be selling child pornography. It wasn’t until very recently that they released the show with the controversial scene included.

And yet the most awkward example of this would be a warning label I once saw on the packaging of a hentai video. It read, “Though the characters in this video appear to be very young, they are in fact age 18 or over.” This stupid warming does bring up a point. You can say that one of your female characters is 10 but draw her with full breasts and hips. You can also, like this one show did, say that your female character is 18, but flat cheated and child-like. Either way, these characters are not real, and therefore have no real age!

So why then would such a thing be prosecuted for legal actions? After all, you can write a novel that talks about under-aged sex. It may receive a lot of negative feedback for it, but never any legal actions against it. No one is arrested for being a potential pedophile for writing or reading such things. So why should visual representation be any different? If you use the pen to write to words or to draw a picture, the fact is that the under-aged characters came from a pen and imagination, no matter how real the images look. Should you be arrested for something that you think about instead of actually doing?

You have to realize that every single law created has been broken in the fantasy world of visual entertainment. If you watch a movie about a serial killer plotting and then hacking his victims to death, does that make you an accomplice to the crime? After all, murder is illegal, right?

Of course not! You can’t be persecuted for fictional events. That’s what the whole “freedom of speech” thing is all about! The only reason why words and ideas should be tried in court is if it threatens or abuses another real-life victim. The reason why child porn is illegal is because in order to show it on a screen, you have to force real-live children to do such acts on camera. This is undoubtedly child abuse, and the law is absolute justified for its existence. But when it’s animated or drawn in a comic, there are no real victims. There is about as much real-life crime being committed from these works as there is in horror films. And yet the double standard of American society accepts the fictional acts of violence over sex any day.

This is an issue that we, the anime fans, must fight for. I don’t condone child pornography in anime or manga, but I’ll be damned if anyone should ban it or make it illegal. The whole reason why I love the medium is because it allows the viewer to escape into a world that is not restricted by the laws of State or science. If you ban the use of one thing in anime, what’s stopping them from banning other things? In this one situation, the guy deserved to be found guilty for supporting the abuse of real life children, but not the fictional ones. PROTECT needs to clarify the difference between reality and fantasy.

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