Category Archives: English Language Modern Visual Fandom

Otakon 2006: An Average Story about a Convention

If words were enough to describe this convention, I wouldn’t need pictures. Even if words were enough, I’d still use pictures because I am lazy.

I was a Harutard

But some words are necessary. Like tags. Could be chronological:
Hot Thursday prereg, drinking, dinner, drinking; hot friday lineup, ticket, sat in line and watch anime, dealers, eat, Nobuteru panel, Madhouse panel, eat alone, concert, karaoke; Saturday ticket, dealers, Kawasumi panel, autograph, karaoke, fate meet, concert, mt meet, Geneon, Hellsing, dinner, art gallery, 4chan, Geneon panel; sunday karaoke, art gallery, hotel crap, karaoke, lunch, karaoke, home.

Or more descriptive:
Haruhi-tard, ETERNAL BLAZE, Hottest. Otakon. Ever., Kawasumi Ayako, Lafiel, Mahoro, Trap-chan, Raptor Jesus, Getsumei Fuuei, MUCC, fatigue, NO U, Free Stuff, Mihata no Moto ni, Pictochat, Geneon, Dan Kim, Futakoi Alternative, Touhou, Ever17, waiting in line, Nobuteru Yuuki, Nakazawa Kazuto, God Bless…

There were the usual amount of cosplaying. Without beating around the bush anymore, you can click on these links at your own risk. Traps, you know. I think the variety this year matches more my expectation from last year than this year.

A good meme from the con to recall is Web 2.0. It’s amusing how much I’ve changed in doing an otakon write-up over the last 9 years. And yet I’ve done it every time save my first Otakon, in a blog form. Instead of AMVs maybe I’ll do a trip down memory lane kind of thing. Some things, despite age, just don’t change time and time again.

Like hitting traffic on the NJ Turnpike.

But there are still stories left to be told of our battle last weekend. Yours and mine. Like how karaoke post MUCC concert means you can’t hear the monitor too well. Or our Canadian friend makes one helluva Trap-chan. Or how 4chan manages to transform time and space and bring anonymity to a convention line. Or how the panels I missed out I wish I could attend, or watch videos of. Or how I asked about Lafiel, and made a fool out of myself at the Kawasumi panel. Or how people should do more Nana Mizuki songs at the karaoke. Or just how much fun we had, or how we wish you were there, too.

I was actually looking for Os on Friday–imagine we were all in the Mad House panel

Perhaps one more notable point to it all is how my friends played into the picture. There was a major blurring between my RL friends, different circles of RL friends, internet friends, and random people. It’s good to know people who know people but knowing so many people can make things difficult. This year marks a good, sharp distinction between people who I consider “con buddies” with “visiting friends” and “groupies.” It’s so important to have all three. Just don’t mix them up in the wrong categories… And keeping the right kind of stories to the right kind of crowd :)

And on that note, I wish you all would show at Otakon next year, because I have high hopes…


Fangirls: Don’t Leave Home without Them!

In anime blogging terms, Otakon (and several other cons like it) is a wellspring of ideas. You can write a long article on Kanaria DX, but for a con-goer you could also write a long article on just finding Kanaria, trying to haggle price on it, fail and come back the next day and bite the bullet, then take pictures of it with Kanaria cosplayers and finish it with a parody sketch of Vita hammering down on Nana or something equally nonsensical. Now multiply that by fifteen or something.

Thanks, Dan Kim!

Yet at the same time, American-style anime cons are not for everyone. Even as fans, we cling onto different ideas of what it means as a fan, what motivates us to act like a gaggle of idiots, and what makes us shell out the big bucks. Even what makes memorable memories vary from one fanboy to another. I respect that.

To that end, that is why I love fangirls at cons. Don’t get me wrong; more often than not they are bringers of headache and long waits. They’re the kind of people who would wait 8 hours in line, overnight, for a Seki Tomokazu autograph (and well worth it, I say). They may also be kind of self-absorbed and singled minded to the extent that they behave like a scary mob of … fangirlness in which levels everything in their path on their way to rush from one line to the next. It’s hard to talk nice about fangirls unless you’re just as equally self-absorbed to care. However, in the context of an anime con in the US, they fit right in.

Especially at the right types of musical venues.

I’m not sure how many people are at all aware the plight LOAE and his cohorts had in order to “get it right” for a certain variety of musical guests. Some concerts are the type you sit down and listen, like PLAY (I would’ve, could’ve, didn’t)–an orchestral rendition of pop video game music hits. Some concerts are the type you want to stand up sometimes (Kanno Yoko‘s piano interludes). Some concerts have seats but you’re not suppose to use them if you can help it (Yoko Ishida), and the rest you are just suppose to stand (any kind of Jrock, or MUCC for this con).

When we have these strange yet wonderful Japanese musical guests at anime cons, the problem is this: a lot of people at the con, and attending the musical events, just don’t know what sort of a show it may be. Unless you live near a major city, too, you are probably a tad shy in terms of concert-going experience. It’s not like going to a movie theatre–most people don’t hit up musical venues in their spare time unless you live in real proximity to them, or chase concerts like, well, a fangirl. A two-tier problem.

On top of the fact that an anime con is really a conglomeration of many kinds of fans with many different kinds of programming, shy of bands like L’arc~en~Ciel, you will really only be reaching a very specific audience segment. Even artists like Yoko Ishida or other more “mainstream fanboy” is going to shoot short of gathering the right kind of crowd. The MUCC concerts at Otakon this year are a good demonstration of this problem, and partially, the solution.

1. The right venue. Just to get it out of the way, the Powerplant sucks–to walk to it requires going around some really seedy parts of Inner Harbor, plus this is still probably the Hottest. Otakon. Ever so I really wanted to spare both my back the heat, and my feet the wear–it’s about a 15-minute powerwalk. Both times I did it I was doing it upstream of a bunch of Yankee fans, too. Generally a blah experience. Still, a proper musical venue is a must. I remember seeing a bunch of punk kids at ACen’s SID concert. No. Even worse was BOA (the UK band) at Otakon back in 2000. No no no. You need the right venue like Ram’s Head for a band like them. It REALLY makes a HUUUUUUUUGE difference.

2. The crowd. Friday night’s MUCC show with Nana Kitade opening was probably MUCC’s best performance out of the two. They were high and mightily powerful, and probably not exhausted yet. But the crowd on Saturday was about 10 times easier to work with. Part of the cause, I imagine, was because of Nana Kitade. She draws a radically different crowd, although I think some fangirls do like her as well. While I may be a gothloli fan, I don’t really like gothloli culture at all, and she’s all about that. I’d say about half of the crowd was into the show overall during MUCC’s gig, and the other half were just there. The hardcore fangirls took the lead and there were even some mild moshing, but it’s nothing compared to Saturday’s crowd. People were broken in, the fans were more organized, and people who can’t bother with cheering just didn’t go through the added effort to come to the show again.

3. The repeated showing. Having two separate shows probably helped sifting through the fans as well as giving everyone a chance to get familiar in terms of what to do at their shows. The second show may be a lot more tiresome for the artists, it was just a better fan response. I think just between Friday and Saturday Kitade’s fanbase at the con doubled, so go her. It probably helps that her hair didn’t get tangled up with the guitar the second day.

In that conventions in the US have been getting musical guests for some time now, these considerations are nothing new. I’m well aware that cons have bigger worries and other restraint too, making these things simply not possible sometimes. But it makes a huge difference, especially when we’re talking about a band that’s playing in a foreign language, from a foreign culture, and don’t have the resources to play the crowd like how a big shot stadium-like concert can.

I think for the rest of this week I’ll try to squeeze in as much Otakon-related entries as I can, so please look forward to that!


Hottest. Otakon. Ever.

Danbooru On The Go

If you think she’s hot, guess again.

Times like this I almost envy those skimpy FFX-II or DOAXBV cosplayers!

[updated +7 hours]

Otakon is a ritual for me. In some ways I’ve come to term with it in that my motivation to go to Otakon annually (9th one this year) is partially on momentum. But on the other hand it is a convention where I do meet up with a giant horde of people that I know, and it is very much so a social gathering. In that the washed-out old school con goer crowd would mostly admit that’s what cons boil down to for con goers, it’s still somewhat a different venture for fans.

And it isn’t for every fan, either. It is like watching Utena–some enjoy it for the lesbianism, others for its surrealness, yet some other do it for direction, style, and music. Even more do it for the drama and character expositions. Some even do it for the funnies. Such is trying to run a con with 20000+ attendees, pleasing all is simply not possible.

In as much as I can talk about Otakon like that, it shows just how jaded I have become… Yet I think I can be pretty happy about the whole adventure? That’s what a good concert will do for me, so see you fangirls 8:30am sharp tomorrow!


Until Otakon, Together as God Blessed…

That'll be me in 4 days

This dude strums it out on a guitar and translated the same song, maybe even on a lonely rail. You can now do the same as he does, if you can sing and play at the same time:

F G Em Am
F G Am7sus Am7

Am G
I’m running blind; I know my heart won’t take anymore
F Dm G C Csus C
Hard to forgive, I couldn’t help but fall again
Am G
You’ve shut me out, unreachable and now you’re alone
F Dm G C Esus E#7
You take it all, and you won’t let me share your pain

Am Em
I’ll turn back; and even though I know that it’s over
F Dm Esus E
Will I really leave, do you really want me on that lonely rail

I’ll follow
F
Deep into the evening
G
Even though you’ll leave me
Em Am F
Through the cold I’ll push the hours away until I find you
Dm Em Am7sus A7
Don’t look back; I’ll wait for that day

You’re shining
F
Guiding me forever
G
Past my indiscretion
Em Am Dm
We’re far apart but you’ll lead me back again and my ways
Em F G
Will someday cross with yours again
Asus A
Together as God blessed

F G Em Am
F G Am7sus Am7

Am G
Passionate thoughts, they fall into your crystalline gaze
F Dm G C Csus C
Melting away into our harsh reality
Am G
No reason why, but I still try to find you again
F Dm G C Esus E7
You’re rushing down; I’m swept away by loving you

Am Em
Even so, I believe I’ll capture this moment
F Dm Esus E
Beauty fades away; but I’m always aching for your lonely heart

I’m ready
F
Face to face I’ll tell you
G
No more time for lying
Em Am F
We can’t spare a moment to look; Our love couldn’t survive there
Dm Em Am7sus A7
No reaching back for all our regrets

I’m stronger
F
Always moving forward
G
Destiny is changing
Em Am Dm
I want to know what the morning brings because it’s my wish
Em F G
Completing every plan we shared
Asus A
Together as God knows

Am
I know that we exist
Em G F
Everyone may disappear into a dream,
G Em Am Am7
And yet your vision still remains

Am
I tried to chase the past
Em Em7 F G
I outline all our hopes before they fade away
E7sus E7
But I just trace the scars

I’ll answer,
F#m
I’ll follow
G
Deep into the evening
A
Even though you’ll leave me
F#m Bm G
Through the cold I’ll push the hours away until I find you
Em F#m F#sus F#
Don’t look back; I’ll wait for that day

You’re shining
G
Guiding me forever
A
Past my indiscretion
F#m Bm Em
We’re far apart but you’ll lead me back again and my ways
F#m G A
Will someday cross with yours again
Bsus B
Together as God blessed

Well, he did do a good job, I’d say.

That said I will probably blog once more, working on something long(er) right now and hopefully I’ll get it out of the way before I leave for Baltimore. Lots of loose ends to take care of until then.


Wanted: Con-Going Bloggers

Modus Operandi of Takamachi Nanoha

I just went through quickly Otakon’s list of panels, and AX2006‘s list of panels. It’s an impulsive thing, but it just struck me as odd–

Where are the bloggers?

I vaguely recall last there there was a blogging panel at Otakon, correct? There is a webcast/podcast panel this year at Otakon, and I didn’t catch anything even remotely like that on the AX list.

I fully realize such sort of thing could come from all kinds of reason, many of them irrespective of anything substantive to the nature of anime blogsphere. For instance, I know Otakon at least have fairly lax standards with panel applications, and I think if you can get a crowd going you can be pretty motivated. However panel applications have a short window of opportunity, and it is actually hard to get a decent audience at a con with a lot of other worthwhile stuff to do. Perhaps more frequently a panel exist because a dedicated individual, who knows how the system works, was on the ball with the application and promotion in a small venue (like a mailing list, or on a website itself, or a forum), as a semi-official “gathering.” There is a general-public aspect to it, but it tends not to draw as many people. And certainly even if the interest is there, without that key, catalytic individual, it doesn’t happen.

The bothersome thing for me is that we have plenty of huge internet communities with big Otakon panels–4chan.org, for starters. Granted the average /b/-tard probably does not read anime blogs, most of the /a/-tards probably do. Maybe it’s time for an animenano or blogsuki panel? I know it has readers, and some go to cons. If not, why not?

Enough conspiracy theories for one day…