Category Archives: Modern Visual Culture

Eventing As a Sub-subcultural Marketplace

This post is partly in response to SDS’s comment about wanting to hear more on this topic. In a nutshell, during his recent trip to Japan, he went to the Love Live Thanksgiving event that was recently taking place. I remember reading about the event mainly for the giant LLSIF game they set up where nine different people can play by tapping separate buttons, and seeing it on a big screen. He also posits the “trigger” about choosing between that and a similarly-timed Love Live doujinshi event.

Just to speak out of my own experience, the past few Million Festiv@ls were like, the few times in recent years where I really wanted to go to a doujinshi event. Given my inclinations for doujinshi, it was more to get all those Matsuri x ??? books, or just seeing what’s out there and which fan base ships what or how did the fannons operated. I remember also about Comikets 87-89, when I would actually research the catalog for ML circles and seeing if there’s anything really worthwhile. It turns out thin books themselves are not where it’s at, but also accessories like card mats? Thanks, guys, that’s some next-level artist alley stuff. (By the way, Million Festiv@l 4 is coming up next month. There are also a few other series of IM@S-only events that are inclusive of ML/CG stuff as well.)

A bit of backdrop about these tiny doujin events. Like most Artist Alley types, Japanese booths nowadays also gravitate beyond the humble thin comic format, at least when it’s focused by specific IP like this. Fans buy merch–not just prints, but the whole nine yards of them. As a reference point, my last “set” purchased from Lunatic Joker last year comes in fancyass plastic folder (full art on it) along with a printed shikishi and a couple other misc goods. The book itself is lusciously printed with a color cover. The whole thing is like 2000 yen but the book itself probably could have gone for just 1000 alone. So you buy the set…because artists know they make more money this way. Perhaps one of the most well-known Million Live doujinshi circle/person, Taka, makes Mocho merch for all occasions and while he also has a series of fan books (mostly detailing Mochoisms on radio) and doujinshi (CG/ML/765 SD stuff) he makes a lot more on these polyester eventer shirts (that wicks away sweat!). Or why Bin1’s now-smash-hit Captain America collab translates into T-shirts and a book of prints. Or why there were so many ReDrop shirts in the crowd during IDOLM@STER 10th.

I guess, in a way that ought to be obvious, the communities within the fandom are engaged persistently. The “artist alley” narrative is a different sort of thing than the typical eventer stuff. Fans at an IM@S live show up in Taka shirts meant a certain context permeates those people’s fandom, for example, and this a particular sort of cultural currency that only pays off in that specific context. But this is the same and yet different than saying you are a Kikuchi Makoto producer, for example. Rather, these fan creation actually reflects more nuanced and specific/unique, composite meanings. It’s easy to be a MakotoP and wear a pin badge of her, as you can get countless official and fan-made pin badges of her. It’s another if you show up with custom black coat embroidered with Hirata Hiromi on the back (let’s congratulate her on daughter #2 by the way). Or a ReDrop Makoto. Or certain pins over other pins.

To paraphrase, official events like lives and such are not “canon” but rather “content.” Fans ultimately have varying levels of preferences in terms of the engagement they want to have, they can have (eg., oversea versus domestic; rich versus poor; student versus salaryman), and what’s available. But unlike watching an anime or playing video games, event-as-content is both ways, as in fans at the event exchange/create ideas as well as consume new content. If the defining mark of otaku entertainment is its cultural ouroboros of remixing aspects of fandom in subsequent work, eventing culture seems like the same thing but on hyper mode.

In the US, I really don’t know AA culture enough to make a statement convincing enough about how it works to the degree that it runs parallelly like Tumblr or whatever. The truth is that these cultural spaces generate its own kind of content, but at the same time it resolves around other contents in which defines these spaces as fan spaces. That much applies across the board. In as much if you have only so many days visiting Japan, what you do with your time visiting which space is entirely a matter of your limitations and proclinations.


M@STER OF IDOL IP WORLD at Anime Next

This weekend, if things go according to plan, I will be giving a panel at Anime Next.

This was great

The convention scheduled my panel, called “M@STER OF IDOL IP WORLD,” on Saturday evening, 7pm. It’s located in Panel 318, which is the “small” panel room on the third floor of the ACC. It also runs at the same time as Trigger Autographs, which is one of the main reasons why I am going to this con… RIP me.

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Ueshama Elevates Dumb Characters

mira

I had a hard time coming up with something short and concise to describe the kind of characters Ueda Reina is particularly good at. Well, maybe not even; it’s more like how do I describe the lead of Bakuon without making slurs regarding people with disabilities. This is more a quick quip about Harmony and Bakuon, so let’s not tread those dangerous waters.

The thought came to me when I watched Harmony the other day. Harmony is Project Itoh’s best novel (and also the most critically regarded one), and because he was one of those writers who’s really taken into the “Tom Clancy style” of storytelling, Itou’s fleshed-out books probably will all work well for the silver screen. Well, it certainly did not disappoint.

Going into the movie I had no particular takes on the seiyuu for the movie, realizing only the lead role played by Sawashiro. Her husky voice probably bleeds into a certain other gun-touting SF anime heroine in the news recently. It’s probably an unavoidable comparison especially for a western audience, but Tuan is a more nuanced character and I think Miyukichi tried to bring that out best she could. She’s gotta be emo enough to ramp up to the climax, after all.

Like Empire of Corpses, there are these somewhat obtuse same-sex ships in Harmony, but it doesn’t really detract from the story in that it helped to slot in the plot device behind Kirie’s obsession for Miach, at least. What really sold the story was Miach. Kirie was a blunt instrument in some sense, perhaps better suited as a dude, now that I think back to her role is in this situation. Still, by being a girl there’s this some tension you can diffuse with their relationship, so the focus could be made more so on the conflicting feelings she has for Miach without having cisgendered romance clouding everything. However, internally constructed, I don’t know if Kirie sold it; the character was conflicted but it wasn’t clear how much the audience had to go on to infer to her inner desires. Miach sort of had to play the onion peeler to get us all the way home, largely through her final scene.

And I really just want to talk about how Ueshama was great as a psychotic world-ender in this role. Short of spoiling the movie let’s just say that this is why I had a hard time coming up a way to group Miach with Bakuon’s Hane (who could be described as a glorified bike sponge). And as a semi-frequent viewer of Hacka Channel it just made sense that Ueda is perfect for these kinds of high tone and low brow roles. If you had a scroll at her anime CV it might give you some insights. If youngin voice actresses of Japan get typecasted at all, Ueshama would be slotted as an oujosama type. In reality she escapes that sort of a thing in general and has already played a wide variety of character types in her short career. Arguably, her role in Harmonie is almost the opposite as her role in Harmony, right?

In this season she voices Hane and Kuromukuro’s Sophie, and those also make a good opposite-pair. The power of this woman who can be cool-cute one moment and old-adorable the other is pretty much already amusing enough on its own. And I don’t really have taken any interests in her via the usual route; purely through her acting and her on-screen charm, I guess.


My Million Live Playlist

I looped a lot of IDOLM@STER MILLION LIVE songs a lot the past twelve months, but after the third anniversary live I think I’ve been focusing on just a handful. Feels like worth sharing with you which, if only as a time-frozen snapshot of how it feels like.

Karen & Ritsuko

It’s a long list even after some heavy pruning, so in the interest of keeping a short list, I’ll just have two: the top 10, and the next 20 or so. The tiers reflects more my sentimental attachment than anything, but within tiers there are no ranks. To put it into perspectives, as of this writing, there are something like 152 Million Live vocal songs.

Youtubes and what not links when available.

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Spring 2015 First Opinions

Imocho #2

I had a pretty busy month between mid-March and mid-April. Two cons and a Japan trip will do that to you I guess. Most of that time suck went with the Winter season, but I think I’ve finally caught up with Spring enough to have some time to write about the currently airing shows.

It wasn’t exactly that I didn’t watch any anime in the winter, but more like I didn’t feel I watched enough. Maybe I’ll end up going back to some and at least finish the ones on the back burner, like Dimension W. And one of these days I will catch up to Concrete? I don’t know and I probably shouldn’t promise. Anyways, on with it:

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