Author Archives: omo

About omo

I run the site, too.

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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Armchair Quarterbacking: Animator Wages

I think it was a couple weeks ago when the animator wages survey results was published by JAniCA. It made its rounds as usual. Here’s just a link to one of many.

The last coverage I read was one of the matome blogs blogging the Japanese translation of 4chan reactions to someone posting Yuyucow’s translated averages. I’m like, this is like a cow eating grass in one stomach and regurgitating it and re-eating it into another (no pun intended). But also /a/ sure does not get it. And I think it’s important to have some context.

(o・∇・o)

Obviously I don’t have first (or much second) hand experience as an animator trying to make it into the industry. And it might even be fair to say the vets who have been doing it for 10+ years might faced different challenges as people who are trying to be an animator in Japan today.

Making animation, for the most part, is something you learn on the job. You can certainly enroll in some higher level classes and pick up trade skills in academia, but typically people (and industry) approach this as you would an associate’s or trade degree. I mean if you enroll and graduate from Kyoto Animation’s schools, I’m sure you can start well as an animator but that’s a very specific kind of training you have gotten. Learning to animate is something you can certain do it yourself, too. In the past 10-15 years this has been something actually possible because of advanced (piratable) software you can run on consumer laptops, and rendering would only take tens of minutes for a short clip. Nerdy enough, you can pull a Shinkai (he’s really nerdy). Today, it’s even more accessible for artists to fool around with animation.

The story/use case goes like this. So when people join the animation biz in Japan as an animator, typically they start as in-betweeners. And on that JAniCA report we know they don’t make much money per month. We can double check this pretty easily because in-betweeners are typically paid by the drawing, and you can work backwards and estimate how many drawings are produced on average, and how much time it takes. at the super low price of 100 yen take home pay per drawing, we’re talking about 925 drawings per month. Is that a lot? A little? Assuming an inbetweener work 5 days a week on average of a 22-day work-month, that’s 42 drawings a day roughly. Does that sound way too low?

So one thing off the bat is that a lot of inbetweeners do not work full time. I mean given this kind of pay, it makes sense; it’s like master and doctorate students working for pay to fund their life while slaving away under a form of academic apprenticeship. Animators too work in this form, at least on a certain level. Meanwhile the freelance-y nature of the job gives them flexibility to work somewhere that pays better.

The real issue with low in-between pays isn’t that it’s not enough to live off of, although that too is problematic. The real problem is the entry pay is too low compared to other things people with similar aspirations and skills could be doing. That’s the core long-term issue with Japanese hand-drawn animation. Or any industry with low wages, excessive working hours, and high stress. Without new and young people going up that apprentice ladder, there will be talent drain, as fewer and fewer people learn the craft as more of the seniors leave the industry, or people quitting half way. Making a living as an in-betweener is possible, it would be very hard, and it might limit the potential pool of applicants to people lucky enough to be working with a KyoAni or living in their parents’ home, but it’s not how the numbers suggest how it’s typically done.

What’s also good to note is that inbetweening is the kind of grunt work you unload on the new guy in the animation studio, if they need that extra work to learn, but it’s literally the kind of grunt work that could be eliminated through better automation and computing advances. There are a suite of software that will auto-inbetween for you, when you insert the key frames. And these software will only get better as time goes on, to the degree that established animation companies might use it. In-betweening is typically checked as they’re colored anyway, so that low-paying job might disappear altogether in the near future and fold into some kind of in-between check or shiage role.

Anyway, the freelance/part-time/full-time kind of nature of majority of Japanese animator professionals is something we have to take into account in looking at data like this, because otherwise it doesn’t make any sense.


Keiretsu In Space

Suddenly a post about Classroom Crisis and Elon Musk? LOL. Maybe this is overdue really…

Shinkai's new film...

It’s hard to take seriously, in any anime setting, the existence of keiretsu systems. It’s a gross exaggeration, but Japanese society today is not a whole lot different than its feudal era self, at least when it comes to socieo-economic blocs that control the large majority of its economy. You have these vertically and horizontally integrated companies that controls everything from top to bottom–finance, retail, distribution, manufacturing, and more–and these keiretsu groups literally own the majority of wealth in the country, and is the beating heart of the Japanese economy.

What is a keiretsu? It’s basically a network (more precisely, a cartel) of companies, either horizontally or vertically integrated, or both, that have connected interests and interlocking ownership. Usually at the center of these businesses are a holding company and a bank to make financial transactions feasible. How they operate is similar to how Elon Musk’s associated major businesses operate: Solar City, Tesla, and SpaceX. Solar City sell bonds from energy investments and create demand for home batteries and get more people off the grid; Tesla sells battery to Solar City to scale its operations (justifies the “Gigafactory”) and home solar makes buying electric cars more appealing; and Space X takes its paid-up-front contracts and invests in Solar City bonds which perform much better than safer but low-yield bonds Aerospace contract money goes into typically. Meanwhile the chief himself buys stock and sells his stock options and provides personal loans from his net worth to finance the various businesses during times of need, providing liquidity and a safety net.

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fhana – What a Wonderful World Line

I still dig fhana, now that their sophomore studio album is out. I gave it a spin or three, and what keeps true are its bright, open instrumentals. And now that I know what they sound like live, I can easily imagine what it sounds like in that context.

To explain, fhana is possibly the first anison band that I felt a distinct need to get audiophile-y on. There’s a dimensionality to their sound in the live that just doesn’t show up on home audio unless you really game for it. It’s like hearing four sources of sounds that just go at it with each other, rather than what two speakers or however many that goes into your ear in an average listening situation. There’s this thoughtful interplay in some of their songs that just don’t translate well on a recording. In some ways hearing a new fhana studio album is almost like just getting a sample and knowing you are not getting the full meal. I feel plugging my meager K7xx into that Orb amp isn’t going to make any difference.

The best track on the album is the title track, What a Wonderful World Line. The PV is right below->

Unfortunately, I think as a whole this album is not as enjoyable as their Lantis solo debut album, but musically I already hear the necessary twist and turns that comes within expectation of a healthy, developing, ongoing artistic effort. Maybe what I’m hearing is just how things go with a band that is making music for the sake of it. Maybe it’s deliberate. To start, the sound doesn’t betray, and it stays true to what we know as fhana, if albeit less punchy than it used to be. Towana’s vocals is as impressive, but it doesn’t quite explodes for me the same way; rather, her always-full-thrust voice runs a little more than it used to be, grates a little harder at those same registers. The instrumentals fade a little compared to what it used to be; some of the tricks are no less obvious the second time around, and it’ll be up to you to find either comfort or repetition in them. And I think fhana accounts for all this by mixing it up, giving Sato more vocal room (no other reason to explain why that track is in the middle of the album) and more stylistic variety between tracks. Even The Seed and the Sower, which is probably a good example of what to expect from this CD, comes in more as diversion, a falsely familiar, same-sounding, but somewhat different experience for a climax.

It’s kind of like being in the sun a little too long?

But these are sophomoric changes within expectation I think. Grading it on a curve, This Wonderful World Line still comes out ahead of the pack. Which is always to say fhana is really neat in that they exist as an anison band, who write music for anime and games. Maybe you can see it as a handicap, but I think that’s the undercurrent of their artistry. It can’t be easy writing for hire for committees of banks and media conglomerates on projects involving hundreds of people and embrace that as your main thing as an art.

If you like progressive jpop and anime music, please listen to fhana and you can iTune their albums on the JP or US stores. It’s a on CDJ here, the LE comes with a Blu-ray with their Lisani footage and some PVs. I think the full verdict on this one is still not finalized because some of these tracks will likely grow on me on repeat. Well, guess our mileage will vary.

PS. Breaking some ground, fhana recorded an all-English track with What a Wonderful World Line. It’s also the most Japanese thing ever, by that I mean the meaning and expression in the song. Penned by Lynne Hobday. Have a look. Every time I hear it I want to MST3K it.