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Join hosts Author Carola and AichiYume in a fun jaunt to The Yaoi Shelf: an exploration of yaoi, shonen ai, and boy's love while discussing tropes, media criticism and more along the way. Grab a seat and get comfy, welcome to The Yaoi Shelf. In this month's episode, Amanda and Carola talk about a podcast favorite: Antique Bakery by Fumi Yoshinaga. theyaoishelf.carrd.co More places to listen- podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-yaoi-shelfPatreon.com/TheYaoiShelfOur 18+ Discord: https://discord.gg/mdp2h8KNr Where else can you find us? Amanda: Twitter- https://twitter.com/AichiYume YouTube-https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZb... Carola: Twitter- https://twitter.com/AuthorCarola Instagram-https://www.instagram.com/authorcarola --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-yaoi-shelf/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-yaoi-shelf/support
Even though there's been a lot of new anime remakes announced, there are still some we'd really like to see remade. Join Gracie, Isabelle, and Agnes as they discuss their picks for remakes and why they'd like to see them. Anime Discussed: Air Gear, Yu Yu Hakusho, Promised Neverland, Fairy Gone, Ikebukuro West Gate Park, Earl and Fairy, Antique Bakery
In part one, Suzanne covers queer culture in Japan, and suggests some non-yaoi/yuri anime with LGBTQ+ themes. Find us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook or email us! Thanks to VITNE and Shane Ivers at silvermansound.com for this week's music. Anime discussed: No.6, Banana Fish, Yuri on Ice, Antique Bakery, Ouran High School Host Club, Doukyuusei/Classmates, Huourou Musuko/Wandering Son, Revolutionary Girl Utena Further Reading Japanese ‘LGBT Boom' Discourse and its Discontents TW Queer Japan: A Quick History of Japan's LGBTQ Icons BL—Fujoshi—LGBTQ Japan Thread (Twitter) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/2weebsinatrenchcoat/message
It's Pride Month! To celebrate the end of June, we going to be talking about some of our favorites LGBTQ+ characters in anime, headcanons we have about characters, talk a bit about bad animes, and scream at ourselves about our terrible collective memory. This episode was originally recorded on June 21st. Spoiler Warning for the following animes: Wandering Son, Sweet Blue Flowers, Whisper of Words, Astro: Lost in SPace, Dramatical Murder, Antique Bakery, Revolutionary Girl Utena, Ouran High School Host Club, Given, Black Butler, Tokyo Godfathers, and Kuttsukiboshi
In honor of International Baking Day, we decided to watch the Korean movie from 2008, Antique Bakery! This is a spoiler episode, so if you don't want the movie ruined go over to Viki and watch it then come back and hear our thoughts! Learn more over on our blog post. We also are going to be doing a family-style recipe book. More information on that can be found here.
Kicking off a brand new year with the Korean comedy "Antique Bakery" based on the popular Manga by Fumi Yoshinaga in which Jin-hyuk who has wealth, good looks and charm sets up a bakery in order to meet the love of his life while being joined by his quirky team as they attempt to make the buisness a sucess. We also talk about merchandise, Funko Pops, boxset releases aswell as laying out the plan for the year ahead plus much more!! Shoutouts: Zobo With A Shotgun, Exploding Helicopter Podcast, French Toast Sunday
Mangakartan joulukalenterissa keskustelemme joka päivä valitsemastamme mangan kannesta. Kolmannen luukun takaa löytyy Antique Bakeryn pokkari 1. - Antique Bakery 1 (kuva)
I should edit this episode…after Pride Month…because I have good foresight and planning and such. Also the Lakers are making a super team, and Golden State is like, “Hold my beer.” This episode, we’re talking about Fumi Yoshinaga’s Antique Bakery published by DMP, Nagata Kabi’s My Solo Exchange Diary published by Seven Seas, and Inio Asano’s Solanin epilogue published by Viz Media. The song you heard at the beginning of the episode is “Life goes on~side K~” by CHEMISTRY from the Antique Bakery anime. As always, you can find me on Twitter @ImpassionateK, and my co-hosts Helen (@WanderinDreamr) and Apryll (@manjiorin) on Twitter at those places in the parenthesis. You can find both of their writing at The Organization of Anti-Social Geniuses, more of Helen’s writing at Narrative Investigations, and my writing at the Fandom Post. Listen Show notes: 0:40 – We talk about Antique Bakery! 20:05 – We talk about My Solo Exchange Diary! 37:01 – We talk about the Solanin epilogue! Next time we’re continuing our late Pride Month manga review with Girl Friends and My Bride Was a Boy!
It’s World Cup time, and I’ll be watching a few matches contemplating the sheer horror and corruption that FIFA and Russia are while cheering for my beloved country of origin, the Republic of Korea (colloquially South Korea). They will be utterly destroyed by Mexico and Germany, and it will hurt my very soul. At least there’s still LAFC and baseball. This episode, we’re talking about Seimu Yoshizaki’s Kingyo Used Books published by Viz Media and Natsume Ono’s ACCA: 13-Territory Inspection Department published by Yen Press. The song you heard at the top of the episode is “Shadow and Truth” by ONE III NOTES from the ACCA anime. As always, you can find me on Twitter @ImpassionateK, and my co-hosts Helen (@WanderinDreamr) and Apryll (@manjiorin) on Twitter at those places in the parenthesis. You can find both of their writing at The Organization of Anti-Social Geniuses, more of Helen’s writing at Narrative Investigations, and my writing at the Fandom Post. Listen Show notes: 0:47 – We talk about Kingyo Used Books! 13:52 – We talk about ACCA: 13-Territory Inspection Department! Next time is Antique Bakery and My Solo Exchange Diary, plus a special on the Solanin epilogue from TCAF!
Hola chicos, bienvenidos a un nuevo monográfico. En este caso he decidido recuperar, un programa que hice con mi compañero Sodapop, un programa sobre pelis gastronómicas. Espero que os guste y disculpar por el sonido. A continuación os hacemos una escaleta con todo lo sucedido en el programa y mi forma de seguirme, por twitter. Mi twitter es @further79 o mediante correo electrónico: mockinuniverse@gmail.com y en nuestro nuevo bloghttps://mockinguniverseydesvan.blogspot.com.es/. Espero que disfrutéis, tanto o más que nosotros. Saludos. Descripción detallada del capítulo: 00:32 Presentación Sodapop 01:10 Película Chocolat 01:42 Tráiler película Chocolat 03:38 Comentarios sobre la película 07:00 Sweeny Tod 07:30 Trailer Sweeny Tod 09:52 Comentarios sobre la película 12:19 Tráiler Charlie y la fábrica de chocolate 14:41 Comentarios sobre la película 19:28 Tráiler Súper size me 21:17 Comentarios sobre la película 23:15 Cine asiático. La cocina no tiene fronteras, el amor tampoco 23: 35 Antique Bakery 24:33 Directores que hacen películas sobre comida 24:45 Tráiler El chef, Jon Favreau 26:35 Comentarios sobre la película 00:28:45 Superchef,, Jackie chan 00:29:34 Juegos para aprender a cocinar para niños 00:30:10 Realitys y programas de cocina 00:35:45 Psicópatas y caníbales 00:35:46 Serie Hannibal 00:38:00 Película Delicatessen 00:39:55 Tráiler película El cocinero el ladrón su mujer y su amante 00:43:11 Comentarios sobre la película 00:47:15 Trailer Fuera de carta 00:49:26 Comentarios sobre la película 00:52:12 Trailer Ratatouille 00:54:39 Comentarios sobre la película 00:57:27 Biografías sobre cocineros 00:57:36 Trailer Julie & Julia 00:59:44 Comentarios sobre la película 01:02:14 Trailer La cocinera del presidente 01:03:50 Comentarios sobre la película 01:05:10 Comentarios Una buena receta 01:07:50 Tráiler Sin reservas 01:10:00 Comentarios sobre la película 01:13:50 Tráiler El Festín de Babbette 01:15:15 Comentarios sobre la película 01:18:15 Tráiler Come reza ama 01:20:27 Comentarios sobre la película 01:22:29 Tráiler Copas 01:24:50 Comentarios sobre la película 01:27:10 Trailer Bon Apetite 01:29:29 Comentarios sobre la película 01:32:10 Tráiler Frankie y Jhonnie 01:34:20 Comentarios sobre la película 01:35:25 Tráiler Gordos 01:37:09 Comentarios sobre la película 01:29:40 Trailer Jamon Jamon 01:41:45 Comentarios sobre la película 01:43:00 Trailer Atún y Chocolate 01:44:47 Comentarios sobre la película 01:47:02 Comentarios Un paseo por las nubes 01:49:55 Tráiler Soul Kitchen 01:51:50 Comentarios sobre la película 01:53:02 Tráiler Un Viaje de 10 metros 01:55:24 Comentarios sobre la película 01:57:13 Tráiler Una pastelería en Tokio 01:58:53 Comentarios sobre la película 02:00:45 Tráiler Fresa y Chocolate 02:02:15 Comentarios sobre la película 02:03:40 Tráiler Tomates verdes fritos 02:06:15 Comentarios sobre la película 02:09:18 Tráiler Tapas 02:11:35 Comentarios sobre la película 02:14:50 Despedida
Manga, the ubiquitous Japanese comic books written on just about every subject—sports, music, sex, shooting pool—represent about 40% of all books published in Japan. In recent decades ‘food manga’ has exploded. Stories of food and conflict and competition abound in mangas like Soldier of Food, Food Wars, Cooking Papa…The Kitchen Sisters Present—Hidden Kitchens: War and Food and Manga. “Manga is a cradle to grave phenomenon,” says Deb Aoki, writer for Anime network and Publisher’s Weekly. It’s a visual storytelling medium that people enjoy from the day they first start reading or enjoying pictures to the day they die. “There’s this Japanese concept, Otaku,” says Sylvan Mishima Brackett, chef and owner of Rintaro Restaurant in San Francisco. “Otaku is a deep, passionate enthusiasm about some obscure part of the universe. Manga tend to cluster around very specific Otaku. It’s a place where people can brush up on the hyper-specifics of their enthusiasms.” “Food manga, gurume manga, gourmet manga, is one of the major genres within manga that’s just been growing exponentially,” says Nancy Stalker, Professor of Japanese History and Culture at the University of Texas at Austin. She wrote a paper called “Gourmet Samurai: Changing Gender Norms in Japanese Food TV.” FOOD WARS, DETECTIVE GLUTTON, SOLDIER OF FOOD Food manga first appeared in the 1980’s when the Japanese economy was very strong. One of the first, Oishinbo, ran for over 20 years and became the basis for an animated series, as have many manga since. “There always has to be conflict in manga, especially in food manga,” says Zhong. “There is not any real peace in manga. If there is peace it’s really short, maybe one or two chapters, then back to war right afterwards. War produces content.” Since Japan opened to the West in the nineteenth century, food has been an element of its international identity. “Traditionally the eating of four-legged creatures was proscribed by Buddhist belief,” says Stalker. “The Emperor first publicly ate meat in 1873. Eating beef was seen as something that would help build the national physique and make the Japanese more like westerners.” In order to compete with western soldiers, the Japanese military began to introduce more beef, more meat and fat, into the diet of the soldier to help build a strong army. The modern manga industry came into being after World War II. It started with Osamu Tezuka, creator of Astro Boy, who was influenced by Walt Disney. “That American content was brought over by the American Occupation,” says Leyla Aker, Senior Vice President of Publishing at Viz Media, a company that specializes in Japanese graphic novels and anime. “During the American occupation of Japan a large portion of the Japanese population was subsisting on hand-outs given by the American forces.” There were severe shortages of food during the Occupation and all foods were strictly rationed. When the circumstances of the war became dire many people resorted to eating bark from trees and replacing sawdust and wood dust in recipes for flour. Many Japanese died of starvation. Miles Thomas, Brand Manager at CrunchyRoll, remembers an anime called Grave of the Fireflies. “One of the most evocative films I’ve seen, about two orphans during World War II who are starving, hungry. They steal food, trying their hardest to survive. “It really makes you think about the darker side of food when people don’t have enough of it to survive,” adds Tiffany Chen who is also a Brand Manager with Crunchy Roll. “For a long time, World War II was just a history you studied in class. I never really felt connected to it personally. A lot of young people actually don’t even know about the atomic bomb. After watching this film, it was a pretty sobering moment.” OISHINBO: JAPAN AND CULINARY NATIONALISM Oishinbo, one of the oldest of the food manga is very popular with adult men, Aoki tells us. “The main character is this scrappy reporter. His father is this snooty gourmet who sets up this ritzy gourmet club for only rich people. They have dueling palette battles.” Oishinbo is written by Tetsu Kariya who is very opinionated about food. The manga creates drama about different food issues – about growing it and cooking it. “It’s kind of controversial,” says Aoki. “He defends eating whale meat, the history of it, how delicious, how dare anyone tell us not to.” “Tetsu Kariya has a very progressive, political stance,” adds Lorie Brau, Associate Professor of Japanese Foreign Languages and Literature at the University of New Mexico, “He embeds these social messages inside his manga.” One of Oishinbo’s chief concerns is foreign influences. How do you maintain the important aspects of your culture while still engaging with the world at large? The manga uses food as a lens to address Japan’s place in the world. YAWEH: MANGA FOR YOUNG WOMEN There is a different subset of manga targeted at young Japanese women called Yaweh about homosexual love affairs. “Boys love” is one of the most popular sub-genres of manga. “Antique Bakery features a cast of tall, thin elegant beautiful young men. They all work in a western style bakery,” Aoki tells us. “Women fall in love with them because they are so handsome. But they’re not available,” says Brau. “But the cakes are available so they make many young women happy.” What Did You Eat Yesterday? has become a very popular manga for recipes. The manga tells the story of a gay couple, one of whom is a lawyer, the other a hairdresser and the lawyer is very intent on creating economical, delicious meals for the two of them. THE HERBIVORE MAN: MANGA AND GENDER NORMS “In the last 10 years Japanese demographics have been shifting,” says Nancy. “Fewer and fewer people are getting married. The rate of unmarried men ages 30 to 34 climbed from 21% to 47%. For women it jumped from 9% to 34% in a decade. The media has come up with this term “herbivore men” Urban men in their 20 and 30’s who are more into fashion and culture than women. Rejecting flesh, therefore they are herbivores. Other conservative pundits say “well, it’s the increase of carnivorous women, women who are too aggressive and focused on their career and refuse to become a full time housewife they create the herbivore man. This is changing men’s relationship with food. They have to increasingly be responsible for their own meals. That is being reflected in these dramas that show a kind of everyman develop a sense of culinary confidence.” Aoki tells us that Manga like Oishinbo and Food Wars in a way represent a war within people to be their best. “There’s honor in fighting to be the best you can be. That if you’re going to do it you’re going to be the best damn one doing it. The way of the sword, the way of the chef.”
Neste programa, Judeu Ateu e Estranho recebem a Gabriela Negro para iniciarem a prometida maratona de Mangás Enquadrados! Para começar, pagamos a promessa e falamos sobre um mangá escolhido pela Jéssica Yukinaime, vencedora de um concurso cultural passado, e falamos sobre o yaoi (?) Copernicus no Kokyuu! Lembrando sempre que o quadro Mangá Enquadrado analisa uma obra COM SPOILERS, então no momento em que falarmos para você que não leu a obra parar de ouvir o podcast, pare de ouvir o podcast.Cronologia do episódio (00:00:27) Copernicus no Kokyuu (01:25:45) Leitura de Emails (01:43:00) Recomendação da Semana - Antique Bakery
We're back from Otakon and fighting off coughs. Clarissa reviews the manga Antique Bakery, Daryl discusses the MANLY CARTOON that is New Getter Robo, and Gerald opines on the limited edition release of Patlabor the Movie 2. Visit http://www.animeworldorder.com for full show notes and supplemental links.