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In this episode we discuss; WEBTOON Wednesday – Spotlight on Canvas with Danika Harrod The Comic Source Podcast Episode #1057 Check out Canvas on WEBTOON Learn how to get started on Canvas with Creator 101 Intro Background with Comics How … Continued The post WEBTOON Wednesday – Spotlight on Canvas with Danika Harrod: The Comic Source Podcast Episode #1057 appeared first on The Comic Source Blog.
Don't you just the feeling of the sand beneath your feet and that lovely music made by the jingle of gold doubloons in your pockets? The roll of a great ship under your boots, and the sound of your crew's heels a-clicking as they dance a reel on the topdeck? But the call of the Sea of Thieves is unrelenting and like those skeleton crews of pirates long dead, your fate is a peripatetic existence to rival that of clever Odysseus. You'll long to point your toes for home, but you'd best stay en pointe because you never know when you'll have cross swords with another pirate or struggle against the tentacles of giant kraken. How could someone, hearing all of this, just kick back and say there's "not enough to do", or that Sea of Thieves was more a proof of concept than a full game? Let this crew of salty sea dogs, featuring Natalie, Austin, and Rob, discuss their unexpected love for Sea of Thieves with the Pirate Queen herself, Danika Harrod, in whose honor this episode description was composed. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A lot of video game villains are cartoonish and over-the-top, but as Danika Harrod argued in a piece on Waypoint this week, sometimes games go too far in trying to make the point that evil people are evil. Danielle, Rob, and myself huddled around some microphones to use Danika’s piece as a launching pad for a broader discussion about how games use villains, prompting us to discuss everything from BioShock Infinite to Resident Evil: Code Veronica. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week Gita is joined by Waypoint's social editor Danika Harrod, who fills in for Patricia who has the week off. We talk shitposting, freak out over K-Pop group Big Bang and discuss the greatest Vine of all time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Musician and podcaster Danika Harrod joins merritt to talk message boards, dark YouTube, and haunted dolls.
On this week's episode, social editor and regular presence on all Waypoint content, Danika Harrod, joins host Josiah Renaudin to discuss social media and games culture. Danika details what it's like running Waypoint's social media accounts, how to balance comical, silly posts with more serious issues, the struggles of moderation in the age of Trump, how to establish a consistent social media voice, and what she's learned about game development over the last year.
Q3 goals: Increase social engagement by 10%, increase returns of used underwear by 40%, fire everyone and replace them with robots.
Waypoint's Danika Harrod swoops in to talk about the erotic yaoi intersections of My Hero Academia, Bloodborne, and Animorphs. Also,
Musician Danika Harrod joins merritt to talk game facts, friendly androids, and the heights of human achievement.
This week on Crunchycast Victoria (@sailorbee) is joined by her old pal Danika Harrod (@danikaharrod) and they discuss Danika's new job, some video game stuff, and some anime stuff! All that good stuff, plus answers to your burning questions. Victoria is posting videos on her YouTube channel. Reina has a YouTube Channel, too! You can find more episodes of Crunchycast on Crunchyroll, YouTube, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, and our Libsyn page. The Crunchycast is hosted by Victoria Holden and Reina Scully and recorded at Crunchyroll HQ. If you have any questions for our hosts, you can reach us at crunchycast@crunchyroll.com, or on Twitter at @SailorBee and @ReinaScully respectively. Noah Hafford produced Crunchycast’s opening and ending music. You can find more of Noah’s music at his SoundCloud.
VICE Gaming became Waypoint in a week of huge gaming news, with Rockstar dropping the first trailer for their long-anticipated Red Dead Redemption sequel, Nintendo providing details on their next piece of hardware, and voice actors officially going on strike. What a week! To break it all down, we invited other members of the Waypoint crew into the podcast bunker, including publisher Joel Fowler and social editor Danika Harrod. Besides the news, we explain why it’s so hard to build a website. Fonts? Logos? Bad ideas for names? Bazinga? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, Danika Harrod from Vice (formerly a brand manager at Crunchyroll) joins Evan and David to talk about Inio Asano’s manga A Girl on the Shore, aka “by far Asano’s horniest work.” Before that, though, the hosts talk about Mob Psycho 100, Berserk, and The Osamu Tezuka Story. Topics include: A Boy at the Club, Game of Thrones with Senpai, and eating the poop. Runtime: 1 hour, 10 minutes Direct Download RSS Feed Subscribe via: iTunes, Sticher, Google Music Send us Feedback! More episodes Show Notes Opening/Ending Song: “Blues Machine” by Scott Gratton Evan went to the club. All three hosts are watching Mob Psycho 100. Danika is watching Berserk. Teekyu is definitely the same thing as Berserk. Evan is reading The Osamu Tezuka Story (look for his review on Ani-Gamers). A Girl on the Shore is by Inio Asano Other Asano manga: Solanin, Goodnight Punpun, Nijigahara Holograph, What a Wonderful World Twitter: Ani-Gamers, Evan, David, Danika Evan writes for Otaku USA Magazine and just hosted his final episode of the Crunchycast. Danika is working for Vice and makes awesome music!
In this episode, Danika Harrod (@danikaharrod) from Vice (formerly a brand manager at Crunchyroll) joins Evan and David to talk about Inio Asano's manga A Girl on the Shore, aka "by far Asano's horniest work." Before that, though, the hosts talk about Mob Psycho 100, Berserk, and The Osamu Tezuka Story. Topics include: A Boy at the Club, Game of Thrones with Senpai, and eating the poop. Send us feedback at podcast@anigamers.com! Show notes, links, comments, and more can be found at http://anigamers.com/podcast.
This week Evan Minto is joined by special guests from the Crunchyroll crew, Sam Wolfe and Danika Harrod. In this episode, we’re totally addicted to Miitomo, Nintendo’s first big entry in world of mobile apps and games. We also talk about the Spring anime season. The gang is watching SPACE PATROL LULUCO and loving it. We’re all looking forward to Joker Game. Evan has the new season of Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure on his watch list. All that, plus answers to your questions! For the full show notes, check out http://crunchyroll.libsyn.com! In the news: WrestleMania 32 is relevant this week because anime was a big part of the event, with The New Day entering the ring in full Dragon Ball Z attire The Crunchycast crew also tackles your questions including: Why is there a trend with terrible "boy enters magic school" anime lately? What is our dream cute girls doing things show? What are some of the best/worst Anime Fandoms? Do we think turning anime or manga into giant multimedia franchises dilutes the quality of the work? 3DS or PS Vita for gaming and more specifically for playing games related to anime or based off of anime? How do we muster up the courage to ask someone out? Evan is writing for Ani-Gamers and Otaku USA. Victoria is posting videos on her YouTube channel. You can find more episode of Crunchycast on Crunchyroll, YouTube, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, and our Libsyn page. The Crunchycast is hosted by Victoria Holden and Evan Minto and edited by Bill Zoeker. If you have any questions for our hosts, you can reach us at crunchycast@crunchyroll.com, or on Twitter at @SailorBee and @VamptVo respectively. The opening and ending music in Crunchycast are produced by Noah Hafford, who can be found at his SoundCloud.
Katsucon 2016 was quite a show, with a Saturday fire alarm, lots of hotel vandalism, and a snowstorm at the tail end that left the Crunchyroll team stranded in DC for a day. Luckily, that meant that there was time to record a special Ani-Gamers Podcast episode featuring Evan, Crunchyroll’s Danika Harrod and Sam Wolfe, and Space Opera Satellite‘s Patrick. Plus, we got a brief visit from Ninja Slayer co-author Phillip “Ninj@” Morzez! Topics include scratch-and-sniff arcade machines, the legend of Vic Mignogna’s fire alarm-pulling antics, and drunken Pokémon fans. Keep in mind that the CR folks (Evan, Danika, and Sam) are NOT speaking as official Crunchyroll representatives here, so the opinions they express do not represent Crunchyroll or its affiliates. Direct Download – RSS Feed – iTunes – Send us Feedback! – More episodes Runtime: 34 minutes
Manga brand manager Danika Harrod explains the challenges of the position, how her dad got her into anime, and what Crunchyroll manga's real goal is.
Evan’s not flying back to New Jersey for AnimeNEXT, but he did attend FanimeCon 2014 in San Jose, CA. In this podcast, recorded on the fourth and final day of Fanime, Evan sits down with his Crunchyroll coworkers and arch-frenemies, Victoria Holden (a.k.a. SailorBee) and Danika Harrod (a.k.a. DarlingDaniChan) and cosplay photographer Ben Lam to talk about the con. Topics include Kill la Kill cosplay, Anime Hell, anime triathlons, and the “flipping off Evan” meme. This podcast was recorded in a hotel lobby, so the audio has a lot of background noise. Sorry! Show notes, links, and comments after the break. DIRECT DOWNLOAD – RSS Feed – iTunes – Send us Feedback! – More episodes (Runtime: 1 hour, 13 minutes) Opening/Ending Song: “Kill Me” by Lame Drivers Our guests: Danika Harrod, Victoria Holden, and Ben Lam Everyone but Ben works at Crunchyroll, the anime and Asian drama streaming website. The “Flipping off Evan” meme is a thing that Danika started on Twitter for no good reason. Former Ani-Gamers blogger Elliot Page started a Tumblr compiling the best shots. Evan ran/participated in four panels: Introducing Studio Trigger (slightly updated version of the “‘Trigger’ Warning” Genericon panel), The Beautiful Backgrounds of Anime, The Changing Faces of Anime, and the Crunchyroll Industry Panel. Victoria/Danika’s cosplays: Elf/Sorceress (Dragon’s Crown), Utena/Maou (Revolutionary Girl Utena/Maoyu), Griffith/Guts (Berserk) Panels Evan went to: Takami Akai (Gainax char. designer) Q&A, Noir (Gainax marketing) Q&A, Anime & Manga for Parents (run by Gilles Poitras), Anime Hell (this one is from Ryan Gavigan), Most Hilarious Bootlegs (run by Heidi Kemps), and History of Sports Anime/Manga (run by Tom Langston) Kill la Kill was the most popular show for cosplay at Fanime. Watch it right now on Crunchyroll, Netflix, or Daisuki. We don’t have photos from the con up yet, but we’ll link them here once they’re online. Otaku USA Magazine: Evan and Ink wrote stuff for the new issue (cover is JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure). Evan wrote about Yuyushiki and Red Data Girl (that one was supposed to be in the last issue) and Ink wrote about Problem Children Are Coming From Another World, Aren’t They? Twitter: Ani-Gamers, Evan, Victoria, Danika, Crunchyroll, Shitty Guts, Shitty Griffith (parody Berserk accounts) Ben’s stuff: cosplay photography Facebook page, Instagram account Email us at podcast@anigamers.com!