Japanese mecha anime creator, animator, songwriter, director, screenwriter and novelist
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Il 22 febbraio 1981, qualcosa cambiò per sempre nella storia dell'animazione giapponese. A Shinjuku, migliaia di fan si radunarono per vedere il primo film di Mobile Suit Gundam, dando vita a un evento che sarebbe passato alla storia come “La dichiarazione del nuovo secolo dell'animazione”.Non fu solo un raduno, fu una rivoluzione culturale. Da quel giorno, l'anime non fu più considerato un semplice intrattenimento per bambini, ma divenne arte, linguaggio, futuro.In questa puntata speciale di Plot Twister, vi raccontiamo la storia di quel giorno leggendario: la nascita del fandom adulto, le parole di Yoshiyuki Tomino, i cosplay di Char e Lalah, e il potere dell'home video che rese tutto possibile.
Negli anni '60 e '70 il Giappone fu attraversato da potenti movimenti studenteschi contro la guerra in Vietnam, l'imperialismo americano e l'opprimente sistema sociale. Ma che impatto ha avuto tutto questo sulla cultura pop?In questa puntata di Giappone nel Mondo, insieme a Rudy esploriamo come l'animazione giapponese sia diventata veicolo di ribellione. Dal realismo ideologico di Yoshiyuki Tomino in Gundam, alla visione distopica di Otomo in Akira, fino ai primi messaggi ecologisti e anti-militaristi di Miyazaki, analizziamo come questi autori abbiano trasformato l'anime in un atto politico e culturale.Un viaggio tra rivoluzioni universitarie, mecha, mutanti e utopie perdute. Condividete con noi nei commenti quali opere secondo voi meglio rappresentano lo spirito della ribellione giapponese!
Evan, Pat, and returning guest Tom Aznable just saw the latest Gundam anime in the theater (showtimes still available!), so they jumped on the mics to chat about G-Quacks and what to expect from the full TV series when it airs in April. Big-time spoiler alert on this one, the movie has a twist that we couldn't avoid talking about. Runtime: 1 hour, 22 minutes Direct Download RSS Feed iTunes Spotify Google Music Send us Feedback! Support us on Patreon! Join our Discord server! More episodes Show Notes Opening/Ending Song: “Blues Machine” by Scott Gratton Episode edited by Patrick Sutton. The Review: Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX Beginning Name drops: “First” Gundam (Mobile Suit Gundam from 1979), Sunrise, Yoshiyuki Tomino, Khara, Trigger, Hideaki Anno, Kazuya Tsurumaki, Neon Genesis Evangelion, FLCL, Yoji Enokido, Ikuto Yamashita, Animator Expo, The Dragon Dentist, The Witch from Mercury, 0080: War in the Pocket, Gundam SEED Destiny Behind-the-scenes materials referenced during the show: Interview with the staff: Part 1, Part 2 Design Works artbook (hosted on E-Hentai so the ads surrounding it might not be safe for work!) BlueSky: Ani-Gamers, Evan, Pat, Tom Mastodon: Ani-Gamers, Evan Evan runs Azuki, a manga publisher and subscription app
The following is a special presentation courtesy of VGU Gaiden: A Retrospective Podcast. You can find their podcast feed here: https://tinyurl.com/ycynku3x Welcome to VGU Gaiden!Hosted by Graydon Webb and DJ Risio, this retrospective film podcast follows two best friends as they share their favorite films with each other and revisit what makes them special (or in some cases, really weird). As always, SPOILERS AHEAD!You can find us on BlueSky:Graydon - https://bsky.app/profile/graytlo777.bsky.socialDJ - https://bsky.app/profile/lordsweepy.bsky.socialVGU Gaiden - https://bsky.app/profile/vgugaiden.bsky.social and follow the other VGU Podcast Feed: https://tinyurl.com/363zdxz6Thank you so much for listening!Please rate the podcast, subscribe, and share it around! All audio belongs to Nippon Sunrise and Yoshiyuki Tomino.All music credit goes to Takeo Watanabe and Yūshi Matsuyama.We do not own these rights.
What is that light? Is that Garzey's Wing? Is he the Holy Warrior? Is that Garzey's Wing? What was that? Garzey's Wing? Yes, Your Stupid Minds is dipping its toe into anime for the first time ever with one of the worst OVAs of all time combined with one of the worst English dub tracks of all time. It's Yoshiyuki Tomino's 1996 three episode OVA Garzey's Wing. Chris is a recent high school graduate who is SO easy GOING and continually fails his college entrance exams. When he goes to his home town to attend a high school reunion pool party, a giant mystical duck bifurcates his consciousness and half of him goes to the parallel world of Byston Well, while his other half remains in the real world and dead-set on attending this pool party. To put it as simply and clearly as possible, Chris must help the slaves of the Metomeus Tribe avoid the Dragorols and Daragau of Zagazoa's War Beast Army Corps under the command of the ruthless King Fungun to get to the Boundless Plains of Gabujuju. Yamato Takeru no Mikoto has granted Chris the power of Garzey's Wing, which allows him to fly or something. His Ferario friend Fellan-Fa, female warrior Leelince, and headband-wearing mystic Hassan-san help in this plane of reality, while real world girlfriend Rumiko lends her chi to help him on both planes while he also attends a pool party. Seems clear enough. Combine this with an absolutely abysmal late 90s English dub track where yelling constituted acting and we're left with an absolutely baffling experience that would still be confusing even if this series actually ended properly. Join us as we somehow make sense of our convoluted situations and discuss this cacophony of fantasy nonsense.
On tonight's show... We discuss WcDonalds becoming a reality, two of the largest manga piracy websites are offline, and a co-founder of the first North American anime club and one of the founders of Furry fandom passes... Also, Crunchyroll offers compensation for digital copy owners, confirms AI subtitling testing, and no price changes except for Funimation legacy subscribers. Lastly, a voice actress deletes Twitter over hate messages caused by false accusations, and Gundam creator, Yoshiyuki Tomino returns to anime! Meanwhile in Japan, a cursed festival to be filmed for the first time, in-flight KitKats discontinued by an airline, and an ATM will automatically play anti-fraud videos for people on their cellphones?! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/animejamsession/support
We're back for YET another Gundam episode! Joining me and Josh today is friend of the show @kennedytcooper, and we're getting into our long awaited episode on Gundam Unicorn, possibly among the greatest entries in the series - as well as several extended discussion's on creator Yoshiyuki Tomino's BIZARRE interviews, an early commentary on Ridley Scott's film Napoleon, and much more! Follow Kennedy on Bluesky at @kennedytcooper.bsky.social and on twitter at @kennedytcooper! Follow Josh at @JoshuaKoss17 End Track - PIANO UC-NO.3: Mobile Suit Gundam: Unicorn Original Soundtrack (2010) - Shigeki Saegusa https://linktr.ee/greenhousegaslighting
Sponsored by http://www.betterhelp.com/thebarn - Save 10% off your first month with code "THEBARN" at checkout!Let's get things started! Domon Kasshu is in search of his brother looking for answers while challenging other Gundam fighters all across the world to secure political dominance for Neo Japan. This stand-alone entry in the Gundam franchise is fast paced and loaded with action. We also look into Yoshiyuki Tomino, the original creator of the Gundam franchise that began in 1979. Gundam fight ready, set, go!This episode is sponsored by www.betterhelp.com/TheBarn and presented to you by The Barn Media Group.
In Today's Episode, Otaku Nate and Ethan Halker of Bomb Squad Productions take a look at Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino's 1977 Super Robot anime series Zambot 3! A Show that many cite as being the blueprint for what would become Gundam, but under the surface there's a lot more going with how it influenced the Super Robot genre going forward and how it was able to tell darker stories beneath its colorful surface. Learn about the show, its legacy, and what Tomino and other took away from this series! Also, you get to learn what a Guiro is too! Follow Ethan on Social Media https://linktr.ee/sundownmcmoon Bomb Squad Productions https://www.youtube.com/@BombSquadProductions Follow us on Social Media! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OtakuNateShow Twitter: https://twitter.com/otakunateshow Artwork by Infinity Ark https://twitter.com/InfinityArk Outro Song: “Sayonara” By Desired
This is the episode you've been waiting for! Sunset Productions has a sit-down, tell-all interview with the creator of Gundam himself, Yoshiyuki Tomino! Tomino-san answers all of our most burning questions about Gundam, including the live-action film, space exploration, Haro, and more! Happy AFD, listeners! Haro at HLJ Haro at USA Gundam Store More Haro at HLJ This episode features sound effects from Pixabay
The Men Who Created Gundam by Hideki Ohwada is a fictionalized version of the real story around the creation of Mobile Suit Gundam, the 1979 anime series that spawned a multi-billion dollar franchise that endures to this day. It's a gag manga that takes numerous creative liberties with real stories of the production history and key creatives (specifically, Yoshiyuki Tomino, Yoshikazu Yasuhiko, and Kunio Okawara), and exaggerates things for comedic effect. Of course, depending on your sense of humor, your mileage may vary. There are definitely some things in this book that are a bit questionable. We thought it would be worthwhile to cover this book, seeing as how we read the entirety of Mobile Suit Gundam: The Origin by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko last year. Think of this as a sort of postscript to our Origin coverage! If you want to check out our coverage of The Origin manga, we have a Spotify playlist here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/3IEJYdVyNUan4qtqiDrLgv Thanks again to Corey J. Beats for producing our theme music. Check out all of his music on various platforms here: linktr.ee/Coreyjbeats If you have any thoughts, comments, questions, or corrections, we're here. Feel free to hit us up on our socials, or email us! We have a Linktree here: linktr.ee/betweenthegutters
We're back for another segment of Movie Magic and YET another Gundam episode! Joining me and Josh today is friend of the show @kennedytcooper, and we're getting into Gundam, the Universal Century timeline, surprising themes of anti-fascism, and what exactly did Yoshiyuki Tomino mean in THAT interview??? Follow Kennedy on twitter at @kennedytcooper! Follow Josh at @JoshuaKoss17, and check out the Monster Pop podcast at @MonsterPopPod linktr.ee/MonsterPop Follow Adi on le twitter hellsite at @fibonaccisniper End Track: Mobile Suit Gundam: Char's Counterattack Original Soundtrack (1988) - Shigeki Saegusa Follow us on: Twitter - @PodGreenhouse Email us at: greenhousegaslightingpod@gmail.com https://linktr.ee/greenhousegaslighting
Because we just don't have enough randos blaming us singlehandedly for American anime fandom's ignorance, we've decided to talk about the theatrical film Mobile Suit Gundam: Cucuruz Doan's Island, a remake of the "lost episode" of the original Mobile Suit Gundam series. Visit www.animeworldorder.com for full show notes and supplemental links.
On a déjà parlé quatre fois des musiques de jeux vidéo et deux fois des musiques de films par le passé. Aujourd'hui, revêtons nos plus beau cosplays de weeaboos et plongeons tête la première dans les musiques d'anime, ces travaux d'animation japonais qui ont depuis longtemps traversé les frontières. Nous essayerons évidemment de ne pas tomber dans la facilité, on a un standing à tenir ; au contraire, que ce soit avec des séries ou des films, ce genre démocratisé depuis soixante années mérite tout l'Amour que l'on a pour ce style de dessin reconnaissable au premier coup d'œil. Ça va bien se passer, on vous le promet. Bonne écoute. Tracklist : Tatsuo Takai - Astro Boy Song (Kamitikada Boys Choir Version 3) (Astro Boy, Osamu Tezuka et Yoshiyuki Tomino, 1963) Noam - Goldorak (Goldorak, Go Nagai et Tomoharu Katsumata, 1979) Akihiko Matsumoto - OZ, the Virtual City (Summer Wars, Mamoru Hosoda, 2009) Kow Otani - Just Communication (Gundam Wing, Masashi Ikeda et Shinji Takamatsu, 1995) Rosa Walton et Hallie Coggins - I Really Want to Stay at Your House (Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, Hiroyuki Imaishi, 2020) Origa - Inner Universe (Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Kenji Kamiyama, 2003) Joe Hisaishi - Mononoke-Hime (Princess Mononoke, Hayao Miyazaki, 1997) Yoshiki feat. Hyde - Red Swan (Attack on Titan, Tetsurō Araki, Masashi Koizuka et Yasuko Kobayashi, 2018) Daisuke Hasegawa et Karen Aoki - Great Days (Jojo's Bizarre Adventure Pt.4: Diamond Is Unbreakable, Naokatsu Tsuda, Toshiyuki Kato et Yasuko Kobayashi, 2016) Yui - Rolling Star (Bleach, Noriyuki Abe et Masashi Sogo, 2007) JAM Project - The Hero (One Punch Man, Shingo Natsume et Tomohiro Suzuki, 2016) Yoko Takahashi et Toshiyuki Omori - A Cruel Angel's Thesis (Neon Genesis Evangelion, Hideaki Anno, 1995) The Seatbelts - Tank! (Cowboy Bebop, Shinichirō Watanabe et Keiko Nobumoto, 1998) Nujabes - The Space Between Two World (Samurai Champloo, Shinichirō Watanabe et Shinji Obara, 2008) Susumu Hirasawa - Murder (Berserk, Naohito Takahashi et Yasuhiro Imagawa, 1997) Photo : Grand Blue, Kenji Inoue et Kimitake Yoshioka (2018)
On a déjà parlé quatre fois des musiques de jeux vidéo et deux fois des musiques de films par le passé. Aujourd'hui, revêtons nos plus beau cosplays de weeaboos et plongeons tête la première dans les musiques d'anime, ces travaux d'animation japonais qui ont depuis longtemps traversé les frontières. Nous essayerons évidemment de ne pas tomber dans la facilité, on a un standing à tenir ; au contraire, que ce soit avec des séries ou des films, ce genre démocratisé depuis soixante années mérite tout l'Amour que l'on a pour ce style de dessin reconnaissable au premier coup d'œil. Ça va bien se passer, on vous le promet. Bonne écoute. Tracklist : Tatsuo Takai - Astro Boy Song (Kamitikada Boys Choir Version 3) (Astro Boy, Osamu Tezuka & Yoshiyuki Tomino, 1963) Noam - Goldorak (Goldorak, Go Nagai & Tomoharu Katsumata, 1979) Akihiko Matsumoto - OZ, the Virtual City (Summer Wars, Mamoru Hosoda, 2009) Kow Otani - Just Communication (Gundam Wing, Masashi Ikeda & Shinji Takamatsu, 1995) Rosa Walton & Hallie Coggins - I Really Want to Stay at Your House (Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, Hiroyuki Imaishi, 2020) Origa - Inner Universe (Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, Kenji Kamiyama, 2003) Joe Hisaishi - Mononoke-Hime (Princess Mononoke, Hayao Miyazaki, 1997) Yoshiki feat. Hyde - Red Swan (Attack on Titan, Tetsurō Araki, Masashi Koizuka & Yasuko Kobayashi, 2018) Daisuke Hasegawa & Karen Aoki - Great Days (Jojo's Bizarre Adventure Pt.4: Diamond Is Unbreakable, Naokatsu Tsuda, Toshiyuki Kato & Yasuko Kobayashi, 2016) Yui - Rolling Star (Bleach, Noriyuki Abe & Masashi Sogo, 2007) JAM Project - The Hero (One Punch Man, Shingo Natsume & Tomohiro Suzuki, 2016) Yoko Takahashi & Toshiyuki Omori - A Cruel Angel's Thesis (Neon Genesis Evangelion, Hideaki Anno, 1995) The Seatbelts - Tank! (Cowboy Bebop, Shinichirō Watanabe & Keiko Nobumoto, 1998) Nujabes - The Space Between Two World (Samurai Champloo, Shinichirō Watanabe & Shinji Obara, 2008) Susumu Hirasawa - Murder (Berserk, Naohito Takahashi & Yasuhiro Imagawa, 1997) Photo : Grand Blue, Kenji Inoue & Kimitake Yoshioka (2018)
Both Gundam as a franchise and Weekly Suit Gundam as a podcast come full circle this week by returning to the world of First Gundam, with the brand-new movie set in the timeline of the original show, Mobile Suit Gundam: Cucuruz Doan's Island! A remake of the infamous 15th episode of Mobile Suit Gundam – an episode with such a troubled production that creator Yoshiyuki Tomino has never allowed it to be distributed outside Japan – original Gundam character designer and animation supervisor Yoshikazu Yasuhiko returns as director to redeem this story of a Zeon deserter protecting war orphans on a deserted island. It's an absolutely wonderful movie, as beautifully animated as one would expect from the great Yasuhiko, but also incredibly smart and soulful in its themes and storytelling, finding a particularly compelling story for original Gundam protagonist Amuro Ray, played again here – possibly for the last time – by a never-better Tōru Furuya. This is a great movie, and an absolute pleasure to discuss for our final Weekly Suit Gundam before the launch of Japanimation Station. Enjoy, and we'll see you on the other side with the premiere of Japanimation Station on August 1st. Be sure to subscribe at http://japanimationstation.com Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman WeeklySuitGundam.Com http://weeklystuffpodcast.com
We start today's show by chatting about work, with Sean telling a funny story about getting a teaching certification, before discussing our love for the fantastic anime Kaguya-sama: Love is War, but then it's time for Gundam! And this week, both Gundam as a franchise and Weekly Suit Gundam as a podcast are coming full circle by returning to the world of First Gundam, with the brand-new movie set in the timeline of the original show, Mobile Suit Gundam: Cucuruz Doan's Island! A remake of the infamous 15th episode of Mobile Suit Gundam – an episode with such a troubled production that creator Yoshiyuki Tomino has never allowed it to be distributed outside Japan – original Gundam character designer and animation supervisor Yoshikazu Yasuhiko returns as director to redeem this story of a Zeon deserter protecting war orphans on a deserted island. It's an absolutely wonderful movie, as beautifully animated as one would expect from the great Yasuhiko, but also incredibly smart and soulful in its themes and storytelling, finding a particularly compelling story for original Gundam protagonist Amuro Ray, played again here – possibly for the last time – by a never-better Tōru Furuya. This is a great movie, and an absolute pleasure to discuss for our final Weekly Suit Gundam before the launch of Japanimation Station. Enjoy!Time Chart: Intro & Stuff: 0:00:00 – 0:23:17Gundam Cucuruz Doan: 0:23:17 – 2:33:31Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe to the WEEKLY SUIT GUNDAM Podcast!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in Apple Podcasts!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
Above Snakes by Sean Lewis and Hayden Sherman from Image, The Men Who Created Gundam by Hideki Ohwada, Hajime Yatate, and Yoshiyuki Tomino from Denpa, more World's Finest, the X-Universe post-Hickman, Dark Knights of Steel #7, The Cimmerian Volume 1 from Ablaze, Frankenrocker and the Jailbait Punks #2 from Bad Kids Press, Deathstroke Inc., The Lonesome Hunters #1 by Tyler Crook from Dark Horse, plus a whole mess more!
We get down into Yoshiyuki Tomino's 1998 series Brain Powerd and ask each other: what do each of these proper nouns means? But mostly we just rave about this delightful show. We also chat a little about Servant and Revolutionary Girl: Utena at the start.CW: Discussion of child abuse.TwittersLiv - @GhostGirlMusicTareek - @SomberAzaleasSend us any questions! tbhanimepodcast@outlook.com
Hey, Kids! You like Gundam? You like pirates? You like Star Wars? In what can only be considered an odd mismatch of all three, combined with a whole bunch of Universal Century knowledge that they manga expects you to know ahead of time. A student exchange to Jupiter is interrupted by terrorists, where Tobia Arronax must take the reigns of a Gundam protagonist and pilot a mobile suit to battle his way out. However, it turns out that the terrorists are actually freedom fighters, and it is actually the Jupiter Empire that is evil. To stop them from poisoning Earth with canisters of poison gas, Tobia joins the pirate crew of the Crossbone Vanguard, where more science fiction clichés happen. This week, Matt, Sam, Jae, and Jacob read and discuss Mobile Suit Crossbone Gundam by Yuuichi Hasegawa, based on the work of Yoshiyuki Tomino.Read along, meme along, or just yell at our bad opinions by following @OverMangaCast on Twitter.YouTube / Instagram / FacebookLeave a review: Podchaser
Giant Robot FM enters the Universal Century! With special guest Tom Aznable, Stephen Hero leads a discussion recounting the production history of First Gundam starting with a brief biography of Yoshiyuki Tomino himself. Topics include predecessor shows, the creative staff that worked on First Gundam, the stormy launch of First Gundam in Japan, the arrival of Gundam in North America, and more! Please find Tom Aznable at these links: Twitter: https://twitter.com/TomAznable Zimmerit.moe: https://www.zimmerit.moe/author/tomaznable/ Special thanks to Ethan Halker (@Sundown_McMoon) for help with research and fact-checking for this episode. Tweet us @giantrobotfm and write to us giantrobotfm@gmail.com Support Giant Robot FM directly on our Patreon page: patreon.com/giantrobotfm Giant Robot FM is hosted by Stephen Hero (@_stephen_hero) and pmcTRILOGY (@pmcTRILOGY) Art by DuarfS (https://www.behance.net/maezurita) (https://www.instagram.com/duarfs) Music by fretzl (@fretzl) (https://www.youtube.com/fretzl)
On this episode, it took almost two years but we're finally covering the infamous Garzey's Wing, the 1996 OVA series by Yoshiyuki Tomino of Gundam fame. Join Dennis, Ed, Kate, and Karen as they go through both the Japanese and English versions of the series, try to make sense of the plot, butcher the pronunciation of a bunch of character names and places, and maybe have a too much wine for once. Plus, with the the help of some blogs, we also get some insight into the source material novels for Garzey's Wing, too. So summon the spirit of a Japanese man, get whisked away to another world by Yamato Takeru no Mikoto, and don't forget your swimsuit for the high school reunion pool party. We're heading to Byston Well. Support the show by either donating to our Ko-Fi link below or purchasing something through a previous episode affiliate link, as Garzey's Wing is currently out of print and unlicensed. Credit goes to to The Cracked Magnifying Glass and Beyond Electric Sheep for more insight on Garzey's Wing. Dennis: @ichnob | Ed: @ippennokuinashi | Karen: @RyaCosplay | Kate: @TaikoChan Website | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | RSS | Ko-Fi
This week's show is another Weekly Suit Gundam spectacular, but before reviewing Reconguista in G, Jonathan gives some final thoughts on the outstanding Metroid Dread, and we discuss some recent Nintendo news, including the addition of Sora from Kingdom Hearts to Super Smash Bros., and the unveiling of Nintendo's laughably expensive Switch online expansion. Then it's on to Reconguista in G, the latest Gundam entry from franchise creator Yoshiyuki Tomino, and perhaps the strangest and most formally daring of all Gundam series. Dense, complicated, wildly fast-paced, and persistently challenging, Reconguista is a divisive entry among the global Gundam fandom, but here at Weekly Suit Gundam, we are in awe of it. There is simply nothing quite like Reconguista in G, which sees Tomino turning up all his thematic and stylistic interests to 11, resulting in one of the purest auteur statements in modern mainstream media. With the best action sequences in the history of Gundam, arguably franchise-best TV animation, amazing and vibrant characters, and a structure that practically re-invents the language of anime before your eyes, Reconguista in G is an endlessly rewarding artistic gauntlet.Enjoy, and come back next week for our very special landmark 400th episode!Time Chart:Intro: 0:00:00 – 0:06:08Metroid Dread Final Thoughts: 0:06:08 – 0:12:59Nintendo News: 0:12:59 – 0:40:36Reconguista in G: 0:40:36 – 4:20:29Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe to the WEEKLY SUIT GUNDAM Podcast!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in Apple Podcasts!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
For the 35th anniversary of Mobile Suit Gundam, franchise creator Yoshiyuki Tomino returned for what is, as of now, his latest installment in the series: Reconguista in G, perhaps the strangest and unquestionably the most formally daring of all Gundam series. Dense, complicated, wildly fast-paced, and persistently challenging, Reconguista is a divisive entry among the global Gundam fandom, but here at Weekly Suit Gundam, we are in awe of it. There is simply nothing quite like Reconguista in G, which sees Tomino turning up all his thematic and stylistic interests to 11, resulting in one of the purest auteur statements in modern mainstream media. With the best action sequences in the history of Gundam, arguably franchise-best TV animation, amazing and vibrant characters, and a structure that practically re-invents the language of anime before your eyes, Reconguista in G is an endlessly rewarding artistic gauntlet, and one of the very finest shows we've had the pleasure of discussing in 40 episodes of Weekly Suit Gundam. Enjoy, and come back next time for Season 1 of the global hit Iron-Blooded Orphans! Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman WeeklySuitGundam.Com http://weeklystuffpodcast.com
This week, Coop and Dylan call in Noted Tominist, Russell Latshaw (@RussellLatshaw), to help make sense of Yoshiyuki Tomino's nigh impenetrable ONA, The Wings of Rean. Eccentric creators, the final challenge of the Crazy Calzony (and Evangelion), bloody burger empathy, and a whole lot of Gundam also come up in the conversation. For more Russell, check out https://spacekaleidoscope.com/ Music Used: My Fate (Super Robot Wars UX OST)
After reviewing the original Gundam Build Fighters and its sequel series Gundam Build Fighters Try on our last two episodes, it's time to round out the original Build Fighters run by rounding-up the many OVAs related to this corner of the franchise. We begin with Model Suit Gunpla Builders Beginning G, the 2010 OVA that first introduced the concept of a Gunpla Battle-based anime, and holds up surprisingly well on its own, with great animation and mecha designs and a whole lot of heart. Then there's the 5 Battlogue episodes, providing quick bite stories set in the Build Fighters world, and apart from one memorable episode involving Bearguys getting crucified, there's not much to talk about. Finally, Build Fighters Try gets a 30-minute sequel in Island Wars, and the original Build Fighters gets its own half-hour follow-up in GM's Counterattack, which is an absolute delight. Discussing all of these and more makes for a very fun capper to our Build Fighters journey. Enjoy, and come back next time for the return of original Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino to the franchise with Reconguista in G! Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman WeeklySuitGundam.Com http://weeklystuffpodcast.com
Comment entrer dans la saga Mobile Suit Gundam ? Avec ses nombreuses séries, ses films et ses OAV, la franchise de science-fiction la plus prolifique du Japon depuis maintenant 40 ans impressionne par son immensité et sa popularité sans faille. Imaginée en 1979 par le génial Yoshiyuki Tomino, la série animée du studio Sunrise était innovante dans son fond et dans sa forme. Pour la première fois, le téléspectateur nippon assistait à une histoire qui se suivait d'épisode en épisode avec des cliffhangers et des personnages secondaires qui n'hésitaient pas à succomber dans des violents affrontements. Ce space opera complexe où des méchas s'affrontent dans l'espace a marqué les esprits pour ses héros et méchants inoubliables (l'antagoniste principal Char Aznable est inspiré par Charles Aznavour et Le Baron Rouge). Alors que Mobile Suit Gundam fut un échec à ses débuts sur le petit écran, la fan base de l'époque ainsi que le succès des films au cinéma propulsèrent le show de Tomino en une œuvre culte considérée maintenant comme incontournable au même niveau qu'Evangelion. L'invité : Jonathan Cordier de Mello, alias Pink Platypus est monteur-réalisateur indépendant. En Février 2021, il sort son premier film documentaire auto-produit ,LA GENÈSE DE GUNDAM, qui revient en près de 2h00 sur les origines du genre mecha et sur la production du premier anime "Real Robot". Le documentaire : https://vimeo.com/570028706 Code intérgration : LA GENÈSE DE GUNDAM from PINK PLATYPUS on Vimeo. Bonus : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0cASNtKYu_A&ab_channel=CliqueTV Pour commencer et commander Mobile Suit Gundam : Le conseil de Pink Platypus : Mobile Suit Gundam Trilogy - 3 films - Edition Blu-Ray Le conseil de Lloyd Chéry : Mobile Suit Gundam The Origin (films I à IV) - Edition Collector Blu-Ray
By the time of the late 1970's, Japan's airwaves were flooded with giant robots. Every week new adversaries would appear for their super-powered robot heroes to smash and save the day. However, as the animation genre itself was changing from TV Manga to Anime, giant robots also needed to change into something more meaningful and Yoshiyuki Tomino had an idea how to do it. Welcome to season 1 episode 34 of Digital Dissection: A Nerd Podcast! Today Joe and Mark give you a crash course on the making of Mobilesuit Gundam and the plot of the original series. This week's topic is also at the request of twitter follower "GeoFire" after winning our contest on twitter...a little while ago. Be sure to like, comment, subscribe, and review as we bring you more content each week! Timestamps [7:00] Humble Origins of Mecha [8:30] Sunrise & The Yamato [10:58] TV Manga & The Origin of Anime [13:45] 1978 & The Age of the Giant Robot [17:30] Space, Battle Group, Gun Boy [22:15] Rationalization of Mechsuits & Themes [25:10] An Amuro Ray of Sunshine [32:30] Designing the Mobilesuit [36:10] The One Year War [42:50] The Red Baron of Gundam [46:02] Silence for 30 Minutes [48:00] 80 Shades of Gray & Humanity's Future [53:10] The Ratings Fall (& Rise Again) [56:20] A Magazine to Remember [1:05:20] The Real Feel of Gundam [1:14:05] Shoutouts From the Twitterverse Shoutouts: PlayComics: https://twitter.com/playcomicscast Intergalactic Boombox: https://twitter.com/boomboxpod Stephanie Phillips: https://twitter.com/Steph_Smash https://www.stephaniecomics.com/ Ben Heck: https://twitter.com/benheck https://www.youtube.com/c/BenHeckHacks Music Credits: "Pixel Peeker Polka (Faster)" Written and Performed by Kevin MacLeod "Our Young Guts" Written and Performed by Andy G. Cohen
Oh no, it's the episode of Mechinations that Yoshiyuki Tomino doesn't want you to hear! The Mechinations team treads upon Cucuruz Doan's Island before making their way to Sayla's Agony (or Sorties!). It's a perilous journey because, honestly, who would want to end up Doan's island. Thankfully, grounded stories like battle drills and the search for salt give us hope. We recorded this episode of Mechinations only days before the announcement of the new Mobile Suit Gundam: Cucuruz Doan's Island movie to release in 2022, directed by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko! More info here: https://twitter.com/SUNRISEINC7/status/1438072237051965441 Ep. 15 discussion: 34:01 Ep. 16 discussion: 1:39:47 Intro Disc: Ignis Madax (The King in Black) Thanks to @fretzl for the intro/outro music Thanks to @JJostar23 for the art Write to us MechinationsPod@gmail.com or tweet us @MechinationsPod Mechinations is co-hosted by Ignis Madax (@IgnisMadax), Stephen Hero (@_stephen_hero), and pmcTRILOGY (@pmcTRILOGY) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mechinations/support
Neo Lorrnoke & Soul Bro Ryu wrap up their reviews of Non-Gundam series by Yoshiyuki Tomino. Join us for our review & discussion of Overman King Gainer!
Join us as we return to review the next series on our quest through Yoshiyuki Tomino "directography" - "Combat Armor Xabungle"!
In which Cass & Alex discuss the second half of Mobile Suit Gundam, directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino and produced by Nippon Sunrise. Next month we will be discussing Tokyo Godfathers, directed by Satoshi Kon and produced by Madhouse. Discussed: job john, bathing is counterrevolutionary, chads on both sides, sitting in a dive bar drinking whiskey in a white linen suit for several months, donkey kong forward aerial, "witness the fate of a soldier!" i throw one leg out and fall on my ass. it's not clear what kind of move i was trying to do, naked snake, venom snake, someone finally bought a copy of your book, sir!, seaplane fishermen(?), flanagan boone and his mad angler squadron, the world being this awful forever, capybaras, my "they told me i'm physically healthy and mentally sound" t-shirt is raising a lot of questions already answered by my t-shirt, delicious juice, anomalously pointy teeth, shower with the lads simulator 2016: do you still shower with the lads, rick doms, fuckdads.com, getting zodiac'd, the aviator, show me all the gundams, char aznable steely dan amv, fancy baroque ladies, a big football with legs, A Planet For Texans, jerking off a weird crystal bong, adolf hitler, buttsham, tricorn hat, brain moment, the light of hatred, hitler and proud of it, gaslight, gatekeep, girlboss, the mask stays on during sex, the nine delights, estonian military rations FINAL SCORES: Walking Around: 4/5 Fellowship: 5/5 Deliciousness: 0/5 Transcendence: 3/5 Goofing: 2/5 Amelioration: 1/5 Coitus: 0/5 Enthrallment: 3/5 *WILDCARD* Cool Robot: 3/5 *WILDCARD* Gay Shit: 2/5 Alex's Book Recommendation: Little Drummer Girl by John Le Carré Cass's Book Recommendation: City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles by Mike Davis Social: Show Twitter: @animeisforjerks Show Mastodon: @animeisforjerks@skeleton.cool Show Email: animeisforjerks@gmail.com Cass's Twitter: @prophet_goddess Cass's Mastodon: @prophet_goddess@skeleton.cool Alex's Twitter: @dunndunndunn Alex's Mastodon: @catalina@selfy.army
Mechinations enters a new era - the Universal Century! Our own Stephen Hero guides us through time from Yoshiyuki Tomino's origins to the origins of the original Mobile Suit Gundam with plenty of fun references to Tomino's previous works (Zambot 3!), contemporaneous works (Star Wars!) and capping the discussion off with the history of Gundam's arrival in the west (The War for Earth!). Gundam 0079 History: 12:37 Intro Disc: pmcTRILOGY (Xenosaga Episode I) Special thanks to @Sundown_McMoonand, @RussellLatshaw, and @customzaku for providing some awesome resources for the history! Thanks to @fretzl for the intro/outro music Thanks to @JJostar23 for the art Write to us MechinationsPod@gmail.com or tweet us @MechinationsPod Mechinations is co-hosted by Ignis Madax (@IgnisMadax), Stephen Hero (@_stephen_hero), and pmcTRILOGY (@pmcTRILOGY) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mechinations/support
Premiering worldwide on Netflix this week after its debut in Japanese theaters last month, Mobile Suit Gundam: Hathaway's Flash is the first film in a planned trilogy adapting original Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino's trio of novels from 1989-1990, following the exploits of Hathaway Noa 12 years after the events of Char's Counterattack. And it's a terrific start to this new film series, offering some of the best animation, music, set pieces, and writing in the history of the franchise. From Tomino's characteristically rich writing to the complex and nuanced vocal performances to how this story fits into the larger cycle of Tomino's original Gundam saga, Hathaway's Flash offers so many rich avenues for discussion, making for a podcast that's an hour longer than the film itself, and could have gone on much longer still. Enjoy, and come back in two weeks for Part 1 of our Mobile Suit Gundam AGE review, where we'll cover Episodes 1 – 28! Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman WeeklySuitGundam.Com http://weeklystuffpodcast.com
After a little back-and-forth on the week's stuff – including Jonathan finishing the outstanding Kimetsu no Yaiba (Demon Slayer) manga – and checking in on a few quick pieces of news, including Ghost of Tsushima getting a PS5 re-release in August, we dive straight into our latest Weekly Suit Gundam extravaganza with Mobile Suit Gundam: Hathaway. Premiering worldwide on Netflix this week after its debut in Japanese theaters last month, Hathaway is the first film in a planned trilogy adapting original Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino's trio of novels from 1989-1990, following the exploits of Hathaway Noa 12 years after the events of Char's Counterattack. And it's a terrific start to this new film series, offering some of the best animation, music, set pieces, and writing in the history of the franchise. From Tomino's characteristically rich writing to the complex and nuanced vocal performances to how this story fits into the larger cycle of Tomino's original Gundam saga, Hathaway's Flash offers countless many rich avenues for discussion.Time Chart:Intro & Stuff: 0:00:00 – 0:26:26News: 0:26:26 – 0:35:55Gundam – Hathaway: 0:35:55 – 3:05:20Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe to the WEEKLY SUIT GUNDAM Podcast!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in Apple Podcasts!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
In which Cass & Alex discuss the first half of Mobile Suit Gundam, directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino and produced by Nippon Sunrise. Next month we will be discussing the rest of Mobile Suit Gundam. Discussed: getting in the gundam, why anime is like this, seinfeld, the history of giant robot shows, super robot, real robot, malthusian overpopulation, the population bomb, o'neill cylinder, fraw bow, Turn A Gundam, sweatson stero, merrybell gadget, agrippa maintainer, cancer kafka, meme midgard, bobson dugnutt, the great gundam project, minovsky physics, tiny little angels, the tommy westphall universe, minkowski sausage, a harrowing window, grape ape, wow cool robot, sunshine ages, sayla sus, g-forces, g-trousers, the type of guy who wears a suit to school, Gundam's Yoshiyuki Tomino Reminds Us All That Char Definitely Has Sex, dick extended universe, new yark, being calm, dave lang, lavish french rococo ballrooms, r/malelivingspace, going back in time to play ruff ryders anthem for teddy roosevelt, antebellum lawyer char, fortunate son, your only crime was violating us law, doing sidequests, tom bombadil, mobile suit martial arts, the scent of battle, seeing a bra for the first time in your entire life, your responsibility as an adult being to pilot a giant robot, the kind of face mask that screams "i have an onlyfans", witness the fate of a soldier! i jump out of the white base and create a huge cloud of smoke. when the cloud dissipates im lying completely dead on the pavement, good quality and competitive price Alex's Book Recommendation: Ways of Seeing by John Berger Cass's Book Recommendation: The Temple of the Golden Pavilion by Yukio Mishima Social: Show Twitter: @animeisforjerks Show Mastodon: @animeisforjerks@skeleton.cool Show Email: animeisforjerks@gmail.com Cass's Twitter: @prophet_goddess Cass's Mastodon: @prophet_goddess@skeleton.cool Alex's Twitter: @dunndunndunn Alex's Mastodon: @catalina@selfy.army
In which Cass & Alex discuss Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken!, directed by Masaaki Yuasa and produced by Science Saru. Next month we will be discussing Mobile Suit Gundam, directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino and produced by Nippon Sunrise. Discussed: the least interesting thing we have ever seen masaaki yuasa be involved in, yo-kai watch the movie, masaaki yuasa heard you talkin shit like he wouldn't find out, the fancy milk they sell at the laundromat, that meme with the guy talking to the lady at the baseball game here demonstrated by twitter user northernlion, our orders are to keep you from joining the anime club, a healthy marriage, the leon the professional extended universe, producing garbage and making people miserable, the word 映像研, knowing enough japanese to be dangerous, the honorific "氏", The Anime Club by KC Green, a moment of silence for our comrade the 30000 yen, two bottles of milk, seven croquettes, one red bean bun with smooth paste, big smoke's order, david mamet again, shirobako, the carbohydrates revolution group, the only way in which this show is like carole and tuesday, ira glass, dying in front of your television, 30 minutes of wow cool robot, using the word "simp" for the second episode in a row, robot crime, crabtle, the oatmeal dot com, greatest strongest robot song, akihabara culture and fermented foods advocacy club, drone photography club, messenger pigeon club, man faced fish investigation lab, hundred eye demon, the least erotic bathhouse scene in the history of anime, the HVAC club, sepak takraw, witnessing the death of a liquor store, fretting your weird head off, having a vision of a sauna floating in outer space, education, marathons, future, e-mail, cryptocurrency, abusive workplaces, trash, don't rock the boat thinking, ransom, PTA, camraderie, cancel culture, overachievers, cyber education, monster parents, mom friends, gender, poaching (cooking), poaching (killing), Otaku: Japan's Database Animals, The Anime Machine Alex's Book Recommendation: The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante Cass's Book Recommendation: 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami Social: Show Twitter: @animeisforjerks Show Mastodon: @animeisforjerks@skeleton.cool Show Email: animeisforjerks@gmail.com Cass's Twitter: @prophet_goddess Cass's Mastodon: @prophet_goddess@skeleton.cool Alex's Twitter: @dunndunndunn Alex's Mastodon: @catalina@selfy.army
We did it folks! We wrap up "season two" of mechtrospective by wrapping up the CORE GUNDAM works by Yoshiyuki Tomino! Expectations and Emotions are high. Let's dig in! Today we cover the seminal 1988 classic Mobile Suit Gundam Char's Counterattack! Due to a recording error Devon's mic sounds a little different in this episode, please forgive me!
In this episode, we talk about the success of the first Demon Slayer film, and how the anime industry has come along way in the words of Yoshiyuki Tomino. Also: the letter from FFXIV's Naoki Yoshida to fans concerning the upcoming Announcement Showcase, and the panic on Twitter that Shueisha was NOT involved in. Note: this episode was previously scheduled to be released on January 23, 2021, but has been delayed--until now! Enjoy! Show Notes, Sources, and Links: https://centakumedia.com/?p=6307 Have questions about the podcast? Ask your question via the Contact form on the Centaku Media website, with the category "Podcast: Episode Questions" and it will be answered directly, as well in a form of a post and/or future episode! Donate! If you enjoyed my efforts of providing unique content through the outlets where Centaku Media is available, consider buying me a Ko-fi! https://ko-fi.com/CentakuMedia ---Credits--- Music "Undone" by Desmeon (NoCopyrightSounds) Watch: https://youtu.be/0E6KXgWuaHo Free Download/Stream: http://ncs.io/undone Centaku Media on Socials Twitter: http://twitter.com/CentakuMedia Instagram: http://instagram.com/CentakuMedia Facebook: http://facebook.com/CentakuMedia Twitch: http://twitch.tv/CentakuMedia YouTube: http://youtube.com/centakuchan --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The day of reckoning has arrived – at last, it is time to review perhaps the most controversial show in the Gundam pantheon: Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny, the baffling, confounding, infuriating, utterly fascinating sequel to Mobile Suit Gundam SEED. Set two years later with both new and returning characters, Destiny tries to be two different, contradictory shows at once: a challenging sequel questioning the assumptions and characters from the original, a la Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, and a straight-up sequel to SEED – Gundam SEED: Here We Go Again – and in the shuffle, somehow makes us hate the entire returning cast even while it buries and repeatedly does dirty its interesting new characters. The result is one of the most inept sequel stories ever told – but undeniably one of the most compelling to talk about. Enjoy, and come back next time as Gundam revisits its canonical sequel series with Yoshiyuki Tomino’s Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam: A New Translation film trilogy! Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
On this episode of Manga Mavericks, Lum & Colton take a closer look at the Mangamo app and read a few select titles such as the award winning MMO rom-com Loving Yamada at LV999!, the hilariously cruel Dropkick on My Devil, and the harrowing but thoughtful gender identity story of I Wanna Be Your Girl. They also take a look at even some more recent additions to the app with The Most Tsundere Boss in History and The Warrior Demigods, Champions of Sparta! The Mangamo app is available on both iOS and Android devices for $4.99 month, so be sure to go and check it out today! Visit this podcast's webpage for a complete list of the links and Community Shout-Outs mentioned in this episode! - http://all-comic.com/2020/manga-mavericks-ep-144-mangamo-spotlight/ PODCAST BREAKDOWN: 00:00 - Intro 02:05 - The Promised Neverland: A Mother's Determination News: 10:23 - 2 New Sukeban Deka manga 11:48 - New one-shot from Shiro Usazaki 13:07 - Shangri-La Frontier added to Crunchyroll Manga and other platforms as simulpub 14:55 - Viz is now releasing Mission: Yozakura Family digitally 16:53 - New licenses from Kaiten Books 20:21 - Sony’s purchase of Crunchyroll finalized at 1.175 billion 23:13 - Kirby Morrow has passed away 24:50 - Yoko Kamio launches English website 26:14 - Way of the Househusband anime coming to Netflix in 2021 28:14 - Kanojo mo Kanojo gets an anime 29:17 - Yoshiyuki Tomino is developing 3 new projects 29:50 - Rumiko Takahashi receives Japan Medal with Purple Ribbon 30:39 - Demon Slayer & Kyoharu Gotouge continues to break records 33:07 - NHK's Sailor Moon poll results 36:39 - Mangamo now available on Android devices 37:27 - The Most Tsundere Boss in History and The Warrior Demigods, Champions of Sparta now available on Mangamo 50:42 - Mangamo to feature comics from Dark Horse (Usagi Yojimbo, Lone Wolf and Cub, etc) Mangamo Spotlight: 55:11 - Loving Yamada at LV999! by Mashiro 1:15:53 - Dropkick on my Devil! by Yukiwo 1:35:03 - I Wanna Be Your Girl by Takase Umi 2:06:29 - Community Shout-Outs! 2:13:37 - Wrap-Up Enjoy the show, and follow us on twitter at @manga_mavericks, on tumblr at mangamavericks.tumblr.com, and on Youtube! You can also follow the hosts on Twitter at @sniperking323 and @lumranmayasha. If you’d like to help support the show financially you can pledge to our Patreon and receive some awesome rewards like our Patreon-exclusive Bonus pods! If one-time donations are more your speed you can donate to Colton’s Ko-fi here and LumRanmaYasha’s Ko-fi here, and if you want to support LumRanmaYasha’s art and other projects you can follow them @siddartworks on Instagram and Twitter and donate to their personal Patreon. Don’t forget to also like and subscribe to us on Youtube and iTunes and leave us reviews to help us curate the show and create better content!
On this episode of Manga Mavericks, Lum & Colton take a closer look at the Mangamo app and read a few select titles such as the award winning MMO rom-com Loving Yamada at LV999!, the hilariously cruel Dropkick on My Devil, and the harrowing but thoughtful gender identity story of I Wanna Be Your Girl. They also take a look at even some more recent additions to the app with The Most Tsundere Boss in History and The Warrior Demigods, Champions of Sparta! The Mangamo app is available on both iOS and Android devices for $4.99 month, so be sure to go and check it out today! Visit this podcast's webpage for a complete list of the links and Community Shout-Outs mentioned in this episode! - http://all-comic.com/2020/manga-mavericks-ep-144-mangamo-spotlight/ PODCAST BREAKDOWN: 00:00 - Intro 02:05 - The Promised Neverland: A Mother's Determination News: 10:23 - 2 New Sukeban Deka manga 11:48 - New one-shot from Shiro Usazaki 13:07 - Shangri-La Frontier added to Crunchyroll Manga and other platforms as simulpub 14:55 - Viz is now releasing Mission: Yozakura Family digitally 16:53 - New licenses from Kaiten Books 20:21 - Sony’s purchase of Crunchyroll finalized at 1.175 billion 23:13 - Kirby Morrow has passed away 24:50 - Yoko Kamio launches English website 26:14 - Way of the Househusband anime coming to Netflix in 2021 28:14 - Kanojo mo Kanojo gets an anime 29:17 - Yoshiyuki Tomino is developing 3 new projects 29:50 - Rumiko Takahashi receives Japan Medal with Purple Ribbon 30:39 - Demon Slayer & Kyoharu Gotouge continues to break records 33:07 - NHK's Sailor Moon poll results 36:39 - Mangamo now available on Android devices 37:27 - The Most Tsundere Boss in History and The Warrior Demigods, Champions of Sparta now available on Mangamo 50:42 - Mangamo to feature comics from Dark Horse (Usagi Yojimbo, Lone Wolf and Cub, etc) Mangamo Spotlight: 55:11 - Loving Yamada at LV999! by Mashiro 1:15:53 - Dropkick on my Devil! by Yukiwo 1:35:03 - I Wanna Be Your Girl by Takase Umi 2:06:29 - Community Shout-Outs! 2:13:37 - Wrap-Up Enjoy the show, and follow us on twitter at @manga_mavericks, on tumblr at mangamavericks.tumblr.com, and on Youtube! You can also follow the hosts on Twitter at @sniperking323 and @lumranmayasha. If you’d like to help support the show financially you can pledge to our Patreon and receive some awesome rewards like our Patreon-exclusive Bonus pods! If one-time donations are more your speed you can donate to Colton’s Ko-fi here and LumRanmaYasha’s Ko-fi here, and if you want to support LumRanmaYasha’s art and other projects you can follow them @siddartworks on Instagram and Twitter and donate to their personal Patreon. Don’t forget to also like and subscribe to us on Youtube and iTunes and leave us reviews to help us curate the show and create better content!
Welcome to Mechinations Flashback, a side project dedicated to spotlighting diverse voices within the greater mecha community. We by no means have the definitive “take” on anything we’ve covered and therefore want to reexamine past works by talking with a variety of insightful critics and creators. On our second episode, Stephen Hero interviews Russell, aka “RTL3,” the caretaker of the wonderful Space Kaleidoscope blog. They dive deep into the atmospheric and politically timely films of Mamoru Oshii, focusing on Angel’s Egg (1985), Patlabor: The Movie (1989), and Patlabor 2: The Movie (1993) in particular. Hot takes abound on the recent Demon's Souls remake, the work of Yoshiyuki Tomino, and Evangelion 3.33. Links for Russell: Twitter: https://twitter.com/RussellLatshaw Space Kaleidoscope: https://spacekaleidoscope.wordpress.com/ Angel’s Egg Review: https://spacekaleidoscope.wordpress.com/2020/04/27/angels-egg/ Patlabor 2 Review: https://spacekaleidoscope.wordpress.com/2020/09/12/patlabor-2-the-movie/ Evangelion 3.33 Review: https://spacekaleidoscope.wordpress.com/2019/04/10/evangelion-3-33-you-can-not-redo/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mechinations/support
The Tomodachi Bros. Revue ep 7: GUNDAM-THON:Turn A Gundam!In this episode the Bros. deep dive into Turn A Gundam by Yoshiyuki Tomino and Sunrise Inc. To help support us, hear this episode Uncensored, Ad-Free and including The Tomodachi Brothers After Dark premium show check out our podbean site: tomodachibrosrevue.podbean.com Please Connect with us on the following Platforms:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tomodachibrosrevue/ Subscribe on YouTube: The Tomodachi Bros. Revue ChannelFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BrosRevueFacebook: fb.me/TomodachiBrosemail: tomodachibrosrevue@gmail.comcheck out The Hipster Snek on YouTube: The Hipster Snek ChannelThe Hipster Snek Tumblr: https://hipstersnek.tumblr.com Thank you very much for your time and have a wonderful day! Credits:The Tomodachi Brothers are: The Hipster Snek, Cog and Dietaku.Make sure you check out The Hipster Snek on YouTube at: The Hipster Snek ChannelExecutive Producer/Sound Designer/Editor/Music Composer/Guitar Performance/Mixing Engineer: Sean Taylor Brown with The Cog Sound Engine. Drums: Kostas Vass
Not-E3 2020 continued this weekend with Ubisoft Forward, where the company showed off Watch Dogs Legion, Assassin's Creed Valhalla, and announced (well, sort of, after many leaks) Far Cry 6. And it came under a cloud of terrible press for the French-Canadian gaming behemoth, as months' worth of sexual harassment and toxic work environment allegations have resulted in one of the most dramatic corporate shake-ups in the history of video games. We talk about all of that and more before our latest Weekly Suit Gundam topic, reviewing Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket. Released in six installments in 1989, War in the Pocket marked the first time creator Yoshiyuki Tomino wasn't involved in a Gundam production, and is widely regarded as one of the franchise's finest hours, expanding and deepening the series' themes and perspective by focusing in on the small-scale story of a boy growing up amidst the backdrop of the One-Year War. It is one of the greatest and most powerful anti-war stories ever told, on similar footing as Isao Takahata's 1988 Grave of the Fireflies, and began a rich tradition of Gundam taking some of its best artistic leaps on home video.Time Chart:Intro: 0:00:00 – 0:02:30 Stuff: 0:02:30 – 0:30:36Ubisoft News: 0:30:36 – 1:33:27Gundam 0080 – War in the Pocket: 1:33:27 – 3:26:20 Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!The Weekly Stuff with Jonathan Lack & Sean Chapman is a weekly audio podcast, and if you subscribe in iTunes, episodes will be delivered automatically and for free as soon as they are released. If you visit www.jonathanlack.com, we also have streaming and downloadable versions of new and archival episodes for your listening pleasure.
Before continuing on to 21st-century Gundam, we’re doubling back for deep dives with the OVA series we’ve mentioned in passing but never reviewed in depth, starting with Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket. Released in six installments in 1989, War in the Pocket marked the first time creator Yoshiyuki Tomino wasn’t involved in a Gundam production, and is widely regarded as one of the franchise’s finest hours, expanding and deepening the series’ themes and perspective by focusing in on the small-scale story of a boy growing up amidst the backdrop of the One-Year War. It is one of the greatest and most powerful anti-war stories ever told, on similar footing as Isao Takahata’s 1988 Grave of the Fireflies, and began a rich tradition of Gundam taking some of its best artistic leaps on home video. Enjoy, and come back next time for our next OVA review with Gundam 0083: Stardust Memory! Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
We dive into Yoshiyuki Tomino's (!) 2003 anime (!!) that's an adaptation of a French sci-fi novel series (!!!). Overman has a lot of charm and we try to break down its plot and characters, as well as how it manages its wild swings in tone. Finally
We dive into Yoshiyuki Tomino's (!) 2003 anime (!!) that's an adaptation of a French sci-fi novel series (!!!). Overman has a lot of charm and we try to break down its plot and characters, as well as how it manages its wild swings in tone. Finally, we talk about the unique mecha designs and how it applies them to the plot to create an interesting story. Check this series out - you may be surprised. Our theme song is Street Dancing by Timecrawler 82. You can reach us at mechadoaboutnothing@gmail.com, our website is mechado.moe, and our Twitter account is @mechadpodcast.
Show Notes This week, we review and analyze Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam (機動戦士Ζガンダム) as a series, discuss our thoughts about the show as a whole, and provide commentary and research on the number four, as well as post-Zeta interviews with Yoshiyuki Tomino and Akinori Endo. - Wikipedia page for the number four, with a list of things that are in fours (many of them religious). - A paper about the number four, subitization in humans and animals (even bees!), and the number four's apparent significance to humans across cultures, time periods, etc.: Gross, Hans J. “The magical number four: A biological, historical and mythological enigma.” Communicative & integrative biology vol. 5,1 (2012): 1-2. doi:10.4161/cib.18149 Accessed at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3291302/ - Post-Zeta interview with Yoshiyuki Tomino (富野 由悠季), translated into English and shared by Zeonic|Scanlations. - Post-Zeta interview with Akinori Endo (明範 遠藤), professional translation commissioned and shared (alongside original text) by Blacotaku's Oldtype Newtype. You can subscribe to Mobile Suit Breakdown for free! on fine Podcast services everywhere and on YouTube, follow us on twitter @gundampodcast, check us out at gundampodcast.com, email your questions, comments, and complaints to gundampodcast@gmail.com. Mobile Suit Breakdown wouldn't exist without the support of our fans and Patrons! You can join our Patreon to support the podcast and enjoy bonus episodes, extra out-takes, behind-the-scenes photo and video, MSB gear, and much more! The intro music is WASP by Misha Dioxin, and the outro is Long Way Home by Spinning Ratio, both licensed under Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license. Both have been edited for length. Mobile Suit Breakdown provides critical commentary and is protected by the Fair Use clause of the United States Copyright law. Gundam content is copyright and/or trademark of Sunrise Inc., Bandai, Sotsu Agency, or its original creator. Mobile Suit Breakdown is in no way affiliated with or endorsed by Sunrise, Bandai, Sotsu, or any of their subsidiaries, employees, or associates and makes no claim to own Gundam or any of the copyrights or trademarks related to it. Copyrighted content used in Mobile Suit Breakdown is used in accordance with the Fair Use clause of the United States Copyright law. Any queries should be directed to gundampodcast@gmail.com Find out more at http://gundampodcast.com
It’s been one year to the day since we started our podcast journey through the wide, wonderful world of Gundam, and to celebrate our one-year anniversary milestone, we’re diving deep into one of the single greatest works the franchise has ever produced: Turn A Gundam, Yoshiyuki Tomino’s return to, and revolution of, the series he created. Set on a pre-industrial Earth in the very distant future, Turn A looks, sounds, and feels like nothing that’s come before, a punch drunk act of endlessly creative world-building that is so impossibly rich with ideas and dense with fascinating themes and characters that even though this is our longest episode yet, it feels like we only scratch the surface. Turn A is essential viewing for anyone even vaguely interested in Gundam, and talking about it makes for one of our richest conversations yet. Enjoy, and come back later this month for our 1-year anniversary special, where we’ll be ranking the best songs, characters, mobile suits, and series from our first year of Gundam reviews. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
This week, we're sharing an episode of our sister series, Weekly Suit Gundam, where we talk about one of the least known and most underrated corners of the Gundam universe, After War Gundam X. Running for only 39 episodes, its shortened run marked the end of four continuous years of the franchise holding the same time slot on Japanese television. But it's also a special, woefully underappreciated show, a smart and soulful return to and commentary on the major tropes and archetypes of Yoshiyuki Tomino's original Gundam cycle, serving as something of an alternate sequel to the original Mobile Suit Gundam wherein Amuro becomes a dejected, sunglass-wearing Captain mentoring a new Gundam Boy. Full of great characters, excellent storytelling, and thoughtful, bold ideas about Gundam's past and future, After War Gundam X deserves a greater reputation, and we hope this in-depth podcast conversation is a step in the right direction.Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
After War Gundam X is one of the least known and most underrated corners of the Gundam universe, running for only 39 episodes, with its shortened run marking the end of four continuous years of the franchise holding the same time slot on Japanese television. But it’s also a special, woefully underappreciated show, a smart and soulful return to and commentary on the major tropes and archetypes of Yoshiyuki Tomino’s original Gundam cycle, serving as something of an alternate sequel to the original Mobile Suit Gundam wherein Amuro becomes a dejected, sunglass-wearing Captain mentoring a new Gundam Boy. Full of great characters, excellent storytelling, and thoughtful, bold ideas about Gundam’s past and future, After War Gundam X deserves a greater reputation, and we hope this in-depth podcast conversation is a step in the right direction. Enjoy, and come back throughout the month of June as we celebrate one full year of the Weekly Suit Gundam with a review of Turn A Gundam, an anniversary celebration special, and more! Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
The Tomodachi Bros. Revue ep 5: GUNDAM-THON:MS Gundam!In this episode, the Bros. begin their 4 episode miniseries exploration of the legendary Gundam franchise beginning with the original MS Gundam by Yoshiyuki Tomino and Sunrise Inc. Warning! The episode contains Spoilers! To hear this episode Uncensored, Ad-Free and including The Tomodachi Brothers After Dark premium show check out our podbean site: tomodachibrosrevue.podbean.com Please Connect with us on the following Platforms:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tomodachibrosrevue/ Subscribe on YouTube: The Tomodachi Bros. Revue ChannelFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/BrosRevueFacebook: fb.me/TomodachiBrosemail: tomodachibrosrevue@gmail.comcheck out The Hipster Snek on YouTube: The Hipster Snek ChannelThe Hipster Snek Tumblr: https://hipstersnek.tumblr.com Thank you very much for your time and have a wonderful day! Credits:The Tomodachi Brothers are: The Hipster Snek, Cog and Dietaku.Make sure you check out The Hipster Snek on YouTube at: The Hipster Snek ChannelExecutive Producer/Sound Designer/Editor/Music Composer/Guitar Performance/Mixing Engineer: Sean Taylor Brown with The Cog Sound Engine. Drums: Kostas Vass
It’s a big moment for our journey through the world of Gundam, as we finally reach New Mobile Report Gundam Wing – aka Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, or just Gundam Wing – the 1995 anime that finally brought Gundam to the mainstream in the West when it premiered on Cartoon Network’s Toonami block in 2000. At once a throwback to many iconic pieces of Yoshiyuki Tomino’s original Gundam formula and a bold break with the structure of every Gundam series up to this point, Gundam Wing is a very different experience than anything we’ve talked about before. Initially exhilarating before growing increasingly frustrating, the show is one of the messier entries in the Gundam canon, but nevertheless fascinating to talk about. And the OVA/movie sequel, Endless Waltz, is a real treat for those who stick with it all the way to the end. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
After a brief discussion of games we've been playing like Bayonetta and Yakuza 5 – and a preview of a Star Wars-themed paper Jonathan is writing with a very weird title – it's back into the wide, wacky world of Gundam, as we finally reach Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, the 1995 anime that finally brought Gundam to the mainstream in the West when it premiered on Cartoon Network's Toonami block in 2000. At once a throwback to many iconic pieces of Yoshiyuki Tomino's original Gundam formula and a bold break with the structure of every Gundam series up to this point, Gundam Wing is a very different experience than anything we've talked about before. Initially exhilarating before growing increasingly frustrating, the show is one of the messier entries in the Gundam canon, but nevertheless fascinating to talk about. And the OVA/movie sequel, Endless Waltz, is a real treat for those who stick with it all the way to the end. Enjoy!Time Chart: Intro: 0:00:00 – 0:10:59Stuff: 0:10:59 – 0:30:53 Gundam Wing: 0:30:53 Stream The Weekly Stuff Podcast Episode #326Download 'The Weekly Stuff' Episode #326 as an MP3Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
We’re starting off this decade of the podcast by discussing a bunch of stuff we did last year! That’s right, it’s time to extensively cover all our adventures at the third convention we attended in 2019, Anime NYC! You’ve heard us go over all the news out of the con a few episodes ago, but this time around we’ll be going into what we personally did there - all the panels and events we attended, and all the people we met! It was a big con for us in many ways, and we got to hang out with a bunch of our friends that you’ll be hearing on this podcast, including Sakaki from the Weekly Shogakukan Edition twitter and blog, Jecka from the same blog, and Marion from Good Friends Anime Club, the Haikyuu podcast View from the Top, and an upcoming Dorohedoro podcast I’m excited to listen to! As you might have guessed, having five people on to discuss what they did at an incredibly busy event takes a while, which is how we’ve ended up with the 4+ hour long podcast you’re about to listen to. Believe it or not, this is but the first of a series of long podcasts we’re starting off 2020 with, as the Best of Manga 2019 episode we recorded also ended up being nearly five hours long, and we have several other incoming podcasts that have ran long besides. Suffice to say, one of our New Year’s Resolutions for Manga Mavericks this year is recording shorter podcasts, both for your listening convenience and our time and sanity! But let me ask you, are you a person who prefers long podcasts like this, or wants them shorter? Do you enjoy these convention report episodes, or are there types of episodes you’d like us to do more of instead? You can let us know all this and more by taking our annual Manga Mavericks podcast survey, which is currently live through February 1st! SURVEY LINK: https://s.surveyplanet.com/UpCz9Mfs This year we wanted to give our survey-takers a little treat as thanks for their feedback, so we’re running a giveaway contest that all survey-takers are automatically entered in. Just fill out our survey, and you could win a FREE volume of manga that we have on hand to give out! Besides the survey, if you want to support the show and help us keep doing what we’re doing, throw us some love over at the Manga Mavericks patreon. Supporting us on Patreon also gives you guys special rewards too! For example, you may have heard the interviews we recorded with Pokemon voice actresses Sarah Natochenny and Lisa Ortiz as well as Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino on our previous episode, where we included an abridged version of the interviews that included just the questions we asked. We’ll be uploading the full, unabridged interviews exclusively to our Patreon, so if you want to hear more questions and conversations with Sarah, Lisa, and Tomino pledge to us for just $5 or more for complete access to those as well as ten of our monthly bonus pods EXCLUSIVELY available on our Patreon! We also have full transcripts of our interviews with Sarah and Lisa written up on All-Comic.com for you to check out as well! PATREON LINK: https://www.patreon.com/mangamavericks There’s more to say, but I’ll let you listen to the rest in the podcast proper! And trust me, we have A LOT to talk about... PODCAST BREAKDOWN: 00:22 - Intro & Updates 09:08 - General Impressions of Anime NYC 2019 15:30 - Day 0: Karaoke Day 1: Friday, November 15th 21:24 - Conducting Interviews at Anime NYC 26:52 - Lines, Crowding, and the Press Room at the Javits Center 42:15 - Press Line Hiccups 48:30 - Shonen Jump Panel & Dr. Stone Panel 1:00:06 - Conducting Interviews at Anime NYC, Revisited 1:11:08 - VLord and Sakaki Buy Hypeland Hunter x Hunter Coats 1:15:58 - Dr. Stone Autographs 1:20:20 - Exhibitor’s Hall & Artist Alley 1:31:23 - Marion’s Friday 1:35:04 - Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken! Panel 1:39:55 - AMV Contest 1:42:13 - 100 Years of Yuri Panel Day 2: Saturday, November 16th: 1:46:20 - NHK’s Rumiko Takahashi MegaPoll Special 1:50:08 - Denpa’s TAa Panel 1:55:12 - GKids Panel 1:58:00 - Yen Press & Square Enix Panels 2:09:25 - Meeting People at ANYC 2:14:20 - Marion’s Saturday Autographs 2:16:16 - AniTube Panel 2:22:14 - Yen Press Panel, Revisited 2:25:55 - J-Novel Club Panel 2:37:40 - Megalobox Panel 2:40:36 - Yoshiyuki Tomino Interview 2:45:10 - Reconguista in G Film Premiere Screening 2:51:23 - VOFAN Interview Day 3: Sunday, November 17th: 2:58:02 - Kodansha/Vertical Panel 3:04:30 - Ray Chase Interview 3:05:25 - Manga Localizers Panel 3:37:20 - Exhibitor’s Hall & Artist Alley, Revisited 3:41:55 - One Piece Podcast Panel 3:46:14 - Lisa Ortiz Interview 3:47:37 - Manga Localizers Panel, Revisited 3:48:55 - Weathering With You Premiere Screening 4:12:46 - Final Thoughts on Anime NYC 4:16:10 - Wrap-Up Enjoy the show, and follow us on twitter at @manga_mavericks, on tumblr at mangamavericks.tumblr.com, and on Youtube! You can follow the hosts on twitter at @LumRanmaYasha and @VLordGTZ and special guests Sakaki at @kiirobon, Marion at @microwaevy, and Jecka at @Jecka1021! If you’d like to help support the show financially you can pledge to our Patreon and receive some awesome rewards like our Patreon-exclusive Bonus pods! If one-time donations are more your speed you can donate to Colton’s Ko-fi here and LumRanmaYasha’s Ko-fi here, and if you want to support LumRanmaYasha’s art and other projects you can donate to their personal Patreon. Don’t forget to also like and subscribe to us on Youtube and iTunes and leave us reviews to help us curate the show and create better content!
We’re starting off this decade of the podcast by discussing a bunch of stuff we did last year! That’s right, it’s time to extensively cover all our adventures at the third convention we attended in 2019, Anime NYC! You’ve heard us go over all the news out of the con a few episodes ago, but this time around we’ll be going into what we personally did there - all the panels and events we attended, and all the people we met! It was a big con for us in many ways, and we got to hang out with a bunch of our friends that you’ll be hearing on this podcast, including Sakaki from the Weekly Shogakukan Edition twitter and blog, Jecka from the same blog, and Marion from Good Friends Anime Club, the Haikyuu podcast View from the Top, and an upcoming Dorohedoro podcast I’m excited to listen to! As you might have guessed, having five people on to discuss what they did at an incredibly busy event takes a while, which is how we’ve ended up with the 4+ hour long podcast you’re about to listen to. Believe it or not, this is but the first of a series of long podcasts we’re starting off 2020 with, as the Best of Manga 2019 episode we recorded also ended up being nearly five hours long, and we have several other incoming podcasts that have ran long besides. Suffice to say, one of our New Year’s Resolutions for Manga Mavericks this year is recording shorter podcasts, both for your listening convenience and our time and sanity! But let me ask you, are you a person who prefers long podcasts like this, or wants them shorter? Do you enjoy these convention report episodes, or are there types of episodes you’d like us to do more of instead? You can let us know all this and more by taking our annual Manga Mavericks podcast survey, which is currently live through February 1st! SURVEY LINK: https://s.surveyplanet.com/UpCz9Mfs This year we wanted to give our survey-takers a little treat as thanks for their feedback, so we’re running a giveaway contest that all survey-takers are automatically entered in. Just fill out our survey, and you could win a FREE volume of manga that we have on hand to give out! Besides the survey, if you want to support the show and help us keep doing what we’re doing, throw us some love over at the Manga Mavericks patreon. Supporting us on Patreon also gives you guys special rewards too! For example, you may have heard the interviews we recorded with Pokemon voice actresses Sarah Natochenny and Lisa Ortiz as well as Gundam creator Yoshiyuki Tomino on our previous episode, where we included an abridged version of the interviews that included just the questions we asked. We’ll be uploading the full, unabridged interviews exclusively to our Patreon, so if you want to hear more questions and conversations with Sarah, Lisa, and Tomino pledge to us for just $5 or more for complete access to those as well as ten of our monthly bonus pods EXCLUSIVELY available on our Patreon! We also have full transcripts of our interviews with Sarah and Lisa written up on All-Comic.com for you to check out as well! PATREON LINK: https://www.patreon.com/mangamavericks There’s more to say, but I’ll let you listen to the rest in the podcast proper! And trust me, we have A LOT to talk about... PODCAST BREAKDOWN: 00:22 - Intro & Updates 09:08 - General Impressions of Anime NYC 2019 15:30 - Day 0: Karaoke Day 1: Friday, November 15th 21:24 - Conducting Interviews at Anime NYC 26:52 - Lines, Crowding, and the Press Room at the Javits Center 42:15 - Press Line Hiccups 48:30 - Shonen Jump Panel & Dr. Stone Panel 1:00:06 - Conducting Interviews at Anime NYC, Revisited 1:11:08 - VLord and Sakaki Buy Hypeland Hunter x Hunter Coats 1:15:58 - Dr. Stone Autographs 1:20:20 - Exhibitor’s Hall & Artist Alley 1:31:23 - Marion’s Friday 1:35:04 - Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken! Panel 1:39:55 - AMV Contest 1:42:13 - 100 Years of Yuri Panel Day 2: Saturday, November 16th: 1:46:20 - NHK’s Rumiko Takahashi MegaPoll Special 1:50:08 - Denpa’s TAa Panel 1:55:12 - GKids Panel 1:58:00 - Yen Press & Square Enix Panels 2:09:25 - Meeting People at ANYC 2:14:20 - Marion’s Saturday Autographs 2:16:16 - AniTube Panel 2:22:14 - Yen Press Panel, Revisited 2:25:55 - J-Novel Club Panel 2:37:40 - Megalobox Panel 2:40:36 - Yoshiyuki Tomino Interview 2:45:10 - Reconguista in G Film Premiere Screening 2:51:23 - VOFAN Interview Day 3: Sunday, November 17th: 2:58:02 - Kodansha/Vertical Panel 3:04:30 - Ray Chase Interview 3:05:25 - Manga Localizers Panel 3:37:20 - Exhibitor’s Hall & Artist Alley, Revisited 3:41:55 - One Piece Podcast Panel 3:46:14 - Lisa Ortiz Interview 3:47:37 - Manga Localizers Panel, Revisited 3:48:55 - Weathering With You Premiere Screening 4:12:46 - Final Thoughts on Anime NYC 4:16:10 - Wrap-Up Enjoy the show, and follow us on twitter at @manga_mavericks, on tumblr at mangamavericks.tumblr.com, and on Youtube! You can follow the hosts on twitter at @LumRanmaYasha and @VLordGTZ and special guests Sakaki at @kiirobon, Marion at @microwaevy, and Jecka at @Jecka1021! If you’d like to help support the show financially you can pledge to our Patreon and receive some awesome rewards like our Patreon-exclusive Bonus pods! If one-time donations are more your speed you can donate to Colton’s Ko-fi here and LumRanmaYasha’s Ko-fi here, and if you want to support LumRanmaYasha’s art and other projects you can donate to their personal Patreon. Don’t forget to also like and subscribe to us on Youtube and iTunes and leave us reviews to help us curate the show and create better content!
A couple of months ago we did some massive podcasts to cover everything we did at Anime Expo, and now we’ve got to do the same for Anime NYC! We’re starting off with our long overdue roundup of all the news that came out of the con, which includes tons of licenses and some big announcements. We would’ve just attached the news to our con report, but that ended up being a five hours long conversation all by itself! So, rather than make a five and a half hour podcast, we thought it’d be better to just split it up into two episodes... I didn’t just want to make this a news-only podcast, though, so we’re also throwing in some special bonuses. That’s right, we’re including excerpts from all three of the interviews we recorded at the con! We interviewed veteran Pokemon actresses Sarah Natochenny and Lisa Ortiz, and the father of Gundam himself - Yoshiyuki Tomino. I’ve been a huge fan of all three for a long time, so being able to interview them and discuss their careers and passions in person was an incredible experience. They answered some interesting questions too, so we’re excited to share their one-of-a-kind insights with you! The full transcripts of these interviews will also be posted on All-Comic.com in the next week, and the full uncut audio will be made available on our Patreon by Christmas Day! Check them out for even more answers and insights from Sarah, Lisa, and Yoshiyuki Tomino! PODCAST BREAKDOWN: News: 00:22 - Intro 01:57 - Demon Slayer Manga Speedup 03:20 - Robot x Laserbeam, Yui Kamio Lets Loose, and Other Short-Lived Shonen Jump Series Receive Digital Volumes 10:10 - Viz Licenses Venus in the Blind Spot & Splatoon: Squid Kids Comedy Show 12:34 - 24/7 Naruto Streaming Channel on Pluto TV 14:49 - Megalobox Season 2 Officially Announced!! 17:22 - Denpa Licenses 23:34 - Square Enix Licenses 31:36 - Yen Press Licenses 48:00 - J-Novel Club Licenses 1:14:00 - Kodansha/Vertical Licenses Interviews: 1:29:17 - Introducing the Interviews 1:32:25 - Sarah Natochenny Interview 1:38:50 - Lisa Ortiz Interview 1:46:54 - Yoshiyuki Tomino Interview 1:54:08 - Wrap-Up Enjoy the show, and follow us on twitter at @manga_mavericks, on tumblr at mangamavericks.tumblr.com, and on Youtube! You can follow the hosts on twitter at @LumRanmaYasha and @VLordGTZ. If you’d like to help support the show financially you can pledge to our Patreon and receive some awesome rewards like our Patreon-exclusive Bonus pods! If one-time donations are more your speed you can donate to LumRanmaYasha’s Ko-fi here, and if you want to support LumRanmaYasha’s art and other projects you can donate to their personal Patreon. Don’t forget to also like and subscribe to us on Youtube and iTunes and leave us reviews to help us curate the show and create better content!
A couple of months ago we did some massive podcasts to cover everything we did at Anime Expo, and now we’ve got to do the same for Anime NYC! We’re starting off with our long overdue roundup of all the news that came out of the con, which includes tons of licenses and some big announcements. We would’ve just attached the news to our con report, but that ended up being a five hours long conversation all by itself! So, rather than make a five and a half hour podcast, we thought it’d be better to just split it up into two episodes... I didn’t just want to make this a news-only podcast, though, so we’re also throwing in some special bonuses. That’s right, we’re including excerpts from all three of the interviews we recorded at the con! We interviewed veteran Pokemon actresses Sarah Natochenny and Lisa Ortiz, and the father of Gundam himself - Yoshiyuki Tomino. I’ve been a huge fan of all three for a long time, so being able to interview them and discuss their careers and passions in person was an incredible experience. They answered some interesting questions too, so we’re excited to share their one-of-a-kind insights with you! The full transcripts of these interviews will also be posted on All-Comic.com in the next week, and the full uncut audio will be made available on our Patreon by Christmas Day! Check them out for even more answers and insights from Sarah, Lisa, and Yoshiyuki Tomino! PODCAST BREAKDOWN: News: 00:22 - Intro 01:57 - Demon Slayer Manga Speedup 03:20 - Robot x Laserbeam, Yui Kamio Lets Loose, and Other Short-Lived Shonen Jump Series Receive Digital Volumes 10:10 - Viz Licenses Venus in the Blind Spot & Splatoon: Squid Kids Comedy Show 12:34 - 24/7 Naruto Streaming Channel on Pluto TV 14:49 - Megalobox Season 2 Officially Announced!! 17:22 - Denpa Licenses 23:34 - Square Enix Licenses 31:36 - Yen Press Licenses 48:00 - J-Novel Club Licenses 1:14:00 - Kodansha/Vertical Licenses Interviews: 1:29:17 - Introducing the Interviews 1:32:25 - Sarah Natochenny Interview 1:38:50 - Lisa Ortiz Interview 1:46:54 - Yoshiyuki Tomino Interview 1:54:08 - Wrap-Up Enjoy the show, and follow us on twitter at @manga_mavericks, on tumblr at mangamavericks.tumblr.com, and on Youtube! You can follow the hosts on twitter at @LumRanmaYasha and @VLordGTZ. If you’d like to help support the show financially you can pledge to our Patreon and receive some awesome rewards like our Patreon-exclusive Bonus pods! If one-time donations are more your speed you can donate to LumRanmaYasha’s Ko-fi here, and if you want to support LumRanmaYasha’s art and other projects you can donate to their personal Patreon. Don’t forget to also like and subscribe to us on Youtube and iTunes and leave us reviews to help us curate the show and create better content!
Our first year of Weekly Suit Gundam comes to a close as we reach the end of the Universal Century with 1993’s Mobile Suit Victory Gundam, the final full series set in the Universal Century and the last before creator Yoshiyuki Tomino took a break from the franchise and Sunrise branched out into Alternate Universe stories. Victory Gundam is famously one of the darkest installments in the series, with a large cast, a shockingly high mortality rate, and the youngest protagonist so far in 13-year-old Uso Ewin. It’s also one of Gundam’s most commonly underrated achievements, an imperfect but frequently brilliant series that contains some of the best moments, characters, action sequences, and episodes, and which lingers long after one finishes watching. We dive deep with the series, but also reflect on our first year of the Weekly Suit Gundam podcast, look towards the future, and discuss Fathom Events’ recent theatrical screening of Char’s Counterattack to celebrate Gundam’s 40th anniversary. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
Our first year of Weekly Suit Gundam comes to a close as we reach the end of the Universal Century with 1993's Mobile Suit Victory Gundam, the final full series set in the Universal Century and the last before creator Yoshiyuki Tomino took a break from the franchise and Sunrise branched out into Alternate Universe stories. Victory Gundam is famously one of the darkest installments in the series, with a large cast, a shockingly high mortality rate, and the youngest protagonist so far in 13-year-old Uso Ewin. It's also one of Gundam's most commonly underrated achievements, an imperfect but frequently brilliant series that contains some of the best moments, characters, action sequences, and episodes, and which lingers long after one finishes watching. We dive deep with the series, but also reflect on our first year of the Weekly Suit Gundam podcast, look towards the future, and discuss Fathom Events' recent theatrical screening of Char's Counterattack to celebrate Gundam's 40th anniversary. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
Something something we’ve been gone for a month because of a multitude of reasons, but now we’re back to bring forth a jam-packed show of Anime NYC happenings, the weird comments Yoshiyuki Tomino had on Makoto Shinkai, the latest in the LOL-suit progression, and one of our favorite pastimes: POLLS! Specifically, a poll from the NHK all about Rumiko Takahashi and her works. Spoiler, a big favorite is the top poll choice on there. Also, Daman Mills is a vocal magician. That is all. 2:40 – ONA at the Movies: One Piece: Stampede11:10 – Which Hollywood writer REALLY liked the Konosuba movie?15:23 – LOL-suit updates: MONEY TALKS27:53 – Gintama 1st season/series dub coming to… Hulu?32:00 – Revie Starlight films coming soon33:12 – more Aniplex shows now on FunimationNow37:49 – Food Wars marathon and Lupin OVA coming to Toonami41:49 – Free! 2020 film indefinitely delayed43:25 – DAEMON X MACHINA getting collab DLC45:29 – the Mr. Osomatsu movie now on Crunchyroll48:33 – Yoshiyuki Tomino’s… interesting comments on Makoto Shinkai55:11 – Banana Fish spiking tourism to the New York Public Library57:47 – Netflix December additions1:01:47 – February home video releases: Adult Swim, Rightstuf, Shout Factory, Discotek (January)1:08:08 – Sentai February releases1:12:06 – Funimation February releases1:20:58 – Aniplex Jan/Feb releases 1:24:54-2:08:19 AnimeNYC event recap1:32:04 – Aniplex panel (TPN, SAO Alicization Blu-ray)1:36:45 – Naruto channel on Pluto TV1:38:28 – Funimation panel (ID: Invaded, Nozomi shows on FuniNow)1:41:58 – Yen Press (Carole & Tuesday manga, High School DxD LNs)1:48:58 – MEGALOBOX 2 now in development1:51:12 – Sentai Filmworks panel (Fragtime OVA, upcoming dubs)2:01:28 – Crunchyroll panel 2:08:19 – NHK poll on Rumiko Takahashi series and characters Additional audio from:Pulp FictionLiar LiarDream – “My Will” Apple Podcasts – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcastona/id1348141210?mt=2Google Play – https://play.google.com/music/listen#/ps/Iji4s3v2zmahjgokqsmevbojno4TuneIn – https://tunein.com/podcasts/Podcasts/PodcastONA-p1249922/Stitcher – https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/podcastona/ Where to find us:Alex – @AuraOfAzureAndy – @MangaMan9000, youtube.com/DubTalkJet – @Divinenega, animationinfinity.comDuelist – @HeartofSword75, youtube.com/DuelistG As always, check out surrealresolution.com for more content, and follow @SurrealReso for more updates on the show, our continued news posts, reviews, and our fellow podcasts.
Anime NYC is currently North America's second-largest anime convention. Doug reports back on the programming, guests, and crowds.
Anime NYC is currently North America's second-largest anime convention. Doug reports back on the programming, guests, and crowds.
Anime NYC is currently North America's second-largest anime convention. Doug reports back on the programming, guests, and crowds.
Anime NYC is currently North America's second-largest anime convention. Doug reports back on the programming, guests, and crowds.
Anime NYC is currently North America's second-largest anime convention. Doug reports back on the programming, guests, and crowds.
Anime NYC is currently North America's second-largest anime convention. Doug reports back on the programming, guests, and crowds.
In this episode of Boku No Stop! we discuss episodes 1-4 of Space Runaway Ideon: "Resurrection of Ideon", "New Lopia in Flames", "The Trembling Earth", and "Escape from Planet Solo". We're back! A new show means a new introduction to one of the other noted "eccentric visionaries" of mecha anime - Yoshiyuki Tomino, he of Gundam. The show starts slow and the animation is a damn strange sight after some of the peak work of the 90s, but we're in for the long haul when the chaos begins near-instantly. Show Notes * The size chart we reference here has been scoured from the internet. Just google "Mecha size chart". You'll find several other ones. * https://i.imgur.com/xvSQvVR.png Support Us: Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/pitchdrop) More Shows: Pitch Drop Network (http://pitchdrop.net/)
Our journey through Universal Century Gundam continues with one of the strangest and most rewarding corners of the franchise, the 1991 theatrical feature Mobile Suit Gundam F91. Written and Directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino and reuniting him with Gundam’s original character designer, Yoshikazu Yasuhiko, and original mecha designer, Kunio Okawara, Gundam F91 was the first attempt to move beyond the original Universal Century saga that had reached its culmination in Char’s Counterattack. Set 30 years later, with an all-new cast of heroes and antagonists, F91 was originally intended to be a full 50-episode TV series, before plans fell through and Tomino and company were left scrambling to fit their story into a 2-hour feature. The result is, indeed, a mess, albeit a fascinating one, filled with some of the richest and most affecting material the franchise has ever conjured, brought to life with some of the best animation ever committed to film. There’s no doubt it’s an oddity and outlier in the history of Gundam, but it’s also essential viewing for fans of the series – and it leads to one of our most enjoyable conversations so far. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
Our journey through Universal Century Gundam continues with one of the strangest and most rewarding corners of the franchise, the 1991 theatrical feature Mobile Suit Gundam F91. Written and Directed by Yoshiyuki Tomino and reuniting him with Gundam's original character designer, Yoshikazu Yasuhiko, and original mecha designer, Kunio Okawara, Gundam F91 was the first attempt to move beyond the original Universal Century saga that had reached its culmination in Char's Counterattack. Set 30 years later, with an all-new cast of heroes and antagonists, F91 was originally intended to be a full 50-episode TV series, before plans fell through and Tomino and company were left scrambling to fit their story into a 2-hour feature. The result is, indeed, a mess, albeit a fascinating one, filled with some of the richest and most affecting material the franchise has ever conjured, brought to life with some of the best animation ever committed to film. There's no doubt it's an oddity and outlier in the history of Gundam, but it's also essential viewing for fans of the series – and it leads to one of our most enjoyable conversations so far. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes!Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter!Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
The original saga of Mobile Suit Gundam reaches its spectacular climax with Char's Counterattack, the 1988 theatrical film that reunites Char Aznable and Amuro Ray for one final conflict, and sees Yoshiyuki Tomino and company bringing these characters, their story, and the major themes of the series up to now home with astonishing aplomb. As the first original movie in the franchise's history, Char's Counterattack boasts incredible production values and some of the greatest animation we've ever seen, but it's also a deeply intelligent, incredibly thoughtful capper to all the big ideas, character arcs, and interpersonal conflicts broached in the original three TV series. And after spending so much time talking about the ingenious character creation that is Char, this movie gives us ample opportunity to put the character and his complex evolution in context, leading to one of the best conversations we've had about Gundam so far. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter! Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
The original saga of Mobile Suit Gundam reaches its spectacular climax with Char’s Counterattack, the 1988 theatrical film that reunites Char Aznable and Amuro Ray for one final conflict, and sees Yoshiyuki Tomino and company bringing these characters, their story, and the major themes of the series up to now home with astonishing aplomb. As the first original movie in the franchise’s history, Char’s Counterattack boasts incredible production values and some of the greatest animation we’ve ever seen, but it’s also a deeply intelligent, incredibly thoughtful capper to all the big ideas, character arcs, and interpersonal conflicts broached in the original three TV series. And after spending so much time talking about the ingenious character creation that is Char, this movie gives us ample opportunity to put the character and his complex evolution in context, leading to one of the best conversations we’ve had about Gundam so far. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
It’s the final stretch of Mobile Suit Gundam – episodes 39 through 43 – and if you thought a mere five episodes wouldn’t be enough to fill a full installment of this podcast, you clearly haven’t seen the absurdly jam-packed final push of this incredible show. With the strange, metaphysical concept of ‘Newtypes’ taking center stage, Gundam’s closing episodes are both its most action-packed and its most boldly experimental, as Amuro comes fully into his new abilities and Char tries to harness the powers of the mysterious Lalah Sune. It wasn’t exactly the ending creator Yoshiyuki Tomino and company had in mind – the series was cut from 52 to 43 episodes, with these final five installments having to tell a much-condensed version of a longer original game plan – but as we argue here, it’s nonetheless a stirring, pitch-perfect ending to this all-time great anime, and one worth the deep dive we give it here. Enjoy, and come back next time for our final episode (for now!) of Weekly Suit Gundam, where we’ll be talking the compilation movie trilogy from 1981-1982 that sent Gundam’s popularity into the stratosphere. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
As we hit the middle stretch of Mobile Suit Gundam and discuss episodes 14 through 25, the show gets increasingly dark, with the challenges faced by the crew of the White Base growing ever more perilous. We’re introduced to new foes like M’quve and Kycilia Zabi, alongside the inimitable Ramba Ral and his companion Hamon, enemies who present Amuro and Bright their fiercest opponents yet, but are also perhaps the most honorable and upstanding characters on the series to date. As the lines between ‘good’ and ‘evil’ grow ever blurrier, the body count starts piling up, and series creator Yoshiyuki Tomino more than earns his nickname, “Kill ‘Em All Tomino.” It’s another terrific, if frequently depressing, set of episodes, as we round the halfway point of the series and head into the back half full steam ahead. Subscribe to The Weekly Stuff Podcast on iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter @JonathanLack Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter @SeantheChapman www.weeklystuffpodcast.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel!
It's the final stretch of Mobile Suit Gundam – episodes 39 through 43 – and if you thought a mere five episodes wouldn't be enough to fill a full installment of this podcast, you clearly haven't seen the absurdly jam-packed final push of this incredible show. With the strange, metaphysical concept of ‘Newtypes' taking center stage, Gundam's closing episodes are both its most action-packed and its most boldly experimental, as Amuro comes fully into his new abilities and Char tries to harness the powers of the mysterious Lalah Sune. It wasn't exactly the ending creator Yoshiyuki Tomino and company had in mind – the series was cut from 52 to 43 episodes, with these final five installments having to tell a much-condensed version of a longer original game plan – but as we argue here, it's nonetheless a stirring, pitch-perfect ending to this all-time great anime, and one worth the deep dive we give it here. Enjoy, and come back next time for our final episode (for now!) of Weekly Suit Gundam, where we'll be talking the compilation movie trilogy from 1981-1982 that sent Gundam's popularity into the stratosphere. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter! Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
As convention prep comes down to the wire, we?re joined once again by Mike Toole to do what we do best with him. Namely, talk about some Discotek Media developments and review anime from Yoshiyuki Tomino! This time around, it's Blue Gale Xabungle aka Combat Mecha Xabungle. Visit www.animeworldorder.com for full show notes and supplemental links.
As we hit the middle stretch of Mobile Suit Gundam and discuss episodes 14 through 25, the show gets increasingly dark, with the challenges faced by the crew of the White Base growing ever more perilous. We're introduced to new foes like M'quve and Kycilia Zabi, alongside the inimitable Ramba Ral and his companion Hamon, enemies who present Amuro and Bright their fiercest opponents yet, but are also perhaps the most honorable and upstanding characters on the series to date. As the lines between ‘good' and ‘evil' grow ever blurrier, the body count starts piling up, and series creator Yoshiyuki Tomino more than earns his nickname, “Kill ‘Em All Tomino.” It's another terrific, if frequently depressing, set of episodes, as we round the halfway point of the series and head into the back half full steam ahead. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Subscribe for free to 'The Weekly Stuff' in iTunes! Follow Jonathan Lack on Twitter! Follow Sean Chapman on Twitter!
Chosen by premium Patreon supporter Nick, we're doing the 1979 classic Gundam series, and we're again joined by Gundam expert/USG Editor-In-Chief/our good friend Kat Bailey! We dig deep into Mobile Suit Gundam, series mastermind Yoshiyuki Tomino, the show's shaky launch to merchandisable success, and so much more. Plus we chat about one of the greatest anime betrayals of all-time and cover a pivotal episode of the first Gundam series! Listen now, Newtypes! Support this podcast and get dozens of bonus episodes by visiting Patreon.com/TalkingSimpsons and becoming a patron! This podcast is brought to you by the streaming network VRV: home to cartoons, anime, and so much more! Visit VRV.co/WAC to sign up for your FREE 30-day trial and kick a little money back to your friends at the Talking Simpsons Network!
For this special SPOOOOOOOOOKY edition of the Anime World Order podcast, we're rejoined by Mike Toole to review the most recent of Yoshiyuki Tomino's head-scratching trainwrecks, Gundam Reconguista in G. Why do we keep doing this to ourselves? Visit www.animeworldorder.com for full show notes and supplemental links.
In this month’s episode the PodCastle crew looks back at the humble origins of two iconic science fiction mega-franchises with 1977’s ripping space opera Star Wars and the three film theatrical compilation of Yoshiyuki Tomino’s 1979 television mecha series Mobile Suit Gundam. In the years subsequent to their release, the aesthetic and narrative conventions of … Continue reading Episode 15: Mobile Suit Gundam and Star Wars
In the first episode of the Retro Mecha Podcast Ian and Craig review Yoshiyuki Tomino's notorious 70's Super Robot classic Invincible Superman Zambot 3.
Episode 05 of Key Frames: Inbetweens, a mini-podcast about anime. Ben and Jeff are rockin' the suburbs! This one's the mecha podcast to end all mecha podcasts. Okay, that's probably not true: Jeff is going to watch Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, and Ben may even talk himself into watching Reconguista in G. But hey, there's some good stuff here about the breakout hits of Yoshiyuki Tomino's early career.
Episode 05 of Key Frames: Inbetweens, a mini-podcast about anime. Ben and Jeff are rockin' the suburbs! This one's the mecha podcast to end all mecha podcasts. Okay, that's probably not true: Jeff is going to watch Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, and Ben may even talk himself into watching Reconguista in G. But hey, there's some good stuff here about the breakout hits of Yoshiyuki Tomino's early career. The post Inbetween 05 - Like Hideaki Anno Did first appeared on Key Frames.
It's a Christmas miracle, everybody! We're joined once again by Mike Toole, hot off the release of the 2017 Crunchyroll Holiday Special, to talk about 1998's Brain Powerd, directed by--yep, you guessed it!--Yoshiyuki Tomino. Visit www.animeworldorder.com for full show notes and supplemental links.
Retro Anime Podcast - The Classic, The Obscure, The Forgotten.
In this episode Ian and Lewis delve into the brutal and desperate world of Yoshiyuki Tomino's legendary Space Runaway Ideon with discussion and reviews of the TV series and the movies A Contact and Be Invoked.
Once again Evan roped a bunch of his podcaster friends into a post-Otakon episode. Reigning Ani-Gamers Podcast champions Al and Kate (@hisuiRT, @narutakiRT, Reverse Thieves), Carl (@sdshamshel, Ogiue Maniax) and Patz (@PatzPrime, The Cockpit) discuss the anime convention's new Washington, DC location, their favorite and least favorite fan panels, the premieres of Eureka Seven: Hi-Evolution and In This Corner of the World, and the Jam Project/T.M. Revolution concerts. David was going to show up but unfortunately couldn't make it this year. Topics include: the song Rescue Fire from the show Rescue Fire, the most annoying Gundam character Yoshiyuki Tomino, and REAL ANIME Reddit. Apologies for the audio quality; the show was recorded on a portable recorder. Send us feedback at podcast@anigamers.com! Show notes, links, comments, and more can be found at http://anigamers.com/podcast.
Once again Evan roped a bunch of his podcaster friends into a post-Otakon episode. Reigning Ani-Gamers Podcast champions Al and Kate (@hisuiRT, @narutakiRT, Reverse Thieves), Carl (@sdshamshel, Ogiue Maniax) and Patz (@PatzPrime, The Cockpit) discuss the anime convention's new Washington, DC location, their favorite and least favorite fan panels, the premieres of Eureka Seven: Hi-Evolution and In This Corner of the World, and the Jam Project/T.M. Revolution concerts. David was going to show up but unfortunately couldn't make it this year. Topics include: the song Rescue Fire from the show Rescue Fire, the most annoying Gundam character Yoshiyuki Tomino, and REAL ANIME Reddit. Apologies for the audio quality; the show was recorded on a portable recorder. Send us feedback at podcast@anigamers.com! Show notes, links, comments, and more can be found at http://anigamers.com/podcast.
Today, it's time for Cocoa☆Disaster to tackle an entry in one of anime's most enduring franchises! Chorps and his friend Sid (@BeamSplashX on Twitter) meet up to talk about 1989's Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket, a six episode OVA series and the first Gundam series to not be helmed by franchise creator Yoshiyuki Tomino. 0080 really digs into the anti-war themes of Gundam through the lens of civilians and a conflict that's smaller and more relatable than the One Year War. We discuss not only the shows and its themes, but the way it affected Gundam as a whole and the way it relates to series that came after it. So what does this first Gundam side story look like, and what does it do differently? Why are the robot fights so unsatisfying? Just how many war crimes did Al commit without knowing? All this and more, coming at you! Timestamps: 0:50 - Introduction 1:50 - Background 8:06 - Gundam 0079 Recap (Series Setup) 12:18 - Summary 1:23:19 - Discussion: Is There a Right and Wrong in This Conflict? 1:30:57 - Discussion: The Final Battle 1:36:49 - Discussion: When You Know You've Lost 1:42:21 - Discussion: Moving On 1:45:44 - Discussion: The Perception of War 1:54:54 - Discussion: Comparisons to Later Gundam Series 2:05:48 - Discussion: Impact on Gundam as a Franchise 2:12:07 - Discussion: Impressions, Closing Thoughts on Gundam 0080 2:33:24 - Outro and Send-Off Intro by BeamSplashX (twitter.com/BeamSplashX)
The gang discusses Yoshiyuki Tomino, better known as the creator of Mobile Suit Gundam. We struggle to say anything positive. Intro Song from Overman King Gainer - King Gainer Over! bt Yoshiki Fukuyama Outro Song from Locke the Superman - Hoshi no Stranger by STR!X Subscribe to the Salty DX Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/Tatsuhobbit Subscribe to the Salty DX Podcast: Main page - www.saltydx.com RSS Feed - http://www.saltydx.com/rss iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/salty-dx-podcast/id1195297613?mt=2 Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/saltydxpodcast/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SaltyDX Keywords / Tags: anime cartoons comedy film geek gundam gunpla hentai humor japan japanese culture mecha movies television toys weeaboo collecting
Crunchyroll & Funimation are partnering together to bring you anime, anime, anime. For the greater good. Introducing the Anime Tourism Association, led by legendary director Yoshiyuki Tomino. Pokemon Anime, with Ash’s New Design is so bad that… Pokemon Generations. New Pokemon Anime, free of Ash Ketchum’s Loserdom Psycho-Pass Vita “Graphical Adventure Djm Attends Midoricon Binge-watching […] The post Anime Podcast of Some Sort: What They Done Did to Ash Ketchum, Tho?! Presented by Funimation and Crunchyroll appeared first on Delta Juliet Mike Media.
It’s been a long time coming, but the hosts of the Animecast finally dive into the origins of what became one of the biggest franchises of anime history. The 1979 Mobile Suit Gundam series in all of its retro glory. Does it hold up to today’s standards, what does it do right, and what may hold it back. Listen and find out! As mentioned in the podcast, this copy of Mobile Suit Gundam was provided to us for review by Nozomi Entertainment and Rightstuf. The opening for this episode is the OP for Mobile Suit Gundam called “Fly! Gundam” by Koh Ikeda. The closing for this episode is the ED for Mobile Suit Gundam called “Forever Amuro” by Koh Ikeda
On this week's show, DJ Ranma S, Ari Rockefeller, and Mako-chan discuss the new Kill La Kill and Hatsune Miku cafes, anime director Yoshiyuki Tomino states anime has no future. Meanwhile Bandai rolls out Capsule Figures in cans to counter tax increase in country. On the cosplay side of thing, we discuss how one cosplayer lost 100 pounds for a particular reason, and another cosplayer who talk about being a plus sized cosplayer. On the Open Forum Topic, we ask the following, "What is the most money you have spent on a cosplay, whether it was a commission, or you paid for it yourself." And in News from Japan, a man sues police after being locked up with gang member, while another attacks school girls on bikes, and finally one guy is arrested over hit and run with a woman he met on dating site. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/animejamsession/support
It took about four years longer than it should have but we're finally at Show 100! To commemorate this occasion, we bring back Mike Toole to discuss Yoshiyuki Tomino's most heartfelt work...Garzey's Wing. Visit www.animeworldorder.com for full show notes and supplemental links.