Vashdaman
Cardcaptor
I read a statistic today that the anime industry is today worth something to the tune of 25 billion dollars, and that 80% of the industry's sales are from the international anime consuming audience as opposed to domestic. I guess this makes sense seeing how truly globally popular anime today is, it's got to the point where Luffy is apparently a totem of anti establishment rebellion in all sorts of far flung nations (which is a subject I know very little about but which I find absolutely fascinating nonetheless, potentially a subject for another thread?), but anyway that 80 percent figure still somewhat surprised me.
I suppose it's partly due to this idea that I think many anime fans have or had about anime being a very culturally distinct and particular product made for a Japanese audience by Japanese creators in a discernably Japanese anime style. Obviously this definition is inherently silly considering the fact that that viewpoint is also only held, ironically, by non-Japanese anime fans. And for years now that position has been increasingly impossible to hold as the line between Japanese anime and international anime becomes more and more blurred. But still that figure kind of surprised me, and it made me wonder how this evident shift over time towards a more important foreign market is impacting the kind of anime getting made today. I haven't paid close enough attention to the anime landscape of late to really notice if there is an increasing number of shows obviously targeting a foreign audience or not. Or if the idea at the anime studios is that people want that characteristic "Japanese" anime flavour and are maybe leaning in to it even more in an exaggerated sort of way. Or maybe the idea is that if it ain't broke don't fix it?
What trends in this regard have you noticed, and what do you make of it all?
I suppose it's partly due to this idea that I think many anime fans have or had about anime being a very culturally distinct and particular product made for a Japanese audience by Japanese creators in a discernably Japanese anime style. Obviously this definition is inherently silly considering the fact that that viewpoint is also only held, ironically, by non-Japanese anime fans. And for years now that position has been increasingly impossible to hold as the line between Japanese anime and international anime becomes more and more blurred. But still that figure kind of surprised me, and it made me wonder how this evident shift over time towards a more important foreign market is impacting the kind of anime getting made today. I haven't paid close enough attention to the anime landscape of late to really notice if there is an increasing number of shows obviously targeting a foreign audience or not. Or if the idea at the anime studios is that people want that characteristic "Japanese" anime flavour and are maybe leaning in to it even more in an exaggerated sort of way. Or maybe the idea is that if it ain't broke don't fix it?
What trends in this regard have you noticed, and what do you make of it all?
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