Mohawk52 said:
Please stop labelling me as "anti-sub". I'm not. By your example FUNimation should have gone bust long ago then, so it wasn't making dubs what caused the destruction of Geneon, it was poor business and marketing decisions, and pirates/fansubs. Many of the titles on my shelf are Geneon USA, some even Pioneer before them in both R1 and R2. They got my money one way or another.
Apologies, but if you say that a title being licensed and released sub-only may as well not have been licensed at all (as per a previous conversation) it seemed natural to believe your stance was anti-sub.
FUNimation deliberately licence only the big hits, which is why we will never see the end of shows like Kodocha, xxxHolic and Higurashi No Naku Koro Ni from them. If a series can't pull in the numbers, they drop it. If streams don't pull in the viewing figures, they don't get disc releases either. Geneon were much more generous, fully dubbing flops like Hajime No Ippo, Saiunkoku Monogatari, Kyo Kara Maoh and the infamous Rumiko Takahashi Anthology (which, according to a widespread rumours, sold under 100 copies per disc while requiring sales of 10k to break even). I own all of those releases, and they're great, but it's hopeless to expect companies to be able to do things like that any more. And several of those shows remain orphans now with no later seasons being picked up, because they are seen as unmarketable
If dubs had no cost, I'd agree with you, but it's widely accepted that a dub is an absolutely enormous overhead when it comes to anime. If having a dub means that something needs to sell thousands more copies to be profitable, but having a dub only means that a company should expect sales to double, it's easy to see that it's impractical for anything that isn't going to be a hit.
The poor business decisions you speak of which brought Geneon down
were dubbing shows that wouldn't be popular. You could argue that they should only have been picking up Shounen Jump titles too and dropping anything which didn't show promise, but a world with nothing but mainstream action shows is far worse than one with the occasional release without a bilingual soundtrack in my mind.
The Beez/S23 model of licensing a healthy mix of titles (ok, so the latter mainly seem to pick up trashy bishoujo stuff lately, but there are gems too...) and putting dubs on series which can support them seems to be the best of both worlds. Revisiting hot sellers to add a dub later without killing the licensing company is great.
Bleh, I'm just annoyed that the one thing keeping me being 'driven out of a hobby I love' as far as UK anime releases are concerned is being condemned for the same, but opposite reason
R