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Taro Toporific wrote:The Anime Network: Anime Call to Arms
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Anime Fans of America:
You' ve made Anime Network, the only dedicated anime channel in America, a breakout sensation ......but now, Anime Network's continued operation and expansion is in jeopardy. Despite the overwhelming success of Anime Network on Demand, certain cable executives think they can program any old anime, and that the fans of America won't know the difference...ad nauseum...
plaid_knight wrote:Also, I wish the channel would start broadcasting stuff in Japanese and allow us to switch between English and Japanese.
Charles wrote:anime isn't going to help your language skills, unless your goal is to talk like a total dork.
cenic wrote:Charles, you've missed the point completely. One of the prerequisites to being an otaku anime fan is being a dork. I guess you've never had the displeasure to attend a state side anime con.
Andocrates wrote:Mozart said "Notes are notes."
Andocrates wrote:And words are words. Watch this 5 second video clip and tell me you can't learn anything from it.
I think there are a lot of excellent Japanese speakers, including native speakers, who wouldn't be able to give you an answer to that question. In fact, that sounds like the kind of question that many Japanese think they need to have an answer to when they are studying English and so never get around to saying anything. There may be many "wrong ways" to learn a language but that surely depends on what the learner wants to do with it.Charles wrote:Why does the speaker use "yatte morau" instead of the verbs suru and kureru/kudasaru/itadaku etc. and why is the verb moratta in past tense? Why do the English subtitles use imperative forms and future tense when the Japanese phrase does not?
Mulboyne wrote:I think there are a lot of excellent Japanese speakers, including native speakers, who wouldn't be able to give you an answer to that question. In fact, that sounds like the kind of question that many Japanese think they need to have an answer to when they are studying English and so never get around to saying anything. There may be many "wrong ways" to learn a language but that surely depends on what the learner wants to do with it.Charles wrote:Why does the speaker use "yatte morau" instead of the verbs suru and kureru/kudasaru/itadaku etc. and why is the verb moratta in past tense? Why do the English subtitles use imperative forms and future tense when the Japanese phrase does not?
Charles wrote:
I never said you can't learn anything from cartoons. I said you learn all the WRONG things from cartoons. Let me prove it. Pop Quiz, essay question: explain the use of donatory verb usage in this example. Why does the speaker use "yatte morau" instead of the verbs suru and kureru/kudasaru/itadaku etc. and why is the verb moratta in past tense? Why do the English subtitles use imperative forms and future tense when the Japanese phrase does not?
You go on ahead and try to convince yourself you're learning Japanese by watching cartoons. It's always amusing to watch the contortions otaku will go to, to justify their cartoon watching hobby.. amusing in the same sense it is amusing to watch a circus freak show or a train wreck.
Andocrates wrote:You probably don't have the proper audio codecs, but no bother. Not everyone who watches anime is an otaku. That line of reasoning results in statements like, "all gay men like show tunes." Watching anime does not make you weird, believing anime is real is what makes you weird.
Andocrates wrote:Not everyone who watches anime is an otaku. That line of reasoning results in statements like, "all gay men like show tunes." Watching anime does not make you weird, believing anime is real is what makes you weird.
Andocrates wrote:I'm not sure the line of reasoning "Learn Japanese by Studying grammar," is any better then learning by watching Japanese TV. I studied Japanese "properly" but it did me little good in Japan.
Andocrates wrote: So to try and answer your pop quiz.
yaku is a group 1verb, not a suru verb. I would not have used yaku but tsukuru
Andocrates wrote:And one last thing, some American and German otaku are freaking monsters when it comes to learning Japanese. Paint everyone with the same brush and you'll miss half of what is going on around you.
Charles wrote: I have never encountered an otaku who attained a serious level of fluency in Japanese.
Andocrates wrote:How many fluent gaijin, otaku or otherwise, have you met? I only know 1 (Declan Murphy at Yamasa.) Japanese is hard for everyone if they have fun learning it more power to them. I don't see how that is any different then your enka thing.
Andocrates wrote:BTW are you saying animation cannot be art? That animation is unable to convey meaning and emotion? Watch "Grave of the Fireflies" and I bet you change your mind.
Andocrates wrote: Audio Format:
Code: 0x0055
Name: WAVE_FORMAT_MPEGLAYER3 (MP3)
Vendor: ISO/MPEG
Andocrates wrote:I don't think anyone was advocating learning Japanese from scratch by watching anime, or for that matter even television. That would simply be impossible. The thread was about how you could not learn anything from watching anime which is a stupid comment when you think about it, it's in Japanese right? Name one show in English that you couldn't learn some English vocabulary from.
Nonetheless, if watching One Piece or Naruto is enjoyable to me what the fu*k does it matter to you?
djgizmoe wrote:Hey, the very first Japanese I learned was from AKIRA and Patlabor, and the slangy, plain form dialogue ended up ringing truer than the following 4 years of feminized-keigo-infested classroom study.
djgizmoe wrote:If it wasn't for my interest in anime, I wouldn't have become interested in Japan and eventually come to live here (where I did not end up being a total dweeb).
djgizmoe wrote: Making generalizations about shallow anime ignores truly artistic films like AKIRA, Jin-Roh, Perfect Blue, Mononoke Hime, etc. For every Pokemon pervert, there's a Tokyo Godfathers fanatic, for every Yugi-Oh cosplayer, there's Wings of Honneamise-loving film critic.
djgizmoe wrote:As for focusing on the "Japanese were victims" subtext on Hotaru no Haka, just remember that the main characters, two kids, were in no way complicit with the adults who did not try harder to stop their country from going to war...Still, it's a downer I probably won't see again, but that's a personal preference.
djgizmoe wrote:Which brings us to "personal preference". Live and let anime otaku, dude.
djgizmoe wrote:Even the worst of them (those who idolize/obsess on anime characters), are not half as bad in my book as soccer hooligans. Or baseball card collecting stats otaku. Or the religious right. Or flash-card-roll-on-belt carrying kanji-otaku...
djgizmoe wrote:Nothing I'm more intolerant of than people making intolerant generalizations...
kotatsuneko wrote:watching jtv is the best teacher there is! screw tapes/computer courses/language "exchange"...
nothing beats jtv!
kotatsuneko wrote:one thought, have you ever thought a lot of otaki start learning japanese in earnest, then get to the point where they can understand games/comics but dont wish to go further as when they read the weekly mags/newspapers what they find is so unpleasant they'd simply rather not read them / be in contact with the average japanese?
djgizmoe wrote:Hey, the very first Japanese I learned was from AKIRA and Patlabor, and the slangy, plain form dialogue ended up ringing truer than the following 4 years of feminized-keigo-infested classroom study.
djgizmoe wrote:If it wasn't for my interest in anime, I wouldn't have become interested in Japan and eventually come to live here (where I did not end up being a total dweeb).
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