Toonami News Line
You like news, don't you?  I can see you're very excited.  And well you should be.  Toonami: The Unofficial has covered many different things in the last few months.  You wanna know what?  Well, I'm feeling somewhat generous, so you can take a look at what have you in the archives here.  Try to contain yourself.
News from the Toonami Universe... And then some

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SEPTEMBER 1998 ARCHIVE
OCTOBER 1998 ARCHIVE
NOVEMBER 1998 ARCHIVE
DECEMBER 1998 ARCHIVE
JANUARY 1999 ARCHIVE
FEBRUARY/MARCH 1999 ARCHIVE
APRIL/MAY 1999 ARCHIVE
JUNE/JULY 1999 ARCHIVE
SEPTEMBER 1999 ARCHIVE
OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 1999 ARCHIVE


~12.26.99~

Browsing through one of my fave game magazines, Electronic Gaming Monthly (Is. 126, Jan 2000), I ran across something of interest.  Sort of a 'paying homage' to the two-hours-of-power we all know and love.  On page 71 is a preview of an upcoming title for the Sega Dreamcast.  Name should sound somewhat familiar... Gundam Side Story 0079.  You get a little story of Gundam history (which, by the way, is as old as the sites runner here).  You get pictures, a preivew of the game, and a little side note on the top of the page, going by the subject title of... well, just read:

GUNDAM WING

Gundam Side Story 0079's release will coincide with a TV series to air on the Cartoon Network this spring.  The series, called Gundam Wing, will slot in the PRESTIGIOUS Toonami afternoon lineup.

I kid you not.  Probably one of the oldest and most prestigious (to return the favor) gaming magazines in North America has given Toonami it's proper dues.  Thanks EGM, hope you enjoy watching Gundam Wing as much as everyone else is sure to.

~12.10.99~

Many have told me about this, and I have read the article myself.  From the New York Post Online, there was a very significant article.  The topic... Dragonball Z:

DRAGON Ball Z" -- a violent, Japanese animated show that looks remarkably similar to "Pokemon"*1 -- is now the highest rated show on The Cartoon Network.
Based on the show's wild ratings (about 1.7 million homes each week) and the mania surrounding anything resembling "Pokemon," the network is planning to add another two Japanese animated shows next year called "Gundam W" and "Tenchi Meyo!"
"There's a huge following for Japanese animation," Cartoon Network spokeswoman Lori Goldberg said. "And the fans live for it."
"Dragon Ball Z" airs twice daily, at 5 p.m. and again during late night. It also airs on the weekends, which means it is on TV for about five-and-a-half hours a week.
The show is basically an Asian take on the Superman legend with some Chinese mythology thrown in.
In Asia, "Dragon Ball Z" has been airing for 15 years. It first hit the U.S. on the Cartoon Network about a year ago.
Like most hard-core Japanese animation -- an art form called Anime -- "Dragon Ball Z" is a morality play, the lines between good and evil are clearly drawn and the interplay between the two can sometimes be very violent.
"We edit it very heavily for U.S. sensitivity," Goldberg said, noting that blood is edited out and in some fight scenes certain frames are deleted from the show.
Goldberg added that the show is appropriately rated for television with TV-Y7FV, which means television that contains fantasy and violence appropriate for ages seven and up.
"None of the violence is real," Goldberg added. "It's all very fantasy based, there's never a gun and everyone who dies comes back to life -- they go to Heaven and then they come back and it teaches viewers that there are consequences to violence.
"There are good messages and it's all very moral," Goldberg said.
The Cartoon Network also currently airs another Anime called "Sailor Moon." The half-hour series is about junior high school girls who protect the universe from evil. It also airs five days a week, at 4 p.m. and Saturdays at 1 a.m.
Anime has been around in Japan for about 30 years. Classic cartoon shows such as "Speed Racer" and "Voltron" were both Anime.
Several characteristics make Anime different from other types of animation. First, the drawing style is streamlined, showing as few specific details as possible, and the action tends to be quite violent at times.
The most violent versions of Anime air only outside the U.S., where the rules against explicit animation violence are less strict.
"Japanese people tend to be a bit more reserved in their emotionalism," Anime expert Scott Mauriello recently told The Post. "They seem to pull it all out in their cartoon characters*2, who can be very emotional, angry or loving. It's sort of a catharsis for them."
 

To put my own commentary to it, I have afew things to say to it.  Now, I will say it's great that anime is getting some recognition in some mainstream things like the New York Post.  And I also think it's great that my fave show, Sailor Moon, gets to share some of that spotlight, but there are two problems, one much like Nemalki said, but one of my own.

1: DBZ is said to be like Pokemon.  Just that mention is enough to make me laugh.  DBZ has been around for 15 years compared to Pokemon's 3 years.  That's somewhat of an insult, if you would take it that way.

2: An 'anime' expert from the NYP had the audacity to say that the characters in anime were CARTOONS.  For those who have frequented my site, you all know how much I hate the word 'cartoon' associated to anime.  'Cartoons' are Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, Tom and Jerry, and anything by Disney.  Anime, is, well, anime.  I think I'll get on about that again later.


 




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