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Dilandau
Joined: 06 Jan 2004
Posts: 525
Location: Tea House
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Posted: Fri Feb 06, 2004 5:58 am
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Go girls! I pulled this info from animenation:
"ICv2 News has published its analysis of the American anime and manga markets for 2003. In summary:
Manga was the fastest growing area of pop culture last year, with 75-100% growth to an estimated market size of around $100 million at retail, largely accounted for by females shopping for manga at bookstores.
The American anime industry grew at a much smaller 10-20% growth rate, bringing the total value of American anime DVD sales up to an estimated annual $550-$600 million."
who woulda thought eh?
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littlegreenwolf
Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Fri Feb 06, 2004 6:11 am
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Heh, it helps that one of the first manga out in america that became widely avalible was a sailormoon. That, and if most girl manga readers do what I do, it's no wonder this is happening. I cannot tell you howmany girls I've gotten into manga at my school in the past two years because of manga like peach girl. Some would think girls wouldn't be into comics, but they seem to be adapting to them fast. Some even stole my copies of Peachgirl. >.>
Anyway, I think it's a real good idea for the manga companies to keep bringing in the plain romance shoujo manga. Expect Hana Kimi sales to be very high when viz starts releasing that. It's one of my all time faves, and there is a giant fandom for it online.
I think it's been mentioned before, but anime fans aren't really made up by a male majority. If you go to an anime convention, the crowd will be pretty evenly split between males and females. I say hurrah to what has been considered by other girls as a "tomboy" intrest to becoming something common.
I will finish off by saying what I've said before: we need a shoujo manga monthly anology, and it would best be an American version of Hana to Yume, or Sho-comi, because those two magazine carry tons of great titles.
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Dilandau
Joined: 06 Jan 2004
Posts: 525
Location: Tea House
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Posted: Fri Feb 06, 2004 6:29 am
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So.....just curious really. Why do you think girls are more into manga than guys? I know its true....I always feel like a dork when I go to the manga section of a big store and I'm the only guy there. *panics and thinks 'maybe I shouldn't be here?'*
I find manga kinda frustrating, cause I know that I (somewhat) control the 'pace' of the story. So, I often get impatient and start 'just reading' and ignoring all the good artwork. I hate it when I do that!!!
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littlegreenwolf
Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Fri Feb 06, 2004 6:58 am
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Dilandau wrote: | So.....just curious really. Why do you think girls are more into manga than guys? I know its true....I always feel like a dork when I go to the manga section of a big store and I'm the only guy there. *panics and thinks 'maybe I shouldn't be here?'*
I find manga kinda frustrating, cause I know that I (somewhat) control the 'pace' of the story. So, I often get impatient and start 'just reading' and ignoring all the good artwork. I hate it when I do that!!! |
Hmm. *Tries to come up with what she thinks* Well. I think it's mainly because a majority of the manga you'll find is shoujo manga, which automatically appeals to girls. You don't often see guys reading the shoujo manga that are obviously shoujo manga. Example, you'll see guyd reading X, but going no where near Fushigi Yugi. However with girls, you'll see them reading most of the manga, from everything to the obviously girl manga to things targeted towards guys like Sorcerer Hunters. I can't really explain why this is, but it happens. You can count on a significant percentage of the subscribers to Shonen-jump being female. I don't know why it is, but Hikaru no Go is pretty much a giant fangirl title, and you could probably see the rate of subscriptions rise when Viz announced that title.
>.> I don't think I answered your question. To simplyfy another reason, like I've said before anime fans are split pretty evenly between male and female, and the girls just have really great manga selections to show their bestfriends who are non-anime fans. It's easy to just tell your friend to try a shoujo manga, and they'll 8 out of 10 times, if it's a good shoujo manga, no matter how tomboyish the girl might be, she'll get hooked. I'm not that in to teenage romance stories. Never was one to get into Dawson's Creek and all that, but Hana Kimi and Hot Gimmic brough out the lovesick teengirl in me. They're just really easy to get hooked on.
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spawn
Joined: 06 Feb 2004
Posts: 2
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Posted: Fri Feb 06, 2004 11:12 am
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I'm looking for some members on my own forum
[Rest of post deleted, shoulda read Teh Rules -t]
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Dilandau
Joined: 06 Jan 2004
Posts: 525
Location: Tea House
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Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2004 4:20 am
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I think this person sent me an email with the same message *glares*
So, manga is like uber-caffeine for girls!
No wonder I get scared in manga sections of stores! But one thing I like about it....it keeps them quite for hours
lol. Another weird question. In Shoujo manga, is the female character ALWAYS the main character? Frankly, I have always found it really interesting when the guy is the one 'telling' the story...its different. Like with the Saikano manga. I don't think you would really classify that as Shoujo though.
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littlegreenwolf
Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2004 1:51 pm
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Dilandau wrote: | lol. Another weird question. In Shoujo manga, is the female character ALWAYS the main character? Frankly, I have always found it really interesting when the guy is the one 'telling' the story...its different. Like with the Saikano manga. I don't think you would really classify that as Shoujo though. |
Well, X and RG Veda, two CLAMP titles, featured guys as the main character, but that doesn't make it any less shoujo. A girl can be the focus of a shonen manga, and that wouldn't make it shoujo. *example: Battle Angel Alita* . What classifies the shoujo manga is the focus on story and character relationships, instead of action. Keep in mind too that many shonen-ai and yaoi manga have pretty much no girls in the story, yet are still considered shoujo manga .
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Yuki555
Joined: 13 Jun 2003
Posts: 164
Location: Georgia
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Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2004 3:27 pm
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I'm so happy to know more people are getting the message (manga is GOOD!). It certainly shows because Barnes and Nobles use to have this ONE shelf for manga, now manga books are all over the store! I (a male) personally have no problem picking up books like Fushigi Yuugi. As long as I like the story, I'll read it.
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himiko-chan
Joined: 08 Oct 2003
Posts: 26
Location: NJ
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Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2004 3:29 pm
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littlegreenwolf wrote: | I will finish off by saying what I've said before: we need a shoujo manga monthly anology |
But we *HAD* one, "SMILE" magazine. (Thank you, Tokyopop.)
Which was great because it hooked me on "Paradise Kiss" and "Mars", while at the same time letting me know that I didn't care for "Peach Girl" and "Juline". But, from an economic standpoint, the GN format is better for my wallet. I can just pick the titles I really want to buy. And I can still get sucked into a new series by a pretty cover (like Alice 19th and Hot Gimmick) and by reading the first chapter at Borders.
The monthly must've not made economic sense for TP either or they wouldn't have switched to the GN format.
Anyway, it's better this way. With "SMILE", you had to go buy it at the comic book store, where the guy behind the counter is watching you every second. With the GNs, you can browse as much as you want in Borders.
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littlegreenwolf
Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2004 3:32 pm
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Yeah, I used to get Smile. I loved getting a ton of different manga chapters in the mail every month. I was so mad when they stopped Smile.
Now that Shonen Jump is doing pretty well, and tokyopop has tons more shoujo titles, I'm hoping for them to possibly bring it back. >.< I would order a subscription in a heart beat.
Heck, they could start a monthly CLAMP magazine if they wanted to.
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qollocust
Joined: 31 Jul 2003
Posts: 182
Location: Philadelphia
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2004 12:18 am
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This doesn't apply to ALL female manga readers, but I've deffinitely got that shopping gene. Everytime I go to the mall, I have to buy something and seeing as I own/seen most of the good anime they sell at our best buy, I usually get a graphic novel at the bookstore. Plus it's cheaper to buy a graphic novel than a DVD.
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Luff-Chan
Joined: 23 Oct 2003
Posts: 79
Location: Scottsdale, AZ
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2004 3:13 am
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I have yet to bump into another guy in the manga section at bookstores -___- I just noticed that most are girls...and they give me glares and try not to look at me O_o I feel so weird at the GN section, and it is right by the cafe, and all those people....staring....watching....*shivers*
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Cerberus
Joined: 02 Nov 2003
Posts: 120
Location: In front of a monitor
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2004 4:05 pm
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I too have never seen another boy at the manga section in my bookstore. I guess it's because boys don't spend as much time looking for manga to buy, we just find one we want and leave soon after. I've noticed that many of the girls will spend a lot of time reading the whole volume and then buying it. O_o (Well that's the way it is for me anyway. Sorry if my personal experiences are wrong.) I just look for a genre I like and if the first chapter is good, I buy it.
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Swordfish_II
Joined: 05 Nov 2003
Posts: 617
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2004 4:39 pm
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You've actually seen other people browsing the manga sections at the bookstores?
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Cerberus
Joined: 02 Nov 2003
Posts: 120
Location: In front of a monitor
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2004 7:04 pm
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Swordfish_II wrote: | You've actually seen other people browsing the manga sections at the bookstores? |
I have at stores like Barnes and Noble and Borders, since they are bigger but not at Waldenbooks. Yet.
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