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Forum - View topicAnswerman - Since When Can Publishers Other Than Viz Publish Jump Titles?
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Lord Geo
Posts: 2693 Location: North Brunswick, New Jersey |
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Well, to be fair, Seven Seas doesn't seem to be the one contacting Shueisha (or even Akita Shoten) directly, as every volume of releases like Yuuna or Saintia Sho, or even the various Go Nagai manga (which would be Dynamic Pro) all state in the back (along with the translation credits) that they were licensed with the assistance of a company called Tohan Corporation, which had also apparently helped companies like TokyoPop & Media Blasters arrange licensing rights for titles like Arm of Kannon (a Gentosha title) or Samurai Man (yet another Akita Shoten title) years ago. I remember seeing something similar with TokyoPop's release of B't X, which credited a company called Tuttle-Mori Agency (&, checking ANN, this company also helped TP with a bunch of CLAMP manga, too).
Really, in the end, it's all about connections, and it looks like Seven Seas has found some connections via Tohan that are helping them gain access to publishers they likely wouldn't have been able to work with on their own. As Deb states, Viz obviously has right of first refusal still, but hopefully this can only open up more titles being given a chance here, since we don't need to rely on Viz for "everything" from Shueisha or Shogakukan anymore. |
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CatSword
Posts: 1489 |
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Love the fact that Seven Seas was able to get these coveted Jump titles.
Also, it's not like Viz never tried ecchi - it just simply was almost never successful for them, because they didn't know how to handle it. The "mature content" stickers (which Seven Seas doesn't apply) might have cost them some sales but had to be there to protect their reputation. Furthermore, they dealt with controversy over initially censoring I''s (before deciding to release later volumes uncensored with their dreaded "mature content" sticker) and didn't finish publishing Strawberry 100%. The likely reason Pretty Face made it all the way through was because it was only six volumes. Last edited by CatSword on Fri Sep 07, 2018 2:38 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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samuelp
Industry Insider
Posts: 2251 Location: San Antonio, USA |
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Tohan is one of the book licensing agent companies in Japan (like Tuttle Mori, the first and biggest one... There's a great piece about its founder and the history of licensed manga for those curious: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2018/05/27/general/will-digital-piracy-ruin-future-manga/#.W5LA-egzbAQ ) Seven Seas _most definitely_ talks directly with Shueisha, shogakukan and all the other Japanese publishers, but the contracts often have to go through agents for historical or business reasons. |
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OjaruFan2
Posts: 674 |
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Looks like the whole rumor of Viz Media being the only North American manga publisher with access to Shueisha and Shogakukan titles is entirely false. That's good.
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configspace
Posts: 3717 |
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But To Love-Ru and Yuuna and the Haunted Hot Springs are shounen, published in WSJ (and Jump Square for TLRDarkness) and thus are supposed to be teen-friendly |
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st_owly
Posts: 5234 Location: Edinburgh, Scotland |
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Japan and the West's definition of teen friendly are not the same. |
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TarsTarkas
Posts: 5957 Location: Virginia, United States |
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Most definitely. |
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Lord Geo
Posts: 2693 Location: North Brunswick, New Jersey |
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That makes sense. I just don't tend to see Tohan or Tuttle-Mori listed in the copyright/translation sections of most manga, but I guess that's because most of the publishers here in America are already partially (if not wholly) owned by a Japanese publisher already, so there's likely no need to involve those two agencies in those cases. I'm sure those two are mentioned much more often in other countries' manga releases.
I wouldn't say that it's completely "false", but rather more a case of it making more sense to work with other companies. Years ago, when manga was a smaller market, Shueisha & Shogakukan probably thought that Viz was enough to work with, since the manga industry here wasn't that big in general, so they likely did turn away other companies, barring some exceptions like Dark Horse (or that time Vertical did a Shueisha manga, because the creator personally asked for that company to release it in English). Today, however, with manga regularly outselling even the biggest names in American it'd be insane for Shueisha & Shogakukan to turn away offers from other companies, because now they likely see manga as being big enough that Viz can't possibly be enough for them. |
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katscradle
Posts: 469 |
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This goes for any kind of exclusive business relationships, it would really, really be unfortunate if others did not have a shot at licensing something simply because all businesses have their own constraints and preferences.
VIZ also built its reputation by censoring a lot of titles it released across all age demographics and imprints for a variety of content, not just sexual. (Sans SuBLime AFAIK they just don’t license something if there is a content issue.) Lots of publishers have done the same but, VIZ were likely the biggest in this regard. Some of their titles still have caused little dust ups out in the wild too, along with being a good size company that can make you a target. So they probably have a bit of a reason to be paranoid. VIZ is still to me one of the most cautious publishers of Japanese comics in English. Though, their way of doing business has clearly worked well.
Been a long time since I heard someone mention I"s. I can barely remember any details myself. Just some line about fitting the criteria of the US audience. But, sometimes an advisory sticker/logo is not something the publisher decided independently. It can be a requirement of the book buyers for stocking the title. Even if a title had warnings on it or, was rated higher did not necessarily mean the contents were in line with the Japanese edition either. I have at least one title from VIZ that was shrinkwrapped and has all kinds of warnings but, was still too much to be published uncensored in English. |
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Shay Guy
Posts: 2337 |
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The article really doesn't posit any answers to the biggest question that jumped out at me from the submission: "Why might Viz, which had right of first refusal, have turned down Silver Spoon, a popular manga from the creator of Fullmetal Alchemist"? (And Yen Press's license took quite a while too, six years into the series and three years after the end of the anime.)
One theory I have is another branding issue; "agricultural high school" isn't skeevy like the Jump titles mentioned, but could still be hard to figure out how to sell. The other is license price. And of course, it could well have been a mixture of both. |
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configspace
Posts: 3717 |
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Ok yes I was being sarcastic. But parts of the west outside of the US, or outside of the Anglosphere, seem ok with it: https://www.amazon.de/Love-Ru-Darkness-Blu-ray/dp/B0791XV7KB/ https://www.amazon.de/Testament-Sister-Devil-Departures-Blu-ray/dp/B07CXBXMKJ/ To Love Ru Darkness and The Testament of Sister New Devil Departures (OVA) are rated age 16 in Germany and so are not adult-restricted. This coincidentally is in line with Seven Seas' older teen rating for their ecchi titles
To my knowledge Polemon is still censored by Viz, previous Naruto volumes still are, Dragonball still is, despite the "uncut" label (which they later admitted to), and Bokurano is still censored despite it being labeled "mature". I'm glad that Seven Seas does not use warning labels to ruin the front covers for any of their manga at all. One can get age info on the back if needed.
I can understand the marketing/selling aspect, but does the license price really matter? Since Viz is wholly owned by Shogakukan-Shueisha their budget ultimately comes from the licensor themselves and likewise money flows back to the parent corp Last edited by configspace on Fri Sep 07, 2018 6:58 pm; edited 2 times in total |
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zawa113
Posts: 7358 |
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Since others can, in fact, publish SJ titles, I really really hope that Ed Chavez's new company, Denpa, will get Space Adventure Cobra. Ed's personal love of this manga is well known (way back when, he actually tended to cosplay as Cobra at conventions!) and now that he's not under anyone's thumb, I hope he can pursue publishing Cobra! (For everyone, not just him! But mostly for me!)
Speaking of "Denpa", did anyone play that 3DS eshop game Denpamen? It's pretty fun and cute! And every time I see the new company name, it reminds me of that game |
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Angel'sArcanum
Posts: 304 Location: Toronto, Ontario |
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Yeah, I always wondered even back to when Gate 7 and Blood Blockade Battlefront from Jump Square were picked up by Dark Horse when other Square titles were put under the Shonen Jump label (Tegami Bachi, Blue Exorcist, Seraph of the End, etc), so I figured Viz had a sort of direct partnership with Shueisha and Shogakukan almost like the American divisions of Japanese companies like Aniplex and PonyCanyon and had license priorities over other companies, though I guess on that note, titles from those Japanese companies had been given over to American distributors not immediately connected before, so I guess there's leeway. It's jarring to me with Jump especially though, because that was like THE manga magazine over here, and that label was like a special brand connected to all these titles, had a kind of special air to it, and then you see Gate 7 or B3 on shelves that qualify but don't have the label on them, then the Dark Horse logo and it feels so weird
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Cave
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This. Definitely. Even recently, they censored and completely cut a page from Robo x Laserbeam. It really amazes me 10+ years later they still continue this nonsense. It is nice to get a simulpub of most of WSJ each week, but I'm really glad to see other publishers get some Shueisha/Shogakukan titles. Last edited by Cave on Sun Jun 21, 2020 9:50 am; edited 1 time in total |
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darkestabsol
Posts: 13 |
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Yeah, I had questions about how Yen Press got Silver Spoon rather than Viz. Not that I'm complaining, since it's finally getting released of course.
On a side note, this gives me vague hope, however slim and infeasible, that someone might pick up Magic Kaito despite Viz seemingly having no interest. (Which is fair enough, given Aoyama's other work, Detective Conan, never did especially well in English.) |
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