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Animation > General > Re: Lupin going...
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Re: Lupin going out of print?

by Terrence Briggs <mrman1mrman1@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 28, 2008 at 04:49 PM

<crossposting to rec.arts.animation, for a broader point I wanted to
make>

On Apr 27, 2:35=A0am, "S.t.A.n.L.e.E" <LostRune+...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
> Sat, 26 Apr 2008 2:36pm-0700, 8-Bit Star <ness...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>:
> > On Apr 26, 11:49 am, "S.t.A.n.L.e.E" <LostRune+...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>

> > > Funimation gave Kodocha a big fanfare,
> > > with a big announcement and toy hammers and everything.
> > > After 52 eps, it still wasn't enough.
>
> > > What gave Detective Conan a chance was the TV exposure,
> > > and yet I don't think it'll ever be finished in America - it's too
lon=
g
> > > (and "old," even though it's still airing in Japan).
>
> > Not sure about Kodocha (this is the first I've heard of it)
> > but Detective Conan was definitely mishandled.
>
> Kodocha was primarily a DVD release
> (although it did get airtime on Funi's own TV channel,
> but that's pretty much insignificant).
> Despite the fanfare and endorsement, there's not enough people that
> could sup****t such a long, dated series (it's only a decade old),
> so Funi ended the DVD release after 13 volumes (52 eps).
>
> Conan had the extra advantage of its CN airing
> and that it's still current in Japan,
> but I think it'll suffer the same fate as Kodocha.
> Not enough N. Americans could sup****t such long, dated series.
>
> Seems the few extended series nowadays, like Inuyasha, are relatively
> new and have TV exposure to complete the DVD release schedule.
> Time will tell on One Piece.

<snip>

> > > New fans don't care; they'll not just gonna buy anything old you
sell,=

> > > especially long expensive ones, regardless how good your marketing
is.=

>
> > Plenty of new shows have failed too. =A0You could
> > just as well say there's no market for anime.
>
> But the odds are even worse for older shows,
> a greater risk for safe-conscious networks.
>
> BTW, it's not just anime.
> Old cartoon shows like Thundercats, Voltron, or Robotech
> didn't do well on CN neither.

I was always curious about the CN ratings for Thundercats, since it
was Toonami's opening act, no?

Remember Transformers: Generation 2?  It debuted as the highest-rated
weekly syndicated show (among 2-11-year-olds) when it premiered in
1994(?).  Got at least a 4.5 rating, with a 25 share.  It was nothing
more than repackaged reruns of the original, 8-year-old TV series.

Heck, wouldn't Dragon Ball Z's success suggest that decade-old
programs could hit it off in this country?

That's the obvious example.  Myriad Looney Tunes, Merrie Melodies and
Bugs Bunny & Tweety Shows have also performed well in the ratings over
the years, despite the shorts being decades old.

Of course, I can't think of any examples since 1995, when TF: G2 did
it.

Terrence Briggs, wonders why Sunbow's GI Joe reruns were never
repackaged back then
Peace to you...
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Re: Lupin going out of print?
Terrence Briggs <mrman  2008-04-28 16:49:06 

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tan12V112 Sat Jul 19 19:20:07 CDT 2008.