Who is this more people? This imaginary audience that is under 60 and still paying for cable and isn’t steaming just doesn’t existDragon Ball Ireland wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 5:16 pmGet more people into Dragon Ball? Sure, it may be a minority in this day and age, but those channels still exist so they are obviously watched by some people who may stumble across an episode of Daima that they may have not otherwise intended to check out. Point is while Dragon Ball on traditional TV is never going to be the juggernaut it was in the 90s and 2000s it doesn't hurt to have it there.MasenkoHA wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 2:59 pm For the life of me I will never understand so many people on here’s’s hyperfixation with Dragon Ball airing on traditional television.
Dragon Ball being on Adult Swim or Nick does what exactly?
Weird Old Dub Stuff
Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
So, I think you got something confused here. FUNi didn't acquire Crunchyroll. Sony acquired them both in 2017 & 2020 respectively. They then folded all of FUNi's assets into Crunchyroll in 2022, with them still running FUNi's offices in Texas & continuing to produce the ongoing dubs FUNi had as well as more new dubs, then FUNi's streaming service got shut down, initially they wanted to just let the remaining subs to it people had run out, but then decided to give people who still had them gift codes to theirs or store credit for their store. As far as anyone can tell, no one who was still in charge of FUNimation before then is still there.LostTimeLord wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 6:12 pmGiven the timing of Daima's dub, and its subtitled Netflix release, I would have thought that broadcast TV is a lower priority for Toei these days. They'd be leaving money on the table by not shopping around to broadcasters, but would anyone other than Toonami have picked it up that quickly or paid what Toei thought it was worth?Yellow Flower King wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 3:16 pmI was just wondering who would get it, because Toei does believe in traditional tv no matter how outdated, because tv stations ironically pay a lot more money even with streaming.
Also (going back to the "Nick" idea), Paramount doesn't actually own Warner Bros yet, and we have no idea how much they'll change when they do. Look at Funimation, they essentially shut their own own streaming service down after they acquired Crunchyroll.
I don't think that anything unusual happened with Daima, so much as Toei just not being interested in simuldubs. For One Piece, they may have even delayed the dub a couple of times so that it coincided with a new run of simulcast episodes.Scsigs wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 12:46 pm only better with the dub being a broadcast dub & hitting them at the same time as the Japanese dub whereas Daima was a few months behind for no reason.
One Piece, there's no set schedule for when more episodes get dubbed now that they've caught up with the Japanese broadcast. And even then, it would probably make more sense for the episodes to be dubbed in chunks like it was for years as FUNi licensed more of the episodes, specials, & movies for dubbing. Especially since the series is going seasonal now. Before then, they started fast tracking the dub towards the end of FUNi's existence & it continued into Crunchyroll's ownership of it, seemingly with Toei helping fund the dub to do so.
Moreso, I think you misunderstood what I was saying & how the dubs of the franchise have been produced in the last over a decade.
So, minus the dubs of Super (ostensibly because they had to dub & broadcast Kai: The final Chapters beforehand on top of the usual lagtime for anime TV shows being at least a year after the Japanese) and Super Hero (for some reason), ever since Resurrection F, the English dubs of Dragon Ball have actually been pretty close to the Japanese releases. Resurrection F had theatrical showings both in Japanese & English back in 2015 around the same time as the Japanese ones, then the Blu-Rays & DVDs came out in the US before the Japanese ones, which is unheard of for a new anime thing unless it's a Western co-production. Then Super: Broly's theatrical showings were done a month in the US after the Japanese ones & the home media releases came 2 months before Japan. Then, Daima's dub started coming out a few months after the series started even though we knew it'd started being produced a few months beforehand & the first 3 episodes had a theatrical showing with it, so it should've been a simuldub. Which was heavily criticized for not making any sense & had a frustrating release schedule of not uploading the dub audios to Crunchyroll & Netflix up until the latest episode, then simulcasting both the dub & sub as the remaining episodes came out.
Toei's also extremely receptive to criticism when it comes to Dragon Ball as well these days. Resurrection F had more action to try to combat the criticism of Battle of Gods not having enough of it (Thanks, IGN), the Super remaster is partly because they need to relaunch Super as a series & adapt the remaining manga arcs, but they're also taking the opportunity to address the biggest criticisms of the original production (the same with how they're making One Piece a seasonal anime) with the animation quality, the pacing, hopefully Goku's characterization, etc. I'm assuming that this is also the reason that Daima had a simulcast release on Netflix, as that's 1 of the most convenient platforms for a lot of people, plus they had a thing going with them for the live action One Piece series, so it makes even more sense. So, I think it'd just make sense if the Super remaster will be broadcast on Netflix & Crunchyroll like Daima was, but with the dub included instead of us having to wait a few months, especially if it's less than or around 10 episodes an arc, which would be easy to dub in a few weeks each with the cast members & mix it so it'd be ready for release.
Only dubs that matter are DB, Kai, & Super. Nothing else.
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Dragon Ball Ireland
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
I never said anyone was exclusively watching traditional TV, of course the few who still watch it use streaming services too. I'm well aware the former will never be able to compete with the latter.MasenkoHA wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 8:38 pmWho is this more people? This imaginary audience that is under 60 and still paying for cable and isn’t steaming just doesn’t existDragon Ball Ireland wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 5:16 pmGet more people into Dragon Ball? Sure, it may be a minority in this day and age, but those channels still exist so they are obviously watched by some people who may stumble across an episode of Daima that they may have not otherwise intended to check out. Point is while Dragon Ball on traditional TV is never going to be the juggernaut it was in the 90s and 2000s it doesn't hurt to have it there.MasenkoHA wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 2:59 pm For the life of me I will never understand so many people on here’s’s hyperfixation with Dragon Ball airing on traditional television.
Dragon Ball being on Adult Swim or Nick does what exactly?
My point was that it, and channels like Adult Swim and Nickelodeon still exist so it can't hurt to have Dragon Ball air on one of them. Even if it only leads to 5 new fans, new Dragon Ball fans are still new Dragon Ball fans and every one of them counts as far as I'm concerned.
Do you have any info about international non-English broadcasts about the Dragon Ball anime or manga translations/editions? Please message me. Researching for a future book with Dragon Ball scholar Derek Padula 
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Yellow Flower King
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
Part of this semi resurgence is because Youtube TV is cheap and offers cable channels but make no mistake: Cable is dead. I am not saying this is like super important or end of the world. TV is dying but even elderly people who know they are going to die still make plans and brace themselves for the end. That is basically what is being done here. Its about how the last days are spent.
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LostTimeLord
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
Yes, they did. Variety: AT&T to Sell Crunchyroll to Sony’s Funimation for $1.175 Billion. Funimation Global Group LLC was put in charge of Crunchyroll, renamed itself Crunchyroll LLC, and shut down the Funimation streaming service. Having a lot of staff turnover (as they apparently did) doesn't make it a new company.
And, to be more direct, this is exactly the kind of thing we'll see happen with Warner, assuming the merger goes through - they're going to have some of the most brutal layoffs the industry has ever seen. Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon both serve the same audience, and presumably make less money than ever; if Paramount owns both, and needs to cut billions of dollars in costs, then the obvious solution is to shut one of them down. They won't need two mainline kids channels any more than Funimation Global needed two anime streaming services.
In short: Paramount are more likely to consolidate Nickelodeon into Cartoon Network (or vice versa) than move programming from one channel to the other, IMO.
Each batch was coming out two months after its final episode aired in Japan, with the exception of the two batches that were 'late' and released just prior to Egghead part two and Elbaph being simulcast. That could be a coincidence, but I personally suspect that they were held back intentionally.Scsigs wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 3:23 am One Piece, there's no set schedule for when more episodes get dubbed now that they've caught up with the Japanese broadcast.
It sounds like Resurrection F and Broly were dubbed exceptionally quickly, rather than the other way around. Maybe the fact that those films were sub-licensed from 20th Century Fox had something to do with that?Scsigs wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 3:23 am So, minus the dubs of Super (ostensibly because they had to dub & broadcast Kai: The final Chapters beforehand on top of the usual lagtime for anime TV shows being at least a year after the Japanese) and Super Hero (for some reason), ever since Resurrection F, the English dubs of Dragon Ball have actually been pretty close to the Japanese releases.
Responding to criticism on the production side doesn't really say anything about the international distribution and dubbing. Simuldubbing Daima only 18 months ago would have been just as good an idea, but that didn't happen.Scsigs wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 3:23 am Toei's also extremely receptive to criticism when it comes to Dragon Ball as well these days.
Maybe it's just me, but I find it a little frustrating that we generally don't have viewing figures for streaming services in the way that we do for traditional TV. Like, we know that 112,000 people watched the first episode of Daima on Toonami, but we don't know how many people even have a Crunchyroll account in the United States specifically.MasenkoHA wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 8:38 pm This imaginary audience that is under 60 and still paying for cable and isn’t steaming just doesn’t exist
Although, as a comparison, I notice that slightly more people watched Super premiere on UK TV in 2019 (over a year after the uncut DVD had been released) than watched Daima premiere on Toonami in the US in 2025. Obviously a lot changed in those six years, but I still think that's kinda interesting.
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Yellow Flower King
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
AKSHUALLY... Cough cough... Actually we do have some numbers for Streaming!LostTimeLord wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 7:09 pmYes, they did. Variety: AT&T to Sell Crunchyroll to Sony’s Funimation for $1.175 Billion. Funimation Global Group LLC was put in charge of Crunchyroll, renamed itself Crunchyroll LLC, and shut down the Funimation streaming service. Having a lot of staff turnover (as they apparently did) doesn't make it a new company.
And, to be more direct, this is exactly the kind of thing we'll see happen with Warner, assuming the merger goes through - they're going to have some of the most brutal layoffs the industry has ever seen. Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon both serve the same audience, and presumably make less money than ever; if Paramount owns both, and needs to cut billions of dollars in costs, then the obvious solution is to shut one of them down. They won't need two mainline kids channels any more than Funimation Global needed two anime streaming services.
In short: Paramount are more likely to consolidate Nickelodeon into Cartoon Network (or vice versa) than move programming from one channel to the other, IMO.
Each batch was coming out two months after its final episode aired in Japan, with the exception of the two batches that were 'late' and released just prior to Egghead part two and Elbaph being simulcast. That could be a coincidence, but I personally suspect that they were held back intentionally.Scsigs wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 3:23 am One Piece, there's no set schedule for when more episodes get dubbed now that they've caught up with the Japanese broadcast.
It sounds like Resurrection F and Broly were dubbed exceptionally quickly, rather than the other way around. Maybe the fact that those films were sub-licensed from 20th Century Fox had something to do with that?Scsigs wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 3:23 am So, minus the dubs of Super (ostensibly because they had to dub & broadcast Kai: The final Chapters beforehand on top of the usual lagtime for anime TV shows being at least a year after the Japanese) and Super Hero (for some reason), ever since Resurrection F, the English dubs of Dragon Ball have actually been pretty close to the Japanese releases.
Responding to criticism on the production side doesn't really say anything about the international distribution and dubbing. Simuldubbing Daima only 18 months ago would have been just as good an idea, but that didn't happen.Scsigs wrote: Tue Apr 28, 2026 3:23 am Toei's also extremely receptive to criticism when it comes to Dragon Ball as well these days.
Maybe it's just me, but I find it a little frustrating that we generally don't have viewing figures for streaming services in the way that we do for traditional TV. Like, we know that 112,000 people watched the first episode of Daima on Toonami, but we don't know how many people even have a Crunchyroll account in the United States specifically.MasenkoHA wrote: Mon Apr 27, 2026 8:38 pm This imaginary audience that is under 60 and still paying for cable and isn’t steaming just doesn’t exist
Although, as a comparison, I notice that slightly more people watched Super premiere on UK TV in 2019 (over a year after the uncut DVD had been released) than watched Daima premiere on Toonami in the US in 2025. Obviously a lot changed in those six years, but I still think that's kinda interesting.
https://www.nielsen.com/es/insights/202 ... pril-2026/
And as it turns out streaming is a more than 50 billion dollars a year industry, almost killing home video.
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LostTimeLord
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
That article doesn't say how many users Crunchyroll has, though. It has the "streaming minutes" but, with no indication of how long any individual streams for, there's not much to glean from that information. We don't actually know, even proportionally, how many people watched Daima on Toonami vs Crunchyroll or Netflix or Hulu.
Besides, I said we "generally don't have viewing figures", not that never get them.
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Yellow Flower King
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
Wow I didnt realize that! That's awesome! I wonder if that's why even Disney+ lets competitors air their anime. Netflix absolutely refuses to play nice though.
Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
I was watching Super again, but this time dubbed. And wow does James Marsters as Zamasu completely clown on the rest of the Funimation cast. He isn't just slightly better than the others, he is MILES better. It was seriously painful going from Marsters talking to Eric Vale and Colleen as Mai who are just so ridiculously one note. While I don't hate the Funimation cast, this was kind of a huge eye opener in the gulf between a true professional and just some people voicing children's cartoons.
Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
Bro, come on. Yes, Marsters is great as Zamasu. He's been an actor for years & did the Super dub unpaid & under a pseudonym. However, saying the regular cast doesn't pull their weight is insane. The dub cast is great. It's a different type of acting they have to do compared to what Marsters usually does, but they do it very well.rweasp wrote: Wed Apr 29, 2026 10:36 pm I was watching Super again, but this time dubbed. And wow does James Marsters as Zamasu completely clown on the rest of the Funimation cast. He isn't just slightly better than the others, he is MILES better. It was seriously painful going from Marsters talking to Eric Vale and Colleen as Mai who are just so ridiculously one note. While I don't hate the Funimation cast, this was kind of a huge eye opener in the gulf between a true professional and just some people voicing children's cartoons.
Only dubs that matter are DB, Kai, & Super. Nothing else.
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Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
The issue is when its compared directly against Marsters and you go back and forth between them. The contrast is massive. In other episodes with no Marsters with everything in a vacuum its completely fine. Like I said, I don't hate the Funimation cast and there's plenty of good performances in there (mainly from the newer additions like Jason Douglas and Whis). But for whatever reason when there is that contrast between some of the older cast members and Marsters, it really doesn't do them any favors.Scsigs wrote: Wed Apr 29, 2026 11:01 pmBro, come on. Yes, Marsters is great as Zamasu. He's been an actor for years & did the Super dub unpaid & under a pseudonym. However, saying the regular cast doesn't pull their weight is insane. The dub cast is great. It's a different type of acting they have to do compared to what Marsters usually does, but they do it very well.rweasp wrote: Wed Apr 29, 2026 10:36 pm I was watching Super again, but this time dubbed. And wow does James Marsters as Zamasu completely clown on the rest of the Funimation cast. He isn't just slightly better than the others, he is MILES better. It was seriously painful going from Marsters talking to Eric Vale and Colleen as Mai who are just so ridiculously one note. While I don't hate the Funimation cast, this was kind of a huge eye opener in the gulf between a true professional and just some people voicing children's cartoons.
Re: Weird Old Dub Stuff
Yeah, it's mainly because of the different styles of acting. James is very good, as he's mainly a screen actor who also has very good voice talents. By contrast, the majority of the regular anime dub actors have very little acting experience outside of voice acting in dubs, which is a very specific style of voice acting separate from prelay work, so they fall into that style of acting easily. It's kinda like watching the Studio Ghibli films dubbed, as those films usually get mostly big Hollywood actors rather than dub actors &, thus, they're different from other anime dubs. Though, I never got the feeling that Marsters was a step above the others in Super. He'd never done an anime dub before & clearly had to adjust to that style of voice acting. He got better over the course of the arc & his yells & screams are just great. I also love his impression of Sean Schemmel's Goku's speaking style in the flashback when Goku's in Zamasu's body. It's much better than Sean's impression of his Zamasu's speaking style since Sean is really bad with trying to do the same accent Marsters gave Zamasu, at least in Super (the funny thing being that Kyle Hebert was better at doing it with Gohan Black in Sparking Zero).rweasp wrote: Wed Apr 29, 2026 11:11 pm The issue is when its compared directly against Marsters and you go back and forth between them. The contrast is massive. In other episodes with no Marsters with everything in a vacuum its completely fine. Like I said, I don't hate the Funimation cast and there's plenty of good performances in there (mainly from the newer additions like Jason Douglas and Whis). But for whatever reason when there is that contrast between some of the older cast members and Marsters, it really doesn't do them any favors.
Only dubs that matter are DB, Kai, & Super. Nothing else.
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