Post
by Super Sayian Prime » Fri May 27, 2011 10:45 am
Something a few of you guys need to realize is that the North American television landscape is almost xenophobic in behavior. If you look at the average schedule of a US based channel, the programming is guaranteed to be dominated by US produced programming. Be it Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, Fox, or ABC Family. That is the truth. Due to that behavior it's difficult to get foreign programming on the air in the US partially because it just doesn't mix well with the rest of the lineup thanks to art style, voice acting, score, theme, or plot. It's certainly true for anime. How exactly would a channel transition from airing, say The Power Puff Girls to Gundam Wing? It just doesn't work. Television channels want a cohesive programming look, and a target focus so that marketing, and advertisers know who to aim at, as well as to get viewers watching a block of programming rather than just select shows. This is the reason localization occurs. It's to make the show attractive to broadcasters by making it fit in within a pre-existing mold. It would be a bit jarring to go from Batman: The Animated Series with its orchestral like score to Shinsuke's Dragon Ball Z's martial arts score. It's a tonne less jarring to go from Batman to the synth rock scores of the North American TV versions of Dragon Ball Z.
In the world of entertainment, the US is an exporter, not an importer. Which is why the number of US produced animated series obliterates the numbers of Japan produced television series on TV. This isn't the case in Europe, where a lot of markets can't necessarily afford to produce their own programming. As well, Europe as a whole has been a tonne more welcoming to anime than North America. Anime had huge mainstream success in Europe decades before the first of that kind of success would ripple into the US which allowed anime programming to be accepted. Heck, just look at the time it took to get Dragon Ball Z on US TV. The first episode premiered in 1996. The show was almost over in Japan at that point, and had begun airing in other, non-US markets years before. Look at what Dragon Ball Z did for anime in the US. It was almost unheard of to see anime on US TV, but thanks to the success of Z a tonne of series were getting a chance, and while anime isn't as mainstream as it once was, there's certainly a lot more anime being promoted as anime on US TV today compared to prior to Z.
This is why I think Funimation's localization of the music in Z is justified. The only way that show was to succeed was if they were to get a prime venue, and that's what they tried to do.
"I like the money it brings in, but Dragon Ball Heroes is the worst. That's actually the real reason I decided to start working on new material. I was afraid Bandai would make something irredeemably stupid like Super Saiyan 4 Broly." - Akira Toriyama, made up interview, 2013.