So it was this one! And my five year guess was accurate. I still think it applies today.Hujio wrote:Yeah, I remember this news piece. It made the rounds about five years ago. Here's the original article on CNN from July 2009.Super Saiyan Prime wrote:What year is that from? You've got b-roll of a SDTV (or an early HDTV) and references to cell animation.
Oh yeah, I know all about this. My anime collection has grown, but anipelex eludes me. I wish I could afford all of Madoka, but each set is like 60 dollars for 4 episodes. I only own Movie 3 - Rebellion.Depends on who's releasing the products. a lot of Funimation's titles are quite affordable on Amazon. For a little under 150 bucks I got all of Spice and Wolf, Soul Eater, Sengoku Basara, Samurai Champloo, and the first half of FMA Brotherhood all on bluray.
If you want expensive, look no further than Aniplex.
Kill la Kill bluray 1. 4 episodes = 60 bucks.
Sword Art Online bluray 1. 7 episodes = 90 bucks
Gurren Lagann complete series + movies bluray set = 1,300 bucks
Funimation has sweet deals, but there lies a problem too: they are monopolizing Anime abroad, and that hurts smaller companies who pick up other titles. It is not a really good situation either. Thinking about the anime industry bums me out, a lot. I always tell my friends to support the industry if you still want to have anime in the future, but they cannot afford it or don't bother to go the legal route. One of my friends wanted to purchase Gurren Lagann since it is his favourite anime. That price however is keeping him away from doing just that.
This is true too. When I was at Anime Revolution, it was just such an awesome sight to see people in cosplays. Lots of merchandise are purchased by cosplayers, which in turn supports the anime they love. It was great to be in that environment.What they don't tell you is that this causes a lot of sales from people that end up loving the series that otherwise wouldn't happen (inside japan and outside japan). In fact, I know a lot of guys who would never have bought anything manga/anime related if they hadn't seen it pirated first and become fans of it.
Hey, I was introduced to Steins; Gate that way, for example, and supported the show as soon as I could! Turns out that the series made such success that now FUNi is reformatting it onto a "Classics" label even though it is only 2 years old; that label allows for a cheaper price for consumers to purchase and own the show while still showing their support for the industry!
Actually, since the CNN article, I think anime has grown a lot, especially here in Canada. It is getting a more mainstream acceptance. Look at how many more anime films are coming over for theatre viewing in Canada and the USA. Dragon Ball is a success story in this regard.
EDIT: after reading YBM's post, it makes sense that anime is no longer in the recession it had in 2009. economies overall got better, but so has the market for anime. For example, here in Vancouver, there was only really 1 place in 2009 to get anime called Sakura Media. Amazon.ca didn't offer as much back then or nothing at all. Anime Conventions didn't exist here until 2012. Now, stores like HMV, Future Shop, and Best Buy have grew their anime sections exponentially. Anime today has also a more mainstream acceptance than it once did (especially compared to 2009).
In 2009, there were no legal streaming sites, unlike today, where today Crunchy Roll and the Anime Network are booming businesses. FUNimation is also streaming anime on their site for a paid membership and free on Youtube! In 2009, no such thing existed except for illegal streams (as far as I'm aware of. If legal stream sites existed pre-2010, they were not the booming industries of today). So it is more likely that people will watch and pay for legal streams than never doing that at all. The odds today are in Anime's favour. One can even watch Crunchy Roll on their mobile device. No such thing existed like that in 2009.
So, 2009 was a pivitol year, just coming out of a global recession and internet and hardware was getting better (and cheaper in terms of quality and affordability) by the minute where streams were growing to be a cheap, viable alternative to torrenting or purchasing hard copies. Today, storage devices and hardware are so capable that streaming is a good alternative for businesses to make money off of.







