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Forum - View topicVice & Luna - Invasion of the Old-Timers, Part I
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VinceA
Posts: 126 Location: Bayonne, NJ |
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Damn it.... I'm a beardo
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Vaisaga
Posts: 13233 |
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Vice is on point, lol. Well, at least it was a pretty handsome beardo that showed up.
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BodaciousSpacePirate
Subscriber
Posts: 3018 |
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I can picture Vice saying something like, "those are the worst kind!" |
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kgw
Posts: 1110 Location: Spain, EU |
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Me too, except for the beard. And he's imagining a Tenchi Muyo t-shirt, not a Robotech one. |
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Asterisk-CGY
Posts: 398 |
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Anyone remember that old guy that did anime reviews while going on hikes? Those were great.
Ah found him. https://www.youtube.com/user/GrumpyJiisan |
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EricJ2
Posts: 4016 |
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Oh yeah, we'll talk your ear off about the days off $5000 two-ep. VHS's--Subbed and dubbed.
Just start that "Wahh, they won't show my Crunchyroll series in Canada!" stuff, and sit down for a long, long lecture...In our day, we had to walk twenty miles in the snow to our nearest Suncoast. And then we'll start telling you about shows you've never seen in your life, because you're too busy watching shows you CAN stream, how hooked you are on whatever fight serial Toonami is airing for free, and think that Sword Art Online is the Worst Thing Ever in the History of Stuff. Oo, you're doing what everyone else is doing because it's in easy online reach and they don't know better, how cutting-edge and trendy! In other words, one good reason to listen to your elders, sonny, is the Millennial Fallacy: Ie., in the real world, it's awfully darn hard to rebelliously impress someone with what you don't know, and/or never had enough curiosity to get off your butt and find out. (And then, of course, once we do start showing Macross, Ranma or UY, it's "Wow, where do you get this?" Why, we got it the hard way, how 'bout you? Never PO a gleefully vindictive beardo, we old guys get pretty cranky when aroused.) |
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Emma Iveli
Posts: 679 Location: Hobo with internet |
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This one made me question what am I as a fan. I really mean that... I'm too young be considered a beardo... yet old enough to be a fan during the VHS days, granted the last the last couple years (got in Ranma in 2000 and was into Sailor Moon and Pokemon before that) but still.
Not only that but I didn't have the issues of an anime fan, I grew up spoiled. What do I mean by that... well until last year I lived in San Francisco... I lived there since childhood. And San Francisco is one of those cities that's the perfect place for anime fan because of Japan Town. So what am I... a spoiled middle-ager? |
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penguintruth
Posts: 8475 Location: Penguinopolis |
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Those people are also referred to as people with taste. Though you’d never refer to Macross as Robotech if you were one.
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EricJ2
Posts: 4016 |
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Non-Beardo: "Tenchi?? Oh, man, War on Geminar sucked!" |
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meruru
Posts: 473 |
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Pfft, new fans don't have a leg to stand on, being snobby of old fans. 1. Old fans are the reason anime became mainstream enough to justify simulcast streaming every single show now. Young fans should be thanking them for buying those five thousand dollar VHS tapes. 2. Old fans have been around long enough to know what's good. Ever go back to some of your early favorites and realize they weren't actually that good, but you liked it because you hadn't seen that much? Sometimes I think certain things only become popular because the younger fans haven't seen enough to know there's better stuff out there.
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leafy sea dragon
Posts: 7163 Location: Another Kingdom |
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These guys exist for every fandom that's been around for long enough (and aren't predominantly women, though there'll always be at least one such guy). Sometimes, they're actually quite fun to hang around, and sometimes they're a nuisance, depending on how much they've matured since their excited phase and how bound to nostalgia they are.
Pokémon, for instance. If I see a middle-aged man wearing a Pikachu shirt, at least based on my experience, he is most likely a genwunner and will scream at you if you so much as mention even something from Generation II, and they are the sort to go to a convention, see a Pokémon TCG competition, and then snark at everything.
Nah, it's not a Millennial problem, it's a problem with every generation. I'm sure the generation prior would try to show off to people of their parents' generation of how wise they were, and Millennials' kids are going to do the same to them (if they haven't already). As for the other thought I quoted, perhaps you have better luck than me, but any time I'd try to show something older, the kids just go "Ewwww that's SOOO OLD!" |
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Triltaison
Posts: 755 |
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I'm in a similar boat. I'm one of the rare birds who was a female anime fan in the '90s who watched stuff primarily on borrowed VHS tapes and read summaries/scripts on fansites with the occasional accompanying image on my dial-up modem. There weren't too many of us anime girls then. I like to think of my fellow fans dating from that era as the Older New Wave. We remember tape trading, the sub/dub wars of VHS, the advent of the Pokemon/Sailor Moon/DBZ explosions, the birth of Toonami, the digital fansub revolution, the DVD eclipse, the days of Animerica Extra, the Geneon/Suncoast implosions, and the adventures of Mixx/Tokyopop. The New Wave to me are the ones who grew up alongside the exponential growth of Pokemon/Digimon and never experienced the fan scene of BBSes, Geocities webrings, and xeroxed 'zines. If you didn't ride the Star Blazers or Robotech waves, but predated the Pokemon revolution, you're part of the Older New Wave. That's just my thoughts on it. But yes. If you were in SF, you were absolutely spoiled as an anime fan. ;D |
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Alan45
Village Elder
Posts: 9897 Location: Virginia |
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I got into anime in the late 1990s. By that time it was possible to become a fan strictly on the basis of commercially issued VHS tapes without reference to either fan subs or butchered broadcast series for kids.
The forums I found at that point were infested by people similar to a "beardo" who had been in fandom for a decade or more. They had little or no time for newbies like me, so I kept quiet and lurked. What I found interesting was that even then they were mad about the changes that were done to create Robotech. At the same time they would admit that it was their entrance into anime. It has only been in the last year or so that I realized that after 20 years as a fan that I no longer qualify as new. |
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Ouran High School Dropout
Posts: 440 Location: Somewhere in Massachusetts, USA |
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Am I a beardo? Let's see...Speed Racer and Kimba in grade school, Star Blazers in high school, Voltron [lions] in college. Huh. Guess so.
However, I do my best not to act like the type Vice describes (though I've met my share at conventions--not pretty).
Hear that loud and clear! That's when I got the bug for good.
It wasn't that bad (well, sorta)...I do remember plonking down $400 for both seasons of Fushigi Yugi on DVD, and getting back $70 in Suncoast membership points. Ah, Suncoast--the place to go for your Friday night, just-got-paid anime fix.
This observation goes straight to the point, and dovetails something I've learned about interacting with younger fans at conventions. I realized long ago that I can either behave like the stereotypical beardo--to no one's benefit, I would add--or I can absorb the excitement of younger fans and make it fun for both of us. I don't stream; marriage and career are quite the distraction. When I do have time, I turn to my DVD/Blu collection (I'm a dyed-in-the-wool collector/videophile.) So, at con, I'm always looking for something new to buy, and I engage the younger fans for advice and suggestions. These kids (in my eyes at least) are usually excited and eager to help, and this goodwill is infectious, my friends! The generational barrier dissolves, and they treat me not as an elder, but just another fan. It also leads to some great conversations while waiting for a panel; I can learn about the best of what's currently streaming, and I can reminisce about older shows, still available on hard media, that they could find in the dealer's room if they were interested. The whole thing boils down to mutual respect.
I so have to laugh! This is an argument I have with my wife, a recent grandmother who is far more attracted to recent 201x digital production than '90s cel-on-film anime. She will watch older anime on occasion, but I have to be selective. |
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leafy sea dragon
Posts: 7163 Location: Another Kingdom |
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Heh, reminds me of how my father used to consume science fiction of all sorts--books, TV, movies, you name it. (Except for games. He never saw the appeal in games. So no video games or tabletop games.) One side effect to that was that he'd watch a lot of anime brought over to the United States at that time, which, if it was labeled as anime, meant it tended to be gory and bloody and full of body horror and other sorts of nightmare fuel. He also really liked the live-action Guyver movies. I was at most 8 years old at the time, and he invited me to come watch them, which invariably terrified me. But that does make me wonder: You point out that science fiction fans tended to cross over a lot with anime fans. What about horror fans of the day? My father was also a horror fan, and as anime tended to have strong elements of both science fiction AND horror in the same series, it was natural he'd enjoy the stuff. Also, of course, Subs vs. Dubs is still going on to this day (in part due to a few people who keep stoking the flames, whether intentional or accidental).
That's a very good point, about not closing yourself off to what people in another generation may be into, and I hadn't really thought about that. I've followed my life under the principle that respect begets respect, but I hadn't really thought about how part of the reason why there may be this dislike in each generation of what their parents were into may have been due to how the parents refused to acknowledge the merits of what their kids are into. I have thought long and hard about why some countries have generation gaps and some countries don't, and I think this is the answer. One thing's for sure though: The Pokémon genwunners I mentioned tend not to have many friends why are also fans of Pokémon (not even other genwunners, for some reason). We're at the point, by the way, where there are teenagers verging on adulthood who were born after cel animation was phased out for digital animation, so for people who have never actually sat down to watch something on cel, it might as well be black-and-white or even silent to them: Watch it for the novelty and to see what storytelling was like before their time but not really take it seriously. You don't have many people alive today who have watched a lot of Charlie Chaplin films who aren't cinephiles, and I think the same is happening with traditional cel animation in general: The people who will go out of their way to see them will tend to be animation fans (or, in cases like Cuphead, it was done as a stylistic choice). |
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