Jubenhimer
Member
Funimation has Dragon Ball Z and One Piece, Viz has Naruto and Bleach, even 4kids had Yu-Gi-Oh!. These were all shonen anime that helped fuel the american anime boom in the 2000s, and still remain popular today. However, famed anime distributor ADV Films, despite being one of the early pioneers of American anime distribution, never really seemed to have had its own long running shonen giant, and was more known for shorter, niche anime, rather than ones with mass market, TV appeal in America. While they had Evangelion, and while it was hugely influential in japan, the problem was that it was only 26 episodes. And despite a brief, heavily censored run on Cartoon Network (2 episodes during Toonami's Giant Robot Week), it really seemed to be more popular with hardcore anime fans in America rather than the pop-culture juggernaut of something like DBZ.
So I've been thinking, would ADV still be around today if they had a few of their own long-running, mainstream shonen hits like DBZ or Naruto? The vast majority of shows ADV aquired were around 26 episodes or less. I remember before Funimation got Sgt. Frog, ADV had the series, and apparently was looking for a TV deal. And just when ADV started production on it, it along with 29 other anime were suddenly transfered to Funimation. This was a sign ADV was falling. So, maybe Sgt. Frog could've been the mainstream TV hit ADV supposedly wanted. Now I understand you don't always need 100+ episodes to be a mainstream success in America, FMA had around 63 episodes, but it was extremely popular when on Adult Swim. And not all 100+ episode anime make it to mainstream TV popularity, and I understand television wouldn't be the end-all-be-all solution (as it would also require good marketing, licensing deals, and merchandising as well)
I guess what I'm trying to say is, did ADV needed a few long-running shonen?
So I've been thinking, would ADV still be around today if they had a few of their own long-running, mainstream shonen hits like DBZ or Naruto? The vast majority of shows ADV aquired were around 26 episodes or less. I remember before Funimation got Sgt. Frog, ADV had the series, and apparently was looking for a TV deal. And just when ADV started production on it, it along with 29 other anime were suddenly transfered to Funimation. This was a sign ADV was falling. So, maybe Sgt. Frog could've been the mainstream TV hit ADV supposedly wanted. Now I understand you don't always need 100+ episodes to be a mainstream success in America, FMA had around 63 episodes, but it was extremely popular when on Adult Swim. And not all 100+ episode anime make it to mainstream TV popularity, and I understand television wouldn't be the end-all-be-all solution (as it would also require good marketing, licensing deals, and merchandising as well)
I guess what I'm trying to say is, did ADV needed a few long-running shonen?