How It All Began

The real heart of CAA; discuss specific series, issues, and things related to anime here.

How It All Began

Postby the_wolfs_howl » Fri Apr 13, 2007 7:49 am

How did you get into anime? Was it a certain show you saw, a manga you read, a trip you took to Japan? Share your story!

For me, everything started with Pokemon. We were visiting some Chinese-American friends of ours, and they were watching some Pokemon episodes. I'm not sure what it was, maybe the animation style (or maybe it was Pikachu), but something pulled me inexorably into Pokemon fandom. For a couple years, I was all about Pokemon. I mean, I watched it whenever it was on, I played video games, dabbled in the card game, daydreamed about it (this was before I'd discovered fanfiction, or I'd have written a bunch of fanfics too). That was pretty much all I knew about anime until a couple years ago (I'd grown out of Pokemon by then). That was when I started seeing Yu-Gi-Oh! on TV some, and found a Yu-Gi-Oh! manga in a bookstore. I was thrilled with the concept of reading a book the opposite way from what I normally do. About that time, I also saw several Hayao Miyazaki movies and totally fell in love with Japanese culture. My brother (who gets me interested in almosteverything I'm a fan of) discovered Fullmetal Alchemist, and we watched it together. Before I knew it, I was an anime fan!

There's a funny story about how I got interested in FMA. To decide whether we were interested, my brother and I watched a fansub of a later episode before we saw the first one. It was that episode where Martel gets killed, and Al is all sad. I couldn't figure out why everyone was referring to him as a 'he', when OBVIOUSLY that was a woman's voice! It was only later I realized that both Ed and Al are voiced by women in the Japanese version. But that episode convinced me FMA was good enough to watch, and since I had no idea who anyone was, nothing got spoiled for me.
You can find out things about the past that you never knew. And from what you've learned, you may see some things differently in the present. You're the one that changes. Not the past.
- Ellone, Final Fantasy VIII

Image

"There's a difference between maliciously offending somebody - on purpose - and somebody being offended by...truth. If you're offended by the truth, that's your problem. I have no obligation to not offend you if I'm speaking the truth. The truth is supposed to offend you; that's how you know you don't got it."
- Brad Stine
User avatar
the_wolfs_howl
 
Posts: 3273
Joined: Thu Mar 01, 2007 11:26 pm
Location: Not Paradise...yet

Postby Mononoke » Fri Apr 13, 2007 11:23 am

I watched the cat returns, hooked since then thanks to "Craner"
User avatar
Mononoke
 
Posts: 40
Joined: Wed Feb 14, 2007 11:39 am

Postby Tommy » Fri Apr 13, 2007 11:38 am

DBZ.

I loved it when I was 7.
User avatar
Tommy
 
Posts: 5745
Joined: Sun Jan 09, 2005 12:00 pm
Location: Plymouth, Mass

Postby Aruiko » Fri Apr 13, 2007 11:53 am

Silver Fang. It was the wery first. I saw it when i was around 5. When i was oldr came all the Pokemons and Digimons.

After that was a looooooong break. But then my friend introduced me to... NARUTO. It was the time when it was in 20th episode in Japan. Hooked ever sicnce.
It was the beginig of real hobby in the world of anime
User avatar
Aruiko
 
Posts: 32
Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 1:17 pm
Location: Finland

Postby mitsuki lover » Fri Apr 13, 2007 11:55 am

Saw Silent Mobius on Anime Unleashed when it was still Techtv.
User avatar
mitsuki lover
 
Posts: 8486
Joined: Sun Oct 03, 2004 12:00 pm

Postby Radical Dreamer » Fri Apr 13, 2007 12:52 pm

It sort of depends. I used to watch Superbook at age like...4 or 5, I don't know. I don't often count it, though, since I was so young. XD I didn't really know what "anime" was until I started watching Pokemon and DragonBall Z in 5th grade, and I enjoyed those, but not enough to look much further into anime as a whole. About two years later, I saw a couple episodes of Trigun, and went for about 2 years without watching any more of that.

When I did see it again, I was starting to warm up to the idea of anime because I had really gotten into drawing the style that I had seen in the games I had been playing, such as certain games in the Final Fantasy series, Chrono Trigger, and Chrono Cross. I caught about 6 more episodes of Trigun, but I ended up falling out of the habit of watching it. Again. XD

A few months later, I caught the first episode of Rurouni Kenshin on CN. The show seemed clean enough, the art was nice, and I decided to start watching it. That's really the show that got me really interested in anime, and it was also my first manga, too, so I generally count it as my first. XD
[color="DeepSkyBlue"]4 8 15 16 23[/color] 42
[color="PaleGreen"]Rushia: YOU ARE MY FAVORITE IGNORANT AMERICAN OF IRISH DECENT. I LOVE YOU AND YOUR POTATOES.[/color]
[color="Orange"]WELCOME TO MOES[/color]

Image

User avatar
Radical Dreamer
 
Posts: 7950
Joined: Sat May 28, 2005 9:00 am
Location: Some place where I can think up witty things to say under the "Location" category.

Postby KBMaster » Fri Apr 13, 2007 12:56 pm

Digimon got me started, along with Anime Fridays on Fox Kids.
User avatar
KBMaster
 
Posts: 755
Joined: Sun Jun 27, 2004 11:48 am
Location: With the penguins

Postby Mithrandir » Fri Apr 13, 2007 3:03 pm

I had a hard time sleeping one night, and I flipped past Vampire Hunter D on Sci-Fi channel. Years later I found some college buddies who were also into anime, and I've been hooked ever since.
User avatar
Mithrandir
 
Posts: 11071
Joined: Fri Jun 27, 2003 12:00 pm
Location: You will be baked. And then there will be cake.

Postby Blitzkrieg1701 » Fri Apr 13, 2007 3:05 pm

Superbook and The Flying House were my first step into the realm of Japanese animation back as a wee one, but it was a while before I saw any more. Aside from Robot Carnival (which made a HUGE impression on me, by the way) I never watched any of the stuff the SciFi channel showed, and we had about the only cable provider in Atlanta that didn't pick up Cartoon Network, so no Toonami for me. Then we moved adn didn't have cable at all for several years, which didn't help either. For the most part, my interest in anime was fed vicariously through video game art and the internet. Oh, that and the occasional visit to my grandparent's where I could catch a few episodes of DBZ, Tenchi, or Robotech. Then Pokemon happened, followed closely by Digimon: the first anime I ever went seriously fanboy over. From there, I completely devolved into an otaku pretty quickly.
Image Image

[font="Book Antiqua"][color="Purple"]For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this: that one died for all, therefore all died; and he that died for all, so that they who live might no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose again on their behalf. II Corinthians 5:14-15[/color][/font]
User avatar
Blitzkrieg1701
 
Posts: 1884
Joined: Wed Jun 02, 2004 9:01 am
Location: Washington, DC (when I'm not in an alternate universe)

Postby Negotiatrix » Fri Apr 13, 2007 3:18 pm

The first anime I ever saw was Starblazers back when I was in elem. school (and the earth was still cooling!).
When HBO showed that version of Nausicaa called Warriors of the Wind, and I loved it. I must have watched that 100 times. I checked the tv guide every week to see when it was showing! Then in high school my friends and I watched what anime we could find in the video stores, which wasn't much.
There was a long time that I forgot all about anime. It wasn't until 5 or 6 years ago that I came across Big O and was hooked!
I was also ecstatic when Nausicaa was released on DVD and I still rewatch it every couple of months.:sweat:
User avatar
Negotiatrix
 
Posts: 59
Joined: Mon Aug 04, 2003 8:20 pm
Location: Sunny Florida!

Postby Fish and Chips » Fri Apr 13, 2007 3:44 pm

I'd previously been a nay-sayer of Anime (sans certain Anime films I enjoyed), with its giant robots, magical girl scouts, and endless battles, till a friend reminded me of the 10% rule (that only 1 out of 10 of anything will be genuinely good), so I started looking into it to try and find my 1 out of the proverbial 10. Because I'd heard it hyped up by some online buddies of mine, I decided to check out FullMetal Alchemist, the Anime and the Manga.

And I was hooked.
User avatar
Fish and Chips
 
Posts: 4415
Joined: Sat Dec 16, 2006 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere.

Postby Alexander » Sat Apr 14, 2007 7:38 pm

I have a vague memory of going to the video renting store when I was six or seven and I saw, what I thought was an American film, "My Neighbor Totoro". My dad wouldn't let me see it because of the spiritual content in the film which never existed when I saw the film 10 years later for my first time.

But my first experience with actually watching anime was one day, when I was nine years old. On Kid's WB, the second episode of Pokemon was being shown. Ash was trying to catch a Caterpi. Which he eventually succeeded in.

I never stopped watching since.

What's also really interesting is I could somehow tell that this animation hadn't come from America because of the style. Something about it felt very distinctly foreign.
<img src="patent pending.jpg"></p>
<p>Signature in progress</p>
User avatar
Alexander
 
Posts: 877
Joined: Sat Apr 07, 2007 12:42 am
Location: Sometimes I wish I honestly knew.

Postby KhakiBlueSocks » Sat Apr 14, 2007 9:10 pm

I got started pretty slowly with anime watching the three biggest "mon" series of the day: DigiMON (Where the third part of my Screen Name came from, more on this if anyone asks!), PokeMON, and MONster Rancher. Then, late one night when I was flipping through the channels, I caught sight of Yu Yu Hakusho on Adult Swim(Ironically, the first episode), and from then on, I was hooked on the GOOD stuff! Bebop was on next, than the infamous Pilot Candidate! The rest, as they say, is freaking history!
Joshua: Hebrew -The LORD is Salvation

" wrote:RustyClaymore 11:27 - Ah yes, Socks is the single raindrop responsible for the flood. XD


Check out my new anime review blog, "The Cajun Samurai"

http://thecajunsamurai.wordpress.com/
User avatar
KhakiBlueSocks
 
Posts: 2675
Joined: Sun Mar 13, 2005 8:32 pm
Location: Louisiana

Postby Fish and Chips » Sat Apr 14, 2007 9:19 pm

Oh, I watched some Anime before my "Convert," but I never really got into it. Catch an episode or two of Speed Racer, Sailor Moon, Pokemon, a touch of Gundam Wing, some Digimon here and there.
User avatar
Fish and Chips
 
Posts: 4415
Joined: Sat Dec 16, 2006 2:33 pm
Location: Nowhere.

Postby Mimiru14 » Sat Apr 14, 2007 10:37 pm

It all started with me watching sailor moon when I was about 5 or 6...Then when I got older...I was hooked on the whole Pokemon scene.Ah,the good ol' days..
[color="Magenta"]"It is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all - in which case, you fail by default."
— J.K. Rowling [/color]

[color="Plum"]"It takes an idiot to do cool things. That's what makes it cool"[/color]:thumb:
User avatar
Mimiru14
 
Posts: 126
Joined: Tue Jul 26, 2005 8:59 pm
Location: the Kaleido Stage

Postby KeybladeWarrior » Sun Apr 15, 2007 1:07 pm

A relative got me interested in watching a show called Ronin Warrios. Man, I like it so much I bought the action figures of the show. At the time I did not know it was anime, until I was about 15. I been hooked on anime for 12 years now.
@)}~`,~ Carry This Rose In Your Sig, As Thanks, To All
The CAA Moderators.

"YEAH TOAST! TOCAA!"
User avatar
KeybladeWarrior
 
Posts: 1176
Joined: Sun Nov 12, 2006 7:04 pm

Postby mitsuki lover » Sun Apr 15, 2007 2:12 pm

I remember when Digimon was on Fox.I saw bit of it then but didn't know it was anime until AFTER I had been watching AU for some time.
User avatar
mitsuki lover
 
Posts: 8486
Joined: Sun Oct 03, 2004 12:00 pm

Postby Jih » Mon Apr 16, 2007 1:14 pm

DBZ on the original afternoon Toonami to Pokemon to Digimon to Outlaw Star to Tenchi to Blue Sub No. 6 to Trigun to Kenshin to AKIRA. I'm part of the Otaku generation who started with DBZ. My real induction would have to be when I saw AKIRA after buying the DVD in 2003. Even before that when I bought and watched Jin-Roh. Anyway, I'm glad I discovered the world of anime for better or worse :)
Jih
 
Posts: 86
Joined: Sun Apr 08, 2007 4:11 pm

Postby Ichigo_89 » Mon Apr 16, 2007 5:50 pm

I'd always seen anime for as song as I could remember... (SuperBook in sunday bible school, watched Voltron & Megaman, rented My Neighbor Totoro) but it wasn't until Pokemon that I figured out what anime was. I guess u could say my TRUE introduction to anime was when I caught part.1 of "The Real Folk Blues" when I was about 13 (quite shocking at that age, believe me...) so yeah.
User avatar
Ichigo_89
 
Posts: 1365
Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 10:00 am
Location: KY

Postby Jessi Ray » Mon Apr 16, 2007 7:21 pm

the_wolfs_howl wrote:How did you get into anime? Was it a certain show you saw, a manga you read, a trip you took to Japan? Share your story!

For me, everything started with Pokemon. We were visiting some Chinese-American friends of ours, and they were watching some Pokemon episodes. I'm not sure what it was, maybe the animation style (or maybe it was Pikachu), but something pulled me inexorably into Pokemon fandom. For a couple years, I was all about Pokemon. I mean, I watched it whenever it was on, I played video games, dabbled in the card game, daydreamed about it (this was before I'd discovered fanfiction, or I'd have written a bunch of fanfics too). That was pretty much all I knew about anime until a couple years ago (I'd grown out of Pokemon by then). That was when I started seeing Yu-Gi-Oh! on TV some, and found a Yu-Gi-Oh! manga in a bookstore. I was thrilled with the concept of reading a book the opposite way from what I normally do. About that time, I also saw several Hayao Miyazaki movies and totally fell in love with Japanese culture. My brother (who gets me interested in almosteverything I'm a fan of) discovered Fullmetal Alchemist, and we watched it together. Before I knew it, I was an anime fan!

There's a funny story about how I got interested in FMA. To decide whether we were interested, my brother and I watched a fansub of a later episode before we saw the first one. It was that episode where Martel gets killed, and Al is all sad. I couldn't figure out why everyone was referring to him as a 'he', when OBVIOUSLY that was a woman's voice! It was only later I realized that both Ed and Al are voiced by women in the Japanese version. But that episode convinced me FMA was good enough to watch, and since I had no idea who anyone was, nothing got spoiled for me.


My word! You have almost 98% of the same story that I have! Accept I didn't watch fansubs and my friend got me further into it (Wolf's Rain, Trigun, and RK mainly) after my Pokemon fandom slowed. I still love the Yugioh manga though! :thumb:
User avatar
Jessi Ray
 
Posts: 32
Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2007 12:00 pm
Location: With Waldo.

Postby the_wolfs_howl » Tue Apr 17, 2007 5:38 am

Jessi Ray wrote:My word! You have almost 98% of the same story that I have! Accept I didn't watch fansubs and my friend got me further into it (Wolf's Rain, Trigun, and RK mainly) after my Pokemon fandom slowed. I still love the Yugioh manga though! :thumb:


Cool! I like Wolf's Rain too. BONES is my favorite animation team, other than Studio Ghibli of course. And my brother's got ahold of Trigun and Rurouni Kenshin, but we haven't watched them yet. I'm expecting them to be good, since I only hear praise for them.
Have you seen Scrapped Princess? It's animated by BONES too. I didn't like it as much as Wolf's Rain or FMA, but I loved Pacifica's design.
You can find out things about the past that you never knew. And from what you've learned, you may see some things differently in the present. You're the one that changes. Not the past.
- Ellone, Final Fantasy VIII

Image

"There's a difference between maliciously offending somebody - on purpose - and somebody being offended by...truth. If you're offended by the truth, that's your problem. I have no obligation to not offend you if I'm speaking the truth. The truth is supposed to offend you; that's how you know you don't got it."
- Brad Stine
User avatar
the_wolfs_howl
 
Posts: 3273
Joined: Thu Mar 01, 2007 11:26 pm
Location: Not Paradise...yet

Postby Saj » Tue Apr 17, 2007 5:47 am

For me it all started with Gundam wing and DBZ on toonami. Then i saw bits a pieces of Cowboy bebop and trigun, and it grew from there.
" ...to walk on water."

" In exchange for our humility and willingness to accept the charity of God, we are given a kingdom. And a beggars's kingdom is better than a proud man's delusion. " -- Donald Miller on Grace

Never going to let you down.
User avatar
Saj
 
Posts: 237
Joined: Tue Mar 06, 2007 7:42 am
Location: in ur base

Postby JasonPratt » Tue Apr 17, 2007 1:40 pm

the_wolfs_howl wrote:How did you get into anime? Was it a certain show you saw, a manga you read, a trip you took to Japan? Share your story!


Does Godzilla count? How about crazy Chinese kung fu movies?

Dad started me watching those when I was _ZERO!_ (um, I mean when it was his turn to feed me at night, before I was even 1 year old. Not during conception... {wry g}) So, between that and the fact that the first movie I was ever taken to was Godzilla vs. Megalon, you could say I was prepped for anime.

Aside from maybe early Christian anime like Superbook etc. (which I recall seeing but never recall actually _watching_), my first anime was very probably Space Battleship Yamato (aka Star Blazers) which my little brother and I adored. Especially the 2nd season (which we didn't know to think of as a new storyline.) Speed Racer was being shown on broadcast TV at the time, too, but I didn't like it as much. Did like Macross when it began showing up. But honestly preferred Ultraman (the only season released in the US) and Spectraman (which I could only catch intermittently at the house of a relative who had cable) better. {g}

The next time I ever saw any anime was in college, with Akira (didn't much like it) and Venus Wars (liked it much better). Unless one counts Transformers (probably doesn't count as anime, though the theatrical feature certainly did!), which I was crazy about back in high school.

After college, I didn't get much into anime until a friend of mine (Marie Brennan) started talking about Rurouni Kenshin. (Thus explaining why my sig for the anime forum features references to SBY and a novel from Marie. {beam!}) Even then, I couldn't watch RK until it began to be released on DVD (in non-fansub format--Marie was going to college in Boston, very far away {s}); but I did start collecting all the SBY available on tape (not counting the aborted attempt at a reboot to the series, which I've heard was abominable and never tried to collect), and I also collected the miniseries version of Record of Lodoss War. That took my anime budget for a while. {g} Next up was the DVD release of RK, and after that--anime collection burgeoned. {g}
this message has been brought to you by
Bittersea Publications
in the owner's spare time {g!}


"For all shall be salted with fire. Salt is good, but if the salt becomes unsalty, with what will you season it? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another." -- Mark 9:49-50 (my candidate for most important overlooked verse in Scripture. {g})


"We must
be strong and brave--
our home
we've got to save!

We must make
the fighting cease,
so Mother Earth
will be at peace!

Through all the fire and the smoke,
we will never give up hope:
if we can win,
the Earth will survive--
we'll keep peace alive!" -- from the English lyrics to the closing theme of _Space Battleship Yamato_


"It _was_ harsh. Mirei didn't have anything that would soften it either." -- the surprisingly astute (I might even call it inspired {s!}) theological conclusion to Marie Brennan's _Doppleganger_ (Warner-Aspect, April 2006)
JasonPratt
 
Posts: 179
Joined: Mon Sep 11, 2006 11:54 am
Location: West Tenn


Return to Anime and Anime Reviews

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 91 guests