Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
- Sukunai
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:00 pm
- Location: Ontario Canada
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
When you consider the cost of the physical item, is almost nothing, its the cost to market the physical item that hurts the process.
I wish movies and all forms of video, could tap into the success of Steam which is doing so well for gaming that a friend was remarking Steam has become so big, it is in danger of becoming an illegal monopoly which while funny sounding, was a valid remark all the same.
I wonder, how much money would say Sony make, if they sold any movie that they had, for a 1 dollar download via a service like Steam.
There comes a point, when risking downloading dangerous illegal copies is not as good as downloading legal copies for peanuts.
If 20 million people downloaded a 1 dollar movie file, that's still an easy 20 million.
If they made it a 5 dollar file, no worse than a rental, that's 100 million. Not a bad return considering downloads can be free of most of the lost money leeched away from the source through middle man retailers.
I often think the industry is simply not bright enough to make adequate use of the internet.
I wish movies and all forms of video, could tap into the success of Steam which is doing so well for gaming that a friend was remarking Steam has become so big, it is in danger of becoming an illegal monopoly which while funny sounding, was a valid remark all the same.
I wonder, how much money would say Sony make, if they sold any movie that they had, for a 1 dollar download via a service like Steam.
There comes a point, when risking downloading dangerous illegal copies is not as good as downloading legal copies for peanuts.
If 20 million people downloaded a 1 dollar movie file, that's still an easy 20 million.
If they made it a 5 dollar file, no worse than a rental, that's 100 million. Not a bad return considering downloads can be free of most of the lost money leeched away from the source through middle man retailers.
I often think the industry is simply not bright enough to make adequate use of the internet.
Anime, one of the few things about the internet that doesn't make me hate the internet.
- TEKnician
- Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2010 4:40 pm
- Status: Not reading the spoilers or manga
- Location: Smack in the middle of the Pacific Ocean
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
*enthusiastic voice*
"INTRODUCING: FLASH MOVIES! MOVIES ON A FLASH DRIVE! EASILY PLUG-IN TO YOUR USB-COMPATIBLE DVD OR BLU RAY PLAYER AND WATCH THE MOVIE APPEAR INSTANTLY! NO NEED TO WORRY ABOUT SCRATCHED DISCS OR BULKY COVERS. WANT TO WATCH YOUR MOVIE ON YOUR COMPUTER? PLUG N' PLAY WITH EASE! AND FOR OUR BIG DEBUT, THE FIRST MOVIE WE'RE GONNA PUT ON OUR FLASH MOVIE IS SUMMER WARS. WE'RE BIG FANS OF ANIME, SO IF YOU ORDER RIGHT NOW, WE'LL THROW IN FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST: BROTHERHOOD (BLU RAY QUALITY) COMPLETE COLLECTION AT HALF PRICE! SO ODER NOW! AHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!! AAAHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!"
*roll credits*
"INTRODUCING: FLASH MOVIES! MOVIES ON A FLASH DRIVE! EASILY PLUG-IN TO YOUR USB-COMPATIBLE DVD OR BLU RAY PLAYER AND WATCH THE MOVIE APPEAR INSTANTLY! NO NEED TO WORRY ABOUT SCRATCHED DISCS OR BULKY COVERS. WANT TO WATCH YOUR MOVIE ON YOUR COMPUTER? PLUG N' PLAY WITH EASE! AND FOR OUR BIG DEBUT, THE FIRST MOVIE WE'RE GONNA PUT ON OUR FLASH MOVIE IS SUMMER WARS. WE'RE BIG FANS OF ANIME, SO IF YOU ORDER RIGHT NOW, WE'LL THROW IN FULLMETAL ALCHEMIST: BROTHERHOOD (BLU RAY QUALITY) COMPLETE COLLECTION AT HALF PRICE! SO ODER NOW! AHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!! AAAHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!"
*roll credits*
Almost as hard as fighting a Holy Paladin.
- l33tmeatwad
- Joined: Wed Feb 16, 2005 3:22 pm
- Location: Christiansburg, VA
- Contact:
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
Flash drives would be step backwards as it costs more than the disc, so you might as well just distribute the disc. If you are going to do a digital file to get off the disc, you could still do a Blu-ray that allows you to rip it on to your PC (which is actually one of the future "plans" for Blu-ray, the ability to get a digital copy from some random server? I'm not too sure on the specifics, but it's different than the current "digital copy" way things are being done).The_TEKnician wrote:Movies sold and distributed on a USB drive?
Digital format, comes with all the extras, easier to get, easier to store, easier to not complain about "OMG, I HAVE SO MANY DVDS I NEED TO GET RID OF!" (easier to rip? )
I've seen dvd players and blu rays with USB inputs on them, maybe we should make use of them!
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- TEKnician
- Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2010 4:40 pm
- Status: Not reading the spoilers or manga
- Location: Smack in the middle of the Pacific Ocean
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
Buy the DVDs...got it. OH WAIT, I'M ALREADY DOING THAT!!!!l33tmeatwad wrote:Flash drives would be step backwards as it costs more than the disc, so you might as well just distribute the disc.
bullseye. ADVERTISING IS EVERYTHING. "What you don't know won't hurt you, but what if you get cut? You don't even know what a band-aid is!"Sukunai wrote:its the cost to market the physical item that hurts the process.
Thats assuming 20 million people in North America even know of it. In regards to anime, i highly doubt that there are even close to 20million fans.Sukunai wrote:If 20 million people downloaded a 1 dollar movie file, that's still an easy 20 million.
Almost as hard as fighting a Holy Paladin.
- Sukunai
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:00 pm
- Location: Ontario Canada
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
Never suggested there was 20 million anime fans, well actually that is not too impossible if you consider global market.
I was mostly thinking common mainstream film releases in that example.
The thing is, you CAN make a lot of money if the offer is impossible to resist.
I'm just not going to steal a file if it is available legit for a lousy buck.
Sure there are people out there that are incurably fucking cheap swine that simply couldn't even offer you a lousy buck. I'm not one of them.
My main beef is convenience. It is NOT convenient to go all the way to Blockbuster and find they have nothing interesting at the moment. Not all of us want the current top 10 selection. What would amuse me, is browsing a massive catalogue of films. It would be like a kid in a candy shop.
I was mostly thinking common mainstream film releases in that example.
The thing is, you CAN make a lot of money if the offer is impossible to resist.
I'm just not going to steal a file if it is available legit for a lousy buck.
Sure there are people out there that are incurably fucking cheap swine that simply couldn't even offer you a lousy buck. I'm not one of them.
My main beef is convenience. It is NOT convenient to go all the way to Blockbuster and find they have nothing interesting at the moment. Not all of us want the current top 10 selection. What would amuse me, is browsing a massive catalogue of films. It would be like a kid in a candy shop.
Anime, one of the few things about the internet that doesn't make me hate the internet.
- TEKnician
- Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2010 4:40 pm
- Status: Not reading the spoilers or manga
- Location: Smack in the middle of the Pacific Ocean
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
rightstuf.comSukunai wrote:I'm just not going to steal a file if it is available legit for a lousy buck...My main beef is convenience. It is NOT convenient to go all the way to Blockbuster and find they have nothing interesting at the moment. Not all of us want the current top 10 selection. What would amuse me, is browsing a massive catalogue of films. It would be like a kid in a candy shop.
/beef
Or are you still talking about mainstream american movies? I'm sorry, i kept thinking we were still talking about anime...
Almost as hard as fighting a Holy Paladin.
- Sukunai
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:00 pm
- Location: Ontario Canada
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
Currently the example is primarily mainstream feature films.
Anime, one of the few things about the internet that doesn't make me hate the internet.
- TEKnician
- Joined: Thu Mar 04, 2010 4:40 pm
- Status: Not reading the spoilers or manga
- Location: Smack in the middle of the Pacific Ocean
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
/topic
Almost as hard as fighting a Holy Paladin.
- Sukunai
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:00 pm
- Location: Ontario Canada
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
At the end of the month here in town Blockbuster closes its doors for good. Poof gone.
The next day, all that will remain for video rental, is two corner convenience stores that have something like a couple of 100 items grand total, consisting mainly of schlock, no correction, entirely schlock.
There will be NO rental options in a town of 30k as of well right now actually as Blockbuster is only selling, the rentals are over.
That includes anime of course.
Is this a dark moment for anime though? Well when you consider that last year, when Blockbuster was not in emminent danger of ceasing to exist, the anime in the store was no better than a wretched selection of cliche junk already old news before the start of the century.
On the other hand, you can always check in with Netflix which apparently has all the anime you can stomache.
Or you can do Crunchyroll which provides anime that's actually NEW as well.
If the show is good enough to watch more than once, and you want to buy it, it's on sale on the internet if you seriously care.
Anime is not dying, and that's the bottom line.
Whether it is being marketed in an inspired fashion though, that might be up for debate.
It seems to have experienced some moments where the old way has led to some old companies rolling over and expiring.
Adapt or die.
The next day, all that will remain for video rental, is two corner convenience stores that have something like a couple of 100 items grand total, consisting mainly of schlock, no correction, entirely schlock.
There will be NO rental options in a town of 30k as of well right now actually as Blockbuster is only selling, the rentals are over.
That includes anime of course.
Is this a dark moment for anime though? Well when you consider that last year, when Blockbuster was not in emminent danger of ceasing to exist, the anime in the store was no better than a wretched selection of cliche junk already old news before the start of the century.
On the other hand, you can always check in with Netflix which apparently has all the anime you can stomache.
Or you can do Crunchyroll which provides anime that's actually NEW as well.
If the show is good enough to watch more than once, and you want to buy it, it's on sale on the internet if you seriously care.
Anime is not dying, and that's the bottom line.
Whether it is being marketed in an inspired fashion though, that might be up for debate.
It seems to have experienced some moments where the old way has led to some old companies rolling over and expiring.
Adapt or die.
Anime, one of the few things about the internet that doesn't make me hate the internet.
- l33tmeatwad
- Joined: Wed Feb 16, 2005 3:22 pm
- Location: Christiansburg, VA
- Contact:
Re: Why Anime is Alive [and well] in North America
I will say this, rental is different than owning. For me, rental digitally at a lower quality I don't mind, but I prefer the quality of Blu-ray as opposed to the lower streaming quality. Also, just something to think about, if your house burns down, you can't really claim digital content that is lost, but physical media you can.
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PixelBlended Studios: Website | Twitter | YouTube
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