Do you think that before the Org was setup there was no way for anybody to put their AMVs online or "share their work"? Do you think the org the be-all, end-all for the fan-made music video community?nbjt417843 wrote:how whould you feel if you had no place to share your work?
Where is all the NON amime music videos
- Brad
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Re: Where is all the NON amime music videos
- x_rex30
- Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2001 4:30 pm
- bum
- 17747114553
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Re: Where is all the NON amime music videos
If I didnt have $10 a month for a cheap web host their would be other things to worry about than sharing some fan videos I've made.nbjt417843 wrote:how whould you feel if you had no place to share your work?
- Brsrk
- Joined: Sun Dec 15, 2002 7:11 pm
- Location: Brooklyn, MI
go find Khameleon 808. he makes some amazing non-anime stuff.
http://www.animemusicvideos.org/members ... hp?v=87528Pwolf wrote:that music was way to "happy" for an anime as dramatic as the kenshin ova... your an evil evil person![]()
Pwolf
- zaku_gundam
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- Sephiroth
- Joined: Tue Dec 19, 2000 10:32 pm
- Location: California
As far as definition goes live action yes.. all animation not quite
"The Japanese term for animation is アニメーション (animēshon, pronounced: /ɑnimɛːʃɔn/), written in katakana. It is a direct transliteration of the English term "animation." The Japanese term is abbreviated as アニメ (anime, pronounced: /ɑnimɛ/ ). Both the original and abbreviated forms are valid and interchangeable in Japanese. The term is a broad one, and does not specify an animation's nation of origin or style.
In turn, the English word anime is a transliteration of the abbreviated version of this Japanese term, and it is typically pronounced as /ˈænɪˌmei/. As with a few other Japanese words such as Pokémon and Kobo Abé, anime is sometimes spelled as animé in English with an acute accent over the final e to cue the reader that the letter is pronounced as [e]. For example, "Abé" can be mistaken as a nickname for Abraham without the accent, which wouldn't pronounce the last letter.
Internationally, anime once bore the popular name Japanimation, but this term has fallen into disuse. It saw the most usage during the 1970s and 1980s, which broadly comprise the first and second waves of anime fandom. The term survived at least into the early 1990s but seemed to fade away shortly before the mid-1990s anime resurgence. In general, the term now only appears in nostalgic contexts. The term Japanimation is much more commonly used in Japan to refer to domestic animation. Since anime or animeshon is used in Japan to describe all forms of animation regardless of national origin, Japanimation is meant to distinguish Japanese work from that of the rest of the world.
In more recent years, anime has also frequently been referred to as manga in Europe, a practice that may stem from the Japanese usage. In Japan, manga refers to both animation and comics. Among English speakers, manga usually has the stricter meaning of "Japanese comics". An alternate explanation is that it is due to the prominence of Manga Entertainment, a distibutor of anime to the US and UK markets. This term is much more common in Europe since Manga Entertainment started out in the UK.
The voice actors for anime usually bear the Japanese equivalent designation, seiyū."
Perhaps we should just call the site mangamusicvideos.org or japanimationmusicvideos.org but since it's called animemusicvideos.org sources that arent considered by the site to be anime are considered it depending on the definition you go off of.
Ain't language fun.
"The Japanese term for animation is アニメーション (animēshon, pronounced: /ɑnimɛːʃɔn/), written in katakana. It is a direct transliteration of the English term "animation." The Japanese term is abbreviated as アニメ (anime, pronounced: /ɑnimɛ/ ). Both the original and abbreviated forms are valid and interchangeable in Japanese. The term is a broad one, and does not specify an animation's nation of origin or style.
In turn, the English word anime is a transliteration of the abbreviated version of this Japanese term, and it is typically pronounced as /ˈænɪˌmei/. As with a few other Japanese words such as Pokémon and Kobo Abé, anime is sometimes spelled as animé in English with an acute accent over the final e to cue the reader that the letter is pronounced as [e]. For example, "Abé" can be mistaken as a nickname for Abraham without the accent, which wouldn't pronounce the last letter.
Internationally, anime once bore the popular name Japanimation, but this term has fallen into disuse. It saw the most usage during the 1970s and 1980s, which broadly comprise the first and second waves of anime fandom. The term survived at least into the early 1990s but seemed to fade away shortly before the mid-1990s anime resurgence. In general, the term now only appears in nostalgic contexts. The term Japanimation is much more commonly used in Japan to refer to domestic animation. Since anime or animeshon is used in Japan to describe all forms of animation regardless of national origin, Japanimation is meant to distinguish Japanese work from that of the rest of the world.
In more recent years, anime has also frequently been referred to as manga in Europe, a practice that may stem from the Japanese usage. In Japan, manga refers to both animation and comics. Among English speakers, manga usually has the stricter meaning of "Japanese comics". An alternate explanation is that it is due to the prominence of Manga Entertainment, a distibutor of anime to the US and UK markets. This term is much more common in Europe since Manga Entertainment started out in the UK.
The voice actors for anime usually bear the Japanese equivalent designation, seiyū."
Perhaps we should just call the site mangamusicvideos.org or japanimationmusicvideos.org but since it's called animemusicvideos.org sources that arent considered by the site to be anime are considered it depending on the definition you go off of.
Ain't language fun.
- Flint the Dwarf
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- zaku_gundam
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- is
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The Wikipedia article..Flint the Dwarf wrote:Out of curiosity, where'd you copy that all from?Sephiroth wrote:Ain't language fun.
I know this because I've read the thing. Probably edited it too, although if I did, it was a long time ago.
In any case, the pasted segment has nothing to do with this. The term "anime" is both:
(1) popularly understood to refer to Japanese animation
(2) is defined as such by this site
If you want to have a war of semantics, you can, but save it for the Wikipedia discussion page on the anime article. Or you start your own video hosting site. (That'd be funny to see, especially since most of the people complaining horribly underestimate the scope of a-m-v.org.)
I think it's pretty clear that the administration of this one isn't going to budge.
- paizuri
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Re: Where is all the NON amime music videos
You know, there was life before a-m-v.org. There were even AMVs, generally hosted by the creators' own web hosting. Then one day, the creator of the site thought, hey there's no centralized catalog of all of these, I bet there are some real gems that no one knows about! So what did he do? He MADE HIS OWN SITE. Feel free to make your own site and host whatever you want. Are we close-minded for only focusing on anime music videos? No, we just decided to make a site that concentrates on them and we're sticking to what we think we can do best.nbjt417843 wrote:is there a web site dedacated to the other stuff? / maybe containing the other stuff?
if not, then i think it is extreamly closed mined of the owners of this site not to let these artists an outlet for there art
how whould you feel if you had no place to share your work?
If you have such problems finding someone to host your work for you, then do it yourself. No one is stopping you. If you're complaining about not being able to find other people's work, that burden is on the creators themselves to find/create their own hosting to make their work available to others. It is not our responsibility and never will be.