ShiroiHikari (post: 1374115) wrote:I've been saying this for a long time: the Japanese anime industry's business model is broken and needs to be fixed.
Ingemar (post: 1374150) wrote:So..... take interest in cheaper hobbies?
I have no doubt that Canada has excellent media.
blkmage (post: 1374155) wrote:The thing is that there doesn't seem to be any obvious fix, at least for TV productions. Pricing and the way TV airing work in Japan have sort of cornered them into this thing. And like I mentioned, widening appeal to people who aren't otaku hasn't worked out very well yet. I'd also imagine margins on foreign sales are too low to make that audience worth expanding.
Yamamaya (post: 1374223) wrote:Guess we'll be seeing another decade of moe then.
The high prices of the DVDs are really limiting their source of revenue. I frankly don't see why they can't make a series that will appeal to a larger audience then charge less for the DVDs. They would still make a profit of it if it did well(plus otakus would buy it as well)
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1374225) wrote:Could this be a recipe for the rebirth of the OVA? Si. I think the Japanese companies will have to change something about the formula, and the OVA provides a way around the TV-time problem. Now, they just have to tweak a few other things in order to make mass-appeal OVAs a profitable venture, cause I need a string of moe OVAs like I need a root canal.
blkmage wrote:Pricing and the way TV airing work in Japan have sort of cornered them into this thing.
blkmage (post: 1374286) wrote:I'd imagine there's huge risk involved with that and companies, especially ones that are publicly traded, are averse to that sort of huge gamble.
This has been speculated to be one of the reasons we're seeing a Gundam UC OVA instead of a TV series. And we can see that in 2010, there are a bunch of adaptations that are getting the movie treatment (Haruhi, Bungaku Shoujo, Break Blade) instead of a TV series.
Of course, I don't think there have been many examples of OVA series. The closest thing I can think of that got released last year are the Negima Another World OVAs, Denpa Teki na Kanojo, and Shana S. I believe Shana S did okay, and the preceding Negima OVAs (Ala Alba) did really well. A lot of this thinking is based on how well Kara no Kyoukai did, which ended up being seven theatrical movies instead of a TV series.
You might also want to see which 2009 shows did super well and compare them to whatever's topped the sales charts in 2009.
Nate (post: 1374287) wrote:Yeah I remember hearing something about that, like in America TV shows don't air at a loss but they do in Japan. I can't remember if it has something to do with the commercials or not but I think it does? I dunno you probably know more than I do.
Yamamaya (post: 1374306) wrote:I would think that the reason anime series air at a loss in Japan is the high expense of making an animated series in the first place.
blkmage wrote:omo's blog
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