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Jul 19, 2021 5:36 PM
#101
ponpokorin said: A person could become more likely to victimize a child if they watch fictional child porn, but nobody is going to go on a man-killing rampage because they saw an anime character fantasizing about offing men who scare her. I think it's ridiculous of you to get so offended that you would compare it to child porn. Thank you for providing your point of view. Same as the other person: I'm not going to follow this through, sorry, but I will reply you one last time (and read your replies, if any), here I go: I havent acted offended nor am I offended, nor could your opinions on this matter offend me. Step down from that cloud you live on. I'd appreciate it if you did not paint your interpretations of my feelings as facts. It is also not relevant to anything, so I question your intentions in this discourse, but unlike you, I will keep my opinion on those for myself. Your claim that fictional child porn propagates victimization of children contradicts your claim that depiction of killing has no effect of human behavior. I'm going to ignore the unsupported claim that fictional child porn has real world ramifications (it may, it may not, its like violence in games, lets put it aside). What matters is, either both depictions are depraved or none, but somehow you hold onto the idea that there is a difference between a character killing other character and the same thing happening in the character's head. That's like saying I can make a completely depraved show and then end it on a 'oh it was just a dream' note, claiming everything is fine - no it is not. This idea of yours seems to stem from your misunderstanding about the morality of character's action and morality of depiction of this action (and morality of the intent of the author of this depiction). Granted, depiction of murder and depiction of murder in character's head are not the same, because the acts are not the same. In the in-world morality they are completely different, just like person in real world fantasizing about murder and actual murder (although anyone sane would already claim here that both are morally corrupt). However for the real-world morality of the in-world depiction, the inside-head argument loses most if not any significance. It does not matter if a character commits evil acts in a dream or in his actual wake state, the show is going to have R rating regardless, because it depicts violence. When talking about real world ramifications, effect of human behavior and morality of the show itself, the presence of the depiction (in whatever form) is what matters (and the context) - so you are committing a fallacy here: You say that character killing only in her head is not (or not as much) morally wrong, and therefore, nobody will go on a killing spree rampage. That's non sequitur. Morality of the character has no bearings on the morality of a show. Good show can depict morally corrupt people and vice versa. Not even the morality of the depiction does determine morality of a show. E.g., depiction of a violence is not a bad thing per se. Rather the ultimate interpretation of the depiction matters, which btw is ultimately subjective, though in practice, can be usually inferred from the tone and context of the show. So ultimately, you believe a drawing can be morally corrupt inherently (i.e., always and without question of the context and its use), but depiction of a character fantasizing about mass killing, discriminatory in nature at that, is a OK in your book. I do not hope to make you understand how silly that should sound. I do hope you at least understand that the CP analogy is relevant here, because it shows how moving a goalpost works, in practice, by you. You compared apples to oranges morality of the image with morality of a depicted character, whose morality should be judged in world, but depictions of which should be judged in real world (like you did with the image). Of course I argue that no clear inherent morality can be established in the first place (taking away the wind from thought police sails), but also that behind the depictions a clear author's intention or message usually resides and that can and should be subject to inspection and praise or criticism. Discerning the intentions is a subjective can of worms though and policing it a rotten one at best. It appears to me however, taking various depictions in the 3 episodes of this show into consideration, that this show (or rather work) has more of an inflammatory intention, purposefully depicting cherry-picked situations. Saying 'but it happens in real life so its realistic' is not a good argument for why certain event was deliberately chosen to be depicted. And as it seems to be the case here, the abuse is just an excuse to give an OK to character's behavior, which would normally not be an OK, to silence dissenters in order to push certain agenda. And we are back to moral policing, virtue signaling and cancel-culture. Which is what this show is all about and that is a fact, but I guess we do not agree on that either. Anyway because of that alone I claim this show to be morally reprehensible (not that it would be any good without this problem). These down our throat shows are rarely any good and I always said that A1-Pictures was really good at capitalizing on hypocritical content blown up to eleven (read sappy unrealistic dramas). If only I knew years ago what was waiting for us... This is way past A1-Pictures and their red eye crazy. |
Jul 19, 2021 5:54 PM
#102
Wow, the story here is so much more engrossing than that of Revue Starlight! Did they ever say where this anime takes place? It's obviously in Takarazuka City, but I have yet to hear "Takarazuka." |
LucifrostJul 19, 2021 6:04 PM
その目だれの目? |
Jul 19, 2021 7:52 PM
#103
Not even Wonder Egg got this uncomfortable to watch, damn. But I'm glad any time an anime is willing to show the ugliness of abuse when so much of it just pretend it doesn't exist. Even more so because it's not subtle at all (which I've already seen some in the comments not liking it). It not being subtle makes it all the more uncomfortable, and it SHOULD feel that way. Because it's not a pretty thing at all. Guess the extremism of Ai's disgust for men now comes clear. And I don't judge her at all. Though people keep judging her for not liking Sarasa. Dude... she's grown as an outcast. Of course, she's not going to immediately trust a girl who's just suddenly all friendly. Maybe she's just tired of all the bullshit in people, which you could also understand because of her mother (maybe she thinks everyone's like that). But anyway, I do think she'll soften to Sarasa. She IS paying a lot of attention, just as her uncle says. She just doesn't realize it |
Jul 20, 2021 5:32 AM
#104
This episode made me sick and uncomfortable to be honest, Narata's past didn't sit well with my thoughts, It's just dark and sad but It's realistic and It tells enough reason why Narata hates men. You know, I never liked "Man hater" or "Lesbian man hater" characters in animes/mangas due to lack of backstories, there are a lot of characters that are like that, mainly because authors want to insert fan services or want to satisfy wide range of audiences resulting plot holes or illogical characters. But in this case, Narata's case, I totally understand and her backstories are clear as a daylight. But I would guess that Otaku guy only want to apologize because he feel that he made Narata uncomfortable because he even didn't speak or say anything but that's just my speculation, I haven't read the manga. |
EgatammaNJul 20, 2021 5:35 AM
Jul 20, 2021 7:20 AM
#105
This episode makes me uncomfortable but it's because it's really realistic and relatable. I am glad this anime portray this problem really well and I am looking forward to next episode. |
Jul 20, 2021 8:27 AM
#106
Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: Grooming, sexual assault, body shaming and eating disorders holy shit I was not expecting this series to get this real. Set us up with the cutesy stuff and then introduced some very real concepts, shojo again showing why it’s the peak of the medium. I’ll never understand parents like Ai’s, tho. I can’t fathom how you could put a man over your own flesh and blood. Like your daughter is clearly afraid of your bf and you just write it off as her being a crybaby? Some mfs really don’t need kids, and it’s sad because although this is anime, there’s a lot of people who actually do this shit. It’s highly unlikely a kid is going to make up being molested, it may happen 1 in a million times, but no way would there not be some type of digging from any reasonable parent. Idk who directed the Ai childhood flashback sequence, but the animation and choreography was absolutely amazing despite the horrible subject matter. Great episode, picked up the first manga volume from the store the other day, looking forward to reading it It's not body shaming. It's job requirement. You wonldn't want to see Chris Evans / Scarlett Johansson fat on screen, would you? There are differences among body shaming, job requirement and personal preference. It’s body shaming. She wasn’t even fat, she had gained like 5 pounds. And I don’t care how they look long as they can act. The teacher explains the reason clearly in the episode. I mean, according what you said, it's pretty obvious you view the scene from your own perspective (you can't see the difference and you don't care the 5 pounds) instead of more objective approach (from the perspective of kageki veiwers which is predominantly female, from the perspective of kageki professionals). I am not a kageki professional. I can't see the difference. Probably that's the difference between professional and regular people like you and me. Instead of making assumption that the teacher body shaming the girl, applying Occam's razor seems more reasonable. That's just my opinion. P.S. Kageki seems niche. It's viewer base seems really small. It's not comparable to mainstream viewer of anime and mainstream media such as anime. Kageki show's ticket price is probably far more expensive than crunchyroll/netflix subscription. P.S.2 sarasa's childhood friend, the young man communicate with sarasa via a tablet, is financially supported by female patrons. |
removed-userJul 20, 2021 8:39 AM
Jul 20, 2021 8:37 AM
#107
RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: Grooming, sexual assault, body shaming and eating disorders holy shit I was not expecting this series to get this real. Set us up with the cutesy stuff and then introduced some very real concepts, shojo again showing why it’s the peak of the medium. I’ll never understand parents like Ai’s, tho. I can’t fathom how you could put a man over your own flesh and blood. Like your daughter is clearly afraid of your bf and you just write it off as her being a crybaby? Some mfs really don’t need kids, and it’s sad because although this is anime, there’s a lot of people who actually do this shit. It’s highly unlikely a kid is going to make up being molested, it may happen 1 in a million times, but no way would there not be some type of digging from any reasonable parent. Idk who directed the Ai childhood flashback sequence, but the animation and choreography was absolutely amazing despite the horrible subject matter. Great episode, picked up the first manga volume from the store the other day, looking forward to reading it It's not body shaming. It's job requirement. You wonldn't want to see Chris Evans / Scarlett Johansson fat on screen, would you? There are differences among body shaming, job requirement and personal preference. It’s body shaming. She wasn’t even fat, she had gained like 5 pounds. And I don’t care how they look long as they can act. The teacher explains the reason clearly in the episode. I mean, according what you said, it's pretty obvious you view the scene from your own perspective (you can't see the difference and you don't care the 5 pounds) instead of more objective approach (from the perspective of kageki veiwers which is predominantly female, from the perspective of kageki professionals). I am not a kageki professional. I can't see the difference. Probably that's the difference between professional and regular people like you and me. Instead of making assumption that the teacher body shaming the girl, applying Occam's razor seems more reasonable. That's just my opinion. P.S. Kageki seems niche. It's viewer base seems really small. It's not comparable to mainstream viewer of anime and mainstream media such as anime. Kageki show's ticket price is probably far more expensive than crunchyroll/netflix subscription. I’m not reading all that. I said what I said, it’s not up for debate. |
Jul 20, 2021 8:56 AM
#108
Gween_Gween said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Gween_Gween said: RobertBobert said: Gween_Gween said: Magnificient and spectacular display of how deep trauma through the lack of compromise can affect your way of viewing the world. The whole Ai's backstory is just a sample of what many people have to endure day by day, it is just so real and put in a real and moral light. Weebs be afraid of this level of wokeness and realness though I can understand how you linked trauma-induced phobia of men to wokeness, but what does the weebs have to do with it? Because weebs are extremely afraid of facing the reality that some women endure because they want to keep the privilege First of all, from my understanding, wokeness is about CRT(critical race theory, you can think of it as cultural marxism or racial essentialism) and social justice politics. It seems that you misunderstand what wokeness is. Gween_Gween said: ... Weebs be afraid of this level of wokeness and realness though Secondly, the story you refers to has nothing to do with wokeness. The man is a pedo and he wanted to hurt children. That's it. Thridly, the story and scene is heartbreaking (at least to me). Saying that a category of people be afraid of that seems really far-fetched to me. Fourthly, what's the definition of weeb to you anyway? the orginal meaning of weeb is that people who want to be japanese. the general meaning is people who like japanese ACGN(anime/manga, game, light novel). Fifthly, the word "privilege" you use, sounds like someone who is into the woke cult. The woke cultists says similar stuff, for example, "white people have privilege", which is racist, judges people base on their skin color, DNA, how they are born. Example of wokeness: 1. dailymail news: 'Every officer is up to speed on diversity training. Not so much ship handling': Scathing official report finds US Navy is too woke for war because of risk averse, politically correct, control-freak top brass link: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9783807/Navy-disarray-focusing-diversity-training-warfighting-report-says.html or video: Navy Unprepared For War As Diversity Training Supersedes War Training Causing US SURRENDER To Iran https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQUbdMRwgmI 2. Insider Leaks Critical Race Theory ‘Indoctrination’ Within Children’s Toy Manufacturer Hasbro link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwN8NFRLpo8 uhh ok i was just playing around, didnt meant to hurt you You didn't hurt me. You just talked a bunch of sh*t that you don't even understand the meaning of it (e.g. wokeness). If you don't want to talk about politics in myanimelist, then just don't make a bunch of political nonsense up or make political comment in here. Personally I don't want to see politics in myanimelist (even though I don't use MAL). |
Jul 20, 2021 9:42 AM
#109
I loved it and I have high hopes for this anime. I felt a bit sick and emotional but it's such a real portrayal of sexual trauma imo. Anyways, Ai did nothing wrong and I think she's perfect. |
Jul 20, 2021 10:08 AM
#110
Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: Grooming, sexual assault, body shaming and eating disorders holy shit I was not expecting this series to get this real. Set us up with the cutesy stuff and then introduced some very real concepts, shojo again showing why it’s the peak of the medium. I’ll never understand parents like Ai’s, tho. I can’t fathom how you could put a man over your own flesh and blood. Like your daughter is clearly afraid of your bf and you just write it off as her being a crybaby? Some mfs really don’t need kids, and it’s sad because although this is anime, there’s a lot of people who actually do this shit. It’s highly unlikely a kid is going to make up being molested, it may happen 1 in a million times, but no way would there not be some type of digging from any reasonable parent. Idk who directed the Ai childhood flashback sequence, but the animation and choreography was absolutely amazing despite the horrible subject matter. Great episode, picked up the first manga volume from the store the other day, looking forward to reading it It's not body shaming. It's job requirement. You wonldn't want to see Chris Evans / Scarlett Johansson fat on screen, would you? There are differences among body shaming, job requirement and personal preference. It’s body shaming. She wasn’t even fat, she had gained like 5 pounds. And I don’t care how they look long as they can act. The teacher explains the reason clearly in the episode. I mean, according what you said, it's pretty obvious you view the scene from your own perspective (you can't see the difference and you don't care the 5 pounds) instead of more objective approach (from the perspective of kageki veiwers which is predominantly female, from the perspective of kageki professionals). I am not a kageki professional. I can't see the difference. Probably that's the difference between professional and regular people like you and me. Instead of making assumption that the teacher body shaming the girl, applying Occam's razor seems more reasonable. That's just my opinion. P.S. Kageki seems niche. It's viewer base seems really small. It's not comparable to mainstream viewer of anime and mainstream media such as anime. Kageki show's ticket price is probably far more expensive than crunchyroll/netflix subscription. I’m not reading all that. I said what I said, it’s not up for debate. Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: Grooming, sexual assault, body shaming and eating disorders holy shit I was not expecting this series to get this real. Set us up with the cutesy stuff and then introduced some very real concepts, shojo again showing why it’s the peak of the medium. I’ll never understand parents like Ai’s, tho. I can’t fathom how you could put a man over your own flesh and blood. Like your daughter is clearly afraid of your bf and you just write it off as her being a crybaby? Some mfs really don’t need kids, and it’s sad because although this is anime, there’s a lot of people who actually do this shit. It’s highly unlikely a kid is going to make up being molested, it may happen 1 in a million times, but no way would there not be some type of digging from any reasonable parent. Idk who directed the Ai childhood flashback sequence, but the animation and choreography was absolutely amazing despite the horrible subject matter. Great episode, picked up the first manga volume from the store the other day, looking forward to reading it It's not body shaming. It's job requirement. You wonldn't want to see Chris Evans / Scarlett Johansson fat on screen, would you? There are differences among body shaming, job requirement and personal preference. It’s body shaming. She wasn’t even fat, she had gained like 5 pounds. And I don’t care how they look long as they can act. The teacher explains the reason clearly in the episode. I mean, according what you said, it's pretty obvious you view the scene from your own perspective (you can't see the difference and you don't care the 5 pounds) instead of more objective approach (from the perspective of kageki veiwers which is predominantly female, from the perspective of kageki professionals). I am not a kageki professional. I can't see the difference. Probably that's the difference between professional and regular people like you and me. Instead of making assumption that the teacher body shaming the girl, applying Occam's razor seems more reasonable. That's just my opinion. P.S. Kageki seems niche. It's viewer base seems really small. It's not comparable to mainstream viewer of anime and mainstream media such as anime. Kageki show's ticket price is probably far more expensive than crunchyroll/netflix subscription. I’m not reading all that. I said what I said, it’s not up for debate. You explained the reason of your opinion in the first reply (now I understand you way of thinking). I elaborated my reason for my opinion in the second reply (now you may understand my way of thinking). It would be a debate if you discuss the topic in your second reply. You have your own opinion, I don't care about that. I was just curious about how you get to the conclusion. End of conversation. |
Jul 20, 2021 11:15 AM
#111
RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: Grooming, sexual assault, body shaming and eating disorders holy shit I was not expecting this series to get this real. Set us up with the cutesy stuff and then introduced some very real concepts, shojo again showing why it’s the peak of the medium. I’ll never understand parents like Ai’s, tho. I can’t fathom how you could put a man over your own flesh and blood. Like your daughter is clearly afraid of your bf and you just write it off as her being a crybaby? Some mfs really don’t need kids, and it’s sad because although this is anime, there’s a lot of people who actually do this shit. It’s highly unlikely a kid is going to make up being molested, it may happen 1 in a million times, but no way would there not be some type of digging from any reasonable parent. Idk who directed the Ai childhood flashback sequence, but the animation and choreography was absolutely amazing despite the horrible subject matter. Great episode, picked up the first manga volume from the store the other day, looking forward to reading it It's not body shaming. It's job requirement. You wonldn't want to see Chris Evans / Scarlett Johansson fat on screen, would you? There are differences among body shaming, job requirement and personal preference. It’s body shaming. She wasn’t even fat, she had gained like 5 pounds. And I don’t care how they look long as they can act. The teacher explains the reason clearly in the episode. I mean, according what you said, it's pretty obvious you view the scene from your own perspective (you can't see the difference and you don't care the 5 pounds) instead of more objective approach (from the perspective of kageki veiwers which is predominantly female, from the perspective of kageki professionals). I am not a kageki professional. I can't see the difference. Probably that's the difference between professional and regular people like you and me. Instead of making assumption that the teacher body shaming the girl, applying Occam's razor seems more reasonable. That's just my opinion. P.S. Kageki seems niche. It's viewer base seems really small. It's not comparable to mainstream viewer of anime and mainstream media such as anime. Kageki show's ticket price is probably far more expensive than crunchyroll/netflix subscription. I’m not reading all that. I said what I said, it’s not up for debate. Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: RakuennoTsubasa said: Marinate1016 said: Grooming, sexual assault, body shaming and eating disorders holy shit I was not expecting this series to get this real. Set us up with the cutesy stuff and then introduced some very real concepts, shojo again showing why it’s the peak of the medium. I’ll never understand parents like Ai’s, tho. I can’t fathom how you could put a man over your own flesh and blood. Like your daughter is clearly afraid of your bf and you just write it off as her being a crybaby? Some mfs really don’t need kids, and it’s sad because although this is anime, there’s a lot of people who actually do this shit. It’s highly unlikely a kid is going to make up being molested, it may happen 1 in a million times, but no way would there not be some type of digging from any reasonable parent. Idk who directed the Ai childhood flashback sequence, but the animation and choreography was absolutely amazing despite the horrible subject matter. Great episode, picked up the first manga volume from the store the other day, looking forward to reading it It's not body shaming. It's job requirement. You wonldn't want to see Chris Evans / Scarlett Johansson fat on screen, would you? There are differences among body shaming, job requirement and personal preference. It’s body shaming. She wasn’t even fat, she had gained like 5 pounds. And I don’t care how they look long as they can act. The teacher explains the reason clearly in the episode. I mean, according what you said, it's pretty obvious you view the scene from your own perspective (you can't see the difference and you don't care the 5 pounds) instead of more objective approach (from the perspective of kageki veiwers which is predominantly female, from the perspective of kageki professionals). I am not a kageki professional. I can't see the difference. Probably that's the difference between professional and regular people like you and me. Instead of making assumption that the teacher body shaming the girl, applying Occam's razor seems more reasonable. That's just my opinion. P.S. Kageki seems niche. It's viewer base seems really small. It's not comparable to mainstream viewer of anime and mainstream media such as anime. Kageki show's ticket price is probably far more expensive than crunchyroll/netflix subscription. I’m not reading all that. I said what I said, it’s not up for debate. You explained the reason of your opinion in the first reply (now I understand you way of thinking). I elaborated my reason for my opinion in the second reply (now you may understand my way of thinking). It would be a debate if you discuss the topic in your second reply. You have your own opinion, I don't care about that. I was just curious about how you get to the conclusion. End of conversation. Not reading that, anyway, read Kageki Shojo. |
Jul 20, 2021 12:13 PM
#112
illailla said: I loved it and I have high hopes for this anime. I felt a bit sick and emotional but it's such a real portrayal of sexual trauma imo. Anyways, Ai did nothing wrong and I think she's perfect. Are you non-ironically fully justifying misandry just because it is caused by psychological trauma? |
Jul 20, 2021 3:41 PM
#113
Jul 20, 2021 6:25 PM
#114
P.S. Forgot to post my own thoughts at the time like the idiot I am, but oh well... And sorry beforehand if I tick off anyone here... If this sort of writing was implemented a bit later on in the story, when stuff has been properly built up for the characters to make me care more about them, I would've been more empathetic with Narata and her trauma. Sadly, for someone easily jaded like me, no offense, this just wasn't the good timing, and it instead felt a very nasty bitter taste for me. I got physically mad instead, and my impressions of the series took a hit as a result. Not like everything's totally lost for me with this series, but eeeesh, it felt too much like a in-your-face sort of deal and not something I would necessarily call genuine. Additionally, considering that it utilizes very sensitive stuff like bullying and pedophilia, it was more like a red flag to me. However, this seems like a pro-feminist series, so I can see it resolved fairly easily next episode, for better or worse. |
Jul 20, 2021 10:37 PM
#115
Ryuseishun said: P.S. Forgot to post my own thoughts at the time like the idiot I am, but oh well... And sorry beforehand if I tick off anyone here... If this sort of writing was implemented a bit later on in the story, when stuff has been properly built up for the characters to make me care more about them, I would've been more empathetic with Narata and her trauma. Sadly, for someone easily jaded like me, no offense, this just wasn't the good timing, and it instead felt a very nasty bitter taste for me. I got physically mad instead, and my impressions of the series took a hit as a result. Not like everything's totally lost for me with this series, but eeeesh, it felt too much like a in-your-face sort of deal and not something I would necessarily call genuine. Additionally, considering that it utilizes very sensitive stuff like bullying and pedophilia, it was more like a red flag to me. However, this seems like a pro-feminist series, so I can see it resolved fairly easily next episode, for better or worse. This is shoujo. Do you expect a shoujo manga adaptation to be offensive to women? Not to mention, the show shows it all in an apparently unfriendly manner. |
Jul 22, 2021 5:07 PM
#117
I have a feeling the fan just wanted to apologize for ruining her career. But that man her mother is dating. Disgusting. Tonguing a little girl like that! Wtf! Yet the worst is the mother! How can you leave your daughter alone with a man you barely know! And she even called you to tell you something and you don't listen?! What if she was raped? TOTALLY IRRESPONSIBLE. And you know she knows what men can be like so how could she?! Does she care at all about her daughter. I'm fuming. |
Jul 24, 2021 3:38 AM
#118
Definitely getting old-school shoujo vibes, not bad as long as it develops the characters in a reasonable way and doesn't turn into a soap opera. Ai is such an unlucky girl, so hope the show doesn't do the typical japanese thing of 100% responsibilizing the victim for her trauma, while the enablers get a free pass for the sake of status quo. On a side note regarding the "fat" incident, it's kind of funny how the women in the show want to cultivate their own distinctive sense of value around the theater to stay away from the pressure of male expectations, but at the same time they are just as pushy/opressive as "male entertainment" by wanting them to be skeletons. |
VludiJul 24, 2021 4:26 AM
Jul 24, 2021 5:16 AM
#119
Vludi said: Definitely getting old-school shoujo vibes, not bad as long as it develops the characters in a reasonable way and doesn't turn into a soap opera. Ai is such an unlucky girl, so hope the show doesn't do the typical japanese thing of 100% responsibilizing the victim for her trauma, while the enablers get a free pass for the sake of status quo. On a side note regarding the "fat" incident, it's kind of funny how the women in the show want to cultivate their own distinctive sense of value around the theater to stay away from the pressure of male expectations, but at the same time they are just as pushy/opressive as "male entertainment" by wanting them to be skeletons. Personally, I have never seen anime show where the victim is made completely to blame for her trauma. Can you name any? In terms of theater, Takarazuka has a predominantly female audience. That is, you call it "male expectations" even when it comes from women. |
Jul 24, 2021 6:00 AM
#120
ponpokorin said: An average 13yo female twitter user foundWow, I feel so bad for Ai. Seems like that waste of space is still living there too, which makes it even worse. I hope she tells her mother the truth at some point, not that she didn't try though. Damn I really wanted to smack that bitch who called the girl fat. If it's that big of a deal then she should have brought it up in private, and with more tact so that the poor thing wouldn't become anorexic. But I am glad that it's showing the dark side of the school too and not just presenting it as some utopian place where dreams come true or whatever. Loved that scene where Ai mowed down all the men, lol. hope no one calls me out for saying that (or have those types of guys all dropped this by now?) |
PunkPineappleJul 24, 2021 6:11 AM
Jul 24, 2021 6:03 AM
#121
Gween_Gween said: "Woke" is usually associated with men hating, blue haired twitter users. This is just an anime about a girl who has gone through shit and needs therapyMagnificient and spectacular display of how deep trauma through the lack of compromise can affect your way of viewing the world. The whole Ai's backstory is just a sample of what many people have to endure day by day, it is just so real and put in a real and moral light. Weebs be afraid of this level of wokeness and realness though |
Jul 24, 2021 8:26 AM
#122
Ai's backstory was quite disturbing and now it makes sense as to why she hates men so much but judging a person based on their looks is still rude. Specially in this case since it doesn't look like the guy she called a creep is actually a bad guy. Anyway, once again Sarasa was great in this episode. I really like her positivity and trying to be of help to others even to someone like Ai who keeps brushing her off. |
Jul 24, 2021 1:57 PM
#123
RobertBobert said: Personally, I have never seen anime show where the victim is made completely to blame for her trauma. Can you name any? In terms of theater, Takarazuka has a predominantly female audience. That is, you call it "male expectations" even when it comes from women. Well to be honest some fall into complete victimism (the ones that go for shock value mostly), but when the drama tries to be more serious they often focus just on the individual's weakness while trivializing social issues, recurring to armchair psychology to "toughen up" (or recurring to emotional dependence if it's romance), instead of asking for professional help (mental health is taboo in Japan after all). Some of Kyoani or Mari Okada's stuff come to mind. RobertBobert said: In terms of theater, Takarazuka has a predominantly female audience. That is, you call it "male expectations" even when it comes from women. eh read again, what I meant is they go to Takarazuka as a way to stay in a "women's world", some kind of liberation, yet their strict demands and pressure aren't that different from regular "male" entertainment. |
VludiJul 24, 2021 2:04 PM
Jul 24, 2021 11:24 PM
#124
Blue_Maroon said: he may not have sinister intentions but a grown ass dude stalking an under aged girl is just creepy. Well that was darker than I was expecting this anime to go. It makes sense that Ai hates men given that she never had a father, her mother was neglectful, and the man she brought in to be a father was a child molester. I don’t think the fan is there for sinister reasons and having Ai hear him out might help her come out of her shell a little more. This is honestly up there with the best debuts of the season so I hope more people start to watch it (although I doubt it). |
Jul 24, 2021 11:44 PM
#125
Vludi said: RobertBobert said: Personally, I have never seen anime show where the victim is made completely to blame for her trauma. Can you name any? In terms of theater, Takarazuka has a predominantly female audience. That is, you call it "male expectations" even when it comes from women. Well to be honest some fall into complete victimism (the ones that go for shock value mostly), but when the drama tries to be more serious they often focus just on the individual's weakness while trivializing social issues, recurring to armchair psychology to "toughen up" (or recurring to emotional dependence if it's romance), instead of asking for professional help (mental health is taboo in Japan after all). Some of Kyoani or Mari Okada's stuff come to mind. RobertBobert said: In terms of theater, Takarazuka has a predominantly female audience. That is, you call it "male expectations" even when it comes from women. eh read again, what I meant is they go to Takarazuka as a way to stay in a "women's world", some kind of liberation, yet their strict demands and pressure aren't that different from regular "male" entertainment. I think this is a misunderstanding, which is caused by the difference in psychological trends in the United States and the rest of the world. In Japan and my Russia, for example, it is believed that a person should work to correct their psychological problems, while in the USA, as far as I know, psychologists often indulge their patients' problems too much, placing them in a dome instead of treatment. Well, here you are faced with typical gender double standards, where the same thing is perceived as toxic masculinity on the part of a man and as feminine strictness on the part of a woman. |
Jul 25, 2021 12:09 AM
#126
RobertBobert said: I think this is a misunderstanding, which is caused by the difference in psychological trends in the United States and the rest of the world. In Japan and my Russia, for example, it is believed that a person should work to correct their psychological problems, while in the USA, as far as I know, psychologists often indulge their patients' problems too much, placing them in a dome instead of treatment. I'm not from the USA but I get what you mean. I believe in balance however, to me the japanese seem to be overly demanding on the individual for problems that often have a more social/contextual magnitude. For example if you can't put up with abusive working conditions you are likely seen as a savage/lazy/bad worker, and they truly believe that it's 100% your fault. If you have depression you'll most likely be seen as weak, worthless human being, even worse if you seek mental care. I agree that the individual should always be responsible for his life, but I also think you can't just forget/trivialize contextual factors. |
Jul 25, 2021 12:42 AM
#127
Vludi said: RobertBobert said: I think this is a misunderstanding, which is caused by the difference in psychological trends in the United States and the rest of the world. In Japan and my Russia, for example, it is believed that a person should work to correct their psychological problems, while in the USA, as far as I know, psychologists often indulge their patients' problems too much, placing them in a dome instead of treatment. I'm not from the USA but I get what you mean. I believe in balance however, to me the japanese seem to be overly demanding on the individual for problems that often have a more social/contextual magnitude. For example if you can't put up with abusive working conditions you are likely seen as a savage/lazy/bad worker, and they truly believe that it's 100% your fault. If you have depression you'll most likely be seen as weak, worthless human being, even worse if you seek mental care. I agree that the individual should always be responsible for his life, but I also think you can't just forget/trivialize contextual factors. The Japanese are a very collectivist nation, so this is understandable. On the other hand, phobias like Ai literally destroy social life and only get worse over the years, so it's really better to fix it as soon as possible, rather than groom it. Unfortunately, this topic is highly politicized nowadays, especially in the media space. For example, the most famous Russian feminist first became famous (infamous, of course), among other things, because of her words that it is justified to hate all men if you had some kind of negative experience with a couple of them. |
Jul 25, 2021 1:50 AM
#128
RobertBobert said: The Japanese are a very collectivist nation, so this is understandable. On the other hand, phobias like Ai literally destroy social life and only get worse over the years, so it's really better to fix it as soon as possible, rather than groom it. Unfortunately, this topic is highly politicized nowadays, especially in the media space. For example, the most famous Russian feminist first became famous (infamous, of course), among other things, because of her words that it is justified to hate all men if you had some kind of negative experience with a couple of them. Yeah of course trauma can lead to mental problems and black/white mentality, which is why seeking justice is just as important as seeking mental health. We'll see how things turn out in the anime. |
VludiJul 25, 2021 2:02 AM
Jul 25, 2021 2:22 AM
#129
Vludi said: RobertBobert said: The Japanese are a very collectivist nation, so this is understandable. On the other hand, phobias like Ai literally destroy social life and only get worse over the years, so it's really better to fix it as soon as possible, rather than groom it. Unfortunately, this topic is highly politicized nowadays, especially in the media space. For example, the most famous Russian feminist first became famous (infamous, of course), among other things, because of her words that it is justified to hate all men if you had some kind of negative experience with a couple of them. Yeah of course trauma can lead to mental problems and black/white mentality, which is why seeking justice is just as important as seeking mental health. We'll see how things turn out in the anime. Well, at least this show is clearly not going down the path of that bunch of offensive seinen yuri/yuri bait where trauma or even just teenage fear of men is exploited to separate female characters from men. |
Jul 25, 2021 2:32 PM
#130
Esse foi um episódio e tanto! O anime até agora passava um ar mais alegre e divertido, porém nesse episódio, pudemos ver o que fez a personagem Ai Narada ser uma garota tão fria. Foi um episódio com um ar mais pesado e nos mostrou o passado traumático da personagem. Ao meu ver, esse foi o melhor até o momento. |
LilitachiJul 25, 2021 2:36 PM
Jul 30, 2021 9:43 PM
#131
Her generalizing of men is just plain stupid. |
PsychedeliosJul 30, 2021 10:09 PM
Jul 31, 2021 8:20 AM
#132
Now Ai's disgust towards men is understandable. I hope she gets to understand that not everyone is same |
Aug 2, 2021 6:55 PM
#133
well i was not expecting to feel that awful after watching this and it didn't really chill even till the end...sheesh i knew she'd have some reason for having the typical hate men trope but it's understandable why now even if it's extreme and flawed but she was traumatized at such a young age with not much help outside of her uncle. judging by some of the reactions seems like your average weeb won't end up liking this show,but im sold since despite it's cute simple art style it ant fucking around |
Aug 4, 2021 7:32 AM
#134
i feel you, sa survivors watching this ep man i didn't expect this. hit hard |
see you, space cowperson . . . |
Aug 5, 2021 3:37 PM
#135
What a realistic episode, I loved every second of it. The moment that pedophile showed up, I felt uneasy through the whole episode. Hopefully it maintains the same maturity. |
Aug 11, 2021 10:28 PM
#136
wow this anime is really amazing, shit really got real this episode. feel really bad for ai, thought she was a bit odd at first but now i can understand and relate with how and why she's feeling/acting like this... absolutely spectacular episode and can't wait to see more, this might just be the hidden gem of the season! also, a shame to see that there's still so many pathetic insensitive retards in this thread who don't have a shred of empathy or even try to understand/sympathize why someone would feel this way. although, they're all probably just simpleminded men who've never experienced anything like this. however that still doesn't give them any excuse to be or stay this ignorant, because it's seriously not a difficult concept to grasp. |
removed-userAug 11, 2021 10:33 PM
Aug 14, 2021 7:49 AM
#137
I guess that stepdad hid his true colors well and the creepiness we witnessed was from Ai's pov. Still, can't help but wonder why her mom went for this guy out of all people. Well, no matter the reason, living with him turned from uncomfortable to a traumatizing experience that ruined Ai's life as she's still suffering from it. I symphatize with her to a certain degree, yet I can't deny that her ideology that was born from a coping mechanism isn't just harmful to herself but to others as well. For instance that stalker who's apparently not as bad as his appearance was supposed to suggest. Following Ai was admittedly a terrible idea and even tho it probably wouldn't have done much considering her misandry, he could've at least cared a bit more about his appearance. That said, it's interesting to see this chain of unfortunate events. Then we had the scene with the teacher. There's a lot I could say about nutrition, aesthetics and performance, but I'm looking forward to see how this show is gonna handle it. All the stuff is pretty heavy handed and reminds so much of traditional shoujo drama, which I really enjoy. |
One Piece episode 914 & 915 & 1027 were a mistake and 957 brought the salvation - FMmatron |
Aug 29, 2021 11:29 PM
#139
It’s hilarious to see so many angry man babies’ reactions to this show. Her misandry is totally warranted! You guys are more angry at how the character’s trauma comes out, than you are about the man who traumatized her. Typical. |
Sep 4, 2021 2:53 PM
#140
Well, now we understand her reason for disliking men so much. Such a terrible expierence with men in the past made her hate them a lot. And, it's understandable. There are a lot of scums out there but the same goes for women. It just depends on who you meet. Anyway, Sarase looking out for her is what makes her such a beautiful character. A bit too loud but a energetic and friendly person who'll help anyone in need. Dio's voice makes the anime x100 better |
SideCharacterKalSep 4, 2021 3:05 PM
“You yourself have to change first, or nothing will change for you!” ' |
Sep 25, 2021 3:41 PM
#141
Expected another lighthearted episode but damn this hit hard in my feels with this truly messed up past which no person should go through. Poor Narata, no wonder she has androphobia. That f*cking pedophile Seiji should be in prison and her Mother should lose custody for child neglect. Glad that uncle Taichi, despite limited in his ways, was there to help her out with getting a door lock and providing emotional support. |
Sep 28, 2021 5:02 AM
#142
Well, that was disgusting. And sadly, her piece of shit of a mother was pretty realistic. Only thing bothering me - why didn't Ai call Taichi that evening when... you know. Why didn't she said her mother that motherfucker molested her? Most unrealistic. |
Oct 18, 2021 9:22 PM
#143
i like how the mom gets mad at the lock rather than using her small ass brain to connect the dots on why ai wanted a goddamn lock on her door in the first place lol. i swear to god these people shouldn't be allowed to keep kids if they're going to be this willy nilly oblivious. i skip the opening every time but the ending... is so good... can't skip it at all... |
Nov 15, 2021 3:59 AM
#144
Wow, I have a lot of feelings about this one. To be honest actually *showing* the assault perpetrated on Ai wasn't ideal imo. Of course it makes us really understand the causes of Ai's trauma, but I feel like it could have just been implied and the audience would have been able to pick up on it. As is, it was (probably unecessarily) hard to watch and it could possibly be triggering for some victims of sexual abuse. I think it's a bit unfortunate because the rest of the episode was depicting Ai's trauma in a rather realistic way that other victims could relate to. Otherwise it was a solid episode. The fantasy that Ai had about killing all those men might seem extreme if you've never suffered from that, but I feel like that's not too uncommon among women that were victims of sexual abuse. It's just more frowned upon to have these fantasies of revenge, so seeing this here in this episode was refreshing to me. There's also a lot that could be said about women who internalize these very strict ideas about what an "ideal body" should look like. An all-girl group with an audience made primarily of women could have been a "safe space" for them to be free of comments and judgements over their bodies, but here it ends up enforcing strict ideals that are just as harmful. I think it's interesting that the characters who are more acquainted with the industry are used to it and just view it as "normal", whereas Sarasa who doesn't have this background is able to see how that's wrong. I wonder if the stalker somehow feels guilty about Ai being fired from the group after her interaction with him, since it seems like she was his favorite from the idol group. Maybe he wants to talk to her to apologize? Or maybe he just feels entitled to have access to her? Anyway that gave me a lot to think about, and I really want to watch the rest of the show. |
Apr 22, 2022 9:51 PM
#145
That was intense and was anxious hoping things didn't get worse for Ai and then the scene with teacher calling the other girl fat, not a single moment to be calm. |
Jun 24, 2022 1:32 PM
#146
i didnt think her mother was that low down but and also i punch that old lady in the face right now for calling one of her student fat, and more importantly Ai mother was very terrible woman how can let someone be around her own child, That woman shouldnt be actress at all. If saw that crap broke every bone on that man's body and cps on Ai mother. |
Jan 6, 2023 12:28 AM
#147
Watching Ai's story unfold felt like seeing a mirror of how I've experienced abuse from adults. Her reaction is so real, it almost hurts seeing how she closed her heart to men/trusting people ever again. I'm excited to see how the rest of this anime! |
desu desu binches |
Aug 22, 2023 1:27 AM
#148
The true horror of this is how often it happens in real life. Mother has a child, dad is out of the picture, mother brings another man in the house and he preys on her kids. In the midst of her bad luck, Ai was lucky that he didn't do something even worse to her, especially since she didn't have a lock for her door before Taichi gave her one. |
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