" wrote:RustyClaymore 11:27 - Ah yes, Socks is the single raindrop responsible for the flood. XD
Eric P. Sherman, President and CEO of the anime dubbing company Bang Zoom! Entertainment, has posted an editorial on the AnimeTV blog on Saturday, urging fans to buy anime instead of watching it via fan-subbed videos.
animenewsnetwork.com
ShiroiHikari (post: 1392719) wrote:So...you're saying Bandai will go under if Haruhi doesn't sell enough copies? Which Bandai are we talking about here? Surely not the video game-toy-anime-etc. empire from Japan.
All joking aside, I'd like to see some sources on that Bandai thing. If they really are betting on such a small number of titles to pull them through, then they're idiots.
FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF-
Well played, ANN. Well played. :l
Bandai Entertainment Responds to ANNCast Comments:MasterDias (post: 1392678) wrote:So. Bang Zoom! CEO Eric Sherman is on ANNCast this week. Notably, he's making a distinction between fansubs (which he didn't sound very harsh on actually) and ripped R1 DVD releases, which are evidently a pretty serious problem for them.
But, the most interesting thing to come out of it is that Bandai Entertainment apparently has everything riding on this year's Haruhi releases and one other title. Otherwise, they are through...
Bandai wrote:In response to Mr. Sherman's comments and how they were interpreted, Bandai Entertainment has no plans to close down. We actually had a very good year in 2009 and good results in the first quarter of 2010. We have new titles to announce soon and we will be exhibiting at Anime Expo, Otakon, and New York Anime Festival this year. Mr. Sherman's speculations about the state of the anime industry are interesting, but not accurate as it pertains to Bandai Entertainment, except in regard to the point that he was actually trying to make that if the market trend continues where there is little support for dubbed anime products, we may unfortunately discontinue creating dubs and focus on sub-only releases. Hopefully this does not happen. We continue to be grateful to the fans that support our business.
From Ken Iyadomi, President of Bandai Entertainment.
Mr. Sherman's speculations about the state of the anime industry are interesting, but not accurate as it pertains to Bandai Entertainment, except in regard to the point that he was actually trying to make that if the market trend continues where there is little support for dubbed anime products, we may unfortunately discontinue creating dubs and focus on sub-only releases. Hopefully this does not happen.
blkmage (post: 1395481) wrote:A dub for Clannad makes no financial sense, and for a company that's a shell company for another company that's declared bankruptcy, financial considerations should be incredibly important.
Let's suppose that there is adequate demand for a Clannad dub. You run into a few problems. The first is that the vast majority of these people will likely have bought the sub only version, as there was no indication that there was going to be a dub. Maybe they're completely satisfied with it. Maybe they don't really care and just bit the bullet. Not every one of these people will go and swap their version for the dub, even if it came at no cost.
Further, suppose a large enough number of people did take advantage of whatever offer this is and did swap them. There's an incredible amount of overhead cost, shipping physical media and now you've got a ton of unsold inventory and have made effectively no money. Okay, sure there were a few holdouts, but I'm willing to assume that the number of these people are, at this point in the product's lifecycle, financially insignificant. And those who wanted a dub but couldn't swap their sub-only DVDs for a dubbed version? Well, they mad and you have a PR problem now.
But what if there isn't adequate demand for a dub? Then you've sunk a ton of money into dubbing to appeal to a small percentage of an already niche target audience. You'll likely have blown away any profit you made from the savings of doing a sub-only release.
My point is that they should have decided which route to go with (dub or sub-only) and stuck with it. Doing a dub after a sub-only release without indicating any such intentions is pretty much worse from every business aspect than just sucking up the initial cost of doing a dub and gambling on it. Or they could have played it safe and stuck with a sub-only release like they said they would, and they would've been fine.
Quite frankly, it's these sort of terrible business decisions that cause me to have zero sympathy for these people when their businesses go under. I bought the Clannad DVDs because I assumed that they finally understood how to do releases properly and wanted them to do more of the same in the future. Imagine my disappointment when I learned that they didn't learn anything at all from the past decade.
KeybladeWarrior wrote:Technically, you can't entirely blame the industry for their bad decisions.
Maybe the industries did things to make more money or maybe they just wanted to test the water like I said before.
Heck, I would laugh if the companies altogether do a boycott and no longer make anime for about 10 years. They turn to something else entirely. Tick off fans and see them whine like babies. Fans complain, and companies make money on another genre of video.
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