Well, to be fair this exists. You just have to pay a blanket subscription fee for whatever cable package carries it, or you can cough up like .99 cents per episode for most on-demand shows.Yamamaya (post: 1459625) wrote:On the other hand, companies like Funimation put very few of their shows on T.V. They work under the assumption that you should just blow 50-60 bucks on a show you've never seen.
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1459628) wrote:Well, to be fair this exists. You just have to pay a blanket subscription fee for whatever cable package carries it, or you can cough up like .99 cents per episode for most on-demand shows.
Yamamaya (post: 1459625) wrote:On the other hand, companies like Funimation put very few of their shows on T.V. They work under the assumption that you should just blow 50-60 bucks on a show you've never seen.
TheSubtleDoctor wrote:Well, to be fair this exists.
you can cough up like .99 cents per episode for most on-demand shows.
Do the Japanese get free cable TV?Nate (post: 1459635) wrote:Japan does not have the same barrier to entry.
Isn't it the same problem for both? Do rural regions get the same channels/shows as Tokyo? I am asking because I am unsure.Nate wrote:While I realize you're admitting the US industry is not the same as the Japanese industry, it's still a problem.
TheSubtleDoctor wrote:Do the Japanese get free cable TV?
Isn't it the same problem for both? Do rural regions get the same channels/shows as Tokyo? I am asking because I am unsure.
As I suspected, Japanese people do, in fact, have to pay something if they want to watch anime legally on TV. Studios aren't giving the stuff away.Nate (post: 1459635) wrote:Which is still forcing consumers to pay before they can view, which is again a problem since Japan does not have the same barrier to entry.
See MasterDias' earlier post. This is not the fault of Funimation or other North American anime distributors.Nate wrote: Show me a regular broadcast station in the US that airs anime, then I'll concede your point.
To bring this thread back to its original topic, would that be good enough for North American anime fans? I know I am opening a huge can of worms here, but I just don't feel that "some shows" getting put on a network that we assume most people can view is this utopian system when compared to North America. Sure it's nice and I'd love it. But, would people stop complaining about the ineptitude of companies like Funimation if, by some crazy turn of events, ABC began a weekly broadcast of One Piece, Detective Conan, and two new shows? Would people stop pirating anime? What would North American anime fans actually consider to be satisfactory on the part of Funimation?Nate wrote:However Super Sentai/Kamen Rider are revered all over Japan so we can be sure at least some shows are everywhere
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1459645) wrote:As I suspected, Japanese people do, in fact, have to pay something if they want to watch anime legally on TV. Studios aren't giving the stuff away.
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1459645) wrote:See MasterDias' earlier post. This is not the fault of Funimation or other North American anime distributors.
I am aware of this. Sure, studios are paying the TV networks (I understand this is the way TV as such works in Japan, not just anime TV), but that is in order to have the fans, in turn, pay to buy the DVDs plus merch. I mean, the actual show is worth something to the studios for just those reasons you suggested.blkmage (post: 1459646) wrote:Funny you should mention that, because the situation is exactly the opposite. Not only are they giving the stuff away, production committees are paying networks to air their stuff so they can have the chance to entice people to buy things. So when only considering broadcasts, they actually lose money from doing broadcasts. But if they lose money on broadcasts, why do they do it? Because it gives them the opportunity to advertise (the anime is the advertisement, not the commercials) the anime goods they're selling.
This seems like a decent start, right?blkmage (post: 1459646) wrote:they need to come up with another way to get their shows out there. For a while, they were able to survive without it, but that bubble has burst now.
Also, now we are talking about the cost of cable subscriptions, in which you can sample a bunch of shows, whereas we were talking about the cost of $60 dollar box sets sight unseen. The cost seems to be shrinking. Again, (1) What can Funi do to satisfy the NA anime fans that it isn't already doing? (2) Is what fans want free access to all anime at any time?
You are in luck, sir! This is exactly the kind of thing that Shawne Kleckner believes the market is moving toward, as I think you mentioned earlier.blkmage (post: 1459649) wrote:I think the right strategy is to offer cheaper cheap anime and more expensive premium editions with actual stuff people want (OSTs, OP/ED singles, physical goods that would be hard to get here). The cheaper sets appeal to a broader audience, while the more expensive sets need to contain some reason to get hardcore fans to buy them. The current one-size-fits-all strategy assumes there's only one kind of fan and it's likely considered too expensive for many and doesn't contain enough value for others.
TheSubtleDoctor wrote:that is in order to have the fans, in turn, pay to buy the DVDs plus merch
Also, now we are talking about the cost of cable subscriptions, in which you can sample a bunch of shows, whereas we were talking about the cost of $60 dollar box sets sight unseen.
Is what fans want free access to all anime at any time?This seems like a decent start, right?
TheSubtleDoctor (post: 1459653) wrote:You are in luck, sir! This is exactly the kind of thing that Shawne Kleckner believes the market is moving toward, as I think you mentioned earlier.
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