2007-03-28, 12:56 | Link #82 |
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2006
Age: 38
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Fans around me mostly started watching anime out of teenage curiosity, trying to find themselves, trying new things... that sort of thing. I may have too started watching anime because of that; I'm not sure. But most of them already stopped being fans, now that they've entered or finished college. With other responsibilities--girlfriends, studies, work, other interests--it's really hard staying faithful to your teenage hobby. In my honest opinion, if you like anime enough, you'll be able to overcome these kinds of crises.
A lot of former fans I know turned into bitter adults or just moved on to other things. It's also true that they haven't been crazy about anime as much as I have, i.e. I usually had the answers and they were the ones asking questions about anime. Even so, I don't exclude the possibility that once a fan has "MAX-leveled" this hobby, he could drop it. With all the hardships I've been through because of my obsession with anime, I can hardly imagine dropping the hobby at this point. Because of this I frequently ask myself: Do real fans ever give up? |
2007-03-28, 15:10 | Link #83 | |
日本語を食べません!
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: San Francisco
Age: 41
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Quote:
Because at some point, like Vexx alluded to, you've simply seen the basic stories there are to tell, in anime, in twenty or thirty different ways. This isn't to say that you'll give it up completely, but rather than following six or eight or thirty (?!) series a season, you might pick one or two that are really unique. And some seasons, you might follow zero. |
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2007-03-29, 12:09 | Link #84 |
anime4life
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Germany
Age: 35
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If there wouldnt be any new story inventions and unique innovative writers now and then, anime industry would have allready died long ago.
Based on that I think youll always have something new to watch but I agree that at some point that wont interest you anymore and anime will be all the same and all boring to you, at least for many, some not. But in the process of our social individualisation traditional values and norms loose their consisty. This doesnt only aply on family life and social choices but also what you watch and what music you listen to. Soon there will be no such thing as "you are to old to watch this" or "wtf is that music you listen to". It will be just a matter of choice and noone will bug you for it and therefore a lot more old people will watch anime. Still not sure when that is. I think a lot people quit watching because of the social pressure and they got more "important things to do", but once the pressure is gone the important thigs and the getting bore of it might shrink along with it.
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2007-03-30, 11:03 | Link #85 |
Senile Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Across the Mississippi from St. Louis, MO
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This is true of story-telling in general. New generations see new versions of the same old story-lines that have been told since Homer's Illead and Odyssey, or Anon's Beowulf. From Shakespear to Jules Vern, all the basic story types have been told before.
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2007-03-30, 11:58 | Link #86 | |
Thread Killer
Join Date: Feb 2006
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Quote:
Basically the question boils down to whether or not a person can outgrow a medium. It varies greatly on the person. Some people will choose career paths that will just prevent them from devoting great amounts of time to anything except maybe one or two hobbies. Just getting out of school, getting a job and having to take care of oneself will greatly impact what hobbies and activities one can take part of. A lot of people find that they no longer have time to devote to their hobbies, whether it is anime, playing sports, watching television, playing music or what ever else may tweak their fancy. Another issue is whether the medium itself can evolve. Television in general, has done so quite well. It has always found a way to cater to the masses. Personally, I think that anime has a bit of a ways to go before it has achieved the evolution that TV has made in general, but part of that also requires evolution of the public and public opinion. There's no hard and fast age where people are too old for stuff. It's just a matter of natural development of both the person and what they used to be interested in. If they no longer find interest, it usually means that either they have developed tastes that no longer align with their former interests, or that what they used to be interested in has changed in a way that no longer lines up with what they are interested in, or both.
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2007-03-31, 16:59 | Link #87 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Indianapolis
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I agree that there is no real age limit to enjoying anime. My mother, who just turned 78, loves to watch both American cartoons and Japanese anime. She certainly doesn't feel "too old" for it, and neither do I for that matter and I'm in my 30s.
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2007-04-03, 19:21 | Link #92 |
ポルカ
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: UK
Age: 42
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I don't know when it's the time to stop watching Anime, but in my case, I think I'm still far from that day.
Animes have so many different plots, storys and develepments, and sometimes when the stories or settings might be the same (or very similar ones), but the drawing styles, the images, the colors, give them always a fresh feeling that I never have when watching a live action show, or live action movie. Although I don't dislike live action, I just enjoy more animated stories. Probably mainly because of my life and career. |
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