Read Covering live events, my latest free journalism guide

Journalism

coveringliveevents

Would you like to attend conventions… professionally?

Would you like to report on hard-hitting journalism topics like anime and video games? Meet your geek heroes and not get tongue-tied about what to ask them? Learn about and share the coolest subculture news with fellow fans?

It’s always been my dream to report on geek topics, and never is living the dream more real to me than when I’m at an event, surrounded by the energy of other fans. That’s why I wrote Covering live events. At 25 pages, it’s my longest guide yet, but it’s been slimmed down to my best tips. From planning story ideas to figuring out what to pack, I’ve taken everything I know about live coverage and written it down here.

Download your free copy of Covering live events here!

Like it? Have feedback? Send me an email and let me know. I put these out for your benefit, and I want to know what you think.

You’ll notice that usually, I put out a grayed out image to represent the next guide in the bookstore, and there isn’t one this time, even though there are two more to go. I’ve decided that, after a year and 30,000 words, these digital guides need a good edit. I’m going to take them more seriously by hiring a copy editor and an illustrator, and then release them as a Kindle book later on.

I think it’s time I realize that this project is getting bigger than me now, and I want to make sure it can do the most possible good for aspiring journos. So watch this space. Next time I talk about the guides, it’ll be to announce bigger plans!


Otaku Links: Let’s read some other anime blogs

Otaku Links

gundamfightallsetWelcome to a very special edition of Otaku Links, where I’m just posting my favorite recent posts from awesome anibloggers, and nothing else. Gundam Fight all set! Ready? Go!

  • The Subtle Doctor wrote a response to my opinion piece on why I think Space Dandy is getting so much media coverage. Check it out! 
  • Scamp’s review on ridiculous “historical” anime Nobunaga the Fool had me laughing out loud.
  • So glad Ani-Gamers put Gundam: The Origin on their Best of 2013 list. I’m on book IV of the manga and it’s such a gorgeous retelling of the original Gundam story, complete with watercolor illustrations.

(Screenshot from Mobile Fighter G Gundam.) 


How I declutter my Gundam models

Figures and Toys

Like Gunpla? Click the image below to visit my new blog, Gunpla 101

gunpla101

organizationBefore and after!

How have you been spending the new year? In my apartment, it’s been all about that New Year’s cleaning. But since John and I have a large collection of anime, manga, figures, and toys, it’s no less geeky than anything else we do all year!

I’ve written a bunch about building Gundams, but the real question is how to maintain them afterward. With all those tiny pieces, they’re serious dust magnets, so at the very least, we give them a blast of canned air at least twice a year.

This year, one of my biggest accomplishments was downsizing. Ever since our post-Otakon gunpla building binge, I’ve just had a stack of model kits sitting in the corner of my bedroom, not adding anything to my life. I’d been hesitant to toss them out, however, because they still contained vital additional gunpla parts in case mine broke.

It dawned on me, however, that I could save serious space by keeping the pieces in labeled plastic bags instead. So I grabbed some painter’s tape and my trusty Tamiya tool set for breaking up the sprues, and got organizing.

spruesNow all my gunpla parts fit in just one box for easier storage. I decided to save the Gundam Destiny box since it’s the largest and has the nicest art on the cover.

one_boxWhen I shared my organizing trick on Tumblr, one of my followers suggested that if people don’t want to get rid of the box art, they can cut the boxes up for more efficient storage. But since I live in a tiny three-room apartment, that just isn’t for me!

Having geeky hobbies that take up this much space calls for some serious otaku creativity. How do you store your fandom collections?

Like Gunpla? Click the image below to visit my new blog, Gunpla 101

gunpla101


Why is the media covering Space Dandy while other anime get ignored?

Anime

dandy_header

The New York Times. The Atlantic Monthly. The two last places you’d expect to see critical reviews on a show with “breasturants” as a major plot point.

Space Dandy, airing on Adult Swim, Funimation, and Hulu, has gotten more mainstream Western hype than any other anime (excepting Hayao Miyazaki films) in literal years.

But, have you actually watched the pilot? Space Dandy is entertaining enough, with bombastic dialogue, plenty of fanservice, and explosive fights. But is there anything truly new or exceptional about it?

At least the New York Times gets that it’s trying to be a parody of everything it seems to be at first, but comments that perhaps that gets lost in translation. I agree; I’m not sure that excessive fanservice actually translates as parodying fanservice as a concept.

It’s pretty early on, but I’m not sold on Space Dandy being anything special, not an anime we’ll still be recommending to new fans a decade from now. I wish the New York Times had instead covered Psycho Pass, which stretched the genre’s boundaries of intellectual depth. Or Attack on Titan, whose high-stakes storytelling rivals that of Lost or 24. Or Kids on the Slope, which has a genius musical score and an equally impressive production team.

Seeing those all get passed over for Space Dandy makes me cringe and wonder if my non-anime-watching friends are going to think I’m some kind of breast-obsessed perv.

So why is Space Dandy being covered while other shows get ignored?

  • The cable effect. In the same breath that newspapers tell us more people are “cutting the cord” than ever, they’re still reviewing cable shows over Internet-exclusive ones. There’s still a bias that more people watch a show if it’s on cable, and that a show aired on TV is somehow more legitimate than a direct-to-streaming one.
  • A star-studded production team. Space Dandy may be a light comedy, but its being directed by Shinichiro Watanabe, the mastermind behind anime classics Cowboy Bebop and Samurai Champloo. And, scrolling through the credits, his probably isn’t the only big name you’ll recognize.
  • It’s really, really weird. What are the parts of Space Dandy that have been most hyped? Its Engrish trailer that called him “a dandy in the space!” Breaking the fourth wall! Dandy’s weird obsession with boobs and butts! Kooky aliens everywhere! Westerners love “Weird Japan” and this is second helpings of the stuff. Like reality TV, it’s just as much something to make fun of as it is something to be entertained by.
  • It pioneered a new release model. My Twitter feed confirms that while Space Dandy may not be the first anime ever created with a US audience in mind or released first in the US before Japan, it is the first to release an English dub before a Japanese sub. More than any other show airing today, Space Dandy was designed first and foremost for an English-speaking audience.

Altogether, it’s its own built-in hype machine with multiple angles for a news article that’s just as crazy and entertaining as the show is. And you can’t blame hit-conscious, overworked reporters for going for something like that.


Otaku Links: A cabbage-eating good time

Otaku Links

cabbage

  • A slightly NSFW Tumblr points out Fake Nerd Guys in a direct parody of “Fake Geek Girl” shaming. Do you think flipping bad behavior in the other direction raises awareness or makes the phenomenon worse?
  • I really liked this post Patches sent me about teen girls. I wasn’t sure why he sent it to me until I reached this line about fandom:

You know those girls everyone loves to shit all over? The ones who really fucking love something? Those girls, man. They take all that energy, all that circulating fire in their veins, and instead of letting it destroy them, they choose to love, ferociously. Be it a band, or a book, or a series of films. They do it to keep themselves sane, and yet we mock them for it.

  • Susannah Breslin has been killing it with transparency lately. Her series on getting paid is a great benchmark for beginning journalists worrying about making what they’re worth. And her series on getting rejected shows that even the pros face setbacks.
  • Meet Kabosu, better known as the face of Doge. Must be crazy to wake up and discover your pet is beloved all over the world!

(Screenshot from Sakurasou.)