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We will watch Mitsuboshi Colors (2018) next Saturday 18:00 UTC [Info] [Countdown]


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Why do anime clubs attract the worst kinds? In high school the one I went to watched the same mainstream shounen/shojoshit everyne already knew about and was house to the school's known turboautists. I went to one the other day as a grown-ass man and the club was just the same highschooler types but grown up. You had:
- the genuinely retarded girl who hasn't seen anything new in twenty years
- the collection of meek shounentards who can barely speak
- the young guy with shit taste
- the twenty-something who's obsessed with 2000's anime because FOMO and it's trendy
- the old dude who grew up on mecha and robotech but attends to try to pick up fat brown chicks
- the older millenials who are actually cool and barely want to be there

Talking to the twenty-something was funny. We were all talking about conventions and he says that he wants the "hare hare yukai" and "lucky star" dances to be popular again. I asked him "Didn't you get enough of that the first time around?" and the other guys laughed and agreed with me, but he started talking about how he got into anime too late and some other sad shit.

I honestly don't know why people still go to these things. The Internet is a much better place to find people that actually watch anime; if I want to find cool people IRL I'll go to a convention.
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That sounds morbidly depressing.
I can't tell whether to laugh or cry at this post :dark:
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I never went to an anime club, but my experiences with (supposedly) fellow anime fans back in the day weren't any better - in fact I'd say they were worse :sweat2:

>- the genuinely retarded girl who hasn't seen anything new in twenty years
>- the twenty-something who's obsessed with 2000's anime because FOMO and it's trendy
>- the old dude who grew up on mecha and robotech but attends to try to pick up fat brown chicks
>- the older millenials who are actually cool and barely want to be there
You should invite these ones here :iyahoo:
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I've only watched two animes in my life, death note and neon genesis
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the good ones have no interest in socializing IRL, and the best of the best never talk about anime even online because every minute you waste socializing is a minute you could've been watching/reading anime/manga/VNs instead
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I generally think that all cool people don't need anything besides web connection to discuss stuff.
Having to be in one room with people you first meet is terrifying for them and you will not find them.
Regular people can't be interested in things it appears, from my lifetime of experience.
For this reason I never attended anything social.
I have no idea of how useful of an opinion the below would be.
Taken from my experience.

I had an introductory english as foreign language class in collge and I went there to look around what it is like of my own volition. It soon turned to an hour long pair assignment where we would question each other in english basic things about each other and she even gave us example questions. You have no idea how hard I tried to avoid anything personal without being a jerk who refuses to participate.

To the question what I watch I responded that I don't watch anything besides documentaries and video essays/lectures which is mostly true. If I admitted that I think that Yuru Yuri is the best show, or that Kodomo no Jikan was an awesome comedy, Tonnura-san, Minami-ke and other things then it would be unfortunate. He admitted to basically watching The Last Airbender and Deathnote and Evangelion and something else but I don't remember.

To question what music I listen to I made every move to avoid admitting to Touhou. I still haven't finished the TLMC5. I said something of sort "older songs" and refused to elaborate. He said he liked anime openings and rap.

Question what games I play I responded "older single player games" and refused to elaborate. Not admitting to Touhou. He said he played Fortnite and CS. He wondered, how mysterious and shy so far. I did not comment.

I remember another question to be about my general interests. I responded "computers and humanities" after hesitation and I refused to elaborate. He said he also likes humanities and he likes learning about other cultures and began praising Japan for being cool and that he learns japanese, but 喋られみませんか was too much for his level. He was nonetheless thrilled that someone else is interested and I liked calligraphy and I told them to look, took out my pen and I began writing the heart sutra from memory the best I can until like 4th character where I woke up and stopped. He was even more thrilled and he said "looks like the real thing", "can you read it?". "Yes". (Don't laugh at me, I use very small brushes to practice and they do not look that good, besides landing a perfect sign is very hard. I also like to imitate fonts of latin letters and it is hard to land a perfect letter too). I can understand pretty much everything I hear and read, but I can't speak because I never practice, I still feel like a loser ;___;

I flagged down the teacher and showed her a C2 paper whether I can skip classes or not but she told me to go with it to higher ups.

When she finally told us that the excercise is over and the next one would be speaking in front of everyone I got my stuff, excused myself that I parked my car incorrectly. Told him "see you next time" when I was exiting and never came back. No way am I going public. I got max grade for not attending.

I believe this guy is a good representative of people who attend such clubs and anything social in general. He was not mean spirited, but of no value to common benefit and development. Besides this type of setting repulsed me in general. So I think you have both the type of people I described being portrayed but also the reason you don't find others you wish to find in such places, mostly waste of time and repulsion. I don't wish to make myself an idol, but objectively I think me and any Heyurizen is a higher kind.

I also had overheard some japanophiles or something of this sort who signed up for basic japanese at the college and they were thrilled but not interested. I can feel it in the person, I never* was mistaken about somebody's character. Beginning in the facade and surface they play, all the way deep, as deep as the unconscious if I get to listen to them for long enough and I filter accordingly. I only was friends with other sentient spergs, others are kept far away or on a leash.

*By never I mean since I grew up enough to judge properly.

Another example of these sociable people who are of no use to advance for anyone was in my computer networking class. Guys were talking something about new tech in the background and I could make out who that is but I did not care much. Usually stuff like some processors and drones and anything tech related. They seemed to be quite interested. I remember once when the class had ended and they were surprised that they could use Samba (as setting up samba on debian was the task of that day) for cloud instead of Google or something and the teacher was like 'yeah no way huh'. Speech of theirs as if they were completely blown away and amazed, first learning that it existed. Such fans of electronics and tech they were. I used to send the assignment after 15 minutes of 90 available for max grades and they were not hard, but some of other students were somewhat impressed, but I am just a simple and actually a no better than a mediocre linux regular.

I bet this is the type that goes to some tech clubs. For this reason I don't attend any.

I had many lesser encounters with this much (or this little) interest that people have in subjects they claim to be important to them. But if you are better then there is also an aspect of revealing the true power level.

I had revealed my power level in a maths class too once in regards to higher order calculus/differentials and unusual dimensional analysis. It was the same lady who asked whether I am an autist after everyone had left. I liked her. I missed max grade by one point.

Same case revealing power level with microchip labs where I did all work alone for an entire semester for 3 of us as they were so sluggish and easily got angry "if you are such a smartass - you do it fag".

I do not recommend joining any clubs that are oriented towards sociability like face to face ones. Regular people have no interest in things they claim to have interest in. And do not reveal power level in public. Unless you wish to waste your time and get abused. I think it is more beneficial to master whatever you do alone than spend time with people who are uninterested in it. Feels like smurfing in games, in the same manner it gets boring after 5 hours, you retreat back to your regular environment very quickly. I would watch anime and appreciate it alone, or on Heyuri type of website, definitely not in real life.

I am aware this was more of a blog and me praising myself. I do not intend to be irritating. I like to write long and derailing posts because they make the internet feel warm and alive. I love warm and alive internet. On one complaint I will delete this post.
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>>5139
>You should invite these ones here
Hell no.
>the genuinely retarded girl who hasn't seen anything new in twenty years
She would wonder why anyone watches anything but the mainstream shounenshit peddled on Toonami. Just because she's retarded doesn't mean she's interesting. Quite the opposite actually.
>the twenty-something who's obsessed with 2000's anime because FOMO and it's trendy
He would've loved 2017 Heyuri, but a normalfag's a normalfag and he would most likely HATE the rest of this site.
The last two: maybe, but I ain't going back.
>>5141
Well if a tree falls in a forest but that tree fell in the most interesting way ever, it might as well have never moved.
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>>5142
I do a decent bit of talking to people normally, so I can't agree that the only cool people are online. Most online people clam up IRL anyways so when you meet them you wonder where their interesting personalities went and why they're staring at their shoelaces now.
Also, I did pretty much the same thing in university and I want to tell you that you're making a mistake.
With the English Class you lost out on the possibility of having a good friend for fear or other normalfags judging you. You aren't strong for clamming up and acting awkward.
In the computering(?) class you "superiority" at Linux is short lived, because guess what? Now everyone has the knowledge you considered so basic.
I get the issue about not showing off your powerlevel all the time, I got called a jester by a project partner and that changed a lot of how I carry myself. But if you don't do anything you're going to waste the last bit of youth you have of skills that honestly don't matter in the long run, especially if you already know how to do everything you're being taught (which was the case for me during uni as well). Master whatever you want on your own time, but use this opportunity to get to know people, because you don't know them as well as you think you do.
College is a luxury, a social pasttime with education tacked on. Use it to that end and stop being a retard. Trust me, it NEVER feels good to recollect the time you spent at college and just see your dorm wall. My university experience has been distilled to a diploma sitting around somewhere and a bill I get in the mail. I have NOTHING to show for my time, money, and effort. Don't let it happen to you.
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there wasn't one in my HS but i did have a teacher as well as a classmate who were fans of garupan, they were kewl ヽ(´ー`)ノ
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>>5142
Shouldn’t it be? 喋ってみませんか
I’m learning, myself, so it’d be cool if you could explain the difference
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>>5146
As expected I can't into grammar, I am a failure
I suck at polish, I suck at english, I suck at russian, and also I suck at japanese :cry:

>>5144
I appreciate concern but I like being alone with my computer. I can't get myself to sit with others. I actually might be super insecure :nyaoo2:
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>>5144
I wish there was something like college but with less money and effort involved.
My single greatest regret is going to college, but 100% of the lasting friends IRL that I have are people I met there.

unfortunately, most of us in that group are broke and looking for a job and not getting shit (・∀・)
I know two people out of maybe a dozen who "made it", and only one of them has his own place (it's tiny and he overpaid like hell lmao, but it's his and he has the money to overpay wwwwwww)
could do with all that time back if I ain't get shit out of it
and I can count the classes I took on my fingers that made me feel like it was worth it (;´Д`)
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>- the older millenials who are actually cool and barely want to be there
Let me guess, that who you think you are? You're just one of the other retards
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>>5137

You complain about people watching mainstream anime, but at the same time you crap on people who "havent watched anything new in years" or "obsessed with 2000s anime"

Which is it? do you like new stuff or not?
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>>5150
mainstream =/= new
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>>5142
I read it rather fast and skipped some parts as hell on earth, it's past my attention span. But I see a lot of similarities in myself - as in seeing teh meaningless in sharing your powerlevel in teh public - and for all my life - I done teh exact things for most of teh time. "It feels meaningless to talk about something you wont be interested in". I held this belief as it was teh Ironwall, and still do, but as all walls that are built - are meant to fall at one point. I've easen up about talking about how much of an otaku I am to a degree to those who might also watch themself. Most of teh time i seen 100x times more. I've a coworker i recommend anime too a few times and honestly - I get to share one of my biggest passions. Is that really a bad thing?

I will never pour out my powerlevel all at once, but showily with hints. If there's no connection to teh other parts, so be it. I keep it to myself.

I think you would enjoy an anime club as soon you lower your guard, as keeping a guard up only prevents you from having fun. It's teh spontaneous conversation about topics you love that are fun after all. Not sitting side to side to ask questions that are awkward. Teh 20 year old guys seems to figured this out - as he just wants to talk about anime and have fun.

Ironically I almost never haev talked about anime irl, as I am not too keen on talking about it. But heck, if I joined a place where everyone is there for teh same reason. I would be excited. It maeks me think of Genshiken where everyone is good freinds and discuses each anime episode after teh other. But to get there is another thing, and I am sure we all want that. I can't feel a little bit jealous. As in teh end, I am talking about a good friendship. Teh start to friendship is open up. To share opinions.

I am sure I will get shit for such "normie thinking" "get friends and be happy LOL", but I would rather point it age "maturity". Also, It's not easy to get to know someone, and I am not very keen in having friends irl either. BUT, as a club without no real attachment does sounds awezum. Everyone in teh Genshiken seems to haev fun - and I am jealous of that. :x3:
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>>5152
what is mainstream right now? its shonen/netflix"anime"/currently airing shows. sounds like new stuff to me.
:rolleyes:
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>>5147
>I am a failure
Please don't say that. I had to look it up because I my Japanese is shit. At least you are trying to form sentences. I wouldn't be able to.
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join our anime club and watch teh anime on cytube :nyaoo-closedeyes:
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>>5154
but not all new anime is popular
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>>5149
No, I was an observer. I've got acting normal down pat ;)
>>5150
New stuff is fine, but that isn't the point I was making. Just because something's old doesn't make it not mainstream. Lucky Star has been incredibly popular for years to the point that random normalfags will have had some experience with it, hence it is mainstream. These people were shounentards and nintendrones, the lowest of the low, who were also stuck in the past. It was a sad sight. These types make for horrible conversation, only rehashing the same conversations about the same kiddy shows and kiddy genres.
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I went to an anime convention with a group of early-twenty-somethings and we basically couldn't relate the entire time I was there. My friend from highschool was there and all he could do when I genuinely talked about the anime I liked was spout off all the references and "memes" he had gathered about them in succession with no explanation. It was fucking annoying.
It's nice not needing a smartphone glued to my face so that I can "obsess" over the latest astroturfed scam game or be completely unable to put myself into a different historical context when talking to older people, but the older guys I talk to usually aren't looking to be very sociable and have their longtime friendgroups already established, so I'm stuck in this middleground. I'm not even sure if i should go to conventions anymore since all I do is walk around looking at untouchable happy young people for a few hours then slink back to my room and sleep the day off. I've been going to them for fifteen years and nothing's changed for me. The audience changed but I can't stand them.
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Not joking, all the best people I've met through uni were in the Anime Club. But some of them take an effort to befriend.
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>>5160
you would be rather impressed at how much money aipri makes just by being a show that knows its actual target audience (little nipponese girls) and doesn't give a shit about anyone else lol

sucks to be an aipri fan as an adult westerner though lol (full disclosure: I don't watch aipri or pretty rhythm or those, just precure lol)
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>>5164
From someone who has watched aikatsu and most of the pretty series, I enjoy precure the most. Not even sure if the other little girl shows have even much of a presence in the west now. I know aikatsu used to be big but it's pretty much dead now.
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What do you suspect? Ofc animes fans are going to be similar types of people who watch it


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