Sunday, October 9, 2016
Japan is as schizo over censorship as America.
In this video you often here the narrator lament about how Nintendo censors video games coming over from Japan. What is never explained is why North America, more specifically the United States tends to be more conservative than the rest of the world (it seems.)
It goes back to who it was that settled America in the 15 and 1600's. Starting in the 1500's you had the Protestant Reformation. From what I understand is that an ever growing number of people grew tired of the excesses of the Catholic Church and wanted to go back to more simpler ways to worship. Like the Christians 1500 years earlier who were persecuted by the dominant Roman religion and state the newly formed Protestants were also persecuted. Groups of people had had enough of this and decided to make a go of it in the new world.
All these Protestants, Pilgrims, and Puritans came here to America to worship as they saw fit without being too interfered from the homeland. Now keep in mind these are people who were to uptight for even England. They wanted freedom of religion for themselves, not for anybody else that had some different ideas on how to pray to God. They were just as vicious as the Church and the states they fled from. (What was it that Jesus called people like that?)
(One, two, skip a few, 99, 100.)
Now back to the title of this post.
With two screen shots of a very popular anime (and one of my favorites,) Yuru Yuri I shall prove my point. (How popular is it? You can by the soundtracks on the American iTunes.)
Why tuck, fold, and constantly change the length of a skirt if she is wearing shorts underneath? I do thank the animators of Yuru Yuri for NOT ever giving us a constant stream of panty shots of 13 year old girls.
In an aside, I do know that Yuru Yuri is a satire on the yuri genre, but was it ever really necessary to have a woman wear her sister's underwear on her head?
(One of my favorite voice actresses, too.)
Friday, May 20, 2016
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Two Years Ago, or More Precisely...
In 2002 I was visiting one
of my favorite stores the Anime Cafe to pick up some manga and
ironically enough anime, when one of the clerks told me to look at
this:
My introduction to sprite
comics made from graphics ripped from games. I had never heard of this but I was immediately hooked. I had to
know where these came from. Up to that
point all I was doing was fanfiction in the hopes that one day I would get
MiSTed. I had always wanted to do comics based on my favorite video
games like Mega Man and Final Fantasy. Maybe even mix in my favorite
anime like Tenchi Muyo and Sailor Moon.
Sprites opened up a whole
new universe for me. I can now do the stories I always wanted to do
but couldn't because of my total inability to draw. First I had to find
where all these sprites came from. After many an MSN search. (Google
wasn't much of a factor then.) Following links and suggestions on
forums I found myself here:
Panelmonkey.org, The
People's Sprites. I was in heaven. All those game rip and public
domain sprites all for my use. They even had the legendary Dr. Wily
sprite made by Deccus.
From 2002 to 2009 it was
my number one place to go for sprites. 2009. We all know what
happened. I don't need to get into it because I know about as much as
you do.
I started making a daily
pilgrimage to The People's Sprites that soon
turned into every other day. Then once a week. Every other week. Once
a month. Every other month. To about a couple times a year. Finally
when ever I saw a link on someone's site I happen to come across.
In May of 2014 I was
raiding the Internet Archive for sprites from dead sites to include
in my sprite site, The Sprite Cemetery. I was on The People's Sprites
trying to figure out how to mass download all the sprites when it
occurred to me, I should check to see if panlemonkey.org is back. It
wasn't, but this ad from GoDaddy was there:
(Oh how I despise GoDaddy. That's
a story for another time.)
I couldn't resist so I
looked into it. You can get a free account. That's a good selling
point. It hooked me. To hire a negotiator was $70. There's a lot I
could do with seventy dollars. That's a mighty fine couple or pizzas
or five gallons of gas. I thought “What the hell, why not? The
opportunity is too great to pass up. Think about all those sites
still linked to panelmonkey.org. All that SEO could be mine. What's
the worse that could happen? The owner says no and I'm out $70.”
After a week or so I get
an email from GoDaddy saying there hasn't been a response and they
are trying again. A few weeks later with no response I pretty much
gave up.
Monday, May 2, 2016
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Turn a Video into an Animated Gif.
Programs you must have:
GIMP- GNU Image
Manipulation Program
GAP- Gimp Animation
Package
Additional programs you
may want:
DVD Ripping software of
your choice. (I prefer DVD Shrink.)
Freemake Video Convertor.
Export Layers plugin for
GIMP
A GIF making program you
like. Gimp does the job, but I like JASC Animation Shop better.
I have been working on the
self inflicted wound that is Anime Mine for a couple of years now.
I've grown fond of making animated GIFs instead of just posting
stills. (They sometimes get a like.) For an upcoming post I want to
show case a moving image of Tamami from Angel Tales.
Normally I would use VLC and take snapshots every frame. This is
exceptionally tedious. Unfortunately I have yet to find a program that
can easily make an animated GIF from video, or just extract the frames I
need. I have found a process that is long, almost as tedious as VLC, in
fact can be very frustrating, but does work.
I already have the DVDs
ripped. Now to import the episode to Freemake Video Converter to
isolate the exact scene that I want. You only want to deal with the
frames you need, not the tens of thousands that will be made if you
don't edit it down.
Drag and drop the episode
into Freemake and click the scissors to the left.
Now we have the video
editor. For expediency I won't go through all the controls. In fact
I'll skip to the scene.
Now to import to GIMP.
Click on Video and then
Split Video into Frames. Next click on Extract Videorange.
That will pop out and extended view. Take the slider marked in red and
slide it all the way to the right. Then don't touch anything else on the
right side. It's buggy and will mess up if you do. Under the slider is a number. That is how many frames are in this clip.
You need to input that number in the "To Frame" box. Next check "Create
only one multilayer Image." Then click okay.
I don't really like the
way animated GIFs look when made with GIMP, so I'll export all the
layers as separate images. Go to File and Export Layers, click the button oddly
named “Export Layers,” take the slider for Compression level to
zero and hit export.
(Looks like a bad frame, now is a good time to take it out.)
Now I will fire up JASC
Animation Shop to make the animated GIF, but this has gone on long
enough and I'll save that tutorial for another time.
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