AnimeNEXT 2014: Trigger Happy

(note: No Type-Moon Weekly News Round Up or All Points Bulletin this week.)

Like all smart conventioneers, AnimeNEXT went after Studio Trigger as guests this year and were successful in bringing over Shigeto Koyama and Hiromi Wakabayashi who both had a hand in Kill la Kill and Inferno Cop among other things. AnimeNEXT doubled-down on awesome with their musical guest being ROOKiEZ is PUNK’D who has supplied openings for DRRR!! and Yowamushi Pedal!

We’re hoping to record live from the event on Friday night. But even if we don’t, this month’s Speakeasy Podcast will be dedicated to AnimeNEXT. As always we’ll have tons of coverage the weekend’s proceedings in the coming week, too.

We got panels, be sure to attend!

Sat. 11:15AM – New Anime for Older Fans

Sat. 01:45PM – Don’t Read That @#$% Scan:
New Legit Digital Manga
You Should Be Reading

Sun. 12:00PM – Terrible Manga Dojo:
Being a Better Otaku through Hayate 2

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Pre-AnimeNEXT 2014 Podcast

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Our tentative schedule for the convention:

Friday
10:00AM – Disabilities in Manga and Anime
11:15AM – Visit Japan even on a Budget animeNEXT
12:00PM – Anime in Western Animation and Comics
12:30PM – Anime To Make You Smile
12:45PM – Spirits, Wheels and Borrowed Gods
03:00PM – A Decade of Anime Fandom: A Retrospective
04:45PM – Inferno Cop with Studio Trigger
06:45PM – The Women of Mobile Suit Gundam
08:00PM – ROOKiEZ is PUNK’D Concert
10:30PM – These Are A Few Of My Favorite Scenes

Saturday
09:45AM – Modoka and Man: The Politics of Gen Urobuchi
11:15AM – New Anime for Older Fans
12:30AM – Kill La Kill: Spot the References, Beginner’s Edition
01:45PM – Don’t Read That @#$% Scan: New Legit Digital Manga You Should Be Reading
03:00PM – Tales of NEXT
04:15PM – The Colorful World of Kenji Nakamura
05:00PM – Kill la Kill with Studio Trigger
07:00PM – Kill la Kill and the Transformation of Japan
08:30PM – Princess Tutu: A Queered Fairy Tale
10:00PM – The Heart of “When They Cry” 18+
11:45PM – Insane Manga Challenge Adult Edition -Triple The Impact (18+)

Sunday
11:00AM – Short Anime
12:00PM – Terrible Manga Dojo: Being a Better Otaku through Hayate 2
01:45PM – 20 Recommended Manga for Grown ups

The Speakeasy #052: Death of a Virgin, PAX East 2014

Drink #052: Death of a Virgin
PAX East 2014

Our first experience with PAX East was an overwhelmingly positive one. So much so that we hope to add it to our list of regular, staple cons we return to each year. It was a whirlwind weekend with all the trappings of other cons we’ve attended, but this one was all about gaming. We discuss everything from the hotel location, the convention center, PWNMEAL, PA themselves, and lots of other stuff.

(Listen)

And now your helpful bartenders at The Speakeasy present your drink:

Death of a Virgin

  • 1 1/2 oz vodka
  • 1 1/2 oz peach schnapps
  • 1 oz lime juice
  • orange juice
  • 7-up soda

Pour vodka, schnapps and lime juice into a glass. Add orange juice until the glass is half-filled, and fill completely with 7-up. Stir well, and serve.

More PAX East 2014 posts:

PAX East 2014: Tweets
PAX East 2014: General Impressions
PAX East 2014: Panels

PAX East 2014: Panels

hisui_icon_4040 In general I will spend most of my time at any convention in the panels. I’m really grateful NYCC having a preview night as it gives me a chance to see their show room floor much more than I ever would without it. So even at an event with all the 1,001 delights like the exhibitor hall at PAX East I still found myself in the panel rooms for most of the weekend. I just enjoy learning and seeing what other people have to say. Also as someone who does panels himself I like to see what other panelist do right that I’m not doing, do wrong to avoid doing myself, and are talking about in general for new ideas of my own. Even a comic book or video game convention can be a wellspring of inspiration.

Apparently PAX panels are infamous for filling up quickly like they were Hall H at SDCC.  I was warned and by several people no less. I was told that you had to be in line for any panels at least a half an hour if you were wanted even a chance of getting in and if a panel was popular you might want to try an hour early. At first I was really worried. I had scheduled a panel every hour for the length on the convention so I assumed it would be much like NYCC: I would probably get locked out of every third panel I went to and have to either camp my next panel or explore the show floor. This was not a terrible plan. I did not really have a major time put aside to explore all the games there anyway so if I was missing panels it was a good time to check out the rest of the con.

That said I easily got into all but one of the panels I wanted to see and I rarely had to show up way in advance. I did not have a press pass so it was not even the power of the fifth estate getting me inside. I’m not sure if it was just that I picked panels no one cared about, if it was a slow panel year, or if it is just the natural tendency for con goers to stand in lines for no reason. All I know is that the only panel I could not get into was Six Months Into the New Console War. Not sure why that was the hottest panel especially since I later went to Console Launches: A Post Mortem which was a fairly similar panel. I admit I BARELY squeaked into Games That Are So Bad, They’re Good but I came to that 2 minutes after it started and panels like that are notoriously popular. So Bad, It’s Good is partially the lifeblood of the Internet. I can’t exactly say what the truth of the matter is but I do think this reinforces my idea that 80% of line culture at conventions is caused by people assuming that they need to line up in advance more than actually needing to line up in advance.

But that is a lot of meta talk. What people really want is to know the good, the bad, and the fugly of the presentations at PAX East.

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