Anime Club
For over ten years, Samo’s Anime Club has been one of the most popular clubs on campus. It specializes in everything anime — from anime-related games to anime clips.Anime is a term used to describe Japanese animation, commonly in the form of shows or comics. This type of entertainment has attracted a large audience; it touches on universal themes. The shows are known for using Japanese culture as the basis of plots.Every Friday, over thirty students meet in Japanese teacher Emily Kariya’s room to socialize, eat and relax while watching anime clips. According to Kariya, the officers of the club like to pick clips the members have never seen before to introduce them to new artists and allow them to continue exploring other forms of anime.“The idea of the club is to create a social group, or a network of people who have similar interests, that being Japanese anime,” Kariya said.Students also participate in many other anime related activities. Some members participate in cosplay, a term short for “costume play” that refers to a performing art in which people dress up as different characters for fun. According to Julia Menyhart (’15), a member of the club since freshmen year, anime club members usually dress as anime characters and go to different types of events in downtown ranging from 10,000 to 50,000 people.“Besides watching anime we sometimes host gaming nights where people can bring their [Nintendo] DS’s and play each other over [Local Area Network (LAN)], sometimes there’s a [Super Smash Brothers] Brawl tournament or two,” club president Garrison Finley (’15) said. “We also have attended media conventions like Anime Los Angeles and Anime Expo as a group in previous years, with a lot of the members cosplaying as various characters from anime or manga.”The club’s favorites include “Kyoukai no Kanata”, “Madoka Magica”, “Little Witch Academia” and many others. Most of the clips range anywhere from three to thirty minutes and feature hand drawn or digitally created anime characters.“Personally, I really like the animation style and the plots,” Menyhart said. “It’s basically like American cartoons and TV shows, except it’s made in a different country that has a different culture, which is interesting to see. I really like learning about different cultures, and Japan has an especially beautiful one. Although not all anime reflects that, it’s interesting to see the modern Japanese culture that you wouldn’t see in normal American TV.”
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