SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : SYCONET.COM (SYCD) THE NEXT AMAZON? GET IN EARLY. $.31

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Loren S. who wrote (1331)12/5/1999 10:39:00 AM
From: Jack Hartmann  Read Replies (1) of 1413
 
Loren, Hope SY read this and can capitialize on it. DBZ had 1.7 million viewers on Cartoon Network! Getting those Fussion and Burdock videos would help SYCD the best in line with their primary business model. My boys would pay $25 for video right now. This is how hot the demand is for it. Getting 1000 in the store will do more that all advertsing current contemplated. Maybe a US exclusive distributorship for these can be arranged. I'm sure others are in the same boat.
This buying of other companies when the DBZ shelf is bare of toys is passing up a golden opportunity. Some DBZ toys are selling for $30 on EBAY vs. their $16 retail price. Another indictation of huge demand for DBZ. Haven't seen Gundam and Tenchi Mayo shows, but Cartoon Network adding them will increase demand in this sector. Hope Sy has their products before the rush. Jack

interactive.wsj.com@5.cgi?dukeofnuke/text/wsjie/data/SB944175764782972840.djm/&NVP=&template=atlas-srch-searchrecent-nf.tmpl&form=atlas-srch-searchrecent-nf.html&from-and=AND&to-and=AND&sort=Article-Doc-Date+desc&qand=&bool_query=dragon+ball&dbname=%26name1%3Ddbname%26name2%3Ddbname%26name3%3Ddbname%26period%3D%3A720&location=article&HI=
December 3, 1999


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Violent Japanese Cartoon Show
Draws Kids' Eyes, Parents' Scorn
By SALLY BEATTY
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

As many a young child already knows, "Dragon Ball Z," a violent animated series imported from Japan, is a huge cartoon hit.

A sort of Pokemon meets "Pulp Fiction," the show is much darker than the average kiddie cartoon. Every weekday afternoon on Time Warner Inc.'s Cartoon Network, characters age, die and get vaporized -- suffering far worse fates than Wile E. Coyote ever did.

Brutality is a staple. In one recent episode, beads of sweat form on the brow of a character named Vegeta as he is nearly strangled to death by an evil foe named Frieza. In another, Frieza uses the horns on his head to impale a good guy named Krillin through the chest.


Goku, left, is a hero in 'Dragon Ball Z.' On the Cartoon Network show he battles the menacing Frieza
Mesmerized, kids are tuning in to the Cartoon Network in record numbers. "Dragon Ball Z" attracted an audience of 1.7 million households on Sept. 30, the largest number in the network's history. The show's ratings among six- to 11-year-olds -- the demographic group most coveted by children's advertisers -- leapt 95% in the fourth quarter through Nov. 30 from a year earlier. Nearly one million kids in that age group tuned in to watch the show Oct. 1, another record for the network.

Advertisers are lining up, too, including Hasbro Inc. and Mattel Inc. Even the U.S. Navy is running macho recruitment ads at the end of the show.

"Dragon Ball Z" is also crackling on the Web. On the Cartoon Network's Internet site, it generates among the most inquiries of any of its shows. Last week, "Dragon Ball Z" ranked as the fifth-most-requested topic on the Lycos search site, behind singer Britney Spears and the Pokemon cartoon, but ahead of the World Wrestling Federation and Pamela Anderson.

Funimation's Dragon Ball Z Site
www.dragonballz.com

Denny's Dragon Ball Z Site
www.dragonballz.com.bi

Dragon Ball Mania
www.surf.to/dbmania

The Dragon Ball Z Project
dbzproject.8m.com

Based on the success of "Dragon Ball Z," the network plans to boost its programming time devoted to Japanese animation to three hours from two, adding two new shows next year. "Gundam" is a tale of bad guys from outer space, and "Tenchi Meyo!" is the story of a lady's man caught up in an interstellar war.

The Cartoon Network says it hasn't had complaints from parents or advertisers about the show's violent content. In fact, the U.S. distributor and licensing agent of "Dragon Ball Z," Funimation Productions Inc., says the show is toned down for U.S. sensibilities -- blood is often edited out and frames are erased to soften the blows in certain battle scenes.

The Cartoon Network also runs "anger management" spots that appear during "Dragon Ball Z" and other shows. "There's nothing wrong with being angry," counsels a bubble-headed host in a space suit. "It's all in how you deal with it. Anger can be a motivational tool." The network says there is no connection between the spot and the show's content.

Betty Cohen, president for the Cartoon Network, says "Dragon Ball Z" is no worse than other popular Japanese programs like "The Power Rangers" or "Digimon," a show about mechanized monsters currently airing on News Corp.'s Fox Kids.

"People are attracted to action and people in battles with certain forces and unusual characters, but it's not about real-life human stuff," says Ms. Cohen. Young boys tune in to "Dragon Ball Z" for some of the same reasons people go to sports events, she adds. "They want to see conflict."

Network executives note that "Dragon Ball Z" is rated Y7-FV -- FV stands for fantasy-violence -- the most cautionary rating available for a children's show. That rating designates "Dragon Ball Z" as not suitable for children younger than seven. Under a voluntary rating system adopted by the TV industry in 1997, the rating appears for 15 seconds at the start of each episode.

"Dragon Ball Z" picks up where two hot trends in animation leave off. The movement toward edgier, more adult humor produced "The Simpsons" and "South Park." But those shows, aired during prime time, were aimed primarily at adults. More recently, the visually stylistic Japanese animation known as anime has swept the U.S.

In Japan, where "Dragon Ball Z" aired in prime time before recently going off the air, the show became a cultural phenomenon -- though by Japanese standards its level of violence was considered mainstream.

Building on the craze for the Japanese show in this country, Funimation says it has signed deals to produce a "Dragon Ball Z" merchandising avalanche: action figures, calculators, pajamas, trading cards and watches. "Dragon Ball Z" products have generated more than $3 billion in world-wide sales since the show was launched in Japan in 1986.

In the U.S., "Dragon Ball Z" had plenty of naysayers when it made its debut in syndication in 1995. For three years, the show had no regular home, airing on various local TV stations and at odd hours, sometimes as early as 5:30 a.m.

Gen Fukunaga, president of Funimation, recalls children's programming and licensing executives telling him that "kids in the U.S. wouldn't have the attention span" to sit through a serial cartoon, one in which complex plot lines unfold over 80 or more episodes.

Others questioned whether American boys would be able to follow the intricate stories, whose main characters regularly age from birth to death, and often merge with other featured players to create entirely new characters. Goku, the show's main hero, starts out as a young orphan and eventually dies.

"The show spends a lot of time in relationship development," says Mr. Fukunaga, explaining the popularity of "Dragon Ball Z." "It tries to tackle a little bit more difficult subjects than the typical children's show."

-- Phred Dvorak contributed to this article.

Write to Sally Beatty at sally.beatty@wsj.com and Phred Dvorak at phred.dvorak@wsj.com
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext