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[3] The web manga began running in Magazine Pocket, an online and app-based web manga magazine published by Kodansha,[4][5] in November 2017. [2] An anime television series adaptation produced by Telecom Animation Film aired from April to June 2021. A second season produced by OLM aired from January to March 2023. Plot[edit] Naoto Hachiouji, an introverted second-year student at Kazehaya High School, prefers to avoid
social interactions and draw manga in his spare time. However, first-year girl Hayase Nagatoro - who is secretly head-over-heels in love with him - inadvertently discovers the manga, calls him "Senpai", and
teases him to the point of crying. She frequents the Art Club room where he hangs out, and continues to bully him for his timid personality and otaku interests, sometimes in a sexually suggestive fashion, calling him lewd. Initially, Senpai really does not like Nagatoro at all, and desperately tries to stay as far away from her and her antics as he possibly can. But as she continues to
push him to become more assertive, he slowly realizes he is also falling in love with her, and gradually comes out of his shell and
involves himself in her life. Senpai meets Nagatoro's friends, Gamo, Yosshii and Sakura, who at first appear to be cruel and shallow high school girls who only seek to torment Senpai, but they catch on to Senpai and Nagatoro's oblivious mutual crush and they become supportive friends who scheme to bring the two closer together. The Art Club's semi-retired president Sana Sunomiya appears and tries to shut down the club, but after a contest challenge during the culture festival, allows it to continue. During the next school year, the president's younger cousin Hana Sunomiya enrolls in the high school and joins the Art Club, whereas Nagatoro joins the Judo Club.
Archived from the original on November 17, 2014. Retrieved December 2, 2014. ^ Francisco, Eric (March 30, 2018). "'Ready Player One'
Anime Easter
Eggs Include Gundam, Voltron and Much More". inverse. com.
Executives connected with Sailor
Moon suggest that poor localization played a role. [15] British authors Helen McCarthy and Jonathan Clements go further, calling the dub "indifferent" and suggesting that Sailor Moon was put in "dead" timeslots due to local interests. [19] British
distributor MVM Films attributed the low sales to the United Kingdom release being of the dub only, and that major retailers refused to support the show leading to the DVD release appealing to neither children nor older anime fans. [87] Due to anti-Japanese sentiment, most Japanese media other than anime was banned for several decades in South Korea. A producer in KBS "did not even try to buy" Sailor Moon because the producer thought it would not pass the censorship laws, but by April 1997, Sailor Moon was airing on KBS 2 without issues and was "enormously" popular. [88] Notes[edit] ^ Through Madman Anime. ^ Sailor Moon end credits (DiC dub, 1995) ^ Sailor Moon DIC/Optimum dub, episodes 1-82 (1-89 uncut) References[edit] ^ "美少女戦士セーラームーン DVD-COLLECTION Vol. 1". toei-video. co. jp.