the pet girl of sakurasou kiss
In the waiting room with Takamura, Takamura asked
Ippo if he was going to be fine in the match, to which Ippo answered that it won't take long. Ippo then
entered the ring and the match began. Ippo took a wider stance than usual and, after about a minute of neither boxer moving, Ippo dashed toward Kojima. In range, Ippo began to throw a left hook, however, he was hit with a counter. Ippo was about to fall until he
caught his fall when he remembered the faces of his previous opponents and Kamogawa. Ippo immediately threw a left that sends Kojima in the air and onto the canvas. The referee quickly ended the match without and count, resulting in Ippo's victory from one punch. Despite winning, Ippo held his head down as he walked from the ring. Ippo expressed his remorse to Takamura in the waiting room from how he fought against Kojima. Ippo thanked both Kamogawa for the training and Takamura for the advice that helped him in the match. After everyone left for Takamura's match against Peter Rabbitson, Ippo fainted.
^ Gnam,
Julian (February 1, 2010). "Soul Eater, Volume 1". Otaku USA. Archived from the original on
June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 23, 2020. ^ Zimmerman, Chris (March 23, 2010). "Soul Eater Volume 2". Comic Book Bin. Archived from the original on June 24, 2020. Retrieved June 23, 2020. ^ Garrity, Shaenon.
Kirk said the experience of producing One Piece "ruined the company's reputation". Since then, 4Kids established a stricter set of guidelines, checks, and balances to determine
which anime the company acquires. [10] On April 13, 2007, Funimation (now Crunchyroll, LLC) licensed the series and started production on an English-language release of One Piece[11] which also included redubbing the episodes previously dubbed by 4Kids. In an interview with voice actor Christopher Sabat, he stated that Funimation had been interested in acquiring One Piece from the very beginning, and
produced a "test episode," in which Sabat portrayed the character of Helmeppo and Eric Vale played the part of the main character, Monkey D. Luffy. (They would later go on to provide the English voices for Roronoa Zoro and Sanji, respectively. )[12] After resuming production of the renewed English dub, which featured less censorship because of fewer restrictions on cable programming, Funimation released its first uncut, bilingual DVD box set containing 13 episodes on May 27, 2008,[13] similarly sized sets followed with fourteen sets released. [14] The Funimation-dubbed episodes premiered on Cartoon Network on September 29, 2007 and aired until its removal on March 22, 2008. [15] On October 28, 2011, Funimation posted a press release on their official website confirming the acquisition of episodes 206–263, and the aspect ratio, beginning with episode 207, would be changed to the 16:9 widescreen format. [16] On May 18, 2013, the uncut series began airing on Adult Swim's revived Toonami late-night programming block from episode 207 onward. [17][18] One Piece was removed from the Toonami block after March 18, 2017.