kabaneri of the fortress
[67] In June 2002, Animage readers
voted One Piece to be the sixteenth best new anime of 2001[68] and voted it sixteenth place in 2004 in the category Favorite Anime Series. [69] In a 2005 web poll by Japanese television network TV Asahi One Piece was voted sixth most popular animated TV series. [70] Before the poll, Asahi TV broadcast another list
based on a nationwide survey in which One Piece placed fourth among teenagers. [71] In 2006, it was elected 32nd of the Top 100 Japanese anime by TV Asahi and 21st by its viewers. [72][73] Funimation's first DVD release of the series "One Piece: Season 1 First Voyage" was nominated for the Fifth Annual TV DVD Awards. [74] The anime was nominated for Best Continuing Series at the 3rd Crunchyroll Anime Awards in 2019;[75] it went on to win in the same category at the 7th edition in 2023;[76] and in 8th edition in 2024, with Monkey D. Luffy also received the award for Best Main Character. It was nominated in Best Action and two voice actor categories in the same year. [77] See also[edit] List of One Piece media Notes[edit] ^ In North America through Crunchyroll (formerly known as Funimation), in the United Kingdom through Crunchyroll UK and Ireland (formerly known as Manga Entertainment) and in Australia through Crunchyroll Store Australia (formerly known as Madman Anime). ^ The alternative English version of the song is only used in the TV edited broadcast of episode 152. ^ Unused in Episode 1000 ^ From Episodes 753–756, the special opening movie, featuring scenes from "One Piece Film: Gold", was not licensed.
"Dr. Stone Manga Ends, Gets New
Chapter Alongside Anime Special
This Summer". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on March 25, 2022. Retrieved March 6, 2022. ^ 「Dr. STONE」第3期、“NEW WORLD”が描かれたティザービジュアルが公開!23年春放送. AnimeAnime. jp (in Japanese). December 12, 2022. Archived from the original on March 31, 2023.
[21] It caught the attention of General Mills, who, in 1997, agreed to sponsor and syndicate the Sailor Moon dub through The Program Exchange. This was later considered an early example of successful fan activism. [20] On June 9, 1997, re-runs of this canceled dub began
airing on USA Network. That same year, production on the series' English dub was resumed with the last 17 episodes of the second season, Sailor Moon R, and was broadcast in Canada from September 20 to
November 21, 1997, to wrap up lingering plot lines. [22] On June 1, 1998, reruns of the series began airing on Cartoon Network's weekday afternoon programming block, Toonami. Due to the ratings success of these reruns, the remaining seventeen episodes (promoted as "The Lost Episodes") also began airing on November 30.