one punch man scantrad frontier
Anime
News Network.
Archived from the original on June 11, 2014. Retrieved June 15, 2014. ^ Komatsu, Mikikazu (December 11, 2015). "NHK's BS Premium to Air "Attack on Titan" TV Anime from
January 2016". Crunchyroll. November 30, 2018. Archived from the original on December 2, 2018. Retrieved December 2, 2018. ^ "Scientists
Named Microscopic Creature After JoJo Stand". Anime News Network.
The pilot miniseries had a little extra work by Madhouse. Popples: The children have randoseru backpacks, the "ViVi" magazine in "A Hair-Raising Experience" has Japanese writing on it, and Party has Wide
Eyes and Shrunken Irises after very loud music is blasted into her ears by her radio at the near-end of "Pop Goes the Radio". The Powerpuff Girls (2016) has an anime-inspired sequence in "Power of Four" where the girls transform into one big glowing Powerpuff Girl and fight a monstrous version of Him. A Japanese song plays as this occurs and a girl takes off her glasses to show off her purple "anime eyes". Rainbow Brite made use of Japanese-outsourced animation, and it shows, especially the big eyes and thick eyelashes (which even the boys sport). Some of Murky Dismal's expressions wouldn't
look out of place in an anime, either.
[145] Towards the end of the series' run, Togashi was publicly criticized for not meeting chapter deadlines and for lower quality art. [15][146] On TV Asahi's Manga Sōsenkyo 2021 poll, in which 150,000 people voted for their top 100
manga series, YuYu Hakusho ranked seventeenth. [147] In North America, several volumes of the manga have ranked within the weekly Nielsen BookScan graphic novels list, including volume five at both sixth and ninth in October 2004, volume six at sixth in February 2005, and volume seven at seventh in June 2005. [148][149][150][151] In 2004, the YuYu Hakusho manga serialization sparked a controversy when a Florida grade school teacher issued a complaint about material found in an issue of the American Shonen Jump magazine
purchased by a fifth-grade student at a Scholastic Book Fair. The complaint centered around portions of the manga containing violence, mild profanity, a character wearing a swastika, and another character smoking a cigarette. About 18,000 copies of the publication (out of 120,000) were returned from the fairs as a result of the matter.