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While anime has been licensed by its Japanese owners for use outside Japan since at least the 1960s, the practice became well-established in the United States in the late 1970s to early 1980s, when such TV series as Gatchaman and Captain Harlock were licensed from their Japanese parent companies for distribution in the US market. The trend towards American distribution of anime continued into the 1980s with the licensing of titles such as Voltron and the 'creation' of new series such as Robotech through the use of source material from several original series. [106] In the early 1990s, several companies began to experiment with the licensing of less child-oriented material. Some, such as A. D. Vision, and Central Park Media and its imprints, achieved fairly substantial commercial success and went on to become major players in the now very lucrative American anime market. Others, such as AnimEigo, achieved limited success. Many companies created directly by Japanese parent companies did not do as well, most releasing only one or two titles before completing their American operations. Licenses are expensive, often hundreds of thousands of dollars for one series and tens of thousands for one movie. [107] The prices vary widely; for example, Jinki: Extend cost only $91,000 to license while Kurau Phantom Memory cost $960,000. [107] Simulcast Internet streaming rights can be cheaper, with prices around $1,000–2,000 an episode,[108] but can also be more expensive, with some series costing more than US$200,000 per episode.Inverse. Author - Adrian Marcano. Published 12 December 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2017. ^ Hunter X Hunter Latest Updates, Erica Mendez Talks About Gon Freecs Archived August 17, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. MovieNewsGuide.
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