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Retrieved April 3, 2019. ^ a b "A Decade of Anime: Your Favorites of the 2010s". Funimation - Blog!. December 9, 2019. Archived from the original on January 28, 2022. Retrieved February 7, 2022. ^ a b "A Decade of Anime:
Best Girls & Best Boys". Funimation - Blog!. December 27, 2019. Archived from the original on May 5, 2022. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
However, Araki did not want Part 3 to be a tournament affair, which was popular in Weekly Shōnen Jump at the time, and therefore decided to make it a "road movie"
inspired by Around the World in Eighty Days. [11] With Part 4, Araki said that he moved away from "muscle men" as they fell out of popularity with readers and he wanted to focus more on fashion. When designing his characters' outfits, Araki considers both everyday fashion and "cartoonish, bizarre clothing that would be impractical in real life". [12] For Part 6, Araki wrote a female protagonist for the first time which he found complicated, but also interesting due to the humanity she could possess. [13] He later described Part 2's much earlier supporting character Lisa Lisa as fresh and "unheard of" in both manga and society in general for its time, and said it was exciting to challenge people's expectations with the female warrior-type. [6] Having not specifically set out on creating a disabled character, Araki explained that Part 7's paraplegic Johnny Joestar was a natural result of wanting to show a character who could grow, both physically and mentally, during a race where "he would be forced not only to rely on other people, but horses as well. "[12] Araki uses unique onomatopoeia and poses in the series, which he attributes to his love for heavy metal and horror films. [14] The poses, which are known in Japan as JoJo-dachi (ジョジョ立ち, lit. "JoJo standing"), are iconic on his book covers and panels, and were inspired by Araki's trip to Italy in his 20s and his studies of Michelangelo's sculptures. [15] Media Manga See also: List of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure volumes Hirohiko Araki, the author of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Written and illustrated by Hirohiko Araki, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure began serialization in the weekly shōnen manga anthology Weekly Shōnen Jump's
combined issue #1–2 of 1987, published by Shueisha on January 1, 1987. [16] The series is divided into eight story arcs, each following the adventures of a new protagonist bearing the "JoJo" nickname.
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