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Ressler, Karen (July 6, 2017). "Japanese Comic Ranking, June 26-July 2". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on February 19, 2018. Retrieved February 19, 2018. Ressler, Karen (February 7, 2018).

Sensei can really refer to any instructor-type, or anyone with a lot of knowledge or who has mastered their craft, like doctors or professional musicians/artists. Senpai Critical to the high school romance genre, senpai is for someone who is your “senior” in some way. Perhaps they are a higher grade in your high school. Perhaps they’ve worked at your office for longer. Both would be acceptable senpai situations. But a senpai is still in your social strata—a fellow employee, but not your boss.

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Production and broadcasting[edit] Main article: List of Sailor Moon episodes Naoko Takeuchi initially planned both the Sailor Moon manga and anime to only run for one season. Due to the season's popularity, Toei Animation asked Takeuchi to continue drawing her manga, but she initially struggled with developing another storyline to extend the series. At the suggestion of her editor, Fumio Osano, Takeuchi decided that the second season would focus on introducing Sailor Moon's daughter from the future. [8] To give Takeuchi time to write the Black Moon story arc, the anime team developed a filler arc known as Makai (Lit. Hell) Tree arc. Sailor Moon is adapted from the 52 chapters of the series which was published in Nakayoshi from 1991–97. The first season was directed by Junichi Satō with Kazuko Tadano as a character designer. For the second season, Sato directed the Makai Tree arc while Kunihiko Ikuhara directed the Black Moon arc. The third and fourth seasons were directed by Ikuhara, with Ikuko Itoh taking the role of character designer starting from the third season. The fifth and final season was directed by Takuya Igarashi, with Katsumi Tamegai as the character designer. [9] The series premiered in Japan on TV Asahi on March 7, 1992, taking over the timeslot previously held by Goldfish Warning!,[citation needed] and ran for 200 episodes until its conclusion on February 8, 1997. Hibagon, l'abominable yéti japonais
08/12 : Juillet 1970. Sur la route de son travail, un habitant de la région du mont Hiba tombe nez à nez avec une créature inconnue, mi-homme mi-bête, recouverte de la tête aux pieds d'une épaisse fourrure brune. C'est la naissance de Hibagon, l'« abominable homme des neiges » japonais. Heta-uma, l'art japonais de dessiner « avec les pieds »
27/07 : Brut, naïf et crasseux, aux antipodes des codes du manga commercial, le mouvement heta-uma, littéralement « mauvais mais bon », s'est incrusté depuis les années 70 dans les colonnes des périodiques japonais, à commencer par la revue mensuelle Garo, où il a vu le jour. Le thé en Chine, d'une tradition séculaire intérieure à la consécration mondiale
21/04 : La boisson chaude, c'est toute une institution dans les pays asiatiques. Les cérémonies du thé sont dans tous les esprits lorsqu'on évoque les pays de l'Asie soit comme coutume d'un raffinement extrême.

The characters have little to no personality. Every episode introduces a ridiculous amount of new characters only to be ditched in the next episode in favor of new soulless characters. The writers slap a quirky gimmick or two to each character and call it a personality. As such, most of them are really forgettable and bland, but that's to be expected with a show with such a large cast, right? But not even Serval and Kaban have personalities. Kaban is. smart? Serval is.