How to Make Your Anime a Meme – This Week in Anime
My Deer Friend Nokotan made a big impression before its premiere with an hours-long video and other social media efforts to stay at the forefront of the otaku consciousness. Did it work?
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed by the participants in this chatlog are not the views of Anime News Network.
Spoiler Warning for discussion of the series ahead.
My Deer Friend Nokotan, Bakemonogatari, Mayonaka Punch, Future Diary, Blend S, Attack on Titan, Birdie Wing, Brave Bang Bravern!, Metallic Rouge, Pop Team Epic, Dropkick on My Devil!, and Bocchi the Rock! are currently streaming on Crunchyroll. Akiba Maid War is available on HIDIVE.
Nick, ever since Steve got Arataka Reigen recognized as an internet sex symbol, the management has been on us to move toward more memetic social media notoriety! We need to get people posting, and we need to do it quickly. Any ideas on what we can do to get the recognition we so obviously deserve?
Well, hot takes always seem to rile up the hornet’s nest, formerly known as The Internet, so we how about we go all Yorgos Lanthimos and start killing a sacred deer?
In my defense, my runner-up was the newest sequel season to Monogatari, so my tastes are eclectically my own. Though Monogatari, especially in its earlier entries, arguably made something of a meme out of itself as well.
However, I think there’s a difference between a show including memes in its repertoire and trying to become a meme itself. That’s a much more recent tactic and one I don’t really vibe with.
It’s like when people would make fake accounts for brands like Nihilist Arby’s but then stop once actual brands started trying to be hip with it. Once Wendy’s is telling people to go to hell and KFC makes a dating sim for April Fool’s, the fun stops.
It was weird because I’d read the manga’s first volume, and…it wasn’t a particularly memetic kind of comedy. At least, not more than any modern gag series. While it has its fair share of references, the main draw is the same absurdism that plenty of other gag comedies use. Nokotan does something weird or random, Koshi reacts as the straight man. Rinse, repeat.
Also, if I can be a contrarian for a moment: No, show, you don’t get to make your own 10-hour loop video. That’s what the fans, the people, the online proletariat decide. Your job is to create something good enough that somebody will spend hours rendering a non-monetizable video for the love of the game. Stuff like this:
It gets its meaning from the fact that nobody was paid to make it. Back off.
It should be easy, too. Goofy OP riffs and remixes are arguably one of the most common forms of anime catching on meme-wise. I’m pretty sure more people know Blend S from the first five seconds of its opening song than anything in the actual show.
Hell, it’s been a thing for well over a decade. I was in the trenches when Attack on Titan‘s OP was the inescapable in-joke. There were so many edits that people started complaining about them, and somebody made an edit out of those complaints.
The aforementioned Monogatari is another case. I liked the show, but seeing dozens of remixes of Renai Circulation and Platinum Disco was also a key part of the fandom at the time. This sort of stuff is with any proper fandom.
Series like Gintama get attention for being self-aware and making meta comments about anime tropes? Well, we can do that, regardless of whether it has a point or adds to any real punchline.
The key to success there was pretty simple: Akiba Maid War immediately delivered on that promise. It nailed its introduction, combining the cynically sweet world of maid cafes with the criminal underbelly of yakuza crimes with the exact level of tasteless bombast necessary to pull it off. If Nokotan had delivered on its promise of being the most absurd, left-field show of the decade, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.
Bravern got people promoting Kona beer. Now that’s successful social marketing.
Bravern actually pulled the opposite. All the pre-release material painted it as a serious, Real Robot show, and the name was the only tell that it was the spiritual successor to the Brave franchise. It wasn’t until the OP dropped that everyone realized what we were really getting. Solid, savvy marketing got that show a lot more word of mouth than it might have otherwise.
I don’t even keep up with the new Jump manga myself, and I’m still hearing about Kagurabachi.
See, that’s just one of those serendipitous moments. Though it also stems from the Western Jump fanbase realllllly wanting some new action series. The dissonance of having so much pre-release hype and the near total lack of actual material to justify that hype got alchemized into enough attention that Kagurabachi‘s a genuine success that people enjoy entirely unironically.
I don’t know why I keep falling for these things.
But really, that’s all the marketing side. If Nokotan really wants to be the big, loud, random comedy for Terminally Online, it has one big hurdle it must overcome. Well, technically two small hurdles that are giving it the finger.
Plus, said fan comics were based on Touhou, which filled out its own meme galaxy. It was, as we cleverly called things back in the day, “meme-ception.”
But that was part of it just throwing the doors open and letting dozens of different studios and creators get involved. So one minute, an episode could be an extended series of video game parodies that ended with Popuko threatening to beat a Pokémon to death, and the next, it was something like this:
Though if I’m talking about it in the same column where I praise the successes of Bravern, obviously the key commonality is Obari.
It also meant that well, you could get weird with it. You could make an Earth Wind & Fire homage with felt puppets for the hell of it. Nobody was there to say no!
There’s an alternate universe where the anime did something really stand out with its presentation of that dance scene instead of…whatever this was.
Half of what makes Pop Team Epic‘s tales of Hellshake Yano so incredible is the presentation.
One of these segments was a minute-and-a-half long, and the other was ten minutes. Guess which one felt like it lasted longer.
It’s not even that funny of a bit on paper (ba-dum-tss), but the execution is so novel, so self-aware in its silliness, that it charms you and sticks with you even if you don’t laugh. Beyond any memetic potential, it’s just a cool bit of art you don’t get to see in professional anime.
The thing is, it fits better with the series’ base tone and, more importantly, actually felt like it had earned it three seasons in instead of frontloading it all before the premiere.
Hell, adaptations that add to their source material can be great. Bocchi the Rock! added a ton of scenes, jokes, and stylistic diversions, but those were always in service of enhancing a sentiment or idea already present. Nothing that Nokotan is doing is inherently bad. I just think it’s not doing them very well.
It’s also a solid example of a “meme anime,” as we’ve mentioned here—one where I could genuinely see people going and checking out the show specifically because of a goofy clip or edit that crossed their timeline.
It turns out that just making something cool and memorable is a great way to spread the word all on its own. I’ve been harsh on Nokotan because I think it’s writing a check its comedy can’t cash, but if it can find its own identity or just execute its jokes better, it could still be a worthwhile watch. Just…let it happen naturally, guys. If you keep trying to call yourself T-Bone, it’s only a matter of time before you’re Koko to everyone in the office.
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