Many anime fans in the West, particularly Canada and the US, view the early 2000s as the golden age of anime. Dubs where becoming consistently good, dvds where starting to be a thing so owning a while series was becoming easier then in the past, and anime could be seen on cable on weekend nights and Saturday morning on regular TV. In the years that followed, though, it disappeared from television for the most part, their time-slot replaced by cheap Disney tween comedies, low budget mature animated skits and whatever the hell Fox replaced the 4kids morning with (didn't really follow that one). The golden age, in the eyes of many, was over.
Well not for me. Despite the disappearance from television anime is more affordable then ever before, conventions which didn't even exist when the supposed golden age happened gather more and more goers each year, and it's easier to find anime then ever before (strictly speaking about legal means, like streaming on Netflix, Crunchyroll and Funimation, or buying it from the anime section of a store. I remember going to the dvd section of a Best Buy and my god the anime section was bigger then the video store in my home town).
So in short I'd say the anime golden age in the west never really ended, it simply changed with the times. How do you guys feel about it?
Well not for me. Despite the disappearance from television anime is more affordable then ever before, conventions which didn't even exist when the supposed golden age happened gather more and more goers each year, and it's easier to find anime then ever before (strictly speaking about legal means, like streaming on Netflix, Crunchyroll and Funimation, or buying it from the anime section of a store. I remember going to the dvd section of a Best Buy and my god the anime section was bigger then the video store in my home town).
So in short I'd say the anime golden age in the west never really ended, it simply changed with the times. How do you guys feel about it?