I get where the idea that Toonami brought "the anime movement" to th U.S. comes from, but I wouldn't just slap a year on it. You forget OP, this was the 90's. You had a generation of kids growing up that loved their cartoons, and this was also amidst the explosion of the internet.malestrithe said:1. You are thinking way too much about this. All this does is prove my point that most people think of Toonami for starting it, which is what I'm trying to correct. Foundations were laid sure, so what? Popularity of Anime in the U.S. did not arrive until Toonami in 1998 (and regardless of technicalities, I'm still going with 1998 for this project) Most people think Toonami as starting the Anime movement in the U.S. Argue with that all you want to, does not change the perception I'm correcting.Aris Khandr said:... it simply hopped onto what was a growing trend.p
Also, Akira was released in the U.S. in 89. Limited Release, sure, but still in 1989.
2. What about Anime from the 80s, 70s and before that? Astroboy was the first popular anime in the U.S. and that was 60s. If you factor that stuff into your equations, you will see that anime was in the U.S. for Decades, but most remember the last 16 years.
3. Stop arguing. You're not going to win this debate. The best we will be able to do is stalemate each other and that's it.
I loved Gundam and DBZ. Once I realized I could search for "anime" type shows on the web, I did so feverishly. At that time though I didn't really distinguish between cartoons and anime. I wouldn't expect most kids could really differentiate between the two. It was more of a, "Well you love Brand X. So how about a more mature Brand X?" Yes please!
It's like Arid Khandr said, "They hopped on a trend." The base audience was already there. I would credit Cartoon Network for seeing it, and then creating Toonami to take advantage of the growing interest in anime. All of it subjective, and therefore relative to certain ages/demographics of the time. If you were 8yrs old in 1998, then Toonami probably was your introduction to anime. And you were awed. If you were 18yrs old, then it was more of an, "About f@#cking time." It's a slippery slope depending on who you ask.
Anywho, I would give more credit to the dawn of the information age and teh webz.