Yet Another Open Letter on Fansubs
Some of you may remember that Arthur Smith, the President of GDH International (parent company of Gonzo), provided some of the kindling that has set the fansub debate on fire throughout the innernubs. And at last, Smith himself has responded to the buzz.
He has one very valid point, that a lot of people assumed based on the ActiveAnime interview that he was doing nothing about the piracy problem when in fact he has been pushing for faster releases and even subtitled episodes from JP companies for some time now. But most of the rest? Honestly, I have to say that I think he mostly answered the straw man comments (for those not in a philosophy class, the weakest arguments / weakest versions of arguments).
He addressed why it takes so long to get shows to the U.S. from Japan, some of which is valid but the rest is mostly just corporate politics and back-and-forth mucking about. If the various companies’ system of dealing with each other prevents the product from coming out when it best suits the market, perhaps a new system is in order?
He also addressed the suggestion I (and many others) made about Japanese companies jumping over the heads of U.S. ones and releasing some materials directly. His argument against that went something along these lines: the U.S. anime companies made anime big with their efforts, and now we need to pay too much money for DVDs that come out too late.
Nuh-uh, sir. I won’t deny that the U.S. companies have done a lot and spent a lot of money to help make anime as big as it is today, but we don’t owe them back pay for that or something. Anime DVDs aren’t pro-rated. If they can’t come out with the product when and how the fans want it then their sales will suffer. I’m not saying that justifies piracy, only that it seems like a pretty silly way to run a business.
He DOES make the valid point that the U.S. companies are better equipped to get anime on TV, dub it, etc. But the system I saw most suggested (and suggested myself) didn’t preclude anime being licensed to U.S. companies for dubbing and television broadcasting– only from quickie subtitling. Which they’re not doing anyway!
So, there you have it. I’m not making any personal attacks on GDH or Arthur Smith– whose attempts to push forward ideas for getting anime out faster and better I absolutely appreciate. I am, however, pointing out that much of his defenses of the industry seem to rest on “this is how the industry is,” without mention of the fact that it doesn’t HAVE to be that way (particularly on the timing front).
Wow, that was long. Oh, and I almost forgot: double question marks and exclamation points do not look professional!!??
Original source: ANN
Tags: fansubs, letters, piracy, rants

December 14th, 2007 at 11:58 am
I would like to see a graph of total anime sales per year from 1992 to current, along with a graph of total file shares via the internet, 1992 to current. I think the American companies have done a lot to make it easier for us to get quality, easy to play copies, but I think the rise in popularity (and thus sales) can be tied directly to the ease/availability of fan subs.
Also, if the US releases would come out sooner, they’d probably get more sales simply because of fans being more ready to buy due to them still being on the high of having enjoyed the show. There’s such a thing as momentum, which is unheard of in a system where we get 3 or 4 new episodes every 2 or more months. This is the internet age, and we expect things NOW.
December 15th, 2007 at 4:44 am
I love how he says the best shows make it to America.
O rly?
Where is my Maria-sama ga Miteru? My Sisters of Wellber seems to be missing as well. Mahoraba? I’m sure I have that somewhere right? Gundam Double Zeta? Oh yes, that came out years ago! Nurse Ririka? Yeah, badass release that! Kamikaze Kaitou Jeanne? The dub rocked! Uta~Kata? They did cool things with the subs on that one…
Oh wait, this isn’t bizarro world. :P
December 15th, 2007 at 7:52 am
@Kyaa: You know, the sad thing is, some of those could be licensed but be in limbo. I happen to know that FUNimation sat on a very popular title for over a year before they even announced it for reasons that I never knew.
December 16th, 2007 at 2:07 am
I hope they are. Do want! :P
And need Nagasarete Airantou on shiny plastic. :P
(Have you watched Minami-ke 6 yet? OH GODS. :P