so they licensed Saiyuki witch is so Asian that i beggers belief talk of Legacy how many people who have watched Saiyuki have read Saiyuki [Journey to the west] or out of the legions who watched Samurai 7 [anime] watched Seven Samurai that failing Legacy not Failling to License a long Running Anime
You seem to be misunderstanding my terminology. When I say "legacy" I'm talking about the series itself, not what it's based on.
Doraemon is a series with like 1000+ episodes in its lifetime. They can always make more of it because it has clout. It's a thing people grew up on in Japan, and they'll always want more of it. Even when the latest incarnation is formulaic and dated-looking and not especially good, people will watch it because it's Doraemon and it's familiar and it's nostalgic.
Because it's so important to the Japanese people, the licensing costs are going to be very high. Bringing Doraemon over the the US would be a
massive investment, so any licensing company would be insane to do it if they couldn't expect a reasonable return.
With a property like Doraemon, that return is far from guaranteed. Unlike the Japanese, people in the US are not going to watch it just because it's Doreamon. It's not especially important to anyone over here. So why would anyone pay the ridiculously high licensing fees to acquire the property when they could license something that is simultaneously cheaper and more appealing to current trends in the American market? Especially after similar properties (Conan and Lupin) failed miserably?
bigone said:
i expect culture Differences for example when i lived in the US for 3 Years in my last years of High School they had not heard of Gundam yet one day a the local comic store there was a cosplay event and went as Char full Zeon{red Comet] Char and No one new who i was shocked like the whole how can you Not Know how the red Comet is
You seem to have learned that cultural differences exist, but not that they're okay. This is what I'm trying to emphasize: they are okay.
I mean, I'm sorry that nobody recognized your Char costume, but you should have realized going into it that the property was obscure in the US and that people weren't going to know what it was.
You can scold people all you want, but that show is just never going to mean the same thing to an American that it does to you.