The Brutality of the Manga Industry

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 161

  • @ghost4439
    @ghost4439 Год назад +185

    This isn't just one industry this is japan in general. The overwork the employees until they break. It's sad really, they need to create more realistic scheduled for themselves.

    • @mauauauauaua14
      @mauauauauaua14 5 месяцев назад +2

      ya i think one reason mangaka keeps going anyway is because if they do something else it wont' be better in any other jobs. if they're gonna suffer either way might as well suffer for something they consider pasison

    • @EliyahuShual
      @EliyahuShual 5 месяцев назад

      They need the Sabbath Day Rest.

  • @imbored1179
    @imbored1179 Год назад +307

    I feel like a solid chunk of the issues mangaka face could be solved if it was done monthly or volume by volume. Working on their own schedules with 2 chapters a month is far better then 1 a week 4 times a month

    • @3dsmaster537
      @3dsmaster537 Год назад +72

      Yeah. 2 chapters a month with 20 or so pages each instead of the grueling 15-17 per week would probably be a least a little better.
      I cant imagine drawing a whole storyboard just for one prick to tell me it sucks and to redo it. And that the past 28 hours i spent drawing it were a waste

    • @victorkaranja1420
      @victorkaranja1420 Год назад +14

      While that's true alot of these companies already have magazines and such for that and the weekly format just happens to be the nost popular type of manga, prolly given it's ability to keep readers attention span due to it being something to fill their week

    • @kingpotato7183
      @kingpotato7183 Год назад +18

      That's why araki went monthly

    • @MrTotBalls
      @MrTotBalls Год назад +9

      @@kingpotato7183exactly and it made his work even better

    • @Kikyams
      @Kikyams Год назад

      if all would support their work or if they could get higher salary. he could get assistants or any kind of help not shouldering all the works. this isnt much an issue in western country right.

  • @adrianpas7309
    @adrianpas7309 Год назад +78

    You know manga industry is garbage when weekly hiatus exists (mangakas are CLEARLY burned)

  • @adamshadow9881
    @adamshadow9881 Год назад +50

    One of my favorite manga, that's technically not a MANGA. But Manfra, is Radiant. Which is ALL done by one French-Canadian guy. It's over 10 years old, but only has 132 chapters. And why is because the series comes out on a volume basis, instead of chapter. On average, two volumes come out a year. (Which might as well be a monthly series.) And the author, Tony Valente, has said that he could pump out one more volume during the year, but he absolutely knows the consequences that comes with it. Makes me wonder if Mangaka could benefit from doing an approach like that. Or even be on a bi-weekly schedule instead.

    • @mindandbody7971
      @mindandbody7971 Год назад +5

      American comics used to produce Bi-weekly during the summer months, but they would usually, not always get fill-in artists on their major titles, or have a shorter story format and insert a filler to conclude the book. Monthly is truly the way to go and that's still a tough schedule for an artist to adhere to.

    • @Miraihi
      @Miraihi 7 месяцев назад +2

      There are monthly manga magazines, but Shounen Jump is the biggest one, and it's weekly.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад +1

      Consumer demand is a wretched thing, the consumer wants it, they want it now, they want it high quality. Wish the publishers would get together and do this though.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Miraihi Yep and there's Shounen Monthly or did that stop running?

    • @Miraihi
      @Miraihi 3 месяца назад

      @@markaven5249 sorry I meant that the monthly manga magazines exist, but to become a real star you must get published in Shounen jump weekly.

  • @3dsmaster537
    @3dsmaster537 Год назад +184

    What sucks about this is that even though I'm educated about it there is practically nothing I can do about this. Creators of my favorite works are suffering in a horrible work environment and the work culture shows no signs of changing. Japan and *only* Japan can fix its own issues that stem that deep. Its disheartening.
    All I can do is support the author and hope the get better

    • @the0nlytrueprophet942
      @the0nlytrueprophet942 8 месяцев назад

      Japans work culture is just completely fucked. I think as they start to open up more to foreigners it’ll get better, but the old men running Japan are such old school wankers honestly

  • @kompav5621
    @kompav5621 Год назад +84

    It's sad, and in one way ironic. The authors of some of my favourite fictional characters write wonderful stories with themes of heroism and growth, yet there's seemingly no one to come save them in their actual lives from the machine that harvests them for every drop of creativity lest they can't pay the bills.

    • @lapplandkun9273
      @lapplandkun9273 6 месяцев назад +3

      Pretty much what happened to Naruto. That's why there were so many problems after the pain arc. Kishimoto got burnt out. The entire story of shinobi killing for a living went ideologically bankrupt and backwards. Kishimoto should've made the ending he wanted, not what the fans wanted because fuck them

  • @dohickey7184
    @dohickey7184 Год назад +78

    I will never understand how these corporations will build themselves entirely on the backs of people's passion, literally owing thei entire existence to creatives, and then doing absolutely everything they possibly can to not compensate them. It's why I hope that if I ever create my own comic I'll be able to publish it on a platform like Mangacreators or Webtoon rather than sign my soul and labor away to a company that could not care less about anything but the bottom line

    • @바보Queen
      @바보Queen Год назад

      and these dumb mangaka's expect to work like this and are almost accepting it as a way of life for a mangaka which is dumb af.. so its their fault too for not speaking up

  • @NinjaristicNinja
    @NinjaristicNinja Год назад +17

    Great video 👏 Depressing, but super informative.

    • @THV4106_
      @THV4106_ 6 месяцев назад

      YOOOO ITS HIM

  • @makotoyuki345
    @makotoyuki345 Год назад +31

    Holy...the mangaka get my condolences. Just wow...I hope this work culture changes eventually. I don’t know what else to say I’m just still in shock, I already know it is bad but wtf is this!?

  • @redgrave4492
    @redgrave4492 7 месяцев назад +2

    I had heard about the harsh schedule, but I'm shocked they don't get compensated much from successful adaptations or licensed games. I hope a new standard to be more considerate to the well being of mangaka will be put in place one day.

  • @lonemotheo1964
    @lonemotheo1964 Год назад +18

    I hope one day these authors see how powerful they are cause truth be told they don't need shonen jump as much as shonen jump needs them

  • @BraviaGames
    @BraviaGames Год назад +64

    Bro you cooked so hard with this. I knew being a mangaka was hard but had no idea it was THAT abysmal. Something's gotta change but idk what. It seems like this harsh work cycle comes with the job at least for Weekly Shonen Jump. That fact that we get such stellar work from these artists is nothing short of a miracle. Good video, really important info actually. Gonna share this.👍

    • @God-T
      @God-T Год назад +3

      When the well with this sh! get dealt with .. it seem so twisted

  • @Kaptime
    @Kaptime Год назад +34

    Sucks how badly even the top authors get paid. Fair... Oda has millions... But he's outsold batman at this point, bro should be getting BILLIONS.

    • @aceclover758
      @aceclover758 Год назад +14

      Revenue and royalties are very different in Japan from other countries
      Under American laws, Oda would be a billionaire

    • @sr_ryoadm
      @sr_ryoadm 22 дня назад

      ​@@aceclover758how is so different? You have some sources to I find, people in other sites only said generic things, looks the same thing to publish in USA when they talk

  • @Xxxvidsdg
    @Xxxvidsdg Год назад +10

    Another thing is some mangakas are often pressured to continue a series if it gets popular like Oda or horikoshi

  • @Jaymizuband
    @Jaymizuband Год назад +15

    Passion tax was a really good point to bring up. Heard about it in Esports not long ago and it’s lame asf how employers will hold that against some people.
    Find it wicked with WSJ how most of these breaks/poor health stories comes from their authors as well.

  • @KingLAO2964
    @KingLAO2964 Год назад +34

    It's really sad to see people have to work their own health into the ground

  • @animationdemonunknown
    @animationdemonunknown Год назад +7

    Sucks that this happens to our favorite mangakas. I would not want to be a mangaka because of burnout and health, so I can only pray

  • @daeryk6424
    @daeryk6424 Год назад +14

    Ain't no way in hell I could deal with any of that shit. Assuming I was in a position to make manga, I would likely die in those work conditions (or maybe fired before that due to no sleep). I rather struggle on my own in that case. At least then I can make my own schedule.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад +1

      And that's the thing, in Japan if you wanted it that badly, technically, one could move to a cheaper city like Fukuoka or something, get a roommate, get a job or skill first that pays the basic bills part time, then work full time on manga until it makes a living. It is Japan though, and 'part-time' means American full time hours.

  • @nolanhartsoe
    @nolanhartsoe Год назад +38

    I'm confused on why these successful mangakas like Horikoshi don't strike or self-publish on places such as Kickstarter. I know it's not close to easy to do these things but these do feel like solid options for them and must have crossed their minds throughout their careers? I'd like to hear other perspectives on this.

    • @kingpotato7183
      @kingpotato7183 Год назад +19

      I'm guessing contracts or something

    • @matttheman9740
      @matttheman9740 5 месяцев назад +2

      Only Americans are known for striking, as we hate working hard. Literally, any other country puts up with it cause it's expected from everybody. Their moto is just to outwork everybody else. It's sad but true :(

    • @nolanhartsoe
      @nolanhartsoe 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@matttheman9740 Yes I've learned a lot more about Japanese culture and others around the world since writing this comment. The cultures we're apart of heavily affect the way we think and view our options.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад +1

      You're actually....very right about this. Kickstarter requires a level of 'star power' or just to know a sh*t ton of people to pull off, and they have the star power to do so. It might just be the risk factor though.

  • @alpguy4865
    @alpguy4865 Год назад +6

    The sheer fact that despite knowing this we're probably can't do much anything to change it is the most messed up one. These mangaka's basically destroying their own body to produce these entertaining stories just so the "upper up" can enjoy the money that the made.
    I would love to see an actual action, like union or changes to these stuffs. It's pretty messed up man, seriously.

  • @NoodleCanoodle
    @NoodleCanoodle Год назад +6

    This is sad to hear. I wish it was possible for Mangakas en masse to start their own magazine so they could get reasonable work conditions. What are these magazines without their work anyways?

    • @ausgod538
      @ausgod538 7 месяцев назад

      They wouldn't have readership without those magazines.

  • @fawfulmark2
    @fawfulmark2 Год назад +5

    A video about a long overdue topic that needs to be made more transparent.

  • @mintman325
    @mintman325 День назад

    I’m in shock and awe every time I see Oda’s schedule. I had a conversation with a friend about 10 years ago about the ridiculous standards of the manga industry and hope that some of my red cents get back to the artist.

  • @pizzasteve9503
    @pizzasteve9503 Год назад +6

    I want to respect the artists for pulling through even in these horrible conditions for making the things they love, but it doesn't sound like they're pulling through at all. No human can withstand this without serious consequences, and it's so sad that this is how things are.

    • @manny7662
      @manny7662 Год назад +1

      You're bound to get health issues.

  • @LunarSpawnSerenata
    @LunarSpawnSerenata Год назад +4

    After what happened with Kentaro Miura, I can now understand why these hiatuses happened.

  • @Thorfell2003
    @Thorfell2003 Год назад +7

    These mangaka deserve more support.

  • @naganut9718
    @naganut9718 Год назад +2

    I felt the need to mwntion the fact that these kinds of things isn't exclusive to manga industry. It can be a lot of the entertainment industry. Whether that games or cartoons, this is already a huge problem for a long time

  • @goldenthing8865
    @goldenthing8865 Год назад +2

    04:46 I know it's completelly unrelated, but I didn't except to hear Darkest dungeon music on this channel, I'll recognise that tune everywhere

  • @jomopowell9149
    @jomopowell9149 2 месяца назад

    As much as I love anime and manga, It's heartbreaking that so many creators in the industry are being worked to near exhaustion. There needs to be a serious reevalution on how artists are treated.

  • @williamcompitello2302
    @williamcompitello2302 Год назад +2

    I heard Hideaki Anno's struggles with the manga life, but I can't believe it's technically everyone!

  • @EverythingAnimePodcast
    @EverythingAnimePodcast Год назад +2

    Wish I could directly support all my favorite manga artist

  • @MrTimeattacker
    @MrTimeattacker Год назад +3

    Great video

  • @blue_rosa_art
    @blue_rosa_art Год назад +4

    Artists in general are really notorious for running themselves into the ground health and mentality wise, and it's really seen the most when an artist (or in this case a mangaka) works for a big publishing company and is given deadlines.
    Most mangakas work solo when they first start out, and if by some miracle their manga does well enough will get assistants later on, but still, the weekly upload schedule is ridiculous and it doesn't even end with physical manga but also online webtoons also have this same crazy weekly schedule just to either get their online webtoon seen or to keep up with demands of viewership to get paid, and (at least from what I heard in the past) these online webtoon/mangakas also pay out of pocket for their assistants as well.
    The system for which all this is built on feels flawed from the start, and honestly it starts to feel that it stems from the fact that art in general is just not appreciated as a medium in the workforce, even though so many forms of entertainment and life are built upon the shoulders of an artist.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      It's all fun until a deadline. I always loved programming C++, but then there was this game I was helping out to port to consoles, and with the deadline and figuring out how the API worked, wasn't fun at all. I realized then and there, hey....rushing is what makes something fun become dull and horrific.

  • @testoftimegaming5219
    @testoftimegaming5219 2 месяца назад +1

    sad to say it but its ultimately the brutality of passion .... I do my own games/comics and its pretty mich consumed my existence to live within my passion

  • @water7962
    @water7962 9 месяцев назад +1

    i was already planning on doing this but this video reinforced it, no matter how little it pays and how much popularity its going to cost me i am going to learn to code and then upload my story/manga related content onto my own website - dont follow this example though because this only works if i have a main, more stable job like im planning on doing (nutritionist)

  • @evilnet1
    @evilnet1 Год назад +23

    The mainstream manga industry doesn't deserve their artists. So many good works and ideas going to waste, mangakas getting sick, etc. Due to decrepit editors and executives.
    This might as well describe the whole of Japanese work culture

    • @alpha-boss
      @alpha-boss 11 месяцев назад +7

      The worst part is i heard that once a story is axed the author doesn't get to keep his work but it belongs with the publisher and the managka can simply try again with a new work. Talk about exploiting manga artist smh

    • @RhiKlowho
      @RhiKlowho 9 месяцев назад +1

      western comics work like that as well. While it's probably a bit different with some of the IDW, Image, etc. DC and Marvel both has or at least had policies where character that are published by them belong to them.

  • @aceclover758
    @aceclover758 Год назад +2

    Yea movies and even the anime adaptations don’t get a constant stream of revenue for the manga author. It’s a one time fee usually at a flat rate….
    Sucks

  • @jay-ik1bm
    @jay-ik1bm Год назад +2

    I think mangakas should stood for themselves. Cuz these cash milker companies will need to stop putting pressure on them. They need the product. On big series ppl will wait a lot no matter what, how they waited for hxh.

  • @misterOrca4
    @misterOrca4 Год назад +2

    This video makes me feel ashamed of myself. I keep forgetting how bad Mangaka have it and I go complain how they're writing their stories online. 😡😓😣

  • @바보Queen
    @바보Queen Год назад +6

    these mangaka create things that become world phenomenon and dont become millionaires... while western stuff the creators are often super rich.. like harry potter or twilight etc... its insane.. the Mangaka's who create amazing things enjoyed by more people than a lot of western IP's should be millionaires.. its like their culture thrives off work and no pay

    • @dennisduncan7561
      @dennisduncan7561 Год назад +2

      Some should and not all western IP makers are millionaires.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      Worse than that, the rich kids from Beverely Hills and rich suburbia in America pretty much took over the entire industry in hollywood in the last 30 years, and are pushing out awful dark bland Netflix series after awful dark bland Netflix series.

  • @Jamillian8
    @Jamillian8 Год назад

    Great video as always Asa! It's very disheartening to hear the horror stories of many beloved mangakas, I hope things change, but knowing how behind Japan laws are, we're probably going to be waiting for a long time...

  • @victorkaranja1420
    @victorkaranja1420 Год назад +1

    Oh boy while I have never been a pro I tried to work on my stuff at the mangaka pace for a good while and sweet christ the grind is pain

  • @Serjohn
    @Serjohn Год назад +2

    People saying it should monthly. Sure but then it's not enough money. Usually monthly authors do it all themselves and some choose to do 2 monthly series. Or be an assistant plus having a monthly series. It's fucked either way. And oh yes monthly series are 35 pages instead, a double issue basically.

  • @eddyalvaross2195
    @eddyalvaross2195 Год назад +2

    Any west african artist would be super happy if they were paid 1000 usd per month. But only if they stay in their country while having such an income.

  • @DjokoT-p6b
    @DjokoT-p6b 7 месяцев назад +1

    Things we do for love. To watch this and at 52 I stll want to make at least 1 graphic novel. For the love of the passion. We're doomed people

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      You should definitely do it, but if you do say like 1-2 hours a day for an entire year without skipping a day, you could then take one month to blitz the rest. One thing I used to do with making video games.

  • @dracotitanfall
    @dracotitanfall 3 месяца назад

    Isayama released AoT as one chapter per month. The chapter itself was somewhat longer than average (40 pages) but the fact that he almost never took a break or went on hiatus and was able to consistently publish AoT until completion says a lot about how much better the monthly release schedule is. Sure we had to wait longer than other manga fans to get more content but whenever a new chapter released it was always a huge moment and discussion never really died down within the fandom. I think more companies should do this.

  • @KimberlyPinkney
    @KimberlyPinkney Год назад +10

    If only they had the strength, time and money to stage a revolution. We have the technology now to reach the world. If they all banded together and form their own business that pays them and gives them the time they and their staff deserve. Like when American comic artists broke away from Marvel and DC. They have a massive audience out there. And yeah, it is a whole other culture out there that must do it for themselves and those who come after them.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      This is absolutely the solution, but they'd have to stop working for a few days to pull it off!

  • @senoadjiaditya1535
    @senoadjiaditya1535 9 месяцев назад +2

    Well, Japan work situation is toxic. Especially, at the creative field.
    I prefer collecting European comics album, for sure. The publisher treat their artist with respect.

  • @themelancholyofgay3543
    @themelancholyofgay3543 6 месяцев назад

    Well thats legit terrifying

  • @rawreviews4457
    @rawreviews4457 Год назад

    Kubo was really a God still drawing with a torn shoulder all Tybw

  • @thedreamsoldiers
    @thedreamsoldiers 11 месяцев назад

    I would love to own a comic publishing company one day. Id have a much more lenient work schedule. Plus higher royalties % & cover expenses whenever possible

  • @donttalktomeyoureannoying8736
    @donttalktomeyoureannoying8736 Год назад +2

    Honestly I would rather draw for $38,000 a year than working some bullsh*tting a** job dealing with irate customers/clients and psychopathic supervisors and immediate coworkers who will drive you to the insane asylum with their vicious antics. Mangaka conditions are horrific, but there can be worse. At least I can be doing something I love.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      You have to find a better job for sure with more room for growth long term.

  • @imnugget8085
    @imnugget8085 8 месяцев назад +1

    Keyfact most mangaka will die earlier in there own countries so U.s magaka or japan there lose about 30 years of there life its sad

  • @Mikaact4
    @Mikaact4 Год назад +4

    I will become a mangaka l will king of the manga

  • @CDISDGOAT
    @CDISDGOAT Год назад +3

    good video

  • @motivatedtoscapechildsupport
    @motivatedtoscapechildsupport Год назад +2

    It's sad to see that it's just an average life of Japanese.

  • @Fightdemon
    @Fightdemon Год назад

    Rest in peace, Miura sensei! - Berserk

  • @debilita9999
    @debilita9999 Год назад +7

    A reminder for all aspiring mangaka to selfpublish, industry standarts are garbage and will lead you to an early grave.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      I would agree. When you self publish though, the irony is, you have to be very social and extraverted for a while, because it does require meeting and knowing lots and lots of people, unless you can find a business partner that would handle the social part, go to events, find readers and make connections with manga shop owners and take 50% or something.

  • @Mordecool9
    @Mordecool9 Год назад +1

    I’d love to get your take on mha chapter 365

  • @jrome_art
    @jrome_art 7 месяцев назад +1

    Watching this makes me want to draw LESS. Americans Love to talk about how Manga is so much better than Amerian Comics, but if this is what it takes to be better, than they can have it. I NEED my time with my wife and kids.

  • @FURRY_CLoud
    @FURRY_CLoud Месяц назад

    Radha Radha
    Radhe Radhe
    Radha Govind

  • @MinecraftSkater125
    @MinecraftSkater125 3 месяца назад

    There is something absolutely admirable about the Japanese work ethic. It is sad that most Japanese are working insane hours but dam near no one can work 18 hours only getting 1-3 hours of sleep and still show up to work.

  • @Onibyron
    @Onibyron 10 месяцев назад

    Where do the editors live at? *chambering something*

  • @shinobi8564
    @shinobi8564 11 месяцев назад +2

    I have a question, why can't you just do all of the manga pages and when your manga is over, you give the papers to the (how do we call that, editor?)
    and then your books are just published?

    • @AsarathaHSYT
      @AsarathaHSYT  11 месяцев назад +3

      because the publisher doesn't want to waste time, money or resources on publishing something if it doesn't do well

    • @shinobi8564
      @shinobi8564 11 месяцев назад

      @@AsarathaHSYT ah ok thank you

  • @IrregularPie
    @IrregularPie Год назад +1

    This is, sad

  • @Mordecool9
    @Mordecool9 Год назад +1

    I missed you last mha upload, did it get taken down?

  • @Kikyams
    @Kikyams Год назад +1

    if all would support their work or if they could get higher salary. he could get assistants or any kind of help not shouldering all the works. this isnt much an issue in western country right

  • @luffy_libya
    @luffy_libya 8 месяцев назад

    sounds like hell fr

  • @holedplot
    @holedplot 2 месяца назад

    And you feed the monster buying more issues.

  • @AlTariqLuqmanMuhammad
    @AlTariqLuqmanMuhammad Год назад +3

    Maybe the mangaka should just be better at their jobs so they don't have to work as much. Seems like a skill issue to me.
    More seriously, the culture around work in Japan (honestly everywhere, but Japan is arguably the worst about it) is extremely depressing. I understand being passionate enough about your craft to sacrifice rest, food, or personal time to work on it, but the returns these creators get for their work is rarely ever equal to what they put in and the burden of creation very often destroys them in the long run. I hope that one day these conditions can be fixed and the culture can evolve to put the health of these (mostly) wonderful individuals first and foremost. (I typed this comment before you got to the passion tax portion and I 100% agree with everything you said there. What a sad reality we live in. Let's make it better.)

  • @bobi200samatar6
    @bobi200samatar6 Год назад +3

    There are manga magazines, like Hana to Yume, that release twice a month instead of weekly. It truly pisses me off that that isn't the norm. Give the people who actually make Shounen Jump successfull more time to cook and take care of themselves.

  • @joshuamarchelim2871
    @joshuamarchelim2871 11 месяцев назад +1

    Does making manga need in jepang?

    • @mateuszmierzejewski1355
      @mateuszmierzejewski1355 10 месяцев назад +2

      yes you need to be in japan publishing in japan writing in japanese for vast majority of people to acknowledge your work as manga.

  • @Franko-db4op
    @Franko-db4op 6 месяцев назад

    I don't think it could get that bad from just sitting in a chair you would need to walk around a lot anyway if you lived in Japan or any big city and the Japan diet won't kill you like that. and id rather do that then my 9 to 5

  • @Theboyfromjupiter
    @Theboyfromjupiter 27 дней назад

    Damn.

  • @animegarh7981
    @animegarh7981 Год назад +1

    Just make it 2 week they also need rest

  • @argotigonzalez1585
    @argotigonzalez1585 3 месяца назад

    Crazy people sacrifice themselves for this

  • @seracris8357
    @seracris8357 Год назад +11

    It's the spirit of the japanese to obey their masters. It gives them strength as a collective but the individuals suffer. Those who don't want to suffer from this culture anymore often leave for western more individual focused societies.

    • @adeleinetheartist8267
      @adeleinetheartist8267 Год назад +4

      No, it is toxic, and it is a shame that this culture is normalised. Blind obedience shouldn't really be the norm.

    • @seracris8357
      @seracris8357 Год назад

      This is a cultural problem of many far east cultures. It has its pros but things like these are the cons. Same goes for western individual focused cultures that can breed egoistical people.@@adeleinetheartist8267

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      It comes from pre-ww2 fascist Japan, then that war like spirit went into the workforce, they became a huge powerful country at the sacrifice of numerous workers giving their life blood for the company, and here we are with this anti-individualist culture still baked in.

    • @seracris8357
      @seracris8357 3 месяца назад

      Why tf, did I write this silly comment...

  • @imnugget8085
    @imnugget8085 8 месяцев назад

    To be honest this is the only thing they should copy u.s comic. Pay a little more and make the books shorter so volum 8-10 chapters should be like 5-8 chapters and sell at the same price

  • @mesasavage
    @mesasavage 7 месяцев назад

    DO what the Image guys in the USA did 30+ years ago. Quit. All the stars, just quit. Start your own publishing thing with new materials. Putting up with this madness seems crazy. You get what you deserve.

  • @Jeffdraws19
    @Jeffdraws19 2 месяца назад

    I love the tittle😂

  • @Thorfell2003
    @Thorfell2003 Год назад

    At least all you need to do by making an actual book that has no pictires is to have great grammar and all these other skills to be an author and even that can take a lot of risk.

  • @treeizure7821
    @treeizure7821 Год назад +2

    Talk about suffering for your art

  • @toymareko
    @toymareko Год назад +5

    Why do these people go through this in Japan?
    They just wanna make a story with their characters why go through so much pain?

    • @akita_inu-il6em
      @akita_inu-il6em Год назад +5

      Because they want to publish their work

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      @@akita_inu-il6em Yep, and publishers have the resources, connections and money to get the work out to people.
      Honestly, I'd consider becoming a publisher of indie games in America if I was an socially extraverted person. You basically just need to go and have drinks with lots and lots and lots and lots of people from events, conventions, etc... and focus on your looks.
      Then you have the introverted artist, who's the perfect candidate to help bring a book or game that helps readers to viewers or players to just escape for a while, but then the social extraverted publisher types want 50% of that, and then as it says in the video, publishers, editors, what have you then think they're a writer, even though they're job should be reserved for 'social animal', and want to take liberties on the work.

  • @wiggie666
    @wiggie666 Год назад +1

    they should just go on strike, then the company will bend to their needs, or they will hire anyone but the manga may not be as good. I feel like they are kinda of doing this now. yes the passion part, this is a good video this is true. I guess everything comes with a price, become known globally living your dream or keep dreaming with your health.

  • @antonioschrager3943
    @antonioschrager3943 11 месяцев назад

    funny as hell

  • @WoodEe-zq6qv
    @WoodEe-zq6qv Год назад

    You flashed that schedule on screen for like 10 seconds and then talked about it for a few more minutes... We can't compare what you're saying to what the schedule is.

  • @HTMangaka
    @HTMangaka Год назад +2

    Still beats food service. Try a similar schedule, but the work is physical. -_-'

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 3 месяца назад

      There can be room to grow in food service, though, as rough as it is.

    • @HTMangaka
      @HTMangaka 3 месяца назад

      @@markaven5249 I have experience with that. The places I worked at will put you on Salary once you're in the top positions. Once they do that, you're cooked. They will call you in on every. single. one. of your days off and ask you to stay till after closing. It's ridiculous. You don't get fairly compensated for all the extra work, either. Because salary.
      Once I did the math and realized I went from making 12.00/hr to making the equivalent of 10.00/hr on salary, I friggin' jumped ship.

  • @eddy9615
    @eddy9615 Год назад +1

    Ok

  • @niteshanthony2324
    @niteshanthony2324 6 месяцев назад

    hey we dont know each other but i wanna say that GOD still loves u and wants u to be with him all u must do is trust in Jesus and repent of ur sins. GOD loves u more than u can imagine

  • @ego.23
    @ego.23 Год назад +3

    Now let’s talk about the bright side, instead of crushing careers:
    1. Most mangakas have a wide support group who work with them to create chapters weekly. For example, Oda has all of his side artists drawing backgrounds, side characters, and various things, while Oda
    literally only draws the main
    characters.
    2. Most people that help out the main mangakas (apart of a team) are usually taking that job as a side job. They don’t live off that lame money every year 😂
    3. Most mangakas complaining about the lifestyle, don’t actually enjoy what they are doing. If you enjoy doing something, than the tough life does not matter.
    4. Hiatus is a thing 😅.
    5. I guarantee you, every mangakas is eating snacks while drawing. Don’t you dare say they starve themselves 🙄. Eating nutrients is important…that extra 5 seconds it takes to grab that broccoli is definitely not gonna kill you.
    Note: Be whatever the Fvck you wanna be. ❤

    • @dennisduncan7561
      @dennisduncan7561 Год назад +3

      And the ones that don't?

    • @ego.23
      @ego.23 Год назад

      The ones that don’t what?….

    • @dennisduncan7561
      @dennisduncan7561 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@ego.23 The ones that don't have an entire support team to draw backgrounds and such and aren't kicking back enjoying snacks.

  • @bobbydigital316
    @bobbydigital316 Год назад

    Just get a normal job and just draw as a hobby artist.

    • @dennisduncan7561
      @dennisduncan7561 Год назад

      And if you want to make money from your art?

    • @bobbydigital316
      @bobbydigital316 Год назад

      @@dennisduncan7561 then good luck to you, but you’re going to have a tough life, and in the case of a manga artist, a long and unrewarding life in terms of money making. I enjoy drawing as much as the next person, but im realistic in how the art industry is. So i have a normal job that pays well, and draw as a hobby. I simply wouldn’t accept such long hours so such little pay, just because I enjoy drawing, in fact it would probably eventually cause me to hate drawing.