Why It Works: Hinamatsuri’s Comedic Timing

It unsurprisingly didn’t take long for Hinamatsuri to pop up in my Why It Works columns. The show’s pretty much a comedy marvel in all respects, and also very endearing as a found-family drama besides, making it basically the ideal show for a huge mark like me. The fact that its jokes generally aren’t that surprising only really underlines the strength of their delivery; pacing really can work wonders, and it’s certainly working wonders here. I hope you enjoy the piece!

Hinamatsuri’s Comedic Timing is So Snappy It’ll Break Your Neck

Why It Works: The Anime-Original Secrets of My Hero Academia

Today on Crunchyroll, I focused on precisely the kind of nitty-gritty craft stuff that makes me so happy to have this column, exploring how the added content for My Hero Academia’s new season reflected the overall authorial voice of the show versus the manga. Obviously they didn’t include any overbearing new foreshadowing or anything, but the way My Hero Academia The Show sees its own cast is interesting to me, and material that diverges from the manga is one of the clearest avenues for exploring that perspective. This was a fun one to write, and I hope you enjoy it!

The Anime-Original Secrets of My Hero Academia

Why It Works: Nick’s Picks for Spring 2018

As usual, I wrapped up this season’s extended preview week with one last look back for Crunchyroll, offering some quick recommendations from across the genre spectrum. With Wotakoi arriving at the last moment, I no longer have much real cause to complain about this season – there’s no big ambitious art statement by one of my favorite directors, but there’s at least one or two solid shows in basically all my other genres. It’s a pretty fine time to like anime!

Nick’s Picks for Spring 2018

Why It Works: Where Must the Members of Class 1-A Go From Here?

Today on Crunchyroll, I’m hyping up the new season of My Hero Academia by once again diving into the fragile self-image of its principle leads. I’m mid-preview week at the moment and have no time to chat, so you can check out the article below and I guess that’s it. I’m off!

Where Must the Members of Class 1-A Go From Here?

So Good You Can Taste It: Anime That Make Eating Look Great

It was time for a recommendation roundup this week on Crunchyroll, and this week we explored great cooking shows! The most fun part of this piece was just trying to find enough of those precise “oh my god this meal looks so good” low-angle reaction shots to fill the article, but fortunately I prevailed, because I am a professional. The people need to know the truth, and the truth is food is good.

So Good You Can Taste It: Anime That Make Eating Look Great

What’s in Store for My Hero Academia?

Today on Crunchyroll I’m basically just hyping the hell out of My Hero Academia’s third season, which was easy to do, considering I myself am hype as fuck for this one. My Hero Academia’s second anime season was a dramatic step up quality-wise from the first, and with the material this third season’s covering offering an even more significant quality jump, I’m pumped to see whatever Bones can pull together. It’s awesome to have a tentpole shounen like My Hero Academia receive such a strong episode-to-episode adaptation, and can’t wait to see Midoriya punch stuff good one more time.

What’s in Store for My Hero Academia?

Why It Works: Rin and Her Space

Today on Why It Works, I took some more time to explore all the stuff that makes Laid Back Camp so great. This time, my focus was on how Laid Back Camp accomplishes the rare task of celebrating introversion in a slice of life shell, a genre that naturally trends towards emphasizing time spent with friends as the natural goal of life altogether. Laid Back Camp is very good at not just respecting Rin’s preferences, but also capturing many of the things that make time spent alone so uniquely appealing. Thanks for that, Laid Back Camp!

Why It Works: Rin and Her Space

Why It Works: What Awaits in a Place Further Than the Universe

Today on Crunchyroll, I dug into the intangible sense of absence and longing that seems to guide so many of the stars of A Place Further Than the Universe. The show’s fixation with this ineffable something that will grant all our lives some greater significance is my favorite thing about it, so I was happy to dedicate a piece to specifically that. Hope you enjoy the writeup!

What Awaits in a Place Further Than the Universe

Why It Works: Fresh Highlights of the Crunchyroll Catalog

It’d been a while since my last recommendation grab bag, and Crunchyroll have picked up a pile of stellar shows these last couple months, so this week I dove into that pile and emerged with a selection of old favorites. I am very happy to have basically any excuse to rep Spice and Wolf, as the show is pretty much my gold standard for anime romance, and it was also fun to revisit Starmyu’s exemplary performance sequences. I’ve already watched all this friggin’ anime, I might as well try and lead other people to the good ones!

Fresh Highlights of the Crunchyroll Catalog

Why It Works: Two Kinds of Camping in Laid Back Camp

For today’s Why It Works, I focused on how Laid Back Camp manages the very different goals of its Rin- and Nadeshiko-focused segments, an interesting contrast that I felt nicely illustrated the dramatic range that exists within the larger slice of life genre. This discussion actually helped me sort out my own feelings on the genre a bit; I definitely prefer the Rin-style material exemplified by shows like Flying Witch, but can still enjoy really exemplary articulations of Nadeshiko’s style, like a lot of K-On! Always fun to learn something new about your own tastes.

Two Kinds of Camping in Laid Back Camp