Japanese Reading Report: 02 March 2025
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- 2ちゃんねる化する世界 (32-83ページ)
- 君に届け 第2期 (第1-13話)
2ちゃんねる化する世界
To start this week I continued the section about
the largely-2chan-fostered "Free Tibet" movement and
general message board culture in the late 00s.
There was an interesting moment where the authors
discussed how the Free Tibet movement was supported
on both the Left and Right, but how almost all
followup movements through 2chan were Right-led.
I'm currently in the second main section of the
book now. This section is about how 2chan was
'stolen' from its creator by an American called
Jim Watkins. There was a little chart in the book
that showed the shift in ownership and geography
of a few different image boards. It displayed
2chan, 2ch.sc, futabachannel, 4chan, 5chan, 8chan,
and 8kun.
Some of these were direct successors of others,
some were spinoffs. It's kind of a mess.
There was basically one moment where I actually
felt like I read something semi-profound. On page
77 the author, explaining why 2chan existed at all
writes:
日本人には本音を書き込む場所が必要だ。It's ultimately not even that profound, but it felt like the first time the text was expressing an opinion (a little bit ironic given the quote).
君に届け
The first episode was an 'episode 0' and recapped the
Kurumi subplot that concluded season 1. For that reason
I'm kind of glad I put off watching this season for a
few months. I worried that I would have trouble picking up
from the middle of the story, but it didn't end up being
a problem.
The real first episode was probably the standout for the
season for me, which is kind of unfortunate because I
actually didn't care for it for the first half. The plot
centres around the not-uncommon romance trope where a
female character (in this case Sawako) wants to give
valentines day chocolates to the boy she likes (in this
case Kazehaya). In true Sawako fashion she has trouble
finding the right time to make it work, and, surprisingly
she actually never finds the time to make it work. The
episode ends with failure, and it kind of sets the stage
for the following few episodes which all involve Sawako
and Kazehaya's relationship backsliding rapidly.
But, as the genre decrees, the pair figure out their
relationship just in time to give the season a few
episodes of breathing room for it to settle and feel
worth it.
Overall I wasn't super impressed. I think the first
season made a better point because it had the advantage
of establishing Sawako's struggle, but it also gave more
attention to side characters and it was fun to see
them develop and struggle alongside Sawako. Season 2
felt a little bit too focused on Sawako's story but,
because it felt like it was already pretty settled at
the end of season 1, a lot of the plot felt like
the author had to fabricate new problems that simply
didn't benefit the story. Even Kent felt like a
wasted opportunity. Ah well.