Manga and Anime Rallyes in Seaside, California by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget
My daughter Florence is part of the generation that saw Pixar animated films explode into the marketplace that used Computer-Assisted Design to create their mobile images.
When
the “kids” became teens, they wanted to be animators, voice talent, and
animation-studio moguls for CAD films (Computer-Assisted Design).
Japanese
manga comics and anime comics were linked to CAD, especially anime, which
creates 3-D images on a 2-D surface using the techniques of vanishing-point perspective, alteration of frame lengths, and color and shading.
The
library system where I worked had a huge graphic novel collection (graphic
novel = new word for comics). When I was
in library school, Art Spiegelman”s graphic novel Mauss was a hit and later
Marjane Satrapi’s graphic novel Persepolis about Iran was made into a film.
I
loved using the comics medium to introduce historical topics as well as being a
leisure medium. I also supported using
the newer graphic novels to teach conversational English skills and vocabulary
to English-language learners (ELLs). There
are usually 250 vocabulary words in a graphic novel, which is a nice amount of
words to memorize before going onto a next graphic novel in a series.
When
my daughter was in high school and received a car for her 16th
birthday (Detroit mom and French MBA dad gift), she was free to go out with her
friends and do “Manga and Anime Rallyes.”
I
was not allowed to go to the rallyes, but all the restaurants they went to in
Seaside knew “Mom” would cover a restaurant bill, if Florence’s “beginner” credit
card with a limited amount of money to spend on it did not work.
I
did ply Florence with questions playfully to find out that she and about 5
friends went to Harumi Japanese (formerly Fuji) in Seaside and ordered a
family-style meal that they all split the tab for and did Manga and Anime
Rallyes.
I
thought what they ate sounded great and they left a good tip, because 6 is a
rather large number of people to serve.
-Dragon
rolls made with eel sushi and and topped with avocado
-California
rolls (cooked fish sushi rolls with mayonnaise)
-Bento
lunches to share with shrimp tempura and beef teriyaki
-the
bento lunches still come with miso soup made with tofu and seaweed, salads, and rice.
-the
kids did not eat sashimi (raw fish), because it is expensive
-the
kids drank sodas and Japanese fad sodas as a “cocktail”
The
kids all had individual plates and would share out what they wanted depending
on food preferences, allergies, and/or religious beliefs.
If
Harumi was very busy, the teens would go to another restaurant in Seaside. There were several very close to Harumi. Florence had a mobile phone and would tell
me, if she was going to a place besides Harumi for lunch and anime rallye. Almost all of these restaurants are still
there (20+ years just counting from the time I have been in California.)
-Nifty
Fifties Café
-Baan
Thai
-Orient
(Vietnamese and Chinese)
-Round
Table Pizza
-Stammtisch
(German – Bavarian)
-City
Diner (Filipino and American)
-Tortuga
(Mexican)
-Orient
Express (Korean)
-Lucky Bamboo (Chinese)
-Lucky Bamboo (Chinese)
-Borders
Bookstore Café
-Paris
Bakery
-Chef
Lee’s (Chinese)
-Former Lee's Garden in Marina (Chinese)
-Taquitos (in Salinas)
-Former Lee's Garden in Marina (Chinese)
-Taquitos (in Salinas)
The
reason I could not go on these outings was probably, because the kids met their
boyfriends at these Manga and Anime Rallyes.
They
played the Japanese game Go and Sushi Go!, read manga and anime, and drew
before and after eating depending on the crowd in the restaurant.
However,
I was the Youth Services Librarian for Monterey County (California) at the time,
so I asked Florence to help me start a “Game” using library books with the
ultimate goal of creating Animated Movie Moguls.
I
did a handout for staff at all 17-branches of our library system, gave it to
homework center coordinators, and did electronic database workshops around the
county showing how to use the library’s online resources that you could get
from home.
I
made handouts for these workshops. All
the students in Monterey County knew about these services and all library staff
learned how to teach how to do these “holds,” which were “reserve-and-pick up”
orders on books in the library system.
(I
also let the Children’s Council of Monterey County know about these workshops
and gave them information.)
The
Animated Movie Mogul Game runs like this:
You
had to make a list of all animated books in the Monterey County System and read
them twice and do all the exercises in them twice to build a portfolio to show
a college counselor to get into CAD classes using the leveling up procedure of
video games:
-Practice
D’Nealian handwriting to strengthen hands for drawing.
(Also,
some people will pay to have invitations, dinner placecards, and menus
handwritten in this style.)
-Practice
calligraphy styles
(Read
about history and usage practices)
-Draw
landscapes
-Draw
buildings using perspective
-Draw
landscapes in perspective
-Draw
cars of various makes in perspective
-Draw
various animals, including horses, in various poses
(Start
with postcard photos of animals)
-Draw
garden flowers and bushes using a gardening book and from real life
-Draw
wildflowers using a field guide and from real life
-Draw
stick figures of the human body in motion
-Draw
portraits
-Draw
fashion from a history of fashion reference book
(Start
with Egypt)
-Read
Dummies books about how to do Word, Excel, Powerpoint, and Access
Work
on setting up a database of your contacts in Access, especially people who can
help you get into college and apply for merit scholarships
-Read
CAD (Computer-Assisted Design Books)
-Set
up shots like Hitchcock did to shoot film scenes
-Meet
with a college counselor to discuss your career goals
This
Manga and Anime Rallye I have described above can be done at home or in a youth
center, too.
Expansion 1: History of Graphic Novels
Mini Expansion now that the "kids" have graduated from college. I read all the library books I could on the history and techniques used in comics, graphic novels, manga (Japanese graphic novels), manwha (Korean graphic novels), and anime (Japanese 3-D comics that use the techniques of film). There are probably many more comic history books in the library, but these 4 books look like updates on some more classical works:
Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art by Scott McCloud
This book along with Schodt's work that follows are the classics in the field. I have read both of these.
Manga! Manga!: The World of Japanese Comics By Frederick L. Schodt
The Comics: An Illustrated History of Comic Strip Art by Jerry Robinson
Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America by Bradforth W. Wright
Expansion 2: French Comics
I like Asterix and the Goths. Manga readers should learn about Comics Around the World. There is an Asterix Amusement Park for families outside Paris, France.
This comic series, Asterix and the Goths, is about the ancient French called the Gauls, who had to defend themselves against marauding ancient Romans.
My husband Laurent and I were able to buy a series of Asterix in English over the years at Atlantis Fantasy World in Santa Cruz, California, which specializes in graphic novels. We usually combined a visit here with a day outing to Beach Boardwalk Amusement Park.
Expansion 3: Monica from Brazil
I have an entire blog devoted to Monica comics from Brazil on this Savvy Mom Ruth Paget website.
Read her series to be international.
Expansion 3: Mafalda from Argentina
This comic was available in Spanish in book format at the library system where I worked. Mafalda is a comic from Argentina. I mentioned this comic to Spanish speakers at work and said American students learning Spanish might like it, too.
(Disclaimer: I grew up reading Archie comics about suburban, American high schools and Ivanhoe historical comics, because I am related to Sir Walter Scott according to a great-aunt through my Hodgson relatives. The Hodgsons have more children than the Penningtons even. They all made use of public libraries to keep their children reading and entertained.)
Expansion 1: History of Graphic Novels
Mini Expansion now that the "kids" have graduated from college. I read all the library books I could on the history and techniques used in comics, graphic novels, manga (Japanese graphic novels), manwha (Korean graphic novels), and anime (Japanese 3-D comics that use the techniques of film). There are probably many more comic history books in the library, but these 4 books look like updates on some more classical works:
Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art by Scott McCloud
This book along with Schodt's work that follows are the classics in the field. I have read both of these.
Manga! Manga!: The World of Japanese Comics By Frederick L. Schodt
The Comics: An Illustrated History of Comic Strip Art by Jerry Robinson
Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America by Bradforth W. Wright
Expansion 2: French Comics
I like Asterix and the Goths. Manga readers should learn about Comics Around the World. There is an Asterix Amusement Park for families outside Paris, France.
This comic series, Asterix and the Goths, is about the ancient French called the Gauls, who had to defend themselves against marauding ancient Romans.
My husband Laurent and I were able to buy a series of Asterix in English over the years at Atlantis Fantasy World in Santa Cruz, California, which specializes in graphic novels. We usually combined a visit here with a day outing to Beach Boardwalk Amusement Park.
Expansion 3: Monica from Brazil
I have an entire blog devoted to Monica comics from Brazil on this Savvy Mom Ruth Paget website.
Read her series to be international.
Expansion 3: Mafalda from Argentina
This comic was available in Spanish in book format at the library system where I worked. Mafalda is a comic from Argentina. I mentioned this comic to Spanish speakers at work and said American students learning Spanish might like it, too.
(Disclaimer: I grew up reading Archie comics about suburban, American high schools and Ivanhoe historical comics, because I am related to Sir Walter Scott according to a great-aunt through my Hodgson relatives. The Hodgsons have more children than the Penningtons even. They all made use of public libraries to keep their children reading and entertained.)
By
Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France
Click here for: Ruth Paget's Amazon Books
Click here for: Ruth Paget's Amazon Books