segunda-feira, 12 de novembro de 2012

Otakus em campanha contra a CBS

Recentemente numa matéria a CBS(rede de notícias americana) fez mais uma de suas matérias sobre a Miku, uma cantora virtual(ela não existe) que é imensamente popular no Japão, tem uma cópia de qualidade duvidosa chinesa, e é ignorada largamente por toda a população mundial que não tenta forçar ser japonesa. Mesmo assim volta e meia noticiários da Europa e dos EUA fazem matérias sobre ela...simplesmente pra chamar japoneses de estranhos, sua ultima matéria da CBS enfureceu a comunidade japonesa de ermitões online por chamar sua ídola de falsa:
  "Hatsune Miku is the rarest kind of pop star. She is enduringly popular in her native country of Japan. She has never been photographed stumbling out of night clubs in the early hours of the morning, and never had issues with drugs or alcohol. She has, in fact, never been seen outside of her concerts at all. This is because Miku is also the fakest kind of pop star. She is a hologram. More accurately, Hatsune Miku is a digital avatar. Wikipedia describes her as a “singing synthesizer application with a female persona,” created by Crypton Future Media. Using Yamaha’s Vocaloid software, anyone with enough technical know-how can program Miku to perform any song on a computer. In Japan, where synthetic characters — such as Hello Kitty — are often far more enduring than real celebrities, Miku has been a huge hit. The holographic star has performed multiple sold-out concerts in her home country and abroad. Projected larger than life on a screen, Miku sings and dances according to the direction of programmers who “choreographed” the concert weeks or months in advance. The stark unreality of Hatsune Miku doesn’t seem to bother her fans at all."

Francamente de todas as merdas que li de fãs enfurecidos...apenas concordo com esse aqui:

  "Finally, every other popstar who’s conditioned for their image rather than voice or talent are just as fake if Miku is fake"

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