Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The cosplayer in yellow has a punch perm. A punch perm (パンチパーマ, panchi pāma) is a type of tightly permed male hairstyle in Japan. From the 1970s until the mid-1990s, it was popular among yakuza, chinpira (low-level criminals), bōsōzoku (motorcycle gang members), truck drivers, construction workers, and enka singers.
D-Frag! (Japanese: ディーふらぐ!, Hepburn: Dīfuragu!), also known as D-Fragments, is a comedic manga series by Tomoya Haruno that began serialization in Media Factory's Monthly Comic Alive in July 2008.
Takashi Murakami (村上 隆, Murakami Takashi, born February 1, 1962) is a Japanese contemporary artist.He works in fine arts (such as painting and sculpture) as well as commercial media (such as fashion, merchandise, and animation) and is known for blurring the line between high and low arts.
Bad Badtz-Maru (ja:バッドばつ丸, Baddo batsu maru) is a male penguin character drawn with spiky hair. [123] Designed by Hisato Inoue (ja:井上・ヒサト) who also designed Hangyodon. [87] In Japanese, "badtz" (batsu) is a term for "X", the cross signifying a wrong answer. "Maru" means circle or "O", and signifies a right answer.
Male stock characters in anime and manga (1 C, 7 P) Pages in category "Male characters in anime and manga" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 212 total.
Surprisingly, the TV personality frequents just one staple go-to item that handles all his hair worries: a firm gel. To be more specific, J Beverly Hills Blue Clear Finishing Wax is his holy grail.
Moon Animate Make-Up! (2014) [4] — Over 250 animators collaborated to reanimate the 38th episode of the DiC English dub of Sailor Moon, "Fractious Friends" (1995). [5] This project is considered to be the first major reanimated internet-collaboration, and eventually led to this style of video increasing in popularity during the late 2010s.
Clamp originally began in the mid-1980s [4] as an eleven-member dōjinshi circle, to fill a booth vacancy at Dream Comic, a doujin event in Osaka. To fill a vacancy next to Yun Kōga's CLUB/Y booth, they called themselves CLAMP, since club and clamp both started with kura (クラ) in Katakana spelling, and the booths were sorted according to gojūon order.