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The Reflection [b] is a Japanese anime television series co-created by writer Stan Lee and director Hiroshi Nagahama. [1] [2] Studio Deen and Lee's Pow!Entertainment are credited with project planning, with animation production by Studio Deen.
In October 2023, Nippon TV established a new 30-minute programming timeslot dedicated to anime.Titled Friday Anime Night, [1] [2] the block is broadcast nationwide on the network and its stations under the NNS affiliation, [1] and airs from 23:00 JST on Friday nights, after the network's long-running Kin'yō Road Show [] (Friday Road Show) movie block.
Rick and Morty: The Anime: Studio Deen Williams Street Adult Swim August 17, 2024: Toonami will air the Japanese language version of the episodes with English subtitles, while the English dubbed versions will be broadcast Thursday nights during the regular Adult Swim schedule. Produced under commission by Sentai Studios. [71] Ronin Warriors ...
The Aquatope on White Sand (白い砂のアクアトープ, Shiroi Suna no Akuatōpu), or The Aquatope of White Sand, subtitled The Two Girls Met in the Ruins of Damaged Dream, is a Japanese anime television series produced by P.A. Works as the fourth entry in its "Working Series". [1]
Jellyfish Can't Swim in the Night (Japanese: 夜のクラゲは泳げない, Hepburn: Yoru no Kurage wa Oyogenai), abbreviated as YoruKura (ヨルクラ), is an original anime television series produced by Doga Kobo for its 50th anniversary.
Ocean Waves, known in Japan as I Can Hear the Sea (Japanese: 海がきこえる, Hepburn: Umi ga Kikoeru), is a 1993 Japanese anime coming-of-age romantic drama television film directed by Tomomi Mochizuki and written by Keiko Niwa (credited as Kaoru Nakamura) based on the 1990–1992 novel of the same name by Saeko Himuro.
Undersea Super Train: Marine Express (海底超特急 マリン・エクスプレス, Kaitei Chōtokkyū Marin Ekusupuresu) is an anime television film created for the Nippon Television Network's annual 24-hour charity program, Ai wa Chikyū o Suku, which roughly translates to "Love Saves the Earth".
Since late-night anime is broadcast during non-peak hours (the standard overall viewership rate on weekdays is approximately 33% at midnight (about half of prime time), and around 12% at 2 AM. [ 2 ] ) around 2009, achieving a rating of 2.0% or higher was considered a "passing grade," [ 3 ] while 4.0% or higher was deemed "high viewership."