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Rantaro Kiyama (黄山 乱太郎, Kiyama Rantarō) Voiced by: Fumihiro Okabayashi (Japanese); Matt Hill (seasons 1-2), Kevin K. Gomez (season 5) (English) Also known as The Head Honcho or Honcho / The Boss (クミチョー, Kumicho). Rantaro is a member of Beigoma Academy BeyClub and BC Sol as well as a coach for The Bombers.
Hill's roles include Ed in Ed, Edd n Eddy, Kevin Keene/Captain N in Captain N: The Game Master, Kira Yamato in Gundam Seed and Gundam Seed Destiny, Raphael in Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation, Ryo Sanada in Ronin Warriors, Carlos in Transformers: Armada, Ironhide in Transformers: Energon, and Artha Penn and Dragon Booster in Dragon Booster.
An English dub of the anime premiered on Teletoon in Canada on November 4, 2017 [2] and on Disney XD in the United States on December 4, 2017. [3] The opening theme is "Evolution Burst!" The ending themes are "Beyxercise" for the first 26 episodes and "Beyxercise 2" for the remainder of the series.
Mieko Suzuki (鈴木 三枝子, Suzuki Mieko, born June 20, 1958), better known by the stage names Teiyū Ichiryūsai (一龍斎 貞友 (Ichiryūsai Teiyū)) and Mie Suzuki (鈴木 みえ, Suzuki Mie), is a Japanese voice actress and kōdan-shi known for voicing Masao Sato in Crayon Shin-chan, Sumire Sakura in Chibi Maruko-chan and Shinbee Fukutomi in Nintama Rantaro.
Any couple or even an individual, regardless of gender or sexual orientation, can take part in the swinging lifestyle. Swinging is a broad community that includes many different roles.
In Real Life is a Canadian reality show in which eighteen young contestants aged 12–14 race across North America and compete in a series of real-life jobs, aimed to "discover the skills, strength, and stamina it takes to make it in real life." [1] The show is developed and produced by Apartment 11 Productions.
In part 2 of season 4, Sarah finds out that she is pregnant. Though she is nervous at first, once she tells John B, the two are excited and ready to usher in a new chapter of their life .
Rakudai Ninja Rantaro started its serialization in the children's magazine Asahi Shogakusei Shinbun in April 1986. [2] The series ended with the 65th compiled tankōbon volume in November 2019 [3] and last appeared in Asahi Shogakusei Shinbun the following December due to the author, Sōbē Amako, suffering a stroke in January of that year. [2]