I AM WERE I AM

siti nur ateeqa
19 july 1992
kelantan
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googlekn jer~~

i'm also love anime....

i not only love korean..i'm also love anime from japan....love it~this is some anime that i'm always watch~

kerorobighead.jpg A comedy originally created by mangaka Mine Yoshizaki, KERORO GUNSO was animated by director Junichi Sato in 2004 and it has become an instant success. The story depicts a platoon of frog-like aliens sent from the planet Keron in attempt to conquer Earth (a.k.a Pekopon). The protagonist, Keroro Gunso (Sergeant), was to lead a team of 4 in this invasion but that plan is quickly put into a halt when he encounter a human family of 3 – the Hinata’s. After his army abandoned his platoon on Earth, Keroro is forced to do meaningless chores for the family as he is being simulated into a member of the Hinata family.

Like many Japanese animated comedies, the series compile of cunning wordplays (with puns and homophones) and physical humor. The biggest difference that sets Keroro Gunso apart from the rest is its uncharacteristically numerous reference to pop culture, particularly its parody to other well-known animation (such as Gundam, Dragon Ball and many others). However most of the references do link to animes that are at their peak of success during the 80’s, which make it hard for some of the younger audiences to understand. Interestingly, only Gundam references are explicit, since Bandai hold both the rights to Keroro Gunso and the Gundam franchise. In many of the parodies, famous scenes would be mimicked from various animes (Evangelion, Slam Dunk, Kamen Rider etc…) deliberately to recreate that same feeling as you would get when watching the the original anime. There is also a moral in almost every episode too, however Keroro Gunso uses the approach of poking fun at the consequences rather then being too direct or cliche. Because of its parodies/references to so many different kinds of anime, Keroro Gunso provides an unprecedented sense that all genres are crossed and meshed together. With that very same reason, the serie itself just seems to reach a more diverse demographic than any other animation has ever done.



K-ON



A story about four high school girls that try to sustain their schools popular music club despite being unable to read music or play instruments

hayate-the-combat-butler-1-cover.jpg

Hayate The Combat Butler shows that while poor people might not have money, they do have super resistance to everything! Which is almost like a kind of super power.

Story:
Hayate is a poor kid. Like literally, he has no money. His parents are pretty bad at balancing their checkbooks, so Hayate has been forced to work ever since he was young. One day for Christmas, Hayate gets the one present that keeps on giving. The gift of having your bodily organs sold to the Yakuza. Oh wait, that’s not a gift.

So anyway, Hayate escapes and tries kidnapping a cute girl in order to get a king’s ransom! But his plan backfires and he ends up saving her from other kidnappers. She’s grateful, and makes Hayate her butler. With the help of Maria the maid, Klaus the head butler, and a talking tiger named Tama, Hayate will have to pay back his debt. Over 40 or so years.


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