I am referring, of course, to last week's 2008 Anime Expo in Los Angeles, California.
When I was first asked to cover the expo, I was somewhat reluctant. My lacking knowledge of the subject matter, I believed, would render me somewhat unfit for the job. However, I was assured that my role at the convention would be to be to simply report the facts.
"I will take on this gruesome beast," I thought to myself, feeling somewhat reassured. "But I'll need backup."
It was at this point that I accepted the assignment under the provision that the company acquire press credentials for my companion and Otaku expert, Sirose Loyola. Her role was to be that of an IGN photographer, and my personal advisor on the ways of the weird.
We arrived at the LACC on Thursday, July 3rd at 11:00 a.m., IGN Comics editor Richard George and I had set a tentative randezvous time of 12:00 p.m., which he naturally interpretted as extremely tentative, arriving at 12:45 p.m. After we obtained our credentials and unnecessary bag of AX-branded swag, it was off to the first task of the con; an interview with J-Pop sensation Shoko Nakagawa.
Shokotan, as she is affectionaly called by her fans, was slated to perform at the Nokia Theater as part of the Anime Expo's weekend festivities, and served as a guest of honor at various events throughout the duration of the con. When Ms. Loyola and I arrived at the meeting room in which the interview was to be held, we found Shoko sitting patiently, elegantly dressed as one of her favorite anime characters (whose name escapes me), with her entourage and Sony-BMG representative.
After the interview we rejoined Comics Editor Richard George, whom had been strolling the LACC's South Hall, collecting free stuff, and perousing the various vendor booths. It was then that we received one of our more amusing assignments: taking photographs of the convention's many costumed patrons.
For those unfamiliar with anime events, many convention goers come dressed as their favorite anime, manga, tv show, movie, video game, or comic book characters, generally, but not exclusively, from Japanese properties. The phenomena is identified as "cosplay" (Costume-Play), and typically involves mimicing not only the appearance of any given character, but also the personality of any given character. The result is an initially surreal, often laughable, and at times, irritating spectacle.
Naturally, the convention-spanning task of cosplayer photography was relegated to Ms. Loyola, whom took to the task with much gusto. Over the span of the three days that we were in attendance, Ms. Loyola took over 700 pictures of cosplayers of the good, bad, and downright terrifying persuasions. Anime/manga enthusiasts of all varieties were dressed as nearly every type of character imagineable--men were dressed as women, women were dressed as men, both sexes were dressed as robots--it was bizarre. Some attendees went all out, wearing quality detailed, professional or homemade costumes. Others did not. One particular instance involved a rather unhygenic looking lad in excercise shorts and flip flops, wearing only a cardboard box with a single line of words scribbled across in marker, for a costume. All the while I was assigned to various industry press-conferences and panels where the biggest publishers announced their lineup for the remainder of 2008, and early 2009.
It was only the next day that we were able to meet Hayter during a press-exclusive conference. When Ms. Loyola and I arrived in the small meeting room, Hayter was up and about the room signing autographs, and shaking hands. Shortly after we sat down, Hayter approached us,
Anyways, moving on, the final event that we were charged with attending and photographing was the expo's big production, the masquerade. The masquerade took place in the stunningly beautiful (and relatively new) Nokia Theater. The masquerade Ms. Loyola knew, and I soon discovered, consisted entirely of cosplaying enthusiasts performing original skits related to various anime series to dubbed audio dialogues and soundtracks. Ultimately, however, the event was a wash. The consistently annoying AX staff would not allow Ms. Loyola, whose photographs would have been published to an audience of over 31 million readers, to move out her seat to take pictures. So, in the absence of a flash photography and varying angles and subsequent blurry photographs, we sat back and attempted to enjoy the show. Which, for me, proved to be impossible. After the show concluded, we walked to mein auto in a haze of exhaustion, delerium, and defeat.
In the end, working the Anime Expo was perhaps one of my most physically, psychologically, and emotionally grueling assignments to date. Unfortunately, the quality of Ms. Loyola and I's work was such that it apparently caught the eye of some higher ups, and I am now actively being considered for further convention-oriented assignments.
Damn it all to hell.
2 comments:
Wayyyyy awesome!
I came across your blog while browsing.
I really like it.
Well feel free to read/comment my posts.
I'd greatly appreciate it.
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Stumbled across this looking for photos of David Hayter, because I'm a sad git. Lovely read. Would love to meet the guy, he sounds fantastic. :)
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