sizab

artist on hiatus

  • he/they/she

30+ / bi trans / ilu <3

i'm an artist making my way through life, this site seems neat.

Adult subjects and jokes may occur but no explicit porn. that's a DIFFERENT account.

Icon/PFP: gallusgalluss @ tumblr


carrd / links hub!
sizab.carrd.co/

Bigg
@Bigg

Thinking about Toriyama tonight and kind of marvelling at how SAD I am. I mean, sure, I grew up watching DBZ pretty religiously, from the start of the series right through the Majin Buu arc. But I didn't stick with it after that. I've played a couple of Dragon Quests. Played Chrono Trigger but never finished it. I think the only one of his manga I've read was a One Piece one-shot he did two decades ago. And yet, reading the news, it felt like a hole being blown through my chest.

His work was foundational, and I mean that in the most reverent possible terms. Foundational, in that without him, so very little of what I love, so very little of what I love about what I love, would exist, at all, full stop. Foundational, in that his work was so vital and omnipresent that it became almost invisible, in the way that the rotation of the Earth is invisible.

And again, I wasn't a Dragon Ball superfan or anything like that. But you didn't NEED to be. I think part of why his death is hitting so hard is that it's making me stop and consider just how MUCH he did, how it's EVERYWHERE. How its essence has endured decades, undiluted by legions of copycats, lackluster adaptation, or rampant memeification. You could, with a straight face, compare his level of cultural influence to that of Shakespeare, and that dude NEVER could have made the Dragon Quest Slime.

I dunno, man. It's gutting. It really felt like he'd be around forever. Everything that dude touched seemed to gain a certain sense of timeless eternity. Characters, monsters, landscapes, vehicles, clothes, layouts. It just seemed to make sense that he'd be eternal himself.


blazehedgehog
@blazehedgehog

Thinking about how Toei had to send letters to the Mexican government because whole entire cities were hosting free, public Dragon Ball Super watch parties.

Toei even went as far as trying to get the Japanese government involved, hoping to put pressure on what they thought was "inciting mass piracy." Some cities complied... but others didn't, leading to some truly massive events.

I mean, sure, when Seinfeld ended, they publicly broadcast the series finale in Times Square. It's estimated around 5,000 people stopped to watch that finale. According to Torrentfreak, over 10,000 people attended the Dragon Ball Super finale watch party in Ecuador alone, and it was only one of many such parties.

You just don't get that with anything else. Ever. This man stirred something in people that is truly rare.


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in reply to @Bigg's post:

I'm with you there. The only thing he directly worked on that I was that big of a fan of was Dragon Quest 9 specifically. 11 is the only other DQ game I've touched but I never finished it. I'd been meaning to get into Dragon Ball and Chrono Trigger for a while but never got around to it.

His passing made me realize that he inspired me more than I thought... I got a bit emotional last night thinking about it. I'm an artist myself, and I hadn't stopped and thought about how his work influenced my own style until now.

I've been thinking about the reach of Toriyama's work and it's truly staggering. Oda put it well when he compared him to a tree. I didn't think of myself as a Toriyama fan, but without fully realizing it I've always lived in a Toriyama world.

in reply to @blazehedgehog's post:

Sensei Akira leaved an unique impression in our culture, we arent gonna celebrate Women day here in Mexico anymore they said, we are declaring March 8 Arkira day, yes, my people love Dragon Ball as nobody has an idea, you need to be Mexican just to understand how much we love Goku