Hi, my name is Laurine. This site recently showed up through random Googling. (Hi Dave M, Ken W, Doug O; someday I'll visit Canada again.) Allakazam the Great was the first anime I saw and loved, am still a big Monkey King fan. In the early 1970s Fred Patten ran a bookstore in Long Beach, where I mail ordered ninja manga. I still enjoy anime, mostly older shows, but don't watch it as frequently. Fave old anime includes Hokuto no Ken, Panzer World Galient, Video Warrior Laserion, Escaflowne, G Gundam, Rurouni Kenshin, Xabungle, to name a few. I still have the videotapes with lots of old Japanese shows, but don't know how good the video quality is.
1980 - San Francisco Japantown and L.A. Little Tokyo were big attractions for finding anime soundtracks and giant robot souvenirs. I still have a Shogun Warrior figure that I glued together back then. In 1977 I was at an L.A. science fiction convention, LosCon, watching giant robot anime with folks who officially started the C/FO a month later. Fred Patten persuaded me to join the C/FO at the 1980 Westercon. I started C/FO Sacramento in 1983 with some subtitled Captain Harlock episodes from a San Francisco Bay Area channel and raw anime episodes sent by my friend stationed in Okinawa. Anime Sacramento still meets a few times a year and is the oldest still existing anime club in North/Central California. The latest Anime Sacramento showing was in November 2012. Seven people came, from as far as San Jose. We watched Tiger & Bunny episodes and the recent Dragon Age animated feature.
In 1985 I started trading with a Tokyo penpal for raw anime episodes. Later a Hawaiian penpal sent subtitled Hokuto no Ken episodes off local tv there. I traded copies to fans for more anime episodes (raw and fan-subbed), OAVs, and movies, which I spread around to fans all over the country and a few people in Canada. In 1987 Osamu Tezuka came to town to give a talk at CSUS, and did a quick Kimba sketch for me. Also in 1987 I started the bi-monthly Anime Sacramento Newsletter, which went out via snail mail. Now it's an email-zine, with anime news but mostly news about upcoming Asian action films. (If I mention Aging Otaku Lounge enough times in the newsletter, maybe more of the aging otaku I know will join this forum.) In 1985 I got to visit Okinawa, picked up anime OST records and bought Dagger of Kamui on videotape. In 1988 I went on the Ladera anime tour to Kyoto and Tokyo, including Tatsunoko and Nippon Sunrise studios. That time I bought anime-theme CDs, while others on the tour stocked up on laser disks. I still listen to my CDs; do they still play their LDs?
In summer 1993 I got to meet in person some penpals at the two Bay Area anime conventions, Anime Expo (Oakland) and Anime America (San Jose). In 2007 I went to the World SF Convention in Yokohama, got to meet Japanese anime fans and buy their fanzines. Akira Kushida gave a concert at the convention. When he sang his tokusatsu and 1980s anime theme songs, the audience all sang along (me too). The San Diego Comic-Con in July 2012 included a San Diego C/FO reunion. James Long, Alec Orrock, B.D. Banzai were there. Even Mark Merlino put in an appearance. I enjoyed listening to their stories of Southern California anime fandom. Every year I get to FanimeCon in San Jose and at least one of the local Sac-Anime conventions.
Hi from Northern California
- whitesnake
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- Anime Fan Since: 1980
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Re: Hi from Northern California
Hi Laurine! Good to hear from you again, and welcome!
Re: Hi from Northern California
You are forever awesome to me for having a "Panda & the Magic Serpent" (Hakujaden) avatar! 

Re: Hi from Northern California
Hi Laurine! Any idea (yet) what of the old KIKU stuff you still have? Most of the tapes I got from that period have aged badly and I'm trying to transfer them as quickly as I can before they are lost forever. A never ending battle. Been at it several years off and on but the pile hardly ever goes down. Ditto with my Dr. Who collection, all the convention footage I shot, early fansubs I was involved with, much old TV recordings for several sites, printed materials, etc. I really despair that it will just vanish with time. But I'm still at it. At least I have my own house now so no worries it will just get thrown out. That happened 2 years ago when I moved from the old place following the death of my mother. I lost 2/3rds of my stuff as there simply was no more room for it in the new place. That said, I managed to keep all the tapes (over 7,000 of them) for now.
I haven't been anywhere in 12 years. Last I saw you was at the Chicon in 2000. I was unable to attend the 2012 one, but I'd love to make a trip to California again. Perhaps next year.
Hope you are well.
Doug
I haven't been anywhere in 12 years. Last I saw you was at the Chicon in 2000. I was unable to attend the 2012 one, but I'd love to make a trip to California again. Perhaps next year.
Hope you are well.
Doug
Re: Hi from Northern California
Hi Laurine. Welcome.whitesnake wrote:Hi, my name is Laurine. This site recently showed up through random Googling.
Your comment just made me remember something that had been on the back of my mind for a while. How DO people find their way to this site? It's sort of funny to think of a bunch of older anime fans just typing "aging anime fans" into google in a random moment of anime fan introspection.

Re: Hi from Northern California
I sought out a place like this specifically, mainly because I'm friggin' 34 and it's depressing now that everyone and their dog likes anime, but they've never heard of the anime that I actually like.llj wrote:Hi Laurine. Welcome.whitesnake wrote:Hi, my name is Laurine. This site recently showed up through random Googling.
Your comment just made me remember something that had been on the back of my mind for a while. How DO people find their way to this site? It's sort of funny to think of a bunch of older anime fans just typing "aging anime fans" into google in a random moment of anime fan introspection.
- Animusubi
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- Anime Fan Since: 1989
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Re: Hi from Northern California
Welcome to the forum Laurine! I found this forum by way of Google also! And I am a very big Monkey King fan as well~ :3
Re: Hi from Northern California
Welcome to the Lounge.
- greg
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Re: Hi from Northern California
Wow, that is quite a history! Plus you got to meet Tezuka Osamu before he died. Welcome to the forum. I think I must have missed something, but what does C/FO stand for?
My presence on the Net, with plenty of random geekiness:
My homepage
My YouTube channel
My Flickr photostream
My Tumblr page
My homepage
My YouTube channel
My Flickr photostream
My Tumblr page
- whitesnake
- Posts: 33
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- Anime Fan Since: 1980
Re: Hi from Northern California
Hi again, I'm really happy to finally be here.
Since whitesnake is my user name on another forum, to be consistent here, I use the avatar picture from Panda and the Magic Serpent, which is the white snake story. I found it on dvd in a dollar store several years ago. But the anime feature is one I enjoyed watching over 30 years ago on videotape. Easy enough to find an image from the movie, cut out a piece and shrink it. Other forums I joined let the members use bigger avatar pictures.
Doug, I still have all my KIKU videos, just don't know how good a condition they're in. The printed materials (old pro- and fanzines, C/FO apazines) are all still in good condition, packed tightly in boxes or crammed onto a bookshelf. 7,000 tapes? wow! A lot more than I ever collected. I still go to a few conventions, San Diego and Chicago earlier this year. No more San Diego - too much trouble to get membership and too crowded. Next summer - San Antonio. Just let me know if/when you come to California. That last time, I was at work. Now I'm retired.
The random Googling must have been on the word "otaku". Always nice to meet another Monkey King fan. I have the 4-book translation of Journey to the West by Anthony Yu, a Chinese graphic novel, random tv episodes, movie versions from Japan, HK, Vietnam, and the 1970s Monkey Magic episodes from Japan, dubbed in pigeon English.
I think I used to know one or two people in Central Anime, way back when.
C/FO - the Cartoon Fantasy Organization, the first anime club in the U.S., formed in May 1977 in Los Angeles, and it sprouted chapters all over the U.S., before crashing back to a few clubs in 1987. (Fan politics, seems to happen to just about every group.) c_fo.tripod.com is the current website for the club, which continues to meet monthly.
Since whitesnake is my user name on another forum, to be consistent here, I use the avatar picture from Panda and the Magic Serpent, which is the white snake story. I found it on dvd in a dollar store several years ago. But the anime feature is one I enjoyed watching over 30 years ago on videotape. Easy enough to find an image from the movie, cut out a piece and shrink it. Other forums I joined let the members use bigger avatar pictures.
Doug, I still have all my KIKU videos, just don't know how good a condition they're in. The printed materials (old pro- and fanzines, C/FO apazines) are all still in good condition, packed tightly in boxes or crammed onto a bookshelf. 7,000 tapes? wow! A lot more than I ever collected. I still go to a few conventions, San Diego and Chicago earlier this year. No more San Diego - too much trouble to get membership and too crowded. Next summer - San Antonio. Just let me know if/when you come to California. That last time, I was at work. Now I'm retired.
The random Googling must have been on the word "otaku". Always nice to meet another Monkey King fan. I have the 4-book translation of Journey to the West by Anthony Yu, a Chinese graphic novel, random tv episodes, movie versions from Japan, HK, Vietnam, and the 1970s Monkey Magic episodes from Japan, dubbed in pigeon English.
I think I used to know one or two people in Central Anime, way back when.
C/FO - the Cartoon Fantasy Organization, the first anime club in the U.S., formed in May 1977 in Los Angeles, and it sprouted chapters all over the U.S., before crashing back to a few clubs in 1987. (Fan politics, seems to happen to just about every group.) c_fo.tripod.com is the current website for the club, which continues to meet monthly.