FLCL: New Seasons?

A beloved, obscure anime with a bizarre lack of fanfare

The subtitle might seem a bit misleading, and it is in some manner. Thing is, I found out about this last week, but it seems that Adult Swim released a teaser in March of 2022 advertising two new seasons subtitled Grunge and Shoegaze.

Yeah, I used the same video as I teased in last week’s post. And that’s the point, this was all the evidence I could find of the new seasons. Normally, my posts are long-form, even if I do on-the-fly research (which tends to be most of the time, honestly speaking), but with so little news about the new seasons of FLCL, I couldn’t help but wonder if it did fly under the radar, which is a shame honestly. It premiered on Toonami in 2001 a short time after the original six episodes were made in Japan, and came back in 2018, during the April Fool’s joke as a promotional piece for FLCL: Alternative and Progressive later that year. The most I could find on it were a few articles and some extra videos providing analysis on the ten-second teaser.

That said, FLCL original, Alternative, and Progressive still give me something to work with. So the most I can do is write about what the other three seasons entailed, fan reception, and perhaps I’ll try my best to speculate on what Shoegaze and Grunge are meant to be, though considering the nature of the property, those names may not mean anything.

Starting with the original, FLCL (read as Fooly Cooly) was launched in Spring 2000 and is remarkably short at six episodes. On the surface, it looks like wacky nonsense that not even JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure would touch with a Stand holding a 5-meter barge pole, but fans of the series recommend watching the entire thing multiple times with a notepad nearby for some homework.

Depending on what you’re focusing on — which is its own feat because there’s a lot that goes on in just this show — you may be looking at the main character, Naota Nandaba, learn what it means to be mature while trying to speedrun childhood or you may be looking at the highlighted character, Haruko Haruhara, prepare to face off against organizations known as Medical Mechanica and the Fraternity so she can steal ultimate power from the pirate king Atomsk.

Just kidding!

Now maybe it’s me, but I’ve heard people focus on one or the other without considering that they run concurrent. Most often, I hear people focus on one or the other, likely because Naota has nothing to do with Atomsk or Medical Mechanica… except that the connecting piece between them is Haruko herself, who introduces herself to the scene by speeding on a Vespa and braining the boy with a bass guitar. The impact gives him a ginormous bump that morphs into a horn that acts as a portal for which a robot emerges from his forehead. Even if Naota isn’t directly involved with these intergalactic shenanigans, it doesn’t stop Haruko from pulling him along while some of the other people in his life come along for the ride. Hell, looking at the rest of the townsfolk, Naota might as well be out of place, which is part of the point of FLCL’s meaning as the plot goes along. I’m not saying it’s bad to focus on one aspect over the other, there’s no wrong way to interpret something, even if the conclusions you come across are different from the general consensus, but thinking one is more important than the other is a bit misleading, even if the two don’t connect directly. As an example, William Shakespeare’s play King Lear was said to be performed on Boxing Day in 1606 and a few months later the Kingdom of England successfully set up the Virginia colony after failing the first two times twenty years earlier, yet there’s no connection between them aside from the country because Shakespeare’s contributions to geopolitics and colonialism are nonexistent.

On the whole though, most fans of FLCL original have lots of love for it. The points of divergence are sharp and clear between that of Progressive and Alternative. Progressive is about a girl named Hidomi Hibajiri whose personality is a match with that if Naota, except she’s most defined by her cat-ear headphones and unlike Naota, she chooses to ignore everything. The boy at least interacted with people; this girl would honestly be mistaken as a “relatable character” by some. Off topic, but I hate how relatable has come to equal jaded and gloomy. Is it hard to relate to a smily, joyful character? I haven’t seen it in full, but the clips of Tomo-chan is a Girl that feature Carol Olston specifically are some of my favorite, and we are nothing alike.

Anyway, like Naota, Hidomi was hit by a weird woman in a weird vehicle who goes on to live with her and her mother, Hinae, as the maid and of course Medical Mechanica returns to bear its fangs. But where’s Haruko in this? Well, she’s the teacher and this time she goes by the name Haruha Raharu. Now based on that description, this sounds like a skeleton wearing the skin of FLCL, and to some, it is. It’s not the same FLCL with a hidden meaning about growing up and boyhood; the original meaning is lost without Naota anywhere to be seen. Then again, I say that this is a fallacy from a fallacy, which draws the conclusion that Naota’s story is the only thing worth focusing on while all that other tomfoolery is going on in the background. This is true, but I’m hard-pressed to say that it should be isolated as much as it is. I’m more of the belief that it’s a coming-of-age story with a challenge for the boy to overcome as opposed to two separate things that barely interact with each other.

The widespread attachment to Naota at the cost of the rest of the plot might be an attribution to the general weirdness of anime being taken as normal and so the plot with Haruko and Atomsk and Medical Mechanica and what not isn’t seen as important as a jaded young boy growing up with unreliable relationships, and I understand that argument, but I also don’t like that. Not that I think it’s a bad faith argument to emphasize the boy’s importance, but to me, it’s more that Naota Nandaba’s story, while as important to the meaning of the show, isn’t what I would call the be-all, end-all.

I also don’t think the Haruko-Atomsk plot is meant to be the main focus of the show either. A video by akidearest on YouTube explains that the director, Kazuya Tsurumaki, wanted to break the rules as much as possible when making the show.

For Alternative, it’s got a wider cast and a more sociable protagonist, Kana Koumoto, and her friends, Mossan, Pets, and Hijiri, all of whom are in the latter half of high school and all of whom are also said to lead unremarkable lives until the giant monster jellyfish shows up and incinerates everything… oh, my mistake, that’s SpongeBob. Same as before: Haruko, bass guitar, Atomsk, the whole shebang.

If you’ve been following along, you’ll notice that as we progress, the protagonists get older and older. Naota is 12 years old, Hidomi is 14, and Kana et al are around 17-18. So for the most part, everyone is growing up and whatever we can expect from Grunge and Shoegaze, slated for release later this year might follow this path or do something completely different.

Across all three of them, FLCL at least maintains the relationships theme, whether it highlights how unreliable they can be as we age, learning to soften up to people, or how hard it can be to maintain them over time. Akidearest’s video linked above shows that FLCL’s plot is a complicated mess of many things and my research on the show and this blog reflect how hard it is to understand. It’s not just a distraction, it’s a fractal distraction, or at least that’s the frame that it’s wearing.

Part of the intention of this specific blog was to look at why a lot of fans of OG FLCL don’t give Progressive and Alternative as much of a chance with a lot of them seeing clones that wear the name as a mask while also questioning the necessity of a double-sequel after seventeen or so years in naptime, but for me, this highlights a number of false conclusions about FLCL and the coming-of-age genre. I didn’t get it at the time, but when I read Catcher in the Rye in high school, I just wrote Holden Caulfield off as a spoiled brat. While I still think that, I’ve come to realize that sometimes he has a point and it’s not all about misunderstanding the world from the mind of an adolescent.

All things considered, Progressive and Alternative follow the coming-of-age model quite nicely, even in the piecemeal fashion as presented. Do I think any one of them are better than the other? That’s a loaded question for me as I think there’s an audience for each type of animation style within the confines of any given animation and specifically FLCL, but as far as plot goes, I can’t really find one I prefer to the other. I feel about all of FLCL the same way I feel about JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure. Everyone has criticisms for and against some aspect of it, and I’m not above that, but the connecting element for JJBA is the family legacy of the Joestar clan’s fight against Dio and his cronies or just fate itself. I don’t have a part I dislike, but I do have some that I lean more towards than most.

Similarly, there’s a lot to examine about all three seasons of FLCL so far. In isolation or association, they all do their job well enough while following different stages in life. But that doesn’t answer if I think one of them is superior. To that I say–

Cop out answer incoming: declaring preference for one over the other is complicated for me. I tend to do it selectively, and with full expectations that what I like now will be different in the next few years. So not superior to anything else, but circling back to my point about relatable characters being gloomy and dejected, I like FLCL: Alternative because of the extra cast of characters to work with than just what I see in the others as a textbook case of how not to communicate. The others are still good in their own right, though.

April Fools’ Day and Adult Swim

Pranks and Adult Animation

April 1 is a golden opportunity for a lot of people to play practical jokes on each other, and there’s often no rules as to how this can go. As long as no one gets hurt then have at it. In the case of TV, even the news likes to have their go at the festivities. Personally, I think there’s more mileage in animation which brings me to the topic of this post’s title.

Perhaps by virtue of being an adult animation TV channel, Adult Swim has a knack for partaking in the jokes and merriment of April Fools’ Day. In some cases, where the program runs from late night March 31 to early morning April 1, they’ll engage in some tomfoolery on the shows they plan on airing, messing with the schedule, or other such on-air silliness. As a bonus for them, it’s an opportunity to air shows set to debut sometime in the future.

What interests me the most of all is that this isn’t exclusive to just the Adult Swim block. In the US, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, and Toonami, all air on the same channel. CN is the primary daytime block; by 9:00 PM every night Adult Swim airs from Sunday to Friday all night, handing the reins back to CN at 5:00 AM; and on Saturday from midnight to 5:00 AM, Toonami airs.

All three have a rotating body of regular shows, some of which have gone down in animation history from Johnny Bravo, Dexter’s Laboratory, Power Puff Girls, and Teen Titans on Cartoon Network; King of the Hill, Futurama, Family Guy, Aqua Teen Hunger Force on Adult Swim; and Toonami’s had a variety of different anime, the most common ones ranging from Cowboy Bebop, to FLCL, to Naruto, Dragon Ball Z, Bleach, and One Piece, some of which are still on the block albeit in the dead of night.

Every April 1, viewers of Adult Swim and sometimes Toonami are in for any given treat. The first round of AS pranks began back in 2004 as a series of slight alterations to the channel’s shows. They were quick to do the same to Toonami and as the years went on, they got progressively more spontaneous. The tradition was still ongoing even after Toonami was canned in 2008. The Wikipedia page for Toonami describes the cancellation of Toonami as low-ratings. But I think I know what the true culprit was for that. Toonami is normally hosted by a robot character known as TOM who introduces the audience to the show and over the years the first time around, he’s gone through more than a few appearance changes through interactive events known as Total Immersion Events.

These events have been a staple of the block for years and generally involve a crisis of some sort attacking TOM’s station where he and AI partner SARA host the programming block. After the crisis is solved or averted or sometimes succeeded into killing TOM, a new appearance is adopted and the appearance of TOM 4 in 2007 was why it was axed the following year.

I wouldn’t say TOM 4’s appearance straight up assassinated the block, but it was a major contributor to the dip in viewership.

For about four years, Toonami was dead until it was revived for April Fools 2012 with a return to form. TOM 3, or in this case 3.5, returned to catch the viewers up to speed that night, by airing some old shows that have been on the block years prior, notably Fullmetal Alchemist and Tenchi Muyo. It wasn’t until a month later that executives confirmed on social media that Toonami was back for good this time.

Ever since, the April Fools’ Day pranks haven’t stopped and occasionally there’s a crossover into Toonami as previously mentioned. One of my personal favorites has to come from 2018. Being a western animation block airing English dubbed anime, the block normally doesn’t air anything in Japanese unless it’s something along the lines of an interview with a mangaka, a director, a studio in Japan or something else. Well, for 2018, not only were Japanese-dubbed anime put on the TV, TOM and SARA themselves were also given Japanese dubs, as was the logo.

Normally, April Fools’ is where AS markets the premiere of an upcoming show or a show’s next season later in the year, and for Toonami, I believe they were especially excited for this as FLCL: Alternative and Progressive were slated to air later that year. Additionally, they put on the 2004 Masaaki Yuasa produced movie Mind Game, also in Japanese, because this April Fools’ wasn’t weird enough.

This still goes down as one of my favorite April Fools’ events from Adult Swim and I was almost expecting them to do it again especially recently. Last month, they stuck it out with the April Fools’ tradition as expected and poking around on the associated subreddit, I kinda got my hopes up a bit. Part of the charm of these events is that its unpredictable. The only thing a viewer can expect from these is a deviation from the schedule and an introduction to a new show or new season of an existing show. This tradition was honored and for 2023, audiences got a taste of new show Royal Crackers and another season was confirmed for The Eric Andre Show and Teenage Euthanasia.

I was expecting something for Toonami this year, but it seemed Adult Swim took the glory. The daily discourse these days has been that of the progress in AI technology, so to capitalize on that, Adult Swim used a generative AI (think DALL-E or Midjourney) to run their programs in the early morning hours of April 1, mildly disrupting the run of Smiling Friends and putting a rerun of Space Ghost: Coast to Coast. It’s hard to explain in wording or writing so have a look at the livestream from that day.

In contrast, Toonami aired the shows as normal whilst paying homage to the joke that put them back on TV. The reason I expected a 2018-style makeover was because Toonami comes on every Saturday night at midnight and April began on a Saturday, but this was more of a miscalculation on my end. Toonami began about three hours earlier than the midnight setup that it has now. Double bills are also quite rare in this regard, so while Adult Swim did give us something stupid to laugh at early Saturday morning, this wasn’t guaranteed for Toonami. Again, April Fools’ Day pranks on AS are unpredictable after all.

So the joke is very much on me, but I still think it was fun this year. Another possible double bill April Fools’ Day prank could probably occur the next time April begins on a Saturday and because 2024 is a Leap Year, the next time that’ll happen coincidentally will be another Leap Year: 2028, which is the year I turn 30. Again, this is speculation. I’m not Nostradamus trying to see what’s in the future…

Significant changes to your life are in the future.

One more thing before I end this blog post, I may have a topic for the next week that’ll throw my schedule into the fray and it concerns FLCL mentioned above. Here’s a sneak peek:

Admittedly, this was from March 2022, but I’m gonna write about it next week because I didn’t know about it at the time.