Patrick W. Galbraith photo

Patrick W. Galbraith


“I guess I'm a "single aristocrat" (dokushin kizoku). This is a category of people in their thirties who have a decent income, but are not obligated to spend it all on family. Usually a man in his thirties or forties would have a family, house, and loan. But we single aristocrats don't. So we spend all our money on hobbies. If I get married, I can't continue this life, unless my future wife is an otaku girl. If she's an otaku and a working woman, we can share space and save money, and thus have more money to spend on hobbies. I have no admiration for the regular "salary-man" (white collar corporate employee) life. I don't want to fully support a woman financially. I like independent women. I'm going to continue my hobby-centered lifestyle no matter what. --Yanai Jun”
Patrick W. Galbraith
Read more
“Everyone says I am an otaku, but recently everyone is an otaku, even if they just have a hobby. If someone says they are an otaku, I am a little doubtful. --Uchimura Amika”
Patrick W. Galbraith
Read more
“Otaku is a label applied to and adopted by those people who build a culture around anime, manga, videotapes and videogames. Their ideas and values were different from the mainstream, and so they were labeled otaku, or called themselves otaku, to indicate that difference.... In the end, otaku is just a label created to contain difference. --Ono Norihiro”
Patrick W. Galbraith
Read more
“There are limits to human beings and science, and fiction is one way to expose those limits. --Ono Norihiro”
Patrick W. Galbraith
Read more
“When we get older we buy the things we really wanted as a kid and can finally afford and appreciate. But it all goes back to that original longing. --Ono Norihiro”
Patrick W. Galbraith
Read more
“There are only two types of people in the world--those who became otaku and those who didn't--and the latter just can't understand what the former is so excited about."--Ono Norihiro”
Patrick W. Galbraith
Read more