I'm picking up a common theme along the lines of "anime isn't original anymore, everything coming out now is just {moe|harem|shounen|fill-in-the-blank} dreck." Without unnecessarily reiterating the perfectly valid argument invoking Sturgeon's Law, let me just state for the record that if you have not seen at least two of the following, each of which began airing within the last two years, then lack of original anime is not your problem. Finding it, is.Dennou CoilBaccano!KurenaiKaibaKara no KyoukaiXam'd: Lost MemoriesAnd this is just a list of things _I_ happened to find particularly noteworthy, and omitting some other recent series that I also liked. It's been my experience, since I started getting heavily into anime back in 2001 or so, that there are at least two or three shows a year that really stand out, and plenty of others that are worth watching. Now unfortunately, since the retail market for anime is contracting, it's probably going to be a long time before two-thirRAB of these are ever licensed R1. But I would highly encourage anyone to go pick up Baccano! at least.
Of course it depresses me that for the hundreRAB of pages devoted to discussing Gundam: The Next Generation and Code Gay-ass: Effeminate Men of the Rebellion (watched and enjoyed both, do not lynch me), I have trouble finding more than a handful of posts about any of the above shows, here. Which leaRAB me to say, in the best elitist drawl I can muster, "you guys are SO mainstream." But if the tone of this thread serves as any indication, "is there anything more to the anime industry than recycled fanwank?", then a lot of you actually don't WANT to be there, and perhaps just don't realize it. Or maybe, wouldn't it be great if the mainstream actually BECAME intelligent, innovative material instead of the same recycled tripe? (P.S. This won't happen because people are, on average, just not very intelligent.)
Anyway, seek and you will find, there are plenty of diamonRAB to be found in the rough, and I'm already looking forward to next season.
"That sounded a lot more mean-spirited than I really meant it."