『Manga With Josh』のカバーアート

Manga With Josh

Manga With Josh

著者: Joshua Rodriguez
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Welcome to Manga With Josh, the show where manga obsession isn’t just accepted — it’s celebrated. Join Josh each episode as he explores standout series, unforgettable arcs, wild theories, and the creative minds behind the pages. If you love manga or want recommendations that hit, this is the place to be.

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エピソード
  • Episode 17 - Please Go Home Akutsu-san
    2026/03/31

    🎙️ Manga With Josh — Episode 17

    Please Go Home, Miss Akutsu — When Nothing Happens, But Everything Changes

    Please Go Home, Miss Akutsu is one of those series that feels simple the moment you hear the premise. A delinquent girl refuses to leave a quiet high schooler’s apartment. That’s it. That’s the setup. But like a lot of stories that lean into repetition, the longer you sit with it, the more you start to notice what’s actually happening underneath.

    At the center of it is a dynamic that shouldn’t work as well as it does. Oyama, the introverted loner, just wants his space. Akutsu, loud and unapologetic, takes it over without hesitation. She shows up after school, eats his food, plays games, and treats his apartment like it belongs to her. He tells her to go home, but never really means it. And somewhere in that contradiction, the story finds its identity.

    What makes this series stand out isn’t progression in the traditional sense, but consistency. The same room, the same routine, the same interactions repeated over and over again. And within that repetition, something starts to shift. The comedy carries most of the surface, with teasing, awkward reactions, and situations that feel just slightly out of control, but underneath it there’s a quiet tension that builds without ever fully resolving.

    📚 What We Talk About

    The core premise and why it works

    Oyama and Akutsu’s relationship dynamic

    The role of repetition and shared space

    The balance between comedy and slow-burn romance

    Supporting characters and how they reinforce the story

    The pacing across 200+ chapters

    Why this is such an easy, consistent read

    Why This Manga Stood Out

    There’s something interesting about a story that chooses not to move too fast. Please Go Home, Miss Akutsu doesn’t rely on big turning points or dramatic shifts. Instead, it builds through proximity. Through the idea that just being around someone long enough will eventually change how you see them, even if nothing is ever said out loud.

    That approach gives the story a different kind of weight. Not because it’s heavy, but because it’s familiar. The moments feel small, but they add up. The tension never fully breaks, and that’s part of what keeps it engaging. It’s not about waiting for a confession, it’s about watching two people slowly realize something has already changed.

    🧠 Final Thoughts

    This is one of those series that becomes part of your routine without demanding it. It’s light, it’s consistent, and it understands exactly what it wants to be. It doesn’t try to expand beyond its space, and because of that, it stays focused.

    It’s not about big moments. It’s about the accumulation of small ones. And sometimes, that’s enough to carry a story further than anything else.

    📖 About the Show

    Manga With Josh is a podcast where we explore manga you may not have heard of, but probably should have. Each episode takes a closer look at stories that stand out—not just for their popularity, but for what they bring to the medium and how they leave their mark over time.

    🔚 Closing

    As always, this is Manga With Josh — where we explore manga you may not have heard of, but probably should have.

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    5 分
  • Episode 16 - City Hunter
    2026/03/17

    🎙️ Manga With Josh — Episode 16

    City Hunter — The Fixer Who Defined an Era

    City Hunter is one of those series that doesn’t immediately announce how influential it is. On the surface, it feels simple—a man takes on jobs in the shadows of the city, solving problems that sit just outside the reach of the law. But the longer you sit with it, the more you realize how carefully balanced everything is. The tone shifts constantly, moving from grounded crime stories to exaggerated comedy, then quietly settling into something more reflective without ever feeling forced.

    At the center of it all is Ryo Saeba, a character who shouldn’t work as well as he does. He’s equal parts elite marksman and complete degenerate, a professional when it matters and a joke when it doesn’t. And yet, that contrast is exactly what gives the series its identity. Around him, the world feels alive—Kaori keeping him grounded, Umibozu adding weight and history, and Saeko pulling him into situations that blur the line between justice and necessity.

    What makes City Hunter stand out isn’t just its characters, but how effortlessly it blends its contradictions. It’s serious without staying serious, comedic without losing tension, and romantic without ever fully committing to it. That balance is what allows it to feel timeless, even though it’s firmly rooted in the style and sensibilities of the 1980s.

    📚 What We Talk About

    The origins of City Hunter (1985–1991, 35 volumes, 191 chapters)

    Ryo Saeba and the “sweeper” archetype

    The core cast: Kaori, Umibozu, and Saeko

    The blend of crime drama, comedy, and romance

    Spin-offs like Angel Heart and its alternate timeline

    The long-running anime adaptation (140 episodes)

    The 1993 live-action film starring Jackie Chan

    Why the series still shows up decades later

    ⭐ Why This Manga Stood Out

    There’s something about City Hunter that feels foundational, even if it isn’t always treated that way. It helped shape a type of protagonist that shows up again and again—the fixer, the cleaner, the person who operates in that gray space where rules don’t quite apply. But what’s interesting is that City Hunter never leans entirely into that idea. It constantly undercuts itself with humor, with absurdity, with moments that remind you not to take it too seriously.

    And yet, when it decides to be serious, it lands. The stakes feel real. The relationships matter. The world has consequences. That duality is difficult to pull off, and it’s part of why the series has remained relevant long after its original run ended.

    Even its legacy reflects that balance. It didn’t just end and disappear—it evolved. Spin-offs, alternate timelines, anime continuations, and even a live-action adaptation all keep circling back to the same core idea. Not necessarily to expand it, but to reinterpret it.

    🧠 Final Thoughts

    City Hunter is one of those series that quietly earns its place over time. It may not dominate modern conversations the way some larger titles do, but its influence is easy to trace once you know where to look. It represents a kind of storytelling that isn’t as common anymore—one that’s willing to shift tones, take risks, and trust the audience to follow along.

    It’s not perfect, and it doesn’t try to be. But in that space, it becomes something more interesting. Something that feels lived-in, flexible, and still worth revisiting.

    📖 About the Show

    Manga With Josh is a podcast where we explore manga you may not have heard of, but probably should have. Each episode takes a closer look at stories that stand out—not just for their popularity, but for what they bring to the medium and how they leave their mark over time.

    🔚 Closing

    As always, this is Manga With Josh — where we explore manga you may not have heard of, but probably should have.

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    9 分
  • Episode 15 - Lupin the Third
    2026/03/10

    Some manga become popular for a moment. Others quietly shape the industry for decades. Lupin the Third is one of those rare series that managed to do both.

    Created by Monkey Punch in 1967, the story introduces Arsène Lupin III, the grandson of the legendary gentleman thief. Rather than a traditional hero, Lupin is a charming criminal who travels the world pulling off elaborate heists while constantly being pursued by Interpol inspector Zenigata. Along the way he’s joined by his unpredictable crew: the cool and calculated marksman Daisuke Jigen, the legendary swordsman Goemon Ishikawa XIII, and the ever-mysterious Fujiko Mine.

    What makes Lupin unique is that the manga itself was relatively short, yet the character never disappeared. Over the decades the franchise expanded into multiple anime series, theatrical films, television specials, and even modern crossover movies. Each era reinvented Lupin slightly, often represented by the color of his jacket, while keeping the core idea the same: a brilliant thief always one step ahead of the chase.

    In this episode we explore the origins of Lupin the Third, its evolution beyond the original manga, and why this mischievous gentleman thief has remained one of the most recognizable characters in anime history.

    What We Talk About

    • The creation of Lupin the Third by Monkey Punch

    • How the character was inspired by the French gentleman thief Arsène Lupin

    • The original manga run from 1967–1969 and its surprisingly small number of volumes

    • Lupin’s core cast: Jigen, Goemon, Fujiko Mine, and Inspector Zenigata

    • The different anime eras and Lupin’s iconic jacket colors

    • The films that helped keep the franchise alive, including The Castle of Cagliostro

    • Lupin crossovers like Lupin III vs Detective Conan and Lupin the 3rd vs Cat’s Eye

    • How Lupin influenced later anime creators and the caper-style storytelling seen in modern series

    Why This Manga Stood Out

    What makes Lupin the Third interesting is that its influence extends far beyond the manga itself. While the original comic ran for a relatively short time, the character became the foundation for one of the longest-running anime franchises ever created.

    Part of that longevity comes from how flexible the concept is. Each adaptation can shift tone slightly—sometimes leaning toward crime stories, sometimes comedy, sometimes full-scale adventure—while still keeping the familiar dynamic between Lupin and his crew.

    It also helped introduce a different kind of protagonist to anime. Lupin isn’t a traditional hero. He’s a thief who succeeds through cleverness, charm, and a little bit of chaos. That formula helped inspire countless caper-style stories and characters that followed.

    Final Thoughts

    What started as a manga about a mischievous thief eventually turned into a franchise that has lasted for nearly sixty years. Through anime series, films, and specials, Lupin the Third continues to reinvent itself while keeping the same playful spirit that made the original story memorable.

    Even today, new viewers can jump into the world of Lupin almost anywhere and still enjoy the adventure.

    About the Show

    Manga With Josh is a podcast where we explore manga you may not have heard of, but probably should have.

    As always, this is Manga With Josh — where we explore manga you may not have heard of, but probably should have.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    12 分
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