Property | Value |
rdfs:label | |
rdfs:comment | - Some of the current rotating staff of the magazine include people who work in tokusatsu genre such as Keita Amemiya and Tsuyoshi Nonaka. The magazine nearly faced permanent cancellation in 2005 due to changing times with digital media overtaking print, but was revived 3 years later thanks to Asahi National Broadcasting, the owners of TV Asahi and Hobby Japan Monthly Magazine. As a result, the publication has survived and is still ongoing.
- Some of the current rotating staff of the magazine include people who work in the tokusatsu genre such as Keita Amemiya and Tsuyoshi NonakaImage:Icon-crosswiki.png. The magazine nearly faced permanent cancellation in 2005 due to changing times with digital media overtaking print, but was revived 3 years later thanks to Asahi National Broadcasting, the owners of TV Asahi and Hobby Japan Monthly Magazine. As a result, the publication has survived and is still ongoing.
|
dcterms:subject | |
dbkwik:kamen-rider/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate | |
dbkwik:kamenrider/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate | |
dbkwik:power-rangers/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate | |
dbkwik:powerrangers/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate | |
abstract | - Some of the current rotating staff of the magazine include people who work in the tokusatsu genre such as Keita Amemiya and Tsuyoshi NonakaImage:Icon-crosswiki.png. The magazine nearly faced permanent cancellation in 2005 due to changing times with digital media overtaking print, but was revived 3 years later thanks to Asahi National Broadcasting, the owners of TV Asahi and Hobby Japan Monthly Magazine. As a result, the publication has survived and is still ongoing. In 2015, the magazine celebrated its 35th anniversary with its 150th issue, featuring Kamen Rider Ghost and Specter on the cover and a retrospective of its previous issues.
- Some of the current rotating staff of the magazine include people who work in tokusatsu genre such as Keita Amemiya and Tsuyoshi Nonaka. The magazine nearly faced permanent cancellation in 2005 due to changing times with digital media overtaking print, but was revived 3 years later thanks to Asahi National Broadcasting, the owners of TV Asahi and Hobby Japan Monthly Magazine. As a result, the publication has survived and is still ongoing.
|