ANIME UPDATE My Clueless First Friend EP13 And The new anime ending song for Bleach : Thousand-Year Blood War is performed by Yoh Kamiyama.


  ANIME UPDATE  My Clueless First Friend EP13  And The new anime ending song for Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War is performed by Yoh Kamiyama.





 My Clueless First Friend 



It turns out that we don't require a time jump or a flash forward to know that these two will be okay. It's fortunate that the episode's title isn't misleading because it actually relates to Takada and Nishimura at age 21 rather than the common primary school assignment where you imagine yourself 10 years in the future. In any case, we are aware that Takada intends for them to live together forever. Nishimura is unsure whether learning to manifest ectoplasm, which he plans to do, is a good idea, but between that and the fact that he will finally call her by her first name after the credits, these two are going places.

It's difficult to decide whether Kasahara asking Nishimura for her contact information or the change in how Takada and Nishimura treat one another is the more appropriate finale for this programme. Both are powerful markers of how drastically Nishimura's life has altered since Takada came into the picture because Kasahara was one of her main bullies and no one else nicknamed her "Akane" before he arrived on the scene. All of that has changed completely now; she not only has friends, but close friends as well, and Kasahara has become one of them, which is wonderful. It demonstrates that Nishimura isn't the only one who has discovered how to improve her circumstances, and it could be argued that Kasahara had to make more conscious changes in her life than Nishimura did.As a result of being broken, Nishimura's journey was realising that she deserved friends. Kasahara had to own her error and make a concerted effort to alter her behaviour in a way that was far more noticeable. Both are incredibly challenging; I know this because I continue to battle my inner bullied child. Kasahara's transition was more widely publicised than Nishimura's because Kasahara had more outside assistance.

Kitagawa is the only character in this series who stays the same. He closes the story exactly how he started it—a child who enjoys picking on others in order to elevate himself. It's appropriate that his little Scorpion Gang loses their clubhouse when their "bomb" malfunctions since it's the kind of minor catastrophe that, to a young person, has enormous significance. Furthermore, I'm not quite persuaded that they didn't deliberately plant the bug bomb in Nishimura's locker before going crazy. Everyone knows that Takada would never do anything to hurt his dear friend, so asking him to retrieve it reeks of deliberate desperation because the ramifications would be much less severe for him. The fact that the incident takes place just after Takada hasbeen telling everyone and anybody that Nishimura makes his chest feel strange.

One of the best ambiguous conclusions I've ever seen is in this. Although Nishimura and Takada's future union isn't confirmed, we receive enough closure to give the impression that it will happen. They are still only young children; fifth graders experiencing their first encounters with love and, in the case of Nishimura, friendship. What is certain is that their lives will continue after this moment and that meeting each other has made them happier individuals. That's the best-case scenario for a bullied child and the very definition of a happy ending. We all deserve to be Taiyou Takadas for others or to have our own. Glad he and Nishimura got together





The new anime ending song for Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War is performed by Yoh Kamiyama.



The song "Endroll" by musician Yoh Kamiyama (Drifting Dragons, Horimiya) serves as the closing theme for the second episode of the anime Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War. Since Kamiyama has been a fan of Bleach since he was young, the opportunity is like a childhood dream come true, he said. He continued by saying that he wished he could go back in time and tell his younger self that he would eventually do this.

On July 8 at 11:00 p.m. (10:00 a.m. EDT), the anime will return for its second cours (quarter of the year) and premiere on TV Tokyo and its affiliates (as well as on other venues) in Japan. The second installment will debut on Hulu in the United States, Star+ in Latin America, and in a few otherOn July 8 at 10:30 a.m. EDT on Disney+, other international nations. English, Latin American Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, French, German, and Italian subtitles will be offered for the animation.

The new cast members include:

Aoi Yūki as Liltotto

Tsuyoshi Koyama as Gerald

Sōichiro Hoshi as Nianzol

Nao Tōyama as Giselle

The opening theme song, "STARS," is being performed by the three-piece rock group w.o.d. For the first time ever, w.o.d. is providing an anime theme tune. Though it was not a deciding factor, manga author Kubo said that he is a fan of the band.


The programme premiered in Japan on October 10 on TV Tokyo and its affiliates. It is currently available in Japan on more than 20 streaming providers, including Hulu and Disney+. On October 10, Viz Media started showing the anime on Hulu in the United States. The anime's English dub had its Hulu debut on November 4. The North American anime premiere was hosted on October 8 at New York Comic Con by Viz Media. The anime is available globally on Disney+, and many Asian nations can watch the series on Ani-One Asia.

With a one-hour special that merged the anime's 12th and 13th episodes, the first season of the show came to a conclusion in December. With breaks, the anime will run for four episodes.

The remainder of the original manga, up until its conclusion, is covered by the anime. The manga's concluding storyline, The Thousand Year Blood War, spans volumes 55 to 74.

The animation will now be directed by Tomohisa Taguchi (Twin Star Exorcists, Kino's Journey: The Beautiful World, Akudama Drive) at Studio Pierrot in place of Noriyuki Abe. Masashi Kudo is back to design the characters, and Shiro SAGISU is back to write the music.

The Japanese cast of the show also has actors repeating their roles from the video game Bleach: Brave Souls despite not having participated in the anime.












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