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Crunchyroll licensing

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But Netflix and Amazon Prime Video (the streaming services) also licensed several of the anime series and films globally in and outside of Japan and Asia; That licensing obligations do not pass through companies of any type that currently operated their respective streaming services do not have to be like that, not at all.

Here is the starting paragraph for Crunchyroll LLC, clear as day: Crunchyroll, LLC (d/b/a Crunchyroll), formerly known as Funimation, is an American entertainment company based in Coppell, a suburb of Dallas, Texas, focused on the distribution and licensing of anime, films, and television series.

Therefore, you do not have any real argument to be made here with "but Netflix and Prime Video!" unless you can provide some citational evidence proving otherwise. And as you can see on Summer Time Rendering and Undead Unluck, this is also the case with Disney Platform Distribution (and NOT merely Hulu or Disney+). So please, do not revert them again; Thanks for your understanding in advance! GalaxyFighter55 (talk) 04:58, 23 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I'm sorry, correct me what's wrong, the fact that I separated the link from the licensing of anime series to new articles to infoboxes within English Wikipedia that are streaming simultaneous worldwide outside of Asia for the season of such spring, summer and even fall of this current year if I have provided you with clear evidence that the orange streaming service is responsible for the licensing of these aforementioned 2024 animes which is jointly operated by its parent company.
Look: https://www.quora.com/Does-using-Crunchyroll-really-help-the-anime-industry
https://www.streamtvinsider.com/video/europe-drives-new-interest-anime-netflix-crunchyroll-boost-awareness

201.229.226.52 (talk) 01:20, 24 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

A Quora thread does not constitute as a source and the Streamtvinsider source (which is considered weak at best here on Wikipedia) refers to Crunchyroll in generic usages. You still have failed to provide any real evidence with this. And here, with a different article it describes on Anime#Industry that: Anime has to be licensed by companies in other countries in order to be legally released. That's what Crunchyroll LLC is, not the streaming service of the same name which hosts those titles to play over the internet. Just admit you made a misconception.--GalaxyFighter55 (talk) 05:44, 24 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Well, how about this news reference about the fall 2022 season where it is also described that Crunchyroll, a streaming service which emerged as the top name in anime streaming and also focuses on distribution and licensing and more recently anime production. It was the only thing I could think of so far.
See: https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/crunchyrolls-supercharged-fall-schedule-unleashes-chainsaw-man-spy-x-family-and-more/ 201.229.226.52 (talk) 14:50, 24 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Read this: Wikipedia:WikiProject Anime and manga/Online reliable sources. General section is most credible. But I don't think we should be discussing this anymore though to be honest, because if I take this issue to a consensus talk with other editors and you can't provide atleast one general source clearly stating something like you're claiming it'll be clear cut and dry. Streaming services are just that: websites video hosts. Legally a company licenses titles. It's not that hard to understand. Regarding Netflix or Prime Video, I personally don't think they should direct to their streamer-only articles either. It's just generalized like that most of the time because there's no pipe linking for disambiguation purposes.--GalaxyFighter55 (talk) 02:08, 25 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Dude, I told you that Crunchyroll (the streaming service) licenses the anime series for the summer 2024 season, all of them, not from its parent company of the same name that currently operates it, was just a series of confusion of edition histories by the user who created the page with the same name so that you believe that it was actually the old Funimation who licensed it, and I gave you the news reference about the fall 2022 season and in the end it did not give you the result, what else do you want, link more articles related to Crunchyroll animes as if the parent company of the same name has the distribution and licensing rights to its anime titles are its property in North America from around 2012 until today, part of which was or are managed by Funimation (its former parent company founded in 1994 and renamed in 2022, which currently operates its streaming service). 148.255.247.59 (talk) 00:40, 28 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Then why can't you prove it with a highly reliable source instead of personal talking points? If you can't provide that specific claim (and no generic-usage, in clear words) from the general section of the reliable sourcing page I just provided you with, then you don't have any argument to be made here. End of discussion, I'm sorry.--GalaxyFighter55 (talk) 03:32, 28 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]