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TV Shows & Series: Best "mangaka" TV Shows/Series


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5 TV shows/series found (page 1/1):

Kakushigoto(2020)

TV-14
| 24min per episode | Animation, Comedy
3.9/5 (with 61 votes)

Single father Kakushi Goto has a secret. He’s a top-selling artist of popular erotic manga, but his impressionable young daughter, Hime, can never find out! Now he’s having to bend over backwards just to keep her inquisitive little mind from discovering what he does for a living.

Mangirl!(2013)

4min per episode | Animation, Comedy
2.8/5 (with 2 votes)

A team of girls with zero experience in manga editing are off and running toward their dream of creating the biggest manga magazine in Japan! They seem to do nothing but run into problems and failures... But still they're working hard every day!

Gu Gu the Cat(2014-2016)

53min per episode | Drama, Kids & Family
3.0/5 (with 2 votes)

About a lady and her cat. The lady's cat dies and she loses all inspiration to continue living, and doing her work from home job. One day when forced to get out of her house for a while she finds and orphaned kitten in the park. The kitten is sick and she takes the kitten to the vet. This kitten brings her out of her depression and gives her new hope.

Directed by Isshin Inudo

Kotaro Lives Alone(2022)

TV-14
| 27min per episode | Animation, Drama, Comedy
4.0/5 (with 26 votes)

A lonely little boy moves into a ramshackle apartment building all on his own and makes friends with the broke manga artist who lives next door.

Manben: Behind the Scenes of Manga with Urasawa Naoki(2015-2017)

45min per episode | Documentary
4.2/5 (with 2 votes)

Urasawa Naoki no Manben (Naoki Urasawa's Manga Exertions) is a TV Documentary airing on NHK Educational TV. It follows acclaimed mangaka Naoki Urasawa (creator of 20th Century Boys and Monster) as he sets out to break new ground for manga even further than he already has. In an attempt to educate viewers about manga and preserve the intricate craftsmanship and process of Japanese artists on video for future generations, he invites a manga artist to have their workplace filmed for a couple of days, so as to display them in the process of crafting chapters for their current serializations. After the footage has been shot, Urasawa meets with the artist and they discuss the footage, talking about the artist's workplace and workflow, the difficulties involved in the mangaka lifestyle, their reasons for drawing manga in the first place, and their perspective on the current industry and their own work.