Japan loves anime. It also loves Twitter. And this past weekend, the country showed what it could do when it combined both: set a world record.
Over the weekend, classic Studio Ghibli anime Castle in the Sky appeared on television. And Japan held what it calls a āBalse Festivalā (ćć«ć¹ē„ć or ābarusu matsuriā), which is to simply write ābalseā (ćć«ć¹ or ābarusuā) in a key moment.
Right now, Iām going to spoil that key moment. Youāve been warned.
Castle in the Sky was released in 1986, so I donāt feel bad about spoiling it (and youāve been warned). In the climax, the Spell of Destruction is cast with the word ābalseā to bring down the city named āLaputaā.
The moment the word was uttered, all of Japan seemed to hop on Twitter to tweet ābalseā (ćć«ć¹), and at the peak, hitting, as website Watashi to Tokyo pointed out, 11,349 tweets-per-second. Twitter was able to withstand the battering.
The number of tweets surpassed the previous record of 8,868 tweets-per-second, when Beyonce announced she was pregnant.
In the past when Castle in the Sky was shown on TV, websites like 2channel and Nico Nico Douga were hit hard. This year, Nico Nico Douga even had a live viewing party. The site was pounded. 2channel was even taken offline after threads began going ābalseā crazy.
In Japan, kids grow up watching Ghibli movies. Whether youāre in a paediatricianās office or even at school, youāre bound to either see the movies or hear the music. I remember one well-known otaku scholar saying that no serious anime fan in Japan will say their favorite anime director is Hayao Miyazakiāitās a bit like saying your favorite basket player is Micheal Jordan. Too obvious.
Yet, before Castle in the Sky was broadcast last weekend, folks on bulletin boards and Twitter were reminding each other of the impending Balse Festival.
There was a flash-mob element to the whole thing, an everybody-else-is-doing-it element, but at its core, it showed that Miyazaki can still dominate the internet, with a decades old anime you can rent and watch whenever you like.
Itās just more fun watching it with millions of people with itchy Twitter fingers.
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(Top photo: mAsaEvo7ć®ćć¼ćø/Studio Ghibli)