Mousou Shoujo Otakukei Volume 3 has been out in America for a number of months now (under the name Fujoshi Rumi), and in the back of the book the author Konjoh Natsumi describes her experience meeting the guys who played her manga’s characters in the live-action Mousou Shoujo adaptation. In one of the panels, she talks about the fact that her “Yaoi Antenna” went off as a result of seeing these guys together, and I think it’s quite telling just how she decided to portray this Yaoi Antenna.

Interesting, no? Konjoh could have chosen plenty of other icons to portray the tingling of her Yaoi Sense. Ohno’s mole, a pair of glasses, a wheeled suitcase, a furry ball of a creature emerging from the back of her skull are all valid choices, but it is the Ogiue fude which immediately brings to mind the image of the “fujoshi.”
Now, Konjoh is not against making obscure references because she does so pretty regularly, but I wouldn’t count this as among the “obscure.” This is a clear sign that in terms of fujoshi characters, Ogiue is pretty much #1 no matter how you slice it, even if a million pretenders to the throne should appear.
Ah. No wonder Ogiue sucks and is the reason I stopped reading, watching, or caring about Genshiken entirely. This explains it.
Your contribution is acknowledged.
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You’re just upset at Genshiken for positing the idea that otaku could have normal, healthy relationships.
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And that, Daryl, is exactly the reason why you’re reading a blog dedicated to that same person.
I laugh at your failure.
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For some reason, I feel like you’ve done this type of post before. Or at least mentioned the same moment from Mousou Shoujo Otakukei.
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