Monthly Shōnen Jump
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AICN Anime - The Art of Osamu Tezuka, Minor Updates on Voltron and Cowboy Bebop, Yamato, Prince Planet and More......wore the mask, gloves and boots rescued school girls AFTER they're stripped and rigged up in bondage scenarios. This took place in Monthly Shonen Jump, home to kids' classics like Ishinomori's Cyborg 009 and Keiji Nakazawa's (Barefoot Gen) I... In this article: Osamu Tezuka, Black Jack, DVD, Astro Boy, Anime, Viz Media, Brendan Gleeson, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, and Intension |
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Wikipedia | November 03, 2009
Weekly Shonen Jump
...readers. Weekly Shonen Jump has a sister magazine called Jump Square, created after the fall of Monthly Shonen Jump. First issue of Bessatsu Shonen Jump which replaced Shonen Book Weekly Shonen Jump was launched by Shueisha on July 2...
In this article: Weekly Shonen Jump, Shueisha, Shonen Book, Jump Square, Naruto, One Piece, Hikaru no Go, and Dragon Ball
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Wikipedia | November 02, 2009
Tegami Bachi
is a ''shonen '' manga series by Hiroyuki Asada. The series was first serialized in ''Monthly Shonen Jump'' for ten chapters, and is currently serialized in the new monthly magazine ''Jump SQ.''. The story takes place in the land of...
In this article: Dingo, Tegami Bachi, Jump Square, Dog, and Letter Bee
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Wikipedia | October 28, 2009
Shonen Book
...and Shonen Book was discontinued. The magazine of Shonen Book was replaced with a special called Bessatsu Shonen Jump, which was later changed to the title Monthly Shonen Jump (branched of into its own magazine, discontinued, and was...
In this article: Shonen Book, Weekly Shonen Jump, Shueisha, Mach GoGoGo, Speed Racer, Obake no Q-taro, Osamu Tezuka, United States, and Manga
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Wikipedia | October 28, 2009
Neko Majin
...August 2003 (Weekly Shonen Jump, 2003 #37-38) Neko Majin Z (ネコマジン Z): June 2001 (Monthly Shonen Jump, 2001 #6) Neko Majin Z 2: August 2003 (Monthly Shonen Jump, 2003 #9) Neko Majin Z 3: February 2004 (Monthly Shonen Jump, 2004...
In this article: Dragon Ball, Weekly Shonen Jump, Son Goku, Majin Buu, Akira Toriyama, Super Saiyan, Frieza, and Dragon Ball Z
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Wikipedia | October 27, 2009
Legendz
...by Makoto Haruno (春野 まこと Haruno Makoto) and the story is by Rin Hirai (平井 隣 Hirai Rin). The manga was published in Shueisha's Monthly Shonen Jump in Japan, and the manga is published in English by Viz Media. The manga had to be cut...
In this article: Legendz, Anime, Kouji Ishii, and Eiji Takemoto
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Wikipedia | October 27, 2009
I Saw It
...True Story, titled in Japanese, is a one-shot manga by Keiji Nakazawa that first appeared in 1972 as a 48-page feature in the magazine Monthly Shonen Jump, which at the time was a spin-off issue of Weekly Shonen Jump. The story was later...
In this article: I Saw It, Hiroshima, Weekly Shonen Jump, Barefoot Gen, Tokyo, and Omoshiro Book
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Wikipedia | October 20, 2009
Monthly Shonen Jump
...under the ''Jump '' line of magazines. Its sister magazine is ''Weekly Shonen Jump''. First issue of Bessatsu Shonen Jump The Monthly Shonen Jump magazine started as a spin-off issue of Weekly Jump called Bessatsu Shonen Jump. The...
In this article: Weekly Shonen Jump, Shueisha, Jump Square, Mark III, MSX, Hobby's Jump, Gag Manga Biyori, Tegami Bachi, and Rosario + Vampire
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Wikipedia | October 20, 2009
Jump Square
...with a circulation of over 500,000. Published by Shueisha, the magazine premiered on November 2, 2007 as a replacement for ''Monthly Shonen Jump'', another manga anthology that Shueisha discontinued in June. The magazine is a part of...
In this article: Jump Square, Shueisha, Weekly Shonen Jump, Stan Lee, Spider-Man, Spider-Man, Karakuridoji Ultimo, Gag Manga Biyori, and Dragonaut
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Wikipedia | October 06, 2009
Norihiro Yagi
Norihiro Yagi is a successful manga artist, having won the 32nd Akatsuka Award for his very first work, Undeadman. Undeadman appeared in Monthly Shonen Jump and has had two sequels. Yagi's first serialized manga was his comedy-genre Angel...
In this article: Claymore, Angel Densetsu, Akatsuka Award, Okinawa Prefecture, North America, and Japan
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Wikipedia | August 12, 2009
Jump (magazine line)
...created a Seinen version of the magazine in 1979, called Young Jump '' (now 'Weekly' Young Jump''). Bessatsu Shonen Jump, later got renamed Monthly Shonen Jump and became a magazine of its own. The seasonal issues of Weekly Shonen Jump...
In this article: Weekly Shonen Jump, Shueisha, Shonen Book, V Jump, Jump SQ., Weekly Young Jump, Business Jump, Ribon, and Super Jump
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Description from Wikipedia:
Monthly Shōnen Jump was a monthly manga magazine published in Japan by Shueisha since February 6, 1970. Its sister magazine is Weekly Shōnen Jump.
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