Japanimation Station Season 6 - TOMINO-THON! cover art

Japanimation Station Season 6 - TOMINO-THON!

Japanimation Station Season 6 - TOMINO-THON!

By: Jonathan Lack & Sean Chapman
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About this listen

Japanimation Station is an anime podcast where hosts Jonathan Lack and Sean Chapman, creators of Weekly Suit Gundam, create deep dive conversations not just on individual shows, but on complete bodies of work, approaching these shows not just as fans, but with a fresh pair of critical eyes. We get deep into the stories, characters, and aesthetics, but also place the series and their creators into the proper contexts of history, backstory, and behind the scenes details that make these works so special. And, hopefully, we’ll have some fun along the way. Welcome to Japanimation Station.Jonathan Lack & Sean Chapman Art Science Fiction
Episodes
  • S6E3 - TOMINO-THON! Invincible Steel Man DAITARN 3 (1978) History & Review
    Mar 30 2026

    “Exhilaration, humor, and pathos” – these are the three pillars Tomino Yoshiyuki outlined in a pre-production memo for the series that became 1978’s Invincible Steel Man Daitarn 3. And the 40-episode show that followed very much fulfilled those goals, as this blend of super robot and Kamen Rider-style super hero action – also taking copious influence from the worlds of Star Wars and James Bond – is a fun and, in the end, surprisingly impactful series. It’s also the show where Tomino drilled down and learned how to perfect an episodic TV formula, telling a different and distinct story every week. While it gets off to a slow start, Daitarn 3 gets better and better as it goes on, building to a finale that proves to be one of Tomino’s finest directorial efforts, and which signals the full artistic flourishing of the man who would create Gundam.

    Enjoy, and come back next week as we arrive at the dawn of the new anime era: 1979’s legendary Mobile Suit Gundam!

    Time Chart:

    Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:37

    Intro and History: 0:01:37 – 1:27:25

    Eyecatch Break: 1:27:25 – 1:28:10

    Daitarn 3 Review: 1:28:10 – 2:41:53

    End Theme: 2:41:53 – 2:44:02

    Subscribe to our YouTube channels!

    Japanimation Station: https://www.youtube.com/c/japanimationstation

    Purely Academic: https://www.youtube.com/@purelyacademicpodcast

    Read Jonathan Lack’s movie reviews and stay up to date with all our podcast projects at https://www.jonathanlack.com

    Subscribe to PURELY ACADEMIC, our monthly variety podcast about movies, video games, TV, and more: https://purelyacademic.simplecast.com

    Follow Japanimation Station on Instagram and Threads @JapanimationStationPodhttps://www.instagram.com/japanimationstationpod/

    Read Jonathan’s book 200 Reviews in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vK

    “Tominoson-G Mk. V” – Music by Thomas Lack, Lyrics by Sean Chapman, featuring Hatsune Miku & KAITO. “The World You See” – Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com

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    2 hrs and 44 mins
  • S6E2 - TOMINO-THON! Invincible Super Man ZAMBOT 3 (1977) History & Review
    Mar 23 2026

    Our Tomino-thon reaches its first full review of the season with 1977’s Invincible Super Man Zambot 3, the debut series from a newly independent Sunrise, and the first original show directed in full by Tomino Yoshiyuki. Combining fantastical, episodic ‘super robot’ action with traces of the darker, more psychologically dense storytelling Tomino would eventually be known for, Zambot 3 also sees several members of the future Mobile Suit Gundam team working together for the first time, including character designer Yasuhiko Yoshikazu, mechanical designer Okawara Kunio (who drew the Bandok fortress, the series’ most striking design), and musical composers Watanabe Takeo and Matsuyama Yuji. And it’s the show that would, with its legendarily brutal finale, birth the legend of ‘Kill ‘em All’ Tomino.

    Enjoy, and come back next week as we meet the suave Haran Banjō in Invincible Steel Man Daitarn 3!

    Time Chart:

    Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:37

    Intro and History: 0:01:37 – 0:51:57

    Eyecatch Break: 0:51:57 – 0:52:41

    Zambot 3 Review: 0:52:41 – 2:24:13

    End Theme: 2:24:13 – 2:26:22

    Subscribe to our YouTube channels!

    Japanimation Station: https://www.youtube.com/c/japanimationstation

    Purely Academic: https://www.youtube.com/@purelyacademicpodcast

    Read Jonathan Lack’s movie reviews and stay up to date with all our podcast projects at https://www.jonathanlack.com

    Subscribe to PURELY ACADEMIC, our monthly variety podcast about movies, video games, TV, and more: https://purelyacademic.simplecast.com

    Follow Japanimation Station on Instagram and Threads @JapanimationStationPod https://www.instagram.com/japanimationstationpod/

    Read Jonathan’s book 200 Reviews in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vK

    “Tominoson-G Mk. V” – Music by Thomas Lack, Lyrics by Sean Chapman, featuring Hatsune Miku & KAITO. “The World You See” – Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com

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    2 hrs and 27 mins
  • S6E1 - Tomino-thon Begins! The Origins of Tomino Yoshiyuki, including MIGHTY ATOM and TRITON OF THE SEA
    Mar 16 2026

    Our Tomino-thon kicks off with a history-focused episode exploring the origins of Tomino Yoshiyuki leading up to the creation of his first full original series, Zambot 3 (which we’ll be reviewing next week). Where did this mad creative genius come from, and what was he up to in the years before he earned his ‘Kill ‘em all’ moniker? This episode takes us from the political climate in Japan during Tomino’s college years, to Tomino’s time at Mushi Pro becoming one of the most prolific episode directors on Tezuka Osamu’s Mighty Atom (aka Astro Boy), to his first directorial project, a (very loose) adaptation of Tezuka’s Triton of the Sea manga. We explore how he became known as the anime industry’s ‘wandering storyboard man’ in the 1970s, and end with the creation of the studio that became Sunrise, Tomino’s creative home for the bulk of his career. It’s a very fun, extremely informative episode that lays the foundation for the season to come.

    Enjoy, and come back next week as we review Invincible Super Man Zambot 3, the show which first earned Tomino his ‘kill ‘em all’ moniker!

    Time Chart:

    Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:37

    Intro and Tomino Origins Part 1: 0:01:37 – 0:16:30

    Mighty Atom/Astro Boy: 0:16:30 – 0:59:04

    Tomino Origins Part 2: 0:59:04 – 1:09:25

    Eyecatch Break: 1:09:25 – 1:10:37

    Triton of the Sea: 1:10:37 – 1:48:23

    Wrap-up: 1:48:23 – 1:54:54

    End Theme: 1:54:54 – 1:57:03

    Subscribe to our YouTube channels!

    Japanimation Station: https://www.youtube.com/c/japanimationstation

    Purely Academic: https://www.youtube.com/@purelyacademicpodcast

    Read Jonathan Lack’s movie reviews and stay up to date with all our podcast projects at https://www.jonathanlack.com

    Subscribe to PURELY ACADEMIC, our monthly variety podcast about movies, video games, TV, and more: https://purelyacademic.simplecast.com

    Follow Japanimation Station on Instagram and Threads @JapanimationStationPodhttps://www.instagram.com/japanimationstationpod/

    Read Jonathan’s book 200 Reviews in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vK

    “Tominoson-G Mk. V” – Music by Thomas Lack, Lyrics by Sean Chapman, featuring Hatsune Miku & KAITO. “The World You See” – Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 57 mins
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