Talk:Characters from Paranoia Agent
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Multiple Entendre?
If the first name of Tsukiko is a play on the term "Lunacy" and her last name means bird, is it possible that this is in fact a joke about the slang phrase "loony bird"?
- Entirely possible. I hadn't thought of that angle.--Mitsukai 00:18, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- How is Tsukiko a pun on lunacy? No matter how I say the name, I don't hear it. --Frungi 4 July 2005 03:18 (UTC)
- It's more of a play on words than a pun due to the cross-language joke involved (see directly above for that answer). That may have to be corrected in the text.--Mitsukai 4 July 2005 03:19 (UTC)
- But where do you get the first part of the joke (Tsukiko ≈ lunacy)? --Frungi 4 July 2005 16:14 (UTC)
- Tsuki-ko, "moon child", but also "little moon". In some languages, "little moon" is the term for lunacy.--Mitsukai 4 July 2005 18:59 (UTC)
- Should the article be changed to say that? It currently says the name may be a pun on the English word. --Frungi 4 July 2005 19:28 (UTC)
- "Lunacy" is one of those words that is tied into the "little moon" or "moon" bits, so it is valid to say lunacy. We could probably reword it to say that it's a "play on words such as lunacy", but I don't think it needs to go that far. If you want to change it, feel free to. That's what we're here for, after all. ^_^--Mitsukai 5 July 2005 00:44 (UTC)
- Should the article be changed to say that? It currently says the name may be a pun on the English word. --Frungi 4 July 2005 19:28 (UTC)
- Tsuki-ko, "moon child", but also "little moon". In some languages, "little moon" is the term for lunacy.--Mitsukai 4 July 2005 18:59 (UTC)
- But where do you get the first part of the joke (Tsukiko ≈ lunacy)? --Frungi 4 July 2005 16:14 (UTC)
- It's more of a play on words than a pun due to the cross-language joke involved (see directly above for that answer). That may have to be corrected in the text.--Mitsukai 4 July 2005 03:19 (UTC)
- How is Tsukiko a pun on lunacy? No matter how I say the name, I don't hear it. --Frungi 4 July 2005 03:18 (UTC)
What was his name!?
In the minor characters section, I want to add the guy who was Tsukiko's Chief for the M & F company. You know, black T shirt, sort of husky build but he sort of has a somewhat feminine way of moving. Has the voice of a suck up sort of..but I can't remember his name. I just skimmed through the entire series quickly to see if I could find it but I couldn't. I can't see his name clearly mentioned in any cast lists either, did he even have a name? I think he'd be a valid addition to the Minor characters section.
Originally I was going to add this to the Paranoia Agent's main page but I felt it would make it too long, so I decided to make it a sub section.
I always felt this series was extremely well done, and felt it deserved a little more of an entry. Espeically seeing as how its now being shown on TV, many will eventually begin to analyze the series.
I made some pages for individual characters not too long ago, but they weren't too popular and too full of speculation rather than facts. So rather than continue on with that mess I thought I'd try to challenge myself to make a more focused entry merely giving a short summary to each character. I'm rather new to making entry's at Wikipedia so I'm very open to suggestions, and ofcourse additional information is more than welcome to be added at anyone's leisure.
- I would recommend breaking it into three sections, main character (if they play a significant role in the series. I'm assuming that Tsukiko, Little Slugger, Ikari and Maromi are the four that meet the bill), significant characters (other characters who play a large role in the anime but are not vital to the outcome) or minor (if they play a minor or superficial role, such as Prof. Ryu or the otaku). Since I'm watching the series as it airs on Adult Swim, someone who has already seen the whole series might be better at determining who is and who is not a major character.--Mitsukai 19:12, 13 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- Thank you. As your watching it for the first time I don't want to give away absolutely everything, although you've probably accidentally been spoiled by much already. (Sorry. ^^;) The thing is, is that almost every episode has a different "main" set of characters, while the Detectives, Tsukiko etc are all more along the lines of recurring characters. Their role as an actual spotlighted character only happens during certain episodes, so I thought it'd be best to maybe put them in the order of which they appear. Although I will consider it once more of the series is shown on Television. Ofcourse, its always open for someone else to do the same thing, but I personally think it works really well the way it is right now. I also decided to exclude the minor characters, as most of the bigger characters I feel deserve a somewhat in depth paragraph as Kon's really done a great job of building their character's, even if they only appear for an episode at a time. Thank you for your suggestion. :3
- I see a minor character section was added. On second thought, perhaps splitting the recurring characters to the episodic characters could work. Let me give it a shot and see how it works
- Thank you. As your watching it for the first time I don't want to give away absolutely everything, although you've probably accidentally been spoiled by much already. (Sorry. ^^;) The thing is, is that almost every episode has a different "main" set of characters, while the Detectives, Tsukiko etc are all more along the lines of recurring characters. Their role as an actual spotlighted character only happens during certain episodes, so I thought it'd be best to maybe put them in the order of which they appear. Although I will consider it once more of the series is shown on Television. Ofcourse, its always open for someone else to do the same thing, but I personally think it works really well the way it is right now. I also decided to exclude the minor characters, as most of the bigger characters I feel deserve a somewhat in depth paragraph as Kon's really done a great job of building their character's, even if they only appear for an episode at a time. Thank you for your suggestion. :3
- I would recommend breaking it into three sections, main character (if they play a significant role in the series. I'm assuming that Tsukiko, Little Slugger, Ikari and Maromi are the four that meet the bill), significant characters (other characters who play a large role in the anime but are not vital to the outcome) or minor (if they play a minor or superficial role, such as Prof. Ryu or the otaku). Since I'm watching the series as it airs on Adult Swim, someone who has already seen the whole series might be better at determining who is and who is not a major character.--Mitsukai 19:12, 13 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Real villain?
I found out that after her dog died, Tsukiko Sagi "created" Makoto Kozuka's alter ego and clone as a mental scapegoat. Because of this reason, i suspect that she not only the protagonist, but is also the real main villain of the story. -- Ed Telerionus 17:53, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
Why a separate page?
Why isn't this part of Paranoia Agent as a section? A single, 13-episode animated series doesn't seem to me to be worth splitting out a separate page just for character listings. Still, there's some good work here, and it should be preserved. -Harmil 30 June 2005 19:28 (UTC)
- I believe it was created in an proactive attempt to adhere to the 30K limit guideline for Wikipedia pages. As the series gets more airing in the US, there's going to be multiple layers added to the main PA page and that one is going to grow rather quickly, thus necessitating breakoffs; this likely would be the first section to be broken off due to its present size as is. A bit forward thinking, admittedly, but as you metioned, worth preserving.--Mitsukai 1 July 2005 13:34 (UTC)
- Yes thats pretty much it. This series has a really diverse and complex cast as well as a number of things that could go over a lot of people's heads such as symbolism and story relevance. But rather than make the main page nearly unvewable due to the length we opted to make it a new page.--Kiyosuki 14:15, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
About Taeko . . .
I only saw the dubbed version on television, but didn't she discover the photos from the hidden camera in the "trash" on her father's profile, not the Internet?
No, she found them next to the trash can on the desktop. It seems her father was going to delete the files, but when he dragged them to the trash can, he missed and lefted them on the desktop. Then she found them after changing the background.
but, to ask the reaaly dark question, was it ever definitively revealed that he was selling the pics? the "YOU HAVE TO CALL ME DADDY!!!" bit with the whore was a particularly strong indicator that the pics weren't for business alone.
Thank you; that was totally what I meant. Also, it wasn't just the whore; it was the little girl at the house he was robbing just before he caught "Little Slugger." -HurriSbezu
The nature of his need for Taeko's pictures is very cojunctural. He could of been selling them for money...which would go with his overall money grubber ambitions. However, he also did seem to have some very interesting sexual fetishes...there's really no way to tell for certain. Its pretty disturbing either way however. --Kiyosuki 14:17, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
Zebra, Fuyubachi, and Kamome
Me and an acquantence looked into some things, and we discoveredvarious details, such as the earliest point where they could have died and the latest point where they could have died. However, there are disputes:
- Did they all die at the same time?
- Zebra - It is assumed that he died after taking all the pills and inhaling the smoke
- Fuyubachi - It is speculated that he may have died on the train, where he appeared dead
- Kamome - It is speculated that she died before Zebra
- Shadows
- Shadows appear on the characters at several points, so this could be interpeted as them living, or it could be interpreted that the shadows appear on them because they have some connection to the mortal realm. They do, indeed, change clothing; and do not cast shadows outside of on themselves.
- Ravens (crows?)
- What do they symbolize in this episode? They appear at the bench, where they were discussing how to die, and then later when Fuyubachi discovers that they died.
- Train victim
- It appears that Zebra was the only one that saw him, so it raises questions of if the other two could see him. Were they dead at the time? Does the old man die on the train, and does the young girl die after they fail at hanging themselves?
Comments would be nice. -- A Link to the Past 08:27, July 17, 2005 (UTC)
A common mythological theme is that crows escort the souls of the dead to the afterlife, so crows are often used symbolically to represent the transition of the spirit to the world of the afterlife.
Kamome is dead by the time she makes the second phone-call (to enter the sealed room she had to have passed through the wall, expecially as suddenly and eerily as she did. She did not want to be alone, and therefore at her death she went to meet her friends in the afterlife). Both Zebra and Fuyubachi -must- be dead after inhaling the toxic poison and swallowing all the pills, as evident by the fact neither Zebra or Fuyabachi cast shadows on the ground in any other scenes. Look closely in the train station, all three of the characters are the only characters (aside from the ghost of the man who threw himself in front of the train) who have no shadows while everyone else standing around in the station has a shadow beneath them. <p>
- If you watch closely as they set up the hibachi and seal the room, Kamome is hiding in the background, so she probably just wanted to hide to surprise them. This can, obviously, be intrepreted as her already being a ghost, but Zebra and Fuyubachi not being able to see or talk to her until after they have both also died--Author X 03:03, 27 February 2006 (UTC)


