Patrick Macias

American journalist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican journalist
PlacesUnited States of America
isJournalist
Work fieldJournalism
Gender
Male
Birth1 January 1972
Age53 years
The details

Biography

Patrick Macias (born 1972 in Sacramento, California) is an American author and co-author of several titles on pop culture fandom, specifically relating to Japanese culture and otaku culture in America. Macias is also a correspondent for NHK World Television show Tokyo Eye, and is the head editor of the otaku culture magazine titled Otaku USA, which debuted on June 5, 2007. In 2014, Patrick became the Senior Manager of New Initiatives at Crunchyroll.

Biography

Macias became a published writer when he was 19, writing about youth culture for zines and other publications. Alvin Lu, a former editor of the San Francisco Bay Guardian, asked Macias to write for the Guardian based on Macias's early work, and this led to a regular column titled "Tiger on Beat" in which Macias covered Hong Kong movies. Lu went on to edit Tokyoscope and Pulp, and Macias likewise began writing for Pulp and became the assistant editor for Animerica.

In 2010, Patrick was contracted become co-host webshow Otaku-Verse-Zero sponsored by Japanese internet radio station company known as K'z Station. With his co-host Yuu Asakawa, he would explore anime and other Japanese sub-culture in and round Tokyo. In 2011, Patrick would join Crunchyroll's web-talk show The Live Show as co-host for the show.

In 2014, Patrick began writing the PARANOIA GIRLS webcomic, “an experimental science fiction story set in the Northern California suburbs of 1985,”featuring art by Japanese surrealist Yunico Uchiyama.

In 2015, Patrick created the HYPERSONIC music club webcomic for Crunchyroll, featuring art by illustrator Hiroyuki Takahashi, in which cyborg DJs battle demons from another dimension.

Later in 2015, Patrick began working with artist Mugi Tanaka on the PARK Harajuku: Crisis Team! webcomic, conceived as a collaboration between Crunchyroll and the “otaku fashion” PARK store in Harajuku, Tokyo.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.