
I cannot hear.
It was posted yesterday.
I wanted to get excited about this manga with Anonymous.
I lost because I laughed at the elephant.
This might be the first time I’ve seen a properly funny stand-up comedy depicted in a manga.
>>3The lingua franca was interesting.
>>4I’ve seen someone I know for the first time… Maya Takizawa doesn’t release many works, but they’re good, right?
>>3Even in “Beshari Gurashi,” there were many funny comedy scenes, right?
>>3The main duo of Shouhashouten and the gag about galas shoes were quite interesting.
I can’t hear an ugly voice either.
Daka daka daka daka!
The interactions before the formation are also interesting.
Paris
The jokes are interesting, but the feelings of the deaf and the details of sign language are also good.
The author is really good at not making the readers feel sympathetic.
It’s tough to explain a comedy act in sign language next to it… I guess thinking like that is no good.
>>12The rhythm of movement and conversation is important, you know.
I think it’s often considered as a subject for sketchbook art.
>>12Shima must be able to do it because he has a sense of humor.
It’s an incredibly good story…
It’s not interesting for customers who can’t see the board unless there are monitors all over the place.
I think there must be some really big flaws, but this material is really interesting…
It’s nice when the roles of the joker and straight man are reversed in a regular conversation, isn’t it?
The quality is high in various aspects… Are you a professional?
✋️Three Paris Three✋️
>>18DADADADADA
>>18Since it says Vienna, it must be written as Paris.
Isn’t it Austria!
>>125Paris is also the capital!
Though short, the sense of satisfaction after finishing it is incredibly high.
>>19After finishing reading, I was like, “What, there were only 38 pages…!?”
I was already done when I saw the scene of them waving their hands while laughing.
The feeling that there might be something to talk about is incredible.
This is also an incredibly good combo product.
This author only has 2 works so far… They will probably be quite famous in about 5 years.
>>21The back-and-forth in this conversation is really nice, isn’t it?
Since deaf people can’t hear their own voice, it was expressed in the font that when they speak, it becomes variously strange.
It doesn’t seem like they can hear anything at all, but what kind of hearing aid would someone in this condition use?
I wonder if it sounds like an incredibly loud sound, like a siren.
>>24By wearing a hearing aid
Even if you can’t distinguish the sound saying that the train is coming, you might recognize it from experience.
It’s like being able to recognize car horns or the sound of train crossings.
Although it’s impossible to be as delicate as language, it is for recognizing loud sounds.
The part of the comedy routine is really funny.
The grip of Paris is too good.
What do you think about Hamata?
>>30It feels like I might sneak up from behind and give a tap.
I wanted to follow the author, but I guess they don’t use social media…
I wonder what circumstances led Shima-kun to learn sign language?
>>32I said at the beginning that my family is deaf, so I’m a native signer.
It’s amazing that they are properly using sign language even in detailed conversation scenes.
The author is writing a lot!
The author seems to have experienced it themselves, given how detailed the descriptions are.
The way they shock you with the thread image before getting into the main story is really clever.
A story to straighten the heart in Yoshimoto Shinkigeki.
Because the author does not clearly depict Hirarin’s struggles and pains as a deaf person, readers are not drawn into sympathy and can instead enjoy a refreshing aftertaste.
>>38I think I’ve depicted the suffering adequately.
I like how it’s sincerely depicted that they are struggling and have the will to fight in order to overcome it.
A manga that’s both funny in its stand-up comedy and has convincing appeal to the audience is really rare…
I wonder if the comedy part is also original to the author.
>>42It doesn’t say “supervised” or anything, so maybe that’s how it is.
I couldn’t hear the ugly voice and was completely captivated.
I couldn’t do it because I waved back with a smile while going under the patrol car.
It’s interesting… or rather, I don’t know how to put it…
It may sound weak, but I thought the level was really high in various aspects.
I like that Rasukoma is pushing the line where people who watch manga can just barely understand what they are saying with this hook.
🫷👮
☺️👋
So I thought, “This is the kind of topic I like…”
Homophones are a vein of ore.
I wonder if they actually practiced Shaolin Temple Karate.
If that’s the case, it’s too versatile…
Are you reversing the roles of boke and tsukkomi between the stage and your private life?
>>51It’s pretty tough for the one making the retort not to be able to speak…
>>56It’s simple, but it’s funny to deliver a punchline with a loud voice…
If you don’t draw the material properly, it loses credibility when the deaf do the material and win, so it’s really admirable to come up with it thoroughly.
>>52It’s amazing that readers think, “There’s no way there are sympathy votes!”
I messed up in Paris.
People with ugly voices tend to have incredibly nice personalities.
>>55At first glance, it looks tough, so the gap increases its likability even more.
Is there no twist where the author is also involved?
The sign language accent from family is too strong, and there’s something real about it that’s interesting…
>>59I was reminded that if I don’t know sign language for the words, I have to do it letter by letter.
“When dealing with creation within creation, the fear of ‘please don’t let it turn into an unbearable atmosphere…’ links well with the story, making it a great BL.”
Isn’t it a bit high IQ to go from Vienna to Paris? It feels like some kind of university comedy.
>>63Isn’t that college comedy?!
>>65Hirarin’s response
>>65>ID:lMyad0TkIt’s so obvious you’re doing it yourself! Are you not just deaf, but also blind now?
Can you hear me! You can’t hear me, right! It’s a little inappropriate, but I couldn’t help but laugh.
>>64The expression is too perfect…
What? I didn’t expect to hear an elephant’s cry!
I can only use sign language for things like “thank you.”
“Towards disabled people, saying ‘Please pay properly~ lol’ is”
I thought it was a seriously unpleasant kind of teasing that could really happen.
This is really realistic.
>>70There’s a grounded rawness to it, as if there are deaf people among your friends or close relatives…?
“Can’t you hear that you’re not allowed to park your bike? It’s too easy to understand the difficulties for both sides…”
And it’s interesting, so it easily gets in.
I think that the mismatch between the rhythm the author envisions for the manga comedy and the rhythm the reader feels is a major cause of the boredom it creates.
This was interesting because the deaf protagonist confirmed the tempo around them while the performance progressed, so it was in sync.
It’s a buddy story, so it’s unavoidable, but I wonder if the lack of presence of the heroine or female characters is just part of the style.
It’s true that you can’t really understand that just by watching a comedy performance with subtitles.
I thought you were just being foolish, but you really went and succeeded at being foolish…
I first think while watching TV subtitles in Vienna (why is it always a European capital…?)
It’s such a high-level deafness that it takes quite a while to understand.
>>79Once I understood this, it felt like the Buddha’s teachings came in smoothly, and I thought if I could use this idea for other topics, I’d want to see more…
It’s common to have a handsome person do the silly stuff.
>>80Well, it’s probably difficult to make a comeback since you can’t talk.
The tone is also important for a retort.
I didn’t understand the meaning of Paris (dadadadada!) at first, but…
The notation “wee” representing automatic doors in spoken language suddenly makes it seem like the capital of Austria has appeared in the subtitles.
The perspective is amazing.
What a good duo…
I thought they were going to perform stand-up comedy solely in sign language.
The climax was powerful as we managed to get through just with lip-syncing and hand gestures, relying on my partner’s trust (which left the deaf audience with no information).
The sense of distance in the early stages with Shima is strong after just one week of getting to know each other.
I’m confident that even if I don’t understand it when going from Vienna to Paris without an explanation, I can still do it with a rush of energy…
>>86If a handsome guy makes a serious face and goes “ZUDADADA,” I’m confident I’ll burst out laughing, thinking, “What? What? What?!”
>>99Weak stage…
When wearing hearing aids, do they look like earphones? That’s true, huh?
Why does such a good manga artist have to end up in a place like Yanmaga web…?
>>88But I definitely think the art style is from Yanmaga.
>>91It has a style that feels like it could be from a yankee manga, doesn’t it?
First, overcome the wall of sympathy! It’s a stand-up comedy with a ridiculously high hurdle right from the start, but it’s funny…
He may be deaf, but he’s a bad-tempered fool who’s funny; you can’t overcome the wall without using him as an immediate punchline.
I remembered a story about someone who thought the sun shining brightly was actually making sound, but they couldn’t hear it.
>>90It must be tough for the person, but it’s an interesting story.
The high resolution or persuasiveness of that horrible woman who messes with disabled people is scary in how accurately it represents the type of woman that definitely exists.
>>93Bullying people with disabilities is absolutely unacceptable!
>>102The judge who started the thread is a customer of the jar, so the bulletin board is unrelated.
Cold smiles are creepy.
>>93It’s probably a sympathy vote.
The fact that the material is properly interesting is impressive.
It’s supporting at a level of full-time employment, not part-time work.
No… a friend!
It’s unfair to be crucified by a police car after Shakyamuni.
It has an afternoon or evening feel.
It is quite common in reality for individuals to try to make humor out of their own disabilities.
However, there are moments when watching a deep topic that is permissible only between the people involved makes me feel guilty.
It was really good that it focused entirely on an approach created from the perspective of someone who does not have a handicap.
>>104It’s that feeling when you’re unsure if it’s okay to laugh when a Black person makes a joke about being Black…
I thought it was an amazing work that completely processes and sublimates reality.
What’s amazing about this is that the content is interesting too…
The drawing is great and the ideas are amazing too.
This is a work that certainly deserves an award.
>>108With this level of drawing skill and composition, they are a newcomer…
I thought you were a veteran manga artist.
The back-and-forth is also a matter of breathing and timing, so write it carefully.
The opening joke from Paris is already amazing.
It’s been pointed out that expressing things we don’t understand with subtitles doesn’t help in understanding them.
I was looking at it in another place and thought it was interesting, even though it’s an advertising manga…
I try my best to be aware of laughter, but I still can’t help but grin when I see the audience’s reactions, and I like that.
I can’t help but grin.
Timmy from South Park is amazing, isn’t he?
Self-deprecating jokes are difficult for both the person making them and the person receiving them.
Shima looks like a delinquent but is rational.
>>120Hillary looks like a thug but is actually a mad dog.
If I fail at the scene of slipping past on a bike (pretending), will Shimada’s lariat explode?
>>121I’d like to see that too.
>>121I also have a curiosity about how to recover when I fail.
The illustrations and ideas are great…
I only know the meaning of the last sign language.
It’s cliché, but when a comedy manga finishes with a panel saying “that’s enough,” it really hits the spot, right?
It’s common for people with disabilities to tend to endure things, so it’s reassuring that Hillary is really getting angry in those scenes.
Is this really that interesting?
It’s a sympathy vote.
>>134If you’re talking about sympathy votes, then try to overpower me!
>>135The letters “gattagatta”
>>144It’s amazing how this plays back in a way that feels so mysterious.
>>144You can easily tell it’s that deaf person’s unique pronunciation, right?
Is the author really in your family…?
>>134I like the look of Shamarin when she’s irritated by this and when she’s about to grab onto something.
[That’s great, you damn it!]
>>136Your mouth is worse than your ears.
I really like how the end of the comedy skit is wrapped up with the message that making assumptions is not good.
I don’t understand sign language at all, so it’s nice that I can kind of understand what Hirarin is saying while blushing in the last scene.
Vienna is something you won’t understand unless you experience it, yet I was struck by the thought that it’s tough to explain this to someone who can’t experience Vienna.
>>139But I know Paon.
>>140Really funny.
This should be made one-sided for the heroine.
>>142?
Hillary is the heroine, right?
>>143No one calls Clinton a heroine anymore!
>>142If Hirarin were a girl, Shimarin’s toughness would be too much.
If Shimarin were a girl, Hirarin’s toughness would definitely be too much.
Through descriptions that provide little information to pick up as a trigger for aligning due to the absence of sound.
I feel a sense of dread at how easily I can break down and present what is needed for the establishment of a joke.
The part where they try to stop by waving their hand is the most amusing.
>>150Hello
>>150😊👋
When it starts selling and becomes a big box, it’s hard to see the flip, so we need to come up with a solution.
>>153Should I prepare a monitor?
A flip of characters different from the monitor.
This really has a perfect flow for a comedy routine, but why did you get stopped by the police? The part about the hearing aid has a great build-up and the relentless punchlines are hilarious, it’s amazing.
>>154(Christianity and Revenge)
>>158Christ walked on His own feet!
It’s possible to play audio at the same time as showing the flip.
I realized gradually after finishing reading the Tour de France from Paris.
I find Hirari-kun’s face too attractive, and it’s painful.
>>162But the elephant’s face is pretty intense, you know.
>>162Ugly response.
I wonder if there are really such ugly people…
>>165I have an unpleasant feeling of certainty that they are definitely necessary…
I was surprised by the detail that Hirarin’s intimidating earrings are connected to a ridiculously expensive hearing aid for fall prevention.
If you’re watching from the wings, you won’t understand what’s interesting…
>>166That perspective is certainly
The thick art style that is the complete opposite of the trends in the Reiwa era also matches perfectly and has a nice feeling.
You’re good at drawing, aren’t you…?
Watch videos of Yutaro Hamada’s everyday life too.
>>170It seems that the part about doing comedy while having a disability is something they take as a normal reference.
I will refrain from it.
There are definitely old men who kick canes for people with bad eyesight.
In fact, I think the interestingness of the comics in the play is enhanced precisely because they are comics that are meant to be read.
If we actually performed this comedy skit, it would require some quite severe tempo management.