no, I didn't say "mini skirts". and I haven't seen that in juvenile movies. I heard of it from a japanese who had lived in kentucky for 12 years. I don't remember what the schoolgirls were said to be wearing. but I guess if it had been just sweatpants the person would not have talked about it all the way. I now see from your tone it's not a big deal to you anyway. but to the japanese there should have been something sexualized found around it, just like you saw something sexualized about nausica. this is what I was trying to say.
yes as a character design fujiko has to be depicted always with huge boobs. but it's not at all like huge boobs = sexy.
and as a kid I haven't thought wonder woman was sexualized. in my eyes she looked like a sporty strong safe teacher.
otaku is a term from the 80's. the scope of its meaning is now really broaden. for example, when you are currently into french cuisine, you can be called french otaku. in that case most of the creepy connotation is not there any more. so for that weird stuff these days you'd say akiba-kei.
but basically both terms are not used for children.
i said mini skirts because i thought of a "school girl uniform" as we had been discussing earlier...
we don't have many uniforms in schools, but there are cheerleaders in uniforms in most high schools...
that is who is usually going to hold a car wash to raise money...
they also do bake sales and sell chocolate bars, etc...
usually to make money for trips, uniforms or for the prom...
but i cannot say i have ever actually seen that myself...
only in really silly comedy films with some low brow humour...
i don't think i would think it's ok if i really saw it...
i guess i laughed because it seems more like a male fantasy than a reality...
just like so much of the stuff that is imported from japan...
ie- a love doll- or a big pillow with a life sized manga girl drawing to sleep with...
we have those pillows too- just not with a drawing...
*ps- kentucky is also where there is likely to be a child's beauty contest, so...
yeah- i guess it's different down south than it is in the north...
remember- we did have a civil war - north against south- and it's actually still how the country is mostly divided in terms of morals and values and ideals...and the way we vote for national policy, etc...
it's also the area where racism is still probably the strongest...
odd/unusual that a japanese person would be living there...
i would never live there...i've never even been to visit...
and now i want to go there even less...ugh...
however- huge boobs definitely = sexy over here...and probably in the west in general...
i know a british guy who's first love as a boy was wonder woman...
and i was definitely aware of her sexy look...
the reason i always liked her is that she was strong and heroic while also being sexy...i think that is the basis for all women superheroes in western comics...
i'm sorry- but you are losing me with all these references to various manga titles...
i will have to do some research and come back to the subject in order to respond...
i think it's amazing to have a perspective from more than one person (and more than one gender) on this topic...
melisande and runner- i love that you don't completely agree...
and maybe- in the end---that is the lesson...
people are people---> it's very hard to generalize and often doesn't work...
remember our kindergarten days or even elementary school classrooms. there are always some kids who casually, randomly or instinctively draw a penis, boobs, whatever, every time they find human figures in their schoolbooks. not every kid of course, perhaps even a minority, but we have an undeniable constant. manga is originally a dependable ally of those kids. manga is what parents don't want children to see and what children really want to see, while the universe of disney might be what parents want to make children appreciate. manga is something to be ridiculed, abased or despised. something low, indecent, wicked. aberration, obscenity and nonsense. but that which can melt what has been hardened, frozen and brittle. the "negative classicist", wilde, schiele, bataille, adorno, mishima, carol christian poell, shion sono.....in a way dangerous, but just honest.
a genuine manga should be something like that. of course it may differ in degree from the above names, but should not differ in kind.
yura yura teikoku is a band of those boys who have grown but still keep the spirit. shintaro sakamoto was a big manga fan kid who couldn't help but expressing his complicated love towards sh*t. the father of their urge and imagination is a problem child. manga is simply for the child. that's where manga's happiness lies in, since there is no need to be underpinned by PTA approval there. and that is the roots of manga, no matter how much today's manga/anime projects have been commercialized, sterilized or detoxified. if I was allowed to speak in japanese, manga is in itself yabai mono.
honestly- i don't remember seeing anyone drawing these kinds of things when i was young...
but- i recently found out that someone i know has done this, and still does it today, even though he is 50+ yrs old!

so i guess this is really universal, even though, as you say, probably a minority...
* i confess that when i heard this and another women heard it- you could see the shock on our faces, because he does this in front of his kids in the house...on every newspaper, etc...
he is gay so his partner is also male and they both just think it's funny...
i have to wonder what his little girl thinks about this though...
she's 10 and sees lingerie billboards and calls them inappropriate...so....
regarding the sh*t song...
some years ago, i knew a psychologist who told me about one of his patients who really loved sh*t...the reason he was seeing a psychologist was not because he wanted to stop loving it, but because he wanted to feel like it was OK to love it...
so- again- something that could be just human nature- regardless of nationality...
these things both sound very "male" though...

there seems to be a universal gender divide...it's interesting...
also- i have heard this term- "problem child" repeatedly now...
i'm quite curious-what is the term in japanese, please? Can you show me the romanji for it? I wonder if there is a way to translate it further...because it is such a broad term and could mean so many things...
when it is used by a japanese person, is it referring to someone who just won't follow what is expected of them?
i just saw an interview with ryuichi sakamoto who referred to himself as a "problem child"... basically because he wanted to be different and didn't want to be like everyone else...
and i've seen a number of men being interviewed using this term about themselves...it makes me think that this is a commonly used phrase...
but i don't know- perhaps it is just a coincidence?
i'm just curious because i think it shows that a number of people- men, specifically- feel some pressure to live up to certain expectations- by family and society- and don't always feel able to meet those expectations...
which is true everywhere, of course, but japan is notorious for having very high expectations and standards for their children and for themselves in general...
i wonder if this term is somehow an expression of those values...