>>4231921>>423079611. There are plenty of people that have waifus that aren’t from Japanese media. The word “waifu” however is, at least to my knowledge, of Japanese origin and therefore often gets associated with anime style characters. I don’t really understand how any of that would create some kind of problem though.
12. I don’t really care, since as I’ve said before my love life is my own concern. I don’t really think it will ever be accepted as normal since the idea is simply too bizarre for most people. Other than that I mostly agree with Mikuanon in that regard.
13. No, I don’t consider myself a part of it.
14. Just like with people of my own gender, there are some I like and some I don’t like.
15. I don’t mind it if they aren’t ripped out of context and you disclose who you’re working with or at least come back and link the finished product.
>any questions?From one journalist to another I have some advice and criticism for you. Question 3 is unclear and needs revision and rephrasing; the questions 7 and 10 should be split up into two separate questions and it is hard to find reasoning and relevance in questions 11. Another gripe with question 11 is that it shows a lot that you seemingly haven’t really done any research regarding the topic as it could easily branch off into more questions, therefore yielding more data and more insight. Additionally, a question regarding the experience with fictosexual communities would shed some more light on the demographic as a whole and cement the fact that the definition of “waifuism” differs greatly not only from individual to individual but also within communities. And last but not least, you should have made an external survey, linked it and made answering the questions in the thread an optional solution.
It shows that you’re probably still a greenhorn, but good luck with your journalism career either way.