Panty shot
- Main article: Camera angle
A panty shot is a photograph, a video, a drawing or an animation in which a (usually fully clothed) woman's or girl's panties are visible.
Panty shots are possible if the female wears a skirt or dress (especially if it is short) and if other factors come along:
- if she is posing in a certain way (e.g. bending over, spreading her legs while seated, standing or hanging upside down)
- if wind blows her skirt up
- if the photographer/videographer chooses a worm's eye view camera angle.
Usually it causes embarrassment to the girl if her panties are seen.
Comic strips
Panty shots were a regular feature of child-friendly comics (esp. Little Girl strips) during the so-called Golden Age. Cartoonists of the interwar period normally drew little girls according to a well established formula, which included (amongst other things), drastically abbreviated hemlines revealing plain white briefs. Needless to say, images of this nature were meant to be cute rather than risque, although Panty-spanking was often used as a form of comedy relief in many of the better known strips, including Little Iodine, Nancy, Little Lulu etc.
The convention was practiced well into the late seventies in various Harvey Comics titles (Little Audrey, Little Dot et al), but made only sporadic appearances during the eighties. Since the early nineties, traditional panty-spanking images have fallen out of favor with mainstream audiences, due in part to such material being deemed politically incorrect.
The rise of the WWW has prompted a minor renaissance of panty-spanking imagery amongst online SP communities, although it is generally considered the 'poor cousin' to the more popular BB variant. On the other hand, classic panty-spanking panels are held in high regard by many older enthusiasts for their unique and often nostalgic 'flavor.'
Manga and anime
In manga and anime, panty shots are a very common kind of fan service, refered to in Japanese as "Panchira." Although the term actually refers to a "brief glimpse" of "panty", the word may be applied to any image in which a young girl's briefs are exposed for any length of time. The convention was (most probably) established in Japanese comics by Osamu Tezuka during the mid-fifties and transferred to the animated medium in 1963 with the original broadcasting of Tetsuwan Atom (Astroboy). Tezuka almost certainly borrowed the idea from Western comics and cartoons - panty shots featured regularly in both Disney and Fleischer Studios productions, and Tezuka was, by his own admission, a great admirer of both.
This influence extended to the design of his most famous female character, Astroboy's robotic sister, Uran (Astrogirl). As noted by numerous animation historians, Uran's appearance borrowed heavily from 1930s cartoon characters such as Minnie Mouse and Betty Boop, both of which were notable for their ongoing panty displays. Possible later influences include Little Lulu and Little Audrey, internationally recognised Little girl characters (though no direct evidence indicates direct copying on Tezuka's part).
Due to Tezuka's overwhelming impact on Japanese popular culture, panchira became a common practice in manga and anime during the 1960s, although the convention was confined mainly to the children's genre. As with their Western counterparts, shoujo characters were frequently represented as cute and naive; innocent panty-shots served to reinforce the image. Consequently, such depictions were considered kawaii (cute) rather than ecchi (risque) at the time. Towards the end of the sixties, however, a hint of sexuality had begun to creep into manga aimed at a slightly older demographic, particularly in titles featuring adolescent female characters. By the 1970s, a younger generation of mangaka such as Go Nagai were exploiting the voyeuristic connotations of the panty shot.
Ecchi-style panchira soon made the transition to anime, figuring largely in mahou shoujo (magic girl) programs like Cutey Honey and Majokko Megu-Chan. The convention was popular enough to spread to many other genres, even those seemingly devoid of sexual content (such as domestic comedy, martial arts and even 'sports romance'). While this increasingly voyeuristic approach led to some controversies during the early seventies, fanservice was mostly viewed as a harmless diversion by the Japanese public. In the present day, panchira is an almost-universal element of Japanese animation. Ironically, the classic American panty shot - once overwhelmingly common in Western comics and cartoons - has all but vanished from the popular media.
In American cartoons, a girl wearing a dress hanging upside down voluntarily (hanging on monkey bar or tree limb) or involuntarily (caught in snare, foot caught in hot air balloon tow rope) were subjected to the cartoon license of her skirt remaining in place to keep her panties covered. (e.g. The Batman episode "Love Is A Croc" has Killer Croc holding Baby Dahl upside down after she double crosses him--with Dahl upside down, her skirt remains in place but thanks to an aerial camera shot we still see her panties.) Even in family-friendly live-action fare, steps had to be procured to prevent graituitous shots. In the 2002 live-action Scooby-Doo movie, Linda Cardellini (as Velma) had her skirt taped to her legs in a scene where she is hanging upside down by one foot in a scaffold chain. Apart from that, panty shots in American cartoons were limited to fleeting shots of cheerleader bloomers and maybe a glimpse due to a skirt being physically forced up. Cartoon Network's "Ed, Edd & Eddy" did have a girl character, Nazz, who in two episodes was seen solely in a camisole, bed slippers and panties for extended minutes.
Trivia
Glory Bee swears vengence after a particularly thorough spanking.
Little Audrey performs a handstand to upstage a local rival. Gratuitous panty shots were a time-honoured tradition in many old school Little Girl strips.
Alice clowns about with the terrible twins in Alice: New Adventures in Wonderland no. 10 (Ziff-Davis, 1951). Humorous panty-shots were a staple of comics aimed at young girls.
The wording of the 1954 Comics Code effectively forbade the depiction of sexual activity in comics, along with extreme violence, horror and bloodshed. Significantly, panty-shots and spanking scenes involving underaged girls were considered completely acceptable under the Code's policies.
See also
Topic:Panties and panty fetishism |
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Panty flashing • Panty spanking • Spanking panties |
Topics: Manga and Anime | |
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Types | Doujinshi • Fan art • Shoujo • Shōnen • Magical girl • Kemonomimi |
Character types | Meganekko • Moe • Pettanko |
Sexual forms | Hentai • Ecchi • Ero-guro • Lolicon • Moe • Pettanko • Shotacon • Yaoi • Yuri |
Sites | Anime Brats • Anime OTK • Oekaki |
Info | Japan • Spanking in manga • Spanking manga • Spanking in anime • Spanking in computer and video games |
Glossary | Glossary of anime and manga |
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