This is actually from a Japanese manga series called Doraemon and it features a cat from the 22nd, robotic cat from the 22nd century who helps this human boy throughout his childhood years until adulthood. In this particular story, it begins with the boy, his name is Nobita who leaves the dinner table because he's unable to eat which makes his parents really worry about him. The robotic cat finds a solution and he pulls out this futuristic device from his magical pocket called the mini black hole. And the black hole is kind of explained in this little panel here as a graveyard of outer space. It swallows up everything in sight and not even light can escape it. What Doraemon, the little the robotic cat, does it gives Nobita this little speck of the black hole which he consumes and it enables him to finish his meal. And then the following day, Nobita is talking to his friend about how many bowls of rice he can eat and this leads to the friends having an eating contest. In order to win Nobita goes back home and eats more of the black hole which eventually does enable him to win the contest but then he falls asleep after eating such a big meal. Every single time he inhales and exhales, because he's snoring, so when he inhales everything that's within his gravitational pull gets sucked in. The story ends with his mother really frustrated at the fact that all this junk has accumulated at their doorstep. I think this is another very playful and interesting way that mediates our fears of the black hole. I think in Japanese popular culture the black hole is made manifest in the form of like a superpower. And I'm only going to talk about some of them but everyone's familiar with Pokemon. Yes, okay I don't know very many people who don't know what Pokemon is. But you see here this is a Pokemon named Gardevoir. That's a genderless Pokemon and it has this power to generate a black hole as a kind of a last resort to use it to protect its Pokemon master if he or she is faced in mortal danger. The other one is this guy. So this is an action figure from Japanese manga and anime series called Kinnikuman or muscle man. He's the villain of that series in particular. He's basically a personification of the black hole as you can see BH, by black hole. He has a superpower to generate several black holes at once in which he can kind of travel through them. So the idea of the worm hole and the black hole is slightly confused it seems. But his ultimate power is that his head basically functions like a vacuum in which he sucks up his opponents and throws them into this alternate universe and supposedly the black hole. Of course the scientists never really explained. But the black hole also tends to be an attribute of villains. But not always the case. I guess my last example. I show this one because it's also a very popular anime series in Canada. So this guy is featured in a Japanese anime as well as manga called Inuyasha which was broadcast in Canada sometime ago. I grew up watching it here. But he has his power or rather the male line in his family is cursed with this black hole on his palm. It's never really called the black hole in the anime series but it functions in the same way and that every single time he opens up his palm, whatever's within his gravitational pull gets sucked in and overuse of this power risks him being sucked in to his own hand which I guess scientifically it doesn't make any sense. Yeah but this guy's name is Miroku from Inuyasha actually. So, those are just some I guess fun ways, entertaining ways in which the the black hole is represented in Japanese popular culture and anime as a kind of superpower. But it's not only in Japan actually, in North America you have Silver Surfer. He's a Marvel hero. I think he's able to manipulate cosmic power and generate black holes as the superpower too. It's very cool.