horacethegrey said:
The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya - Good lord. I honestly couldn't stop laughing at the first episode of this. It is without a doubt the most whacked out anime I've seen since
Excel Saga and
Yakitate! Japan. To try and explain what this show is about would be doing it an injustice (not to mention revealing a great deal of Spoilers

). But if you all insist on a description, let me say that it's a slice of life/comedy anime much in the vein of
Azumanga Daioh, but taken to the
nth degree.

All of you must watch this, trust me. And believe me when I say that the first episode is pure comedy gold.
Oh God Yes. I've seen the first two episodes and can't wait to see where it goes from there. The first episode had me in stitches. And Kyou has got to be the best seinen lead ever. "...Wait, you're going to show this to the public?!"
I'm a little past the middle of
Fruits Basket. It's probably the best shoujo series I've yet seen. I am singularly impressed by the depth of characterization.
I finished watching
Neon Genesis Evangelion a short while ago, and I can't decide if I loved it or if I was totally cheated by the lack of closure. That said, Shinji's emotional emancipation at the end left me feeling satisfied. I have no intention of viewing
End of Evangelion, as I feel the series ended on a positive note and I don't want to watch everyone die horrible deaths.
I've also been watching
Ranma 1/2. I'm up to the 7th season, and plan on seeing the OVAs after. I'd been warned that it dragged very badly in the middle seasons, and indeed it did, but it was worth it to get to the last two seasons, which pick up considerably. Another older series I'm watching is
Sailor Moon -- the subtitled version,
not the dubbed version -- mainly to see what the fuss is about, and I think it's pretty good for a kids' show.
Two shows I'm interested in checking out in the future are
Fate/Stay Night and
Eyeshield 21. The basic premise of the former intrigues me, but the knowledge that it's based on an H-game puts me off quite a bit. As for the latter, it's just the novelty of American football seen through a Japanese lens that I'm interested in.