Daft Punk, who helped create Interstella 5555, show up briefly at an award show the Crescendolls are attending.
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Series Director Yasuhiro Imagawa appears in Mobile Fighter G Gundam's second opening, in the sequence showing Argo in a crowded Hong Kong street Imagawa's the guy in the Federation uniform.
Yoshiyuki Tomino appears in Ideon: Be Invoked.
(He has no collaboration on the game itself though.)
Eiichiro Oda later appears in the Platform Fighter One Piece: Gigant Battle 2 as an assist character.
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In a movie short based on a soccer competition, the author of the manga, going by his nickname Odacchi, makes an appearance as the "world's best soccer player." His shot is the only one the goalie successfully catches and blocks.
Masashi Kishimoto appears on a billboard in the third chapter of Naruto.
likely because no one would be able to tell who he was since he is drawn pretty much identically to Keitaro (to the surprise of no-one). He is always overtly called by his name in these situations, though.
Motoko & Kitsune hijacked his boat in the New Years' special.
He appears to help out a couple of the residents of the Hinata Inn in the Love Hina Christmas Special.
In fact, the Stan Lee cameo (Dunstan) kicked off the plot by creating the mechanical boys.
Stan Lee is seen quite a lot in Hero Man.
And his name is called in the airport during the final Eden of the East film.
He appears briefly in one scene of Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - he's driving a car in some security feed footage pulled up by Section 9 while they try to track down Hideo Kuze.
The bovine self-caricature of original creator Hiromu Arakawa makes stealth appearances in several episodes as well, including the scene in which Winry is yelling at a hospitalized Ed to drink his milk, and again much later on when Sheska is describing her UFO-related conspiracy theories to Winry.
If you compare the man to a picture of the director of the anime, you'll see they're one and the same. One of the soldiers flies past the screen in such a way that his face takes up most of the screen at one point, and looks suspiciously Japanese, considering Ed's country is apparently supposed to be European of sorts.
A blink-and-you'll-miss-it example: In episode 13 of Fullmetal Alchemist, Roy and Ed are having an alchemy duel and Roy sends one of his flame attacks into the crowd, causing them to fly into the air.
Fujiki Shun also appears on several occasions in his manga Hajimete no Aku.
Hiroaki Samura appears in the anime version of Blade of the Immortal as a pinwheel salesman.
ES also heavily features Koshi Rikdo, the creator of the original comic, and many of the episode openings revolve around the two butting heads about what direction the story should go.
Shinichi "Nabeshin" Watanabe has made this his signature, most prominently in Excel Saga.
On at least one occasion he even lent his voice to a guest appearance during an interlude in the anime adaptation of Dr.
Akira Toriyama makes several cameos throughout his works, whether they're in the manga he draws or the anime based on them, usually to poke fun at himself or provide a throwaway quip.
Go Nagai has appeared in many of his manga adaptations, including the live-action Cutey Honey (the movie saw Honey smashing the window of his car giving Nagai a nice Panty Shot, while in Cutie Honey the Live, he appears in the DVD exclusive 26th episode) and Devilman productions.
He also cameos as the doctor in "Tenacity" who helps cancer-ridden medical student Yamanobe to treat another cancer patient before he dies.
In "U-18 Knew", Tezuka appears as a patient suffering from "chronic deadlinitis".
Amusingly, he has "Why am I here anyway?" written on the back of his shirt.
In "Legs of an Ant", Tezuka draws himself as a passer-by warning Mitsuo about a forest fire on the road ahead.
Tezuka makes appearances in several chapters of Black Jack.
He appears as a museum tourist in Kimba the White Lion.