
Compilation of "Girls Band Cry" Nina Iseri's Famous Quotes: Every Sentence Pierces the Heart with Soulful Cries
Preface: The "Mad Dog" Lead Singer Whose Language Is a Weapon
Preface: The "Mad Dog" Lead Singer Whose Language Is a Weapon
In the 2024 anime dark horse Girls Band Cry, the protagonist Nina Iseri, with her extreme, pure, and uncompromising 'mad dog' personality, became a love-her-or-hate-her focus for viewers. She never hides her emotions—anger, sadness, joy always burst out in the most raw way. And besides her heart-wrenching singing, what carries these emotions are those sharp, piercing 'famous quotes' (or 'outbursts'). These lines aren't just dialogue; they are her weapons to rebel against the world, define herself, and build bonds with her partners.
The foundation that shaped her rebellious soul: "Don't aim to be liked."
Strictly speaking, this line isn't Nina's own quote, but comes from her father's teaching. However, this phrase became the core philosophy underlying all of Nina Iseri's actions. After being isolated for standing up against school bullying, she internalized 'Don't aim to be liked' in an extreme way, making it her manifesto to no longer read the room or compromise herself to please others. It was this near-distorted persistence that gave her the courage to drop out and move to Tokyo from her hometown, and to dare to flip off all injustice and hypocrisy.
To protect what's important: "Momoka isn't wrong!"
When Nina learned about Momoka's past of leaving her former band 'Diamond Dust' and her confusion about her own music, Nina took Momoka's pain as her own. She repeatedly shouted 'Momoka isn't wrong!'—this wasn't just comforting a partner, but a declaration of war.
"So I want to prove that song isn't wrong!"
This famous quote showcases Nina's trait: she will arbitrarily shoulder others' emotions and turn them into her own driving force. For her, proving that Momoka's music is right is equivalent to proving her own worth—this intense obsession became the band's strongest cohesive force in its early days.








