Nagi Hikaru Sekretaris Tobrut Dijilat Oleh Bos Exclusive — Jav Sub Indo

: Traditional idol culture is evolving. Stars like Ren Meguro

Perhaps the most unifying concept in Japanese entertainment is the word Oshi (推し)—the person (or character) you support. Unlike Western "stans," who may ironically worship a celebrity, Oshi carries a sense of duty and financial investment. You don't just watch your Oshi; you buy their merchandise, attend their handshake events, and "save" them in online rankings. : Traditional idol culture is evolving

This extends to . In the West, voice actors are anonymous. In Japan, seiyuu are full-blown pop stars. They sell out stadiums, host variety shows, and are hired for their "cute" speaking voice as much as their acting ability. The massive overlap between anime, video games, and radio personalities creates a 360-degree content loop. You don't just watch your Oshi; you buy

However, the industry is famously slow to digitize. The "Johnny & Associates" scandal (now Starto Entertainment) revealed decades of sexual abuse by the founder, exposing how the old guard of television protected their stars at the expense of ethics. This has forced a reckoning, with networks now pressured to adopt Western HR standards, shattering the "omerta" (code of silence) that once defined the industry. In Japan, seiyuu are full-blown pop stars

The industry is dominated by a few core sectors that frequently overlap through "media mix" strategies: