It is a culture that respects its craftsmen (the mangaka , the kabuki actor) to the point of worship, yet exploits its entry-level animators like feudal peasants. It is a world where the most vulgar game show is sandwiched between the most refined period drama.

The television industry functions as a feudal guild. The major talent agencies ( Oscar Promotion , Watanabe Entertainment ) control access. You cannot get a film role or an anime voice job without first "paying your dues" on a 6:00 AM variety show where you are forced to react to a video of a monkey riding a unicycle.

Similarly, when an idol is caught dating, the "punishment" is often a public head-shaving (as happened to AKB48’s Minami Minegishi in 2013). The ritual humiliation is not for the crime; it is for breaking the parasocial contract . She stole the fan’s investment. She grew up. In Japan, the entertainment industry demands that its stars remain children forever. For decades, Japan was a "Galapagos Island" of entertainment—evolving in isolation. DVDs cost $40. Rental stores ( Tsutaya ) dominated. But Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Disney+ have bulldozed the walls.

Why? Because Johnny’s produced the soundtrack of a generation. To expose him was to admit that the kawaii boys singing about first love were built on a foundation of predation. The industry chose silence for 40 years.

In Japanese dramas ( doramas ), the most emotional moments are silent. A character stares at a river for 45 seconds. A hand hovers over a door handle. Western remakes invariably add dialogue, destroying the ma (the negative space). In Japanese aesthetics, what is not said is more important than what is. When Netflix remade Kiss That Kills into The Lie , they added screams and chase scenes. It flopped. They forgot the emptiness.