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Hanbun, Aoi. (半分、青い。, Half Blue Sky) [1] is a Japanese television drama series and the 98th Asadora series, following Warotenka.It premiered on April 2, 2018, and concluded on September 29, 2018.
Beyond Goodbye (Japanese: さよならのつづき, Hepburn: Sayonara no Tsuzuki) is a Netflix original Japanese drama series starring Kasumi Arimura and Kentaro Sakaguchi. [2] All 8 episodes were released at once on Netflix on November 14, 2024. [1] The series mainly takes place in Otaru, Hokkaido. [3]
Flower Shop Without A Rose (薔薇のない花屋, Bara no nai Hanaya) is a Japanese television drama. It was broadcast and produced by Fuji Television . It started with a 22.4% (Kanto Region) rating on January 14, 2008.
Hanbun no Tsuki ga Noboru Sora (半分の月がのぼる空, lit. Sky with a Rising Half-Moon), subtitled looking up at the half-moon and also known as Hantsuki, is a Japanese romance light novel series written by Tsumugu Hashimoto and illustrated by Keiji Yamamoto centering on two hospitalized seventeen year olds and the love they begin to share.
8.7% [3] 4 August 1, 2016 つのる想い Tsunoru Omoi: Thought to raise: 9.5% [4] Shuhei Nomura, Kenta Hamano, Miami D has also appeared in the sub-audio [5] 5 August 8, 2016 告白 Kokuhaku: Confessions: 8.4% [6] 6 August 15, 2016 彼の真実 Kare no shinjitsu: His truth: 8.3% [7] Miura Shohei & Shuhei Nomura appeared in the sub-audio [8] 7 ...
Short Program (Japanese: ショート・プログラム, Hepburn: Shōto Puroguramu) is a 2022 Japanese anthology streaming television drama series based on Mitsuru Adachi's manga collection with the same name starring members of boy band JO1 as the male protagonists.
In Season 15 Episode 3, Roland appears as a host. [2] AIBOU is also broadcast with English subtitles in Hawaii by the television station KIKU under the name Partners, [3] [4] and in Los Angeles by the station Japan Hollywood Network (before UTB 18.1) under the official English name AIBOU: Tokyo Detective Duo. [5] [6] [7]
Sophia Fukunishi is half Australian and Japanese. She moved to Tokyo at 27 years old and has obstacles with trying to assimilate into a very different Japanese culture. The Mexican-Japanese Oi family with Gabriela, Alex, Tetsuya and Sara share the challenge of raising multi-lingual, multi-cultural children in Japan.