Scandal Eve (2025)

スキャンダルイブ ‧ Drama ‧ 2025
Scandal Eve (2025) poster
7.3
Your Rating: 0/10
Ratings: 7.3/10 from 231 users
# of Watchers: 720
Reviews: 5 users
Ranked #8581
Popularity #12759
Watchers 231

A notice arrives at the office of talent agency president Ioka Saki: a weekly magazine is set to publish a “cheating scandal” about one of her contracted actors, F. The article’s author is Hirata Kanade, a reporter for Weekly Buncho who has exposed countless celebrity scandals. As the agency and the magazine clash fiercely over the publication, new facts hidden behind the scandal begin to surface—pulling them ever deeper into the dark underbelly of the entertainment industry. (Source: Japanese = AbemaTV || Translation = MyDramaList) ~~ Release dates: Oct 31, 2025 (Ep. 1-2 | Festival) || Nov 19, 2025 (Online) Edit Translation

  • English
  • Русский
  • Español
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Country: Japan
  • Type: Drama
  • Episodes: 6
  • Aired: Nov 19, 2025 - Dec 24, 2025
  • Aired On: Wednesday
  • Original Network: AbemaTV
  • Duration: 45 min.
  • Score: 7.3 (scored by 231 users)
  • Ranked: #8581
  • Popularity: #12759
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Where to Watch Scandal Eve

Abema TV
Subscription
Netflix
Subscription (sub)

Cast & Credits

Photos

Scandal Eve Japanese Drama(2025) photo

Reviews

Completed
niaoniao Finger Heart Award1 Flower Award1 Reply Goblin Award1 Notification Ninja1 Reply Hugger1 Big Brain Award1
17 people found this review helpful
Dec 24, 2025
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

machinery and the mob

9 / 10

Most dramas are made to help us escape for a bit. This one doesn’t let you do that. It doesn’t try to be clever or self-important. It just confronts you. It pulls a system we’re not supposed to see into the open and holds it there. What makes it uncomfortable is that it doesn’t stop at the industry. It makes room for the audience too, for the way attention, demand, and silence keep the whole thing running. This isn’t really entertainment. It’s a reckoning with an industry that only works because people stay quiet and pretend not to know.

The scandal at its core is not rumor or professional misconduct. It is the systematic suppression of rape and sexual assault. We see multiple victims erased through coordinated falsehoods. Of cousre, who knows how many victim stories never make it to the light. We see media manipulation and suppression deployed as a weapon. A culture so practiced in self-preservation that it pushes victims toward isolation, despair, and suicide. The series does not treat this as some sort provocation... it treats it as evidence that the whole thing needs a reboot or to be torn down.

Haruna's (oh how I love Haruna in everything she is in)character is personally implicated and ideologically committed. Her sister is also a victim, and that wound never closes. But she is not driven by solely by revenge. She is driven by belief. She believes truth matters. She believes journalism has an obligation beyond access, profit, and survival. That conviction is what makes her dangerous in a system designed to bury facts rather than surface them.

At first I was a little conflicted by the sister connection, but I think the writers did a good job of introducing it (I am just very wary of any previous connection trope.... but at least this one isn't that someone in the show crossed paths with someone 47 years ago and now everything is magically connected.)

The scenes with her and Ko hit me harder than anything else in the show. This isn’t some moral showdown. It’s two women who understand exactly how much power a narrative can hold and who gets to tell it. They know what silence protects and what truth can destroy, and neither of them looks away. Watching it, I kept holding my breath. Every word and every move matters. It’s tense, it’s exhausting, and it feels completely real.

What makes the drama so damning is that it doesn’t stop with the easy villains. It doesn’t let us blame just the agencies or point fingers at the media and feel clean about it. Yes, they’re guilty. But the show names the last accomplice too, and it’s the audiencee. Abuse keeps happening because attention keeps paying for it. Lies survive because they sell. People want the spectacle, then punish anyone who threatens to ruin it. So everyone quietly agrees to look away as long as the product stays untouched. Watching isn’t neutral. Consumption is participation. Every view, every click, every excuse keeps the machine alive. We are not standing outside of this.

The series really only slips once for me. The Editor-in-Chief, Kenjiro Goda, changes sides a little too smoothly. In a story where telling the truth always comes at a cost, that turn felt a bit rushed. There are a couple of other moments like that too. I get that with only six episodes there was never going to be time to sit with every character, and I don’t think the show is being lazy. I just kept feeling like a few of those shifts needed another scene, another beat, something to make the change feel heavier. When everything else in the show makes growth feel painful, the easier turns stand out.

For me, the ending doesn’t retreat into cynicism. It refuses the easy lie that nothing ever changes. The truth is dragged into the open, publicly and in a way that can’t be taken back. What happens in the final press conference isn’t abstract or symbolic. It closes the loop that was opened in the first episode, and what’s said there felt exactly right to me. Nothing padded. Nothing softened. I didn’t need to see every villain punished on screen to feel the weight of it. Their downfalls are clearly set in motion, and that’s enough.

The fact that everything isn’t wrapped up neatly didn’t feel like a flaw. It felt honest. This story was never about comfort or clean closure. It was about what happens after the truth is finally spoken, and how impossible it is to pretend nothing happened.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
burhaa aadmi
3 people found this review helpful
27 days ago
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 1.0

Challenging, uncomfortable, powerful

VERY topical for the entertainment/news media generally,perhaps even more so in Japan, not an easy watch. A great example of a Drama I REALLY enjoyed but will not watch again. All 3 female leads shone, Ms Ko was her awesome self and they nailed the ending. I hope more people watch this unflinching examination of the "truth" industry.
Was this review helpful to you?

Recommendations

There have been no recommendations submitted. Be the first and add one.

Recent Discussions

Be the first to create a discussion for Scandal Eve

Details

  • Title: Scandal Eve
  • Type: Drama
  • Format: Web Series
  • Country: Japan
  • Episodes: 6
  • Aired: Nov 19, 2025 - Dec 24, 2025
  • Aired On: Wednesday
  • Original Network: AbemaTV
  • Duration: 45 min.
  • Content Rating: Not Yet Rated

Statistics

  • Score: 7.3 (scored by 231 users)
  • Ranked: #8581
  • Popularity: #12759
  • Watchers: 720

Top Contributors

59 edits
52 edits
23 edits
19 edits

Popular Lists

Related lists from users

Recently Watched By