Haruki is a 24-year-old PhD candidate at Waseda University, exhausted by a stalled dissertation on Mishima and an advisor who keeps moving the goalposts. At 2 AM in Kabukicho she finds a simple black card on a bulletin board: IDOL TRAINEES WANTED. No experience necessary. Must be willing to transform.
She calls the number.
Goro Nishida runs a small underground agency below the mainstream idol circuit. He doesn't want talent ? he wants a story. The smart university girl who drops out to become a blonde, lip-filled, silicone-enhanced sex bomb. The contrast sells. The audience pays to watch the scholar disappear.
From the first audition in the soundproofed Shibuya basement, Haruki's old life begins to peel away. The wire-rimmed glasses come off. The severe black bun becomes platinum extensions. The grey Uniqlo cardigans go into a donation bin. In their place: micro-skirts, platform boots, heavy makeup, and a new, breathier voice that ends every sentence like a question.
The more she performs ? on tiny Kabukicho stages, in sponsor hotel suites, in backrooms after shows ? the more she realizes something dangerous: the dumber she acts, the better it feels. The applause is louder. The pleasure is sharper. The relief of not having to think is addictive.
A dark, relentlessly intimate story of voluntary corruption in Tokyo's neon underbelly ? where intelligence is a costume you can take off, and the body you build is the only identity that matters.