What Happened to Ayumu on 'Terrace House'? Plus, the Other Members of the Show's Priceless Panel

Publish date: 2024-05-23

Meet the Hosts of Your Latest Netflix Obsession, 'Terrace House'

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Dec. 24 2018, Updated 9:13 a.m. ET

Source: Netflix

If you might have been sleeping on Terrace House, it is time to forestall. The newest season of Opening New Doors is now on Netflix and it's the very best binge of the season. Possibly the most delightful part of this show — which follows six Japanese millennials who reside together in a beautiful suburban mansion — is the panel of hosts who intermittently remark on the drama as it unfolds.

Panels are commonplace on Japanese tv, however the chemistry of the Terrace House hosts is especially enjoyable to watch. These commentators, who are from different towns and of other ages, supply recaps, anecdotes and their very own perspectives on the housemates. Without them, Terrace House would simply be simply another subpar truth dating display.

Plus, all the way through the latest season of Opening New Doors, the panelists watch the housemates staring at them, which creates a trippy room-of-mirrors impact and an ungainly, self-conscious tension among them. Moments like this make Terrace House an absolutely stand-out display that is completely unlike anything we are exposed to on American TV.

And — with the exception of young Ayumu, who left the panel as soon as the remark was a little risqué for the then-15-year-old — the identical relied on group has led us via loads of Terrace House episodes since she show began back in 2015. 

Keep reading to know about every one.

1. Ayumu Mochizuki

Source: Netflix

Newcomers to the show might be questioning what brought about Ayumu to disappear after the first 18 episodes of Boys and Girls in the City. While many disliked the then-15-year-old, pronouncing he didn't convey a lot to the desk and used to be more than likely too young to comment on anything going on, others assume his young age was exactly why the show replaced him with Kentaro as soon as "the commentary started getting M-rated."

Since leaving Terrace House in 2015, his acting profession has taken off. Catch him on the Japanese mini-series Becoming Mother, or more recently on Netflix's own Mob Psycho 100.

2. Kentaro

Source: Netflix

Ayumu's substitute Kentaro is the simplest member of the panel who hasn't been with the hosts since day one. Kentaro is a successful actor in Japan, and was once already a well-recognized face to Netflix after starring in their authentic show, Good Morning Call.

Though he began his tenure on the panel without offering too much statement on the display, he turns out to banter much more with his co-hosts at the present time. Kentaro additionally serves as a handy foil to the disturbing and chatty Ryota, who will incessantly throw in feedback like "Kentaro, you haven't developed a discerning eye for women yet. I'll teach you today," all through the show. Major eyeroll.

3. Azusa Babazono

Source: Netflix

Azusa is an actor and comedian from Osaka. Although she's one of the quieter hosts in the crew, she has a favorable outlook on the housemates and provides insightful statement whenever she participates in the panelists' banter. 

Her standpoint is especially welcome when she will give an explanation for the conduct of housemates from her place of origin and unpack Osakan stereotypes.

4. YOU (Yukiko Ehara)

Source: Netflix

Yukiko AKA YOU is an actor, style, singer and television personality. She seems on panels of many other Japanese shows in a similar role as the one she holds on Terrace House.

YOU introduces the show's premise at the get started of each episode: "Terrace House is a show about six strangers, men and women, living together, and we observe how they interact with each other." She at all times wraps up with the line, "As usual, there is no script at all."

She comments on the cast of the show continuously, and her feedback are occasionally so out of left field, they're impressively funny to watch.

5. Yoshimi Tokui

Source: Netflix

Like YOU, this actor and comedian appears on several other Japanese selection presentations as a number. Although he does not speak too frequently, the Kyoto local will also be pretty harsh together with his critique of the housemates when he does. 

Sometimes he chimes in with personal anecdotes about his personal relationship lifestyles and, useless to say, it might get a bit awk.

6. Reina Triendl

Source: Netflix

This fashion style and Japanese socialite is the maximum lovable of the panel. Each week, she leads off the recaps by reading key issues of the earlier episode from her iPad. Her position is that of the blameless voice in the group, who reigns the others in when their innuendos get out of hand. 

She may be the maximum romantic of the bunch, and at all times gets emotionally invested in the love lives of the show's attainable couples.

7. Ryōta Yamasato

Source: Netflix

OK, I stored Ryota for closing as a result of even supposing he talks SO MUCH, he is the least likable of the hosts, IMHO. Like Tokui and YOU, Ryota also appears on many other Japanese shows; on Terrace House, he performs the role of the sarcastic and cynical outspoken guy, who blurts out each terrible thought that passes thru his head.

He's always actively in search of area members to criticize, which makes him something of a bully, despite the fact that I assume it also makes for excellent TV. Especially fascinating to me was the 2d episode of the new season the place he watches the housemates watch Terrace House's remark panel, and brazenly acknowledges how imply and horrible he's.

Here's hoping that revelation causes him to alternate his act up slightly and grow to be a little extra likable this season.


You can watch all of Terrace House, including the newest season of Opening New Doors, on Netflix.

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