TV-Series
Description
Hina Hōjō, the youngest sibling of Sweetfish Productions’ pioneering idols China and Mina of the Chocorat Sisters, enthusiastically praises her sisters’ legacy, often launching into detailed recitations of their achievements until gently cut off by others. Though her pride in their connection is evident, the nature of their familial bond—biological or otherwise—remains undefined, as the anime refrains from depicting direct interactions between them.
A theater-focused performer aspiring to idol stardom like her sisters, Hina balances ambition with comically disastrous kitchen escapades. Her culinary experiments, whether baking pastries or reheating miso soup in a microwave, inevitably erupt in harmless explosions, cementing her reputation as ovenware’s greatest adversary.
Recruited into the third-generation Lovely Idols under manager Tomohiro Fujisaki, Hina’s journey centers on mirroring her sisters’ paths. Yet the narrative prioritizes her idol pursuits over deeper exploration of her personal aspirations or unresolved dynamics with the Chocat Sisters and their mother, leaving these threads purposefully untouched. Her story exists solely within the main series, with no expansions into supplementary media.
A theater-focused performer aspiring to idol stardom like her sisters, Hina balances ambition with comically disastrous kitchen escapades. Her culinary experiments, whether baking pastries or reheating miso soup in a microwave, inevitably erupt in harmless explosions, cementing her reputation as ovenware’s greatest adversary.
Recruited into the third-generation Lovely Idols under manager Tomohiro Fujisaki, Hina’s journey centers on mirroring her sisters’ paths. Yet the narrative prioritizes her idol pursuits over deeper exploration of her personal aspirations or unresolved dynamics with the Chocat Sisters and their mother, leaving these threads purposefully untouched. Her story exists solely within the main series, with no expansions into supplementary media.