Xxxmmsub.com - T.me Xxxmmsub1 - Dass-400-720.m4v Apr 2026
The video is grainy, shot in single long takes, 720p, no audience laugh track. No opening credits. Just a title card that fades in: "The Mirror Stage" A woman sits in a fluorescent-lit dressing room. Her name is Yuki Hoshino — a recognizable face from late-night Japanese variety shows, known for her bubbly ojaru persona. But here, she's not smiling. She's staring into a cracked mirror, removing her makeup in slow, deliberate strokes. The camera never cuts.
Mari assumes it's fiction. A revenge drama. A meta-commentary. But then she notices something: the file contains a second video track, hidden, accessible only by changing the extension to .mkv and extracting with forensic software. This track is filmed from a different angle—a hidden camera placed inside the dressing room's ceiling vent.
Within minutes, the channel description changes:
DASS-400: The Last Broadcast Logline: A disgraced documentary filmmaker discovers a corrupted video file labeled "DASS-400-720.m4v" on a cryptic Telegram channel. As she restores the footage, she realizes it’s not a drama—it’s a real-time confession of an entertainment industry scandal that someone is trying to bury. And the final scene hasn't finished recording. Deep Story: Part 1: The Ghost in the Stream Xxxmmsub.com - T.me Xxxmmsub1 - DASS-400-720.m4v
And here's where Mari freezes the playback. Because the scripted dialogue—if it is scripted—feels too real. Yuki starts listing names. Producers. Network heads. A famous comedian known for "training" young talent in private karaoke rooms. The details are specific. Dates. Hotel names.
"If you have received this file, do not rename it. Do not share it. Do not look into the mirror while playing it. And if you hear a voice say 'Take 2'—run."
"...the DASS-400 asset is live. She thinks it's a drama. But the contract was clear. If she walks out during the monologue, the non-disclosure is void. We release the raw. Her career ends. Call me when she's back in the building." The video is grainy, shot in single long
Mari downloads it. The metadata is strange. Creation date: — a year from now. Codec: proprietary, marked DASS , which Mari recognizes from old industry rumors as "Digital Archive Scripted Series" — a short-lived streaming initiative by a defunct production company called Genmu Studios (literally "Illusion Studios"). They produced only one series before vanishing. A drama about a drama.
But today is 2024.
Below it, typed in the metadata: "Rolling. Action." Thematic Core: This story explores the dark underbelly of Japanese entertainment—the kuroki gyōkai (dark industry) where reality and performance merge into a cage. It questions: when trauma is filmed for public consumption, who is the victim? Who is the director? And in an age of Telegram leaks and lost media, can we ever be sure that what we're watching isn't watching us back? Her name is Yuki Hoshino — a recognizable
That’s where she finds it: a video file named , posted without context, no thumbnail, only a single emoji: 🎭. The channel, @lost_nippon_dramas , has 47 subscribers. The file size is 1.8GB. Last active: two years ago.
In this angle, the director is visible. His face is partially obscured, but his voice matches. And at the 34-minute mark, after Yuki leaves, the director pulls out a phone and makes a call. Mari enhances the audio:
Yuki Hoshino vanished six months after this was filmed. Officially, she retired due to "health reasons." Unofficially, Mari finds a missing persons report filed by Yuki's mother—filed the same day as the video's metadata creation date: .
Mari realizes the truth: is still active. It's not a series—it's a live experiment. Every person who watches the file becomes a potential "character" in the next episode. The Telegram channel is the control room. The missing Yuki was Episode 1. Mari is Episode 2.
Yuki doesn't look at the lens. She wipes off a layer of foundation, revealing a bruise on her jaw. "They made me cry on command. Twelve times. For a commercial about pain relief."