AHO-GIRL
Finished · 12 epdiomedéa · 2017 · Japan

AHO-GIRL

アホガール

6.4/ 10 · 123,053

Available on

Crunchyroll· Sub · HD

Yoshiko Hanabatake is an idiot beyond all belief. Somehow managing to consistently score zeroes on all of her tests and consumed by an absurd obsession with bananas, her senseless acts have caused even her own mother to lose all hope. Only one person is up to the task of keeping her insanity in check: childhood friend Akuru "A-kun" Akutsu. Though he bemoans the ridiculous behavior he has to endure, the studious but terrifying A-kun is always ready to put an end to any stupidity Yoshiko gets up to, with no qualms about using physical force. Unfortunately, no matter how many times he attempts to knock some sense into her, the girl bounces right back to her usual shenanigans, even dragging in some other eccentrics along for the ride. Try as he might to rein in her nonsense, every moment is unpredictable with Yoshiko and her profound idiocy on the loose. (Source: MAL Rewrite)

Episodes

12
1. Episode 1 - She's Here! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
2. Episode 2 - Aho Girl Multiplies!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
3. Episode 3 - Security in Senior Citizenship! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
4. Episode 4 - Charge! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
5. Episode 5 - Summertime! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
6. Episode 6 - A Hot Summer! Aho Girl
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
7. Episode 7 - The Gal! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
8. Episode 8 - Like an Angel! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
9. Episode 9 - Festival! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
10. Episode 10 - Drive! Aho Girl!
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
11. Episode 11 - Final Battle! Decisive Blow! Aho Girl
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch
12. Episode 12 - Meeting... And! Aho Girl
13m · Crunchyroll
Watch

How watching this pays the artists

Every time you watch AHO-GIRL on a legitimate streaming service, a portion of that revenue flows back to diomedéa, the voice actors, the composer, and the animators who made it. Subscribing or watching on an ad-supported tier is how the work continues.

Where the money actually goes

Streaming services pay licensing fees to the production committee that financed the show. That committee distributes revenue to the studio, the publisher of the source material, the music label, and the broadcasters who originally aired it. The animators themselves are typically employed or contracted by the studio; their pay comes from the studio’s share of these licensing dollars.

Piracy doesn’t reduce streaming-service revenue evenly — it removes the underlying viewership that justifies future licensing investment. Less licensing investment means smaller studio budgets, lower pay for animators, and fewer shows greenlit.

Torinagi surfaces every legitimate option so you can watch on the service you already pay for, or on a free ad-supported tier if one carries this show. We never host video.