Smile Down the Runway
Finished · 12 epEzo’la · 2020 · Japan

Smile Down the Runway

ランウェイで笑って

7.3/ 10 · 39,546

Available on

Hulu· Sub · HDYouTube· Sub · HDNetflix· Sub · HDCrunchyroll· Sub · HD

Chiyuki Fujito has a dream: to become a Paris Collection model. The problem is, she's too short to be a model, and everyone around her tells her so! But no matter what they say, she won't give up. Her classmate, a poor student named Ikuto Tsumura, also has a dream: to become a fashion designer. One day Chiyuki tells him that it's "probably impossible" for him, causing him to consider giving it up...?! This is the story of two individuals wholeheartedly chasing after their dreams in spite of all the negativity that comes after them! (Source: Kodansha USA)

Episodes

12
1. Episode 1 - This Is Your Story
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
2. Episode 2 - A Professional's World
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
3. Episode 3 - Smile Down the Runway
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
4. Episode 4 - Young Talents
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
5. Episode 5 - Individual Styles
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
6. Episode 6 - Superiority and Inferiority
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
7. Episode 7 - Aura
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
8. Episode 8 - The Designer's Capacity
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
9. Episode 9 - Rivals
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
10. Episode 10 - Must Not Lose
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
11. Episode 11 - The Promise
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch
12. Episode 12 - This Is My Story
25m · Crunchyroll
Watch

How watching this pays the artists

Every time you watch Smile Down the Runway on a legitimate streaming service, a portion of that revenue flows back to Ezo’la, 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.