One of the ENHYPEN members is straight-up LYING.
HYBE just dropped the news: ENHYPEN is kicking off the very first season of STAN:A — Spotify’s brand new video podcast series that’s gonna shake up how we enjoy K-pop content globally. Their show, The Blood Diary, premieres April 3, with fresh episodes dropping every two weeks.
It’s a simple but addictive format.
The members take turns sharing mysterious or straight-up weird stories from around the world. Plot twist — one of them is completely made up. The rest have to figure out who the liar is… and we get to play detective along with them.No fancy stages. No choreo. No big cinematic universe.
Just the guys sitting down, talking, reacting, and lowkey sweating when the questions get spicy. The tension comes purely from their faces, their timing, and how they side-eye each other. It’s giving real “who’s hiding something” energy.For a group that usually serves super polished concepts and powerful performances, this feels refreshingly stripped back. Suddenly we’re not watching the performance — we’re watching them. Who hesitates a little too long? Who’s way too smooth? Who’s just vibing while everyone else spirals? The game is fun, but the real entertainment is seeing their unfiltered dynamics.
This is also the first big thing coming out of HYBE’s new partnership with Spotify. Instead of tying everything to comebacks and charts, STAN:A lets them stay connected with fans in a chill, ongoing way — perfect for keeping the ENHYPEN energy alive between tours and albums.
What makes it work so well for them is that ENHYPEN has always had that tight-knit (but slightly chaotic) bond. All the trust, teasing, and inside jokes they usually wrap into their lore? Now it’s just… out there in conversation form. No script, no roles. Just the members being themselves.
And with episodes rotating who leads the storytelling, everyone gets a moment to shine without it feeling like official solo content.
This drops right as they’re adjusting to life as six. No big staging to hide behind, no choreo to carry the energy — just close-up camera and raw interaction. It’s kinda bold, honestly. The simplicity makes every little shift in mood or reaction way more obvious… in the best way.At the end of the day, The Blood Diary isn’t about perfectly guessing the lie.
It’s about how long they can keep us hooked just by being their unfiltered, vampire-chaotic selves.So yeah — small setup, but it might end up revealing a lot.Mark your calendars:
The Blood Diary premieres April 3 at 8 p.m. KST on Spotify.
New episodes every two weeks.
Who’s ready to play detective with the boys?