Home / Sports / Ohtani Interpreter's $16M Fraud Scandal Stalls Scripted Series Development
Ohtani Interpreter's $16M Fraud Scandal Stalls Scripted Series Development
24 Oct
Summary
- Lionsgate faces challenges setting up scripted series on Ohtani's gambling scandal
- Acquisition execs fear project could damage relationships with Major League Baseball
- Ohtani's interpreter pleaded guilty to stealing $16 million from the player's account

As the Los Angeles Dodgers prepare to face the Toronto Blue Jays in the 2025 World Series, Lionsgate Television is finding it challenging to set up a scripted series about the gambling scandal involving Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani. According to a source, acquisition executives are concerned that taking on the project might damage their parent companies' current or future relationships with Major League Baseball.
The project, announced in May 2024, is being developed by producer Scott Delman and writer Alex Convery, who has become known for sports dramas. However, the series has faced setbacks, as major media companies with MLB rights deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars each year are hesitant to get involved.



