#like if you watch movies or shows set in ancient Greece or Rome in particular
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Really tired of people calling FG by the one name that makes zero sense in context, is alienating to a lot of people, and is actually the single figure Mojito has confirmed he's not. Are people just unaware of one of the more popular hairstyles/looks for guys with long(ish) brown(ish) hair and beards/beard stubble in (and out of) media?
People/characters listed left to right, starting with the top:
Row 1: Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes in Captain America: The Winter Soldier; François Arnaud as Cesare Borgia in The Borgias; David Wenham as Faramir in The Lord of the Rings; Oded Fehr as Ardeth Bay in The Mummy Returns; Jason Carter as Marcus Cole in Babylon 5
Row 2: Kevin Sorbo as Hercules in Hercules: The Legendary Journeys; Liam Neeson as Qui-Gon Jinn in Star Wars: The Phantom Menace; "Foreign God" in ENNEAD Season 1, Episde 65; "Foreign God" in ENNEAD Season 2, Episode 10; Robin Atkin Downes; Hugh Jackman as Van Helsing in Van Helsing
Row 3: Ewan McGregor as Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars; Hades in Blood of Zeus, James Watson as Duncan Idaho in Dune (2000); Gale in Baldur's Gate 3; Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn in The Lord of the Rings
Row 4: Mark Ryder as Cesare Borgia in Borgia; Jason Momoa; Nigel Terry as King Arthur in Excalibur; Christian Kane as Eliot Spencer in Leverage; Jared Padalecki
Like I could keep adding people and characters to this because this style is so damn common (I was honestly tempted to make a second collage, bare minimum). But I'd be here forever. There are a number of other fan names for the unnamed foreign god, including Foreign God, FG, Beard, Mustache, or you could go with what Seth calls him, "Furball".
#ennead#foreign god ennead#fg ennead#there are so many guys who have this style#trying to remember them all is impossible#a lot more with blonde and red hair as well#like if you watch movies or shows set in ancient Greece or Rome in particular#and shows set in Europe and the US in the 1700s-1800s#you see this everywhere#and it's popular for singers too#apologies for people confused about this showing up in their tags#like I don't get why it's meant to be funny as a joke name#is the joke âlol I don't know what men look likeâ?#why do people have to involve xtianity even in places where it's not involved#it's worse when people actually think it's a potential identity for FG#when no that makes zero sense for FG as a character and the person people think he is#or the story on the whole#and again Mojito confirmed he's not Jesus#like obviously people can do whatever they want#I just find this whole phenomenon really annoying#I remember when bg3 came out and people were spamming the tags with Gale saying he looked like FG#it's not a rare look#yes I am aware people have gotten McGregor's Obi-Wan confused with Jesus before#and yes I am aware that Cesare is at least theorized to be an inspiration for modern white Jesus looks#doesn't change the fact the look is common#mostly it just means people keep doing this and it's always been dumb#fallfthoughts#maybe stop perpetuating xtian supremacy so casually#also if you literally wander around multiple countries around the Mediterranean many men look like this#years ago I was in one city off the coast and literally every direction I looked was at least 1-3 men who looked like this
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South Korean music industry at a glance: an outsider perspective
I watched one particular AMV last week. The song used for the video was âIâm afraidâ by Korean rock band DAY6. I was pleasantly surprised as someone who values lyrics in song first and foremost. The music itself was great. Iâll listen to their songs again. Itâs a nice fit for my music taste. Naturally, YouTubeâs algorithm decided that Iâm a fan of everything Korean after 1 video and started spamming my recommendations with k-pop songs, documentaries and everything in-between.Â
I watched a couple of videos, listened to some songs and discovered fascinating patterns. So, I went down to the comment section. And it was rather interesting experience, should I say? The concept of entertainment industry in South Korea simply begged to be explored more after this. I dug deeper and visited Tumblr k-pop tags and briefly glanced upon Instagram and Twitter. And, oh...
I am a big picture person and I enjoy both studying and creating systems. This one was particularly fun to explore. I discovered a lot of new things for myself. Perhaps, you can discover something new for yourself too or take a step back and look at this from a new angle.Â
Disclaimer: itâs impossible not to offend someone on Tumblr, so keep that in mind. That being said, I do NOT intend to insult of offend anyone. Itâs just a little research done for fun, because I love research with a purpose. This post is NOT A HATE post. No hate intended for fans, artists or other people involved. Itâs meant to be a discussion, nothing more and nothing less. If it sounds like hate, itâs just my sarcastic sense of humour.
Content Warning: I mention suicide, death, depression, rape in a couple of sentences. Thereâs nothing major or graphic, but itâs there.Â
In this long post I decided to share with you my opinion, a so-called outsider perspective, on the world of music entertainment industry in South Korea and people involved in it on different levels. I use the word âoutsiderâ mainly because, thatâs exactly what I am in this case, as someone who is in no way involved in k-pop community. I canât name you a single band or their members. I donât know any solo artist and canât neither sing nor name you any song.Â
And to be completely honest, I donât think I will set my foot into k-pop fan-circles ever again after everything I saw.Â
Think of this as âIn this essay I will...â meme, except thereâs an actual essay.
As far as I know, in South Korea âk-popâ refers to all music produced in SK, including solo artists, various bands, singers-songwriters. It doesnât even have to be pop music. Koreans include in this definition all genres of music. However, around the world âk-popâ means primarily music made by idol groups and bands marketed for children, teenagers and younger people. In this post I use the latter definition, because thatâs how most people understand âk-popâ in other countries. Therefore, my statements, opinions and conclusions here would concern only idol music.Â
The music industry in South Korea is heavily influenced by culture and traditions of the country, just like all things are. And thereâs nothing wrong with that. After all, different backgrounds are what makes people so interesting and unique. However, when combined with consumer mindset, desire to generate profit at any cost and fast-paced nature of modern life these neutral cultural elements could produce something concerning, and it can lead to disastrous consequences.Â
1. Idol
These people are called artists, musicians, singers, bands, groups, performers. In South Korea and in Japan, however, people call them Idols or Stars. Iâve also seen Muses, Princes and Queens. Interesting, isnât it? The terminology used to describe these musicians in South Korea is one of the key elements in this whole entertainment system. Youâll see why.
But who or what is an idol exactly? Letâs take a basic definition from Wikipedia.
âIn the practice of religion, a cult image or devotional image is a human-made object that is venerated or worshipped for the deity, person, spirit or daemon ... that it embodies or represents. In several traditions, including the ancient religions of Egypt, Greece and Rome, and modern Hinduism, cult images in a temple may undergo a daily routine of being washed, dressed, and having food left for them. Processions outside the temple on special feast days are often a feature. Religious images cover a wider range of all types of images made with a religious purpose, subject, or connection. In many contexts "cult image" specifically means the most important image in a temple, kept in an inner space, as opposed to what may be many other images decorating the temple.
The term idol is often synonymous with worship cult image. In cultures where idolatry is not viewed negatively, the word idol is not generally seen as pejorative, such as in Indian English.â
Cambridge Dictionary defines idol as follows:
And hereâs the definition from Oxford Dictionary:Â
This is a centrepiece of this tapestry. Surely, you have noticed by now what these definitions have in common.Â
Idol = a cult image of a god, a deityÂ
By calling these musicians âidolsâ industry makes society and audience treat them in certain way, namely as gods. What characteristics do gods possess? They are beautiful, talented, funny, confident and graceful, blessed by eternal youth of immortality. Gods have no flaws, they do not bleed, they are above human concerns. They are an embodiment of perfection. They are stars, you could not reach.Â
But real people are not like that. They can be sad and angry, insecure. People donât have perfectly symmetrical faces. They canât dance in sync without preparation. They canât sing like angels at any given moment throughout the day.
What happens when idols accidentally reveal their humanity? What happens when people see, that they make mistakes and do stupid things, that they need to train hard to appear graceful on stage?Â
I will tell you. And itâs not pretty. But, first, letâs look at other elements of this system.Â
2. Y/N and Self-insert fantasy
Aside from the music, K-pop sells the self-insert fantasy to the audience. Itâs carefully arranged to appear real, where the cracks are masked and every word is scripted. The reality is so vivid that one doesnât even have to use imagination all that much, because all scenarios and decorations already exist. Countless interviews for TV and magazines, fan meetings, talk shows, reality shows made sure people are privy to all juicy details of personal lives and opinions of musicians. And also one word - merchandise. Some of that merch made me question my life choices. Some of it is, ah, creepy or has weird vibes. All of this provides plenty of material for people to work with. Fans can effortlessly imagine themselves beside their idols or even in their place.Â
In a highly competitive society, where people throw themselves into studying and work since young age, forming deep and lasting connections with others is very hard, sometimes impossible. As a result, people long to have a group of close friends with similar interests, a loving partner who would cherish them endlessly. People want to be rewarded for their backbreaking efforts to succeed by the carefree life of fame and music, everlasting friendships and love. And in a way you canât really blame them for his.Â
Does this dream life sound familiar? We are looking at K-pop bands here. It doesnât really matter if their members donât always get along or that they can live in debt, that fame is fickle and adoring fans can tear your self-confidence to shreds. Audience wants the glamour of fantasy and the industry is more than happy to cater to these desires.Â
Perhaps, knowing that even for idols this fantasy is sometimes unattainable makes the whole set up feel just a little cruel.Â
3. Fans, stans and fandom culture
Weâve already established earlier that idols are gods in the eyes of people and listed traits they must possess. So, what else do gods need to exist? Worshippers. Because a cult is worth nothing without its followers. Gods need a group of people to worship them and spread their beliefs. The role of worshippers is performed by a fans in this case.Â
Apparently, there is a running joke that girl groups need to win a general public popularity and boy bands need a big passionate fandom. It seems to be true according to my observations.Â
In k-pop fandom people use the word âstanâ to state that they like or support particular group. Now, I am sure everyone here knows that in other fandoms, dedicated to movies, shows, books and games thereâs an important distinction between being a âfanâ and a âstanâ. What is it?Â
A fan is someone who likes a ship or character, creates and/or consumes fandom content, supports certain ideas, discusses things they enjoyed and disliked, criticises canon. Stans, however, are a different breed. They engage in all typical fandom activities, but their support and enjoyment becomes obsession. Stans believe their favourite characters and ships are immune to criticism, that they are superior no matter what others say. Stans start shipping wars, send anon hate, death threats over fictional characters and hurt real people. Stans are considered toxic fans. And majority of normal civilised people donât like them and try their best to let stans hang out in their echo chamber by themselves.Â
In other fandoms and communities, to be a fan means to love, support and enjoy something, while to stan means to obsess over and hyperfixate on these same things. Words âI stanâ rarely mean âI supportâ for most people, and if they do mean that, itâs only used in a joking manner (âWe stan procrastination legend!â, âI stan our miscommunication kingsâ).
Everywhere else âstanâ has only negative connotations, except in k-pop. But what has changed? Whatâs the difference? Why do international fans scoff at âshipper stansâ and then turn around calling themselves âstans of X k-pop groupâ at the same time? Does it make you wonder?Â
And this is another core theme of k-pop, in my opinion. In fandom where stan = obsession = support, you can see interesting patterns.Â
Fandom loves their flawless gods. But watching them from afar is not enough for some people, because unlike deities in different religions, these gods live among us. People are very much aware of that. Industry has created a cult and laid the groundwork for worshippers to express their adoration in every way including personal contact. And who wouldnât want to meet their god? Who wouldnât want to know more about them or tell them how much you love them? In talk shows and fan meetings there is only so much one can do after all.
People desire to know more, to have more so much that their obsession transforms into concerning stalker tendencies. These crazy individuals follow idols, stalk them on social media, in hotels, research flight numbers, bribe security. Musicians were attacked and poisoned. I strongly suspect there were cases of rape that no one knows about. There is even a special term for these fans -Â âsasaengâ.Â
Is there a definition for stalkers of actors or musicians in western world? No, Iâm pretty sure there isnât. They are just called âinvasive/obsessive fansâ or âstalkersâ.
Also, there are sasaeng memes. Yeah, you heard that right. I enjoy some classy dark humour as much as the next person, but there is a fine line between normal and questionable.Â
Back to the topic of stalkers. Do you realise how disturbing that is? Such behaviour is so common that there is a term for it. You create a fandom-cult, encourage people to worship k-pop idols as gods and then act surprised when members of said cult become fanatics and their adoration becomes obsession.
And itâs so easy to step on this slippery road. The system makes it ridiculously easy. Lines begin to blur. How much is too much? Where do you draw the line?Â
While sasaeng fans engage in extreme real-life obsession, people online arenât that far off, to be honest. Iâve seen it all: imagines, headcanons, fanfiction, real-person shipping, reactions. Real person shipping is a controversial topic. Some people support it, others donât. I suppose Iâm among those who donât get it. Iâm not exactly against it, but I find it strange. Mainly because itâs based on assumptions made by fans about personalities and behaviour of real people.Â
Assumptions. Dear me! K-pop fandom has this thing with video compilations. Iâve never seen this phenomenon being so widespread in any other community or fandom. Basically people edit together a collection of short clips from talk-shows, interviews, Instagram stories, some YouTube videos, etc and then proceed to analyse every gesture, word, facial expression of idols and provide both audio and on-screen commentary. These videos and many other forms of similar analysis allow people to imagine what kind of personalities idols have, what kind of life do they live. Itâs the source material for fanfiction, imagines and headcanons.Â
But itâs not real. Itâll never be real. Itâs an illusion, an image, a stage persona. They fall in love with a face and made up personality. And I think that when people create this content they can forget this. Fans can develop certain emotional dependence and unhealthy attitudes in the long run. In some YouTube comments even supportive and encouraging words sound whiny and obsessive. And semantics of being a âstanâ of certain group or individual doesnât help.Â
4. Industry, companies and liarsÂ
At last we arrive at the most important aspect of music entertainment industry - its creators.
Have you seen âThe Road to El Doradoâ? Itâs one of my all time favourites. It has iconic characters, adult jokes that I didnât get as a child and iconic soundtrack. Iâll quote âItâs Tough To Be A Godâ a lot here.Â
In South Korea music industry is a factory, the production line to be exact. This kind of set up affects everything in the grand scheme of things. Companies and agencies play the role of training centres and record labels. And there are so many of them that a whole new scamming system developed based around fake idol agencies. It implies that there are people who fall for offers of these agencies and continue to do so. I suspect that victims must pay a fortune upfront before they realise their mistake. Are there any kind of legal protection against such scams? How can people verify the authenticity? Because a well masked scam can exist for a long time before someone discovers it and calls them out on their nonsense.Â
As far as I understand legal companies work like this. After high school, which is often focused on performing arts (and private schools can get away with using talents of students for personal gain, which is totally not surprising), young people can audition for an agency and become an idol in training or idol-trainee. And passing audition is hard. But good recommendations can help, connections too.Â
During training you donât get paid. Only a few companies pay aspiring musicians. People can spend years in training and donât debut. But rent, necessities, clothing and food (not that you need much of it, but more on that later) cost a lot. Where do you get the money to live then? Support from parents, one or two part time jobs at most and bank loans. Surprise! We found an unexpected (just kidding, itâs very obvious) party, who reaps benefits from the system.Â
You need skill to be an idol. Natural talent helps too. The more skills you have, the cheaper and faster your training is. To level up your game you attend classes every month offered by your agency, which are not cheap (dance classes range from 400$ to 1000$ per month, sometimes more). There are four main categories in evaluation process: vocals, rapping, dancing and visuals. Idols are multitaskers, to have a chance on stage one must be perfect at everything. And people are ready to invest thousands of dollars into their kids training so that they could have a chance in entertainment industry. South Korea thrives on revenue k-pop industry generates every day.
Letâs pause here for a second and think about what kind of people come to these agencies. The answer is easy. People who have a dream, a desire, a real goal. You donât wake up one day and decide to become a k-pop idol. Sometimes people get invited by agencies (after prior acting, modelling career or any other form of exposure). These people are usually very young. Some start straight after high school, some after university, but 25 years old is considered a late start. Compare that to western musicians who start singing at any age and still become famous.Â
But why this age limit? Because idols are eternally young. So that in public eye musicians are remembered as 20 year old gods. People would listen to their music and imagine a young attractive face. Career in k-pop is short, it lasts 5-7 years, rarely longer than that. Itâs even less than modelling or acting can offer. And professional sportsmen retire in their late 30â˛s. Some play longer, but usually, thatâs it.
If you live in Los Angeles and say that you want to be an actor or performer, no one would bat an eye. Itâs like saying that you want to be an engineer or accountant. Similarly, in South Korea becoming an k-pop musician is a real career. Because part of the self insert fantasy that the industry sells is the idea that anyone can be an idol. Itâs easy after all. Anyone can pass auditions and become a trainee. A trainee with no guarantee of debut. But one should never underestimate the power of idol-dream. After all, idea is the most resilient parasite. Â
âMy friends started training in kindergarten. They have wanted to become idols since youngâ
âA lot of young kids get interested in Korean musicâÂ
A 6-year old child sees the performance of k-pop group for the first time on TV. Letâs say itâs a girl. She is enraptured and decides that she will be like that too someday. She grows up, while being part of the fandom, just like all idols are in one way or another and whose fan-obsession transforms into desire to succeed. Her parents spend time and money to find her tutors, to fund dancing and singing classes. Perhaps in high school this girl decides to fix the shape of her eyes and make nose straighter. She trains hard and passes the auditions in her dream agency. And during training this girl faces the reality of behind the scenes life in music industry.
âWhy are you crying? Iâm not even pushing youâ
âHow many times have I told you? The rest are doing it perfectlyâ
âShe is dancing like an elementary school studentâ
âI watched your performance as a spectator who bought a ticket to your concert. I want a refundâ
âYou make my ears hurt. I donât want to listen at allâ
âListening to you was tiringâ
âIâll kick you out instead. You wonât debutâ
âI thought I was going to die. Thatâs how determined I wasâÂ
While I do understand that keeping a high quality standards in media industry is important, there are more productive and healthy ways to motivate someone to improve and be more passionate, you know? Constantly insulting people with sadistic glee and putting them down at every opportunity or calling them ugly to their face doesnât do much.Â
Do you think that children know about this? Do they know about soulless teachers and belittling managers? Do they know about friends who are really your competition, so you shouldnât get attached? Do they know about living in debt? Do they know any of this? No, I donât think they do.Â
Children dream about the stage, about the sea of lights and crowds who chant your names. They want adoring fans and photoshoots. They want to appear on TV and magazine covers. Teenagers want the thrill of performance, they want to share their music and dancing with others.Â
âI donât know how many times I cried aloneâ
The truth is cruel. But they wonât give up easily even if it means sleeping 4-5 hours and consuming no more than 500 calories per day. Because giving up means that your whole life was a lie. One canât afford not to be good enough. Giving up means admitting that all efforts and money your family invested into your dream were in vain. It means losing face before your family and friends - a fate worse than death. Imagine living this idol dream and building your whole future around it and then being told that youâll never debut because of the circumstances outside of your control or something minor, like face shape or 1 kg of weight that your body refuses to lose. It can break you. Especially if you are like 18 or something.Â
5. âAnd who am I to bridle if I'm forced to be an idol If they say that I'm a God, that's what I amâ
âI donât think thereâs anything a tough as being a trainee in Koreaâ
Once you are a trainee at the agency your personal life does not belong to you anymore. You canât go out without permission of the agency. You phone is taken away. Your diet and weight are monitored. Bad habits are not allowed (no smoking, drinking or drugs). Oh! I think I found the good thing in the system! Unfortunately, it wonât last. Trainees canât date or meet with family without permission of agency. Dating is very taboo. Even established idols canât openly date.Â
Why is that? Because gods canât belong to anyone. Their lives are property of the fandom. Because openly dating idols destroy the self-insert fantasy. There was a former idol girl who dated another musician. She was called a whore by her fans, her loving and adoring stans. You might know who I am talking about. Would you call an American actor or singer a prostitute for dating someone?
Trainees sign the contract. And how can a young person straight out of school or university know much about what makes a good contract in entertainment industry or what makes a good contract in general? Even if you do understand the terms fully you would still sign it because if you have come so far, you canât let your dream slip this easily. There isnât a choice. Not really. If you want to debut, you will agree to anything.
What about life after debut? You have to pay off your loans. And company takes 60-70% of your groupâs earnings. Artists themselves get 30-40% and split it between themselves. K-pop groups have from 5 to 10 members or more than that. Each person gets less than 6%. Idols are not filthy rich. They are not. These earnings are practically nothing compared to the work you have put into this.Â
Idols are musicians, who often donât even write their own songs, music or create choreography. But if public doesnât like the song and musical number the company created, they blame idols for the failure. Such an amazing logic we see right here. But people say that sharing music is the best part of idol life. But whose music?Â
Models on catwalk are not there to demonstrate their physical beauty, they are blank canvas for works of clothing designers. Same with k-pop musicians. They act like puppets in a way, whose faces and voices are used to show audience someoneâs music and songs. Some groups do write their own music and lyrics and itâs nice to know that. But those, who donât are rather unfortunate. Itâs a nice tool of psychological control and pressure for an agency. They can hold it over group and use the following rhetoric: âWe gave you everything! Why canât you follow the simple instructionsâ or âWhere would you be without us? Itâs not even your music!â
I called k-pop industry a factory. Thatâs true. Dozens of people become trainees every year. These talented young people are fully prepared to do anything to achieve their goal. They are ready to practice until they collapse, starve themselves and pour themselves into every song. Companies know that. Tell me why would they value their idols as individuals, as people, as human beings if they always have a replacement? Why bother with mental health of their artists if next year they could have a fresh set of people, who are younger and prettier? Why try to improve relationships inside groups if you could fire any member and replace them within a month or two?
In western countries famous bands have different stories. Some were friends since high school, who played in bars and during festivals and then they were noticed by some representative of label company, who offered them a contract. Some groups were formed by like-minded people who bonded and decided to share their music with the world. There are many stories, but ultimately the have one thing in common. Bands in the West often form themselves. These people had time to bond, connect, discover each other, solve some disagreements and learn to work around their differences.Â
K-pop groups are formed by their agencies. They are their property in a way. Company selects the best and puts together these total strangers, appoints the leader with marketable face and personality and then expects them to work together like a well-oiled machine. No one has time to bond during training, because other people are you competition, not friends. And then you must learn to work as a team and be best friends on camera for the audience to support the self-insert fantasy. Itâs no wonder that k-pop groups donât get along sometimes. And every member knows that they are replaceable. It doesnât help in forming connections. Groups canât just terminate contract and go to work with another agency. I heard it happens sometimes, but itâs not a done thing. Unlike in other countries where bands just sign the deal with a different label and release their music under their name if they donât like the old conditions.Â
âIt's tough to be a God But if you get the people's nod Count your blessings, keep them sweet, that's our advice Be a symbol of perfection Be a legend, be a cult Take their praise, take a collection As the multitudes exalt Don a supernatural habit We'd be crazy not to grab it So sign up two new Gods for paradiseâ
But is it really a paradise?
Idols are expected to act cute, to match personalities created for them by fans or media. They have to act according to the concept of their group. They have to be a symbol of perfection: skinny, single and with a face perfected by surgery. They are allowed to mess up, but only in a cute way. They can break down and cry, but only if itâs âaestheticâ.
Weight issues are a separate topic. Sometimes I wonder whether managers in companies understand how weight loss or human body in general works. To be honest, I think that scales in agencies are rigged. And only managers know that. I know it can be done from personal experience. Some beach resorts tweak their scales and make them show 4-6 kg less than actual weight, so people wouldnât get upset if they gain some. There is no way a girl as tall as I am (173 cm) could weigh like 47-50 kg and be able to perform complex choreography on stage and sing without being out of breath, visit the gym on a regular basis and generally function as a normal human without fainting every other day.
âI developed a lot of eating disordersâ
âI think I consumed about 300 calories todayâ
âSomeone, please, trim the fat off her armsâ
If you grow up thinking of idols as gods and then, when you become one of them you think that you must act as one too. But being an easily replaceable god is a heavy burden. The industry, companies and audience want you to be perfect, to always be on your best behaviour. And the thought of not being good enough or divine enough terrifies you, because stans have no mercy (black ocean concept is the most stupid thing ever by the way). This kind of pressure can destroy even the most resilient. And it does.Â
Almost everyone knows that situation with mental health in South Korea is not the best to put it lightly. In many ways itâs a cultural thing. But in k-pop mental health issues are treated with even less care. Gods are not supposed to be depressed or suicidal. They are not supposed to have fears or insecurities, canât be upset or angry. They try hard to be this deity, this image. So, even when they realise they need professional help or even a friend to talk to, they either wonât seek said help or reach out only to be met with silence. Some agencies disapprove or forbid therapy altogether.Â
Sometimes fandom becomes self-aware.
âDonât forget that idols are people too!â
âYour favourite idols are running out of breath just to keep you entertainedâ
âThey are humans, who have feelings!â
Oh, but hereâs the thing, my friend. The industry doesnât want you to think of them as people. Companies and media repeatedly reinforce the idea that they are not people, they are your idols. And strangely enough, the audience supports this idea. People continue to call them idols, developing worshiping tendencies in the process, imitate them, scrutinise their flaws and triumphs. Because, you know, only âreal and ordinary humansâ can have flaws, not âidolsâ.
So people who say âthey are human tooâ and people who say âwow, this concert was amazing, but vocals in the beginning were so off-key, I simply canâtâ are one and the same.
This thought process would have been funny if it wasnât so disappointing. But thatâs just my observation.
And hereâs another thing about sexualisation. I said before how appearances are everything, marketable face and body could drastically improve your chances to succeed. Companies know about this too and concepts and aesthetics of groups are designed accordingly. Girls are dressed in skimpy outfits, their dances are unnecessary suggestive, they wear heavy make up and try to have âmatureâ vibes. Boys donât avoid such objectification either: suits, tight pants and dress shirts along with make up and hairstyle to give audience a promise of the things to come. Grown adults are not supposed to lust after 15-17 year olds. You canât just create a sexy stage persona for teenagers. Do you remember my earlier words about creepy merch? Yeah. All of it neatly plays into the self-insert fantasy and encourages obsessive behaviour.Â
This happens in western countries too. In some way thatâs understandable. Beautiful and sexy image with a hint of innocence attracts more people and sells, because it caters to one of the base human instincts. But some things make your skin crawl.Â
Sponsorships are another topic. Some k-pop bands seek out sponsors to provide financial aid and cover expenses, when earnings are not enough. Sometimes these sponsorships are fine, perfectly civil. But sometimes itâs a prostitution. Girl groups receive money and provide sexual favours to their patrons. Itâs a way for the group to gain financial support and even find new opportunities in the industry. Companies can encourage such deals. Let that sink in for a moment.Â
6. âAny advice to those who want to become a k-pop idol?â
A lot of former idols and trainees have similar responses to this question.Â
âI donât want to discourage anyone, but think twiceâ
âYou only see the glamorous side, but donât see all the hard work that goes into itâ
âItâs not what you thinkâ
âThey think âSince I am good looking and can sing and dance really well, maybe I should become an idol?â, but there is much more to itâ
âThey think itâs something that is easy and will keep their family set for life financiallyâ
And this implies that most people donât know what kind of lifestyle k-pop stars truly have, despite the amount of information available online about âbehind the scenesâ proceedings.
7. Moving on
I am a practical person and every decision I make is subjected to scrutiny. And after seeing everything I can't help but wonder whether idols believe it's truly worth it. What keeps the industry alive is the idol-dream, the wilful ignorance of its reality and youthful idealism, the beautiful naĂŻve belief that it'll get better, even if it never does in the end.
Sure no one would ever admit it out loud, because it's one of those things you never say on camera, no matter how sincere you have to be. It's the matter of professionalism after all, and idols have it spades. And also, because admitting this would equal admitting that you spent your best years doing something you both loved and hated, admitting that this was a mistake.
When you grow up in a society where appearances matter the most, where saving face and being polite is more important than staying true to yourself, where individuality is tolerated only to a certain point, it takes a lot of courage to admit that you need a break. I greatly respect those who decided that idol lifestyle is not for them and moved on.
8. Conclusion
To sum up, I hope you enjoyed my small research and this perspective, since you have read it all the way to the end. Â
You have noticed that entertainment industry is an intricate system and its every component makes sure nothing changes. Companies have power over idols and audience, fandom has power over idols and their careers, and musicians themselves have fame and their music, but not always the promised fortune or happiness.Â
Itâs important to understand the big picture to draw your own conclusions and encourage positive and heathy attitudes in fandoms. Being open minded and allowing people to make mistakes and live their lives the way they want to is a part of being a decent person. People donât owe anything to others. Art is about sharing your thoughts and feelings, promoting ideas and spreading beauty. Itâs not always about money. And I think that this is what k-pop lacks as an industry. It turned dreams and human need for self-expression into business. Here everything is turned into a product. Everything idols touch can be sold, sometimes literally. Industry created problems, which canât be solved anymore, because doing so would topple the system. And I find it tragic. Trapped in an endless chase after perfection creators of k-pop forgot that beauty lies in the eye of the beholder.Â
If you take a look at comment sections and posts on different platforms, what will you see? What kind of things resonate with audience? What makes people laugh and cry? When people start to appreciate the substance?
âEveryone needs to hear this song in their darkest momentsâ
âThank you for your music!â
âThey always deliver! These guys canât make a bad song!â
âIt inspired me to write again!â
âTheir songs brought me and my sister together once againâ
âThis is what happens when you let groups write their own music - they make incredible thingsâ
âThey really are legends of k-pop! I love that they are not afraid to show their inner strengthâ
âStay strong! You rock!â
I believe that the answer is quite simple: when itâs real, sincere. Itâs all about the message you choose to send to your audience, because only superficial things cause obsession. When you say that the sparkly façade is all that matters, then thatâs the only thing people will ever care about. Your audience will never give a damn about the meaning behind dancing, music or lyrics, if you tell them that performance is more important. No one would praise WHAT k-pop idols sing, instead they would prefer wasting breath to criticize HOW they sing or look or move.Â
I dare the k-pop industry to prove people that itâs not just about looks or perfection, or laser shows, or being a branding machine. Prove to your fans that k-pop artists are also passionate people with big dreams and talent, who love every moment of their job, who live and inspire, who are human just like us and whose humanity is real!
Do it, you cowards!
And now, Iâm finished. I can hear the raging crowd of k-pop fandom in the distance, which means itâs time to hide. See you some other time!Â
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Painting for a historical fantasy cover
Updated January 2018 - I originally wrote this in 2016 and have made some minor updates
I have an interest in history, which makes me interested in painting historical fantasy art. Although not an active member currently, I was involved in medieval recreation for several years, so have made my own costumes and practical items. I know enough about history to know that I wouldnât really want to live back in the past. But I love learning about the clothes, the crafts, the stories and mythologies. So when it comes to painting historical fantasy, and even illustrating RPG characters, I tend to look at things as more than just âprettyâ, delving into books, documentaries and even more pop cultural references.
The Brief
When you get an illustration brief, you have to try and figure out what the client is actually asking for. Some clients say they want âhistorically accurateâ, but what they may mean is âHollywood historyâ :). Others are more direct and point to pop cultural references, or say they want fantasy elements. Some people will be very specific on the type of sword/ costume/ building type. Thereâs of course nothing wrong with any type of historical fantasy, however whatâs shown in a drama series or a movie may not be 100% accurate. Sometimes what is true to history (or what we currently think we know), may not have the right visual impact. Our ideals of beauty, sexiness, manliness, innocence and other cultural stereotypes are often completely different to the past, not to mention different based on where in the world you are from. For example, Vikings had beards and braids. Some people want clean shaven Vikings which in a fantasy world is fine!
If itâs a magazine that specialises in realistic and historically accuracy information, many of the historical fantasy tropes may not be acceptable. If however the client is an RPG games player, they may actually want armour that is impractical or not historically accurate.
How to get an understanding of what the client wants?
Ask questions
Make references to more commonly known representations when talking to your client, even if they are movie or film references. Having a common starting point is always a good thing, even if itâs absolutly NOT what the client wants. That helps us learn what they DO want
Pay attention to where the artwork is going to be used. Is it trying to sell something (book, game), is it purely for a character representation, is it for a historically knowledgeable crowd? History may matter, however it may not draw in the right kinds of people.
If itâs for a cover illustration, research the author, read any sample chapters or scenes they may send though, look at any references they may send through (being aware of copyright!)
Starting your research
I dabble in history. I pick and choose things Iâm interested in, and I am by no means an expert on anything. But when you are hired to illustrate something, for that brief, you must become enough of a master that you can make decisions about costumes, weapons, armour, architecture and everyday objects in the paintings. Beginning research for an illustration is like beginning research for an essay, but youâre focusing more on visual elements than words.
Start broad, then refine.
Iâll use Spirit of the Sword as an example (this was heavily directed so was designed within a fairy tight brief). The brief was for a historical fantasy novel set in a Classical Greco-Roman world. This is your starting point â Ancient Rome and Ancient Greece. If you know nothing about the topic, look up an encyclopedia or wikipedia, maybe watch a documentary on the general subject. This should give you some key terms that you can further reference, and the beginnings of an understanding for the design aesthetic.
My client made specific references to items he wanted on the cover that are directly linked to his are of historical fantasy
peplos (Mirandaâs clothing)
Spatha (type of sword)
Manica (armour covering the arms)
I loved Greek and Roman mythology as a kid so have a number of different books on the subject. But most of these have other artistâs visions. Although these days I tend to start with the Internet, I still love looking through paper books for ideas. Here are a couple of the âgeneralâ books I sometimes use for ideas gathering
Another great reference is SketchUp. This is a 3D modelling tool, but there is a warehouse of pre-built models that include historical sites, buildings, and other objects. While most of the models are simple, this can be the basis for more detailed drawings.
Try historical re-enactor forums and sites as well. Be aware that there are degrees of âaccuracyâ, but people that are recreating items from the past, often have some great resources and detailed research, as well as photos of their costumes, weapons, armour and other bits and bobs. Museum sites, flickr collections of photos taken in museums are also great places to research. Always be aware of copyright, but photos of items help bring reality to paintings, drawings or sculptures from history.
Details can matter.
When you are painting fantasy, there are some things you can get away with. But history is a little bit different. A sword is not just a sword. It can almost be a character in the book itself. There are many types of swords, from many different eras and cultures, and used for different reasons. The sword Excalibur from Arthurian myth varies depending on the setting of the tale
Roman Britain
Generic medieval English sword
Purely fantasy representations that would look good at court, but might not be that deadly in an actual battle
Clothes are the same. Those pretty âmedievalâ gowns with angel winged long sleeves were only in western European court for a relatively short period of time (called a bliaut and worn primarily in France around the 1200s â from known evidence). It was not worn by peasants, and the lesser nobility may have tried to copy it, but it would have been in lesser fabric. Vikings without beards? Only in fantasy. Medieval women with uncovered heads? Only during certain periods or by younger women. Ancient Greece and Rome women often had their head elaborately braided, even adding hair pieces â however it depends on the time period, the specific culture, and the status of the woman. People with slaves could afford time to spend on their appearance.
It drives me nuts seeing a âmedievalâ historical book set in the 1200âs where the girl on the front is wearing an Elizabethan dress (1600s). Maybe the average Jane Smith wonât notice or care, but itâs easy to look things up on the Internet. If itâs a fantasy world with historical elements, it matters what the author has written.
Also colours and dyes were based on what they could get at the time. They had beautiful dyes available, but colours such as black in medieval Europe (unless it was black wool from a black sheep) were expensive to make, so was generally reserved for richer people. This of course changed later in time (i.e. Victorian era) due to technological changes, and broader trade routes. This goes for richer purples and some blues as well.
Just because itâs historically accurate, does not make it a good artistic decision
Finally, when making an illustration for a book cover, you want an image that tells you a bit about its genre, maybe something about its characters, the mood of the story â basically a teaser on what the reader can expect from the book. Sometimes there will be minor historical inaccuracies, sometimes there are artistic and design decisions. Your job, if itâs for a cover, is to create an image that grabs the reader and makes them want to turn over the book to read the blurb. Work with your client, explain to them why you want to include something that may not be historically accurate, show them how something does not work from an artistic perspective, let them understand your thinking.
And if the client decides they want something a particular way and you disagree, then accept it and move on. If your client is happy, and youâve worked to the best of your ability, then youâve done your job.
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