germans are in the comments informing me that the first car had actually been made in germany--this is fascinating, sorry if i've pushed a bit of american propaganda there lol
@aoifasayres10964 жыл бұрын
mm why did you not talk abt africa and northen africa we are also effected by orientalism
@SAR-re1fx4 жыл бұрын
Well your take is only from an American point of view. Is not the same here in Europe. You guys have to remember that, the West is not only "USA". Our culture is been misrepresented in Kpop too and exploited without even informing about the culture. Specially the sexualization of Spanish and Latin women. You just have to be the new trend in Kpop of Arabic, Spanish, African and Hispanic culture. Orientalism is old as heck, so is the fetishization of Meditarranean and Arabic cultures by them. Is a full circle. We have fetishes with Orient and they have it with us. We misrepresent their culture and they do the same with us. Yeah, humans are trash.
@mayuhmetal4 жыл бұрын
@@aoifasayres1096 hey african here lmao, in all honesty i very much expected this to be contextualized within america wheres from and what hes familiar with. more research couldve been done to cover more ground but i believe this is meant to be hyperfocused on how it relates to kpop (or asia more generally) though it does very much affect north africa.
@aoifasayres10964 жыл бұрын
@@mayuhmetal which should not be a normal thing to ignore a huge continent , i feel everybody is ignoring and doesn't want to talk abt things related to Africa . when i said north africa i mean it in things related to islamic word . i can get that he is talking on general but it's still should be included if we talking abt orientalism and culture appropriation
@lachi82424 жыл бұрын
@@aoifasayres1096, this video was focused on how techno orentalism relates to K-pop/Korea so no, he did not talk about Africa. Maybe he'll do another video that goes over that topic, but it might have been out of place to talk about it in this specific video.
@liron58894 жыл бұрын
do people forget that most american pop music is the result of intense collaboration between songwriters, producers, and performers? yes, sometimes people write their own music but why do we pretend collaboration is a bad thing when a) it's the norm worldwide and b) it allows for more inventive work? no one's hiding the work of writers and producers, but to ignore the fact that idols are tremendously hardworking, passionate, and talented performers in order to paint them as "lazy" and "fake" because they don't do yet another unique discipline required in music-making is absurd. and racist.
@winwinnie49054 жыл бұрын
yES
@poppagBallZ974 жыл бұрын
Melody Rose wait I’m curious to know why it’s racist 🤔 can you explain? If you don’t want to, that’s okay.
@liron58894 жыл бұрын
Broken Hotdog it’s a double standard as explained in the video
@Shay454 жыл бұрын
Western artist will sometimes lie about their participation in their music. They get made fun of for having others write their lyrics. People have "secret writers" because like you said it is seen as a bad thing in the west
@liron58894 жыл бұрын
@@Shay45 you're right and it's BS !! UGH !! songwriters and producers are a really important part of the industry and have a totally different skillset than performers and that often makes songs better !! ugh i hate it
@paullu51394 жыл бұрын
If you want to see a another rather recent effect of orientalism. Just look at Logan Paul's trip to Japan. He talks so much about how Japanese people are "kind and respectful". But yet he takes advantage of it to act like an asshole. I had to stop the video when he threw the coins in the temple. I really hate this negative stereotype that Asian people are polite and kind (almost emotionless?) people. This would be great if it was framed in a positive way but it's not. It makes us look like we're weak people whose kindness can be taken advantage of which Logan Paul really made it seem like through his video. Imagine the effect this has had on his audience of young impressionable people.
@igu44434 жыл бұрын
On the flip side, I've definitely heard a bit of " you asians don't care about anything, they're so rude, cheap, dirty..." etc. etc. Even though what I've heard is the exact opposite its intentions are still to dehumanize Asians. those who always approach an entire culture based on stereotypes. hell sometimes people subconsciously have two stereotypes/impressions that contradict each other and honestly if we just *think* a little bit more we can see that oh wait its situational/we're not so different. it scares me that that there's so many people who don't understand that we're all just human. that thinking is honestly what lead to the shitshow that was logan paul's trip to japan.
@daezyagbakoba66944 жыл бұрын
I remember those horrible vlogs. You should have seen him take fish from a Japanese market and run around the streets with it and shove it into people's faces. And then he eventually dumped the fish onto the back of a taxi, which then drove off, as the driver was not aware he put dead fish on the back of the car. Those vlogs made me so angry to see how little respect some Western people have for Asian people/cultures in general.
@thapoint094 жыл бұрын
@ExtraSwirl It's a better stereotype than what Americans in general get. I'd _kill_ to be thought of as unfailingly polite.
@MAjaLeahHB4 жыл бұрын
another aspect of this. in my sisters former school there were a few girls who fetishised asians. it was really gross. they will literally give every asian man who is mildly interested in them their phone number. and they were minors. they would flirt with men that were like 10 years older. of course it's always the adults responsibility to brush them of but they were easy to take advantage of because they had the stereotype that asians would treat them with respect
@nm96884 жыл бұрын
@@igu4443 that is aimed towards non Japanese, aka Filipinos, South Asians, Chinese etc. Because to neckbeards Japan is the country their anime waifus come from
@firerat_4 жыл бұрын
no one seems to realized that everyone is manufactured?? like bru you go to a school 12 years and if u dont is illegal, we have no control over what we have to study. ofcourse you can drop out, but no one is going to hire a self-tought. being a trainne is no diferent of studying science or a conservatory
@MAjaLeahHB4 жыл бұрын
in my country there are "trainee systems" for almost every profession. these "trainees" make little money, study part time in schools specific to their fields and also work for companies who invest a lot to train them. they will work and study hard to proof themselves in to their company, so they can have a future career there. since 2020 trainees in korean entertainment aren't allowed to have a trainee period longer than 3 years in the same company, we have literally the same rule in my country. the reason why people here still think of kpop like this crazy manufactured machine is because the media will portray it this way
@litvenplayosu4 жыл бұрын
And DON'T get me started on acts like the Vienna Boys' Choir and elite ballet schools in Europe. Now THAT is manufactured.
@wheresmyeyebrow16084 жыл бұрын
Products are manufactured because they're created for the sole purpose of selling for profit with everything else being add-ons People however, at least in the Democratic world, grow up in pluralistic societies where Governments only really wish you to obey the law and contribute to the economy in some way * and have access to almost all the world's information that's available online and have the ability to debate and interact with anyone else online also The whole point of this video was that labelling KPOP or Asians in general as 'manufactured' dehumanises them so I just don't that that's a good place to fit them. You can't sit there and tell me that the kids who used wikipedia for their high school essays and the dropkicks at the back of the class who didn't listen were both 'brainwashed'
@usualavantgasp3 жыл бұрын
now THAT'S a statement
@claragerhardtdavid68022 жыл бұрын
@@MAjaLeahHB I actually got really interested in your comment. Where are you from?
@Eunseo29844 жыл бұрын
No wonder the comments "It's all manufactured" bothered me so much more than other comments like "the music is shitty" or something. I knew something was wrong, but I couldn't pin it down.
@bunnywavyxx95244 жыл бұрын
they only hate the music because it's made by Asians. "they all look the same" plastic surgery" robots" it's all a call to the ideal that the west is superior.
@LM-ix7pk4 жыл бұрын
bunnywavy xx or people just genuinely don’t like the music... it’s ok if someone doesn’t like kpop. Many of my family members don’t like kpop because they don’t understand it and they can’t sing along, and I totally understand that.
@lunaxzo24314 жыл бұрын
LM bruh how u not gonna like music because it’s not in a language u know when western rappers be rapping in English but don’t tell me u acc understand that 💀 and don’t get me started on people who bopped to despacito despite not speaking Spanish. I dont even speak Arabic yet I occasionally listen to Arab music because their tunes be fire. it’s completely ok if u simply don’t like the tunes in kpop like ye I get it but the others be avoiding kpop cuz they’re “manufactured” “Asian” “cringe” because that’s what everyone hears nowadays.
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
@@lunaxzo2431 The worst thing is that if you read the lyrics of despacito, it's just lirical porn like 99% of Latin American music, which makes me feel so lucky of discovering K-Pop in a country plagued with sex songs and people who use way too much autotune.
@4eva6434 жыл бұрын
@James Henry Smith i saw you in another comment thread. I don't still understand what you are trying to say.
@daezyagbakoba66944 жыл бұрын
I'm glad there's a word for it: techno-orientalism, because it's so infuriating to see Western people continuously talk over actual Asian people and try to pretend that they're saving them when they don't need to be saved. Great video as usual.
@cassandra-4 жыл бұрын
I find it funny how locals pretend to care about and sympathize with idols after watching some mediocre videos like "the dark side of kpop 😱" , then proceed to make homophobic and racist jokes, call them flops, make fun of their language, bully their fans, etc.
@auau29784 жыл бұрын
whenever locals make reaction vids and hop onto the trend of "first time reacting to", it makes me cringe bcos they're all judgemental n complains abt language, but they're the ones using kpop for clout
@cassandra-4 жыл бұрын
@@auau2978 and yet a lot of kpop fans still give them views... i hate it here
@Zara-vv8sn4 жыл бұрын
literally what h3h3 did
@bye-ray-23893 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@alequintana52944 жыл бұрын
It would be super interesting to do a deep dive into de misoginistic connotations in how media and the general public dismiss kpop because it is for "teenage girls" even if this group of people can hold a lot of power (i.e: BTS)
@paullu51394 жыл бұрын
Or maybe even talking about how Western media paints Asian men as "less desirable" because they are more "feminine"
@ultraagilao40264 жыл бұрын
Yes, that’d be an incredible video. I’ve seen that one of the main reasons people shit on BTS (especially on reddit) is because they think that only teenage girls like them, and they use that to conclude “if teenage girls like them, their music must be shitty and they only like them for their looks” but of course, reddit is a dumpster fire of toxicity and also has plenty of other problems with sexism and misogyny so evidence of this behavior from other social media would be useful.
@variant_hero4 жыл бұрын
Paul L I’d really like that too! my friends and family always ask why I like bts and talk about how less masculine Asian men are and it’s always followed by old stereotypes.
@variant_hero4 жыл бұрын
Ale Quintana I agree!!! and the fact that if it’s something that women are usually more into it’s bad, while things that men are into is completely fine and normal
@imsinkingfast4 жыл бұрын
Ah but that's just it. It isn't Kpop that is being dismissed so much as it's the perceived fan base of "young females" who's tastes and opinions that are being dismissed. This isn't new. It has been the case for generations, from the "hysteria" of fans of Elvis Presley to "BeatleMania" and all the way thru to Duran Duran, Nsync, MCR; where the media focus is always on teenage girls screaming and crying at the sight of their 'Idol', it reinforces the message that these are simply 'overly emotional, hormone imbalanced teenagers experiencing their first crush' and so, as 'mature, serious adults' we couldn't possibly admit to liking it ourselves or be associated with it and thus it must be brushed aside and treated as 'other', not important or worthy of praise as that would reflect poorly on 'us' (being in most cases adult males who probably desperately don't want anyone to look up 'sports fans' in google image because... yeah, talk about crazy 'fans' lol). I totally agree though that this would be a very interesting subject to cover, if not important because until fans know they are actually fighting the wrong battle, nothing will ever change.
@bucca24 жыл бұрын
I just want to put out another counter for people who pretend that they care about the mistreatment of kpop idols and say "oh they look so tired" "they look abused" 1. Fans are usually on the frontlines of idol mistreatment. In fact, they are so overzealous that they even mischaracterize not getting lines or good outfits as mistreatment. 2. You are stripping these idols of their autonomy. While some idols are minors , many of the biggest players are older. BTS and Twice are in their 20s. EXO is filtering through the military (something required of Korean men BY THE AGE OF 30). They are adults who can make their own decisions and can definitely tell when something amiss is going on. Take the recent example of Day6's Jae. Take the tragic example of Mina from AOA. They stood up for themselves and succeeded. Do not infantilize idols. They do not need your help if you are unwilling to be productive and do something other than make smarmy comments on twitter. 3. White saviorism!
@ctrl.f4 жыл бұрын
THIS 👏
@laurennn3164 жыл бұрын
Oh thank god for this
@theabyssofjin33724 жыл бұрын
Some people shitting on something just for the sake of it. Every industry has their own bad side, those non kpopers paints K-pop fans as someone who support the mistreatment. When we even bitching about small cut or "simple" outfit.
@poppagBallZ974 жыл бұрын
bucca2 can you explain the third one I’m a little confused, sorry 😐
@LM-ix7pk4 жыл бұрын
What does white saviorism has to do with anything?
@pj.is.digital4 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a kpop documentary from an actual fan or at least someone with better intentions. Not some outsider who constantly tries to act like they're in a nature documentary, examining the industry using a high-res zoom lens.
@ZZ-bz9wr4 жыл бұрын
You could check out Dive Studios. It's not documentaries by any means but it is real kpop artists discussing various aspects of the industry. For example: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnbVhquFqKhofNU
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
@James Henry Smith Ladies and gentlemen, we got here a butthurt local.
@coralf54 жыл бұрын
This looks super interesting The thing is people also won't pay attention to actual k-pop fans and dismiss us as delusional little girls who don't know anything. We try to educate them, but people only listen to the media and not the actual people who know about it. :(
@leonardopessanha51284 жыл бұрын
But it is little girls. Is like Bieber fan, what's the difference. Next gen this group will like other thing, that's normal
@michylol4 жыл бұрын
@@leonardopessanha5128 theres also actually a lot of young adults and older adults who are into kpop. yes a big part of the fandoms are "little girls" but its not just that
@leonardopessanha51284 жыл бұрын
Fair enough
@la_11.634 жыл бұрын
Leonardo Pessanha If I may add in a respectful manner, majority of the fandom is above legal age. Let’s take BTS’ fanbase (bc they’re the most recognizable), their fanbase’s age demographic have the majority on 19+ with even fans in their 40’s and 50’s. Even Jungkook outsold a wine bottle that I’ve heard is around $100+ (Merlot March by Umani Ronchi Vigor Sangiovese). I do agree that teenage girls are slowly becoming the majority, it’s still clear that young adults are still winning the age demographic. I wish you all the best :)
@lachi82424 жыл бұрын
@@leonardopessanha5128, another thing I want to add is that "kpop fans" includes many different fandoms with different age and gender demographics all smashed into a single title. So when you narrow down a kpop fan to a teenage girl without knowing the fandom they come from, you are stereotyping and generalizing based on your previous notions of who pop music fans tend to be. Some examples of kpop group demographics: 1. Bigbang - known to have an even split of male and female fans with the most fans within a 20-30 year age range (51%). 2. Twice - most known for their staggering amount of fanboys with over 60% of the fanbase meaning male. The majority of their fans are in their teens and 20s. 3. BTS: most known for their very even split of age ranges (24% 10-19 year olds, 26% 20-29 year olds, 19% 30-39 year olds, and 27% 40-49 year olds) with a large number of fans being female (76%). 4. Izone - If you thought Twice had a large amount of fanboys, Izone's fanbase is made up of about 80% males with age demographics similar to Twice.
@lillabukovacz81954 жыл бұрын
Elliot i sent your ‘you’re wrong about kpop’ video essay to one of the most influential journalists in my country, Hungary. he wrote an article about the suicides and scandals of kpop, presenting the whole industry as something that is deeply rotten and as something that must be stopped, and i tried to tell him how it’s harmful for the actual korean artists and the fans of kpop. he replied immediately and said that he will give your video a chance. i just want to say thank you, because i’ve never seen anyone who covers these topics so objectively and perfectly as you do, and i’m glad someone has already done the research and continues to do so, so we can educate people with your videos 🙏🏼🙏🏼
@adriennpasku26024 жыл бұрын
meg tudod mondani hogy kiről van szó? nem nagyon olvastam kpopról magyar cikkeket eddig.mondjuk nem lep meg ha negatívan írnak róla, tekintve hogy mennyire visszamaradott ez az ország,még a mi generációnk is(feltételezem 15-25 között vagy). pl próbáltam 23 éves nővéremnek mutatni bts-t és csak arról beszélt hogy mennyire nőisek. csalódtam benne,, hiába tudtam hogy azt fogja mondani
@lillabukovacz81954 жыл бұрын
Adrienn Pásku szia, sajo david irt egy cikket “halálra szereti a világ a koreai popsztarokat” címmel az indexnek. szóval a befolyasossagnal nem konkretan rá gondoltam, hanem az indexre, csak ezt fölösleges lett volna egy kommentben túlragozni:)es szerintem pont azért annyira zart a generacionk és a tarsadalmunk az egész temara, mert ezek a népszerű mediumok meg mindig azt a nezopontot lovagoljak meg, hogy milyen szörnyű, embertelen ez a koreai popipar, és nem neznek bele abba, hogy nyugaton se sokkal jobb a helyzet. vagy hogy a kpopban is van rengeteg olyan példa, ami kulonleges, érdekes, és kifogasolhatatlan, ha a muveszek egeszsegerol van szo(pl a bighit külön figyelmet fordít a mentalis egeszsegre, onallosodasra, a művészek szabadsagara, mindent megtesz, hogy a gyulolet ne erje el az eloadokat)amúgy én is 23 leszek nemsokara, és nagyon sokáig nem voltam hajlando rá se nezni a bts-re az eloiteletek miatt, és így utolag nagyon banom:( mert tudom hogy nagyon szerettem volna már évekkel ezelőtt is. és nehéz a kornyezetemben lévőkkel most szót erteni ezzel kapcsolatban, mint ahogy neked a novereddel, de probalok mindig higgadt és informatív maradni, és beszélni arról, hogy én miért vagyok oda annyira az egészért, mi benne az erdekes. pl ez az éveken at húzódó storyline/alternativ valosag, és a kepzomuveszeti, szepirodalmi intertextualitas, építkezés a pszichologia tudomanybol,amit a bighit művel, szerintem tok ismeretlen a nyugati popiparban. ezek miatt nagyjabol sikerult megértetni a szüleimmel és a barátaimmal, hogy miért értékes az egész, te se add fel:)
@adriennpasku26024 жыл бұрын
@@lillabukovacz8195 ránéztem a cikkre és hát igen tükrözi az amerikai nézőpontot. az az egyik legidegesítőbb dolog az ilyen cikkekben hogy mint ahogy mondtad hanyagolják megemlíteni hogy ez nem egy teljesen egyéni dolog, mivel minden ország zenei iparának van negatív oldala, amellett meg egy furcsa érthetetlen jelenségként kezelik. én is úgy vettem észre hogy mostanában egyre több company kezd foglalkozni az idolok megvédésével. pl amit bighitről mondtál, sokan nem értik hogy a kreatív önállóságuk és a személyiségük hatalmas része a sikerüknek. én 21 vagyok és viszonylag nemrég kezdtem igazán érdeklődni kpop iránt( főleg bts, mivel az ő zenéjükkel azonosulok a legjobban), de egy ideig én is kerültem. főleg azért mert mint a legtöbb ember én is azt hittem hogy kpop csak cutesy meg vidám-amivel nincs baj, csak nem az én ízlésem. szóval átérzem a szitudat:D tesómnak meg mutattam néhány dalt, de nem az ő stílusa, ami ellen meg nem tehetek:) talán később újra próbálom
@jungkooks_microwavephobia4 жыл бұрын
please do an update in a few months I hope he is a decent journalist and willing to correct mistakes
@lillabukovacz81954 жыл бұрын
Adrienn Pásku na szerintem nagyon hasonlo a talalkozasunk az egész jelenséggel, én se nagyon foglalkozom mas eloadokkal, csak veluk. bár nagyon sok csapat zenejet hallgatom, és sokmindenkinel ledobbentem, hogy milyen gazdag, színes a mondanivalo és mennyivel tartalmasabb, mint amit hittem regebben az egeszrol. és szerintem nehéz azt mondani, hogy a bts nem a stilusa valakinek, mert legalább 6fele zenei mufajban alkotnak, és ezeket keverik, de mondjuk emlekszem, hogy egy éve hallottam a bwl-t, dna-t, és rogton azt mondtam, hogy ez szörnyű. most pedig napi szinten hallgatom mindkettot, és ebben szerintem hatalmas szerepe van annak, hogy tudom hogy nem egy üres cutesy vidám szinjatek az egesz. de persze ezzel nem azt mondom, hogy erőltetni kell bárkire is, nagyon sok ismerosom van, aki rogton rávágja, hogy ez nem jon be neki, de sokaknál tudom, hogy ez abszolut azért van, mert gaz, hogyha valakinél kiderul, hogy köze van a kpophoz, mert rogton buta uresfeju rajongokislanynak van belyegezve.
@naanie974 жыл бұрын
After watching your video essays, I can't help but think about this one interview with BTS (It's radio disney 2017). The interview happened years ago but the clip was only released in 2020 probably because yoongi's answer didn't fit the narrative they were trying to achieve- White interviewer: How does American pop compare to K-pop? Yoongi: it's just music, it's the same, the same
@naanie974 жыл бұрын
I just went back to watch the interview again and they turned off they comments, I wonder why...
@sole78164 жыл бұрын
damn yoongi spiting out *facts!!* and this is what i tell everyone who ask me what’s kpop; “what’s kpop?” “just like music here, but in korean.”
@lachi82424 жыл бұрын
Think TWICE, just foreign media in general, not just western reporters. I remember watching a French reporter complaining about BTS’s use of make up and fashion choice as well as saying that they’re clones of each other.
@sole78164 жыл бұрын
@James Henry Smith wait what? what’s your point? (not meant in a rude way, it’s just i cant tell what you’re trying to convey) all i’m saying is music is music no matter the language; like kpop is pop but in korean, jpop is pop but in japanese, cpop is pop but in chinese, etc...
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
@@sole7816 Leave him alone, he's a butthurt local.
@michelle59004 жыл бұрын
I hate the way media insists that K-pop is manufactured. It's literally the same way people go to university to learn skills for their future career. Its not manufactured!
@JoshuaAlto4 жыл бұрын
@Think TWICE Yeah. We'll just ignore the media & focus on the real issues.
@dragonrj12334 жыл бұрын
@The Marvelets Elitestan not all groups, BTS, mamamoo, gidle and other groups are not like that 🤙🏻 so we should not generalize.
@njamh1054 жыл бұрын
@The Marvelets Elitestan Though these problems are real for some idols, we should stray away from trying to generalize the entire industry in that way. Also, a lot of these issues present themselves in different ways in other industries.
@ledora90784 жыл бұрын
@The Marvelets Elitestan you’re probably not gonna read this, it ended up longer than I thought but... Bruv have you seen Big Matthew from kard? That dude has no filter, and I could name many more artists that don’t hide under some persona. And you also have to take into account how korean media is different and things like for example swearing on a show can be frowned upon. A lot of companies do not force the things you’ve listed upon idols, in fact, people audition and sign up for the trainee system. Although there are some companies that are foul and abusive, that doesn’t mean generalize the entire industry because abuse is not common among all companies. Many of the groups I stan have full creative control over their music and even put themselves together before they debuted, they just all trained to get better at their craft and fulfill their dream. That’s why you’ve really got to get into some groups to learn about them and see how many of the things outsiders cover in the industry are just common misconceptions. Once again, the issues you addressed do happen and have happened, but it is not an accurate representation of the entire industry and not even a large portion of it either.
@ledora90784 жыл бұрын
@The Marvelets Elitestan Well I’d like to know where you’ve learned this so you can inform me I guess if that’s really the case because from what I’ve seen, it isn’t.
@pinkysaints23094 жыл бұрын
Another thing I want to say is that sometimes western kpop fans still have this racist ideas of Asians for example how generalised kfans are by Ifans there is a sense of superiority on stan twitter by Ifans compared to Korean ones. Eg ‘Koreans are so judgmental and bully the idols’ when western fans have viral tweets mocking certain idols and groups. It tiring.
@lachi82424 жыл бұрын
It goes both ways though. I’ve seen fans saying Ifans ruined kpop etc. I don’t think there should be a superiority complex between fans in general because it just promotes stress and pointless arguments.
@kathia80144 жыл бұрын
uhhhh yes!! and there are of course prejudices from kfans towarda ifans as well. its a complicated community all around lol. but as an ifan i feel so much this for our side, and even some internalization of these dark side of kpop generalizations "My Group is sooo Different from Other kpop groups" etc. for ex i remember when bts were first invited to the bbmas, iarmys and usarmys in particular were making posts like "bighit you better make them look so good, ie. dont make them look weird or '''''overt the top'''''" as if they shouldn't look *too* kpop and like. -_-
@_bear_melody4 жыл бұрын
Recently a reporter(?) talked about the oh so bad kpop industry on german television(sat.1), saying "they all look the same" multiple times throughout the video. Fans tried to point out to her that that is something that you shouldn't say and that what she said puts the KPOP industry in a very bad light. The reporter however didn't think that anything she said was wrong because after all idols get surgery to look like that one ideal all asian people have thus they all look the same. You could clearly tell that she just found out about kpop's "dark sides" by the way she talked so eagerly about it. She was definitely a fish thrown into the water. I couldn't understand how she couldn't understand what was wrong with her statement but after this video I think I know why she is thinking like that. And it pains me to know that we will have to continue to listen to these peoples unshakeable opinions over and over again and them never accepting another viewpoint. (English is not my first language so if I made any mistakes I'm sorry)
@mylovechoerry22334 жыл бұрын
Half of the Hollywood celebrety have had suregy
@waynemackinnon39184 жыл бұрын
'They all had plastic surgery', 'they all look the same', 'they were just picked because they are goodlooking, not because they are talented'(a not so subtle 'they have no talent'), ''they all sound the same', and the flipside, 'they are the second coming of christ', nobody is as talented as my bias'', they are mistreating my bias by 1. not giving enough lines, 2. giving them the worst outfits, or 3. they're not on camera all the time, like they deserve to be'. are two sides of the same coin, negative or positive fetishizing of asians. Of course the western media is going to badmouth and stereotype kpop, because it's threatening to take income from western popmusic (they took our jobs!) and the news and information media depends on that income as well. Of course it's also just stupid, for example "they all look the same." excuse me, but just no. I can clearly distinguish different asian/black/white/native/poc people from each other, even when two people of the same race/ethnicity whatever look similar, without even trying! so I call b*llsh*t! Oh, and also by the way, if they all had plastic surgery, then the western artists need to go to South-Korea now, because those surgeons do an amazing job, compared to western medicine in that regard!
@theobsidianparade57264 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with this - its awful and unnecessary (and your English is really good by the way ) ^^
@cassandra-4 жыл бұрын
@@waynemackinnon3918 All those criticisms basically all boil down to xenophobia, and when it's called out by fans, they're dismissed as "hysterical fangirls". imagine if Western media actually took kpop seriously.
@strawberrylemonade33914 жыл бұрын
Wow, English isn't ur first language and you wrote a whole Essay (a very valid one too). You go girl!🙌
@cassandra-4 жыл бұрын
Locals say "oh, it's just plastic surgery" so often that it's beginning to sound like they think Asians can't be attractive without going under cosmetic procedures
@auau29784 жыл бұрын
ppl get cosmetic surgeries for various reasons. its not our place to make assumptions and judgemental comments. i remember when naeun n namjoo(?) from apink had plastic surgery n the whole kpop community started calling them names. just because they get those doesnt automically mean theyre "fake" or catfishing the ppl.
@smileveryday14 жыл бұрын
and its cousin "every asian person who gets double eyelid surgery wants to look white" without realizing that 1) east asians do have naturally occurring double eyelids (and you can actually have one of each! or even a triple eyelid after crying the night before!!) so 2) they probably want to look like other asians with double eyelids and 3) it is possible for western influence to reinforce existing asian beauty standards, or european people being fawned over and sometimes favored under existing beauty standards, but this doesn't mean that the asian beauty standard is to look white (for example, there are many stereotypically white features like a strong jaw that are not favored), 4) problematic asian beauty standards are our problem to deal with. please fix the beauty standards in your country/culture before trying to fix ours. they might mean well but these people do not know how patronizing they sound.
@leteflondondu924 жыл бұрын
its just jealousy plain and simple
@cassandra-4 жыл бұрын
thetangerine fr, white ppl think everything revolves around them
@wheresmyeyebrow16084 жыл бұрын
@@cassandra- Well hold on now sweetie don't generalise yourself
@pj.is.digital4 жыл бұрын
I loved what Dr. Anderson says about how most people don't even listen to or understand k-pop. We (fans) say this everyday, but no ones wants to listen to "stans w/ kpop boy pfps".🙄 I'd hope anyone who still peddles that "evil dark k-pop industry" narrative would at least listen to a scholar. However, I think we know by now that these people just don't care. Most of them don't want to learn. They just want to provoke and troll people over a damn music genre. The thing is we know there's issues in the industry, we're not stupid. Even if we show the slightest disagreement with negative k-pop takes, suddenly painted as brainwashed teenagers. I'm just so tired.
@senmeii4 жыл бұрын
Same bub, same. I stopped trying to argue with these people now, I just let it slide. If they prefer to stay in their ignorance, rather than learn, it's their loss, not ours.
@blaubird4 жыл бұрын
this orientalist pov is so common. i study in a SKY university, a postgraduate course, in english. So last semester I took a class on Cultural Industries, the professor were korean btw. And he decided to put a focus on the way companies use kpop (???) but he hated kpop ((no one forced him to talk so much about kpop on a class about cultural industries when there are other cultural industries in korea?)), and he even said things like korea could never become a global cultural power like "the west" cos there is no counter-culture. the reasons for the lack of this he left them kinda open-ended, but he literally wrote on his slide "no big tradition of political philosophy : asians cannot think". I mean he also didn't watch Parasite because he hates being told what to watch and he dislikes the "hyper-violent" (?) korean movies. my point with all this is that there is a subsection of "academics" writing on kpop just because they get easy grants and easy money, and there is no real interest nor research done on it. the class had another professor, she was supposed to be the expert on kpop, but she said the same old thing: lack of creative control. she praised big bang but in the same breath dismissed bts' writing-producing credits because she has "heard" that they write with other people the tracks ((which lol as if gd produced every track without working with YG in-house producers?)). So even when reading supposedly academic papers we have to be careful and deeply think about what, how and why, it's telling us something. Much props to you for this video and I was delighted to hear Dr. Anderson, she was speaking some straight up fire.
@blaubird4 жыл бұрын
@Think TWICE it was "economics of cultural industries"
@leteflondondu924 жыл бұрын
so the professor is basically full of self hate? sad.
@wellheck13773 жыл бұрын
gosh that “expert in kpop” sounded extremely unprofessional oh my gosh... im a teen and i could do a better job.
@surabhikashyap2413 жыл бұрын
There is a generation of Asians who were always told that they aren't good enough and why the West is so great. For them Asia can be saved when they follow West blindly instead of creating their own path. Only from the last few decades, the new generation of Asians are slowly coming out from this inferiority complex. So, Asians bashing their own and continuously telling them to act like West is nothing new. Self criticism for improvement and self hate are two different things. The problem with such mindset is they seek uniformity and western universalism instead of celebrating and accepting diversity.
@Cla2264 жыл бұрын
Before i started listening to kpop i would see all this videos about the dark side of kpop and i thought i will never listen to it cause i don’t want to support this horrible industry. But when i actually started to listen to the music and started to do research i realised that it was just like any other music industry in the world with it’s good and bad parts, and that there were positive parts which they were never shown in the videos.
@Hannah-ur3ks4 жыл бұрын
What makes me frustrated about these documentaries is that they don't want to admit that it's only being made to further prove their hidden racists intents. They always make Korea and all these other Asian countries as dystopian cities, as if the place they come from is any better. I always thought their "deep research into the kpop world" similar to the white savior complex, like they must show us to the light. A documentary like these should be done on neutral grounds, not with the intent to vilainize. Also it's really not that deep, it's just a bunch of people who enjoy a type a music and have found creative ways to show their appreciation for it.
@yorukaadams9404 жыл бұрын
Let me smack the guy who said Tiffany's smile was completely mechanical.
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
Hearing that Tiffany herself did that would be probably the most viral thing in the K-Pop community. And epic for me.
@medb65034 жыл бұрын
K-pop stans and the general public are more orientalist than they'd like to admit because at times they do it so indirectly, they don't sense it themselves. The Middle East, East Asia, and Asia in general are all seen as exotic to the point where we become caricatures that are displayed like we belong in a circus. Just because English is not spoken and our cultures are different from theirs, our intelligence is doubted and negatives heightened. Aladdin and Mulan are HUGE examples of this.
@renoirrr4 жыл бұрын
JinHit Entertainment many things about those movies are stereotypes and different cultures from the east mixed into one (especially Aladdin oh my gosh)
@jesuishong4 жыл бұрын
yeah and i feel social media actually at least lowkey propagates these ideas, considering westernised perspectives are put at the forefront of all discussions and you're considered insensitive, unprogressive, or uncivilised if western discussions and opinions aren't the centre of your attention, leading back to disaster donations and things like that, where more minor things happening in western countries receive way more attention and traction than the major things happening in non-western or "global south" countries... actually these popularised academic terms like these (including "third world") also propagate the idea that every place not western european or north american is a monolith, so just the act of engaging in these discussions without thinking of the implications of those words really progresses the orientalist mindset without them realising. they're basically all examples of microaggressions that need to be unlearned
@medb65034 жыл бұрын
@@renoirrr Yeah :// Aladdin is an Arabic name and the story is supposed to take place in the Middle East. However, they mistook our culture for East Asian (Indian specifically) and included their clothing, music, ecs (even little things like the tiger), proving that they see our cultures as interchangeable and insignificant enough to steal from but not dive in to.
@medb65034 жыл бұрын
@JinHit Entertainment Aladdin is an Arabic name and the story is supposed to take place in the Middle East. However, they mistook our culture for East Asian (Indian specifically) and included their clothing, music, ecs (even little things like the tiger), proving that they see our cultures as interchangeable and insignificant enough to steal from but not dive in to. I recommend reading this if you want to know about Mulan as well: www.refinery29.com/en-us/mulan-chinese-representation-stereotypes-disney-anniversary
@medb65034 жыл бұрын
@@jesuishong Exactly! A whole Muslim Holocaust is going on right now and the West doesn't care. Meanwhile, we are expected to be well versed on their current news and history (by having American/British school systems that are dedicated to retelling the white victor's perspective only). They know next to nothing about our history, heritage, and news and if they ever do study us, it's through the lens of war, dictatorship and general chaos. ALSO! It's very frustrating when I'm the diversity of a group and have the responsibility of representing all Muslim women or all Arab women in the room because like you said, we are not a monolith and I am NOT your token Muslim girl smh.
@dittokyu4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I've often thought so many of these arguments of kpop as 'manufactured' and 'perfect' come off extremely techno-orientalist. That people of the 'east' are robots without feeling. Despite the fact these systems and images also exist in the 'west'. The 'west' is incredibly threatened by the success of the 'east', and thus portray them in negative techno-orientalist lights to maintain their status as superior. Anyway, you always seem to make video essays that perfectly encapture my thoughts on these topics 😅 Thank you for the great work!
@heoniebee95664 жыл бұрын
Last night Spotify put some rando’s song on the Jonghyun memorial playlist and when they got called out on it they went “oops, our bad, any way stream this other group’s song since they’re all interchangeable ammirite?”
@user-qm8gt8lf7l4 жыл бұрын
yea i saw that too and was honestly so disgusted like :// ig they were tryna b like "hey guys come look at us we like bts!!!! pls use our app!!!" but the whole thing was just rly tone deaf and disrespectful
@kimmy24094 жыл бұрын
Im glad they all called out this person. It was so disgusting and it's really not okay to do something like this.
@ameliaclement54664 жыл бұрын
Ya like they literally brought up stay gold for no reason like no we are going to stream it bc they were being disrespectful to jjong :/
@pj.is.digital4 жыл бұрын
Yea that was beyond messed up. Most replies I saw from spotify's tweet were shinee fans getting mad at bts fans. I felt like spotify wanted to cause some kind of drama.
@heoniebee95664 жыл бұрын
autumnaljulia Racism in programming/tech is also a thing. People bring their biases into their coding. The fact they automated a message for ALL korean pop artists, because “hey, what’s the difference” in itself is orientalist. They’re a company dedicated to music...but felt it was okay to make an automated message where they just slapped on the most popular current artist, which they use for a specific nationality of people who they’ve lumped into the same ‘genre’ when it’s not even agreed that ‘kpop’ is a genre at all.
@Nublet8644 жыл бұрын
"Wow can you believe it a fan got a tattoo of the logo of the artists they like, can you believe it?!?!?" Me *whose seen dudes ironically have the blink-182 smiley above their butts* : ya
@jungkooks_microwavephobia4 жыл бұрын
I mean come on they just want to be enraged about something there are so many people that get celebrities FACES tattooed Jeffrey Stars upper body is basically just a Hall of Fame
@Ruby_Spacek4 жыл бұрын
I made a video on k-pop awhile ago and someone left a comment on how it’s hypocritical for me as a leftist to stan k-pop because of the exploitation....because we all know exploitation in the entertainment industry is unique to Korea right?🤔
@jenniemikasa5764 жыл бұрын
I Love how I can recognize that this is joy in the rainbow dress from peek a boo just by the silhouette
@Cmuse554 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU FOR THIS. Literally everyone I talk to believes the entire kpop industry or just Asians in general are like robots and also assume all the kpop fans are delusional little girls that don't see the bigger picture when we are the ones who see and know exactly what goes on. Yes, some of us are not from Asia, but we mostly know how the industry actually works because we took the time to understand it, to listen and watch so much content. The thing that bothers me the most is how people don't even care to see for themselves how kpop actually is just so they can stick to their false image of it because it's the most comfortable for them to think that way. I wish more people would watch this.
@rimirimi88774 жыл бұрын
"That it's so much less original" *shows TXT 's nap of a star*
@happyhappy6854 жыл бұрын
*Triggered*
@LetsSaboogi4 жыл бұрын
The passive aggressive sarcasm was what I lived for
@pinkgangsta61574 жыл бұрын
Kpop audition - Test for school Kpop agency (trainee) - university Debut - You pass the test/exam Idol - worker This is like normal form in society
@naanie974 жыл бұрын
Yes! Exactly! Also all forms of artistry have this format too. Why would art, dance and music schools/colleges/universities exist? All those creatives train for years before they get to work as professionals. The narrative that the art is only creditable if the artist comes from an independent/indie background is bs tbh
@LynnHermione4 жыл бұрын
Ballet schools are even more appropriate, yet nobody accuses the Royal Ballet of being robots...
@emj6024 жыл бұрын
I sent this to my dad and really asked him to watch this a rethink his biases because whenever I try to bring up kpop he will somehow bring up the “manufactured” shit and makes me muy uncomfortable.
@liz2574 жыл бұрын
I did a (UK) college project on the way kpop is dealing with mental health and LGBT stuff and lots of weird things happened. My mentor suggested I focus on the negative aspects of the industry instead of the positives. When I had finished my speech and got asked questions (by a room of white teachers) one of the questions I was asked was "Why do you think that it is harder to talk about these issues for Koreans?" He wouldn't accept my answers until another teacher suggested collectivism and his face lit up literally. It was so weird at the time I didn't know why it felt so uncomfortable - but now I realise it was the forced narrative, they already had the answer they wanted.
@ijm71174 жыл бұрын
Everyone. Help me share this on Twitter. As well his other videos. Let's educate locals please👏🏻
@lachi82424 жыл бұрын
I’ll try😅
@cassandra-4 жыл бұрын
if locals used their brains, they would've figured this out already. After all, a lot of us started off as locals too, didn't we? unfortunately, all they know how to do is spam racist and homophobic jokes and say "kpoop bad".
@J4keWasHere4 жыл бұрын
as a media graduate i was cringing at that documentary, as im sure so many others were. So many basic manipulation tactics even with the camera work to push their motive. Shoutout to Duboc tho actually a good choice for a documentary lead
@RC-gt3lb4 жыл бұрын
Right, so how are we going to get everyone to watch this...
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
Our work as fellow K-Pop fans who actually care about our idols' general health, we must put the links of this video in "Dark Side of K-Pop 😱" comments.
@seraphywang46384 жыл бұрын
Spam
@marshmallow9273 жыл бұрын
Im putting this under any comment/reply on ppl who say the generic shit abt the korean idol music industry
@seraphywang46383 жыл бұрын
@@marshmallow927 Ok
@samedi76103 жыл бұрын
@@emitheorbit1118 I'll join you.
@Sai-rp2xt4 жыл бұрын
Just a small correction: 13:54 the car was not invented in America.
@m.di.c.4 жыл бұрын
Actually the car had been invented in Germany, says the nitpicky German commentator ^^
@jennyserna43294 жыл бұрын
Wow, this made crazy good points. I've seen reaction channels call them "robots" and disregarded their hardwork and achievements. GREAT VIDEO!!!
@k-trash41284 жыл бұрын
People always come at me and try to teach me about the issues with Kpop and I ask them if they ever even listen to it and they be like.. uhm yea I watched to 2 music videos and. 3 min video about the dark side of kpop
@angelaw68124 жыл бұрын
Some Americans go "kpop is so manufactured" as if American music ISN'T the IRONY
@toodie5359 ай бұрын
what puzzles me musically right now is the nationalistic twinge to the label Americana/Roots music (full of kids from Toledo faking a backwoods accent)
@AlwaysDollLover4 жыл бұрын
ive been watching your last couple videos and they’re so interesting and well researched! it made me question why i hide my interest in kpop, my friends know i like it but that’s about it - they can’t tell me the song stuck in my head, my favorite group, my ult bias, etc. i noticed i don’t play it with any one other than my parents in the car. i panic when people ask me what music i like and throw it out there with oldies. i know it’s a genuine interest of mine that makes me happy but i try to hide it and just post on a stan account none of my irls follow. i mean i don’t care if my irls like kpop or not, i do respect that. i forgot where i was going with this but things that are different or “fOreIgN” have to earn respect much more than other thing - same thing with anime but now it’s considered cool and not lame to like. anywaysss, thank you for these videos!
@reoij4 жыл бұрын
There is also another thing that bothers me (I don't know how much it bothers others but anyway). Whenever those reaction channels react to kpop mvs and they hear an english word they get so surprised like "Whoah there's englishhhh" "WHOAH is that EnGLiSh" "THEY SAID AN ENGLISH WORD? WOAH" *like no Susan, "I love you" is clearly chinese, since that's the only language you think asians are capable of speaking* And they also say "omg their english is so good, how??" why are these people so surprised? I really don't understand. It reminds me of when western interviewers tell Mark "oh my goshhh your English is soooo good" like ummm okayyy
@hiraya33954 жыл бұрын
i recently had an argument with a fellow filipino (im filipino, hi) regarding this,,, they werent a kpop stan, yet acted as if i was a brainwashed kpop fan who knew nothing of this and simply rolled over for my korean idol overlords. it was frustrating and felt very much racist, because they kept regurgitating the kpop idols are a machine and are simply manufactured, thus have no agency. at the time, i couldnt understand why i felt that way. it was so much worse, even, than being told my favs are shit and have shit music, because that at least tells me they simply dont share my preference. however, this narrative that they claim has apparently driven them to not support kpop (except that they do bc they listen to kr&b,, cue the elitist music listener lmao). its so frustrating bc theyve simply spit back the recycled dark side of kpop shit without judging idol music fairly and without the prejudiced and high mighty attitude. thank u for putting my feelings into a well thought out video,, im a bit sad i didnt get to use this video as it PERFECTLY answers everything they said (i perfectly answered their shit too,, they were just far too ignorant and prejudiced to give a shit abt my arguments).
@MhzToinette4 жыл бұрын
I don't know how I missed this video. Excellent work Elliot. This brought back a lot of memories. In June 1982 I was an almost 13 yr old girl who had been born & living in Detroit all my life. My mother, grandfather & 2 aunts worked for Chrysler back then and the Vincent Chen m*rder & Toyota was discussed quite a bit in our household. My grandfather who served in WW2 & The Korean War did not like the Japanese at all so we heard a lot of rants about them and how they were going to ruin America. I learned a lot from my grandfather and taught him a few things. His rants against the Japanese were because the things they'd done ( invading Korea & the bombing of Pearl Harbor especially) effected him, his family & friends. He had no problem with them being Asian just the things they were doing. I was a quiet kid that only spoke out when it came to others being wronged especially when it came to discrimination and never cared about how a person looked or were they where from when it came to making friends. I fit in comfortably with everyone. I was 17 when when we had an indept discussion about racism and he told me he was wrong for blaming an entire people for the wrongs that those in/with power did. He also admitted that we as Americans shouldn't have blamed the Japanese for the problems the US car industry was having, that the US just needed to step their game up. It's a competitive world. Wherever I went I was called weird for hanging out and interacting with non-black kids. I had started to pull away from my friends and felt that something was wrong with me. This conversation with my grandfather had a huge impact on me as it helped me realize nothing was wrong with me and to stay the course. Everyone needs to realize people are people regardless of where they are from and we're all just trying to live life to the best of our ability.
@wizz20814 жыл бұрын
This should be thought in schools! We live in a globalized society and we should educate ourselves more on these cultural implications. Amazing video!
@curlythoughts90944 жыл бұрын
I loved how this video doesn't deny that there is a "dark side to Kpop" however addresses the fact that we shouldn't generalize it to every aspect and person in the industry. I believe that the over-usage of the term is very disturbing because to the uninformed people this kind of negative approach will not only strengthen their cultural closure but also will paint this distorted and inhuman picture about an industry which like any other has flaws while we forget that at the core of all of this we find some's creation, art, and expression.
@flyushkifly4 жыл бұрын
Wow. Seoul is nothing like 'the future' or 'bladerunner'. It's just a huge, diverse city.
@rillykid4 жыл бұрын
"Diverse" 💀💀💀💀💀
@jungkooks_microwavephobia4 жыл бұрын
rilly kid for sk standards yeah and I mean it is still quite diverse if you ignore the ethnic aspect
@rillykid4 жыл бұрын
@@jungkooks_microwavephobia admittedly, yes but for world standards heck no
@Belihoney4 жыл бұрын
Diverse??
@Belihoney4 жыл бұрын
Wait is this sarcasm?
@choerim4 жыл бұрын
This was really fascinating. While watching the video I couldn't help but wonder what impacted the kpop industry's differences from other industries - do you think you could make a video about that at some point? What I mean is how organized the industry is - the music shows everyone performes in, the fact that mixing of different generes in one song or on one album is completely normal for any and every artist to do, the level of creativity and effort that goes into music videos and how imporant even simple storylines and symbolism are to most of them. Even the existence of channels like ReactToTheK shows that kpop is at a different level in its complexity and creativity from other pop industries. I don't know if there's any way to track the history of music and Korean people and get a straight answer, but it's a topic I'd be really interested to hear more about. All of your videos are really well researched and it's very impressive!
@marialuisaoliveira10094 жыл бұрын
This has nothing to do with the video, sort of, but as a South American I hate it when people from North America, mostly from the USA, refer to themselves as "Americans". It may not look as a big deal for you, but this small linguistic act helps to spread the notion of the United States supremacy and superiority over other American countries, which has long suffered from political interventions and are victims of neo-colonialism. Just wanted to point this out, but great video, by the way.
@marialuisaoliveira10094 жыл бұрын
Think TWICE I’m not blaming him. Just wanted to point it out. 🧡
@marialuisaoliveira10094 жыл бұрын
AW I think it’s important to understand how a language can hold power. I’m not sure how else they could refer to themselves either, but in Brazil we refer to them as “estado unidenses”.
@JD-xm4uf4 жыл бұрын
I see thi around a lot but it would very difficult to change, at least from what I know. The US isnt the only country that calls the citizens Americans, Many countrues in europe does as well. Japan refers to the US as, A-me-ri-ka. I hear what you say but i don't see any way for people to change that easiy when so many people use that name.
@barbaraandrade51154 жыл бұрын
Yess I'm brazilian too I AGREE SO MUCH. I have heard many stories of South Americans who went to exchange in the United States. Unfortunately, there is a lot of misconception, many don't know almost nothing and I don't think they study at school about Central/South American cultures. I've seen many of us being stereotyped...
@LynnHermione4 жыл бұрын
So much yes. America es un continente, no un pais.
@diannaa.624 жыл бұрын
I wish this had spanish subs. I wanna show some of my family members who are very ignorant about this topic.
@Danae_O4 жыл бұрын
working on it! (EDIT: subs are up)
@diannaa.624 жыл бұрын
Danae O. Oh thanks!
@lidiasoares49394 жыл бұрын
same here but in Portuguese too, if they add English I maybe to the translation to pt
@demitwice4 жыл бұрын
@@lidiasoares4939 eu posso tentar legendar em português, só vai levar um tempo a
@lidiasoares49394 жыл бұрын
@@demitwice Sério? Muito obrigada. Leve o tempo que precisar.
@wiki4004 жыл бұрын
Gosh, he really went above and beyond with this video. I always look forward to when you post. Keep it up!
@pitypang16304 жыл бұрын
"dark side of the media industry" wow that was strong
@pmk72114 жыл бұрын
Man, you are so underrated! Your whole youtube channel is a diamond! I hope you will get the recognition you deserve eventually! Can't wait for the next video!
@youandwhatarmy6354 жыл бұрын
Wow I had never heard of techno-orientalism before, thank you for the new understanding 🙏
@wesselm91844 жыл бұрын
"Asians are not very expressive" I hear that alot from old white people
@toodie5359 ай бұрын
On the Pacific coast of USA, directly after WWII (Pacific Theater), Asians had to keep a low profile for their own safety as there was still cultural bias-backlash. Schoolmates told me this.
@MissMariela1004 жыл бұрын
I think a point where this stereotypical view of Orientalism prevails the most in K-pop is this critique that they look like girls. Because most occidental people have this occidental concept of what the masculine is, that differs greatly of the masculine idea of the east. Masculinity in the east includes dressing fashionably, daily skin care, expressing their emotions, physical close contact with other males that are considered family, and many other things that for some reason seem awkward to "us in the west". And I think it's super interesting to see why we can be atracted to those qualities, also.
@sofiaisasmendi40754 жыл бұрын
amazing as always, i will link this on twitter to anyone arguing that the kpop machine is a monster and we're too ignorant to see it lol, also it blows my mind how everything /always/ gets narrowed down to imperialism and capitalism
@stephanieebarr12 жыл бұрын
I believe this. This dehumanization of "other" allowed the exploitation of people all over the world. And still does. It still flavors how people react, how they perceive, and how open they are to different cultures and ideas. The irony for me as a dabbler in history is how many amazing technological breakthroughs started in Asia, how much rich culture is glossed over. And, to talk about "Orientals" as dirty, especially in the time frame Europeans first encountered in their native countries (i.e. Europeans were disgusting, from a hygiene standpoint) them is frankly sad. One factual detail. The first car was not made in America (Ironically, the earliest car might have been made in China), but even if that's speculative, France and Germany were both ahead. The US did pioneer mass production, which made cars more accessible (but that's ironic too in a discussion of the Western view of kpop). You have some excellent essays and I've enjoyed them, particularly on the insight I've been given on Korean cultural history, which I knew only tangentially from reading Chinese and Japanese history. I expect I'll have to do some deep diving. I clearly didn't learn anything in depth. Also, lastly, I'm a huge fan of BTS and fell in love with them almost at once, admittedly before I knew they had so much to say, and definitely more so once I heard the meaning behind their songs.
@cartoonplanettv4 жыл бұрын
lol, i was just looking at part 1 and now i found out this was released 2 hours ago, what a coincidence. I feel special! *Does 'feel special' dance move*
@aimanraza4 жыл бұрын
This was an excellent video! I took a class about racial world-making in science fiction and we talked a lot about these kinds of issues. However, this is the first time I heard this connected to kpop and I must say this was a really good and informative video! Keep it up!!
@user-pn2ly2wv8k4 жыл бұрын
I am so mad that I didn't discover you sooner. A KZbinr that does intensive research, actually looks at both sides of the argument, AND has a works cited page/bibliography??? Props to you man.
@ankitamohanty31574 жыл бұрын
You all are doing a great Job. I am glad to have found you amidst mindless K-pop reaction channels. I just believe K-pop would be a huge subject of discussion and debate in near future, like how asian culture that had been thoroughly oppressed by Western media came into forefront and broke stereotypes. It's videos like these that would guide us to an articulated knowledge about the matter. Thank you so much!
@ponparkle31024 жыл бұрын
Ankita Mohanty Western media? You’re talking about USA ?
@ankitamohanty31574 жыл бұрын
@@ponparkle3102 yes, precisely. However I still believe it's a long ongoing process
@ponparkle31024 жыл бұрын
Ankita Mohanty Sorry but why you are saying “oppression” ?
@ankitamohanty31574 жыл бұрын
@@ponparkle3102 isn't it oppression when you intentionally use them for clout but no let them grow commercially? Isn't it oppression when you clearly rob the biggest boyband in the world of their credentials?
@strandedpluto72504 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this well throughout and explained video. I love how you are interviewing experts and quoting academic articles and deep diving into history. It is just chefs kiss 👌 I love to see videos like this so really thank you so much!! Great work ^^
@spritenoicy16764 жыл бұрын
So much work goes into your videos. Like good lord, you are CRIMINALLY underrated.
@fullofhype4 жыл бұрын
Your videos need to be viewed more than they have been.
@onlylaboum4 жыл бұрын
i have the feeling i've used one or two articles by Crystal Anderson before for papers on k-pop in uni. it's great to see you interview / include experts in these video essays!
@vidhighai97454 жыл бұрын
Wow , I have been writing about kpop for a couple of months now.Your video essays and writings have given me a new topic for discusiion.As a student of media and films , your point of Techno - orientalism makes a lot of sense to me and deserves a detailed discussion. This is a thought that popped in my head while watching this essay. We have great examples of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon , Grandmaster (cut down to 108 mins from 130 min) , Snowpiercer , Parasite :which have been whitewashed for the western audience only because they don't like to read. This evolved approach of orientallism is also a big reason for the disregarsd to the Korean artists and music industry , with its resurgence in the present time.This is an artistic colonisation of works that are better or disrupt the ideas of a 'manufactured , plastic or machine culture.'
@saminthecity16554 жыл бұрын
This was brilliant and enlightening. Thanks for your hard work, Elliot and the gang. I want this to be shared everywhere
@st3nloona3384 жыл бұрын
Tysm for these videos! I feel like they’ve really put some of my thoughts into actual well thought out, informative things😭
@RubenTricky4 жыл бұрын
your videos are so damn well researched!
@jordantamah94084 жыл бұрын
I always thought it was weird that people would say I can't listen to kpop because I can't understand what they are saying when those same people would listen to but reggaeton or even French music even though they can't understand
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
Reggaeton is one of the worst things you could ever listen in your life, trust me; their lyrics and videos are straight up Machismo and soft porn. Remove the Instrumental of one of those songs and you get a declaration of a raper.
@giulianaschaerer71404 жыл бұрын
The orientalism definition is very interesting and I kinda see this happen a lot for latin america too (I am from a south american country), I see it is a ‘white colonizar’ thing and no culture is safe from this not even not ones as advanced as asian cultures.
@hannp03084 жыл бұрын
This probably took you ages to finish... Thank you!
@cloudofreverie7864 жыл бұрын
Western ideologies projected in to kpop isnt what Kpop truly is. Why would you believe a colonizer over a native? It's only the people in the kpop industry that can truly explain where they're coming from in terms of perspective, viewpoint, and worldview.
@SAR-re1fx4 жыл бұрын
Well... there´s another take in Korean pop towards Spain or Latin American , how most of the time think that Spain culture is the same as countries from South American culture, how they mix flamenco with mexican, thinking that all "mediterranean" or "latin" women we sort of are "hot" "passionate" "sexy" "promiscuous" calling us "señoritas" "sexy señorita" and other bullshit. Even in the US asked me if we had electricity in Spain because they thought that we sort of still live in villages like in the middle ages and toros playing all the way around. There are trends in Kpop misrepresenting Spanish, South America and Arabic cultures so I guess is a full circle. All countries see each other exotic or strange, I don´t think nobody can portray a culture accuratley without living there.
@Danae_O4 жыл бұрын
(Chilean here) that would be a sign of the US and to a lesser extent other English-speaking countries (plus certain specific European countries like France) historically having far more power and reach over culture and media globally than Asia and Latin America (and Spain to a lesser extent), with the stereotypes coming from the US industry and modern European culture constantly spreading to other places as well. This would also apply to stereotypes about marginalized communities within the US itself, like black people or LGBT+ people. It's all about historical context and power dynamics.
@pitypang16304 жыл бұрын
this is amazing, absolutely thank you for all that you have covered! it means a lot to have this broader perspective now, and words to identify these things that ive only had a vague feeling of and have been eluding me. really wow
@arcie3716 Жыл бұрын
The interview with the very end with Tiffany is insane???? The person asked if Tiffany learned how to smile???And when she said that she gets her smile from her father, they called her a "jolt of pure cultural technology" Jesus Christ talk about dehumanizing
@dorachance39464 жыл бұрын
This is such a great series of videos! Thank you! A lot of media coverage is very lazy in general when it comes to music from non-western backgrounds, but being fairly new to kpop I had no idea it could be SO bad. I always thought of online media coverage of music as predominantly useless and harmless, but I guess I should reconsider that...(in my defense, I am a classical musician living in Europe, my essence is living under a rock for years before realizing stuff 😂)
@paradisecrack7024 жыл бұрын
Cosas como estas me hacen sentir agradecida de haber conocido a BTS siendo una adolescente en mi etapa de formación porque gracias a ellos he aprendido a dejar atrás muchos estereotipos (y xenofobia) hacia los asiáticos que de otra forma habrían seguido conmigo de por vida y podrían haber hecho daño eventualmente
@bl00dp0p54 жыл бұрын
Una vez que una ve como nos han lavado el cerebro respecto a otras naciones o culturas las cosas son muy diferentes, se empieza a tener una mayor autonomía de los que realmente pasa
@emitheorbit11184 жыл бұрын
Yo solia tener muchos prejuicios referente al K-Pop, hasta se podría decir que era hater, luego ví un vídeo en el que Danna Alquati de "Mi Problema con la Monja" y ahí salió un vídeo de una chica bailando, la canción que usaba se me hizo pegadiza, y ahí fue cuando escuché mi primera canción de K-Pop: *BBoom BBoom* y no me arrepiento para nada.
@koreli414 жыл бұрын
thank you for this very informative video! i study orientalism and korean studies at my university and I unfortunately never heard of techno-orientalism before your video! i will certainly look into it as it is very interesting! thank you
@mahikamihan4 жыл бұрын
👏👏👏 Danae for all the illustrations holy those are amazing! 💕💕💕
@musicislife394 жыл бұрын
Would love to watch with the premiere but have work so will watch later, can't wait
@bhlasvegas9903 жыл бұрын
Imagine a Korean reporter coming to America and investigating the dark sides. A whole film crew, with their camera and lights and asking ignorant questions very seriously....the West does this all the time all over the world not just Asia
@juliafranch78484 жыл бұрын
I never heard about techo-orientalism but now you brought out is very common in media
@chickenlittle_jae79794 жыл бұрын
I loveeeeeee your videos sososo much they're so good! Hope you'll do more :) I can't understand why your channel is so unknown and underrated.. there isn't a channel that has videos nearly as good and with such a good research as yours
@OliVia-mp6bw4 жыл бұрын
I am excited to watch this when it comes out!!
@MinervAthena1234 жыл бұрын
This is such an excellent video! I was not prepared to see a clip of The Untamed in it, but it was a welcome sight!
@mrblvoch21684 жыл бұрын
Thank you for educating me
@barbharar4 жыл бұрын
this is quality content that needs to be shared, elliot you are amazing!
@egglito4 жыл бұрын
once again you've made an amazing video essay and i can't wait for the next installment of the series :)
@ingusch37834 жыл бұрын
This has far too few views!!! Such a good video, thank you for putting in actual time and effort and talking to *actual* experts on the topic!
@dandybees76954 жыл бұрын
aaaaa all of the subjects you touched on were articulated so well!! i encourage anyone who enjoyed it to do additional research beyond the video too! i’ll def be listening to dr. anderson’s podcast
@tanhakate20254 жыл бұрын
Hi bby gang. It was a great video. Thank you! As someone who is moderately read on orientalism and has been orientalised in the past, I am aware of when it's happening, but also as someone who does not follow k-pop generally, or idol music specifically, I don't always know to defend my views. For instance, I agree that k-pop is viewed in an unfairly negative light, which perpetuates techno-orientalism, but if someone were to argue with me, I wouldn't have the numbers and facts to defend myself. On the off occasion that I feel a need to defend the view, and there is a genuine desire to learn, I can quickly point them to your videos. However, different cultures are pervasive with such depictions of the "Other" depending on the power relations within those societies. Do you have any thoughts on this: how can we fight the good fight without knowing everything? (lol sorry to sound dramatic)
@ruby89034 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this and the other video essays, this one in particular confirms and elaborates this suspicion that I always had, but I didn’t have this much information. Isn’t it ironic how western media has constructed this narrative about manipulated asian artists while turning a blind eye to the very sinister things going on their own music industry. Just yesterday I was reading about Britney Spears and how she’s been a prisoner of her handlers. The woman has had zero autonomy over her own life or career for more than a decade now. She can’t make any decisions without their consent. As far as I know there has never been anything like that within the korean music industry.
@aerithofmyore4 жыл бұрын
Every industry is mechanised if you think about it
@lachi82424 жыл бұрын
Basically
@evavankats4 жыл бұрын
I wholeheartedly wish that your videos will have millions of views someday and that the general perception of k-pop will be a little better than it is today. Thank you so so much for making these kinds of videos.
@Marina-ot6re4 жыл бұрын
Your videos are so good, really well-researched! Now I just need to show them to my brother, that thinks that kpop idols are manufactured and don't care about their fans
@alarelius4 жыл бұрын
this was excellent! once again, elliot, you knocked it out of the park. It's so cathartic for me to watch your videos :) and I loved arirang at the end
@littlecookie21564 жыл бұрын
This is... incredible. Your videos are so informative, and really captivating, they make me think about the thing I didn't usually care so much about. (Especially because English is not my first language, and my brain just doing its best when I watch your videos lol)