4.4 • 102.4K Ratings
🗓️ 23 November 2024
⏱️ 36 minutes
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0:00.0 | From the New York Times, this is the interview. |
0:06.3 | I'm Lulu Garcia-Navarro. |
0:09.1 | I'd like to invite you into my refuge when it all gets to be too much. |
0:13.8 | It's a world of bright color, incredible fashion, perfectly choreographed dance moves, |
0:19.0 | and bullion earworms that bop. |
0:22.3 | Yep, I'm talking about K-pop. |
0:25.1 | If you know, you know. |
0:27.1 | But for those who don't, |
0:28.5 | South Korean pop, known as K-pop, |
0:30.8 | is a highly stylized art form |
0:32.8 | that has a massive global fan base, |
0:35.2 | giving outsized cultural influence |
0:36.9 | to the small country where it's made. |
0:39.3 | The genre stars, known as idols, are trained, often for years, by entertainment companies. |
0:45.3 | The companies then place the most promising trainees in groups, write and produce their music, |
0:50.3 | and, some would say, obsessively manage their public image. |
0:53.3 | It's a structure that works for the idols who make it big, |
0:56.6 | but it also draws criticism for its grueling |
0:59.2 | and what some critics call exploitative methods. |
1:02.6 | One of the biggest stars to come out of that system is Rose. |
1:05.9 | Born Roseanne Park, she trained for years at one of K-pop's largest agencies, |
1:10.5 | YG Entertainment, eventually |
... |
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