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  • and thousands of others with a free two-month trial.

  • Visiting Japan feels a bit like taking a trip to the future.

  • Robots serve and deliver your food,

  • Vending machines sell everything from umbrellas to puppies,

  • Bullet trains whisk you around the island at 320 kilometers an hour,

  • and its median age of 47.3, the second-highest in the world, warns of the global aging soon

  • to come.

  • There's one way, however, where Japan is stuck in the past.

  • Walking around Tokyo, or Osaka, or Kobe, you might notice something odd: a strangely high

  • number of music stores.

  • Compared to the U.S., Japan has 40% as many people but nearly double the number of music

  • shops.

  • As a whole, the Japanese music market is the second biggest in the world but unlike almost

  • any other.

  • In most parts of the world, streaming has replaced physical sales.

  • In 2015, for example, 66% of U.S. music sales were digital.

  • In Japan, it's nearly the opposite.

  • 75% of sales were physical, and only 18% were digital.

  • This is due, in part, to the country's stringent copyright laws, licensing restrictions, and

  • rental culture.

  • But there's another reason CDs are still loved in countries like Japan and South Korea:

  • K-Pop.

  • Korean pop groups have offset losses from piracy with glossy, premium, collectible CDs,

  • usually sold to fans who will never play them.

  • Instead, CDs are sold as merch - often with different covers to encourage buying several,

  • and sometimes act as lottery tickets for a chance to meet your favorite singer.

  • What's so interesting about K-Pop, as a business, is that almost everything, from

  • the very beginning, is manufactured as a consumer product.

  • Artists aren't found but created - sculpted for maximum reach, over many years, in a factory

  • system.

  • And their international success is no accident.

  • K-Pop is a deliberate, government-funded project aimed at growing South Korea's global power.

  • Making it, in the process, highly political.

  • The 1988 Summer Olympics was a turning point for South Korea.

  • Like Japan's 1964 and China's 2008 games, it was a rare, historic opportunity to change

  • the country's image abroad.

  • Harsh censorship laws and restrictive TV network monopolies soon opened up, giving way to a

  • new generation of artists.

  • 4 years later, in 1992, the Korean government's Culture and Tourism Institute began looking

  • for new, overseas markets.

  • But rather than waiting for demand, Korean entertainment hooked foreign viewers and created

  • it.

  • The institute translated a popular drama calledWhat is loveinto Cantonese, which it

  • sent to the Korean consulate in Hong Kong, where it was offered free to a local TV station.

  • Soon, Hong Kong and its neighbor Guangzhou, were asking for more.

  • Not long after that, demand spread to Taiwan, Vietnam, Japan, and further into mainland

  • China, which established diplomatic relations with South Korea that same year.

  • The media called this mass cultural dispersionHallyu”, orthe Korean Wave”.

  • The next turning point came after the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, when manufacturing

  • industries across South and Southeast Asia saw huge losses.

  • In response, President Kim Dae-Jung turned to the entertainment sector, hiring a PR firm

  • to launch a new national image.

  • The cultural budget increased 600%, and a new Ministry of Culture was formed, including

  • an entire K-Pop department.

  • The second Korean Wave came in 2012 with the explosive viral hitGangnam Style”.

  • Overnight, the whole world became curious about Korean music, dramas, fashion, and language.

  • And while it wasn't truly representative of K-Pop as a genre, it was useful for one

  • big thing: proving a song didn't need to be written in English to succeed in the West,

  • later confirmed by hits likeDespacito”.

  • No one could've predicted the success of Gangnam Style, but the rise of Korean entertainment,

  • in some form, was inevitable. Engineered-for, in fact, by the K-Pop Formula.

  • The difference between it and other genres is that K-Pop is reverse-engineered based

  • on consumer preferences.

  • Where most musicians start off practicing in their parents' garages, driven only by

  • a passion for the art and eventually get discovered by a record label, K-Pop groups usually begin,

  • rise, and change directions from a conference room.

  • There are four big labels: YG, SM, JYP, and Big Hit Entertainment.

  • Although, again, the wordlabelis slightly deceiving - these companies aren't so much

  • agents as product designers - they create and shape every aspect of their groups.

  • First, they begin with recruitment.

  • Because K-Pop singers are as much public idols as musicians, the composition of personalities

  • is very important.

  • Companies look for a set of distinct yet cohesive personalities so as to appeal to as large

  • a fan base as possible, while not generating unnecessary internal conflict.

  • Some labels turn recruitment into a reality-TV competition - ideal for creating fan loyalty

  • and dramatizing personalities.

  • In 2012, 4% of the entire South Korean population tried-out for Superstar K, its most popular

  • singing competition.

  • Other companies recruit based only on qualities like appearance: because the next component

  • is Training.

  • Potential stars, sometimes as young as 11 years old, go through roughly 5-10 years of

  • arduous preparation.

  • A training schedule might be as follows: 5 am, Wake up; Practice Choreography, Go to

  • school, Get out at 3 pm, Practice vocals until 6, Language lessons until 9, and then exercise

  • until 11, leaving an hour to get home before the trains shut down for the night in Seoul

  • and 5 hours for sleep.

  • Still, after all that, after sacrificing all other hobbies and dreams, after learning English

  • or Japanese, only about 10% of trainees will everbut.

  • K-Pop stars complain of long, miserable hours, low pay, and unfair 7-year contracts which

  • include clauses forbidding them from talking publicly about relationships and/or requiring

  • they maintain a certain weight.

  • Labels, in turn, argue these stipulations are necessary given the tens of thousands,

  • hundreds of thousands, or even millions of dollars and years they invest in each trainee.

  • The third ingredient, and perhaps most important, is localization.

  • Because K-Pop is so diverse - incorporating everything from pop to techno, rock, and hip-hop,

  • it's hard to define what, exactly, it is.

  • One of the few, unifying characteristics which sets it apart from, say, Japanese Pop, is

  • the way it caters to an international audience.

  • Group names generally consist of a short, easily-recognized English word or acronym

  • - TWICE, BTS, EXO, AOA.

  • Another common strategy is to have at least one Chinese, Japanese, Thai, or Taiwanese

  • group member.

  • Songs and their extravagant music videos are often produced two or three times: in Korea,

  • Japanese, and Mandarin, with English words sprinkled throughout.

  • In addition to being hugely profitable, this international focus provides Seoul with something

  • even more valuable, although, intangible.

  • While soft power can't be precisely measured, it tells a nation's story in a way no amount

  • of tanks or factories ever can.

  • K-Pop is so political because it paints such a vivid national image.

  • Thus, why South Korea brought the girl group Red Velvet to sing for Kim Jong-Un in Pyongyang

  • last year.

  • Separately, in 2016, the U.S. began deploying a defense system in South Korea against potential

  • North Korean missiles called the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense.

  • Soon after, South Korean products began disappearing from Chinese shelves.

  • Although never explicitly announced, China's government effectively banned K-Pop.

  • Tour groups were forbidden from traveling to the South and previously welcome K-Pop

  • groups suddenly found their performances canceled or visas denied.

  • Music videos were even blocked from the internet, as groups turned to Hong Kong and Macau concerts

  • until the ban was relaxed in 2017.

  • It's another example of China using its large consumer market as leverage - not unlike

  • the recent NBA controversy - both, proving the unwavering fortitude of Chinese patriotism

  • - stronger even, than the support of a Kobe Bryant or BTS super-fan.

  • Finally, the last step is to sell every millimeter of unused space.

  • Extreme fan loyalty translates into extremely effective paid endorsements, product placements,

  • and sponsorships.

  • The quintessential example of the formula's success is the 7-member boy band, BTS.

  • Their Twitter account generates 4 times the engagement of President Donald Trump's,

  • They appeared on the Ellen show,

  • Gave a speech at the United Nations, and contribute an estimated $3.6 billion US Dollars a year

  • to the Korean economy.

  • One study estimates the country gets $5 back for every $1 it spends on K-Pop.

  • It's now building an entire themed-district in the capital - with a concert hall, recording

  • studios, museum, and K-Star Road, similar to Hong Kong's Avenue of Stars or Hollywood's

  • Walk of Fame.

  • Some say K-Pop is too commercialized, too scripted, toofake.

  • But while some artists invent touching origin stories, K-Pop is honest about its motives:

  • profit!

  • Like professional wrestling, yes it's exaggerated and mass-produced. And yes, its fans are aware.

  • But there's something respectably authentic about how transparently manufactured it all

  • is.

  • It may be fake but very real is the joy it brings millions of fans around the world.

  • Behind every great K-Pop idol is an intense motivation and need to learn new skills. If

  • you want to learn how to be more productive, or make videos like these or super meta - learn

  • how tolearn faster, Skillshare is for you.

  • Personally, my favorite is YouTuber Thomas Frank's course on staying organized and

  • getting things done. On his suggestion, I've started taking Fridays to review the week

  • and catch up on to-dos. It's a little thing but has the big effect of making me feel on

  • top of things for the rest of the week.

  • These are really well-produced, high-quality courses, and they can be all yours for less

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  • Thanks to Skillshare for sponsoring this video and to you for watching.

This video is sponsored by Skillshare. Use the link in the description to watch my class

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B1 中級 美國腔

K-Pop的經濟學 (The Economics of K-Pop)

  • 278 5
    王語萱 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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