A gorgeous k-drama about K-pop industry
is Imitation (2021)! Loved it!
Technically, it was a typical Korean romance drama, but in fact, it had so much between the lines about how the industry works (and when I watch something about K-pop, I want a give-or-take honest representation of K-pop, not something rose-glassed like Shooting stars, Lovely Runner or K-pop demon hunters).
Although this drama is about personal life and love of two K-pop idols, it pays a lot of attention to how everything works in there: what do sound producers, costumers, managers, agency directors and trainees do, idols' rehearsals, shootings, trainings, TV and concert performances.
SHAX K-pop boy band rehearsal
Backstage of Inkigayo
SHAX performance
Reality show filming
Sound producing members of bands cooperate with a composer. And SHAX have here not only fully made performances, but also promo materials:
But the further you look into it, the more darker things you can see. ✪ In this industry, everyone should do what they was told to do to keep the show go on:
The center member disappeared just before the show, so ML was forced to take his place. It didn't matter if he didn't know what to do or if he was afraid of the height (It was filmed like he WAS, and I remembered irl idols who were forced to take a ride on a rollercoaster for the show despite they were obviously scared).
✪ Idols are just an instrument of making money for their agency, so the opinion of idols is not of real value to the big boss:
"If you had the conscience, you wouldn't steal the screen time of rookie groups."
The agency put its super popular boy band SHAX in a broadcasting grid of Inkigayo in the last moment. Some rookies was robbed of broadcasting time because of it. ML and his band wouldn't like to participate , but they couldn't convince their boss, so they were forced to take a part at Inkigayo anyways.
✪ Idols lack of private life. They are 24/7 under the spotlight of cameras:
It's a reality show, but he's trying to sleep. Sleeping under camera's eye is not something pleasant, I suppose.
It's so telling: he constantly wonders if he'd be caught on camera by fans or paparazzi.
It hurt. A very telling scene. I've read that irl idol's partners aren't allowed to take a picture with their famous boy/girlfriends to prevent the information about them dating from leaking. So she deletes all provocative photos although she would like to keep an image of the real him (and here is another problem: everything fans can see isn't real, you'll never know what person irl your idol is).
✪ The industry forces idols to choose between their career and their private life:
In the past, ML wasn't happy to learn that his bandmate had secretly dating someone, because if fans would find it out, they could start boycotting the whole band. Idols should keep the image of a boyfriend material that any fangirl can get. Fans' delusions are the core essence of K-pop popularity.
✪ In this industry, no one is irreplaceable:
I understood what was that only by gif cutting: a former manager of SHAX watches their new performance and remembers the former center member who went missing 3 years ago. But only he sees him on stage in his Mind Palace: it has been 3 years since then, and SHAX have their new center member. A person went missing, but the brand proceeds functioning as always and brings money to the agency as always.
✪ Sic transit gloria mundi, the glory is fleeting:
I like the representation of this principium: the rookie idol girls are super happy to be recognizable by fans in a nearby store; ML, an idol on the peak of his popularity, is recognizable by fans even if there are only his eyes seen, and is anxious about it instead of being happy; the former member of the very popular boy band isn't recognizable anymore, although only 3 years passed and the band itself is still super popular.
✪ Idols have unhealthy coping mechanisms:
When ML's manager finds out ML having a crush on someone he shouldn't have a crush on, he forces him to work as much as ML physically can, because hard work is the ML's way to cope. Unhealthy, but it's still better than soju or drugs.
I like this moment. He was a dancer before he became an idol, so he dances to be in touch with himself.
✪ But the darkest part of K-pop lies in the hypocrisy of the industry: it exploits artists' bodies and souls , keeps them in a cage of a perfect image, and, at the same time, feeds fans with parasocial relationship and delusions about an idol belonging to them wholly. And I like that these two topics pierce through the whole drama and lay in the core of its plot. Lets talk about it in the next post.









