Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • In 1964 an English boy band called The Beatles made its television debut

  • and changed the face of the music industry forever.

  • More than 50 years later another foreign import is doing it again.

  • Meet BTS a seven member South Korean boy band from Seoul.

  • The band has sold millions of albums and is one of the most watched artists

  • on YouTube.

  • Not to mention their stadium shows around the globe have quickly sold out.

  • It's estimated that BTS is worth about 3.6 billion

  • dollars per year to the economy of South Korea and more than 1 billion

  • dollars in consumer exports.

  • The idols as South Koreans call its megastars were the reason that 1 in

  • every 13 foreign tourists visited the country in 2017.

  • BTS even partnered with visit Seoul on a tourism campaign.

  • which were featured in videos for the campaign have become hot spots for

  • tourists.

  • Should beaches maintain their popularity they could generate 37 billion

  • dollars in economic value for South Korea over the next 10 years.

  • So how did BTS break the mold in South Korea and jump to the top of the

  • charts in the U.S..

  • BTS wasn't an overnight sensation debuting in 2013 the K-pop group took its

  • name from a Korean expression "Bangtan Sonyeondan" which translates to

  • "Bullet Proof Boy Scouts."

  • Although the acronym has since morphed to stand for beyond the scene a nod

  • to how connected the band is to its loyal fans known as "Army.".

  • So what is K-pop anyway.

  • K-pop is short for Korean pop or Korean popular music.

  • It's a music genre that blends together electronic, hip-hop, pop, rock,

  • R&B, and even rap.

  • The genre can be traced back to the early 90s but rose to popularity in the

  • 2000s.

  • It has since grown into a 5 billion dollar global industry.

  • Typically K-pop groups have gained a foothold in South Korea and throughout

  • Asia before trying to expand to a global audience.

  • But when they did travel abroad these trips were actually detrimental to

  • many of their careers because it ripped them out of the spotlight in their

  • home country.

  • So previous generations of K-pop idols Korea very much depended on TV as a

  • platform whereas BTS used social media to really kind of make themselves

  • available and visible and that can be done anywhere in the world.

  • But BTS did things a little differently.

  • The boys of BTS were signed to South Korean entertainment company Big Hit

  • Entertainment who had conducted the auditions that brought them together.

  • The group spent several years refining their dance moves and sound before

  • debuting in 2013.

  • Two band members Jimin and V hailed from the Korean Arts High School in

  • Seoul a private educational institution that has many K-pop idols as

  • alumni.

  • The school closed in February 2019 however as it was unable to keep up with

  • new and strict laws and decided to stop taking students.

  • Other performing arts high schools sometimes called K-pop schools remain.

  • Here young South Korean students practice their dance moves and polish

  • their vocal skills.

  • The boys hail from cities and towns from all over South Korea and were

  • brought together through a series of auditions in 2010 and 2011.

  • Big Hit Entertainment was on the brink of bankruptcy in 2007.

  • However it wasn't until BTS's launched that Big Hits' financials really

  • turned around.

  • By 2018 the company's profit soared 97 percent from the year prior hauling

  • in around 57 million dollars.

  • Revenue rose 132 percent from 2017 to 2018 and the company's net income

  • rose 105 percent year over year.

  • Much of this growth was due to how Big Hit first marketed betas to the

  • public.

  • Yes kind of circumvented traditional model of the viewing on TV music shows

  • and gaining visibility and rather they took a route of reaching out to

  • global fandom through social media directly.

  • So it is a band that gained fame and popularity overseas even before they

  • became superstars in Korea itself.

  • The band was given full control of their social media presence and we're

  • encouraged to live blog their practices and daily lives.

  • Social media has been playing a tremendous role not only into Korean Wave

  • but also in exchange and propagation of culture.

  • In fact Korean Wave including K-pop, K-beauty, K-food, movies, and games is

  • a worldwide trend now because of the social media and a U.S.

  • market is no exception.

  • In recent years the millennials have spent enormous time on social media

  • and a massive cultural content has been consumed especially the expansion

  • of Korean Wave on YouTube is the most powerful driving force.

  • Notably, none of the band members have their own individual accounts on

  • social media.

  • There's just one band account meaning the group's fan following is

  • concentrated on one account per platform.

  • On Twitter the band has more than 20 million followers on Instagram more

  • than 19 million.

  • And YouTube has just over 20 million as of July 2019.

  • This massive fan base isn't concentrated in one country or region; it's

  • global.

  • And that has been a major factor in BTS's success.

  • Their record label even gave the boys latitude to create their own solo

  • music.

  • BTS first arrived in America in 2014, to be part of a South Korean reality

  • TV show called "BTS American Hustle Life" which aired on a South Korean

  • network.

  • The show centered around the band living in L.A.

  • while learning more about Western culture and rap music from industry

  • veterans Warren G and Coolio.

  • Later that year BTS became the youngest artist to play L.A. K-con

  • on an annual festival that features the biggest K-pop superstars.

  • This performance garnered the group a lot of attention.

  • In 2017, BTS received its first billboard music awards for top social

  • artist. Nominees are artists that fans engage with the most on social

  • media.

  • The first one at the Billboard Music Awards in 2017 was a total shock to

  • the majority of U.S.

  • media because BTS captured the top social artist overtaking superstars

  • such as Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez.

  • The Beatles were from Liverpool not from a rich background.

  • BTS is very similar.

  • Their daily lives it would be in the delivery room with friends every day.

  • They show that their lives are not much different from ours.

  • They are the same as us, they are real.

  • Otherwise they would never be able to gain this level of popularity.

  • The band also gained notoriety for their show stopping choreography and

  • highly stylized music videos.

  • In May 2019, at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey nearly 100,000 people showed

  • up to watch the band perform shelling out between 55 and 250 dollars per

  • ticket.

  • Sales from the two shows reach more than 14 million dollars.

  • Earlier that month in Chicago attendance was around 88,000 at Soldier Field

  • over the two performances.

  • The band hauled in 13.3 million

  • dollars in ticket sales.

  • For comparison, Taylor Swift also played at Soldier Field earning 14.5

  • million dollars for two performances in front of one hundred and 5000 fans

  • each night.

  • Swift also played at MetLife Stadium, earning 22 dollars for three

  • performances playing to crowds of over 165,000 thousand.

  • In 2018, BTS has earned its first platinum certification for its song "mic

  • drop" and its first gold album for "Love Yourself: Answer."

  • Answer debuted number one on the Billboard 200 chart and was recognized as

  • the best selling album ever on South Korea's Goan Chart.

  • There are so sung not about love or broken hearts.

  • It's about identity, confidence, and loving oneself.

  • It is socially conscious message that's why we pull their music the music

  • of this generation.

  • This messaging is especially important as the K-pop industry has become

  • mired in scandal in recent years.

  • In early 2019 a number of prominent K-pop idols were named as being part of

  • an online group that shared sexually explicit videos of women filmed

  • without their knowledge or consent.

  • Many K-pop fans in Korea are discontent with labelling bikinis as

  • K-pop acts because they think BTS is more than K-pop and beyond K-pop.

  • Particularly at this moment when K-pop world in general is mired in very

  • severe scandal involving sex trade, rape allegations, and illegal drug

  • sales and what not.

  • BTS has partnered with UNICEF to stage campaigns against violence towards

  • children and teens around the world.

  • Last November, BTS launched the Love Myself campaign with UNICEF building

  • on our belief that true love first begins with loving myself.

  • We've been partnering with UNICEF's End Violence program to protect

  • children and young people all over the world from violence.

  • And our fans have become a major part of this campaign.

  • With their action and with their enthusiasm.

  • We truly have the best fans in the world.

  • In 2019 BTS continue to break records.

  • The group was the first K-pop band ever to perform on Saturday Night Live.

  • The band's most recent album "Map of the Soul: Persona" had more than 3

  • million preorders internationally and upon release went to number one on

  • iTunes album charts in 89 different countries.

  • Unlike other K-pop stars who mainly target Southeast Asia or Chinese fans,

  • BTS has targeted the U.S.

  • market directly.

  • The boy band has collaborated with a number of music heavyweights that are

  • popular in America.

  • Including Nicki Minaj, Ed Sheeran, and Halsey and BTS isn't just taking the

  • music industry by storm.

  • Toys, apparel, and cosmetic companies are all benefiting from the band's

  • global fame.

  • BTS has partnered with Converse, Coca-Cola, Puma, and Hyundai in the form

  • of clothing lines and advertisements.

  • Not to mention BTS has collaborated with Funko on a set of seven Funko

  • Pops.

  • All the social media engagement we've had with any property this

  • year, BTS is number one and that's ahead of Game of Thrones ahead of

  • Avengers: Endgame.

  • So that's a surprise to us and it's a it's a huge win and we got a little

  • bit of how powerful the BTS brand could be at New York Toy Fair when we

  • start to see that was our number one instagrammed, tweeted, facebooked

  • item for that for that for the show.

  • So we're seeing diversity across who and what the K-pop fans are and I

  • think that's one of the reasons why the products are resonating at

  • different retailers.

  • I mean you can't get any more diverse from Barnes and Noble to Hot Topic to

  • Amazon.

  • Three very diverse retailers in all three are doing exceedingly well with

  • the BTS brand

  • It's clear however that BTS isn't just a passing fad.

  • The Love Yourself, Speak Yourself tour has reportedly made more than 100

  • million dollars in ticket sales averaging about 4.5

  • million dollars per show.

  • The group has been prolific about releasing new music.

  • Since 2014, BTS has released six studio albums and six EPs.

  • For comparison, the Beatles released 12 studio albums and 13 EPs between

  • 1962 and 1970.

  • Not to mention Beatles is the first band since The Beatles to have three

  • albums hit the number one spot in America in less than a year.

In 1964 an English boy band called The Beatles made its television debut

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it