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  • The foundations of K-pop music as we know it today were laid in the late '80s, when

  • the South Korean government loosened censorship laws in an effort to modernize, but the Korean

  • music wave didn't start making a splash on global shores until the 2010s, thanks in no

  • small part to YouTube.

  • According to a 2017 Bloomberg report, the worldwide K-pop industry is worth almost $5

  • billion, but this fame comes at a cost.

  • It might be all shiny and happy on the surface, but K-pop has a disturbing dark side that

  • artists are only now starting to expose.

  • Brace yourself as we take a closer look at the underbelly of this entertainment industry.

  • The slave contracts

  • If you're familiar with K-pop, chances are you've heard the term "slave contract."

  • Managers profiting from the talent and hard work of their artists is by no means a strictly

  • Korean phenomenon, but it's here that the exploitation of aspiring stars appears to

  • be at its most blatant.

  • Former JJCC member Prince Mak claims that the notorious slave contract is not only real,

  • it's widespread.

  • He said on his radio show, The Prince Mak Hour:

  • "Slave contracts are a long time.

  • Normal contracts are from 7 years to 15 years."

  • Prince Mak noted this means that a star who debuts at age 25 with a 15 year contract will

  • still be in a K-pop group when they're 40.

  • Even worse, according to Prince Mak, is that the contracts don't start right way.

  • "Your years in your contract actually start from when you debut.

  • So you could be training from when you're ten years, but that doesn't count."

  • Boot camp hell

  • When Spin magazine's David Bevan visited the headquarters of YG Entertainment in 2012,

  • the music journalist was impressed with the postmodern complex, boutique cafeteria, plush

  • recording studios, and on-site gym manned by a famous Korean fitness guru.

  • However, this was all in stark contrast to the building in which the company's 30-or-so

  • boot campers were actually living at the time.

  • According to Bevan:

  • "You would never guess that this is where they live [...] a squat, red-brick apartment

  • building whose only distinguishing mark is the grimy noodle shop tucked into its ground

  • floor."

  • Cramped living conditions and strict schedules aren't the only hardships that some K-pop

  • trainees are subjected to.

  • Ferlyn Wong, former member of female idol quintet Skarf, claimed in an interview with

  • The New Paper that her manager would subject her to "verbal abuse" during boot camp, telling

  • her that

  • "[She was] too opinionated […] [and would] never succeed in anything she does."

  • What do the parents of these young performers think of all this?

  • Well, many moms and dads may be at the mercy of the agencies, too.

  • Wong added:

  • "My manager told my mum off, saying she should have taught her daughter better and that her

  • daughter is not living the way a proper human being should."

  • Money woes

  • You could argue that all of this sacrifice is worth it when the reward is fame and fortune,

  • but in truth, K-pop stars rarely get the latter.

  • According to former JJCC member Prince Mak:

  • "The company usually gets 90 percent and the artist gets 10 percent.

  • If you're lucky then company gets 80 percent and the artist gets 20 percent.

  • And that's per group, Mak said, so if you're in a five-member act, you'll personally only

  • see only 2 percent of the cash.

  • From that 2 percent, the idol also has to repay the money the agency spent training

  • them at boot camp, and the debt just keeps growing

  • Worked to exhaustion

  • After graduating boot camp, the hours don't get any less grueling.

  • Being a K-pop idol is a full-time job and then some, with groups reportedly expected

  • to be on the clock all day, every day.

  • Prince Mak weighed in on the workday on his radio show.

  • "You could be working 20 hours, or even a whole day.

  • I've worked 20 hour shifts.

  • I'm shooting a reality or variety TV show and they went on for 20 hours.

  • With shifts that long, when do the stars sleep?

  • Not very often, for one.

  • "Every day we average about three to four hours sleep, apart from that it's all training

  • or work."

  • Plastic surgery pressures

  • Surgery is reportedly rife in K-pop, and artists will often allude to its prevalence in their

  • music, whether that be to subtly poke fun at it, like in Psy's "New Face," or brazenly

  • embrace it, like in Six Bomb's "Becoming Prettier."

  • It's not uncommon for idols to discuss their enhancements during interviews, but what doesn't

  • happen very often is an idol admitting that they were pushed into it.

  • But Shindong, from boy group Super Junior, did just that, saying in an interview:

  • "One day, the president of our agency suggested I should have double eyelid surgery because

  • I have an unpleasant look in my eyes, so I decided to follow his suggestion."

  • Solo artist Hwang Chi Yeul has also admitted to getting work done at the request of his

  • management, telling an interviewer:

  • "I didn't really have thoughts of plastic surgery, but before debut my management company

  • said that we should do it, so I agreed."

  • Strict diets

  • South Korean society puts a lot of emphasis on physical beauty, meaning that the more

  • attractive you are, the better your chances of making it in K-pop.

  • For idols, this means maintaining a strict diet.

  • According to Prince Mak:

  • "Our diet is always controlled.

  • Obviously I can't eat fried chicken every day."

  • The former JJCC member claims that he knew of a female idol group whose members would

  • be disciplined by their agency for not sticking to their prescribed weight.

  • Mak said:

  • "Could be a dance, could be running, could be no-eating.

  • So they'll get punished if they go over their weight, and they usually check once a week."

  • K-pop idols' extreme diets may also lead to eating disorders.

  • Artists JinE of girl group Oh My Girl, and solo singer IU have both opened up about suffering

  • from anorexia and bulimia, respectively, though neither girl has directly attributed their

  • disorder to the their jobs.

  • The problem

  • Kim Jong-hyun, the frontman of popular K-pop act SHINee, took his own life in December

  • 2017.

  • In an apparent goodbye note shared by a friend, the artist spoke about the intense pressures

  • of life as a music idol.

  • "If you ask why people die, they would probably say it's because they're exhausted."

  • Jonghyun said in his note, translated by Metro, which was posted to Instagram by friend and

  • fellow idol Nine9.

  • The note said:

  • "I suffered and agonized about it [but] I never learned how to turn this pain into happiness."

  • The young star's note went on to say he felt

  • "[He was] not meant to lead a life in the public eye."

  • The intense media vacuum that K-pop stars get sucked into may put them at an increased

  • risk for ending their lives.

  • In 2007, solo artist U;Nee hanged herself in her home just before the release of her

  • third album.

  • In 2010, singer Choi Jin-young took his own life just 18 months after the loss of his

  • actress sister Choi Jin-sil.

  • And in 2015, Ahn So Jin was found unresponsive after being dropped by her agency.

  • Dangerous fans

  • Most idols use social media to interact with their fans around the clock.

  • When they leave the safety of private property, however, those interactions can quickly become

  • dangerous.

  • Members of Big Bang and Super Junior have been involved in multi-car pile ups as a result

  • of being chased by fans.

  • Kim Heechul from Super Junior even closed his Twitter account as a result.

  • If you're not safe on the roads, you're at least safe when you're performing, right?

  • Wrong.

  • Girls' Generation's Taeyeon found this out the hard way when a strange man got onstage

  • during a live performance and tried to abduct her in front of everyone.

  • Discrimination?

  • With training centers popping up everywhere from Sydney to New York City, the ever-ambitious

  • K-pop industry has flung its doors open to foreign talent.

  • Many idols speak multiple languages and are often required to perform in different languages,

  • with Japan proving a particularly lucrative market.

  • This means that foreigners entering the industry need to brush up on their language skills

  • fast, especially when it comes to Korean.

  • Chinese-Australian artist Prince Mak said:

  • "Korea is actually very foreign-friendly, but in the industry, it's not very foreign

  • friendly."

  • Mak isn't the only mixed-heritage idol to experience difficulties.

  • Some artists claim they've been racially discriminated against.

  • British-Korean singer Shannon was trolled after she performed the Korean national anthem

  • at a baseball game.

  • She said on the South Korean variety show My Neighbour, Charles:

  • "My mother is Korean, and it shouldn't matter, because I have Korean blood in me.

  • But they kept calling me a foreigner.

  • They wrote negative comments about me."

  • Chinese native Fei, of girl group Miss A, had a similar experience with haters.

  • She explained on the show:

  • "When I first came to Korea, someone asked me if I only take a shower once a week.

  • I was taken aback.

  • I said, 'I shower everyday.

  • Why?

  • Do you think Chinese people don't take showers?'

  • The person seriously thought that.

  • I was surprised."

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The foundations of K-pop music as we know it today were laid in the late '80s, when

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