Display MoreBut you're acting like being a pop singer in the US is any different at least in terms of the financial exploitation and sexual crap you have to deal with, particularly for women. Everyone knows how cruel and exploitative the entertainment business is, and it's no better here. Labels here will exploit you and trap you into perpetual debt slavery, while everyone from your own damn agents or producers, A and R execs, and other powerbrokers and benefactors try to sleaze their way into your bedroom.
I do agree though about one thing - the trainee system. Nobody in the US could handle what Kpop trainees have to go through.
Working 70-80 hours a week as 14 year olds, being forbidden to have phones or contacting parents for weeks/months at a time.
Forced to live 6 deep in a nasty two bedroom tenement apartment, being yelled at every day and treated like subhuman because of the seniority system.
Having teachers and managers sometimes even physically discipline you, getting criticized every waking moment of your life for every little microexpression you show and every syllable you utter.
Having to learn 3 different languages while learning to dance and sing and doing media training all at once.
Workers in America are coddled like crazy, it would be a MASSIVE culture shock for any local to have to deal with what a high stress workplace is really like in Korea.
Don't forget possible sexual harassment, being forced to wear revealing clothing, having to do favors to sponsors, starving yourself, and constantly comparing yourself with someone else or get compared.