Why is it still controversial to be a kpop fan outside Asia?
-
-
its even controversial in Asia too, people here think kpop is for 6-13 year olds
oh yeah since kpop music is influenced by western music it will be looked down on
-
its even controversial in Asia too, people here think kpop is for 6-13 year olds
lol so i bet general public everywhere think kpop is for kids
-
here ppl think anyone older than 17 is a creep for stanning a kpop group
the gays outside the kpop bubble will judge a kpop fan like they're r-word
-
-
i think kpop lacks for not being viewed as realistic
like some successful lana del rey/lorde acclaimed and self written
but i guess it's just culture. the perfection of kpop is not appealing to most westerns, everyone I know criticizes the KPOP industry as cookie cutter songs and choreography
-
i think kpop lacks for not being viewed as realistic
like some successful lana del rey/lorde acclaimed and self written
but i guess it's just culture. the perfection of kpop is not appealing to most westerns, everyone I know criticizes the KPOP industry as cookie cutter songs and choreography
The problem lies in the very manufactured nature of kpop. To a lot of people, kpop is seen as a product, not as music. And they're not totally wrong. Of course there's also the stigma that it caters to young girls. But this criticism is mostly addressed towards boy groups; yet girl groups suffer the same prejudice so it's not the main reason. People don't like it because it looks fake to them, simple as that.
-
Same. The only thing they asking is the basic “Why are you listening a song which language you don’t understand?”. Couple of them was asking me to show them something and they noted that it’s not bad, not what they expected. lmao I don’t know what they expected. Personally I think it’s better then some of the trash the radio plays.
-
-
-
-
-
I think it's because it's sung in another language, and when English audiences listen to something that isn't English, they usually get confused. It's probably the same in most countries too, but people do think it's normal to listen to English music in non-English speaking countries.
-
well firstly, most ordinary people dont care
they do, however, see it as a children's plaything
which is fine to me by all means
there are so many adults still going gaga over harry potter which doesnt make sense to me, but to each their own
secondly, a lot of people, mostly the conceited ones, have this mental image of a very stereotypical incel kpop fan ( which kpop fans are to blame for somewhat ) and those pathetic people like to make fun of everyone to make themselves feel better
you know, the average "confident" man whose confidence is carefully curated upon looking down on others and acting all "cool" and emotionless in public
see even i resorted to a stereotype
regardless, you get the point
-
People are too quick judge it. They think it's "overproduced" and "cookie cutter" because they made a judgement based on a few songs. When in reality, there's some really good music within kpop , much better than shit played on the radio. There's also a stereotype that only teenage girls like it. I understand why people say that but is there anything wrong with teenage girls liking it? No. It all comes down to misogyny. Just like how male american football fans can get away with burning down stuff and punching each other, though somehow teenage girls liking anime/kpop are the big problem.
As long as someone isn't a obsessively toxic stan who acts delusional, it should not be controversial to like kpop. Or really anything for that matter.
-
its even controversial in Asia too, people here think kpop is for 6-13 year olds
oh yeah since kpop music is influenced by western music it will be looked down on
-
-
Most people I know would judge others for liking Kpop, pretty sure it's the racism on their part
-
I think it depends on norms and mindset. People with a limited worldview tend to look at things in a very limiting way (i.e. based on what is familiar) not knowing there's a spectrum of sounds within K-Pop; d0pe music exists even in South Korea.
-
omg when I was a big stan at 15-16 everyone would make the biggest deal out of it in a negative way..
Now that I'm quieter and chill about liking it, suddenly they're the ones asking for recommendations
and at uni people think it's surprising and unique when they find I like it, it's a good conversation starter
-
It was fine back in 2015 when nobody knew what kpop was. Now i definitely would not tell anyone i listen to kpop.
Thats why im annoyed that kpop is as big as it is now. With lame songs like dynamite getting popular, people think every kpop song is like this. Same thing happened with Gangnam style but that did die down eventually.
-
Participate now!
Don’t have an account yet? Register yourself now and be a part of our community!