Masters of the vlog: For larger labels, unveiling a new K-pop idol group was like "a major Hollywood production," the author notes. The K-pop scene is so competitive, it's essential for a group to have fans before it even debuts. Unable to compete with bigger labels' marketing money and industry connections, Big Hit went a different route with BTS. The boys connected to fans through candid video diaries and blog posts chronicling their everyday experiences, anxieties and hopes, as well as teasing unreleased music. BTS members managed their own Twitter account, and later, Jin, one of the group's vocalists, started a YouTube series called "Eat Jin," in which he . . . ate things. "At the time, there really wasn't any way to communicate with the fans, and as I liked eating, I thought I should upload that, at least," Jin recalls. The crude, unedited footage stood out from the glamorous, tightly managed image that idols were supposed to present. The strategy proved prescient years later, when video streams became the default way for Korean celebrities to talk to their fans.
AFP