randompasserby wrote:I think I'm in the minority whenever the subject of idol dating is brought up, mainly because I don't really care either way
*disclaimer : when I talk about idols, I meant H!P. Don't really keep up with the rest of them to make a valid opinion
Their average age is around what...junior high to high school age? I don't know about you guys but where I live dating is usually pretty much meaningless and never high on the priority list to most kids around that age, maybe I'm just projecting here but I honestly believe that from personal experience and what I can see of other kids around me at the time. Even more so for those driven kids that have already decided on a career track, be it at sports, academia or entertainment as is the case for idols.
While ultimately I do agree that an agency booting an idol that was caught in a dating "scandal" is idiotic, I never saw no-dating rule itself as an inhuman agency enforcing blatant violation of human rights... simply because that would be ignoring the very valid possibility that the girls could just as easily choose it for themselves (feeling no great loss abstaining from dating for a few years) and there's always the door to the graduation ceremony whenever they feel like moving on.
Heck, I can only remember less than 10 people in my high school senior year that were definitely dating someone and my social circles back then definitely weren't as pitifully empty as it is now
That's really an interesting spin, rpb. Dating, or at least the possibility of dating, is such an important part of life in the US that it's in some cases inconceivable to us that it could just be low-ish on someone's priorities. Actually, when I was a kid, my family was really religious and I was forbidden to date as well. That didn't entirely prevent me from misadventures, plus I moved away from home as soon as I was able, but it still informed my worldview to some extent. I never really gave it much thought as such, but it could be why it doesn't bother me much either that the girls aren't "allowed" to date. I'm putting "allowed" in quotes because I agree there's a clear distinction between being actually forbidden, and being given a choice of not dating and picking a new job.
I honestly don't feel any kind of guilt complex over being a jpop fan, or a fan of H!P. If I did, I'd probably stop, or at least curtail my listening a great deal. That's one of the reasons I hardly listen to any "gangsta" rap; I can't condone the rampant violence, misogyny, and senseless, abusive lifestyle it promotes, which IMO is far more insidious than the fantasies that idol groups purvey. When I listen to H!P or AKB, I don't really think for a second that those girls are preserving their virginity for my sake. And not that I'm unique in any way, I think the vast majority of jpop fans understand that there is an "I-it" separation ("spacelike interval" ??
) between themselves and their idols. They don't fool themselves into an imaginary "I-thou" mutual-cause-and-effect relationship ("timelike interval" ??) with these distant figures. A lot of rap fans, on the other hand, seem to take the fantasy lifestyle of a rap artist to heart. They strive to emulate the swagga, the reliance on violence and mistreatment of women, on crime and lack of civility, in their own daily lives. To me, idol music doesn't even come close to that level of disrespect for its audience and its own performers.
Also gaiz, (Saho) Akari in S/mileage? ARE YOU DAFT? She's way too...sly...for S/mileage. They're supposed to be totally innocent girls who just by accident dress like OOPS, WHY IS MY SKIRT SO SHORT? WAKANNAI!!!