Miekie wrote:I don't think they forced her to leave.
But if Sayuki would have stayed now and would announce her graduation in a few months, wotas could be disappointed like: 'We agreed to her staying and now she is abusing our trust by leaving anyways.'
So my guess is, this has just sped up her leaving by loosing a graduation period.
Makes perfect sense to me, especially considering the fact that UF are not for now breaking ties with her.
teth wrote:She knew the rules and broke them. UFA can only do what they’ve always done to not set a bad example.
teth wrote:This is the idol industry
Not saying she shouldn’t get to be a normal person but she did know the rules and broke them
So I don’t feel sorry fo her?
It doesn't really looks like she has any real regrets here so I agree there's no reason to be sorry (except for the disappointed fans, maybe). But at the same time, just saying "she knew the rules and broke them" is kind of a cop out. These "rules" are a relic from 20 years ago. UF aren't forced by some law of nature to do what they've always done. It's time for them to re-examine their policies. I agree with Celedam here:
Celedam wrote:There's a difference between a 15-year-old girl dating and a 23-year-old woman dating.
It's one thing to discourage dating for their teenaged employees. Allowing it would cause many to view the girls as bad role models. It would at the least interfere with Up Front's reputation as a more wholesome, benevolent-custodian counterpart to the slimy Vernalossom empire (ex AKS). But grown women SHOULD be able to have happy public romantic lives. Might doing so adversely affect their fan following? Maybe. But so might changing their hairstyle, or NOT changing their hairstyle, or straightening their teeth, or NOT straightening their teeth, or doing a photobook, or NOT doing photobooks, etc. In other words, they're adults, and their choices in life have inevitable consequences. But they should still be allowed to make them, to the extent that they're not actually bringing shame upon the organization. Example of choices that UF would have to swiftly respond to: an affair with a married man, which is still a serious scandal in Japan. A tattoo. Drunken behavior. But adult celebrities dating isn't something that requires a response. It might be gossip, but it's not a scandal, except that Up Front allow it to be so by taking punitive action. If they were to say, "We don't comment on the personal affairs of our adult-aged performers," that would be the end of it.