TotallyUncool wrote:Seriously, I said I don't like some of the things I see in the Japanese idol industry, and if I don't like 'em, I don't like 'em. That's pretty simple.
If you can't explain why better than "it's unfair" or "just 'cuz," then your opinion is as worthless as you think ours is.
And that goes for everyone else here.
Here it is, folks… (And I'm going to do this point by point to make it even clearer. Feel free to refer back to this in the future, because I'm never coming into this thread again. Unlike many of you, I've actually thought this through and have reached a rational, principled position that doesn't need to be debated any further.)
---begin here---
Idols exist to sell you a product, and that product is a little bit of relief from your real-world problems. CDs, DVDs, concert tickets, and merchandise are just the tokens by which they sell you that product.
It's built right into the word itself: an idol is an object of worship or adoration. It satisfies an emotional need in us, more than for mere entertainment. See also the literal meaning of 「可愛」.
It's never been about the music, et.al. If it was, then they would be singers or actresses or models, not idols, and they would succeed or fail on their actual talents.
Idols may
become singers or actresses or models, as they grow older and develop whatever talents they have, but it's usually clear when that happens. We call it "graduation".
That's why we the consumers tolerate often mediocre music from idols, and it's also why seemingly plain, talentless girls can still become successful idols. Just remember the product they're actually selling you.
If idols have real-world problems of their own, then they can no longer effectively sell you that product. And if they have problems that indicate some moral failing, then they jeopardize the entire brand.
Therefore, idols are employed on the agreement — either implicit, as part of industry convention, or explicit, as written into their contracts — that they will keep themselves free of real-world problems.
That means no dating, no smoking, no drinking (at least until it's legal, and even then only casually), love your family, respect your seniors, stay in school, follow the rules, be in good health, and so on.
Idols still have problems, of course. They're only human. But the problems they have are the cute, inconsequential problems of youth like dealing with acne or studying for a test.
Sex is the ultimate real-world problem because it and its possible consequences (e.g., pregnancy, disease) are the ultimate indication that a girl has become a woman. Virginity matters, whether you like it or not.
Being sexy is NOT the same as being sexual. There are no consequences to wearing a skimpy costume and flirting with the camera. At the end of the day, they can take off the costume and put away the camera.
We object when younger idols appear sexy because someone else is
making them appear sexy and the idols themselves don't understand what they're doing. Older idols do understand, so we don't object.
The entire idol industry works only if we all accept these normally unspoken understandings: what the actual product is, what the idol must do to sell the product, what's sexy and when, and so on.
If any of these understandings are violated, by irresponsible girls or unscrupulous managers or overzealous fans, then the industry stops working. The spell is broken and we all lose.
In the end, however, being an idol is a job like any other. It may seem like more, because the work involves almost daily public attention and at least the illusion of an emotional bond, but it's really not.
And since it's only a job, when a girl leaves that job, the public attention and emotional bond should stop. We have no more right to stalk (yes, that's what it is) a former idol than we do any other girl on the street.
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