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Kita St Cyr wrote:It's interesting to see the defensiveness of the inherently misogynist nature of 'idolatry' by throwing out the "it's a job" argument or the average age of H!P.
At the end of the day, there's a lot that's wrong and unfair about 'idolatry'. The victims end up being the girls. Their characters might be super-human, but it's so unfair to expect young girls to sacrifice their humanity in order to appease and unforgiving fanbase. That they sign these contracts at such incredibly young ages is the real shame of it all.
resop2 wrote:I had an idea recently and I wonder if what the crowd thinks of it:
Male followers of female idols view them as kid sisters and don't want them to date because it would mean that they would change from being their genki sisters.
Female followers of male idols view them as boyfriends and want them to date to show that they are interested in females.
AyuHikaru wrote:Dealing with a lot of wota on Tumblr, Facebook, Forums, Twitter, I can tell you that a lot of men do not see the girls as little sisters. I will admit most of the guys in the fandom are respectful, they will say a girl is attractive or flawless or beautiful without being creepy at all. I know a Harunan wota who is 21 and talks about how she is perfect and he wants to be her boyfriend and he NEVER crosses the line into creeptastic territory. Even when speaking about the underage girls (like say Mizuki, who gets a lot of comments for her Jail Bait body) they never cross the realm into gross or disrespectful.
HOWEVER, none of them see the girls as "little sisters" and if you read 2ch, hardly any of them do either. And while I talk about the respectful men above, there are a lot of disrespectful, reprehensible males who are disgusting, pedophilic, and misogynistic toward the girls. A good English example is about 6 months or so a guy was commenting on the H!O pic board about how lickable he thought the girls were (and that was a safer comment that I remember). That "Little Sister" BS is what they say in public while fapping to a 14 year olds photobook in private.
Let's face it, most of these guys probably want these girls to be their girlfriends. It's no different than the Johnny's fandom.
Zunu wrote:H!P almost imploded a few years back, not because of any competition - AKB was still nascent - but because it had allowed itself to become ruled by the what was perceived to be the whims of the most rabid wota. It played hardball with its most talented members and the result? Scandal after scandal, resignation after resignation rocked the credibility of the organization. But follow all the dots. It was a "credibility" in the first place defined by adherence to the virginal illusion.
Miki Fujimoto was a hero because she said, you know what? Fuck this, y'all are just going to have to handle the fact that I'm a sexually active woman now. And surprise the fans' didn't jump ship (more than they already had) and things eventually worked out fine. I'd have to ask Starra for sure but it seems to me that since then H!P has desisted from making girls publicly apologize in response to rumored sex scandals. I have no way of knowing, but I'm led to think that Fujimoto's mutiny was a catalyst which led to their re-examining that aspect of their public policy.
Zunu wrote:Kita St Cyr wrote:It's interesting to see the defensiveness of the inherently misogynist nature of 'idolatry' by throwing out the "it's a job" argument or the average age of H!P.
First of all, that's weaksauce. If you have an argument to make (and you do make a good one, although I don't entirely concur), you should rely on the strength of that argument. Casting aspersions upon the supposed motivations behind opposing positions is just a bullying tactic. "You disagree with me, therefore you must be misogynist."
At the end of the day, there's a lot that's wrong and unfair about 'idolatry'. The victims end up being the girls. Their characters might be super-human, but it's so unfair to expect young girls to sacrifice their humanity in order to appease and unforgiving fanbase. That they sign these contracts at such incredibly young ages is the real shame of it all.
This is something that I find a bit bizarre about (as it is referred to in the scholarly literature) The "BTK (Bakajo-Totally-Kita) position". It plays havoc with concept of capacity. On the one hand, you are saying that the girls are capable of making an informed decision to be sexually active. On the other hand, you are saying that the girls are incapable of making an informed decision to not be sexually active.
But ultimately if the industry as a whole refused to push the virginal angel angle, then I believe the fans would follow along, and frankly I think fandom would be healthier as a result.
resop2 wrote:^
1) I don't claim to know what every H!P male fan is like.
2) It might be offensive to you, but I believe it to be true from conversations that I have had with people who know boy-idol fandom. (I have no first hand knowledge.)
3) First part: Probably not.
Second part: Yes, while it might not be true, for the older brother, their greatest fear is that their cute younger sister will change.
This is not a troll or a joke, but a question.
Bakajo Nono wrote:They're far too young to understand what exactly they're swearing off when they sign contracts at such a young age, and then by the time they have advanced through puberty and all the hormones have stopped wreaking havoc, they've been disciplined by the industry through years of training, education, and every other way they are so completely immersed into the industry to view sex in a slut-shaming light. I'm not saying they do, in the end, view it that way, but it inevitably shapes the psyche over such extended periods of time--and especially with such deep immersion and intensity. That's how schools work to promote nationalism, hierarchy, etc.
Not to mention, again, the paradox they face when they sing songs about romantic life, act in sexualized ways, and yet are restricted from actually engaging in any of it in any way.
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