seven young Korean men dressed all in black staring at the photographer.

Beyond The Story: BTS biography is a humanising, literary portrayal of K-pop ’s world-leading  stars

write essay on bts

PhD candidate, Media and Communication, University of Leeds

Disclosure statement

Jenessa Williams does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

University of Leeds provides funding as a founding partner of The Conversation UK.

View all partners

In a climate of ever-increasing competition, it’s a real feat when any band makes it to their tenth anniversary bigger than ever. Such is the case with K-pop group BTS (short for bangtan sonyeondan , “bulletproof boy scouts” in Korean). The band have released their first official biography – Beyond The Story – to look back on their decade-long path to international, record-breaking success .

Initially rumoured to be a Taylor Swift autobiography , pre-orders had made the book a bestseller before its subject was announced. It was released to tie in with both BTS’s anniversary and their hiatus, undertaken so that the members could enrol in mandatory Korean military service .

For fans who have been there from the beginning, the book is a souvenir to covet. For western audiences who have discovered K-pop more recently, it’s a pleasant reintroduction to the group’s early incubation years. Having sold well over 40 million albums worldwide – and become the youngest ever recipients of the South Korean Order of Cultural Merit – BTS are among Korea’s most influential ambassadors.

Behind The Story was co-written by South Korean journalist Kang Myeong-seok and the band’s seven members. Following the oral history format that has benefited popular music journalism books such as Lizzy Goodman’s Meet Me In The Bathroom (2011), it tracks the band’s history across 544 pages, culminating in the release of their most recent anthology album, Proof (2022).

One by one, and in their own words, we meet J-Hope , RM , Suga , Jungkook , Jin , Jimin and V . They recall their nervousness at becoming K-pop trainees, their different motivations and the parts of performance they felt most vulnerable about. Each knew that they would have to work impossibly hard if they were to compete at the level K-pop culture demands.

The cover of Beyond the Story with seven headshots of the band members

Through anecdotes both humorous and moving, we learn how they bonded as a group. The seven teenagers, who were from completely different walks of life, were set up in a bunkhouse to learn how to sing and dance as a slick professional outfit.

In telling the story of BTS, Beyond The Story also tells the story of K-pop and how its dynamics have changed over the years. Fans who cottoned onto BTS in their international breakthrough era of songs such as Boy With Luv (2019) or Dynamite (2020) may assume that they always traded in upbeat pop. But their early years were actually deeply rooted in American Hip-hop , a genre K-pop has borrowed from since the early 1990s.

While K-pop groups often pride themselves on a style of perfectly-synchronous choreography known as kalgunmu (razor-sharp dancing), BTS’s hip-hop influence allowed them a certain looseness. Their musical hybridity helped to bring their individual personalities to life.

While it is true that Korean management companies closely guide their stars’ public image, and work them hard from a very young age , Beyond The Story challenges the stereotype of K-pop artists as mere performance puppets. There are several moments where members recall direct involvement in styling, choreography or songwriting. They also discuss using their platform to speak up on a range of social and political issues .

The group’s founding label Big Hit was considered small when they launched. This meant the group were frequently underestimated – even mocked – by their peers. But this underdog status encouraged them to experiment with DIY forms of self-promotion. The members blogged directly to a growing fanbase , for example, instead of relying on management-led channels.

It’s a model that has paid off. Though K-pop still evokes images of impressive polish and unison performance, newer groups such as Seventeen , Le Serrafim and Tomorrow X Together have been able to develop a model which matches feats of dance athleticism with more vulnerable, personal lyricism. This allows them to be both relatable and aspirational for worldwide audiences.

Read more: Hallyu! The Korean Wave at the V&A is an unflinching look at the country's creative rise

A new wave of music biography

Some prior understanding of the K-pop industry may be required to get the most out of the book (knowing how groups are typically assembled, for example, or how competitive Korean TV shows work). But as a contribution to modern music journalism, Beyond The Story is valuable. As they learn of the band’s insatiable work ethic, discipline and brotherly commitment, readers will feel as if they know each of the seven members much better, with a deeper understanding of how their music has developed since their debut.

It’s also highly visual. Lush photography neatly punctuates the chapters, guiding the reader smoothly through each BTS era. With pages that mark the track listings and specific details of each release, it’s easy to turn to your favourite album or treat the book as a reference text – a thoughtful, encyclopaedic blueprint for future artist biographies to come.

The use of QR codes throughout (330, to be exact) is also a smart innovation, recognising that fans might want to reminisce about (or discover) the group’s music videos, dance practices and video logs for themselves as they read. In this way, the book becomes a living museum, truly immersive and interactive.

Of course, the BTS story is far from over. Amid their hiatus, the members are experiencing international success with solo singles. Jimin recently became the first Korean soloist to top the US Billboard charts. At a time when K-pop feels bigger than ever, their success story can only inspire others who are ready to ride the unstoppable Korean wave to reach for their dreams, or indeed, for their local bookstore.

write essay on bts

Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here .

  • Book reviews
  • Music journalism
  • Korean music
  • Keep me on trend

write essay on bts

Service Delivery Consultant

write essay on bts

Newsletter and Deputy Social Media Producer

write essay on bts

College Director and Principal | Curtin College

write essay on bts

Head of School: Engineering, Computer and Mathematical Sciences

write essay on bts

Educational Designer

All products are independently selected by our editors. If you buy something, we may earn an affiliate commission.

On BTS, Writing, and What Makes an Artist

BTS

In this essay, author Jade Song explores the impact of BTS on her artistic experiences and the writing of her first novel, Chlorine.

In 2021, BTS dancer and rapper J-Hope released a new version of his song “Blue Side” on the third anniversary of its original release, along with a letter explaining his decision to expand the song into something that felt more complete. He wrote that he wanted to find a realm in which he could transform into a mature artist, while simultaneously feeling nostalgia for the time when he was too passionate and heated to properly express his experiences. How he can’t go back to that innocence, but he can give himself a moment to provide comfort to his past self.

BTS — with members RM, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, V, and Jungkook — have a way of turning their past anguishes into that sort of comfort J-Hope sought. Throughout their music, there’s a sense of, okay, we are going to feel all these emotions, but then we are going to make something beautiful out of them. It’s a sentiment I’ve taken literally as I wrote my first novel, Chlorine (forthcoming from William Morrow), following a talented competitive swimmer under immense pressure, dreaming of becoming a mermaid, free from any silly little human whims.

By the time I began writing the novel, I was already ARMY for a wide variety of reasons: BTS’s gender-defying fashion, openness around mental health , fluid choreo , endless deluge of personable content, genre-encompassing nine-year discography, and the joy of being part of a die-hard fandom. But above all, I loved BTS because of their artistry, which inspires my own.

It may seem strange to connect writing a novel with stanning a K-pop band. But to me, it is normal, natural—I do not know how I can create anything without finding meaning in other artforms. Listening to BTS and being ARMY is, to me, an enriching experience similar to how RM and I both feel looking at paintings : “It’s living with and examining a piece of the artist’s life. It allows the work to breathe. It lets you have a conversation with it.” And like RM, I like keeping things that are close to my heart near me.

BTS symbols logo finger hearts

Chlorine is partially inspired by my experiences as a competitive swimmer for 12 years. When I was a young swimmer, I was too naive to understand my coach’s abuses of power, too clueless to understand the self-inflicted body horrors of endless dieting and muscle-building for the sake of athletic performance. I was floating atop blue pools of innocence; then later, as an adult, drowning in black holes of whatever sentences my brain conjured as I drafted the story. It didn’t help my mental health that I was reading rather bleak novels to help shape my own novel’s similar frame : Han Kang’s The Vegetarian , Anelise Chen’s So Many Olympic Exertions , and Susan Choi’s Trust Exercise , three excellent books featuring similar themes.

Submerging myself in these types of stories while excavating details from my own life felt like I was barely staying afloat atop the yawning abyss . Yet the only way to pull myself out of the abyss was to keep vomiting words onto my keyboard. To keep typing, in the hopes that eventually, someday, I’d finish the book, and that somebody would care. That I could offer comfort to someone if they read the novel, so they would know they weren’t alone in experiencing this grief, angst, and loneliness.

To me, this offer of comfort is one of the greatest hopes of BTS and their music, what makes them so wonderful. Together we will build a hope world , composed of our blue side stories. 

When I embarked on revision, rereading the unsteady hope world I had created in my first draft, I was struck by the intense, bitter anger radiating through the story. The main character has a body carved with both muscles and rage, rage that contorts how she treats herself and others. 

The anger in this novel emanates from me. I exist as a queer Asian American femme, a child of immigrants, who listens to my friends, mostly women and queers and people of color, as we vent about student debt, healthcare costs, rent increases, and more. I live in America. I read the news. I pay attention. Therefore, I am angry about so many things. How can I not be? 

In his recent Vogue Korea interview , Suga said that his first mixtape, 2016’s Agust D , was all about anger, but now, he has realized that he doesn’t know who to be angry with anymore. He had been making a weapon out of anger and a sense of inferiority, but then realized he couldn’t channel creative energy through only those emotions any longer. I recognize this arc. It’s how I experience anger in my own life: I seethe and self-destruct, and then I settle down. I get back to work and try to make art — art that unfortunately lacks this wisdom. I’m still channeling my creative energy through rage. 

I don’t want to do this anymore. 

In part from writing Chlorine , and in part from listening to BTS’s growth from 2013’s 2 Cool 4 Skool to 2020’s life-affirming BE , I’ve realized my softness came before my pain. Life and art do not begin with rage, fire that sparks in reaction to something. And life and art cannot rely forever on such an intense reaction, because it is all-consuming. Anger needs darkness to magnify its flare, and it sucks the light we might see from other sources. 

So when I revised my novel, I added more love, more tenderness, more humor. Between the characters and in how the main character treats herself. Because in the end, we’re meant to let our art be the containers of our soft and tender hearts, and I do not want to write stories that forget this.

After writing Trust Exercise , author Susan Choi told Vulture that the book “owes its final form to an upswell of rage, both personal and private.” I love Trust Exercise . I love the strength flowing through Choi’s words, because anger can be empowering. But as Suga has said, this kind of anger is, in the end, unsustainable. What will live on instead is the beautiful piece of art that comes from this anger — Trust Exercise , Agust D , and (dare I call it beautiful?) my novel. A beauty that reflects the other beautiful things in the world, like love for a band and a fandom, love for your friends. Love for the art that helps you stay tender.

There were 12 drafts of my novel with countless ending rewrites before I felt my manuscript was decent enough to send to agents. I say decent, not good, because even now, after the novel has been sold, I still think about how it could’ve been made better. I could have changed my characters’ trajectories, strengthened the plot. 

In BTS’s Break The Silence docuseries , Jimin spoke about a song he’s been writing: “...I keep changing it. I changed the message over and over again… I stayed up a few nights… I can’t say it’s super good, but it’s the first song I’ve written myself.” Like Jimin, I kept changing my novel’s message over and over again, I stayed up many nights to rewrite, and I can’t say it is super good. But it’s the first book I’ve written, and I’m so proud of myself that when my agent emailed me with news of the book deal, I immediately hugged my friends, who were with me when the email appeared. I sobbed hard. I sobbed with awareness of how much my body was shaking uncontrollably because the friends embracing me were unmoving anchors.

The tears I shed from my book deal were tears of joy, yes, but also tears of overwhelmed fear, fear that arrives with each new writing development. I believe this is a common feeling for many artists — Suga has said he cried in the shower the night of the 2017 American Music Awards, their American debut, from how overwhelmed and scared he was to be so close to his wildest dreams. Was Suga dreaming that four years later, in 2021, BTS would be at the American Music Awards again? That the king of manifestation would go from debuting there to winning its highest honor with a Korean language acceptance speech ?

I wish I could have this hindsight already. Instead, all I have are dreams for this novel and future books, unwritten. As Suga raps, my dreams are too small to fit in one room . Perhaps I’m in my Bangtan 2013 era — what will happen if my dreams rise? Will I be brave? Will I be ready to jump, hoping that my leap will not be my fall?

Though my legs are poised to leap, I’m awake to the challenges — I may jump, but then I may fall. I harbor no delusions about skyrocketing to fame after one book. Most novels do not earn out their advance; the majority sell less than 5,000 copies . The publishing industry itself has no idea which books will sell well. My novel could be the only book I ever finish. It could be the only book a publisher will want to acquire. Creative industries of all mediums are cutthroat and require a steady drumbeat of creation to build what they call an artist career. A successful artist is not brilliant but productive. Fine. I am at peace with this output — I have always loved this kind of work. But with love comes grief, and I am always preemptively grieving the inevitable loss of love. 

This lamentation is reflected in my favorite BTS song “ Black Swan ,” which details the pain of growing distant from one’s artistic calling and includes a stunning film encapsulating the Martha Graham quote: “A dancer dies twice — once when they stop dancing, and this first death is the more painful.” The choreography and song is partially inspired by the 2010 Aronofsky psychological horror film Black Swan , where a dancer under immense pressure loses her grip of reality — a film I rewatched many times, because I could relate from my time as a swimmer, and because it helped inspire my own athletic novel with an unreliable main character. 

Dancers, athletes, idols, artists: we push ourselves so hard we forget about the passion that brought us there. RM sings, "If this can no longer resonate / No longer make my heart vibrate / Then this may be how I die my first death." I hope BTS will never die that first death. I hope I don’t either. I don’t plan to. But the pressure, both self-made and external, builds and builds, and so does the blood, sweat, and tears we shed to relieve it—if we are lucky, as BTS sings in their hidden track “ Sea ,” the blood, sweat, and tears can collect into a prosperous ocean.

As Jungkook sings in “ Euphoria ,” I can hear that ocean from far away: I have a book deal in hand. I am moving on from that lonely time . But I was an artist before this deal, before a monetary value was placed onto my art, and I am still an artist. I will be after too, whether people care about my work, whether I’m ever published again. Artists make art because we can’t imagine not making it, because art is our first love . To be an artist is not a particularly pleasurable or satisfying existence, but it is an existence imbued with, to quote Martha Graham again, “a queer divine dissatisfaction, a blessed unrest.” And like Suga sings about his piano , I have been making sense of this divine dissatisfaction since I was young, alone in my bedroom, when nobody knew anything I made, when I would make no money from it, when all the art I made was bad, but it was ultimately mine, making it more special than anything else. Even if this trickle reveals itself to be a mirage, even if my novel completely flops, I’ll still be making sense of my blessed unrest, because as J-Hope has said, “It is the only thing I can do.”

Despite the manifestations of potential failure, it is a solace that I know how to land , thanks to BTS. After all, how can I hate the art I make, how can I fear the self that makes it, when Jin, worldwide handsome and self-love-extraordinaire, is getting me to belt out, I’m the one I should love in this world? That nothing can stop me from loving myself ? When I can remember that at the end of winter’s cold, a spring day will come again?

My flight to Los Angeles for the Permission to Dance concerts in November 2021 was a red eye, yet I was wide awake, surrounded by an excited ARMY crowd of all ages, races, languages, sizes, and genders — we were going to see BTS! We entered the doors in our hearts and emerged into paradise ; we were strangers yet best of friends, complimenting each other’s purple hair, comparing our BT21 tags, exchanging LA restaurant recommendations. We shared a love for BTS, and had spent so many years watching seven men support each other deeply, like Jungkook’s Golden Closet Films highlighting his fellow band members or the way they show up for each other’s solo songs . The same thing is surely happening for thousands this week, as BTS takes over Las Vegas, renamed as Borahaegas , for a four-date concert residency. ARMY bond comes automatically, inspired by the exquisite brotherhood running through Bangtan, reminding us we will never walk alone , a reminder given to me again and again by the people and art I love.

At the press conference in Los Angeles, Jimin said that “...we want to bring healing and consolation to everyone else who is also going through these hard times and living through these challenges together… [These concerts] made me feel like we are back where we belong, and I hope everyone can end up where they belong.” 

We, ARMY, did end up where we belong. We belonged at the concerts, singing and dancing and crying with each other and our favorite artists, and I can’t wait for us to keep nestling ourselves in belonging — at BTS concerts, yes, but also in bookstores, art galleries, movie theaters, our homes, our loved ones’ arms, our soft and tender selves — because we belong with whatever and whoever keeps us thriving and reveling and ruminating in this universe . 

In her book The End of the Novel of Love , one of my favorite writers, Vivian Gornick argues about her own favorite writer, Grace Paley, that people love life more because of her writing. That Paley’s writing makes us “feel again the crazy wild sexy excitement of life.” I, and many other ARMY, no doubt feel this way about BTS. Is this not the purest, truest, sense of art? This revel of life? 

How can you love them so much, asks a friend. How is your brain wired to fangirl so hard, asks another. The answers to these questions possibly lay in the fact that to me, there’s no difference between listening to a BTS song and standing in front of a Devon Shimoyama painting. No difference between watching a Leslie Cheung film and observing an Etel Adnan leporello and hanging up my friend’s illustration in my living room. It’s all art to me. Art that reminds me why this life is worth living. 

As V said , the future is not just grim darkness. The future is suffused with possibility. A future great art invokes — and the kind of art I hope I can make.

Jade Song is an artist and author whose debut novel, CHLORINE , is forthcoming in 2023 from William Morrow.

Let us slide into your DMs. Sign up for the Teen Vogue daily email .

Want more from Teen Vogue ? Check this out: The BTS Years

Best Songs of July 2024: Ice Spice, Stray Kids, ENHYPEN, and More

BTS, the band that changed K-pop, explained

The keys to BTS’s success: emotional resonance, sincerity, and an ARMY of fans.

by Aja Romano

BTS mugs for the camera in their newest music video “Butter.”

In 2012, Rolling Stone published a list of the 10 K-pop bands most likely to make it big in the US. Achieving significant US fame was a newly attainable, if still distant, milestone for South Korean pop groups thanks to the 2000s’ tremendous exporting of South Korean culture overseas — a trend known as Hallyu, the Korean Wave. Rolling Stone’s list, which appeared two months before Psy’s “Gangnam Style,” included groups like Big Bang, Girls’ Generation, and 2NE1 — the greatest bands of what’s generally thought of as the “second generation” of pop groups to emerge during K-pop’s rise to international prominence.

It didn’t, however, include a group of teenage boys, then-recently assembled through a studio audition process, who were being meticulously polished and prepped for their debut. On December 22, 2012, the group released a number of Soundcloud clips featuring its seven members rapping in Korean and English — including a rap cover of Wham’s “Last Christmas.”

It was hardly the stuff of attention-getting Korean hip-hop. But the band in question — Bangtan Boys, later officially known as BTS — would go on to completely transform the image of all-male boy bands in South Korean music and shatter conceptions of what breakout success looked like for South Korean bands overseas.

  • How K-pop became a global phenomenon

BTS’s rise to prominence has been so immense over the last few years that the band’s latest single, “Butter” — their first since a trio of groundbreaking, historic No. 1 singles in fall 2020 — is a major event.

BTS made headlines in 2020 with the hit single “ Dynamite ,” which became the first K-pop song in history to debut at No. 1 on the US Billboard “Hot 100” chart.

Having already racked up more than 60 million YouTube views in its first 12 hours online, “Butter” already seems positioned to be an even bigger hit for the band.

  • With “Dynamite,” BTS beat the US music industry at its own cheap game

These US chart-toppers are huge accomplishments for BTS. The band has spent years building to this point, slowly conquering the American music scene with one milestone after another. Since 2018, when they became the first South Korean band in history to debut an album at No. 1 on the US Billboard chart , they’ve collaborated with major artists like the Chainsmokers , Steve Aoki , Nicki Minaj , Ed Sheeran , and Halsey . They’ve performed everywhere from Good Morning America to Saturday Night Live , from Times Square’s New Year’s Eve concerts to Grand Central Terminal .

In 2020, BTS garnered a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Duo/Group performance. They’ve even snagged a couple of Guinness World Records for their incredibly engaged fanbase .

So why was BTS the band that finally broke through the culture barrier overseas to make significant waves in the US? The answer lies in a combination of factors, and most of them are about change: the changing nature of K-pop’s studio culture and the way “idols” are produced; changing depictions of masculinity in South Korea; changing ranges of acceptable expression in K-pop; and, above all, the approach BTS has taken to building its fan base and interacting with its fans.

But to understand all this change, we have to back up a few years to understand how K-pop became the regimented industry it is today — and how BTS subverts that regimen.

How did K-pop become a $5 billion global industry?

write essay on bts

Vox explore K-pop’s elaborate music videos, adoring fans, and killer choreography for our Netflix series Explained .

Watch now on Netflix.

BTS is the product of an industry insider who wanted to create a new kind of idol

K-pop began on April 11, 1992, when a hip-hop trio called Seo Taiji and Boys performed in a talent show on a national South Korean network. Seo Taiji and Boys were innovators who challenged norms around musical styles, song topics, fashion, and censorship, which was unprecedented for a culture whose musical production had spent the past few decades subjected to strict government oversight. But it wouldn’t last.

In the ’90s, three powerhouse music studios began cultivating what would become known as idol groups. Assembled through auditions and years of grooming within an intense studio culture — the highly regimented system of idol group production in Korean and Japanese music studios — idol groups are polished to perfection, designed to present the very highest standards of beauty, dance, and musicality. Children who enter these studios spend most of their lives enduring rigorous training to become part of an idol group. If they’re chosen, the studio exerts a huge amount of control, not only over the songs they sing and the way their band is marketed but also over their daily lives .

Idol groups have come to dominate the Korean music industry, but there are well-known toxic and abusive elements to idol life. Over the last decade, the Korean government has taken steps to end the structural exploitation that has been a major part of Korean studio culture. But in the early 2010s when BTS was formed, most studios had a highly regimented, restrictive approach to idol group production. As part of the process, they systematically ironed out most of the personal expression and socially conscious music that Seo Taiji was originally known for — after all, it’s hard to express yourself when you’re contractually forbidden to have a personal life. Even today, idols typically only feel free to open up about their struggles after their studio careers have come to an end .

It was within this environment that a man named Bang Si-hyuk began to quietly build a different kind of studio, and to cultivate the band that would become BTS. A successful songwriter and music producer, Bang was nicknamed “Hitman” for writing a string of popular songs, from g.o.d.’s “One Candle” in 1999 to T-ara’s “Like the First Time” a decade later. He worked as an arranger and producer with the studio JYP until 2005, when he left to form his own Big Hit Entertainment.

But Bang also struggled with his position within the industry. As a studio owner, he confessed to insecurity about his work and said he admired singers who could express their personalities in their music. This combination of ideas — the honest musical expression of one’s creative anxieties — would become a crucial element of BTS.

In 2010, Bang began to assemble a group of teens for a group he called the Bulletproof Boy Scouts. This would go on to become Bangtan Boys, then BTS, but the ingredients of their success were inherent in the original name. Bang intended “bulletproof” to function as a celebration of the kids’ toughness and ability to withstand the pressures of the world. But he also wanted the band to be able to be sincere and genuine — not immaculate idols groomed amid studio culture, but real boys who shared their authentic personalities and talents with the world.

This approach was quite different from the normal studio approach to idoldom, wherein idols are trained to be pleasant but mild — to function as blank slates upon which viewers can project their fantasies. By contrast, Bang wanted BTS to be full of figures that audiences could relate to. In a 2018 interview with the South Korean newspaper JoongAng, he described how he originally thought of BTS as consisting of gentle, sympathetic idols who could mentor their fans:

I recently came across a company document from [2012,] the year before BTS debuted, in which we were debating what kind of idol group to create. It said, ‘What kind of hero is the youth of today looking for? Not someone who dogmatically preaches from above. Rather, it seems like they need a hero who can lend them a shoulder to lean on, even without speaking a single word.

To create that band, Bang had to shake up the established precedents for how idol groups are treated. BTS wouldn’t have strict contracts and curfews, and they’d be allowed to discuss the pressures of stardom. Their lyrics would be open about the cultural pressure placed on Korean teens to excel and do well and to repress their anxieties. In short, they would be frank, honest, and natural.

How they did it: a consciously authentic style combined with socially conscious messaging

In 2017, BTS launched the “Love Myself” campaign with Unicef to end violence against kids.

“We came together with a common dream to write, dance and produce music that reflects our musical backgrounds as well as our life values of acceptance, vulnerability and being successful,” said BTS’s leader, RM, in a 2017 interview with Time . There are six main ways BTS breaks with established precedent for K-pop boy bands to carry out this mission:

  • They frequently write their own songs and lyrics.
  • Their lyrics are socially conscious and especially attuned to describing the pressures of modern teen life in South Korea.
  • They create and manage most of their own social media presence.
  • They aren’t signed to “slave contracts,” nor do their contracts have the grueling restrictions of other idol groups.
  • They tend to focus on marketing entire albums rather than individual singles. (This is essentially still true despite their recent string of singles in the US.)
  • They talk openly about the struggles and anxieties of their career instead of presenting an extremely polished image at all times.

It should be noted that most of these elements have been present in numerous other recent K-pop groups — most notably Big Bang, which probably influenced BTS more than any other K-pop group. What Big Hit Entertainment did, however, was systematize these elements in BTS, and market them hard.

In the earliest videos of the band, from the months before their 2013 debut, the members were styled as young and sweetly innocent , maintaining the common “schoolboy” concept of male K-pop idol groups. When the group officially launched in June 2013, however, it was with a hard style paying homage to old-school gangster rap. Their first single, “No More Dream,” was an ode to teen apathy, a rebellious rejection of Korean traditionalism.

And it wasn’t exactly popular: Early audience reactions included a lot of eye-rolling at what was viewed as a superimposed gangster image the band hadn’t earned. And while they were clearly leaning on the confessional lyrical apathy of Seo Taiji and his early successors, it all seemed contrived rather than real.

A K-pop commentator who goes by the mononym Stephen ran a weekly podcast, This Week in K-Pop , from 2013 to 2017, which chronicled new releases in K-pop and inevitably documented the rise of BTS. But Stephen and his co-hosts were initially skeptical of the band. “Now K-pop has faux hip-hop undertones everywhere,” he said. “But in 2013 there wasn’t really that much, other than Big Bang. So when [BTS] came out with this very in-your-face, ‘We’re hip-hop’ image, it felt a little silly.”

Stephen pointed out that K-pop in general suffers from this problem. “K-pop really likes the look and attitude of hip-hop, but not too much . It’s very surface-level: hip-hop as a culture rather than as a musical genre.”

BTS’s climb to success, then, involved the band finding a way to communicate that this confessional image was real. They did this by mixing their openness on social media with blunt and honest lyrics — and owning their status as an underdog group battling to succeed against other bands who came from established studios with larger budgets. They spoke openly of the influence of Big Bang, which was also known for its socially conscious messaging. And they covered Seo Taiji’s ”Come Back Home”:

In essence, they found a way to imbue their musical style with substance. This led to well-reviewed, pointedly personal works like their three-album series The Most Beautiful Moment in Life , which deftly mixed “theater [and] autobiography.”

Their two most successful singles from this period managed to neatly encompass this new direction. “ I Need U ” (2015) was a refreshing, personalizing step away from hip-hop toward an R&B sound, while “ Dope ” (2015) openly celebrated the endless grind of their lives: “Over half of the day, we drown in work / Even if our youth rots in the studio / Thanks to that, we’re closer to success.”

“Dope” also drew attention to the band’s talent in a major way: It was the moment South Korea realized that these boys could dance.

“‘Dope’ is probably my favorite video of all time,” Stephen told Vox in 2018. “Focusing on dancing like that — they weren’t the only ones doing it, but they were definitely the best ones doing it.”

“And they alternate,” he added. “They do the big, boisterous, in-your-face dance video. But they also do those more emotional mini-art-flick type videos.” And no BTS art flick is better than “Blood Sweat & Tears,” the gothic, gorgeous 2016 single that launched them into a new level of international fame.

Colette Bennett is an entertainment reporter and a huge fan of BTS — but even though she liked their music, it took a while for her to take their message seriously.

“When The Most Beautiful Moment in Life series started, I saw something,” she says. “And that’s when I went back and watched their old vlogs. Up to and after debut, [these] skinny kids all crammed in a studio the size of a broom closet. Just … being honest about how much they poured into what they were doing, humble about being scared and unsure, etc.”

To Bennett, the band’s frank discussion of mental health and the expectations placed on Asian teens was revolutionary. In 2016, she wrote a profile of the band that argued that they were changing the nature of K-pop through their interpersonal approach to image-making. While watching them on their 2017 “Wings” tour, she said, “there was a moment that really stuck out.”

“There’s a song the three rappers do called Cypher 4 . The refrain is, ‘I love, I love, I love myself / I know, I know, I know myself.’

“I looked around me at hundreds of people in their 20s cheering every word, and I thought, ‘My god. They’re using their influence to teach young people — the ones most inclined to grapple with self-hatred — to start considering what self-love means.’”

The BTS ARMY is real, and it is mighty

BTS’s fans — who collectively gained the nickname ARMY for their well-organized and loyal following of the group — responded to that confessional strategy so well that by 2015, tickets for the band’s sold-out limited US tour were reportedly being scalped for more than $10,000 . Since then, the band has sold out all of its four subsequent world tours , including a record-breaking 2019 tour that included a landmark concert at the Rose Bowl, and a 2020 tour that ultimately had to be canceled due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Stephen told me that it took a while for the hosts of This Week in K-Pop to realize how big BTS had gotten. “We always thought the next big group to cross over would be a girl group, somebody like Twice ,” he told me. “I don’t think it really hit me how big they were until I moved to Korea in 2014 and talked to the children. Every single person in my school system, from teachers to high school students to middle school students to elementary — everybody knew who BTS was.”

  • The big business of BTS, the K-pop band that’s changed music

BTS’s international fandom was also hard at work making sure the band had a chance to break through. Throughout 2017, fans systematically bombarded North American retailers like Walmart , Target , and Amazon with pleas to stock BTS’s new albums — and then promptly pushed the albums up the sales charts . The ARMY was so mighty that by the time BTS made their US television debut at the American Music Awards in 2017, the audience was treated to a time-honored K-pop spectacle: an auditorium ringing with fan chants .

The international BTS fandom has worked to mainstream K-pop as few other factors have. On Tumblr, the internet’s unofficial home for fandom communities, BTS and its members reign supreme, recalling the vast reach of One Direction in its heyday. In April 2018, Tumblr decided to stop breaking out K-pop as a separate category in its popular weekly Fandom Metrics, an official Tumblr product that measures the popularity of fandoms and related subtopics across the site. By merging K-pop with English-language groups, the account could more accurately reflect the relative popularity of K-pop bands to their Western counterparts.

The first week the categories merged, BTS debuted at No. 1 on the platform, ahead of Beyoncé and Harry Styles.

So who are these guys, anyway?

Bang’s initial idea for BTS was to build not a boy band, but rather a supporting crew around one talented teen: Kim Nam-joon, a.k.a. RM. He quickly opted to go the idol group route instead, and it took nearly three years of trying out different combinations of members and styles for the boy band to finally emerge.

Most K-pop groups have band members who occupy fixed, noticeable positions within the band: the leader, the public “face” of the group; the “visual,” whose main role is to be pretty; and so forth. Not every group has set roles, and most roles change over time. And because BTS is trying to be less staged than other groups, its roles are a lot blurrier than other groups. Still, there are a few constants.

The leader and lead rapper: RM

Born Kim Nam-joon, RM is a 26-year-old rapper and the first member recruited to BTS. It’s not exaggerating to say that the entire band was built around him.

RM first made his name as an underground rapper; still in his teens, he was frequently spotted spitting verses alongside his friend Zico, who would go on to become the leader of the K-pop group Block B. After a friend told Bang about the rapping teen, Bang recruited him into his studio, where fans gave him the pre-debut nickname “Rap Monster.” From there, the idea to form an entire idol group rapidly took shape, and the Monster shortened his stage name to RM.

The dancer/rapper: J-Hope

Jung Hoseok, a.k.a. J-Hope, sometimes called Hobi, is most frequently described by fans as a ray of sunshine, thanks to his sweet personality. The 27-year-old is one of the group’s main songwriters as well as a frequent choreographer, its lead dancer, and one of its three main rappers. (He sings well, too!) Since joining the group, he’s had a notable solo debut that landed him in the top 40 on the Billboard 200. And have I mentioned his chin could cut glass ?

The vocalist/dancer: Jimin

No single member of BTS is its “face,” but the spotlight often belongs to 25-year-old singer and dancer Park Jimin. Jimin is frequently positioned as the group’s lead vocalist. He’s also a part of the group’s dance line, for good reason , along with J-Hope, Jungkook, and Taehyung.

The mentor vocalist: Jin

The 28-year-old Kim Seokjin, a.k.a. Jin, is the group’s oldest member, and as such he frequently occupies a mentorship role within the group (complete with dad jokes). He’s one of the group’s main vocalists, and though he’s not officially the group’s “visual,” he seems to have a habit of accidentally going viral for being beautiful.

The prodigy: Jungkook

Depending on when and whom you ask, Jeon Jungkook is either the designated “face” of the group, the designated beauty, the designated main singer, the group’s centerpiece member, or all of the above. But there’s one role that never changes: At 23, he’s the youngest. The group often calls him the “golden maknae,” a.k.a. the golden child, because he’s a bit of a wunderkind in terms of talent. In fact, he was in high demand before he settled on joining Big Hit because he looked up to RM. But he’s unquestionably the baby of the group — and arguably its most popular member.

The rapper: Suga

Min Yoongi, stage name Suga, is one of the group’s three rappers — though it should be noted he, like fellow rappers J-Hope and RM, is also a decent singer. At 28, he’s also one of the oldest members, which makes him something of a group dad. His name comes from his preferred basketball position of shooting guard, but legend has it that Bang chose the name for him because it reflects his “sugary” personality — subtle, yet sweet and generous .

The vocalist/dancer: V

The 25-year-old Kim Taehyung chose the stage name “V” for victory — but it could just as easily stand for “versatile”: He’s one of the vocalists, he worked his way onto the dance line, and he’s even tried his hand at rapping. His playful, quirky personality (let’s call it “singular” ) and penchant for stealing the spotlight have made him one of the group’s most popular members. It also probably doesn’t hurt that he has chemistry with everything that moves.

Each of the members of BTS has been hands-on regarding their own careers from the start. As the group has gained more and more power in the entertainment industry, they’ve also each developed their creative and professional sides. By this point in their long careers, every band member has produced, written, or co-written multiple tracks on the group’s albums, and most of them have also worked on independent productions and songs outside of BTS.

For example, rapper Suga has also released two bestselling mixtapes under his alter ego rap handle, Agust D . And vocalist Taehyung co-produced and co-wrote the hit 2020 single “ Sweet Night, ” released as part of the soundtrack to the popular Korean drama Itaewon Class .

On top of all this, the band members all play a variety of musical instruments, in addition to routinely splitting the duties of dancing, singing, and rapping. They’re an immensely talented group of artists.

But perhaps their biggest asset is their shared ability to directly communicate their love and affection to fans. When the band appeared in the annual Time 100 in 2019, entertainer Halsey wrote their profile, making a point of highlighting BTS’s authenticity:

Outwardly, they are polished and professional, but hours of laughter, secret handshakes and gifts exchanged show those around them that underneath this showstopping, neatly groomed movement are just some guys who love music, one another and their fans.

Stephen told me there’s a real core appeal in what BTS is doing. “A lot of their ballads really do sound like they’re talking to you and confessing to you, more so than a lot of pop standards,” he said.

BTS has pulled off this confessional, one-on-one intimacy all while building an international fanbase, despite considerable language and cultural barriers. And in that respect, BTS has truly become an international revelation.

BTS has made major inroads for other K-pop bands and changed the way we think about international fandom

Understanding BTS’s rise to the top also means acknowledging that they’re not alone in their class: They’ve succeeded and grown alongside other bands that have also been innovating and reaching new levels of international success — like Blackpink, which in 2019 became the first K-pop girl group to perform at Coachella . Collectively, this K-pop generation is rapidly changing the conversation and pushing the limits of what K-pop is allowed to be.

But BTS has also done more than arguably any other band to expand K-pop’s international reach — as well as the way international media and the music industry are forced to contend with K-pop. After all, as the lyrics to “Butter” note , the band’s “got Army right behind us when we say so” — a major brag, but one that’s clearly accurate. And BTS fans aren’t just making themselves visible to the music industry. They were also at the forefront of the 2020 push to drown out racist hashtags on social media, and both fans and the band itself have condemned anti-Asian racism .

As BTS and their fandom gain more attention, they’re diversifying mainstream music in America at a moment when artists like The Weeknd have called out the recording industry for its gatekeeping . Between the band’s undeniable talent and diligent work ethic and the fandom’s immense influence over charts, sales, and media coverage, the BTS phenomenon is essentially unstoppable.

Moreover, whatever groundbreaking changes come next for K-pop will likely be a direct result of BTS’s influence. Already, American production companies are moving to bring even more aspects of K-pop to the US. For instance, MGM recently partnered with K-pop studio SM Entertainment to bring the K-pop reality competition format to Hollywood.

Even more intriguing: On the back of BTS’s tremendous success, its parent studio BigHit recently renamed to HYBE Entertainment and, in a billion-dollar deal , acquired heavy-hitting manager Scooter Braun ’s entire portfolio of clients. That means BTS’s studio now oversees artists like Justin Bieber, Demi Lovato, and Ariana Grande. With that potential industry power, and that much fan support at its back, HYBE and BTS could well be poised to shape the music industry in ways hitherto unseen.

And whatever they do next? Will likely be Dynamite.

  • Internet Culture

Most Popular

  • The “It Ends With Us” drama is the new “Don’t Worry Darling” drama
  • Tim Walz is riding the wave of the vibes election
  • Take a mental break with the newest Vox crossword
  • MDMA therapy didn’t get FDA approval. Now what?
  • Why readers love — and love to hate — Colleen Hoover

Today, Explained

Understand the world with a daily explainer plus the most compelling stories of the day.

Sponsor Logo

This is the title for the native ad

Sponsor thumbnail

More in Culture

Paris reminded us why we love the Olympics

Paris hosted a great Olympics. That’ll probably be the exception going forward.

Who is Noah Lyles? The star sprinter’s Olympics went perfectly — until it didn’t.

The Olympian won gold in the 100 meters, then caught Covid and came up short in his signature event.

Everything you need to know for breaking’s Olympic debut

Rule number one: Don’t call it breakdancing.

Why readers love — and love to hate — Colleen Hoover

It Ends With Us is at the center of Hoover’s very polarizing body of work.

I’m a Black vegan. Why don’t you see more of us?

People of color are more likely to be vegan. But the animal rights movement still has a white face.

Why India’s star wrestler was disqualified at the Olympics

Vinesh Phogat was just ounces away from a medal.

Find anything you save across the site in your account

Telling the Story of BTS

write essay on bts

This piece originally appeared in our Daily newsletter. Sign up to receive the best of The New Yorker every day in your in-box .

The writer E. Tammy Kim recently published a piece about how BTS became arguably the most popular band in history . The newsletter editor Jessie Li spoke to Kim about what it was like to report on the Korean boy band and the thrill of seeing them live at their final concert before they announced, on June 14th, that they were taking a break.

What was your first introduction to BTS? What made you realize that this was a story you wanted to pursue?

I started noticing a few years ago that K-pop fandom was being eclipsed by a more specific BTS ARMY —which stands for “Adorable Representative M.C. for Youth”—fandom. But I sort of ignored it—thinking of myself as someone who reported on more “respectable” Korean topics—until I realized how silly that was. This is the biggest band in the world!

Devoted fans describe BTS as a form of self-care and therapy; they talk about how the band “saved” them, and how they “do so much for us.” How would you describe the special allure of BTS that distinguishes them from other bands, including other Korean boy bands?

There’s an intensely felt reciprocity between BTS and its fans. The members produce daily content, and shout-out and interact with fans on a very emotional level, which leads fans, in turn, to want to give back.

In April, you attended the final performance of the band’s “Permission to Dance” tour, in Las Vegas. What was the most surprising or unexpected moment you experienced when you attended the concert?

I’d never been in a concert attended by sixty-five thousand people—and then to have all those people, of every stripe, singing in Korean, my household tongue. I was overwhelmed!

If you had to devise a mixtape of just three BTS songs or music videos for a novice listener, what would you pick and why?

The music videos for “ Black Swan ,” “ IDOL ,” and “ ON ” are aesthetically thrilling and convey the band’s musical and choreographic range.

Having finally delved into the world of BTS (as you write, “nine years of music, dancing, articles, and tweets”), do you now identify as a member of BTS’s ARMY , as fans call themselves? And do you have a bias—a favorite member of the band?

ARMY ’s devotion is such that I wouldn’t dare call myself ARMY ! In terms of a bias, I can’t say for sure, but I really dig SUGA’s candor and appreciate the fact that, very early on, he wrote a song commemorating the Gwangju uprising of 1980, a key moment in South Korea’s democratization.

New Yorker Favorites

The hottest restaurant in France is an all-you-can-eat buffet .

How to die in good health .

Was Machiavelli misunderstood ?

A heat shield for the most important ice on Earth .

A major Black novelist made a remarkable début. Why did he disappear ?

Andy Warhol obsessively documented his life, but he also lied constantly, almost recreationally .

Sign up for our daily newsletter to receive the best stories from The New Yorker .

How BTS Became One of the Most Popular Bands in History

an image, when javascript is unavailable

BTS Reflects on Songwriting, Inspiration and Artistry

By Rebecca Davis

Rebecca Davis

  • ‘The Matrix Resurrections’ Leads China Box Office With $7.5 Million Debut 3 years ago
  • ‘Battle at Lake Changjin’ Sequel to Hit China Theaters in February Amid Crowded Lunar New Year Lineup 3 years ago
  • DAZN Nears Estimated $800 Million Deal to Acquire BT Sport 3 years ago

BTS VARIETY COVER SHOOT FULL BAND 16x9

The band members of BTS — RM, Jin, SUGA, j-hope, Jimin, V and Jung Kook — have conquered hearts around the world as consummate performers. They also frequently co-write their own material, with some penning their own solo works — all while collectively running their own prolific social media accounts, which they share as a group. Their next album, “BE,” has already sparked a firestorm of fan interest ahead of its Nov. 20 release.

In their interview with Variety , the members of BTS discussed what they see as their top artistic contributions to the world and what’s inspiring them now.

As artists, what do you see as your greatest contribution so far to music? How have you pushed the genre of K-pop forward?

SUGA: Talking about our impact on K-pop seems kinda grandiose. It’s serendipitous that what we did went the right way and was meaningful, and that these things happened.

Related Stories

Olympics screenings in movie theaters highlight exhibitors’ need for alternative content, ‘the walking dead: dead city’ teaser: jeffrey dean morgan reveals lucille is back for season 2.

We were able to use and reap the benefits of a variety of online platforms. What we wanted to do was show as much as we possibly could through this wide variety of online platforms, and leverage that [reach].

So it’s not like our goal was to go to the U.S. All we wanted to do was show our performances to people who loved our music. Our goal at the start was never to get a Grammy. We’re just seven regular Korean guys who started to do what we really wanted to do, what we found fun, which was to make music. That led to where we are and who we are now.

What would you say you’re most proud of having accomplished so far as artists, particularly from a musical perspective?

RM: We are Koreans, and the fact that people are singing our songs in Korean, that we were able to expand the reach of the Korean language around the world — that’s something that of course we are very proud of. Also, if due in some small part to us, young people around the world are able to do positive things they want to do, that’s always going to be something we’re proud of too.

The music industry is composed of a variety of platforms nowadays — it’s not just about the songs or listening to the songs. For example, for BTS, performance is a very integral aspect of who we are and of our music. The acronym for our group is BTS: People are really curious about our ‘BTS,’ our ‘behind-the-scenes’ look. They want to see who we are both on and off stage. This is what makes BTS.

Music industry observers are probably impressed by the fact that these are Korean songs being heard outside Korea. But I think what is also notable to them is that it’s not just about listening to the music anymore.

For us, music videos are a very important part of our creative process and music. Our ‘behind-the-scenes’ peeks that we show through Youtube or social media — just us being ourselves and being cute, off-stage — these are all things that people want to see and are all integral parts of who we are and what our music is.

I wouldn’t say this change in how music is seen is something we started, but it’s something that we’ve contributed to in some small part.

You guys have broken so many YouTube viewership records, with “Dynamite” being just the latest example. Do you feel comfortable redefining how musical acts are reaching out to fans through online platforms like YouTube and WeVerse, or do you still feel pressured to make inroads into traditional platforms like radio? Why?

Jin: Our goal is to try to show and expose ourselves to ARMY as much as possible. There are a lot of platforms now. So, there are a lot of different things that we show through different platforms, especially now when we can’t meet our fans in person, since some things are more suited to one platform than another.

Jung Kook: What’s really the most important is for ARMY to hear our music, and love, relate and connect to our music. That’s really the most important thing for us.

What hobbies or creative endeavors have helped you get through this tough period of the pandemic?

Jung Kook: Because of the coronavirus, we had to cancel, postpone and reorganize a lot of our plans. Earlier, things were kinda aimless. I wasn’t sure what we were supposed to be doing.

Around the time of our FESTA fan festival in June [note: an annual release of content to celebrate the anniversary of their group’s debut] we wrote a song called “Still With You” that sort of contains what I was feeling at that point in time — that I really missed our fans. Around then, we also started thinking about how we could use this time to really prepare ourselves for the day when we can meet our fans again. All of us have been working very hard. We’ve adjusted a lot to this new situation.

Could you share with us a song that you love so much you wish you’d written it?

Jimin: I really love our songs and the style of BTS songs. I’ve been trying to work on my personal music, but haven’t really put something out yet. What I’m trying to do now is learn from the other members and try new things that are in the style of BTS, which I really love. I’d like to release and create my own music.

V: When I was much younger, I listened to a lot of top hits and songs that the other members recommended to me. I often felt that it would’ve been great if I’d written those songs myself. I’m trying very hard so that I can one day write one of those great songs and feel that sense of pride.

More from Variety

Joel kim booster tapped to host ‘bad dates’ podcast from smartless: actor says he’s a ‘survivor of a lifetime of bad dates’, with redbox’s demise, the dvd rental business bottoms out, life after ‘deadpool’: summer movies resurrection begs rethink of long-term box office outlook, more from our brands, how creators are rallying around kamala harris, this new show at monterey celebrates cars and hip-hop, france aims for record medal haul thanks to de gaulle’s disgust, the best loofahs and body scrubbers, according to dermatologists, olympics: french runner alessia zarbo ‘feeling better’ after collapsing during 10,000-meter race.

Quantcast

Find anything you save across the site in your account

How Park Jimin of BTS Helped Me Feel Seen in My Brown, Queer Body

write essay on bts

When the COVID-19 pandemic began, I fell into a hole of depression. After graduating from Wellesley College in 2018, I was unsure about career or grad school prospects, separated from my friends, and the concerts I’d been looking forward to were postponed indefinitely. Above all, one thing plagued my mind: I had no idea what my gender was.

Two years prior, I’d felt safe in my nonbinary body at my historically women’s college. But in the “real world,” I struggled to share my pronouns and was confused about what they even were. The pandemic only made it worse. Trying to label my gender began to take a physical toll on me. I started having panic attacks in my sleep. Clothes stopped fitting. I’d also been obsessively listening to the K-Pop band BTS since early 2019 — so to shut out the questions about gender rushing to my brain, I dove even deeper into the fandom.

With more time on my hands and no energy to do anything else, I watched their videos, listened to their albums, and soaked up every interview on late night television. So when BTS released tickets to their October “Map of the Soul ON:E” online concert, I pulled myself out of bed to make sure I was one of the first in line to snag tickets to the show.

The group performances were as incredible as I expected. But while each member shone during their solo sets, the section featuring Park Jimin, the charming Libra of the group, grabbed me immediately. Performing his 2020 song “Filter,” Jimin began by approaching a female mannequin cautiously, admiring her, and grabbing her scarf. He stepped away, while wrapping it around himself. Then, he slid back toward her and grabbed her white floppy hat, bowing his head down, as if he’d done something wrong. Finally, he slinked to her a third time, quickly sliding her blazer off her shoulders. Wearing everything but her skirt, Jimin acted like he was feeling himself. His moves became increasingly confident, as he took Pink Panther -esque strides through the chorus.

One by one, he shook off the mannequin’s clothes and tossed them aside. In the next verse, a group of all-male backup dancers playfully handed Jimin a more traditionally masculine black jacket and hat, pulling his hands in different directions like a puppet. During the bridge, he tossed both sets of clothes aside, and after the quickest quick-change, he emerged in a bright red ensemble that possessed elements of both traditional masculinity (a formal suit jacket) and femininity (a corset). This was signature Jimin: his look defied the black-and-white gender binary represented by the mannequin and backup dancers. He stood in his vibrant and colorful final form, singing, “Mix the colors in the palette/Which me do you want?/Pick your filter.”

I hadn’t even realized when tears had started streaming down my face.

Jimin’s “Filter” performance, which I interpreted as a representation of gender fluidity and experimentation, assured me it was okay not to know which box I fit into, to constantly question, and to try new things. I felt affirmed in lacking the perfect word to pinpoint my gender identity. My struggles with my body, impacted by my strict upbringing, had made me feel isolated in sharing my ideal presentation with others. But Jimin had proudly displayed his moves on a global stage that was live streamed by more than 10 million people. In his rejection of gender norms, in wearing whatever he wanted, he’d reminded me that my body was more than the object of ridicule.

Growing up in Dhaka, Bangladesh, I was all too familiar with feeling like I needed to escape my fleshy prison because of these rigid binaries. As a teenager, I was forced to switch from wearing t-shirts to more traditional salwar kameezes, a set of long tunic-like shirts paired with loose, cuffed trousers, typically worn by women, and could feel male gazes piercing through my outfits like X-Ray machines. The sense that my body held me captive was further drilled into my head by my relatives’ non-stop comments about my shoulders, hair, weight, and — my personal favorite — that nobody would marry me if I “dressed like a boy.”

Padya Paramita in 2013

The first time that it occurred to me that I might be queer was while watching Bend it like Beckham as a seventh grader; my ears went completely flush every time Keira Knightley came on screen. (I blamed it on the humid day and didn’t revisit the movie for eight years afterward.) But I didn’t know a single queer person who looked like me — a brown pre-teen with oiled braids just struggling to fit in. In hindsight, there was a reason Knightley was the one I found attractive in the film and not the lead, British-Punjabi actress Parminder Nagra. In my head, there was no way a brown woman could be desired by another brown girl.

Arriving at Wellesley in 2014 completely overthrew my previously limited cultural bubble. During orientation, I encountered nonbinary people, individuals who used “they/them” pronouns, and queer South Asians for the first time. I soon gained confidence to experiment with my physical appearance. My hallmate gave me undercuts, I started buying denim jackets from men’s sections, and I keenly emulated Zayn Malik’s haircuts. I no longer felt like I needed the queer representation on Glee and Grey's Anatomy that I clung to in my teenager years, but still never felt right to me. Then, I discovered BTS.

At the time, BTS was rapidly taking over the world — they are the only act to have topped the Billboard Global 200 three times — while proudly singing in their mother language of Korean. Watching this group of men my age ascend, despite the heavily anglocentric western music industry, gave me hope as an immigrant writer trying to succeed in the US. BTS was a complete sensory experience with a message. Songs like 2019’s “Dionysus” incorporate broad themes like art, religion, philosophy, and mythology, while other tracks 2014’s “Spine Breaker” and 2015’s “Silver Spoon,” tackle issues like youth struggles and social class.

From the first time I laid eyes on him, it was obvious that Jimin was unabashedly different. His bubblegum pink hair, love of jewelry, and magical, mermaid-like voice shocked me at first, likely because I still had internalized ideas of misogyny and queerphobia within me instilled by my childhood. But as I dug in deeper into each member’s back story, I soon learned that he had undergone his own journey when it came to breaking gender norms.

Born in Busan, South Korea, Jimin started training in contemporary dance in his pre-teen years. But when he joined the record label Big Hit Entertainment as a 15-year-old student at Busan High School of Arts, he realized that his passion wasn’t always appreciated. Around the time, some of the online discourse surrounding K-pop stars involved calling dancers homophobic names, disparagingly comparing them to girls. So when BTS debuted in 2013, it seemed like Jimin was hiding a part of himself. Clad in heavy necklaces and snapbacks, his outfits read hypermasculine and in performances, he would lift up his shirt to show off his rock-hard abs.

Image may contain Human Person Crowd Clothing Shoe Footwear and Apparel

Around early 2015, as BTS rose to fame, Jimin’s public appearance slowly began to shift. He began incorporating his ballet roots during performances, and in the following years, fans started to notice a significant change in his appearance: The heavy necklaces were replaced by more traditionally feminine necklaces and rings . In his 2016 video for “Lie,” Jimin stunned audiences with his modern dancer side — a part of him that would continue to show up again in other songs from the era such as “Blood, Sweat, and Tears.” He finally was praised for his fluid movements that were once the source of his ridicule, with Billboard complimenting his “expressive delivery of the song's dramatic choreography” in 2017.

It’s easy to say that gender doesn’t really matter, but the K-pop industry is heavily gendered. There have only been a handful of mixed gender bands among hundreds of boy and girl groups, and being openly queer is often completely out of the question for most K-pop stars — even heterosexual artists aren’t allowed to date publicly. Despite everything, Jimin started coming out of his shell, openly wearing outfits originally designed for women , shirts with the words “gender equality” and “radical feminist,” laughing at his bandmates for claiming selfies aren’t for men , and letting his dance moves flow freely.

Image may contain Suit Coat Clothing Overcoat Apparel Human Person and Home Decor

Jimin reminded me of myself — I was born 75 days before him, 2500 miles away. Yet both of us had tried hard to please society and performed gender in a way we weren’t meant to put on. It both took us time to realize that society’s gender norms weren’t the law, there was no “male” or “female” when it came to fashion and behavior. We would still be loved, even if we took the risk of expressing ourselves in a real way.

In a recent interview with Sirius XM discussing his song “Filter,” Jimin explained, “Filters can be the things within a camera application, or social media, but it can also mean people’s perspective or prejudice.” He mentioned how he wanted to present to the world in different ways. His explanation resonated with how I’d restrained myself while growing up in a homophobic, cisnormative society: I put on this image of a straight, modestly dressed, long-haired cis girl. After watching Jimin’s choreography that showed him rejecting those various expectations, he helped me come to terms with the fact that I also needed to shed the stereotypes that defined my upbringing.

Padya Paramita

Our respective Korean and Bangladeshi societies rejected us daily and tried viewing us through pre-conditioned filters rooted in misogyny and homophobia, but we retaliated in our own way. Jimin did ballet, and didn’t care about others’ opinions. Soon after the concert, I told friends that I identified as nonbinary; I was okay with any pronouns because they were all equally confusing and satisfying.

My brown, queer, uniquely-shaped, gender-confused body didn’t headline movie posters or magazine covers. But it was mine. No societal boundaries could dictate my process of learning to love it.

Get the best of what’s queer.   Sign up for  them .'s weekly newsletter here.

“No one else wanted to be openly gay. So I stood up.” K-pop star Holland explains why he had to come out

write essay on bts

Comment on this text

write essay on bts

Motivation to Study: an Inspiring Story About BTS

Pop culture.

June 23, 2019

write essay on bts

By Joyce Li

Have you been disappointed with yourself recently? I know I have. Although it may sound dumb, I was upset that I wasn't placed in a higher math course at a school I recently was accepted into, IMSA.

I made higher expectations than I could reach, and I was, to say the least, mad at myself. I ended my freshman year with a 3.9 GPA, making that frustration even higher for a perfectionist like myself. As silly as that sounds, little things like these can easily anger us, and it's important to think about what you can do to motivate yourself to be a better person.

No matter how your life is right now, chaotic, filled with homework, or just plain happy, motivation is always welcomed warmly into your life. Now that most schools are getting close to the end of the year, people tend to drop their work ethic in homework assignments now that summer is within hands reach. But it's always important to have that motivation to finish strong!

However, sometimes having that motivation is hard. Sometimes, I think of it very specifically, thinking If I don't try on this homework assignment, then it'll probably just drop my grade one or two percent. I mean, it's not that much, and I want to get home!

For some students/non-students who just need a little dose of motivation, here's a little story! The motivational story is about the South-Korean pop group BTS or the Bangtan Boys. Their story is a great example of how motivation and passion can get people to places like these. BTS is a seven-member group comprised of seven people (Rap Monster, Jin, Jimin, Jungkook, Jhope, V, and Suga) and they debuted their first song in 2013.

It was a single part of the album "2 Kool 4 Skool", which wasn't very popular at the time. Big time groups such as Big Bang were taking the spotlight, and the newbie group under the company BigHit were slowly gaining fame just to be brought down. Their image of being "too cool for school" quickly drew criticism, and they didn't make much money at all.

At that time, many members were struggling with themselves. Jimin had begun to starve himself mainly because he didn't like his body and he wanted the members to have enough to eat. Suga had suicidal thoughts and social phobias, and Jungkook was the youngest member, leaving his family at age 14. The others had to give up many other things, and their past had begun to haunt them.

BTS had very few views on youtube, they were happy when about 150 fans came to see them at their fan meet whereas thousands would flock to see other bigger groups, and one time they only made 300 gifts for their fans (something generously kind because no other group did this) and 350 came. They were, to say the least, very surprised. They wrote letters to all 300 fans and gave them food when they had nothing to eat themselves, worrying that they would be hungry because they waited at the fan meeting for so long.

They called each other brothers and went to bed every night believing tomorrow would bring a better day, and with their hard work and passion, they skyrocketed in the next few years. In 2014, BTS released a couple of very popular songs. "Danger" and "Boy In Luv" quickly topped charts all over Korea, earning them the fame they deserved a long time ago. Their popularity began to rise as they were invited to be judges for dancing, invited to KCON in Los Angeles, and many more. They stuck together the entire time, smiling every second for their hard work paying off.

2015 was the year that the spotlight went towards them. "I Need U", a hit single, was immediately a top 5 hit on the Gaon Digital Chart in South Korea, and their other song "Dope" was their first music video to hit 100 million views on youtube, which sent them to win their first ever Music Video MV award. As they continued to win award after award, the fandom only began to grow. Their album "Wings" hit over 500,000 preorders the day it was launched. 2016 became their footstool for success.

They won Artist of the Year at the annual MAMA Music Awards, being the first group not from SM, YG, or JYP to do so. Their hit song, "Blood Sweat and Tears" achieved an all-kill, hitting number one in ALL of the charts in Korea. And at the end of the day, it was their passion and motivation to do well for the fans that drove them here.

Now, it's 2019. I can't even begin to list the recognition they've gotten, and the awards they've recieved is endless, including their fourth major win at the Billboard Music Awards! Their collaborations with huge names, such as Juice WRLD, Halsey, and Steve Aoki have landed them with major fame and popularity here in the USA as well as in Korea.

They've sold out concerts in Rose Bowl, MetLife, Soldier Field, and to put this into perspective, it took Taylor Swift 3 months to sell out the Rose Bowl Stadium. It took BTS a whopping 90 minutes to sell out 90,000 seats! Think about that for a bit.....

Either way, the lesson here is how did a group, who barely managed to eat a meal a day, land to buying gucci for fun and selling out stadiums around the world? Maybe it was luck. Maybe it was perseverence.

At the end of the day, passion overtook everything, and they continued on, even when they were at their worst. They refused to give up, and it landed them here. I can't even begin to explain how proud I am, and how proud I am to be an ARMY, the BTS fandom.

I hope this story may have given you a bit more motivation on what you can do, whether it's gathering energy to complete school or something else in your life. Have a great day everyone!

Think this article is a must-read? Share it! 🤳💬

write essay on bts

Hello! My name is Joyce, and as a curent high schooler, I enjoy writing about academics, culture varieties, and many other topics, and when I'm not busy writing, I enjuy playing volleyball, cooking, and watcing an absurd amount of anime :D. Thanks for stopping by!

Recent in Pop Culture

Let us slide into your dms 🥰.

write essay on bts

The BTS story: how K-pop’s superstar boy band conquered the world

  • It was clear from the group’s debut in 2013 that they had something different, helped by Suga and RM’s background in underground hip hop
  • Fans often reference BTS’s first win on South Korean music programme The Show in 2015 as a huge turning point in their story

K-pop outfit BTS are without doubt the biggest boy band in the world, so it was no surprise that their four upcoming shows at Hong Kong’s AsiaWorld-Expo Arena next week immediately sold out.

Their popularity is not confined to one region – or even continent – as the seven-member act are global in every sense of the word. Their story is integral to understanding their remarkable popularity, so let’s take a look at the band’s origins, rise and major achievements over the past six years.

The seven musicians all shared one bedroom. Their label, Big Hit Entertainment, was a small company within an industry ruled by the “big three” K-pop oligopoly (SM, YG and JYP Entertainment). So despite the band’s meteoric rise, they made their debut as underdogs.

However, there were already hints of their future crossover success as their first single hit reached No 14 on Billboard’s World Digital Songs chart two weeks after it was released. At the same time, they received recognition in South Korea as the best new artist at the 2013 Melon Music Awards.

Rise to fame

Back in 2014, the boys handed out fliers promoting a concert during their reality show American Hustle Life . But now they’re selling out international stadiums within 90 minutes.

So how did BTS get here? Their breakthrough happened in two stages: first in South Korea and then in the US.

Fans often reference BTS’s first win on South Korean music programme The Show in 2015 as a huge turning point in their story. The winning single I Need U not only represented a significant stylistic departure for the boys, but also earned them widespread recognition.

In 2017, the band won the award for top social artist at the Billboard Music Awards. At the time, it was already a big enough deal that BTS were invited to the ceremony. But to beat out the likes of Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez and Ariana Grande? Suddenly, the mainstream US press could see that BTS were leading a phenomenon that deserved recognition.

Major achievements

Search for the word “first” on BTS’s Wikipedia page and you’ll find a whopping 86 matches. The band earned their first Billboard 200 entry at No 171 with The Most Beautiful Moment in Life, Part 2 in 2015. Since then, their accomplishments have snowballed.

As mentioned, 2017 was the year BTS truly crossed over into the American mainstream. Their stateside TV appearances that year included being on The Late Late Show With James Corden , Jimmy Kimmel Live! and The Ellen DeGeneres Show . The band made their US performance debut at the 2017 American Music Awards, further increasing their fame internationally.

write essay on bts

But 2018 is the year that BTS seemed to break records almost every day. They became the first K-pop group to perform at the Billboard Music Awards when they performed Fake Love . They racked up numerous RIAA gold certifications. And two of their albums hit No 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart in the space of a few months.

The South Korean superstars also enlisted some of the West’s biggest artists for various collaborations, including Nicki Minaj, The Chainsmokers’ Andrew Taggart and Steve Aoki.

“I’m very lucky to be collaborating with BTS,” Aoki told the Post in an interview last month. “But it’s like, collaborating with me I don’t think was moving a needle for them, so to speak. We were just having fun, and it’s making it exciting and colourful and different.”

BTS have already proven they’re not a flash in the pan, so there’s a lot of anticipation for how 2019 will play out for them.

“I remember [South Korean singer] Psy stating that he had a difficult time breaking the spell after the Gangnam Style boom, and I’m impressed by how well BTS have managed the sudden hype in the past couple of years,” said Stephanie Choi, a doctoral candidate in ethno-musicology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

“By now they should have well-established connections with American media and artists, so I expect to see them having balanced appearances in both Korean and American media.”

It is also worth noting that BTS haven’t had to drop their Korean lyricism to find an American audience.

“It’s so powerful that a non-dominant language is globally renowned,” Aoki said. “[The songs] are almost 90 per cent Korean-based. So it’s an absolute bone chiller – it makes your hair [stand up] when you realise you don’t need to speak the dominant language to really get into the hearts and minds of people.”

BTS’s crossover successes have also had a trickle-down effect, with more South Korean artists embarking on solo tours and media blitzes in the US.

“They just did their own thing, and the world went along with that,” Aoki said. “With that laying the groundwork, it also opens it up for all these other artists who might not have had a chance because they don’t speak English or sing in English.”

Love Yourself

“Love yourself” is a recurring theme in BTS’s discography and their message as artists. They aim to remind the younger generation that true love starts with yourself, as RM put it on the US television show Good Morning America .

Their “Love Yourself” album series oversees the journey to self-love amid the highs and lows of an ill-fated romance. If the series is a story arc, “Love Yourself: Her” is the rising action, “Love Yourself: Tear” the falling action and “Love Yourself: Answer” the resolution.

The “love yourself” motif appears in various ways throughout the album series. There’s the effervescent hook from Idol , where the members sing: “You can’t stop me loving myself.” Then the series wraps up with a bow on the aptly titled Answer: Love Myself . Spoiler alert: the answer is to love yourself.

Band leader RM repeated the mantra “love yourself” to the group’s fans (also known as the BTS Army) during their Billboard Music Awards speech in 2017: “Please, Army, remember what we say: love myself, love yourself.”

BTS also launched the Love Myself campaign with Unicef in October 2017. The two-year-long partnership sponsors the #EndViolence campaign, which seeks to make the world a safer place for children and teenagers.

The campaign has been funded through direct donations and a percentage of the profits from BTS’s “Love Yourself” albums. As of November 2018, they had raised US$1.4 million.

write essay on bts

BTS also made history when RM gave a speech at the United Nations last year. He spoke about his hardships as a young person trying to find himself, and encouraged young people to find their inner voice. Then he introduced a new concept to the “love yourself” theme: “speak yourself”.

“The most impressive part of Army is that they practise the ‘Love Myself’ campaign not simply for their idols but really for themselves,” Choi said.

“BTS and Army are not in a hierarchical relationship, with BTS simply providing thoughts to Army. Rather, they are in a dialectical relationship in which Army also inform BTS about gender issues, racism and world history. They are growing up together.”

Home / Essay Samples / Music / Band / BTS: The Phenomenal Iconic South Korean Music Band

BTS: The Phenomenal Iconic South Korean Music Band

  • Category: Music
  • Topic: Hip Hop

Pages: 1 (579 words)

Views: 3954

  • Downloads: -->

--> ⚠️ Remember: This essay was written and uploaded by an--> click here.

Found a great essay sample but want a unique one?

are ready to help you with your essay

You won’t be charged yet!

Beethoven Essays

Concert Review Essays

Taylor Swift Essays

Jazz Essays

Elvis Presley Essays

Related Essays

We are glad that you like it, but you cannot copy from our website. Just insert your email and this sample will be sent to you.

By clicking “Send”, you agree to our Terms of service  and  Privacy statement . We will occasionally send you account related emails.

Your essay sample has been sent.

In fact, there is a way to get an original essay! Turn to our writers and order a plagiarism-free paper.

samplius.com uses cookies to offer you the best service possible.By continuing we’ll assume you board with our cookie policy .--> -->