Decoder Ring’s Evan Chung told the story this week of the Japanese musical duo Pink Lady and their ill-fated American TV variety show in 1980. Pink Lady’s meteoric rise in Japan was exceptional—but it also helped define a broader phenomenon known as Japanese “idol” culture, which is still going strong today.
For this special bonus episode, Evan spoke with Patrick W. Galbraith, an anthropologist at Senshū University in Tokyo. He’s the co-editor of "Idols and Celebrity in Japanese Media Culture" and the co-author of a book in the 33 ⅓ series about the contemporary idol group AKB48.
Patrick explains that, while idols may seem at first like the manufactured pop acts we’re familiar with in America, they’re actually a distinct category of celebrity with no Western equivalent. Rather than stun with talent and beauty, idols use approachability and vulnerability to compete for the love of fans. They’re the perpetual boy-and-girl-next-door types, and have come to occupy an omnipresent and outsized role in Japanese culture.
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Information
- Show
- Channel
- FrequencyUpdated twice weekly
- Published21 November 2024 at 05:00 UTC
- RatingClean