
The Korean Wave is advancing into Europe. Korea's largest showbiz  management agency SM Entertainment is making the first move with "SM  Town Live" at the 6,700 capacity concert venue Le Zenith de Paris on  June 10 and 11.
The concerts proved extremely popular, with tickets for the first show  selling out online in just 10 minutes. SM Entertainment originally  planned to hold just one concert, but on May 1 several hundred French  K-pop fans demonstrated in front of the Louvre and demanded a second.
SM founder and CEO Lee Soo-man is the person who is leading the bold  move. "At one point, I was worried that we might be making reckless  investment in something that could happen only in the far future," he  told the Chosun Ilbo from the U.S. "But the plans to globalize our pop  culture that we've been quietly preparing for more than a decade are  starting to bear fruit."
SM Town Live in Paris will feature five popular Korean bands -- TVXQ, Girls' Generation, Super Junior, SHINee, and f(x).
"We've been building relationships and content with composers in various  countries for a long time to globalize K-pop," Lee said. "This series  of concerts is the fruit of those long-term efforts. SM has a pool of  over 300 composers and producers in the U.S. and Europe, so we're  capable of producing music that can appeal to people all over the world.  I'm confident that we can captivate young people in France, the U.S.,  Britain and Germany with our music."
Asked about criticism that Korean-style showbiz management relies on  "slave" contracts that bind singers and actors to their agencies for 10  years or more, Lee said, "These criticisms come from people who don't  realize that this system is the driving force of the globalization of  the Korean Wave. We select talented youngsters with a lot of potential  at an early age, and nurture them into highly competitive entertainers  through rigorous training."
But he claimed agencies are "also committed to giving them a normal  education. There is a limit to American and European agency system as it  only makes investment in already proven stars. But in Korea, we have a  system that constantly discovers new stars. There is no place for those  who seek a windfall or jackpot with a one-off investment in the Korean  entertainment industry. We have produced stars through long-term  planning and investment." In fact, he insisted the U.S. and Europe "are  trying to learn from our system these days."
Source: [english chosun]
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