In an age where the fall of Rome is no longer a historical spectre but a daily lived experience, we find our latest parable in the travails of a K-pop group. Le Sserafim, the quintet of manufactured idols, has reportedly 'overcome band tensions and internet trolls' to stage a comeback. The sheer drama of it all would make a Victorian novelist blush. Yet beneath the glittering surface lies a deeper truth about our collective spiritual bankruptcy.
Let us dispense with the usual pieties. The modern obsession with 'authenticity' is a symptom of intellectual decadence. We demand that our pop stars suffer. We need them to bleed. Why? Because we ourselves have become so detached from genuine struggle that we must vicariously consume the manufactured crises of celebrities. Le Sserafim's 'tensions' are not real in any meaningful sense. They are choreographed drama, scripted for maximum engagement. Internet trolls are not a force of nature but a predictable consequence of a society that prizes attention over substance.
Consider the historical parallel. In the late Roman Empire, the public became insatiable for bread and circuses. The circuses grew ever more elaborate, more violent, more 'real' in their simulation of life-and-death stakes. Today, we have K-pop comebacks. The difference is one of technology, not of essence. We watch young women perform the ritual of overcoming adversity, and we call it inspiration. We do not ask why we need such inspiration in the first place.
The very concept of 'band tensions' is a modern invention. In Victorian times, a musical group was a collection of professionals who respected the craft. They did not need to resolve personal conflicts in public. They understood that the music mattered more than the performer's biography. Now, we reverse the hierarchy. The biography is the product. The music is merely the soundtrack to our voyeuristic obsession.
Let us also consider the national identity angle. South Korea has built a multibillion-dollar industry on the back of this idol system. It is a factory of manufactured emotion. Yet Western audiences consume it with the same uncritical fervour as they once consumed British colonial tea. We have outsourced our emotional labour to the East. We pay them to perform struggle so that we do not have to confront our own.
Le Sserafim's comeback, then, is not a story of triumph. It is a story of capitulation. A capitulation to the tyranny of the comment section. A capitulation to the false god of 'transparency'. We are told that these women are 'brave' for facing their critics. But true bravery would be to ignore the trolls entirely. To refuse to play the game. To make music that stands on its own merits, without the crutch of narrative.
But that is impossible under the current dispensation. The logic of the attention economy demands constant revelation. Every backstage quarrel must be aired. Every tear must be captured. We have become a civilisation of emotional pornographers. We demand the raw, unscripted display of feeling, even as we know it is never truly raw or unscripted.
In the end, Le Sserafim's comeback is a mirror held up to our own decay. We cheer for them because we need to believe that struggle can be overcome. But we refuse to see that the struggle itself is a construct. The true struggle is the one we avoid every day: the struggle to think for ourselves, to reject the manufactured narratives, to find meaning in a world that offers only endless entertainment.
So go ahead, stream the new single. But as you do, ask yourself: is this the best we can do? Is this the grand achievement of a civilisation that once built cathedrals and composed symphonies? The answer, I fear, is too depressing to print.









