In a stunning display of what can only be described as musical Stockholm syndrome, Japanese pop sensation XG have emerged from a five-year training regimen that makes SAS selection look like a spa weekend, and the British music industry is positively moist with admiration.
Let us be clear: these seven young women have not merely learned to sing and dance. They have been forged in the fires of an entertainment machine that would make a Victorian factory owner blush. Reports describe 14-hour practice sessions, dietary restrictions that would break a Buddhist monk, and a level of psychological conditioning that would make North Korea's propaganda bureau take notes. And for what? So they can perform synchronized choreography while hitting notes that would shatter crystal.
The British music establishment, ever the arbiter of authentic suffering, has declared this 'admirable dedication'. Record executives who wouldn't get out of bed for less than a seven-figure advance are now nodding sagely about 'the grind'. One A&R man was overheard saying, 'It's like the Spice Girls but with fewer personality disorders and more hyperbole.'
But let us not mince words. This is not art. This is athletic brutality dressed up in designer clothes. XG have been subjected to a system that would be illegal if it involved animals. Yet we call it 'training' and marvel at the results. We are complicit in a global assembly line that takes teenagers and stamps them into products.
And the British music industry loves it because it reminds them that somewhere, someone is working harder than the bloke who nicked a beat from a Motown record and called it innovation. XG are the living embodiment of the Protestant work ethic: suffer now, reap rewards later. Never mind the psychological damage, look at those perfectly angled arm movements!
Of course, the girls themselves are smiling. They're told to. They've been conditioned to see their suffering as privilege. It's the ultimate gaslight: convince the victims that their torment is a gift. And we buy it. We buy the albums, the concert tickets, the branded merchandise. We are the enablers.
But do not mistake my cynicism for criticism of XG themselves. These are talented young women who have survived an industrial process designed to break them. They deserve success. What they don't deserve is a system that treats human beings as prototypes for a never-ending assembly line.
So let Britain applaud. Let us heap praise on this 'remarkable journey'. But let's also acknowledge the uncomfortable truth: we are celebrating institutionalized endurance, not artistic expression. The music industry has always been a circus, but now the animals have been trained to applaud their own cages.
In the end, XG will undoubtedly achieve global stardom. Their music is catchy, their moves are sharp, and their story is precisely the kind of inspirational garbage we crave. But as we tap our feet to their latest single, let's spare a thought for what it cost them. And maybe, just maybe, ask ourselves: is the price of entertainment worth the human sacrifice?
Now, if you'll excuse me, I need a drink. Preferably something strong enough to wash down this bitter taste of capitalism's latest triumph.








