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@tugcecankurtt: Bekliyorum okuyacam hadi abi
🇹🇷Tuğçe Cankurt🇩🇪
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Region: TR
Thursday 08 January 2026 19:27:57 GMT
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🇹🇷Tuğçe Cankurt🇩🇪 :
Fotoğrafta koyun 😁
2026-01-08 19:33:30
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🇮🇶 ٱل؏ســڪــرﯤ 🇮🇶 :
💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔
2026-01-08 19:31:08
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In 1994, a South Korean government council calculated that a single Spielberg film generated more revenue than twice the country's entire annual car export volume. That memo triggered a 30-year project to engineer a cultural export machine from scratch. Jurassic Park grossed $850 million, equivalent to 1.5 million Hyundai cars. Korea exported barely 700,000 a year. South Korea decided to build the wave. In 1995, Samsung offered Spielberg $900 million to fund DreamWorks, demanding creative control and Korean staffing. Spielberg noted "the word semiconductor must have been used 20 times" at dinner. The deal collapsed. But Samsung, once derided as "Samsuck," surpassed Sony in brand value by 2005. The 1997 crash gave Korea reason to bet bigger. President Kim Dae-jung, amid a $58 billion IMF bailout, jumped culture funding from $14 million to $84 million by 2001. As journalist Euny Hong put it: "There was zero market for Korean popular culture. It had to be force-fed into foreign markets." Lee Soo-man, a singer turned engineering student at Cal State Northridge, witnessed MTV and returned with an inversion: everyone assumed a country gets rich first, then its culture shines. He believed culture should lead. He founded SM Entertainment, coined "Cultural Technology," and built a pipeline taking 300,000 applicants yearly. About 1% ever debut. Trainees wear numbered stickers instead of names. Phones confiscated on arrival. Those who quit owe up to $129,000. Western pop uses the same engineering but hides it. Max Martin co-wrote more #1 hits than the Beatles. Berry Gordy modeled Motown on Ford's assembly line. John Seabrook defended producers crafting Rihanna's hits as artistry, then framed K-pop's identical process under a chapter titled "Factory Girls." But Korea built one layer with no Western equivalent: fandom as operations department. Fans call it chonggong ("collective attack"). BTS fans organized 101 million YouTube views in 24 hours through coordinated global shifts. By 2024, 9 of the top 10 best-selling albums worldwide were K-pop. That's what it looks like when a country treats culture as infrastructure.
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