Batfort

Style reveals substance

Tag: YG Ent

Another College Admissions Scandal

Too bad it didn’t include Harvard:

As detailed in U.S. Department of Justice filings, the scheme involved a company, known as “the Key,” that illegally manipulated two main “side doors” to secure the admission of its clients’ children to elite universities. The Key, run by William Rick Singer, bribed officials at college-entrance examination companies to allow third parties to take the students’ tests for them. And it bribed college coaches to identify the students as recruited athletes — guaranteeing them preferential treatment by the admissions office — even though they were not so recruited.

Although let’s be real, Harvard already has legacy admissions. The price tag for a side door into Harvard is likely in the millions, rather than the multi-hundred thousands.

Here’s the sales pitch:

What we do is we help the wealthiest families in the U.S. get their kids into school … They want guarantees, they want this thing done. They don’t want to be messing around with this thing. And so they want in at certain schools. So I did what I would call, “side doors.” There is a front door which means you get in on your own. The back door is through institutional advancement, which is 10 times as much money. And I’ve created this side door in. Because the back door, when you go through institutional advancement, as you know, everybody’s got a friend of a friend, who knows somebody who knows somebody, but there’s no guarantee, they’re just gonna give you a second look. My families want a guarantee.

I’ve never worked at a school that had refereed undergraduate admissions, but now I wish I had. After seeing the different tensions and fault lines that split through a graduate-level admissions committee, I can only wonder at the amount of political jockeying that happens at the undergraduate level. Graduate school at least had a lot of technical ability and raw knowledge by which to disqualify applicants.

What’s interesting to me here is how this is yet another example of how elites game the system, while the rest of us dupes try to do the right thing. And yet, these aren’t even the elitest elites.

Do it right, and you get your name on a building or an entire academic program or an endowed chair, AND your kid gets an auto-accept.

With the famous actresses named, this feels a lot like the Seungri scandal that broke in the k-pop world over the last week: a token investigation that will drum up a lot of media hype and general outrage, blowing off steam from the real corruption.

There are people that the public already knows to provide a “face” for the wrongdoing. A scapegoat, really.

And when those people see justice, it’s all taken care of—right?

Yeesh.

2NE1 Appreciation Post

2NE1 is dead, long live 2NE1.

This is one of my favorite videos from 2NE1. It’s a dance practice, so it’s not especially polished or produced. But the melody from “Come Back Home” is so haunting and the choreo flows so well with the song structure that I can’t help but to love it.

Looking back at 2NE1’s debut song, “Fire,” they debuted right out of the gate as a non-sexy girl group with attitude. It isn’t like they want to snuff out their femininity–because they don’t–but I appreciate how these girls don’t play the “cute” or “coy” or “sexy” roles that have built-in body language. They are not pre-packaged like Girls Generation or many of the girl groups in the current year.

If Twice is the girl group that I go back to for a “cheerleader in my pocket,” 2NE1 is the girl group I tap into when I need to skip past cheerleader to unleashing my inner badass. (Naturally 2NE1 gave us the girl anthem of the century.) Check out CL’s swagger in the dance practice above–she’s legit.

2NE1’s distinctive swagger always makes me wonder if they contributed to the rise of toxic feminism, when women try to imitate men to their own detriment. Masculine influence is definitely an issue–many of my influences are men–especially with ambitious or low-agreeability women because those traits are so rare in the female community.

But if you look at 2NE1’s members, the masculine swagger is balanced out by distinctively feminine traits. CL is elegant. Minzy has a maternal vibe. Bom is basically an anime girl. Dara is too delicate for the blunt edges of pop music. Bom and Dara would be completely out of place in a masculine song, except as the feminine foil, and they hold their own in “I am the Best.”

It’s definitely “too far” in terms of the overt message, but sometimes you need to go “too far” internally so that you get to “far enough” externally. Like negotiating with yourself–you set the anchor so far out that even if you get halfway, you’ve accomplished much more than you would have anyway.

2NE1 is no longer with us, but I’m glad that we had them for a little while.

Sometimes I get so frustrated with the laissez faire attitude of YG Entertainment, for not providing the structure and discipline of SM Ent to capitalize on the talent of their artists. You sign good people–let them sing!

 

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