Big Hit Entertainment

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About a month and a half before this, in the beginning of November, Min Yoongi—who would debut as SUGA of BTS—had arrived at Sinsa Station Exit 1, just as j-hope would, and was looking for the dorm.

________My parents dropped me off. There’s a practice studio in the
basement of Yujeong Restaurant near the Cheonggu Building. I
stood there until Pdogg came out and took me inside. My parents
told me later that I looked like I was being dragged off somewhere
(laughs).

SUGA was seventeen years old at the time. He was a bit too young to
leave his hometown of Daegu to come up to Seoul just because he wanted a career in music. But in Korea, it is difficult to grow into a mainstream artist if one doesn’t happen to be in Seoul.

______I was in a dance crew in Daegu, and there was a studio I worked in.But the pie was just too small. We might have an event gig from time to time? Sometimes we were paid in tickets for our
performances, not money. Not that we were doing it for the money necessarily, but I wonder if we should’ve at least been paid enough to buy a meal, and a lot of times we weren’t paid even that.

By the time SUGA entered Big Hit Entertainment, he was already a
paid songwriter working in Daegu. He attended music hagwons to learn MIDI, was introduced to composers, and went from studio to studio doing all kinds of work. Back then, there was no arts high school that taught mainstream music in Daegu, which was why for a time he studied classical music with an eye on entering arts high school that way. He learned different kinds of music from various musicians, composing everything from school songs to trot. But for a teenager dreaming of a career as a professional musician, especially a teenager obsessed with hip-hop, his prospects outside of Seoul were slim.

______Hip-hop wasn’t very mainstream in Daegu at the time. This was when people made fun of rappers, calling them “hip-hop warriors,”and when the hyungs I made music with did cyphers1 in the park, we’d get maybe twenty people as an audience. And our first one had two people.

It was a fairly reasonable choice for SUGA to head to Seoul, in retrospect. Indeed, SUGA and j-hope had deliberately made the decision to enter the idol audition process before joining Big Hit Entertainment as trainees; j-hope had undertaken auditions with other companies and already had specific dreams of debuting as a singer by the time his dance hagwon recommended him for an audition with Big Hit.

As Korean idol groups became explosively popular in the 2000s, not only domestically but internationally, teenagers aspiring to stardom flocked to famous dance hagwons that not only taught dance but also introduced promising students to entertainment companies in Seoul. This was also how j-hope’s initial training was outsourced to Gwangju before he entered the dorm in Seoul.

______The Big Hit A&R people came to Gwangju and sat in on the
auditions in person. I danced for them, and then did eight months of outsourced training after I succeeded in the audition. Once a month during this training, I made videos of myself dancing and singing to send to the company.

Meanwhile, SUGA, who was already a professional songwriter, became interested in a particular person at Big Hit Entertainment.

______I always liked the songwriter Bang Si-Hyuk. I really liked the T-ara song “Like the First Time,” and learned that Bang had written that song. He wasn’t on television or anything back then, but he was
already famous as a songwriter among people in the know.
For teenagers with limited insider knowledge of the entertainment
industry, trusting a company recommended by one’s dance hagwon or taking an audition because a favorite songwriter happened to work there was the best course of action. Even before the incredible success of today’s BTS, Big Hit Entertainment in 2010 was already a well-respected company, more than worthy to be a young musician’s dream company. Bang Si-Hyuk—the current chair of HYBE—established Big Hit in 2005, and by the time j-hope and SUGA had signed on, he had raised a string of successful artists like 8Eight, J-Lim, and 2AM to stardom. 2AM’s “Can’t Let You Go Even if
I Die” in particular, composed by Bang, was a massive hit that rocketed the team to supremacy. Big Hit Entertainment was hardly small fry in the scheme of things, with a stable of successful artists and the owner and main
producer of the company well-known for his ability to consistently crank out hits.

But the team Big Hit was trying to build at the time with trainees like
SUGA and j-hope, the team that would become BTS, was proving to be something of a new challenge for Bang Si-Hyuk. The making of a K-pop idol group is like the production of a Hollywood
blockbuster. Everything converges into a single effort, including capital, planning, advertising and PR, and even the brand value of the company itself.

In spite of this, the industry was so competitive that only about five boy groups and five girl groups in a decade could be considered successful.

Most of these popular groups came from what was known as “the big
three”: SM Entertainment, YG Entertainment, and JYP Entertainment.

These companies, like Hollywood’s major studios, had the lion’s share of capital and industry know-how.

Big Hit, of course, had 2AM. But co-label JYP was the one that led the effort from training to launch. That was why for Big Hit Entertainment, the process of casting, training, and launching was a whole new venture.

And it went without saying that this whole process was much more
difficult and costly than simply launching a balladeer. Idol groups need simultaneous mastery of song and dance on stage, and all that singing and dancing needs to be trained into them, which means enough practice space is needed to teach scores of trainees vocals and dance. For those, like SUGA and j-hope, who moved away from home, as well as whoever happens to show high potential and is therefore deemed closer to debuting, room and board need to be provided. To prepare an idol group for their debut requires not only offices for the company itself but literal “spaces” for all of the above.

This was why j-hope could only be taken aback by what he saw that
Christmas Eve when he first entered the dorm. Big Hit Entertainment was a major company in the entertainment industry, one that a budding artist like j-hope could trust to nurture his talent. But in some ways, the company was arguably closer to being a kind of start-up, with administrative offices and recording studios in cramped quarters on the second floor.

Bang Si-Hyuk used one of those tiny rooms for his artistic and
administrative work, including meetings. It was so small that there was room for no more than three people, and that third person would have to sit on the floor.

Instead of bringing all the trainees into the same building,Bang rented practice space and accommodations around the Cheonggu Building.

These spaces, like their offices, were only just enough for their most basic functions, which is apparent when contrasting Jung Kook’s practice footage from February 2013a with the BTS dance footage filmed in HYBE HQ.b In 2013, Big Hit clearly had everything they needed and more for a company of their size. But compared to “the big three,” they might as well have had nothing.

One thing Big Hit had a disproportionate abundance of was people. Take the trainees, for instance. There were about fifteen male trainees vying To become BTS. At one point, there had been twenty trainees competing to join the girl group Glam, which debuted a year before BTS.

And importantly, Big Hit also had the producer and content creator Bang Si-Hyuk, the producer Pdogg, and the performance director Son Sungdeuk.

But for the two teenagers who had come up to Seoul from Daegu and Gwangju, the first thing that made a big impression, like SUGA’s comment
about moving into the dorm, was the fact that there were a whole lot of other teens their age with similar interests. SUGA remembers:

________I went to the recording studio and RM and Supreme Boi were there, and other trainees, and we got all excited just talking about music.

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