cortis4coers
Under stage lights that burn hotter than the sun, idols are taught to be flawless and stitched into perfection, polished into symbols, wrapped in history like silk. But silk can wrinkle and pride can bruise.
When CORTIS steps onto the national stage dressed in tradition, the world expects reverence. They expect grace and obedience.
Keonho has never been good at obedience. A slight sag of fabric. A quiet tilt of defiance. A reminder that he has always colored beyond the edges drawn for him. The cameras catch it. So does Tarzzan of All Day Project. Where Keonho moves like fire: impulsive, bright, unapologetic. Tarson stands like steel, sharpened by discipline and devotion to what came before him. His words online are calm, controlled, and devastating:
Some lines should not be crossed.
The comment spreads like wildfire
Suddenly, every award show becomes a battlefield. Every shared stage hums with static. Their eyes meet across rehearsal rooms like drawn blades. Smiles for the cameras. Ice behind them.
Keonho calls him rigid.
Tarzzan calls him careless.
But anger is only passion with nowhere to go.
And the more they clash, the more the tension bends, stretches and threads itself into something dangerously intimate. Because beneath pride and public image, beneath tradition and rebellion, they recognize something unsettling in each other: The same hunger, the same fear of being misunderstood the same loneliness that lingers long after the lights go dark.
In an industry built on perfection and silence, they are becoming noise. And the line between enemy and something far more fragile has never felt so thin.