K-POP All columns · 21Latest →01Gaining the world, but losing the origin: The paradox of 'less Korean K-pop' K-pop has been gaining immense popularity worldwide, but in the process, it is losing its Korean roots. This phenomenon can be seen as a paradox, where K-pop is becoming more global, but less Korean.2026-W2702K-Pop without the K, from “origin” to “recipe”2026.0603Yesterday's enemies have joined hands today The union of the 4 major entertainment agencies, the calculation of **K-Cella**2026.0604Records have been broken, and values have fallen. The End of K-pop’s “Growth Premium”2026.0505K-pop That Shook the World, Singing in the Rain April 2026: A Self-Portrait of the “Homeless Hegemon”2026.0406The First Button of the Supercycle: What Did Arirang Erase?2026.0307A Court That Values Creators Multilabel, the Invoice of That Promise2026.0208A Ceiling of 100 Million, and the Conscience of a Contract Two Invoices K-Pop Has Accepted2026.0109A non‑existent group was the most “K‑pop” of the quarter.2025 4Q10Who Owns K? —A Nonexistent Group Takes First Place for a Quarter2025 3Q11Who Owns the Idol? Spring 2025, the Contract Won Over the Music2025 2Q12Couldn’t Escape, Even After Changing Names Q1 2025: K-pop Confronts Its “Trust Ledger”2025 1Q13The Quarter When Systems Began Speaking K-pop, Confessing Its Inner Workings in Its Own Voice2024 4Q14Can Factories Tolerate Artists? The Question K-POP Faced in Q3 20242024 3Q15One Roof, Eleven Families, What That Crack Revealed2024 2Q16The album bubble was the first to crack2024 1Q17100 Million Shades of Shade How Fandom Built—and Simultaneously Toppled—an Industry2023 4Q18Who Broke the Wings? The Miracle Invoice Built Through Outsourcing2023 3Q19The Miracle of SMEs: What It Has Brutally Proven2023 2Q20The seat left by the founder, whose K-POP has become?2023 1Q21The sweet poison of global mainstream