The virtual K-pop group PLAVE prompts a rethink of reality and simulation boundaries. The author argues that K-pop is based not on physical bodies but on systems of labor and shared belief. Highlighting the virtual nature of fandom, it suggests this has always been the reality.
In Nyara Aquino's opinion piece, PLAVE is depicted as a five-member virtual K-pop group without physical bodies. They chart, sell hundreds of thousands of albums, and win music shows. Fans cry, laugh, and argue over them. The author critiques the 'ontological panic' around virtual idols as rooted in a mid-20th-century definition of reality.
K-pop fetishizes bodies but is fundamentally a system of fan labor and digital shared belief. Fans stream, vote, translate, clip, and organize across time zones via usernames and avatars. Fandom has long been virtual, through comments and emojis, building relationships without physical touch. PLAVE simply stops pretending otherwise.
Citing philosopher Timothy Morton's 'symbiotic real,' humans are tangled assemblies of biology, technology, platforms, and habits—not self-contained bodies. The bond between PLAVE and fans is a negotiated intimacy, focused on moments like over-the-top jokes or glitches that cause laughter, not technology obsession. If something disappoints, surprises, or demands shared time, its reality cannot be denied.
PLAVE exposes the idol structure, becoming a 'hyperobject' distributed across platforms, emotions, and infrastructures—never fully graspable, encountered in fragments like clips or chart rankings. This mirrors fragmented human identities in 2026, scattered across devices and algorithms. Echoing David Bowie's foresight, culture shifts from singular figures to collective meaning, with authority leaking outward.
PLAVE represents K-pop without the 'meat envelope,' arguably its most honest form in decades. The piece was published in The Korea Times on February 1, 2026.