This 2020 video promoted the lead single from Blackpink’s first Korean-language studio album, The Album. The video, released on 26th June 2020, was premiered on Blackpink's YouTube channel at the same time as the single was released.
The video broke many YouTube records, including most-watched premiere (1.66 million concurrent viewers), most views within 24 hours for a music video (86 million views) and fastest video to achieve 100, 200 and 600 million views. It was the 3rd most viewed music video of 2020. As of Autumn 2021, the video has had over 1 BILLION views.
BLACKPINK: How You Like That
K-pop: global phenomenon
The K-pop genre reflects the global nature of the media and music industries. Over the last 20 years, K-pop has become a cultural sensation as groups like BTS and BLACKPINK enjoyed global success. This has also resulted in Korean culture becoming mainstream in the West.
Audience
BLACKPINK’s audience: Blinks
BLACKPINK fans are known as ‘Blinks’ and are largely teenage girls and young women. Their fans are worldwide but they are particularly big in the Philippines and Indonesia as well as western countries such as the UK and USA.
Avril, a 16-year-old Blink (Blackpink’s fandom name) from Peru discovered them in 2018. “Everything about them made me become a fan,” she tells Vogue over Twitter. “The way they perform, their iconic songs and choreos, their friendship, even the way they dress. Blackpink were on a whole new level.”
Audience pleasures
Applying Blumler and Katz Uses and Gratifications theory:
- Diversion: music video conventions – performance, effects, fast pace etc.
- Personal relationships: Fan interaction online through social media is a key element of K-pop’s global success. Fans feel like they ‘know’ the band members.
- Personal identity: K-pop fandom often involves copying the look of band members and seeing their own style reflected on screen.
- Surveillance: Western audiences gain knowledge of Korean music and culture.
Marketing and promotion to the audience
The video’s release was preceded by a series of teasers on the band’s social media accounts (including posters, photos focusing on individual band members and videos) and a reality show (24/365 with Blackpink, available on YouTube).
A “dance performance” video including the choreography for the music video was released in July 2020; by March 2021 this had achieved over 600 million views and was placed in the top 20 videos of the year by Billboard magazine.
Dance performance:
BLACKPINK 24/365 - Behind the scenes of the How You Like It music video shoot:
Industries
BLACKPINK: manufactured by YG Entertainment
Blackpink was formed in 2016 by Korean entertainment company YG Entertainment and by 2020 was one of the most successful K-Pop bands in the world. As of 2021, the band was the most followed girl group on Spotify and the most-subscribed music group, female act, and Asian act on YouTube.
The changing nature of the music industry
How You Like That demonstrates the changing nature of the music industry and how important YouTube and social media has become for music artists.
The way people consume music videos has changed – now phones, tablets and YouTube are the primary ways audiences engage with music videos (known as convergence). It also shows music video has become a media form in its own right, not just a way to sell an album.
BLACKPINK’s billions of YouTube views also bring in money through advertising.
Music: a global industry
K-pop demonstrates the global nature of the industry with BLACKPINK selling out arenas across the UK and USA as well as in the East. They played Wembley Arena in 2019 as well as huge US music festival Coachella.
Music videos: regulation
With music videos now largely consumed on YouTube, regulating the content of music videos is very difficult. Some UK-based record companies get their music videos rated by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC).
The kinds of issues the BBFC considers in classifying music videos include bad language, dangerous behaviour presented as safe, drug misuse, sexual behaviour and nudity, and threatening behaviour and violence.
BLACKPINK - How You Like That: Blog tasks
Audience
1) What are BLACKPINK fans known as - and what would the demographics / psychographics be for the BLACKPINK audience?
2) What audience pleasures are offered by the music video for How You Like That?
3) Pick out three particular shots, scenes or moments in the video that would particularly appeal to BLACKPINK fans. Why did you choose those moments?
4) How was the How You Like That music video marketed and promoted to the audience?
5) Why is K-pop a global phenomenon and what has helped it to become so popular?
Industry
1) How were BLACKPINK formed and what records have they broken?
2) What other successful artists have YG Entertainment created? You may need to Google this.
1) How were BLACKPINK formed and what records have they broken?
2) What other successful artists have YG Entertainment created? You may need to Google this.
3) How has technology and the internet (known as technological convergence) changed the way audiences consume music videos?
4) How do BLACKPINK and K-pop show that the media and music industries are now global?
5) How are UK-based music videos regulated and what types of content require warnings?
Extension tasks
Read this Guardian review of BLACKPINK's album. What does the writer say about the band and songs?
Read this Variety feature on a controversy that offended some global fans of BLACKPINK. What was the problem and how did they respond?
Read this Teen Vogue feature on the music video release of How You Like That. How else did the group promote the release of the song?
Here's another Teen Vogue feature offering a brief history of K-Pop. How the genre go global?
Finally, read this excellent Medium blog on the future of the music video in the digital age. Summarise the main points of the blog in 100 words.
You'll need to finish this case study for homework - due date on Google Classroom.
Extension tasks
Read this Guardian review of BLACKPINK's album. What does the writer say about the band and songs?
Read this Variety feature on a controversy that offended some global fans of BLACKPINK. What was the problem and how did they respond?
Read this Teen Vogue feature on the music video release of How You Like That. How else did the group promote the release of the song?
Here's another Teen Vogue feature offering a brief history of K-Pop. How the genre go global?
Finally, read this excellent Medium blog on the future of the music video in the digital age. Summarise the main points of the blog in 100 words.
You'll need to finish this case study for homework - due date on Google Classroom.
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