BTS announces two official books; one breaks down song lyrics and one is full of Korean recipes
Thirteen years of music. Seven members. Now, the stories behind the songs and the meals that fuelled them are finally getting their own pages.
Seven boys, one dream, and a world that could not stop watching. BTS broke records, crossed language barriers, and turned fans into a powerful global force. Behind the cheers and chart success lies a story of ambition, hard work, and the cost of superstardom.
BTS and the global takeover no one saw coming.
Picture this. London. June 2, 2019. Wembley Stadium is shaking. Not metaphorically. Literally shaking. Ninety thousand fans are screaming, singing, crying, waving light sticks, and losing their voices in perfect harmony. On stage stands a seven-member group from South Korea, once ignored, once mocked, once dismissed. That night, BTS didn’t just perform a music concert. They rewrote music history.
This was the second night of their two-day Wembley takeover and the eighth stop of a massive 20-city world tour. The crowd sang louder than the speakers. The moment felt unreal. For BTS and for their fans, called ARMY, it was proof that something huge had happened.
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And this moment? It was only the surface of a much bigger story.
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By 2019, BTS had achieved what many artists only dream of. Four Billboard Music Awards. A Grammy nomination for Best Recording Package for ‘Love Yourself: Tear’ (2018). Massive global album sales. Stadium tours across continents. Ah!
People began whispering a big name. Then saying it out loud. Then writing headlines about it.
“Are BTS the new Beatles?” That comparison alone shows how deeply BTS shook global pop culture, especially considering how fast it all happened.
But BTS isn’t just about charts, trophies, or screaming fans. Their rise raised serious questions about culture, identity, technology, and how fans now connect across borders.
BTS exists in a world where cultures don’t stay neatly inside borders anymore. Their music blends Korean storytelling, hip-hop roots, global pop sounds, social messages that cross languages.
This mixing is called cultural hybridity. Simply put, it means different cultures meet, mix, and create something new.
Instead of Western culture dominating everything, BTS shows how local artists can take global influences and reshape them into something original.
BTS didn’t copy the West. They talked back to it, in their own voice.
What makes BTS special isn’t just the sound. It’s how they exist online and how fans feel connected to them. In today’s digital world, music travels through phones. Fans meet on social media. Identity is shaped through online communities.
In that scene, BTS didn’t rise alone. They rose with their fans.
And that fanbase of ARMY is one of the most powerful cultural forces of the 21st century.
ARMY stands for Adorable Representative MC for Youth. Cute name. Serious power.
ARMY is global, highly organised, loud, proud, and emotional.
They stream music together. They translate lyrics for free and raise money for charity. And, they defend BTS against racism and misinformation.
When BTS won the Top Social Artist award at the Billboard Music Awards in 2017, it wasn’t an accident.
It was ARMY.
BTS didn’t rely on traditional music systems. They lived online. Fans interact with BTS mainly through YouTube, Twitter (X), Instagram, VLIVE, Weverse.
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Fans organise “streaming parties” to boost views and charts. Instructions are shared in multiple languages to make sure streams count.
It’s digital teamwork.
BTS debuted in 2013 under BigHit Entertainment, a small company at the time.
They were hip-hop idols, a risky label. They were criticised by Korea’s hip-hop community, ignored by mainstream media. And, they were struggling financially.
Yet overseas fans noticed them early.
By 2014, BTS appeared on Billboard’s World Albums chart. Their EP ‘Skool Luv Affair’ hit number three. Their Japanese releases entered Oricon’s top ten.
By 2016, they headlined KCON USA. They toured globally. And, they dominated charts
The climb was real. And fans respected that.
BTS broke records fast. Their albums debuted in top five on iTunes worldwide. The group dominated Billboard charts. “Blood Sweat and Tears” hit six million views in 24 hours. “Boy With Luv” smashed that with 74 million views in a day.
They are the first Korean artists with RIAA Gold. Also the first Asian artists with a non-English album at No.1 on Billboard 200
They were signals.
BTS gives fans more content than almost any group. Music videos, casual vlogs, reality shows, travel documentaries, the mobile game ‘BTS World’, the Weverse fan platform, BT21 character merch.
Even before debut, BTS shared raw, unpolished videos. This honesty mattered.
BigHit allowed BTS freedom online. Their producer Bang Si-hyuk famously said he didn’t restrict their social media use.
Fans noticed.
BTS talks about things most pop groups avoid.
Their songs discuss school pressure, youth unemployment, economic inequality, mental health, social injustice, affirmative actions.
If you don’t believe us, you should really add “School of Tears”, “Silver Spoon”, “Am I Wrong” to your playlist.
Unlike many idols, BTS members write and produce their own music. RM and Suga openly say their lyrics come from personal pain and real life. That honesty created something powerful.
Many idol groups borrow hip-hop style. BTS lives it.
Formed around rappers RM and Suga, BTS treats hip-hop as identity, not decoration. Their music shows technical rap skill, storytelling, self-reflection
This helped fans believe in their authenticity.
BTS built a long narrative through albums. ‘The Most Beautiful Moment in Life’ trilogy explored youth and confusion. ‘Love Yourself’ series focused on self-acceptance
Their fears, failures, and criticism became part of the music.
It’s not just enjoyment of the music. It is also BTS members’ personalities, meaningful messages, support during hard times, genuine connection with fans.
Fans said BTS felt real.
They noticed creative control, hard work, growth over time
The ‘Love Yourself’ series became a turning point.
Fans shared deeply personal stories while escaping toxic relationships, coping with grief, managing mental illness, learning self-worth.
At the United Nations in 2018, RM spoke about fans who said BTS helped them survive.
This wasn’t marketing. It was impact.
Many fans don’t speak Korean. It doesn’t matter. Now they say emotion crosses language with BTS, and they can feel the lyrics even without understanding them.
BTS rose during a time of economic uncertainty in South Korea. There was climate anxiety, mental health crises, social inequality growing.
Their message wasn’t fake happiness. It was hope with honesty.
BTS is also proof that culture flows both ways and identity can be shared beyond borders. It is about transcultural connection, emotional investment, shared human experience.
Fans are now eagerly waiting for their new comeback album ‘Arirang’ and a world tour.
BTS built something lasting. A global conversation. A shared emotional space. A reminder that feeling understood matters.
And BTS matters as long as fans keep singing, ‘Forever ever ever, we are young.’
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