Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

China’s hottest new boy band is five women

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BEIJING: China’s all-girl “boy band”, FFC-Acrush, had more than 749 000 followers on social networking site Weibo even before any of their music was released.

Sporting short bobs, loose T-shirts and barely there makeup, Acrush’s androgynou­s look is bucking centuries-old norms in a society where girls strive to look feminine and act demurely.

Marketed by sports brand Fantasy Football Confederat­ion, the five, aged 18 to 24, held their first news conference in Beijing yesterday and released their first single, Action.

“We want the girls to break the mould,” the band’s agent, Zhou Xiaobai, said.

The letter “A” in the band’s name is a reference to the god Adonis – the archetype of youthful male beauty in Greek mythology.

It’s not the first time Chinese music agents have had the idea of forming a gender-neutral act. In 2005, a boyish-looking Li Yuchun briefly won fans. She also sparked debate about how women should dress in a conservati­ve society.

Held back by worry about a social backlash, the music industry had stayed away from marketing “handsome girl” acts until 2016.

Last year, Zhejiang Huati Culture Communicat­ion, an entertainm­ent start-up backed by Tencent Holdings, was looking to create a girl band when the idea of an androgynou­s act came about. “We happened to see many ‘handsome girls’ during the auditions, and people thought they looked quite all right.

“Then it hit me that now is the time,” said Zhejiang Huati’s chief executive, Wang Tianhai.

Acrush is one of several bands under the FFC brand, which aims to be a pioneer in sports entertainm­ent by mixing sport with music and dance. All FFC bands must learn to play soccer. – Reuters

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