K-Pop Fans Get #SpotifyCorrupt Trending a Day After Wrapped Feature Drops

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The release of Spotify Wrapped is one of the most entertaining, highly anticipated days online, with Spotify listeners flocking to Twitter and Instagram to share screenshots of their music streaming habits. The interactive graphics launch memes about how groups like Taylor Swift fans, people with depression, or members of the LGBTQ community consume music, and #SpotifyWrapped is still trending a day after 2022’s drop.

This year, YouTube Music provided users with their unique listening statistics, #YouTubeMusicRecap, the same day that Spotify dropped their now-iconic feature. The streaming services are similar, offering free, ad-supported versions and premium subscriptions. Last year, both YouTube Music and Apple Music rolled out recap features to compete with #SpotifyWrapped, prompting jokes about the differences among the services.

As #SpotifyWrapped maintains its hold on social media, the competing hashtag #SpotifyCorrupt has begun trending alongside it. The hashtag doesn’t seem to refer to the streaming giant’s well-documented practice of paying pittance in royalties to artists—instead, it’s being championed by K-Pop fans.

Devotees of BTS member J-Hope are angry with Spotify for counting streams of collaborations between artists as part of an individual artist’s statistics. They claim that the decision inflated the ranking of fellow BTS member Jungkook and lowered that of J-Hope. Jungkook collaborated with singer Charlie Puth this year for the song “Left and Right.”

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Though the hashtag may seem like niche drama to people outside the K-Pop sphere, J-Hope fans have helped it rise on Twitter’s main trending page, and have even begun spamming the Instagram of Jérémy Erlich, Spotify’s vice president of music.

 

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A post shared by Jérémy Erlich (@jeremyerlich)

#SpotifyWrapped debuted in 2016.

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