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In June, he was a fixture at Paris Fashion Week, where he partied at a Christian Louboutin bash, sat front row at the AMI Alexandre Mattiussi show, and befriended Sébastien Meunier, the artistic director of Belgian fashion house Ann Demeulemeester. He released a self-titled mini-album in March, which Harling helped fund, raising more than $100,000 in 45 days (two times the original goal). Since “Neverland,” it seems as though the world has become Holland’s oyster. This global fanbase soon began to call itself “Harling,” a portmanteau of “Holland” and “Darling,” the family name of the characters from Peter Pan. Overnight, the song Holland had hoped would reach one or two people reached hundreds of thousands around the world.
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The video received a 19+ rating, because of the kissing, in South Korea, limiting its viewership there, but gained more than 700,000 views in 24 hours on YouTube. The music video for “Neverland,” which featured Holland and a male love interest walking barefoot on a beach, cuddling, and kissing, was released on January 21, 2018. I want them to know: there’s nothing wrong with you, never lose who you are, and focus on finding what makes you happy." "I want my fans to love themselves and take care of themselves. “It was more about showing the people who gave me a hard time for being gay that I am supported and that I support others going through the same thing, even if it was just one or two people.” When it came time to choose a stage name, Holland, whose given name is Go Tae-seob, chose to honor The Netherlands, which was the first country to legalize same-sex marriage in 2001. “It was not really a project I expected people to love,” he says of the single. Even so, he believed in the song’s greater mission.
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“I risked losing my family members,” he admits. This choice was extremely bold in addition to its high financial costs, his musical debut also served as his official coming out.
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Barrie’s Peter Pan, where people live free from society’s social expectations. He worked two part-time jobs to fund the creation of "Neverland,” a pop song with lyrics that express a longing for the mythical world of J.M. When no agency was willing to support his mission to create music while also being open about his sexuality, Holland decided he would go at it alone. As is customary in K-pop, he auditioned to join an entertainment company where he could train to become an idol. Things didn’t get easier when Holland decided to pursue music as a young adult. “Stories like that influenced me and gave me courage,” he says of his younger self. He specifically recalls a 2012 news story about Maroon 5’s Adam Levine refusing to patronize a restaurant after finding out that the owner supported outlawing gay marriage in the state of California. “I didn’t have anyone to get advice from,” he recalls, so he turned to the web to research LGBTQ+ culture in other parts of the world, and he was heartened by acts of support from Western artists.
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As his male classmates expressed interest in female artists, Holland was bullied for pining after K-pop boy group SHINee. Holland first realized he was gay in middle school, and there weren’t any LGBTQ+ public figures in South Korea that he could look up to. In August, a former K-pop reality show contestant made headlines when she posted a photo with her girlfriend on Instagram. Within the music industry, a small handful of proud LGBTQ+ Korean musicians, like R&B singer MRSHLL and trans entertainer Harisu, preceded Holland’s debut as an idol. Holland says that gay pride celebrations are getting bigger “little by little” each year, and Seoul’s local LGBTQ+ community is known to gather at the gay bars in the city’s Itaewon neighborhood. Despite this hostility, South Korea’s LGBTQ+ community is growing.