Originally she was going to go with
My first thought was "This is where all the fashionable people are," though not necessarily because of its haute atmosphere--it was basically a sports bar--and we were all dressed fancy as well for the concert so it included us. We sat in the corner around a low wall from the bar section, which was incredibly crowded, ordered some tuna on sticky rice and French fries appetizers, and checked through the menus. I got the poké (which was good), an old fashioned (which was not), and then when the waitress asked if I wanted another drink, I said that
Like I mentioned, I don't usually go to big arena shows, and this is the first one I'd been to in twenty-five years. We went into the United Center through a side door with no line, past a bunch of lines that seemed to be 50% Asian women wearing miniskirts despite the freezing weather, and then past the merch booth and up three sets of stairs. I was not expecting to be sitting up so far from the stage that æspa were effectively ants:

This is on max zoom.
The concert was fine. I'm not an æspa superfan--that's Laila, to be honest--so the symbolism in the intra-song videos was lost on me. I just listened to the songs that I had heard dozens of times before when Laila wanted to hear them, including my favorite, Hold On Tight (my favorite because it's in English
), as well as a few songs I hadn't heard. The one in the image there is Pink Hoodie, new to me, and evidence of total failure on the part of the managing company because afterwards when we went to check out the merch station the two things That's the big problem, I think--as you can tell, I'm kind of indifferent to the concert. It was fine, and I had a nice time, but since we watched everything on big screens anyway and there wasn't a lot of interaction with the crowd, I didn't necessarily feel like I personally got anything out of it that I couldn't get from watching videos of their performance. The dancing, routines, etc were really only visible on the screens. Obviously I was in the minority, though, based on the reactions of the crowd, who shook their lightwands, danced when æspa called for it, and were clearly having a great time. Though, maybe it's just that I'm also not really in Kpop's target audience either.