In Peek-a-boo, members of the group Red Velvet kill a pizza delivery boy as part of an occult ritual. It is the ultimate proof that K-Pop is completely sold out to the occult elite.

Red Velvet is the name of a delicious cake, but it is also the name of a K-Pop girl band that is extremely popular in Asia. The group’s video Peek-a-Boo reads as an Occult-Elite 101 introductory course and it ends with the death of a random guy for no apparent reason. The video is a perfect continuation of a disturbing trend seen across pop culture: The killing of men by female stars. Why is murder being celebrated in pop videos aimed at young people?

One thing is for sure, the members of Red Velvet are not making the decisions involving their careers. And they’re not directing any videos.

Indeed, Red Velvet is signed with the notorious South Korean label SM Entertainment, which has made the news several times for subjecting “idols” (that’s how these performers are they’re called in Korea) to “slave contracts” and mistreatment.

SM Entertainment, one of the largest Korean music labels, has had a series of legal challenges to its contractual policies. In 2009, former Super Junior member Han Geng claimed that the company forced him to do things he didn’t want to do under threat of fines if he disobeyed and denied him sick leave when he developed gastritis and kidney problems. (…) In 2012, EXO-M’s leader Kris filed a lawsuit to get his contract annulled due to the company’s neglect of his opinion and health: “The company has treated me like a machine part or as an object of control rather than presenting a vision as an entertainer.”

– ListVerse, 10 Horrifying Realities From The World Of Asian Pop Music

While K-Pop songs are often cute and upbeat, the behind-the-scenes of this world is extremely sinister. The entire K-Pop system is based on the recruitment and exploitation of young, talented individuals who are subjected to a military-style training program to turn them into slaves.

According to one Singaporean woman who was picked out at a mass audition by a Korean talent scouting firm, trainees are expected to work 14-hour days to practice gym, dance, swimming, and singing. Breakfast is limited to low-fat biscuits, bananas, and lettuce. Chicken breast and salad are served for dinner, and no water is allowed after 7:00 PM to prevent “bloatedness.” Trainees are accompanied into the bathroom by a minder and made to wear sunglasses at all times. One part of the process of becoming a K-pop is extensive plastic surgery, which is so common in the K-pop industry that an entire website exists documenting before and after shots of idols’ surgical procedures.

– Ibid.

And that is only the beginning. Those who go through this ordeal, especially women, are often turned into sex slaves (Beta Kittens).

Female trainees are traded by brokers and are allegedly brought to bars and forced to engage in sexual work to get ahead, even if they are still minors. One ex-trainee claimed in an interview that the going rate for a “meeting” with a female trainee was $220, while very young trainees, or those signed with a prominent label, cost between $700-900. In 2010, Taiwanese singer Estrella Lin claimed that when she was a member of girl group 3EP Beauties, her agency bartered her body to potential investors. She said this is an open secret throughout the Korean entertainment industry, and actresses and singers are expected or forced to give sexual services in order to get advancement opportunities. In 2002, Jang Seok-woo, CEO of Open World Entertainment, was arrested for not only sexually abusing female trainees, but encouraging male idols in his employ to do the same. Aphrodisiac substances were administered to trainees, some of whom were underage.

– Ibid.

As usual, these stories are only the tip of the iceberg. As seen in my several other articles about K-Pop and J-Pop, the entire system is drenched in Monarch programming and occult rituals.

Red Velvet’s Peek-a-boo is another proof of the sad truth about K-Pop: A group of Beta kittens who dance to the occult elite’s agenda and symbolism.

Let’s look at the video.

Peek-a-Boooo

Why am I booing? Because the message behind the song is toxic.

The video begins by setting an “occult ritual” vibe to the story.

In all occult circles, it is widely established that spells, rituals, and sacrifices yield the most potency during a full moon.

For the rituals that require the most potent and powerful magick, the fullest phase of the moon is most appropriate. (…) The full moon is the point when the moon reflects all light from the sun back to the earth. It is the most potent time of the lunar cycle.

– Occult100, Moon Phases

We then see the girls “preparing” for the blood sacrifice – and they’re dressed for the occasion.

Before killing the guy, the girls feel the need to almost kill each other. Why? Because K-Pop idols are interchangeable pawns.

The same William-Tell-inspired scene (where an expert marksman shoots an apple placed on a child’s head) is echoed in another K-Pop video: Ladies’ Code Kiss Kiss.

Bizarre fact, EunB died in a car accident after the release of that video (read my article explaining how Kiss Kiss eerily foreshadowed the death of 2 members of the group Ladies’ Code).

Other than nearly killing each other, the girls of Red Velvet also have a bizarre obsession with pizza.

What does this all mean? The answer is in the signs.

When the pizza delivery boy arrives, the ritual begins.

The guy tries to run away and the girls find it very funny.

One of the girls takes the delivery boy’s hand, making him believe that she will help him escape.

Therefore, we are to understand that Red Velvet has killed all of the boys on that poster. They’re, like, serial killers. The boys are still considered “missing” meaning that they’ve never been found and Red Velvet are above suspicion … even though they had to call pizza places and give their address to get pizza delivered. It doesn’t make sense. Any detective would have solved this case in about 35 seconds. Unless these rituals are protected by the elite, like they often are.

So, did this pizza boy make it out alive? Nope.

The video ends with a murder. That’s it. No twist, no lesson, no meaning. Just an innocent guy who got lured into the house of evil K-Pop witches and got murdered in a ritualistic fashion. Considering that most K-Pop fans are very young, what the heck?

The video is part of a wider, and disturbing, trend: The killing of men by female singers in music videos.

Why Are Men Being Killed in Videos?

Here are some examples of the music industry celebrating female stars killing men.

Some might rationalize these videos by claiming that they’re about “strong women” and “feminism”. At the risk of stating the obvious, the violent murder of a person is not “feminism”, it is the violent murder of a person.

In Conclusion

Red Velvet’s Peek-A-Boo has no “moral of the story”. The girls ritualistically kill innocent men, they look fabulous while doing it, and, ultimately, they get away with it. All the while, they do all kinds of one-eye signs to highlight the fact that they’re industry slaves following the script that was given to them by their superiors.

As established in my previous articles, K-Pop is 100% on par with the occult elite’s agenda. The same debasing, mind-corrupting messages that are pushed on young people who listen to Western pop are promoted in Asia as well.

While feminism used to be about equality between the sexes, it is currently being steered towards anger, hatred, and the lust for the destruction. Is this the path to follow to become a better, more spiritual, and enlightened person? Of course not. It is a path towards the exact opposite. And that’s what they want. They want a society filled with petulant, immature, irrational and self-centered children … who are entertained by playing peek-a-boo.