And under it, in bold: Exhibit A: The BBMA OMA Ally Advance PDF – Obtained under false pretenses.
The PDF unfolded like an accordion of ghosts. Dozens of artists. Dozens of category jumps. Country singers turned EDM. Folk duos turned hyperpop. Every single one had signed the same OMA clause. Every single one had been erased from their original genre’s history books.
He clicked.
Leo Chen, a junior analyst at Titan Records, had been asleep for exactly forty-seven minutes. He’d been grinding on the Q3 royalty reports for fourteen hours. But the sender’s name— M. Solomon, CEO —turned his blood to ice water. Bbma Oma Ally Advance Pdf
The first bomb dropped at 6:00 AM, when Leo forwarded the PDF to three journalists and one very confused K-pop stan account on Twitter.
Leo looked back at the PDF. The countdown ticked: 28 days, 11 hours, 38 minutes.
But one name was highlighted in yellow.
Artist: Ally Ventura. Current Category: Top Latin Female Artist. Advance Category: Top Global K-Pop Artist.
He closed the file. Then he opened a new document. A blank page. He typed a new title:
And somewhere in a hotel room in Miami, Ally Ventura woke up to a phone full of chaos—and for the first time in months, smiled. And under it, in bold: Exhibit A: The
He clicked.
Below it, a single line of fine print: “Pre-ceremony performance rights & category reallocation. Effective immediately.”
His phone rang again. Seoul. This time, he answered. Dozens of category jumps