[EMY]
After we published the songs, all we could do was wait.
Tomorrow would tell us if it would be a hit . . . or a total flop.
Galaxy Entertainment had no marketing budget whatsoever—none, zero, not even enough to print flyers.
There was no music video too.
We had to rely entirely on Angel's voice and the song's strength to carry us through. No fancy music videos, no radio campaigns, not even an auto-tuned TikTok dance challenge.
The song would air only once on a small local station. One broadcast. That was it.
I wasn't about to let it die quietly.
So while Angel practiced her bright smiles and mentally prepared for the release, I rolled up my sleeves and prepared for battle—digital battle.
"Angel," I told her seriously, pointing at her phone. "Post the song on every social media account you have. TikTalk, Songgram, TuneTok, MySpace—whatever dinosaur platform still exists."
She blinked. "M-MySpace?"