Gulf News

K-Pop suicides raise concerns

Entertainm­ent experts have long warned about the dark side of the scandal-ridden industry

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When K-Pop star Sulli ended her own life last month, her fellow K-Pop singer Goo Hara was heart-broken, bidding a farewell to her best friend in a live-streaming video. With tears running down her cheeks, Goo expressed hope that Sulli would live “as she pleases” in heaven.

“I will live twice more diligently now that you are gone,” she said. “Dear fans, I will be fine. Don’t worry about me.”

But on Sunday, six weeks after Sulli’s death, Goo herself was found dead in her Seoul home in what police were calling a suicide. The suicides by two of K-Pop’s most beloved stars have left fans in South Korea soulsearch­ing over what has gone wrong in K-Pop, their country’s most successful cultural export.

Lee Yong-pyo, chief of the Seoul Metropolit­an Police Agency, told reporters that Goo’s body was found by a maid on Sunday evening. Investigat­ors also found a handwritte­n memo in which Goo expressed her despair, Lee said.

As grief-stricken fans flocked to the Seoul hospital where her body lay, her family was planning to hold the funeral in private.

Once popular mainly just in Asian countries, K-Pop girl groups and boy bands, like BTS, now command huge global followings. The genre has captured the imaginatio­n of fans around the world with its fusion of synthesise­d songs, video art, fashionabl­e outfits and synchronis­ed dance routines that mix teasing sexuality with doe-eyed innocence.

But entertainm­ent industry experts have long warned about the dark side of the scandal-ridden K-Pop industry, which has remained largely hidden behind its glamour.

Legions of young South Koreans train for years, often starting in their early teens, honing their singing skills and dance moves in hopes of impressing

“star management” agencies who deem them good enough to debut their first song. Even after they make the cut to become K-Pop idols, their star status rarely lasts long, as younger stars with cuter looks and fancier dance moves replace them. K-Pop stars in their late 20s are already considered old, and these fading idols often try to carve out new roles in acting or as solo singers or talk-show regulars — a difficult transition that is often not successful.

The K-Pop phenomenon gets disseminat­ed largely through YouTube, Instagram, Twitter and other social media channels, where its stars are exposed to both a flood of fan letters and hateful comments and cyberbully­ing on everything from their looks to their singing skills to their private lives.

In 2017, Sulli, a former member of the South Korean girl group f(x), attended a memorial for another K-Pop star, Kim Jong-hyun, 27, who had killed himself after leaving a note that said he was consumed by depression.

Sulli, 25, took her own life last month after she bitterly complained about misogynist­ic internet trolls, especially after she joined a feminist campaign that advocated not wearing bras.

Goo, 28, a former member of the wildly popular K-Pop girl group Kara, had also struggled with online attacks. Trolls spread rumours that she owed her looks largely to plastic surgery. She admitted that she had gone under the knife for droopy eyes.

Things turned worse for her after she broke up with her hair-designer boyfriend, Choi Jong-beom. And rumours spread that there was video footage of the couple engaging in sex.

“I won’t be lenient on these vicious commentari­es any more,” Goo wrote on her Instagram account in June, complainin­g about her “mental health” problems and “depression.”

At times, she sounded desperate, pleading for her critics to relent. “Public entertaine­rs like myself don’t have it easy — we have our private lives more scrutinise­d than anyone else and we suffer the kind of pain we cannot even discuss with our family and friends,” she said.

Goo’s suicide has already resulted in soul-searching in South Korea. The number of people who supported an online petition to the office of President Moon Jae-in asking for harsher punishment for sexual harassment has more than doubled to 217,000 since her suicide was reported.

In her last Instagram message, Goo uploaded a photo of her lying on her bed. She wrote “Jalja,” or “sleep tight.”

 ??  ?? Goo Hara.
Goo Hara.
 ?? Photos by AP. AFP and Reuters ?? A man pays tribute at a memorial altar of Goo Hara at the Seoul St Mary’s Hospital in Seoul on November 25.
Photos by AP. AFP and Reuters A man pays tribute at a memorial altar of Goo Hara at the Seoul St Mary’s Hospital in Seoul on November 25.
 ??  ?? Kim Jong-hyun.
Kim Jong-hyun.
 ??  ?? Sulli.
Sulli.

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