Los Angeles Times

A convergenc­e of K-pop fans

Thousands descend on downtown for KCON shows, talks, more.

- By August Brown

Now that K-Pop is as mainstream as “Ellen” and “Saturday Night Live,” young people with any perceived link to the scene are starting to see some upsides.

“I had a [Korean] friend who started getting so many more swipes on Tinder after BTS got big,” said Kristin Jordan, a 24-year-old K-pop superfan attending the KCON convention in downtown L.A. on Saturday.

Jordan said that her friend enjoyed the extra attention but that he wasn’t totally convinced of everyone’s motivation­s.

“He was like, ‘Should I be feeding into this? Should I start dressing like a K-pop star?’ He kind of started seeing [that attention] in a certain new way,” Jordan said.

KCON, now held in New York and L.A., has similarly blossomed from a niche pop subculture in the U.S. into an enormous industry that’s influencin­g music, fashion, beauty and digital life. KCON L.A., held annually since 2012, is a now four-day symposium that draws more than 100,000 fans and emerging acts like Ateez, Loona, Momoland and Stray Kids, along with offering a laundry list of panels, meet-andgreets and dance-offs.

Its fans, artists and profession­als are grappling with what to do now that it’s getting so much attention — and what debts the scene may owe to other cultures before it.

“In the word ‘appropriat­ion’ is a sense of property. Culture is collective, so it’s tricky,” said Michelle Cho, an assistant professor of East Asian popular culture at the University of Toronto who spoke on a panel about cultural conflict in K-pop. “It can lead to an impasse when you think of it as ‘mine.’ But you have to be respectful of it when an identity is premised on it.”

One striking thing about contempora­ry K-pop in the U.S. is how diverse the fan base is: mostly young, but from every race, sexuality and gender expression. That heterogene­ous fandom upends questions about K-pop as cultural property in the U.S. At KCON, that was fully on display in the concourses of the L.A. Convention Center, as preteen black girls, middle-age Latin men, gay couples and 20-somethings with anime hair all gamboled to take pictures with their idols.

The culture mashup made for some fascinatin­g convergenc­es, but not without confusion or disputes.

“Now you get K-pop groups marketing to Japanese audiences dressed like cholos and then wondering why they’re seeing pushback,” said Miranda Ruth Larsen, a lecturer at Bunkyo Gakuin University in Japan. Larsen studies K-pop’s intersecti­ons with race and gender and national identity. While obviously Korean, K-pop is also a sponge for ideas and an aesthetic all its own. It grew from U.S. hiphop and dance music (and, for that matter, rock ’n’ roll played on postwar military bases in South Korea) but it’s now reshaping U.S. pop.

“Culture’s always sticky,” Larsen said. “Who has the power to decide how it does and doesn’t travel?”

Sometimes it doesn’t travel at all. Chungha, a former star of the pioneering girl group I.O.I., was one of two acts that missed KCON because of visa issues, and fans were quick to blame contentiou­s U.S. border policies (proving that politics are never distant, even at an escapist event like this).

But sometimes it travels right into your bedroom. There was a tutorial on Kpop drag makeup, where fans of any gender could learn the scene’s tricks to play with their presentati­on.

In a scene that prizes gentleness in male idols and where plastic surgery is ubiquitous, the subject was potent. Talks on LGBT fans, dating cultures in Korea and even a session for K-pop fans over 30 (we do exist, it’s true) showed how the fandom can permeate other parts of your identity and how the growing scene is accommodat­ing more kinds of fans than ever before.

One big theme at this year’s conference was the slow reemergenc­e of successful girl groups.

As male groups like BTS, Monsta X and NCT127 have come to dominate the industry — thanks to the feverish loyalty of their young, female fan bases — many also wondered where the next wave of women would come from.

Blackpink and Twice can play arenas, but groups like Loona, Momoland and Iz*One drew some of the biggest devotional screams of the night (Fromis_9, Itzy and Mamamoo would bring their legions on Sunday).

Earlier at the convention, Cody and Wyatt, the male hosts of the popular YouTube music chat show “Gaypop,” joined a Blackpink drag show as “Snackpink” and welcomed the possibilit­y of a shift of power and artistry back to women.

“We need female management in the U.S., female [video] directors. It changes the whole power structure,” Cody said.

His panel cohost, Caro Malis, a K-pop writer for Soompi and Nylon, agreed: “Women don’t need to just be cute or your girl crush. They can be anything. The fact that it was shocking when girl groups started wearing pants instead of skirts shows how much it’s changed but also what it was like” just a few years ago.

As the conference turned to a 20,000-capacity concert at Staples Center, those ideas played out in the biggest spectacle the scene can offer.

The girl-group Loona’s “Butterfly” teased the hyper-feminine delivery of early-2000s pop with rigorous choreograp­hy; fellow women-led act Momoland’s “I’m So Hot” and “Baam” had an even brasher charisma and sax-stomping ’90s European house vibes. The male ensemble SF9’s “O Sole Mio” was a melange of Korean, Spanish and English that could be mistaken for a Maluma or Ozuna single if you missed the memo that this was a K-pop festival (which, of course, means that K-pop is as truly global as anything else today)

Ateez might have been the breakout act Saturday, though, with some of the strongest singles of the postBTS era. “Wave,” “Dancing Like Butterfly Wings” and “Hala Hala” are ultramoder­n standouts that dip into reggaeton, trap and tropical house. It’s no wonder why RCA signed the group to a U.S. deal, part of a wave of similar moves from majors.

As K-pop seeps into (and absorbs from) every other culture around the globe, it’s given South Korea a new shine from Tinder to top 40. Those exchanges are never without baggage, though, and KCON fans seemed more than eager to understand and explore them.

And if you got a few new right-swipes afterward, well, K-pop fandom definitely has its upsides nowadays.

 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles times ?? MEMBERS of the K-pop boy group AB6IX show off their moves during their performanc­e Saturday at Staples Center as part of KCON.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles times MEMBERS of the K-pop boy group AB6IX show off their moves during their performanc­e Saturday at Staples Center as part of KCON.
 ??  ?? THE RETURN of female groups was heralded at the symposium. Here, Momoland performs at Staples.
THE RETURN of female groups was heralded at the symposium. Here, Momoland performs at Staples.
 ??  ?? FANS gather outside Staples to dance on Saturday. The K-pop fandom in the U.S. is incredibly diverse.
FANS gather outside Staples to dance on Saturday. The K-pop fandom in the U.S. is incredibly diverse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States