Marin Independent Journal

Why Americans are so obsessed with ‘Squid Game’

- By Airielle Lowe

My first introducti­on to “Squid Game” — the fictional Korean drama that is now No. 1 on Netflix worldwide — was through a brief clip on TikTok. The game “Red Light, Green Light” was being played, and I watched as one player was shot dead for moving after a “red light” was announced. The other players in the room then began to scream and run — only to be slaughtere­d in a frenzy of bullets.

The TikTok user providing commentary on the clip gasped at the violence, and I found myself doing the same. Though I’ve watched my fair share of Korean dramas in the past, the gore in this scene was something I wasn’t accustomed to for this genre (though numerous other shows and movies are breaking that boundary). Curious, later that evening I opened Netflix and went to the first episode to see what it was all about.

By the end of the series, my question had been answered. “Squid Game” is violent, emotional, and even comedic at times, but there are reasons beyond its shock value that make this drama so compelling, and for American viewers in particular. While “Squid Game” has been a global hit for its distributo­r Netflix, it’s also the first Korean series to hit No. 1 on the streaming platform in the US.

The series fixates on hundreds of vulnerable individual­s who are either currently in poverty or falling into it, and as a result are chosen to fight to the death in a series of children’s games in hopes of winning a cash prize equivalent to $38 million. The astronomic­al winnings are “graciously” donated by the wealthy elite, who watch the debt-ridden competitor­s kill each other in a quest for financial stability and riches.

Though the plot comes across as a gross exaggerati­on of some dystopian future, “Squid Game” reminds us of the unfair and unpredicta­ble nature of life that many of us have experience­d, even if you have had the benefit of growing up better off. We can see parallels to our own challenges in the lives of the players -- and when we do, we realize that “Squid Game” is in many ways a surprising mirror of our present reality.

In the US, we play our own version of “Squid Game” every day, and some do so more than others. Whether it’s fighting for better wages, to maintain a roof over one’s head, or even for basic worker rights, Americans are playing a game of opportunit­y and success, too -the main difference is that for the players in the show, the rules for success are much clearer.

Take, for example, the series’ character of Seong Gi-hun (played by Lee Jung-jae). Naïve but kind, Seong becomes a player in the game after a sequence of events that include finding out his mother has an illness that requires hospital care they cannot afford. It’s a story I immediatel­y recognized, especially with the abundance of GoFundMe pages related to medical expenses, and stories of even children trying to raise money for their family member’s outstandin­g medical bills.

When Gi-hun’s mother learns of her diagnosis, she refuses to stay at the hospital or get treatment because she believes they will not be able to pay the bill or pay the rent while she’s out of work. For many Americans, this isn’t science fiction -- this is real life. A 2021 study from the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n found that Americans are burdened with at least $140 billion in outstandin­g medical debt, with those in the poorest communitie­s owing roughly five times more on average than those in wealthier zip codes. “By 2020, individual­s had more medical debt in collection­s than they had in debt in collection­s from all other sources combined, including credit cards, phone bills, and utilities,” the study found.

There’s also Ali Abdul (played by Anupam Tripathi), a migrant factory worker from Pakistan. Ali is not compensate­d after losing several of his fingers during a work accident.

 ?? ?? Visitors take photos near a model of the doll named “Younghee” that is featured in Netflix’s series “Squid Game” displayed at the Olympic park in Seoul, South Korea.
Visitors take photos near a model of the doll named “Younghee” that is featured in Netflix’s series “Squid Game” displayed at the Olympic park in Seoul, South Korea.

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