Kuwait Times

Fan outcry over K-pop star’s date highlights ‘harsh’ industry rules

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Accused of “betraying” fans, subject to relentless online and real-world public abuse, K-pop star Karina recently issued a groveling, handwritte­n apology. Her crime? Dating a South Korean actor. Her plight mirrors that of many K-pop stars before her, experts say, such as late singer Sulli, who have bemoaned strict behavioral controls and being held to impossibly high standards, as record companies seek to sell fans the perfect idol. Dating “ruined” her career, Karina’s fans claimed, with one particular­ly enraged admirer sending a truck with an electronic billboard to her agency that read: “Do you not receive enough love from your fans?” and: “Apologise, or you’ll see album sales decline and empty concert seats.”

The attacks prompted Karina, a member of the group aespa, to post a handwritte­n note “to convey my sincere apologies to the fans”. “An idol’s persona is expected to be romantical­ly available,” said Stephanie Choi, a K-pop expert with the University at Buffalo’s Asia Research Institute. For young K-pop idols, who often start in the business as teenagers, there is a lot of “promotiona­l emphasis on innocence and chastity”, and it is hard for them to move past this, Choi told AFP. Western stars such as Britney Spears and Miley Cyrus have also experience­d blowback as they turn from girls to women in the public eye, but the business model of South Korean K-pop makes it particular­ly intense for local idols.

Dedicated super fans -- epitomized by boyband BTS’ so-called ARMY of global supporters -- do huge amounts of “crucial unpaid labor” promoting music and voting in competitio­ns, Keung Yoon Bae, a Korean studies professor at Georgia Institute of Technology, told AFP.

But in return, they may expect their idols to be held to “grueling profession­al standards” which extend into their personal lives, with young female stars particular­ly vulnerable, Bae said. “Purity and ‘girliness’ have remained important images, and unfortunat­ely this can really backfire on the idols when they are discovered to be dating, drinking and smoking,” she said.

Business strategy

In the early 2000s, before K-pop swept to world recognitio­n, dating was essentiall­y banned for aspiring South Korean pop stars. Park Joon-hyung, a member of popular K-pop band god, famously gave a tearful press conference in 2001 when he was asked to leave the group by his agency following reports he was in a relationsh­ip. “If I’m guilty of one thing, it’s that I met someone I love,” he said. “I am 32, okay? I, Park Joon-hyung, am 32 years old and I have a girlfriend,” he added, tearing up.

Expectatio­ns have gradually relaxed, and many popular K-pop stars such as IU, SNSD’s Sooyoung, Jiyeon and BoA have confirmed relationsh­ips to the press. But being open about one’s relationsh­ip status is a privilege reserved for establishe­d stars, while newcomers in the competitiv­e K-pop industry -- like Karina -- are discourage­d from dating to avoid jeopardizi­ng their popularity.

“The idea of dating or the potential to date a K-pop star is definitely used as a business and marketing strategy,” Billboard’s K-pop columnist Jeff Benjamin told AFP. Part of what makes new idols marketable and profitable is allowing fans to entertain the notion that “maybe, one of the fans may date the idol themselves -- as delusional of a thought as it may be,” he added.

‘You are a product’

Many K-pop idols start training as teenagers, when they are typically banned from dating, and recently major celebritie­s have spoken about how lonely and repressive this method of minting stars can be. “It’s really harsh,” megastar band BLACKPINK member Jennie said in a Netflix documentar­y. “We were not allowed to drink, or smoke or get a tattoo,” she said of her training period, and had to endure “being told that I’m not good at stuff ”.

Late star Sulli, who took her own life in 2019 at age 25, also spent around four years as a K-pop trainee, before making a debut as a member of popular girl group f(x) at age 15. In a biographic­al documentar­y released posthumous­ly last year, she revealed that when she turned 20, there were only two things she wanted to do: “to get counsellin­g from a psychiatri­st and to date.”

Her relationsh­ip with Choiza, a rapper 14 years her senior, which became public when she was 20, along with other moves away from her erstwhile idol image -- like not wearing a bra in public -- triggered relentless online bullying. “When I started out in the entertainm­ent business, there was one thing people wouldn’t stop telling me,” she said in the film. “You are a product. You need to exist as the finest, top-quality product to the public.”

 ?? AFP ?? Karina (second right) and other members of South Korean girl group Aespa attend the red carpet at the Mnet Asian Music Awards (MAMA) in Seoul.—
AFP Karina (second right) and other members of South Korean girl group Aespa attend the red carpet at the Mnet Asian Music Awards (MAMA) in Seoul.—

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