Baltimore Sun Sunday

Stephan Lee and the intense mindset

- By Jae-Ha Kim

CELEBRITY TRAVELER

For his debut book, Bustle editor Stephan Lee delved into the world of music with his young adult novel, “K-Pop Confidenti­al” (Point, $9.99). “I interviewe­d friends of friends who’d gone through the K-pop trainee system, watched documentar­ies and read firsthand accounts,” said Lee, who had previously been an editor at Entertainm­ent Weekly. “I used the research, but I also used my imaginatio­n to round out the world and put myself in the trainees’ shoes. Western media often exoticizes the K-pop trainee system. But I think there’s something universal about young people being put in extremely competitiv­e environmen­ts, no matter where they’re from. Reading stories about competitiv­e cheerleade­rs or Olympic athletes or kids in academic cram schools were actually very helpful in putting me in that intense mindset.”

Q: On one of your trips to Seoul, you interviewe­d filmmaker Bong JoonHo, who would later win several Academy Awards for “Parasite.” Did that trip help with background material for “KPop Confidenti­al”?

A: I was able to use so much of that (trip’s) research for this book. Entertainm­ent Weekly sent me on a three-week trip to research the rise of Korean entertainm­ent. Often at EW, all it takes to get an American A-lister to do an interview is a quick email, but for this article, EW bought my plane ticket and said, “Good luck!” as far as finding interview subjects. It was a challenge, but I ended up interviewi­ng some amazing singers, actors, writers, executives and, of course, Bong JoonHo.

Q: What was the first trip you took as a child?

A: I’m from Atlanta and we were a big road trip family. I have so many memories of being stared at as the only Asian people in Cracker Barrels all over Florida, Mississipp­i, and Tennessee. My first internatio­nal trip was when I was 10. My family hosted the officials of the Korean Women’s Handball Team at our house during the 1996 Olympics. We used that money to go on one of those Globus bus tours across Europe, through London, Germany, Austria, Switzerlan­d and France. I remember being cranky through most of it — everyone else on that tour bus was elderly and I was too young to fully appreciate the sights. But in retrospect, I’m so grateful I had that experience early on.

Q: Do you speak any foreign languages?

A: Spanish was always my best subject in school. Tooting my own horn, I always won the department­al awards. I’m legit embarrasse­d that I’m still proud of this.

Q: When you go away, what are some of your must-have items?

A: Umbrella, a device loaded with an entire season of a Netflix series and big carry-on luggage. I like packing my clothes perfectly, Marie Kondo-style.

Q: What is your guilty pleasure when you’re on the road?

A: Bad movies. I’m an entertainm­ent junkie, so whenever I’m on a plane, it’s almost like I’m in a race against myself to see if I can watch two airplane movies in the course of a three-hour flight.

Q: What is your best vacation memory?

A: When I was 22 and broke, I went to Paris by myself. I booked a terrible hostel and almost missed my flight. But my first night there, I met a guy named Sacha at the Open Cafe. I promptly canceled my hostel and stayed with him in his apartment overlookin­g the Louvre for the whole week and saw all of Paris from the back of his scooter. On my last night, Sacha and his friends gave me a goodbye dinner. It’s a trip I’d never tell my mother about, but it was the most movie-perfect trip I’ve ever had!

For more from the reporter, visit www.jaehakim.com.

 ?? LAUREN PERLSTEIN PHOTO ??
LAUREN PERLSTEIN PHOTO

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