BTS, K-pop And the Gift of the South Koreans
Yesterday, we were at the Mall of Asia when our vehicle was
slowed down by the traffic and we stopped in front of a throng of people (mostly
giddy-looking teenage girls and there’s more than a hundred of them) who
suddenly screamed happily at the top of their lungs. We thought a celebrity was
about to come out from a bus nearby, but it turned out that they were
screaming at the giant screen in front of MOA Arena where a promotional video
of a group was being shown. People screaming at a video clip? That’s something,
I thought. I didn’t know if people then did that at the Beatles.
The group, it turned out, was BTS, a boy band from South
Korea, which had a show that day at the MOA Arena. That’s the first time I heard
about the group. (Okay, I am quite clueless when it comes to K-pop). I turned
to my companions inside the vehicle, which included a nineteen year old girl, a
fourteen year old boy and a twelve year old girl, all pop culture enthusiasts, and asked them if they knew BTS. They weren’t
aware of the group. What did BTS mean? Behind The Scene? Big Time Syndicate?
Blue Turtle Soup? Blue Thong’s Sexy? They didn’t know either. They weren’t fans
of Korean music (why would you be attracted to songs you don’t understand? they
argued) but they loved their TV shows (thank God for subtitles). They mentioned
Goblin, Legend of The Blue Sea, and Love In The Moonlight. I remembered trying
to watch one Korean TV drama last year, Descendants of the Sun, at the behest of
someone who swore that it was great—but I gave up after watching two episodes,
thinking that I probably must transform first into a sixteen year old girl to
enjoy it.
I’m not planning to watch another Korean TV drama again and
you have to tie me tightly first to a chair before you could persuade me to
listen to a Korean song but I will wholeheartedly agree that when it comes to
entertainment, the South Koreans are thoroughly gifted. Some of my favorite
movies are Korean : Oldboy (2003), The Chaser (2008), Mother (2009), Save The
Green Planet (2003), I Saw The Devil (2010) and The Man From Nowhere (2010).
These are all great pieces of cinema. What’s “trust me” in Korean?
So we went inside the mall, we ate, bought something and I thought about the people watching the BTS concert, who were, most likely, happily singing along to the words they could hardly pronounce, to the words they had to Google before they could understand.
"Sarang haeyo," answered my 19-year old companion when our 12-year old companion asked her if she knew some Korean words.
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