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Why are Korean idols facing more threats from fans?

  • Published : Jul 6, 2017 - 14:43
  • Updated : Jul 6, 2017 - 14:43

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Twice (JYP Entertainment)
A growing number of Korean pop stars received death threats in recent months, raising questions as to why such incidents occur.

From Apink to Twice and BTS, South Korea’s most beloved artists have faced serious threats from anonymous people online and over the phone. This has put the local entertainment industry on edge, amid growing concerns over how celebrities can be better protected from such threats.

Most of these threats are written out of anger. Irrational jealousy over celebrities who are dating or show even remote romantic interest in someone can cause incredible rage, resulting in furious fans writing threats online.

“When fans become infatuated with their favorite celebrities beyond what is considered rational, it becomes a turning point. The fans become possessive, as if they are taking ownership of them,” said culture expert Kim Sung-soo to the local media. “And because the fans see the celebrities as possessions, if the celebrities do not do what the fans want, they go ballistic.”

Death threats are not new to the Korean idol industry. Celebrities have often faced threats right at their front doors, such as 1990s group Baby VOX, which received a letter written in blood. There have even been attempts made to harm idols: In 2006, TVXQ’s Yunho was given a drink mixed with super glue by an “anti-fan,” and he was subsequently hospitalized.

With online communities growing in numbers, it is easy to post an angry threat on the internet.

On June 13, a user of conservative online community Ilbe issued a death threat against Twice’s Mina, citing the possibility of the singer being in a relationship.

Twice’s agency JYP Entertainment responded that it would take legal action, to which the user posted a handwritten apology. He said that he did not know his threat would incite so much fear and shock.

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(Online community)
The next day, amid news of Apink releasing its sixth mini album, an anonymous man phoned Gangnam Police Station saying he planned to stab the six members of the group.

The man later identified himself as a fan through a phone interview with local media, saying he made the threats out of anger but without an intention to kill.

During the phone call, the man said he was upset because the group appeared on a reality show that featured the members going on blind dates with actor trainees. He argued that he was the victim as he had spent years buying Apink’s merchandise while they had the freedom to date other men.

Last Tuesday, the same culprit called KBS-2TV saying that he had installed a bomb at Music Bank, a weekly music show that was to feature Apink that day. After the call, a squad from the Seoul Metropolitan Police evacuated the site and enlisted the help of a bomb disposal unit. No bomb was found.

With netizens feeling increasingly empowered online, the severity of their threats has also grown. In a violent and descriptive way, some fans pose death threats as a way to control their favorite idols by instilling fear in them.

Twice was also subjected to such anger when it began promotional activities in Japan. Another user of the Ilbe community site posted his outrage over the group performing abroad, accusing the group of abandoning South Korea and reaching out to Japan out of greed. The user said that he would be waiting at the airport when the group came back, with 10 liters of hydrochloric acid.

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(Online community)
Top-rated K-pop groups also encounter danger when they fly out of Korea to meet foreign fans.

BTS was exposed to a death threat in March, when a netizen said that she would shoot Jimin during his solo performance of “Lie” at Honda Center in Anaheim, where the group performed for the final leg of its US tour. The netizen added that she had two accomplices and even specified the seat number that she would attack from. With heightened security at all concert locations, the tour finished successfully and without incident.

Although most death threats prove to be words rather than action, they remain a serious concern.

In South Korea, death threats are not taken lightly by law. “It is still a crime to intimidate someone or cause fear,” lawyer Yang Ji-min was quoted as saying by the local media. “Those convicted can serve up to three years in imprisonment and be fined up to 5 million won ($4,300).”

By Paige Shin / Intern reporter (paigeshin2019@heraldcorp.com)

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