https://top-korea.blogspot.com/2012/01/news-jakarta-postasia-news-network-cute.html
South Korea’s best-known export today is not pickled cabbage.
Instead, it comes in a sleek, pretty package and suits the tastes of people across Asia – especially young women – and increasingly the world.
Move over, kimchi. Come on down, K-pop male idols.
In the past few years, Indonesian teenage girls, like their peers across Asia and increasingly in Europe, have become devoted fans of Hallyu (Korean wave) entertainers such as Choi Si-won of Super Junior, Kim Jaejoong of JYJ (formerly a member of DBSK/TVXQ), SS501′s Kim Hyun-joong and many more.
Back in 2009, the era of Bae Yong-joon with his famous Winter Sonata TV series gave way to protégé Hyun-joong in the role of Yoon Ji-hoo in Boys Before Flowers.
Jaejoong’s Protect the Boss and Si-won’s Poseidon, produced in 2011, have captured the hearts of fans who watch the series however they can - cable TV, video streaming, pirated DVDs or on YouTube.
Asian countries, especially Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan, have turned out plenty of attractive young entertainers in the past, but these Korean men – stylish, well groomed and well built – fulfill a fantasy for young women of the very handsome boy next door.
According to psychologist Dewi Dewo, moviegoers want to see men who are good-looking but not intimidating.
“Why do sweet-looking boys sell? Because the trend today is for them. Even young stars from the West are cute guys,” she says.
Tati Winarsih, the author of Seoulvivor, a book on K-pop hot spots in Seoul released late November, believes that it’s only natural for everybody to want to see “beautiful creatures”.
“These girls really love those pretty boys because despite their beautiful look, they are still able to show their macho side, their manly character. They aren’t effeminate despite their beauty,” she says, adding that reality shows have helped the stars to reveal their true selves to their fans.
The dramas also sell Korea.
Most of the shows treat viewers to beautiful scenes of Korea’s main tourism sites such as the famous Jeju Island or the landmark N Seoul Tower on Namsan – a major driver of the increasing number of foreign tourists arriving in South Korea.
The dramas also perform wonders in advertising traditional Korean dishes such as kimchi and bibimbap.
Even UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, himself South Korean, has praised the K-pop stars, saying that, thanks to them, “Korea’s status was elevated”.
You can read the entire 3-part article here
Source: AsiaOne
Shared by: JYJ3
South Korea’s best-known export today is not pickled cabbage.
Instead, it comes in a sleek, pretty package and suits the tastes of people across Asia – especially young women – and increasingly the world.
Move over, kimchi. Come on down, K-pop male idols.
In the past few years, Indonesian teenage girls, like their peers across Asia and increasingly in Europe, have become devoted fans of Hallyu (Korean wave) entertainers such as Choi Si-won of Super Junior, Kim Jaejoong of JYJ (formerly a member of DBSK/TVXQ), SS501′s Kim Hyun-joong and many more.
Back in 2009, the era of Bae Yong-joon with his famous Winter Sonata TV series gave way to protégé Hyun-joong in the role of Yoon Ji-hoo in Boys Before Flowers.
Jaejoong’s Protect the Boss and Si-won’s Poseidon, produced in 2011, have captured the hearts of fans who watch the series however they can - cable TV, video streaming, pirated DVDs or on YouTube.
Asian countries, especially Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan, have turned out plenty of attractive young entertainers in the past, but these Korean men – stylish, well groomed and well built – fulfill a fantasy for young women of the very handsome boy next door.
According to psychologist Dewi Dewo, moviegoers want to see men who are good-looking but not intimidating.
“Why do sweet-looking boys sell? Because the trend today is for them. Even young stars from the West are cute guys,” she says.
Tati Winarsih, the author of Seoulvivor, a book on K-pop hot spots in Seoul released late November, believes that it’s only natural for everybody to want to see “beautiful creatures”.
“These girls really love those pretty boys because despite their beautiful look, they are still able to show their macho side, their manly character. They aren’t effeminate despite their beauty,” she says, adding that reality shows have helped the stars to reveal their true selves to their fans.
The dramas also sell Korea.
Most of the shows treat viewers to beautiful scenes of Korea’s main tourism sites such as the famous Jeju Island or the landmark N Seoul Tower on Namsan – a major driver of the increasing number of foreign tourists arriving in South Korea.
The dramas also perform wonders in advertising traditional Korean dishes such as kimchi and bibimbap.
Even UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, himself South Korean, has praised the K-pop stars, saying that, thanks to them, “Korea’s status was elevated”.
You can read the entire 3-part article here
Source: AsiaOne
Shared by: JYJ3
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