K-pop music Many Korean pop stars and groups are known throughout
East and
Southeast Asia. K-pop often features young performers. In the 1970s and 1980s, many musicians appeared, such as
Cho Yong Pil, a renowned musician from that period. He used many sources such as the
synthesizer. Among his influence, he is well known for popularizing
rock music. The popularization of Korean pop music has come from many sources including, YouTube and other video streaming sources. With the growth of social media, it has helped with the expansion of K-pop outside of Asia. The dominant explanation of the global K-pop phenomenon is the "hybrid" view that advances an argument about the combined along with Korean, the Austronesian, Chinese, Japanese, and Indian cultures as a grand Asian Culture (AC) that increasingly countervails the previously dominant Western Culture (WC) as a whole (Chua, 2004). K-pop became one of Korea's top exporting industries with its rapid and widespread popularity around the world, particularly in the East. Korean popular culture has a timely commercial combination of (1) the global liberalization of music markets in Asia and more recently the rest of the world; and (2) the rapid advancement of digital technologies like YouTube which prefers to select and feature perfectly photogenic performers from all over the world, including Korean girl and boy bands (Oh, 391). The emergence of the group
Seo Taiji and Boys in 1992 marked a turning point for Korean popular music by incorporating elements of American popular musical genres of the 1990s. To illustrate, their popularity was based on innovative hybridization of music as they creatively mixed the genres like rap, soul, rock and roll, techno, punk, hardcore and even ppongjjak, and invented a unique musical form which 'employs rap only during the verses, singing choruses in a pop style' with dynamic dance movements. They showed how Korean rap would sound. Consequently, Seo Taiji and Boys expanded the scope of K-pop. In 2002,
BoA became the first Korean pop star to break through in Japan following the fall of barriers that had restricted the import and export of entertainment between the countries since the end of World War II. For that reason, she was awarded the title of Goodwill Ambassador, and has since contributed to restoring the good relations between Japan and South Korea. In addition, there is also traditional Korean pop music, or
trot. Appealing to older Koreans, there are many popular singers, including
Tae Jin Ah,
Na Hoon-a and
Song Dae Kwan, mainly in their 50s and 60s, if not older. However, trot has recently experienced a resurgence due to the popularity of
Jang Yoon Jeong, a young semi-trot star, who had a breakout hit with "Omona."
Noraebang Karaoke, a Japanese loan word, is most commonly called "Noraebang" (노래방, literally, "song room") in Korea instead but various
Korean alternatives like
Norae yeonseupjang (), or
Norae yeonseupshil () are also sometimes used.
Noraebang is even conducted in transport vehicles such as tourist buses. Noraebang is the equivalent to the
Karaoke-Box in Japan, whereas singing before an audience of a karaoke bar is called Karaoke () in Korea. Recently, a coin karaoke, which is a form of payment different from the existing karaoke, appeared.
Korean popular culture outside Korea There are approximately 70,000 Korean students in American colleges every year. Furthermore, increased immigration has reached to booming heights of over a million in 2010 alone. With these migrations have come the spread and expansion of Korean Popular culture. For example, the popular South Korean film titled "Shiri" () sold more than 5.78 million movie tickets in the United States alone. One of the reasons for the success of the Korean Wave comes from the influence that the Korean government has in the production and distribution of popular culture. Recent years have led to changes in access to both enjoying and creating new songs, movies, and other types of popular culture. One example comes from recent collaboration with the Korean Government and others to help achieve glocalization, making hallyu approachable and enjoyable for people from many different cultures and backgrounds.
Film and television The popularity of Korean films has risen since the success of
Shiri in 1999. South Korea is one of the few countries where Hollywood productions do not enjoy a dominant share of the domestic market, partly due to screen quotas requiring cinemas to show Korean films at least 73 days a year.
Shiri, a film about a North Korean spy preparing a coup in Seoul, was the first in Korean history to sell more than two million tickets in Seoul alone. It also earned $14 million at the Japanese box office alone, helping it to surpass box office hits such as
The Matrix and
Star Wars. The success of
Shiri motivated other Korean films with larger budgets. Upon release,
Shiri attracted 5.8 million theatre-goers; these numbers outscored the local theater attendance for the Hollywood-made film,
Titanic. The venture capital firm KDB Capital, the main firm that invested money into the production of
Shiri (specifically, around $333,000), would end up earning more than 300 percent in returns (Shim, 33), helping to spark the Korean government's interest in the possible profits that can be awarded through the entertainment industry. In 2000
Joint Security Area achieved huge success, surpassing the benchmark set by
Shiri. The following saw
Friend manage the same. In 2001, the romantic comedy
My Sassy Girl outsold
The Lord of the Rings and
Harry Potter which ran at the same time.
Park Chan-wook, the director of
Joint Security Area, has gone on to direct many popular films in Korea and abroad, and is best known for
Oldboy.
Kim Ki-Duk, another well-respected filmmaker who is noted for using minimal dialogue to create an emotional response from the audience, is known especially for
3-Iron and
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring. As of 2004, new films continue to break records, with many Korean productions achieving greater popularity than Hollywood films. Both
Silmido and
Taegukgi (
The Brotherhood) were watched by over 10 million people, almost a quarter of the Korean population.
Silmido is based on a true story about a secret special force, while
Taegukgi is a blockbuster about the
Korean War from the director of
Shiri. The social satire and monster movie
The Host (2006) broke Korean box office records and grossed $1.8 million in the United States. This success attracted the attention of
Hollywood. Films such as
Shiri are now distributed in the
United States. In 2001,
Miramax bought the rights to an English-language remake of the successful Korean action comedy movie,
My Wife is a Gangster. Many Korean films also reflect the unique circumstances of the
division and
reunification of Korea. In 2016,
Train to Busan, directed by
Yeon Sang-ho created a new sub division genre of zombie-like film in South Korea. Unlike many more western-made zombie films, Yeon uses an entirely Korean cast to establish and display a Korean-only film. Becoming a Korean zombie blockbuster film, modeled after
Shiri(1999),
Train to Busan earned a worldwide grossing of US$93.1 million. The film reflects social and economic challenges in a developing South Korean society, creating a realistic perspective of the future. In 2020,
Parasite, directed by Bong Joon-ho, which depicts the
economic inequality situation in the country, won four awards at the
92nd Academy Awards:
Best Picture,
Best Director,
Best Original Screenplay, and
Best International Feature Film, becoming the
first non-English-language film to win the Academy Award for Best Picture.
K-dramas Korean television and especially the short form dramatic mini-series colloquially called "dramas" by Koreans and
K-dramas elsewhere have become extremely popular outside of Korea. Dramas were foremost among cultural exports trend in Asia and elsewhere. The trend has driven Korean stars to fame and has greatly boosted the image and prestige of Korean popular culture. One example that the Korean Wave of drama have come into existence is in 1997, when the national
China Central Television Station (CCTV) aired a Korean television drama,
What is Love All About?, turned out to be a big hit. Responding to popular demand, CCTV re-aired the program in 1998 and recorded the second-highest ratings ever in the history of Chinese television. In 1999, in Taiwan and China, another Korean television drama serial
Stars in My Heart, became a big hit. Since then, Korean television dramas have rapidly taken up airtime on television channels in countries such as Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Vietnam and Indonesia, which saw media liberalization beginning in the 1990s. Dramas showcase a wide range of stories, but the most prominent among the export dramas have been romance (
All About Eve,
Autumn Fairy Tale,
Winter Sonata,
My Fair Lady,
Stairway to Heaven,
Full House,
My Name is Kim Sam Soon,
Goong,
My Girl,
Boys Over Flowers,
Shining Inheritance, ''
You're Beautiful, Heartstrings, Secret Garden, Dream High) and historical fantasy dramas (Dae Jang Geum, Emperor of the Sea, Jumong, Sungkyunkwan Scandal). Korea has also aired their first blockbuster spy drama, IRIS''.
Korean animation While
The Simpsons is the best known back-room product of South Korea, many other popular English-language animation series (
Futurama,
King of the Hill,
Avatar: The Last Airbender,
SpongeBob SquarePants,
Family Guy) have had the basic animation,
in-betweening, and coloring done in South Korea; there has also been some South Korean collaborations and minor contributions on
anime from Japan. This work is professional, but not necessarily Korean in tone or manner. Recently, the animation
Pororo the Little Penguin became one of the most popular cultural exports of South Korea, being exported to 120 countries worldwide. This little blue penguin has 1,500
spin-off products and a section in a theme park. Pororo is so powerful that Koreans call him Potongryong ("President Pororo"). According to the Seoul Business Agency, Pororo will generate global sales of 38 billion won (approximately US$36 million) this year, and the brand is worth 389.3 billion won for Iconix (the firm that created it) and others.
KPop Demon Hunters is an American animated film set in Korea, released on June 20, 2025. It was directed and conceived by
Maggie Kang and
Chris Appelhans, and animated by Sony Pictures Imageworks. The film was later released on Netflix and achieved global box office success. Immediately after its release, it entered the Netflix Top 10 in more than 90 countries and ranked No. 1 in several of them.
Korean comics or manhwa In
Korean, the term
manhwa (), derived from
manhua (), simply means 'comics' but outside the two Korean states, it generally refers to the comics of South Korea, although some comics come from North Korea as well.
Webtoons Webtoons are digital comics invented in February 2003 by the website Daum in South Korea. "Love Story" by Kang Full was the first successful webtoon that popularized the industry. Naver founded Line Webtoon in June 2004, and launched their website worldwide on July 2, 2004. Other countries including mainland China, India, Taiwan and Singapore have created their own Webtoon Industries. ==See also==