One minute everyone wants a bit of British and American culture; the next you’re on the phone desperately trying to get tickets for the latest K-pop sensation

Two weeks back, while the world was marvelling at the Great British Queue, I was in a queue of a different sort – Ticketmaster’s – trying to get tickets to the South Korean band Blackpink. There was a countdown, there was an app, I had Mr Z on the case trying a different date, and it was completely fruitless, thank God, because I had no idea when I started how expensive they were.

My kid, along with my niece, is a “blink”, which means a fan of Blackpink, a girl band that US and UK media always call the most successful “South Korean” act of all time, omitting to mention that – as the most followed music act on YouTube – they really don’t need the national qualifier. The second most followed act, incidentally, is BTS – AKA the Bangtan Boys, also South Korean.

Zoe Williams is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Taliban bans women from national park in Afghanistan

Minister says women visiting the lakes of Band-e-Amir were not wearing their…

Seamus Jennings on the Tory approach to the law – cartoon

Continue reading…

UK infrastructure needs much more investment, say government advisers

National Infrastructure Commission says public transport, home heating and water networks all…

Dunblane victim’s brother and sister call on US to enact gun controls

Jack Crozier and Ellie Crozier lost their five-year-old sister Emma in Britain’s…