Wednesday, February 23, 2011

The Moving Trend of the Hallyu Boom


Although Japan and Korea are located so closely, Japan and Korea are very different culturally. For example, when Korean and Japanese people eat rice, Korea people use spoons and leave the rice bowl on the table but Japanese people bring their rice bowl close to the face and use the chopsticks to eat the rice. However, they also share similar characteristic such as respecting the elders and some of the words spoken in both languages. Some of the same words include promise, which is 約束 (pronounced as yakusoku) in Japanese and 약속 (pronounced as yaksok) in Korean. Korea and Japan share numerous similarities and differences.
Recently, Korean culture is spreading to Japan once again. In 2002, the first hallyu boom took place in Japan with the famous drama Winter Sonata. Winter Sonata won great popularity among old Japanese women and this was the great hallyu boom of Korea. From then on, several Korean singers and actors/actresses visited and performed in Japan. However, after a few years, the hallyu boom started to diminish.

However, during the few years, many great idol stars in Korea won great popularity and once again made the hallyu boom in Japan. The second hallyu boom started with the increasing popularity of a Korean idol group, T.V.X.Q. They were easily seen on the top five songs in the Japanese Oricon chart and had a concert in Tokyo Dom, which is the biggest concert hall in Japan.


After T.V.X.Q., many other popular idol groups such as Kara and Girl's Generation released albums in Japan and came out on TV shows many times. The significance of this second hallyu boom is that this time, Korean stars are gaining popularity among young teenage girls. Are you wondering why Korean stars became so popular in Japan? I'll explain about the reason of the popularity of Korean stars in my next entry!:)

No comments:

Post a Comment