Netflix’s Bet on Korean Content
The dystopian drama epitomizes how partnerships between multinational streaming giants and the local creative industry can become mutually beneficial.
Showing 81 items
The dystopian drama epitomizes how partnerships between multinational streaming giants and the local creative industry can become mutually beneficial.
Squid Game - the first Korean show to top Netflix’s charts - follows the country’s long cinematic tradition of examining inequality and power relations.
What might be prompting K-pop bands to engage in social activism on the global stage? One thought is that bands are shaped by their international...
History, politics, and geopolitics are ever-present in Northeast Asia - and they are increasingly part of the media landscape.
Kim Jong-un has called K-pop a ‘vicious cancer’ but whether it will destabilize the North Korean regime is impossible to say.
Netflix's new TV show D.P. is jumpstarting widespread discussions about abusive conditions that many conscripts face in South Korea’s military.
Korean fried chicken is an example of how an American dish became transformed in Korea and returned to the United States.
By jumping into the platform industry, music studios not only aim to become a global entertainment giant but also a competitive tech player.
The establishment of new bands modeled on K-pop's style and regimen gives rise to the question on what constitutes "authentic" K-pop.