K-pop Buzz on Twitter Grows Substantially Despite COVID-19 | Be Korea-savvy

K-pop Buzz on Twitter Grows Substantially Despite COVID-19


This image, provided by Twitter Korea on Sept 22, 2020, shows the growth trajectory in the volume of K-pop-related tweets on social media platform Twitter in the past decade.

This image, provided by Twitter Korea on Sept 22, 2020, shows the growth trajectory in the volume of K-pop-related tweets on social media platform Twitter in the past decade.

SEOUL, Sept. 22 (Korea Bizwire)Despite COVID-19 having bogged down the global entertainment industry at large, the conversation and buzz surrounding K-pop on the social media platform Twitter has increased substantially in volume in the past year, according to data from the company Tuesday.

The number of K-pop-related tweets from July 2019 to June 2020 on the global social media platform reached 6.1 billion, up 15 percent from the 5.3 billion tally from a year ago, according to data compiled by Twitter Korea together with music startup Space Oddity’s fandom analytics dashboard “K-pop Radar.”

In celebration of roughly a decade in terms of K-pop’s presence on Twitter, the company partnered with Space Oddity to conduct a comprehensive analysis of tweets surrounding 122 leading artists across 20 different markets to monitor how the social media platform was facilitating the conversation on K-pop.

The analytics found that the United States has the most users who tweeted on the topic of K-pop, followed by Japan and South Korea. Indonesia, the Philippines, Brazil, Mexico and Argentina followed behind.

In terms of the volume of K-pop related tweets, Thailand came first, followed by South Korea, Indonesia, the Philippines, the U.S., Brazil and Malaysia.

The top mentioned K-pop artist globally was BTS, followed by EXO, GOT7, BLACKPINK, NCT 127 and Monsta X. Seventeen, NCT Dream, TWICE, Stray Kids came next.

In terms of songs, the top mentioned K-pop number was “Obsession” by EXO, followed by four BTS tracks — “ON,” “Boy With Luv (Feat. Halsey),” Black Swan” and “Interlude: Shadow.”

This image, provided by Twitter Korea on Sept. 22, 2020, shows the nations with the most unique users who tweeted on the topic of K-pop on Twitter.

This image, provided by Twitter Korea on Sept. 22, 2020, shows the nations with the most unique users who tweeted on the topic of K-pop on Twitter.

The conversation surrounding K-pop on Twitter has apparently grown exponentially especially between late 2016 and the first half of 2018.

BTS won its first Top Social Artist award at the Billboard Music Awards in May 2017, and EXO also opened its official Twitter handle in July of that year with the release of “Ko Ko Bop.”

YeonJeong Kim, head of global K-pop partnerships at Twitter, stressed that the conversation of K-pop has not decreased at all on Twitter despite COVID-19 having prompted cancellations of concerts, world tours and fan meet-and-greet events.

“These fans, many who are young and based all over the world, are flocking to Twitter to join these fun #K-pop Twitter conversations to feel connected to a global fan community,” Kim said.

This photo, provided by Twitter Korea on Sept 22, 2020, shows YeonJeong Kim, head of global K-pop partnerships at Twitter, Stray Kids leader Bang Chan, singer Sunmi, and Hyungwon and Kihyun of group Monsta X (from L to R) at an online event in Seoul celebrating K-pop's 10-year presence on Twitter.

This photo, provided by Twitter Korea on Sept 22, 2020, shows YeonJeong Kim, head of global K-pop partnerships at Twitter, Stray Kids leader Bang Chan, singer Sunmi, and Hyungwon and Kihyun of group Monsta X (from L to R) at an online event in Seoul celebrating K-pop’s 10-year presence on Twitter.

Twitter Korea also invited several leading K-pop artists for an online event celebrating K-pop’s roughly 10-year presence on the platform.

Female solo artist Sunmi, who first debuted in 2007 as a member of Wonder Girls, explained that she often tried to send tweets mixing Korean and English for both her local and global fans.

“I’m very happy that K-pop is finally receiving the recognition from around the world.”

Hyungwon, singer of boy band Monsta X, said he tries to share photos of places on Twitter when the band is touring overseas.

Monsta X bandmate Kihyun added that fans seem to respond excitedly to more casual and daily content as opposed to more official content.

Stray Kids leader Bang Chan said the group’s online chemistry with fans remained great thanks to their continued communication on Twitter.

(Yonhap)

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