K-pop label home to Exo and NCT tackles invasive fans as South Korea updates anti-stalking law
- K-pop label SM Entertainment says it will no longer turn a blind eye to bad fan behaviour, and promises to take legal action
- Obsessive fans, known as ‘sasaeng’, follow stars and invade their private lives, sometimes endangering them
Last week K-pop label SM Entertainment announced that it would no longer ignore the aggressive behaviour of fans known as sasaengs.
Invasive sasaeng behaviour – the word means “private life” in Korean – has long been an issue in Korean entertainment, with many of the biggest stars regularly followed and watched outside their regular work schedules.
Since K-pop idols became popular in South Korea in the 1990s, home break-ins and car accidents attributed to sasaengs have been reported regularly. SM Entertainment, which was an early innovator in K-pop, has largely benefited from the tight bonds between artists and fans, which some feel has enabled the invasive behaviour of sasaengs.
SM has long been recognised for its particularly hands-off approach towards fans who overstep the norms in pursuit of celebrities, which it acknowledged at least in passing in a statement on July 16.
“The excessive invasion of artists’ privacy by ‘sasaengs’ will no longer be tolerated,” the company declared.