New K-pop boy band trio Re:wind talk about second chances and resetting their careers


Back in early 2024, Edward Park was having dinner when he received a text from a friend. It read: โ€œHey, have you ever thought about being a K-pop idol?โ€

โ€œHere we go again,โ€ he thought, letting out an audible groan.

That is because the budding actor had already chased his K-pop dream: he spent three months in Korea when he was 17, honing his singing and dancing skills around the clock at a Seoul training centre that acted as a funnel for K-pop agencies. There, Park would sing โ€œuntil my voice would just collapse in on itselfโ€ and dance โ€œuntil I would just collapse on the floorโ€, he says.

But after promises to join two big companies never materialised โ€“ as well as concerns over his mental and physical health โ€“ Park decided to walk away from the industry.

Eddie, who is Korean-American and grew up in southern California, has a background in musical theatre and listened to groups like Girlโ€™s Day and BTS growing up. Photo: Re:wind
Eddie, who is Korean-American and grew up in southern California, has a background in musical theatre and listened to groups like Girlโ€™s Day and BTS growing up. Photo: Re:wind

By the time a smaller label gave him an opportunity to debut as an idol shortly before he left Korea in 2021, reality had hit for Park. โ€œDebut isnโ€™t even the start. You have to last the test of time,โ€ he says. โ€œI would have to give up my education, my future.โ€

So receiving that text years later in the United States โ€“ where Park had just wrapped up a role as a blue-haired K-pop hopeful in Anderson .Paakโ€™s 2024 directorial debut K-Pops! โ€“ brought up mixed emotions.

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