Back in early 2024, Edward Park was having dinner when he received a text from a friend. It read: โHey, have you ever thought about being a K-pop idol?โ
โHere 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 โuntil my voice would just collapse in on itselfโ and dance โuntil 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.
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. โDebut isnโt even the start. You have to last the test of time,โ he says. โI 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 .Paakโs 2024 directorial debut K-Pops! โ brought up mixed emotions.