
Clean slates: How 6 Korean stars bounced back from scandal
2. Seo Yea-ji
At the peak of her icy-glam allure from It's Okay to Not Be Okay , Seo Yea-ji was shaping to be an up-and-coming Korean star. Then came 2021. Allegations surfaced that she had manipulated then-boyfriend Kim Jung-hyun into acting cold toward his female co-star. Add in accusations about her résumé embellishments and abusive behaviour, and suddenly the industry turned cold at the former future screen queen.
Seo Yea-ji pulled the oldest trick in the K-celeb playbook: vanish, regroup, reappear with cheekbones sharper than public memory. She returned in Eve (2022), a revenge-driven makjang drama that leaned into her femme-fatale brand. While ratings were mixed, her presence was undeniable. Her redemption? Still a work in progress, but as anyone in K-dramaland knows, even a half-likeable anti-heroine gets a second act. 3. Lee Byung-hun
He's one of the biggest Korean stars, but you don't get to be Korea's A-list royalty without some tarnish on the crown. In 2014, Lee Byung-hun was embroiled in a blackmail scandal involving two younger women who threatened to leak a video of him making lewd jokes. Cue moral outrage, press conferences and awkward public apologies to his wife, actress Lee Min-jung.
But here's the thing: Lee Byung Hun is an actor's actor. He weathered the scandal with a mixture of contrition and sheer onscreen dominance. A year later, he was back, starring in Inside Men (2015), Master (2016) and Hollywood blockbusters. His saving grace? A long résumé of brilliant performances, a loyal fanbase and a national tendency to forgive men with gravitas and box office receipts. Now he's back on the global stage with Squid Game , whose third season is airing in June. 4. Song Hye-kyo
Yes, the K-drama queen hasn't always had a squeaky-clean reputation.
Long before The Glory (2022) turned her into the unofficial face of elegant vengeance, Song Hye-kyo faced a quieter scandal: a tax evasion incident in 2014. While she claimed the unpaid taxes were due to an accountant's error, the damage was rapid, especially for an actress known for her pristine image and clean-cut rom-com leads.
Rather than launch into defence mode, Song Hye-kyo paid her dues, issued a sincere public apology and took a step back. She came back smarter, picking roles that aged with her: more introspective, less bubblegum. Revenge saga The Glory didn't just reignite her allure, it rebranded her entirely and solidified her as one of the most enduring Korean stars in history. Proof that in Korea, a scandal can be a footnote if your next act is pitch-perfect.
Don't miss: The rise of the antihero: 10 K-drama characters who played by their own rules 5. T.O.P (Choi Seung-hyun)
As BigBang's chicest member and the reigning king of aloof cool, T.O.P had it all, until a 2017 marijuana scandal (still illegal in Korea) and a highly publicised overdose during his military service nearly derailed his career. The public's response was swift and cold; this was no minor misstep.
After years of low-profile living, art collecting and cryptic Instagram posts, T.O.P slowly returned, rejoining BigBang for their 2022 single 'Still Life'. The moody, mature ballad served as a comeback and a quiet reintroduction. He's since stepped away from the group, refocusing on his passions in art and space (he was even slated for a lunar mission via Elon Musk's SpaceX project, although that has yet to materialise). He also played a scene-stealing rapper in the second season of Squid Game (2024). 6. G-Dragon
G-Dragon is one of the biggest Korean stars in music. After a drug scandal in 2011, G-Dragon's reputation saw a dip in public favour, especially given Korea's strict drug laws. But his case was relatively minor, a one-time incident in Japan, reportedly from an offer he 'didn't know' was laced.
His comeback? Immaculately styled. GD continued to dominate both music and fashion, re-cementing his icon status with a solo album, global campaigns for Chanel and museum-level fashion credibility. He's proof that, in Korea, scandal can be forgiven, especially if you're the kind of celebrity who's more cultural institution than idol.
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