
BTS' Jungkook apologises for wearing ‘Make Tokyo Great Again' hat after fan backlash
Jungkook, a member of the
K-pop supergroup
BTS , has issued a public apology after coming under fire from fans for wearing a cap with the slogan 'Make Tokyo Great Again', a phrase criticised for invoking painful memories of
Japan 's colonial rule over Korea.
The 27-year-old K-pop star, who recently
completed his compulsory military service in
South Korea , was wearing the hat on Friday when he made a surprise appearance at rehearsals for the final performance of fellow BTS member J-Hope's world tour in Goyang, according to the KoreaWave news website.
To many fans, the slogan – a play on former US President Donald Trump's 'Make America Great Again' campaign message, which has long been linked to nationalist sentiment – evoked bitter memories of Japan's colonial rule over Korea from 1910 to 1945.
'I think this is JK expressing what he actually feels to Korea and Koreans without saying anything,' an irate user posted on the allkpop website. 'I wouldn't be surprised if he renounces his Korean citizenship and decides to domicile elsewhere, and South Korea will lose his tax revenue forever.'
Another added, 'Straight from coming out of the military and wearing an anti-Korean, right-wing hat is an interesting choice, to say the least.'
BTS members Jungkook and Jimin salute at a sporting facility in Yeoncheon on June 11, shortly after completing their 18-month mandatory military service. Photo: AFP
Yet another post read, 'He bought that stuff not knowing what it was? Wasn't he in the military? How does he have such a lack of basic political and historical issues that concern his country? It's the history of Japanese imperialist right-wing oppression.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
35 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
As Trump struggles to secure trade deals, has Beijing's hand been strengthened?
The United States failed this week to reach a tariff deal with Japan, a key Pacific Rim ally, and has threatened to notify multiple countries of new duty rates on imports after talks with only one, the United Kingdom, have shown any results. Those developments, which made the US look weak in the short term, should prompt China to take a harder line with Washington on reaching a deal, analysts said. China, the world's second-largest economy, was hit especially hard by US President Donald Trump on April 2, which he dubbed 'Liberation Day' , when he raised duties on Chinese imports to more than 100 per cent. Citing concerns over US trade deficits, he also imposed double-digit tariffs on imports from many other Asian nations. Country-specific 'Liberation Day' tariffs were put on hold for 90 days the following week – until July 9 for most countries – pending trade negotiations. Following talks in Switzerland in early May, those on China were also paused for 90 days, until August 12. Beijing's negotiators would draw strength from the US threat to notify trading partners of new duties and the lack of a US-Japan deal because both showed it was hard for Washington to get what it wanted through talks this summer, said Chen Zhiwu, chair professor of finance at the University of Hong Kong. 'These kinds of threats should embolden the Chinese negotiators because it's a sign of desperation,' Chen said.


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
All about K-pop superstars BTS as last member finishes up mandatory military service
It is official – almost. Soon, all seven members of the massively popular K-pop group BTS will have completed South Korea's mandatory military service. Rapper Suga will be the last of the bandmates to be released, on Saturday, after fulfilling his duty as a social service agent, an alternative to serving in the military that he reportedly chose because of a shoulder injury. BTS' entertainment agency said no events are planned for Suga's release out of concern for overcrowding. The six others – RM, V, Jimin, Jungkook, Jin and J-Hope – served in the army. Four of them – RM, V, Jimin and Jungkook – were discharged earlier this month. Jin, the eldest BTS member, was discharged in June 2024, as was J-Hope in October. Play BTS are expected to reunite later this year. Ahead of that highly anticipated homecoming, here is what you need to know about the group.


South China Morning Post
19 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
South Korea's ruling in Plave libel case reshapes avatar rights in the metaverse era
A recent court decision involving defamation against a virtual K-pop group is prompting fresh legal debate in South Korea over the rights of digital personas – with analysts describing it as a significant shift in how the law defines harm, identity and expression in the age of the metaverse. The case centred on Plave, a five-member boy band whose anime-style avatars exist solely in the virtual realm but are voiced and animated by real-life performers using motion-capture technology. Despite their stylised appearance, the court found that online insults directed at the avatars amounted to defamation of the humans behind them – a view legal scholars say reflects a growing recognition of avatars as extensions of individual identity. 'Considering that in today's metaverse era an avatar is not a simple virtual image but a means of self-expression, identity and social communication, defamation against an avatar can constitute an infringement on the actual user's external honour,' wrote Judge Jang Yoo-jin in the May 14 ruling, which ordered the defendant to pay damages to each of the five performers. Rather than marking the close of a dispute, the verdict is widely seen as the start of a broader legal reckoning over how societies define harm – and personhood – in virtual spaces. Fans of virtual K-pop boy band Plave look around a pop-up store in Seoul, South Korea, on March 7. Photo: Reuters The dispute began last July, when a social media user posted a series of mocking videos and derogatory comments targeting Plave, describing them as 'ugly' and ridiculing their performances. Some posts included profanity.