K-pop acts dropped from Japan year-end music show

Agence France-Presse

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Taxpayer-funded broadcaster NHK insisted politics had played no role in the selection of performers for the New Year's Eve broadcast

Girls Generation at an event in Hong Kong, January 2012. AFP FILE PHOTO / LAURENT FIEVET

TOKYO, Japan – Japan’s widely-watched year-end TV show will feature only Japanese acts this year, with popular South Korean performers left out of the line-up amid territorial frictions with Seoul.

Taxpayer-funded broadcaster NHK insisted politics had played no role in the selection of performers for the New Year’s Eve broadcast watched by up to 40 percent of the nation’s TV audience.

Korean girl groups KARA and Girls’ Generation and male group Tohoshinki (TVXQ) were among the headline acts last year on “Kohaku Uta Gassen” (The Red and White Song Contest).

The live TV show lasts more than four hours, and features established acts like AKB48, as well as grandees of J-pop like aging boy band SMAP.

Viewers are drawn from a wide cross-section of society on an evening when Japanese families traditionally gather at home, often around a television set.

NHK officials told a press conference that Korean performers were dropped after reviewing how popular they were over 2012, and after looking at support for them among Japanese fans.

They denied speculation that the spat over the sovereignty of a pair of islands in the Sea of Japan (East Sea), called Takeshima in Japan and Dokdo in South Korea, had played any role in the decision.

President Lee Myung-bak’s visit to the islands in August angered the Japanese public, and cooled ties between the neighbors.

Korean political leaders and cultural figures, including actors and an Olympic athlete, staged a series of stunts over the following months designed to reinforce Seoul’s control of the islets.

At least one popular Korean drama was pulled from Japan’s airwaves after one of its stars voiced support for Seoul’s claim.

Tokyo has also spent several months in bitter dispute with Beijing over the ownership of a different set of islands. – Agence France-Presse

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