The Crazy World of Korea's Plastic Surgery Industry
الملخص
TLDRThe video delves into the intricate dynamics of beauty standards and plastic surgery in Korea, particularly influenced by K-pop culture. The speaker, an Asian American, reflects on their personal journey from idolizing K-pop idols to critically examining the societal pressures surrounding beauty and the normalization of cosmetic procedures. They discuss the historical context of beauty standards in Korea, emphasizing the distinct ideals that differ from Western perceptions. The rise of medical tourism in Korea is highlighted, showcasing the country's advanced cosmetic surgery industry and the appeal of lower costs for foreign patients. The speaker also addresses the implications of social media on beauty standards, the emergence of movements like 'Escape the Corset' that challenge traditional norms, and the concept of lookism, which affects social and professional opportunities. Overall, the video encourages viewers to consider the deeper societal issues tied to beauty and self-image.
الوجبات الجاهزة
- 🌟 The speaker shares their journey from idolizing K-pop to questioning beauty standards.
- 💉 Medical tourism in Korea is a growing industry for cosmetic procedures.
- 👁️ Common beauty standards in Korea include big eyes and pale skin.
- 🚫 The 'Escape the Corset' movement challenges traditional beauty norms.
- 📉 Lookism affects job opportunities and social acceptance in Korea.
- 📖 Historical context shows the evolution of beauty standards in Korea.
- 📱 Social media influences perceptions of beauty through the 'technological gaze.'
- ⚠️ Risks of medical tourism include inadequate aftercare and potential malpractice.
- 🤔 The speaker encourages critical thinking about societal pressures related to beauty.
- 💬 The video invites viewers to share their thoughts and experiences regarding plastic surgery.
الجدول الزمني
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The video begins with the host introducing herself as an Asian American who was once obsessed with K-pop and the Korean beauty industry. She reflects on her early admiration for K-pop idols and their plastic surgery, contrasting it with the stigma surrounding cosmetic procedures in America. Over time, she became critical of the beauty industry's impact on society, particularly regarding the pressures faced by dark-skinned and mixed-race individuals in Korea.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
The host discusses the beauty standards prevalent in Korea, which include features like big eyes, double eyelids, and pale skin. She emphasizes that these standards are distinct from Western ideals and have historical roots in Korean culture. The video critiques the misconception that all Asians aspire to look white, highlighting the unique cultural dynamics that shape beauty perceptions in Korea.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The video transitions to the topic of medical tourism in Korea, where many individuals travel for cosmetic procedures. The host notes the rapid growth of this industry and the various procedures people seek, such as double eyelid surgery and lip fillers. She mentions the ease of using platforms like Squarespace for promoting businesses related to this industry.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The host elaborates on the specific beauty standards in Korea, including the emphasis on proportions and the concept of 'Insang,' which relates to first impressions based on facial expressions. She discusses how these standards are marketed and the societal pressures that drive individuals to seek cosmetic enhancements.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
The video highlights the technological gaze in Korea, where social media influences beauty standards and creates demand for specific looks. The host explains how this gaze affects perceptions of beauty and the normalization of cosmetic procedures, including the extreme measures some K-pop idols take to maintain their appearance.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
The host provides a historical context for the Korean beauty industry, detailing its evolution from the Joseon period to the present day. She discusses the government's role in promoting the beauty sector as part of a broader cultural strategy known as Hallyu, which has led to Korea becoming a global leader in cosmetic surgery and beauty products.
- 00:30:00 - 00:37:47
The video concludes with a discussion on the normalization of cosmetic surgery in Korea, where many view it as a necessary step for social acceptance and job opportunities. The host reflects on the societal pressures that drive individuals to undergo procedures and the ongoing conversations about beauty standards, including movements that challenge these norms.
الخريطة الذهنية
فيديو أسئلة وأجوبة
What is the main topic of the video?
The video discusses beauty standards, plastic surgery, and cultural identity in Korea, particularly in relation to K-pop and the beauty industry.
What personal experiences does the speaker share?
The speaker shares their journey of initially idolizing K-pop and the beauty industry, and later reflecting on the societal pressures and implications of plastic surgery.
What is medical tourism in Korea?
Medical tourism in Korea refers to the practice of traveling to Korea for cosmetic procedures, often due to lower costs and advanced technology.
What are some common beauty standards in Korea?
Common beauty standards in Korea include big eyes, double eyelids, thinness, high nasal bridges, a V-line jaw, and pale skin.
What is the 'Escape the Corset' movement?
The 'Escape the Corset' movement is a pushback against beauty standards in Korea, encouraging individuals to reject societal pressures related to appearance.
How does the speaker view the plastic surgery industry?
The speaker expresses concern about the societal implications of the plastic surgery industry and its impact on self-image and cultural identity.
What historical context is provided about the Korean beauty industry?
The video discusses the evolution of the Korean beauty industry from its association with lower classes to its current global prominence.
What role does social media play in beauty standards?
Social media contributes to the 'technological gaze,' influencing beauty standards and creating demand for specific aesthetic traits.
What are some risks associated with medical tourism?
Risks include inadequate aftercare, language barriers, and potential malpractice due to ghost doctors.
What is the significance of the term 'lookism'?
Lookism refers to social prejudice against individuals who do not meet certain appearance standards, impacting job opportunities and social acceptance.
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BUSINESS RESULT INTERMEDIATE UNIT 3 "Free time and leisure"
- 00:00:00- This video is brought to you by Squarespace,
- 00:00:02an all-in-one platform for building your brand
- 00:00:03and growing your business online.
- 00:00:05Hello, my beautiful doves.
- 00:00:07As some of you may have guessed,
- 00:00:09I am Asian American, surprise! (laughs)
- 00:00:12(birds chirping)
- 00:00:13(curtains whirring)
- 00:00:14(cat meowing)
- 00:00:16(birds chirping continues)
- 00:00:19And like many Asian Americans,
- 00:00:20I went through a phase where I just about worshiped
- 00:00:23the K-pop industry.
- 00:00:24For me, this phase took place during sophomore junior year
- 00:00:27of high school to the point where I would wake up at 4:00 AM
- 00:00:31before class started, just so that
- 00:00:32I could watch my favorite groups performing on Mnet
- 00:00:35because you know the time difference.
- 00:00:37This was also the first time
- 00:00:39that I discovered the Korean beauty industry
- 00:00:40because K-pop and beauty go hand in hand.
- 00:00:43Idols are constantly promoting products,
- 00:00:45doing product placements.
- 00:00:47Similar to Sydney Sweeney's never ending partnership
- 00:00:49with corporate America.
- 00:00:50Most idols also got plastic surgery,
- 00:00:52and this was something I was really shocked by at the time
- 00:00:54because in America, if a pop star got plastic surgery,
- 00:00:58it was like a major talking point, derogatory,
- 00:01:02people are really mean about it,
- 00:01:03so a lot of stars try to hide the fact
- 00:01:05that they got procedures,
- 00:01:07but in Korea, it's very blatant.
- 00:01:08You can easily find before photos of every single idol,
- 00:01:12and there's just not a lot of stigma.
- 00:01:14People actually praise the results when they're good.
- 00:01:17At the time I was in awe of these surgical transformations.
- 00:01:20I truly believed that every idol looked
- 00:01:22so much better post plastic surgery.
- 00:01:25Mind you, almost all the before photos of them are
- 00:01:27from when they were like 14 years old
- 00:01:29and still clearly growing into their faces.
- 00:01:31But that's besides the point.
- 00:01:32I was drinking the Kool-Aid.
- 00:01:34I was chugging the Kool-Aid,
- 00:01:36and as a result, I became obsessed
- 00:01:38with what kinda work I would get done.
- 00:01:40When I finally got the disposable income to fly to Korea
- 00:01:43and pay for my new face,
- 00:01:45like this was so locked into my future plans.
- 00:01:49Obviously over time the plans have changed
- 00:01:52and I started becoming really upset
- 00:01:53with what the plastic surgery industry has done
- 00:01:55to us as a society on a global scale,
- 00:01:58in terms of the Korean surgery industry,
- 00:02:00I became much more informed
- 00:02:02about the oppression that dark skinned
- 00:02:04or mixed Koreans experience, as well as the experiences
- 00:02:08of other demographics of Asians who are affected
- 00:02:10by Korea's soft power.
- 00:02:12Like as a Vietnamese woman, it really disturbs me
- 00:02:15how looking Korean has become an aspiration
- 00:02:19for some of my community.
- 00:02:20Meanwhile, looking Vietnamese
- 00:02:22or looking Southeast Asian is often weaponized as an insult
- 00:02:26by East Asians.
- 00:02:28I also watched shows like "Single's Inferno,"
- 00:02:30which is a Korean dating show,
- 00:02:32and the first season was very controversial
- 00:02:35because some of the male contestants would say,
- 00:02:37literally point blank to the camera
- 00:02:39that they liked a girl purely because she had pale skin,
- 00:02:42like nothing about her personality.
- 00:02:43Also, to say that there's a lot going on
- 00:02:45in the Korean beauty industry,
- 00:02:47and I found that over time it's just gotten more
- 00:02:50and more powerful, especially on a global scale.
- 00:02:53So I wanna talk about it.
- 00:02:55As I said, I am Vietnamese, I'm not Korean
- 00:02:58and I can't read Korean, so there's obviously discourse
- 00:03:00that I'm missing, but I did my best
- 00:03:03and I referred to a lot of information
- 00:03:05from Elise Hu's book, "Flawless: Lessons in Looks
- 00:03:08and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital,"
- 00:03:10who is an award-winning journalist,
- 00:03:12and she was NPRs first bureau Chief in Seoul,
- 00:03:15and I highly recommend reading her book
- 00:03:17if this subject interests you.
- 00:03:18It's very comprehensive.
- 00:03:20- Off to Korea. - Off to Korea.
- 00:03:22(transition clicks)
- 00:03:23- [Tourist] Today I'm getting double eyelid surgery.
- 00:03:25- [Tourist 2] Lip filler, and Botox.
- 00:03:27- [Tourist 3] Liposuction.
- 00:03:28- One of the fastest growing sectors in the travel industry,
- 00:03:32medical tourism.
- 00:03:33(upbeat energetic music)
- 00:03:40(upbeat energetic music continues)
- 00:03:46(upbeat energetic music continues)
- 00:03:47(keyboard buttons clacking)
- 00:03:51(TV static buzzing)
- 00:03:53- If you've been looking for a way to build your website,
- 00:03:55but HTML and CSS and all that sound intimidating.
- 00:03:58Squarespace is an amazing platform that offers tons
- 00:04:01of customization options and pre-made templates.
- 00:04:04A lot of people use Squarespace to host their stores,
- 00:04:06and that's because it's just super easy.
- 00:04:08You can list any product from something physical
- 00:04:10to subscriptions to downloads.
- 00:04:13I'm currently using Squarespace as a portfolio both
- 00:04:15for my book club and for my video essays.
- 00:04:18As an example, for this most recent video,
- 00:04:20the work cited was actually so long,
- 00:04:22it maxed out YouTube's description limits.
- 00:04:24So I created a page on my site
- 00:04:26to host all these references just for you.
- 00:04:29Check out squarespace.com for free trial,
- 00:04:31and when you're ready to launch,
- 00:04:32go to squarespace.com/MinaLe
- 00:04:33to get 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
- 00:04:37(TV static buzzing)
- 00:04:38(upbeat energetic music)
- 00:04:42(transition beeps)
- 00:04:43(tourist speaking in foreign language)
- 00:04:47(guide speaking in foreign language)
- 00:04:49(tourist speaking in foreign language)
- 00:04:51- So first, I feel like we need to discuss
- 00:04:53what the beauty standards even are in Korea.
- 00:04:56There are many, but I would pin it down to big eyes
- 00:04:59and double eyelids, thinness, high nasal bridges,
- 00:05:03a V-line jaw and pale skin.
- 00:05:06There is an emphasis on looking glowy and youthful,
- 00:05:08hence why aegyo sal, the small puff
- 00:05:11of skin found under the eyes is often highlighted as well,
- 00:05:14as this feature apparently adds a youthful charm
- 00:05:16to the face.
- 00:05:18These standards are also pretty unisex.
- 00:05:20While I think there are some crossover ideals
- 00:05:23like the big eyes and the thin bodies,
- 00:05:25overall, Korean beauty standards are pretty distinct
- 00:05:27from Western beauty standards,
- 00:05:29and that's why I find it extremely irritating
- 00:05:31whenever I hear Americans saying things like,
- 00:05:34"Oh, everyone in Asia just wants to look white."
- 00:05:37In actuality, the favoring of white skin in Korea,
- 00:05:41"white" in quotes, predates Western colonization.
- 00:05:44It doesn't refer to race, it refers
- 00:05:46to the paleness associated with being high class
- 00:05:49during the Gojoseon period, which ended in 108 BCE.
- 00:05:53The belief was that the white skin suggested
- 00:05:55a labor free life away from the sun.
- 00:05:58Similarly, regarding double eyelids, Elise Hu notes
- 00:06:00in her book "Flawless,"
- 00:06:01that it's actually East Asian movie stars with this feature
- 00:06:04who are considered the ideal.
- 00:06:06She writes in East Asia,
- 00:06:07the double-eyelidded Hwang Shin-Hye, not Meg Ryan
- 00:06:11had the most sought after face.
- 00:06:13No offense to the beautiful Meg Ryan, of course.
- 00:06:15She also reports that of the hundreds
- 00:06:17of people she talked to for her book,
- 00:06:19not a single person said the motivation
- 00:06:21for plastic surgery in Korea is to look more European.
- 00:06:24Furthermore, anthropologists
- 00:06:26and scholars have uniformly found that the importance
- 00:06:29of local cultural dynamics trumps
- 00:06:31outside influences when it comes to health and beauty norms.
- 00:06:35Well, yes, there are some traces
- 00:06:37of European beauty baked into the Korean beauty ideal.
- 00:06:40Sophie Jin argues that this was not the result
- 00:06:43of idealizing whiteness,
- 00:06:45but the result of Koreans attempting
- 00:06:47to formulate a new national identity separate
- 00:06:51from their former colonizer, Japan.
- 00:06:53She writes for the Journal of Contemporary Asian Studies.
- 00:06:55"For a country shaped by foreign influence, a desire
- 00:06:58for a new identity stemmed from an 'Anti-other' sentiment
- 00:07:02or a rejection of foreign powers.
- 00:07:04Thus, by drawing on aspects of Western beauty,
- 00:07:07but molding them to the Korean face.
- 00:07:10The new Korean look became one distinct
- 00:07:12from both the Western face
- 00:07:14and the traditional East Asian face,
- 00:07:16reminiscent of Korea's colonizers."
- 00:07:18This look is sometimes called K-face by sociologists.
- 00:07:22Yip, Ainsworth and Hugh note that this beauty standard
- 00:07:25is supposed to signal global integration
- 00:07:28and cosmopolitanism and that the strategic combining
- 00:07:32of European elements with a predominantly Asian look
- 00:07:35gives off a worldly appearance.
- 00:07:37It's very similar to Instagram face
- 00:07:39that we have in the West,
- 00:07:41in the way that the face combines various features
- 00:07:43of you know, multiple races
- 00:07:45to produce a somewhat ethnically ambiguous look,
- 00:07:48but K-face is still distinctly Korean
- 00:07:51just as Instagram face is still distinctly white.
- 00:07:54Beyond the features themselves,
- 00:07:55there's also a lot of emphasis on proportions
- 00:07:57in Korean beauty marketing.
- 00:07:59For instance, the one to one to one face ratio
- 00:08:02that says you should be equally balanced between your brow,
- 00:08:04your nose, and your chin,
- 00:08:05and the leg ratio that says you should have a five to three
- 00:08:09to two proportion between your thigh, calf and ankle.
- 00:08:12(Doctor speaking in foreign language)
- 00:08:16- The hyper focus on proportions might stem
- 00:08:18from East Asian beliefs about first impressions in Korea,
- 00:08:21it's a concept called, "Insang," Ann Shin explains
- 00:08:24what Insang is in her short story, "Learning To Walk."
- 00:08:27Koreans say you can tell a person's disposition
- 00:08:29by reading their facial expression at rest.
- 00:08:31It's called Insang.
- 00:08:33You could say a person has a warm Insang
- 00:08:35or a nervous Insang,
- 00:08:36or an Insang that shows they've been through
- 00:08:38a lot of hardship.
- 00:08:39That's not the one that I want. (laughs)
- 00:08:41I'm sure the focus on specific proportions
- 00:08:44is also great industry marketing.
- 00:08:46These ratios designate seemingly objective measurements
- 00:08:49that you can measure your own body up to
- 00:08:51and thus modify accordingly at the clinic
- 00:08:54if you don't meet them.
- 00:08:55Calf Botox literally exists
- 00:08:57to atrophy the muscle in your calf
- 00:08:59so that you can hit that golden ratio.
- 00:09:02These objective, wink, objective ratios also allow people
- 00:09:07to measure other people's bodies as well.
- 00:09:09A few years ago, BeBoss TV published a YouTube video called,
- 00:09:12"9 Female Idols
- 00:09:13with Most Insane Body Proportions in Kpop."
- 00:09:17In their video, they analyze different idol bodies
- 00:09:19to determine who has the best body of each group.
- 00:09:23- [Presenter] According to Celeb Revealed,
- 00:09:24she's 48 kilograms heavy, 167.5 centimeters tall,
- 00:09:29and easily stands out with body measurements
- 00:09:31of 34, 25, 31 inches.
- 00:09:33- Crazy stuff, if you look in the comments,
- 00:09:35also, most of them are stating their own opinion
- 00:09:37of who has the best body rather than asking
- 00:09:39why we're even talking about this in the first place.
- 00:09:42There is also plenty of forum posts
- 00:09:44that feed into this body discourse as well.
- 00:09:46A Reddit post asking, "What do fans exactly mean
- 00:09:49when an idol has good proportions?"
- 00:09:51Received an answer that mentions a head to body ratio
- 00:09:54known as the "Eight stacked heads test."
- 00:09:57AKA the perfect body is eight heads tall.
- 00:10:01Actually the perfect body is five apples tall but whatever.
- 00:10:04Hu mentions in her book a concept called
- 00:10:06the "Technological Gaze," she defines it
- 00:10:09as an algorithmically determined set of ideal traits
- 00:10:11for our facial and body parts that social platforms feed us
- 00:10:15through the content we scroll.
- 00:10:17It represents a power shift
- 00:10:18from an external male-judging gaze
- 00:10:21to a self-policing narcissistic gaze.
- 00:10:24The self-policing tech gaze creates demand
- 00:10:27for what we should look like and also feeds it,
- 00:10:29thanks to the attention economy
- 00:10:31that drives competition among the biggest tech companies.
- 00:10:34The technological gaze is present across any country
- 00:10:37that has access to social media.
- 00:10:39It's the reason why Instagram face is a thing
- 00:10:41and why everyone is getting the same treatments, lip filler,
- 00:10:45chin lipo, rhinoplasties in America,
- 00:10:48but who explains that Korea is hyper modern,
- 00:10:50which emphasizes the technological gaze even more.
- 00:10:54After all, it's the most wired place on earth,
- 00:10:56has world leading internet speeds
- 00:10:58and in 2006 had the highest broadband penetration rate
- 00:11:02in the world.
- 00:11:03Seoul is also the fourth most surveyed city in the world
- 00:11:06ranked by a number of CCTV cameras per square mile.
- 00:11:09As a result, it's unsurprising there's such a heavy emphasis
- 00:11:12on visual culture.
- 00:11:13I learned a few years ago
- 00:11:14that some K-pop idols even get nostril Botox.
- 00:11:17It's because when they're performing on stage,
- 00:11:19camera operators will literally zoom in
- 00:11:21on specific idol faces while they're singing and dancing,
- 00:11:24and the quality is like 4K.
- 00:11:26So you can see every sweat droplet on their skin
- 00:11:29and the Botox is supposed to prevent the nostrils
- 00:11:32from flaring out in a non photogenic manner
- 00:11:34during their closeups.
- 00:11:36I mean, if we're going to zoom in on nostrils,
- 00:11:38what can't we zoom in on.
- 00:11:40Procedures like getting your armpit colorized,
- 00:11:43shaving the back of your skull to look more rounded
- 00:11:45and getting Botox injected into your trapezius muscles.
- 00:11:49These are all incredibly specific procedures
- 00:11:52and hardly noticeable to anyone else,
- 00:11:54but the fact that people still get them done just goes
- 00:11:57to show how stringent beauty standards have become.
- 00:12:00(upbeat piano music)
- 00:12:02(keyboard buttons clacking)
- 00:12:07You know, it's actually incredible that Korean beauty
- 00:12:10is so powerful on the global stage
- 00:12:12because Korea had a pretty late start in the beauty game.
- 00:12:15During the Joseon period, which was 1392 to 1910,
- 00:12:18makeup was mostly associated with lower class courtesans.
- 00:12:21This is because Confucianism was popular
- 00:12:23and one Confucian value is to keep the body
- 00:12:25as natural as possible.
- 00:12:27It wasn't until 1916
- 00:12:28that the first mass manufactured Korean beauty product came
- 00:12:31onto the scene, a white face powder called Pakabun.
- 00:12:35But throughout the 20th century, there were some hiccups
- 00:12:37to industry growth.
- 00:12:38Following the Korean War, South Korea was ranked
- 00:12:40among the poorest nations in the world.
- 00:12:43Then in 1997,
- 00:12:44a major economic crash forced the government
- 00:12:47into asking the IMF for an emergency loan of $57 billion.
- 00:12:51There was a lot of resentment over this bailout
- 00:12:54as citizens worried over the potential loss
- 00:12:56of their country's economic independence.
- 00:12:58For example, as a condition to the aid,
- 00:13:00the IMF forced South Korea to admit foreign banks
- 00:13:03and allow the import of Japanese goods
- 00:13:05that had previously been banned.
- 00:13:07For context, Japan started its Imperial campaign
- 00:13:09in the late 1800s and annexed Korea in 1910.
- 00:13:12They brutally ruled over the country until the end
- 00:13:15of World War II and given all the terror
- 00:13:17the military incited on the Korean people
- 00:13:20and the fact it was still a living memory
- 00:13:22for most of the population,
- 00:13:24yeah, it makes sense why there would be distaste
- 00:13:26over Japanese products.
- 00:13:28"The New York Times" interviewed a Korean woman at the time
- 00:13:30who lamented, "I'm angry at the American
- 00:13:34and Japanese demands.
- 00:13:35If you really wanna help us,
- 00:13:36don't make us buy your things, just by our things."
- 00:13:40This sentiment was probably felt
- 00:13:42by the president at the time, Kim Dae-jung.
- 00:13:43He was also shocked at how much revenue the US
- 00:13:46and UK made from their media industries
- 00:13:48and decided that Korea needed its own pop culture industry.
- 00:13:52After the IMF crisis,
- 00:13:53he invested money into a new cultural content office.
- 00:13:56It became a collective effort in the country
- 00:13:58to build up the industry as everyone was eager
- 00:14:01to eclipse Japanese pop cultural imports.
- 00:14:04This soft power agenda strategy is known as Hallyu,
- 00:14:08and yes, it also included the beauty sector.
- 00:14:10As an example of the government's purposeful investment
- 00:14:13in the beauty industry.
- 00:14:14In the early aughts Seoul's cosmetic surgery clinics
- 00:14:17were actually on the verge of shutdown,
- 00:14:20since there weren't enough patients.
- 00:14:22But in 2007,
- 00:14:24the Korea Tourism Organization established medical tourism
- 00:14:27as one of its focus areas for growth.
- 00:14:29Today, a medical tourism support center greets visitors
- 00:14:32at the Incheon International Airport, the entry point
- 00:14:36for the hundreds of thousands who visit South Korea
- 00:14:39for procedures each year.
- 00:14:41You can also get a value added tax refund
- 00:14:44if you get a cosmetic procedure
- 00:14:45that is over 15,000 Korean won or about 11 USD.
- 00:14:49As a result of this effort,
- 00:14:51the Korean beauty industry grew exponentially.
- 00:14:53In 2009, about 60,000 foreigners visited Korea
- 00:14:56for procedures.
- 00:14:57By 2019, the number
- 00:14:59of medical tourists reached nearly half a million.
- 00:15:02By 2018, Korea boasted the most cosmetic surgeons
- 00:15:05and most plastic surgery per capita on earth.
- 00:15:09In her investigative piece
- 00:15:10on Korea's plastic surgery industry,
- 00:15:12Patricia Marx visited a clinic
- 00:15:13in the so-called improvement corridor
- 00:15:15of the Gangnam District.
- 00:15:17She notes that in this area there were between 4
- 00:15:19and 500 clinics and hospitals within a square mile.
- 00:15:23Because of how popular Korea is
- 00:15:24as a medical tourism destination,
- 00:15:26there are now cottage industries of medical tour guides.
- 00:15:29I still remember the first time I witnessed
- 00:15:31an influencer publicizing her medical tourism journey.
- 00:15:35This was back in 2017,
- 00:15:36so it was pretty shocking and memorable.
- 00:15:39She actually had a deal
- 00:15:40with a medical tourism agency called Docfinder Korea.
- 00:15:43They essentially acted as a middleman hoping her
- 00:15:46to book her appointments, transportation and accommodations,
- 00:15:50and with everything taken care of, it honestly starts
- 00:15:53to seem more like a vacation than a hospital visit.
- 00:15:55There are plenty of travel vloggers who will go to Seoul
- 00:15:58and feature a cosmetic procedure
- 00:16:00as just one item on their travel itinerary along
- 00:16:03with eating delicious food and exploring the city.
- 00:16:05- [Tourist] My gosh, this smells so good!
- 00:16:10- [Guest] Oh...
- 00:16:11- So what's the next step for the industry then?
- 00:16:14To build tourist attractions
- 00:16:16around the hospitals, obviously,
- 00:16:18Marx notes that one clinic she visited
- 00:16:20had its own plastic surgery museum,
- 00:16:23complete with among other oddments, deformed skulls,
- 00:16:25postoperative shampoo, and a fun house mirror.
- 00:16:29Websites like Visit Korea will actually advertise
- 00:16:31a combination of medical procedures
- 00:16:33and tourist destinations
- 00:16:35with one itinerary titled "Medical Tour Guide to Muan:
- 00:16:39Enjoy the City Embracing the Sea and Tidal Flats."
- 00:16:42The itinerary lists hospitals along with restaurants
- 00:16:44and natural wonders.
- 00:16:46So it's these kinds of luxuries
- 00:16:48and experiences that help make Korea
- 00:16:50a popular destination for medical tourism.
- 00:16:53But you might be wondering why participate
- 00:16:55in medical tourism at all?
- 00:16:56Why go through the lengths
- 00:16:58of getting procedures over in another country
- 00:17:00when there are plenty of specialized doctors
- 00:17:02in many of our home countries?
- 00:17:04While a lot of procedures are actually cheaper in Korea
- 00:17:06than my home country of America.
- 00:17:09A Bloomberg article interviewed Julie Miller,
- 00:17:11a 46-year-old from New Jersey who is flying to South Korea
- 00:17:14to get Botox and skin tightening.
- 00:17:16Rebecca Choong Wilkins reports for Bloomberg,
- 00:17:19"It's a trip that'll take her about a day
- 00:17:20and the final bill for those treatments isn't cheap,
- 00:17:23about $3,000,
- 00:17:24but it's almost half the cost of doing it back home."
- 00:17:27She's right. Prices are cheaper.
- 00:17:30At Oracle, a clinic in Seoul,
- 00:17:31an entire region of Botox is as cheap as $30,
- 00:17:35whereas the same procedure in LA would be $200.
- 00:17:38As for double eyelid surgery,
- 00:17:40you can get one for $300 in Seoul.
- 00:17:42The price for the procedure in the US is 10 times higher.
- 00:17:45Jungmi Jun, a researcher at USC reported
- 00:17:47in her 2015 study that major surgeries in Korea are offered
- 00:17:50at a price two to eight times lower than
- 00:17:53in the United States.
- 00:17:55Some hospitals will also price treatments low
- 00:17:58to get patients into their clinics
- 00:17:59in hopes that those patients will return
- 00:18:01for more expensive procedures later on.
- 00:18:04I also have multiple East Asian friends
- 00:18:06who just do not trust American doctors,
- 00:18:09believing that these doctors are uninformed
- 00:18:11about East Asian facial features and proportions
- 00:18:13and will botch them as a result.
- 00:18:15And as I said before, the specificity of the procedures
- 00:18:18that you didn't even know you needed help
- 00:18:19to reinforce Korea's reputation
- 00:18:21as a technologically advanced country that will take care
- 00:18:24of you, unless they don't.
- 00:18:27Like any country with a beauty industry, human error,
- 00:18:30predatory marketing and clinics focused
- 00:18:32on bottom line profits will lead
- 00:18:34to botch results or even death.
- 00:18:37There's also a number of factors specific to medical tourism
- 00:18:39that can pose additional problems such as the lack
- 00:18:42of translators and presence of illegal brokers.
- 00:18:45Personally, I find that the best recommendations
- 00:18:47for anything from medical doctors to restaurants
- 00:18:51to hiking trails,
- 00:18:52they all come from people I actually know,
- 00:18:54people who I trust to have gotten this firsthand experience.
- 00:18:58When you're a foreigner, unless you have friends
- 00:19:00or family based in that country that can tell you what's up,
- 00:19:03for the most part,
- 00:19:04you're going to have to rely on the internet
- 00:19:06to get your recommendations, and as the saying goes,
- 00:19:10don't believe everything you read on the internet.
- 00:19:12Predatory people across Reddit
- 00:19:13and other online forums will post fake reviews all the time,
- 00:19:17even though this is illegal,
- 00:19:19some posters receive commissions from bringing in clients,
- 00:19:21which is why they do it.
- 00:19:23Doctors will also pay commissions
- 00:19:24to brokers who help foreign patients match
- 00:19:27with their clinics.
- 00:19:28I should add, this is illegal for domestic patients.
- 00:19:31Korean law also prohibits the use of influencers
- 00:19:34for testimonial marketing,
- 00:19:36but influencers are often still part
- 00:19:38of a clinic's marketing scheme.
- 00:19:39"Al Jazeera" reviewed a contract
- 00:19:41that required a foreign influencer
- 00:19:43to produce multiple promotional videos
- 00:19:46and social media content about a plastic surgery clinic
- 00:19:49in exchange for free surgery,
- 00:19:51with the clinic dictating specific positive language
- 00:19:54to be used in posts.
- 00:19:55The clinic requires that that influencer produce the content
- 00:19:57before knowing the final result of the surgery,
- 00:19:59stipulated that it would review all content
- 00:20:02before its release and included confidentiality terms
- 00:20:05that effectively prevented disclosure
- 00:20:07of the sponsored nature of the surgery.
- 00:20:09When the influencer didn't wanna use the positive language
- 00:20:12because she wasn't happy with the results,
- 00:20:15the company demanded she pay back
- 00:20:18for the surgery and travel costs.
- 00:20:19Fortunately, her lawyer got the demand to stop
- 00:20:22after reminding the hospital
- 00:20:23that they were already doing something illegal
- 00:20:25under medical advertising laws.
- 00:20:26But not every influencer can afford a good lawyer
- 00:20:29to argue these clauses
- 00:20:30or even know that arguing is a possibility.
- 00:20:34The actual experience of getting the surgery
- 00:20:36can also be overwhelming and confusing.
- 00:20:39One American named Alex, who traveled to South Korea
- 00:20:42for a rhinoplasty said she was rushed into surgery
- 00:20:45despite having reservations and not being able
- 00:20:47to speak with an in-house translator.
- 00:20:49After the surgery, she experienced complications
- 00:20:52including disfigurement due to the implant
- 00:20:55protruding through her skin, which forced her
- 00:20:58to get an emergency removal surgery in the US,
- 00:21:01which I'm sure was an extra wad of cash.
- 00:21:06She told Al Jazeera, "I felt abandoned,
- 00:21:09like I was on a conveyor belt.
- 00:21:10Once they had done the surgery,
- 00:21:12they didn't wanna deal with me anymore.
- 00:21:13They kept saying I was still healing
- 00:21:15when I knew something was seriously wrong."
- 00:21:17Frustrated by inadequate aftercare
- 00:21:19and unable to secure a refund,
- 00:21:21Alex wrote a review with photos on the Gangnam UNNI app,
- 00:21:24a popular plastic surgery review platform marketed as UNNI
- 00:21:28outside South Korea, eager to avoid negative publicity,
- 00:21:31the hospital offered a full refund,
- 00:21:33but only after she agreed to delete the review
- 00:21:36and sign a confidentiality agreement.
- 00:21:38The document which was reviewed
- 00:21:40by Al Jazeera prohibited her from discussing the contents
- 00:21:43of the agreement and her experience on any platform
- 00:21:46with failure to comply resulting in financial penalties.
- 00:21:49Malpractice is everywhere.
- 00:21:52You know, there's an entire reality TV show dedicated
- 00:21:55to fixing bad plastic surgery in the US.
- 00:21:58Some procedures are also just more difficult
- 00:22:00to do than others.
- 00:22:01They're more high risk.
- 00:22:02BBLs have a notoriously high mortality rate compared
- 00:22:05to other surgical procedures.
- 00:22:07I'm not too familiar with the American legal system,
- 00:22:09which I'm sure is tricky to deal with even for citizens.
- 00:22:13But if you get a procedure abroad, it's even more difficult
- 00:22:16to navigate because you're not a citizen,
- 00:22:18so you have different rights
- 00:22:20and I'm assuming you don't speak the local language,
- 00:22:22so you'll need translators,
- 00:22:24you'll need to somehow find a lawyer, et cetera.
- 00:22:26Additionally, it's hard to get restitution
- 00:22:29if an accident does occur
- 00:22:30because Korea has strict defamation laws
- 00:22:32that make it very difficult for anyone to sue.
- 00:22:34There's also the issue with ghost doctors, AKA doctors
- 00:22:38who perform a surgery that another surgeon was hired for.
- 00:22:41They come into the operating room
- 00:22:42when the patient is under general anesthetic.
- 00:22:44It's technically illegal,
- 00:22:45but regulations are not heavily enforced
- 00:22:47because it's hard to prove.
- 00:22:48Many clinics don't have CCTV cameras
- 00:22:51in their operating rooms
- 00:22:52and you know patients are knocked out.
- 00:22:54The reason the ghost doctor industry exists is
- 00:22:56because of how high demand these clinics are,
- 00:22:59but rather than just accepting fewer clients,
- 00:23:01they hire ghost doctors, usually younger,
- 00:23:03less experienced doctors to maximize profits.
- 00:23:06Jo Elfving-Hwang, an associate professor
- 00:23:08of Korean studies at the University of Western Australia,
- 00:23:11told CNN that high profile surgeons often use K-pop stars
- 00:23:16or celebrities to promote their clinic,
- 00:23:18but during busy periods, some just can't deal
- 00:23:21with the volume of patients,
- 00:23:22especially as star doctors also need to be available
- 00:23:25for consultations with new customers.
- 00:23:28Ghost doctors operate illegally in America too,
- 00:23:31but laws in Korea are pretty relaxed
- 00:23:34even when malpractice is proven.
- 00:23:36For example, one doctor who asked a nurse to perform eyelid
- 00:23:39or nose plastic surgeries at least 90 times,
- 00:23:42received only a three month suspension.
- 00:23:45Between 2008 and 2014,
- 00:23:48the Korean Society of Plastic Surgeons estimated
- 00:23:50that there were about 100,000 victims
- 00:23:52of ghost surgery in South Korea.
- 00:23:54I should clarify that just
- 00:23:56because you're treated by a ghost doctor doesn't mean
- 00:23:57anything bad will happen to you,
- 00:23:59but it is concerning to not know what's happening
- 00:24:02and also it is illegal.
- 00:24:04So yeah, just not good.
- 00:24:06Overall, you know, I'm not saying
- 00:24:07that Korea's a bad place to get work done.
- 00:24:09Obviously many people go without any issues,
- 00:24:12but I think everyone at the very least should be informed
- 00:24:15no matter what country they go to,
- 00:24:17no matter what specific clinic they go to.
- 00:24:20Korea has this really good reputation,
- 00:24:21but that doesn't mean that you shouldn't do any research.
- 00:24:24There was a girl on TikTok that went viral recently,
- 00:24:27but she deleted her video maybe
- 00:24:28because she was avoiding getting sued for defamation,
- 00:24:31but she was permanently blinded
- 00:24:32by her doctor in Korea when getting filler injected.
- 00:24:35People just have so much trust in these institutions,
- 00:24:38but you only have one body, so just be as informed
- 00:24:41as you possibly can if you must get a procedure.
- 00:24:44(upbeat piano music)
- 00:24:46(keyboard buttons clacking)
- 00:24:51Despite the risks,
- 00:24:52cosmetic surgery has become a pretty normalized
- 00:24:54both in Korea and in LA.
- 00:24:56A 2020 "Gallup" poll found that
- 00:24:59since the early 2000s,
- 00:25:0170% of Koreans don't view cosmetic surgery as taboo.
- 00:25:04One in three women surveyed all between the ages of 19
- 00:25:07and 39 had undergone cosmetic surgery.
- 00:25:0959% of men said they would get plastic surgery
- 00:25:12to improve their chances on the job market,
- 00:25:14a number that shot up 30% since 1994.
- 00:25:17Korean American journalist Jane Chung wrote
- 00:25:19for Business Insider that when she was 14,
- 00:25:21her family offered her double eyelid surgery
- 00:25:23as a middle school graduation gift.
- 00:25:26Chung refused because at the time she believed
- 00:25:28that permanent body modification was, quote,
- 00:25:31"A tool of patriarchy to control and subdue women."
- 00:25:34She's not wrong.
- 00:25:35Chung is not the only one who's been offered plastic surgery
- 00:25:38as a graduation gift, though,
- 00:25:39it's common enough in South Korea that dermatology
- 00:25:42and plastic surgery apps offer up to 50 to 70% off discounts
- 00:25:46to recent high school grads in a three pack
- 00:25:49of popular procedures, eyelid surgery, nose jobs,
- 00:25:52and Botox for jaw contouring.
- 00:25:54Patricia Marx interviewed a Korean college student
- 00:25:56who said, "When you're 19,
- 00:25:58all the girls get plastic surgery.
- 00:25:59So if you don't do it after a few years,
- 00:26:01your friends will all look better,
- 00:26:02but you will look like your unimproved you."
- 00:26:05There's a statistic that one in four Korean mothers
- 00:26:08with daughters between the ages of 12
- 00:26:10and 16 have suggested plastic surgery to them.
- 00:26:14An anonymous Korean woman told "Vice,"
- 00:26:15that the pressure comes from wanting their kids
- 00:26:17to be socially accepted.
- 00:26:19She says, "Everyone is getting prettier and prettier
- 00:26:23and some parents don't want their child to be the ugly one.
- 00:26:26It's like in the 90s if you got a Discman
- 00:26:28because your parents didn't want you
- 00:26:30to be the only kid at school without one."
- 00:26:33This weirdly reminds me
- 00:26:34of the whole Japanese bento box phenomenon.
- 00:26:37Walk with me here, in Japan it's common for mothers
- 00:26:41to invest a lot of energy
- 00:26:42into preparing aesthetically pleasing bento boxes
- 00:26:45or lunch boxes for their children.
- 00:26:47It can take hours to prepare all the ingredients,
- 00:26:50source the right tools and shape all the foods.
- 00:26:53Rudiko Tamira, a 43-year-old Japanese woman
- 00:26:56with two young children told National Geographic
- 00:26:58that she knows mothers who get up at like four o'clock
- 00:27:01or five o'clock in the morning cutting seaweed
- 00:27:03with scissors.
- 00:27:05Mariko Oi wrote for BBC about this
- 00:27:08and explained that the reason why they do this
- 00:27:10is because "There is an underlying guilt
- 00:27:12that we, many Japanese working mothers feel.
- 00:27:15It was our choice not to give up our careers
- 00:27:18so our children shouldn't suffer because of it."
- 00:27:20She also notes that this is an expectation put on mothers
- 00:27:23by their communities as well.
- 00:27:25One woman confessed to her,
- 00:27:27"The pressure that my bento must be judged
- 00:27:29by the teachers makes it even more stressful."
- 00:27:33Makiko Itoh, author of "The Just Bento Cookbook," says
- 00:27:36that Bento is a reflection of parenthood.
- 00:27:38"A lot of it is caused by the fact that many parents want
- 00:27:41to get their kids into a good kindergarten
- 00:27:43and for that they have to pass the test.
- 00:27:46So the better the parents perform in their parental duties,
- 00:27:48including making the right lunches,
- 00:27:51the more likely their children will be accepted
- 00:27:53by good schools and receive a better education."
- 00:27:58A 36-year-old Japanese woman named Kyoko Sudo
- 00:28:01also told Nat Geo her personal experience
- 00:28:03of being bullied over bento when she was in school,
- 00:28:07she recounted,
- 00:28:08"Kids started complaining about what my mother made,
- 00:28:11'maybe Kiyoko's family is very poor
- 00:28:13because she only has one egg and one sausage.'
- 00:28:15They judged me and my family, you know."
- 00:28:17So in a similar fashion I think that a lot
- 00:28:19of the parents encouraging their kids
- 00:28:21to get plastic surgery are coming from a good place.
- 00:28:24You know, they want their kids to fit in, to not be bullied,
- 00:28:27to get good jobs later in life
- 00:28:29and they don't wanna be judged
- 00:28:30as being bad parents, et cetera.
- 00:28:32But ultimately it is another pressure point
- 00:28:34that reinforces structural lookism.
- 00:28:38Lookism is social prejudice against those who fail
- 00:28:40to meet a certain appearance standard
- 00:28:42and the word stems from the fat acceptance movement.
- 00:28:45Lookism is prohibited by a 1995 Korean law,
- 00:28:49but Helen Chu, a Korean beauty entrepreneur explains
- 00:28:52that often the first thing anyone says when they meet you
- 00:28:56is related to looks.
- 00:28:58And as I said, it's structural.
- 00:28:59A 2017 South Korean poll found that nearly 40%
- 00:29:02of respondents experienced discrimination
- 00:29:04based on their appearances when applying for jobs,
- 00:29:07up until 2019 when the practice became illegal,
- 00:29:10it was common for job applications
- 00:29:12to require headshots from their candidates.
- 00:29:14Job listings will also use terms like neat
- 00:29:17and beautiful to describe ideal candidates.
- 00:29:19One advertisement that drew media attention specified C
- 00:29:23as the ideal bra cup size.
- 00:29:25Even the Ministry of Employment and Labor once shared a link
- 00:29:28on Twitter encouraging job seekers to mind their looks.
- 00:29:31Suggesting cosmetic surgery has become one
- 00:29:34of the seven credentials needed for employment
- 00:29:36and asking what type
- 00:29:38of face companies preferred for its applicants.
- 00:29:40The post has since been removed.
- 00:29:42So it's not a purely superficial interest to get work done.
- 00:29:46There are actual consequences for being ugly
- 00:29:49and honestly, I think if I was in a situation
- 00:29:52where I literally could not get a job
- 00:29:54because of the way I looked,
- 00:29:55I would consider plastic surgery way more seriously.
- 00:29:59Obviously, I'm not in support
- 00:30:01of the cosmetic surgery industry
- 00:30:02because at the end of the day this perceived independence
- 00:30:05and being able to change your appearance
- 00:30:08still reinforces a neoliberal mindset that each of us needs
- 00:30:11to self-improve in order to compete in the market.
- 00:30:14Also, worrying about aesthetic labor distracts us
- 00:30:17from focusing on actual structural inequality.
- 00:30:19So I don't agree with it,
- 00:30:21but I'm just saying there's reasons
- 00:30:23and stepping outside of a system is more difficult
- 00:30:26than just paying $300 for double eyelid surgery.
- 00:30:30Also, every country has
- 00:30:31this kind of oppressive beauty ideal,
- 00:30:33but I think the major difference between say Korea
- 00:30:36and America is that Korea is more upfront about it.
- 00:30:39In America to a certain extent,
- 00:30:41we still cloak plastic surgery discourse
- 00:30:43around feeling your best, self-improvement language
- 00:30:46doesn't blatantly acknowledge the desire to be pretty
- 00:30:49for the approval of society.
- 00:30:51There's also still shame about getting beauty procedures.
- 00:30:54Not going to name any names,
- 00:30:55but there are many celebrities
- 00:30:57who will deny getting any work done,
- 00:30:59even when anyone with eyes can tell they did.
- 00:31:02Michael Hurt, a sociologist who is half Korean
- 00:31:04and half black explains, "The US still does this,
- 00:31:07'No, Photoshop is bad. Be yourself.
- 00:31:10Don't fall into the trap.'
- 00:31:11But you can't escape this shit.
- 00:31:13Korean society says, 'Fuck it,
- 00:31:14you look better, so go do that.'
- 00:31:16If I can make my meat face look like
- 00:31:18the better hyper-Photoshopped digital version of my face,
- 00:31:21why wouldn't I do that?
- 00:31:23It's not the future, it's right here in Korea today.
- 00:31:26Koreans get beat up for looking fake,
- 00:31:28they're body shamed, but basically Korea is doing
- 00:31:30what everybody will be doing very soon."
- 00:31:33Yeah, I honestly feel like the reason plastic surgery
- 00:31:36isn't more accepted in the US
- 00:31:39is because it's less accessible here
- 00:31:41and you know, we have a shrinking middle class
- 00:31:43that can barely afford things
- 00:31:45versus in Korea it's way more accessible
- 00:31:48and so you don't have to be like upper class Hollywood
- 00:31:51to be able to afford a nose job,
- 00:31:53but not everyone is buying into the beauty industry.
- 00:31:56There's a movement in Korea called Escape the Corset
- 00:31:58that pushes back against beauty standards
- 00:32:00with the more radical members foregoing makeup entirely
- 00:32:03and shaving their heads.
- 00:32:04Hu explains why this is so brave,
- 00:32:06specifically in South Korea,
- 00:32:08"The rejection of basic appearance norms comes
- 00:32:10with punishing social sanctions for Korean women.
- 00:32:13These activists have become outcasts at school and at work.
- 00:32:16Sometimes they're even uninvited
- 00:32:18to their own family gatherings."
- 00:32:20One movement member, Ho Jian explains her experience.
- 00:32:24"Instead of calling me by my name,
- 00:32:26my coworkers just call me, 'Boy,' 'why are you like that?'
- 00:32:29They'll ask me and my family tells me they think appearing
- 00:32:32with short hair and being makeup free is unsafe for me.
- 00:32:35Everyone comments about their own discomfort.
- 00:32:37At first, I try to explain my thoughts and values,
- 00:32:40but that's not what they wanted to hear,
- 00:32:41so now I'm just ignored."
- 00:32:42Despite detractors, The Escape The Corset movement
- 00:32:45has successfully ignited many conversations
- 00:32:47about women's rights
- 00:32:48and some consumption data actually shows decline
- 00:32:51in beauty related spending among Korean women in their 20s.
- 00:32:54I can't say for sure what caused this,
- 00:32:57but it's interesting nonetheless.
- 00:32:58Numbers from the Ministry of Economy
- 00:33:00and Finance indicate that between 2015
- 00:33:02and 2018, sales of cosmetics, hair products
- 00:33:05and other beauty related goods dropped
- 00:33:0653.5 billion Korean won, approximately $44.8 million
- 00:33:12among women in their 20s,
- 00:33:13and this was also the time when Escape the Corset
- 00:33:15was heavily talked about.
- 00:33:17Feminist online communities like WOMAD
- 00:33:19also have organized in-person demonstrations
- 00:33:22and protests such as the B-Wave protests
- 00:33:24for abortion rights, which started in 2016
- 00:33:27and continued until 2019 when the abortion ban was lifted
- 00:33:31in a constitutional court ruling.
- 00:33:33(upbeat piano music)
- 00:33:34(keyboard buttons clacking)
- 00:33:38I think a lot of people who don't know too much about Korea
- 00:33:40and are only exposed to K-pop
- 00:33:42and the industry abuses going on there,
- 00:33:45I think they perceive Korea
- 00:33:46as being a looks obsessed country,
- 00:33:50but there's different motivations
- 00:33:51for why someone might be obsessed with looks
- 00:33:53that go beyond just individual vanity
- 00:33:56and it's after reading these resources,
- 00:33:58especially Elise Hu's "Flawless" that you know,
- 00:34:00I can't stop promoting because it's so good.
- 00:34:03But after reading these things that I feel like I'm able
- 00:34:05to understand or more understand,
- 00:34:08understand more the nuances behind the beauty industry
- 00:34:11and why it's difficult
- 00:34:12to make broad stroke statements like
- 00:34:14we should just not wear makeup and not get plastic surgery.
- 00:34:17I mentioned systemic issues before,
- 00:34:19but another example,
- 00:34:21Jessica Elfving-Hwang interviewed 20 women living in Seoul
- 00:34:24who were 63 and over about their attitudes towards beauty,
- 00:34:27and the participants explained
- 00:34:28that beauty work in Korea at least among elderly women,
- 00:34:32was understood in the context of respect to others.
- 00:34:35This concept was referred to as Yewi
- 00:34:37or correct social etiquette.
- 00:34:39When Hu interviewed elderly Korean American women
- 00:34:41in Orange County, their attitudes were similar
- 00:34:44and that they still believed in performing beauty work
- 00:34:46in some way.
- 00:34:47One woman, Elizabeth exclaimed through laughter,
- 00:34:50"Let myself go? No, of course not!
- 00:34:53I still care.
- 00:34:54I put some moisturizer and a little liner
- 00:34:56to look like I'm awake."
- 00:34:57A 71-year-old woman, Joe Young Lim drew a link
- 00:35:01between letting herself go and being unhealthy.
- 00:35:03"If we're laying in a hospital, then we're, you know,
- 00:35:06burdening our children."
- 00:35:08These attitudes are reminiscent
- 00:35:09of what journalist Autumn Whitefield-Madrano wrote
- 00:35:12as a defense on beauty in 2016.
- 00:35:14"The number one thing I hear from women when I ask
- 00:35:17about their reasons for performing beauty work
- 00:35:18is not that they wanna change how they look,
- 00:35:21but that they want to look like their best selves.
- 00:35:23It may be human to dream of transformation,
- 00:35:26but it is practical to dream
- 00:35:27of simply looking all the time the way we do
- 00:35:30when we're rested, fed, watered, well sexed
- 00:35:32and nicely groomed.
- 00:35:34In other words, the reason we perform beauty work is
- 00:35:37because we are engaged in chronic hope."
- 00:35:40I think about my own grandma who is retired, married,
- 00:35:43and mostly only sees people she's known for years,
- 00:35:47AKA people who absolutely do not care what she looks like
- 00:35:50yet she styles her hair, keeps her nails painted
- 00:35:52and does an elaborate makeup routine every morning.
- 00:35:56I think about myself and how I feel a lot worse
- 00:35:58if I don't change outta my pajamas all day,
- 00:36:00even if I, you know, don't intend to leave my house.
- 00:36:04A lot of these attitudes have to do
- 00:36:06with social conditioning,
- 00:36:07like we maybe wrongfully associate putting on makeup
- 00:36:11with being active or taking part in community,
- 00:36:14but Hu writes,
- 00:36:15"We should ask ourselves if the labor we're undertaking
- 00:36:17is ego driven or soul driven?
- 00:36:19Does it lead to more connection with ourselves
- 00:36:21and others or disconnection?"
- 00:36:24I think it's always valuable to know the reasons
- 00:36:26for why we go through aesthetic labor
- 00:36:28because it can help us come up with alternative methods
- 00:36:31for living a freer life.
- 00:36:34For example, if you know you associate putting on makeup
- 00:36:37with seeing your friends, experiment with what it means
- 00:36:40to not wear makeup and still see your friends
- 00:36:43and figure out whether
- 00:36:44or not you can at some point disconnect the two
- 00:36:48and then notice whether
- 00:36:49or not that disconnection brings any more meaning
- 00:36:52to your life.
- 00:36:53I don't know, it's just food for thought.
- 00:36:55I think that obviously when you put in plastic surgery
- 00:36:58in here, it adds like another wrench
- 00:37:00to the equation than just like not wearing makeup
- 00:37:02for the day but we like to talk in absolutes when it comes
- 00:37:05to beauty discourse.
- 00:37:06I think it serves a less to think of it
- 00:37:09in those kinds of dichotomies,
- 00:37:10especially when we're talking about other cultures
- 00:37:12and you know, the different kinds
- 00:37:14of like structural institutions that exist that make us want
- 00:37:19to adjust our bodies in this specific way.
- 00:37:23Okay, (giggles) anyways,
- 00:37:25thanks for hanging out with me today.
- 00:37:27My name is Mina. I hope you have a lovely rest of your day.
- 00:37:30Please let me know in the comments what you've thought about
- 00:37:34when it comes to like plastic surgery in Korea.
- 00:37:37I don't know if this is like very niche,
- 00:37:38but I feel like it's not that niche anymore
- 00:37:41and yeah, I would love to hear any experiences as always,
- 00:37:44and I'll see you next time.
- 00:37:45Okay, bye. (lips smacking)
- K-pop
- beauty standards
- plastic surgery
- medical tourism
- Korean beauty industry
- Escape the Corset
- lookism
- social media
- cultural identity
- personal experience