A German radio station has apologised after a host made remarks comparing BTS to Covid. AP
A German radio station has apologised after a host made remarks comparing BTS to Covid. AP
A German radio station has apologised after a host made remarks comparing BTS to Covid. AP
A German radio station has apologised after a host made remarks comparing BTS to Covid. AP

BTS: German radio station apologises for comparing boyband to Covid-19


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A Bavarian radio station apologised on Friday for a host’s comments comparing popular South Korean K-pop band BTS to the coronavirus, saying his choice of words had gone too far but was in no way meant to be “hurtful or racist.”

The statement came after legions of fans accused the station's host Matthias Matuschik of racism for his comments on the band's cover of Coldplay's Fix You, taking to social media using the hashtags #Bayern3Racist, #Bayern3Apologise and #RassismusBeiBayern3 which translates as "racism at Bayern3."

“Racism is not an opinion,” wrote one user, @Vroseeeee1 in a blunt tweet in English, German, Korean and Spanish.

The uproar came after a live show on Wednesday, in which Matuschik derided BTS's version of Fix You as "blasphemy" and compared the band to Covid-19, describing them as "some crappy virus that hopefully there will be a vaccine for soon as well."

He then dug his hole deeper as he tried to roll back the comment somewhat, saying “I have nothing against South Korea, you can’t accuse me of xenophobia only because this boyband is from South Korea… I have a car from South Korea. I have the coolest car around.”

Then he went on to say that in penance for the cover, BTS “will be vacationing in North Korea for the next 20 years.”

BTS, which debuted in 2013, became the biggest boy band in the world, selling out stadiums worldwide and delivering a video message at the UN General Assembly this year.

Their songs, filled with intimate, socially conscious lyrics, are credited for their success. Unlike other K-pop bands that carefully maintain the personas created by their labels, BTS is known for its active engagement with fans — known as Army — through social media. BTS has over 33.1 million followers on Twitter.

Offence at the comments didn’t only come from South Korea, with many social media users in Germany and elsewhere immediately condemning them.

Many South Koreans living abroad expressed concerns that the remarks could incite anti-Asian violence, already on the rise in many places.

“This is not just about #BTS, it is about so many Asian people who are dealing with extreme racism especially due to pandemic,” Hansl Chang, a South Korean who lives in Germany, tweeted.

That does not change the fact that many of you found his statements to be hurtful or racist. We apologise for this in every way possible. We will work on the matter with Matthias and the team in detail again in the next few days

In the station’s apology, it said that while Matuschik was “presenting his opinion in an ironic, exaggerated way and with exaggerated excitement, his words went too far and hurt the feelings of BTS fans.

“But he — and he has assured us of this — in no way intended this. He just wanted to express his displeasure over the aforementioned cover version.”

It noted that Matuschik has been involved in helping raise aid for refugees and has a “constant campaign against right-wing extremism” and has shown he is against xenophobia or racism in any form.

“That does not change the fact that many of you found his statements to be hurtful or racist,” Bayern3 said. “We apologise for this in every way possible. We will work on the matter with Matthias and the team in detail again in the next few days.”

The biog

Age: 23

Occupation: Founder of the Studio, formerly an analyst at Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi

Education: Bachelor of science in industrial engineering

Favourite hobby: playing the piano

Favourite quote: "There is a key to every door and a dawn to every dark night"

Family: Married and with a daughter

The biog

Family: wife, four children, 11 grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren

Reads: Newspapers, historical, religious books and biographies

Education: High school in Thatta, a city now in Pakistan

Regrets: Not completing college in Karachi when universities were shut down following protests by freedom fighters for the British to quit India 

 

Happiness: Work on creative ideas, you will also need ideals to make people happy

Stormy seas

Weather warnings show that Storm Eunice is soon to make landfall. The videographer and I are scrambling to return to the other side of the Channel before it does. As we race to the port of Calais, I see miles of wire fencing topped with barbed wire all around it, a silent ‘Keep Out’ sign for those who, unlike us, aren’t lucky enough to have the right to move freely and safely across borders.

We set sail on a giant ferry whose length dwarfs the dinghies migrants use by nearly a 100 times. Despite the windy rain lashing at the portholes, we arrive safely in Dover; grateful but acutely aware of the miserable conditions the people we’ve left behind are in and of the privilege of choice. 

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