Latin America Falls for Korea and Rewrites Its Cultural Map
From Chilean dance crews to Mexican influencers and Argentine Korean creators, South Korea’s cultural boom is no longer niche in Latin America. It is reshaping taste, business, and belonging, while showing how the region’s imagination is drifting eastward in time.
When Fandom Becomes Urban Life
On the polished flagstones outside a cultural center in Santiago, four Chilean girls count their dance steps aloud in Korean while Blackpink blasts from a speaker. That image, reported by The Guardian through interviews and on-the-ground reporting, is a useful place to begin because it captures something Latin America has quietly grown accustomed to over the past few years. Korean culture is no longer arriving as an exotic side current. It is walking into public space, into speech, into choreography, into shopping lists, into the everyday appetite of cities that once treated it as a niche.
What might have drawn curious stares a decade ago now looks almost ordinary. That is the real story. In Mexico, the Korean creator Sujin Kim, better known as Chingu Amiga, has built a huge following by talking about K-dramas and skincare. In Colombia, the Korean YouTuber Zion Hwang has opened karaoke restaurants to profit from the boom. In Brazil, Korean and Korean Brazilian influencers such as Arthur Paek are helping turn cuisine and culture into social media language with massive reach. Across the region, Korean references are no longer confined to a single neighborhood or a devoted subculture. They are mainstream enough to generate business, identity, imitation, and aspiration simultaneously.
That matters because Latin America has long absorbed culture from abroad, then remixed it in its own idiom. But this Korean wave feels different in tempo and in texture. It is not just music, not just television, not just beauty products. It is a full cultural package arriving simultaneously through screens, algorithms, fandoms, and diaspora networks. It comes with color, discipline, sentiment, and an industrial polish that younger audiences recognize immediately. The Guardian notes that Mexico is now K-pop’s fifth-largest market, and demand for BTS tickets became so intense that even the Mexican president wrote to her Korean counterpart to help plan additional dates. That is no longer fandom at the margins. That is a state-level acknowledgment that something bigger has happened.
The transformation feels especially visible because it has moved from symbolic consumption to urban geography. In Santiago’s Patronato neighborhood, where a small number of Korean migrants arrived in the 1970s, Daniela Im told The Guardian that the boom truly accelerated during the pandemic. Lockdown drove K-dramas and films like Parasite deeper into homes across the region. When restrictions eased, her family turned their textile workshop into a traditional Korean restaurant. Now, she says, when a TV character drinks soju or eats samgyeopsal, children show up the next day wanting to order it. Just a few storefronts away, a minimarket stocks kimchi and sauces labeled in Spanish and Hangul. More than 40 Korean restaurants have appeared in that tiny zone in just five years. This is how soft power becomes bricks, menus, rent, and local trade.
The Old Migration Story Meets a New Screen
One of the most interesting aspects of The Guardian’s reporting is how this boom connects to a much older migration story. The first group of Korean migrants arrived in Latin America in 1905 at the Mexican port of Progreso. They had been lured by false promises of stable work and ended up laboring in brutal conditions on agave plantations in Yucatán. Later waves came in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, driven by instability and unemployment in Korea. Today, only around 100,000 Koreans and their descendants live across Latin America. That is not a large population for a region this big. And yet, most major cities now pay tribute to Korean culture and fandom in some form.
That contrast is revealing. The demographic footprint is relatively small. The cultural footprint is now enormous. Which means this is not just a story of diaspora expansion. It is a story of amplification. A relatively modest migrant history has met a far more powerful machine of global culture and digital distribution.
But the diaspora still matters because it gives the boom human bridges. Christian Burgos, a Mexican television presenter in South Korea, told The Guardian that when he first got interested in Korean culture as a teenager around 2010, he was almost alone. “It was really niche,” he said. He learned Korean at the main public university in Mexico City, one of the few places offering classes at the time. Then he moved to South Korea, where he eventually worked on television. Now, he says, hardly anyone in Mexico is completely unaware of Korea. Spotify reports 14 million K-pop fans in Mexico. In public spaces, teenagers dance in groups dressed like K-pop stars, filming themselves with tripods.
There is a certain Latin American familiarity in that progression. Something begins as an obsession, almost embarrassing in its intensity. Then it becomes a subculture. Then commerce notices. Then public life adjusts. Then nobody remembers when it was rare.
The same pattern runs through the story of Liliana Inés Song, born in Argentina to Korean parents. She told The Guardian that she always felt she needed to build a bridge between Korea and Argentina, the two halves of herself. As a child, she gravitated toward Korean shows more than Argentine television. Later, she began explaining the differences between China, Korea, and Japan at a time when many Argentines still lumped them together under the vague label of “Asian.” Eventually, she started her own channel and moved to Seoul with her husband. By late 2024, she was interviewing Squid Game star Lee Jung-jae. What her story exposes is the educational side of this wave. It is not just about consumer desire. It is also about correcting ignorance, naming differences, and making Asia more legible to a region that once saw it from afar.

Soft Power Finds a Region Ready to Listen
The larger question, then, is why Latin America seems especially receptive right now. Part of the answer is aesthetic. Burgos told The Guardian that even people who do not like the music can find the videos hard to stop watching because they are so visually addictive, with quick changes and bold colors. That sounds small, but it is not. Digital culture rewards intensity, polish, and visual coherence. Korea has mastered that language.
Part of the answer is emotional. K-dramas, pop idols, beauty rituals, and food culture do not arrive as cold products. They come wrapped in intimacy, aspiration, and narrative. In Latin America, where melodrama, family feeling, and performative emotion already occupy such a large place in cultural life, that package travels unusually well.
And part of the answer is geopolitical, even if it first shows up in children’s conversations. Brazil’s health minister, Alexandre Padilha, suggested last year that Latin America’s growing interest in Asian culture contrasted with, and perhaps connected to, the declining international appeal of the United States under Donald Trump. He said his 10-year-old daughter no longer imagines the United States when she talks about wanting to go somewhere. She imagines what she is increasingly seeing from the East. That observation should not be exaggerated, but neither should it be dismissed. For generations, so much of Latin American modern desire was filtered through the United States. What The Guardian captures is a subtle shift in the cultural imagination. The north still looms, but it no longer monopolizes fantasy.
That does not mean Korea is replacing local identity or even replacing the United States in any total sense. Latin America is too hybrid, too stubbornly itself for that. What it means is that Korean culture has found a region already prepared to translate it into local terms. Young Chileans do not dance exactly like Koreans. Mexican influencers do not consume K-beauty as passive copies. Korean Argentines do not bridge cultures by abandoning one half of themselves. They adapt, localize, explain, and re-stage.
That may be why this boom feels durable. Dr. Jinok Choi, who directs the Rey Sejong Institute at Universidad Central in Santiago, told The Guardian that what she now sees among young Chileans is more than a passing fascination. It is a profound interest in Korea, one that is continually opening new avenues in the relationship. That sentence may be the best way to understand where the wave now stands. Latin America is not simply consuming Korean culture as a trend. It is starting to reorganize parts of its cultural future around it. And once that happens, a dance on a Santiago sidewalk stops looking like an imitation. It looks like the map is changing under everyone’s feet.
Also Read: Cubans Transform Scrap Ingenuity into A Cautionary Example For Latin America



