In an era where we gleefully feast on the carrion of celebrity meltdowns, the news that K-Pop quintet Le Sserafim has quelled internal strife and seen off a troll army is being hailed as a triumph. But let us not mistake a well-rehearsed press release for genuine human drama. The group’s label, HYBE, has spun this tale as a parable of unity in the face of online hatred, complete with a documentary that follows the members through tears and triumph.
It is a narrative so polished it could reflect the moon. We are told that the band, comprising Kim Chaewon, Sakura, Huh Yunjin, Kazuha, and Hong Eunchae, faced “band tensions” following the departure of member Kim Garam last year. The trolls, as they are called, descended like digital locusts.
Yet the group prevailed, releasing a new album and preparing for a world tour. How inspiring. Except this is not a story of resilience in the traditional sense.
It is a story of industrial resilience, of a machine designed to absorb and repurpose negativity into product. The K-Pop industry has long perfected the alchemy of turning scandal into sales. The “trolls” are not a threat; they are a resource.
Every hate comment is a brick in the fortress of brand loyalty. Le Sserafim’s “overcoming” is not a victory of the human spirit. It is a victory of public relations.
We should be wary of celebrating manufactured narratives. True resilience is messy, unpredictable, and often silent. It does not come with a curated documentary or a carefully timed comeback.
But then again, we live in an age where even our tragedies must be optimised for streaming.









