Parasocial diffusion: K-pop fandoms help drive COVID-19 public health messaging on social media
Ho-Chun Herbert Chang, Becky Pham, Emilio Ferrara

TL;DR
K-pop fandoms significantly contributed to COVID-19 health messaging on social media, especially through parasocial engagement with BTS, reaching diverse and often neglected communities worldwide.
Contribution
This study reveals how K-pop fandoms and parasocial relationships can be leveraged to enhance public health communication during crises.
Findings
Tweets mentioning K-pop received 111 times more responses.
Strong engagement from South America, Southeast Asia, and rural US.
Increased activity from right-leaning elites over time.
Abstract
We examine an unexpected but significant source of positive public health messaging during the COVID-19 pandemic -- K-pop fandoms. Leveraging more than 7 million tweets related to mask-wearing and K-pop between March 2020 and December 2021, we analyzed the online spread of the hashtag \#WearAMask and vaccine-related tweets amid anti-mask sentiments and public health misinformation. Analyses reveal the South Korean boyband BTS as one of the most significant driver of health discourse. Tweets from health agencies and prominent figures that mentioned K-pop generate 111 times more online responses compared to tweets that did not. These tweets also elicited strong responses from South America, Southeast Asia, and rural States -- areas often neglected in Twitter-based messaging by mainstream social media campaigns. Network and temporal analysis show increased use from right-leaning elites…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAsian Culture and Media Studies · Media Studies and Communication · Misinformation and Its Impacts
