K-pop band detained at LA airport as suspected sex workers
SEOUL, South Korea—All eight members of a new girl K-pop girl band, traveling for an album cover shoot in the United States, were detained at Los Angeles airport on suspicion that they might be sex workers, their agency said Friday.
The eight member band, Oh My Girl, were held for 15 hours on Thursday before being released, after which they flew back to South Korea.
Their agency WM Entertainment released a statement saying the LA immigration authorities had gone through the band’s costumes and props.
“Then, probably because of their young age, they seem to have mistaken them as sex workers,” the statement said, without elaborating.
The agency said it was taking legal advice in the United States as to whether the band’s detention was lawful.
Article continues after this advertisementThere might also have been an issue with the type of visa the band members were holding, as they were also booked to perform at a gala event in Los Angeles on Saturday.
Article continues after this advertisementOh My Girl was only formed in March this year and released its debut single in April.
South Korea’s K-pop scene, which has been exported with enormous success across Asia and beyond, is dominated by young girl and boy bands whose members are sometimes as young as 13 or 14 years old.
In 2012, the South Korean authorities took steps to curb over-sexualised performances threatening to slap R-ratings on films, music videos and TV shows that placed an exaggerated sexual emphasis on young singers and bands they feature.
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