S Korean garlic video ad roasted over purported obscenity
A rural South Korean town is getting roasted over its video ad on garlic that some farmers say stinks of obscenity and has even sexually objectified the agricultural product
A rural South Korean town is getting roasted over its video ad on garlic that some farmers say stinks of obscenity and has even sexually objectified the agricultural product.
The controversy surrounds a 30-second video which had been on a YouTube channel for Hongseong County, a small central and western South Korean town of about 100,000 people known for its local āHongsanā garlic, for about two years.
The video shows a woman touching the thigh of a man named āHongsanā with a full garlic head mask and saying words like āvery thickā and āhardā to apparently metaphorically advertise the quality of the local garlic. The scene is a parody of a famous scene from a 2004 hit Korean movie titled āOnce Upon a Time in High School.ā
The spicy ad, which reportedly generated about 190,000 views on Hongseongās YouTube channel, had been largely kept underground, but began to take root in the larger public when it was aired on electronic billboards at a Seoul express bus terminal and a downtown street in the central city of Daejeon last month ahead of the garlicās release.
One farmer who saw the video notified some farmersā groups, while South Korean media also began reporting about it, leaving a bad taste in people's mouths.
āWe canāt repress our astonishment,ā said a joint statement issued by the local branches of two major farmersā organizations ā the Korean Peasants League and the Korean Women Peasants Association. āThe video offended the people who watched it and dealt a big blow to the image of the agricultural product that farmers have laboriously grown.ā
Calling the video āsuggestiveā and āinappropriate,ā the statement said it "sexually objectifiedā garlic.
The farmersā groups asked Hongseong to apologize, punish those responsible for the video production and formulate steps on how to prevent similar incidents. Shin Ji Youn, an official at the Korean Women Peasants Association, said the farmersā groups asked Hongseong to respond to their requests by Aug. 10.
Hongseong officials said Wednesday theyāve withdrawn the video from their YouTube channel and had stopped airing it on the billboards last week. The county hasnāt issued any official statement on the issue, and officials said they are discussing how to respond to the farmersā requests.
County officials said they formally changed the name of their local garlic to āHongseongā after their county name in January.