Meeting your partner’s family can be nerve-wracking, especially when cultural differences come into play. For one Korean student, what was meant to be a warm weekend introduction turned into two uncomfortable days of being treated more like a K-pop exhibit than a guest.
Her boyfriend’s 13-year-old sister, an obsessive fan, couldn’t stop using Korean words she didn’t understand, asking intrusive questions, and even taking photos of her while she ate.
When the visit was finally over, she vented to her boyfriend, calling his sister’s behavior racist. Instead of understanding, he got defensive. Now, she’s wondering whether she went too far or if she was simply the only one willing to call out what no one else would.
A woman met her boyfriend’s K-pop-obsessed little sister and spent two uncomfortable days being treated like a walking Korean stereotype




























Cultural psychologist Dr. Eunjung Kim from the University of Washington explains that this kind of behavior, though often unintentional, reflects “cultural fetishization” where fascination with a culture turns into objectifying people from it.
“When someone treats you like a novelty or assumes traits based on race, it stops being appreciation and becomes dehumanization,” Kim says.
The rise of global K-Pop has brought Korean culture into mainstream Western consciousness, but it’s also exposed new layers of racial bias.
According to Dr. Crystal Anderson, author of Soul in Seoul: African American Popular Music and K-Pop, Western fans often blur the line between admiration and appropriation.
“There’s nothing wrong with loving K-Pop,” Anderson notes, “but assuming all Koreans live, act, or look like idols erases individuality and turns real people into extensions of fantasy.”
Sociologist Dr. Nancy Wang Yuen, who researches racial representation in media, adds that this “idolization of identity” is still racism, even without malicious intent. “Racism doesn’t always come from hate; it can come from ignorance, from a failure to see someone as a person beyond their ethnicity.”
As for the boyfriend’s reaction, experts stress the importance of allyship. “When your partner tells you they experienced racism, the right response isn’t to argue, it’s to listen,” says Kim. “Invalidating them reinforces the very isolation they’re describing.”
See what others had to share with OP:
These Redditors backed OP completely, saying the sister’s behavior was fetishizing and racially objectifying, even if unintentional


















![Woman Says Her Boyfriend’s Little Sister Was Racist For Treating Her Like A K-Pop Idol [Reddit User] − NTA. From the title I assumed something different, but no she makes you into a racial trope, which is not OK.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761014597456-23.webp)
These users acknowledged that while the sister might not have known better, it was still racism in effect






These commenters emphasized that being curious about Korean culture isn’t racist


























So, what do you think? Please, share your opinions in the comment section below!










