BTS Leaps Back into Busan—A Free Fest to Boost Expo 2030 Dreams
Concert Highlights
- All‑seven members reunited for the first time since the June break announcement.
- The event, styled “BTS in Busan,” was completely free for anyone who wanted to fan‑boy.
- Fans strutted to the stadium, eyes glued to over 500 fans of fire‑yellow or flashy black outfits.
Fans and Attendance
- About 52,000 people filled the stadium according to Yonhap.
- Six‑figures—up to 100,000—simply turned up in the borough, some even caught the show on giant screens in city squares.
- A roaring crowd proves that even a “pause” can’t dampen the group’s magnetism.
Band’s Future and Military Service
- BTS’s oldest, Jin, is slated to enter mandatory Korean service in 2025.
- New 2019 legislation lets “bigger stars” deferral until age 30.
- Defense minister said the group might “still perform overseas while serving,” a wink toward keeping Tokyo, Seoul, and London audiences humming.
- RM’s pep talk: “If you’ve got faith in us, we’ll keep making music together—no matter what comes next!”
Expo 2030 Contest
- Four cities—South Korea, Italy, Ukraine, Saudi Arabia—vied to host the 2030 World Expo.
- The winner appears next year; the next step is to watch the votes roll in at the BIE.
- BTS, dubbed the “official ambassadors,” slice a groove of global slang into the pitches.
BTS’s Global Impact
- Formed 2013, they quickly blew up with beats that talk about friendship, meaning and mental health.
- Last year they snagged Artist of the Year at the American Music Awards—first ever for an Asian group.
- In May, they met with President Joe Biden to discuss anti‑Asian hate crimes, showing music can be both a mic drop and a policy tool.
In short, the free concert in Busan was not just a blast, but a statement: BTS’s torch keeps burning, even when delays loom.\n
