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On May 20, Harry Styles released his new album Harry’s House, debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 albums chart. This is his third studio album in which all thirteen songs are in the top 30...
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May 26, 2022
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The first theatre production highlighting the global takeover of the K-Pop industry will be making its Broadway debut later this year, with its opening night scheduled for November 20, while...
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When four girls from South Korea turned the California desert into a global stage
There are music moments… and then there are cultural reset moments. BLACKPINK performing at Coachella? Yeah. That was the latter. Twice.
The first time they took the stage in 2019, they made history. The second time in 2023? They owned it. Headliners. The main event. And not just for K-pop stans, but for everyone with a pulse and a WiFi signal.
It wasn’t just a concert. It was a statement.
BLACKPINK didn’t just step onto the Coachella stage, they kicked the door down, walked in slow-mo, and said, “K-pop has officially entered the chat.”
From Seoul to Indio: How We Got Here
Let’s rewind. Before BLACKPINK, no K-pop girl group had ever performed at Coachella. K-pop was global, sure, but still treated like an imported trend in the U.S. something niche, something “for the fans.”
Then came 2019. Four women in matching black fits, walking onto one of the biggest stages in Western music like they’d been born on it. They weren’t guests. They weren’t a cute add-on. They were the moment.
And the crowd? Ate. It. Up.
People who had never streamed a K-pop track in their life left that desert with “Kill This Love” playing in their head on repeat. That was BLACKPINK’s intro to Coachella. But trust, they were just getting started.
The 2023 Headliner Takeover: Blinks, Baddies, and Beyoncé-Level Presence
Fast forward four years, and BLACKPINK was no longer just representing K-pop, they were leading the global lineup. In 2023, they made history (again) as the first K-pop act to headline Coachella. Not openers. Not side-stage. HEADLINERS.
That weekend in Indio, the desert air had a different energy. Something between a high-fashion runway and a global fan meetup. Jennie, Jisoo, Rosé, and Lisa came out with an intensity that hit harder than the bass drop in “DDU-DU DDU-DU.”
From the first note, it was clear: they weren’t here to prove anything. They already had. They were there to celebrate the empire they’d built.
The Energy Wasn't Normal. It Was absolute GREATNESS
Watching them live felt surreal. There’s something about seeing a group that effortlessly balances sweet and savage, flawless visuals, vocals that hit, and choreo that makes your knees hurt just watching it.
Their performances weren’t just tight. They were emotional. Explosive. You could feel the years of hard work, rehearsals, and cultural pressure boiling over into something beautiful.
The camera would pan across the crowd, and you’d see it: American fans screaming every Korean lyric. International flags waving. TikTokers crying. Even Coachella bros with bucket hats frozen in awe.
It was the kind of energy you can’t fake. And you can’t forget.
Why It Mattered (Like… Historically)
BLACKPINK didn’t just bring K-pop to Coachella. They made it impossible to ignore.
Before them, K-pop artists had to fight for space on Western lineups. After BLACKPINK? They’re getting top billing. Western media stopped calling it a “K-pop invasion,” and started calling it the future of pop. Artists from Billie Eilish to Cardi B were watching from the crowd or reposting clips.
They proved you can perform in a mix of Korean and English and still shut down a Western stage. They proved that girl groups aren’t outdated, they’re just global now. They proved that four women with talent, vision, and a rabid fandom can shift the entire music industry’s center of gravity.
BLACKPINK didn’t just headline. They redefined.
Not Just Music—This Was Fashion, Culture, and Influence on Steroids
Let’s not act like this was just about vocals. The LOOKS they served? Haute couture in the middle of the Mojave.
Jennie in custom Chanel. Lisa in Celine with boots made for stomping hearts. Jisoo in Dior. Rosé in Saint Laurent, glowing like a Coachella fairy with heartbreak in her voice. It was giving supermodels-who-also-happen-to-sing-better-than-you energy.
And their impact went beyond music. Coachella that year felt different. It was more global. More feminine. More diverse. TikTok was flooded with fancams. Fashion blogs couldn’t keep up. Twitter? Cooked.
What It Meant for K-Pop in America
BLACKPINK’s Coachella run was the final boss level of K-pop’s rise in the West. After that, no one could say it was a passing trend. They opened doors, kick-flipped them open, for other acts like ATEEZ, LE SSERAFIM, and NewJeans to walk through.
They proved that K-pop isn't just for stan Twitter. It’s for stadiums. For streaming charts. For history books.
It was a moment. A shift. A before-and-after.
And no matter how many future K-pop groups take the stage at Coachella, BLACKPINK will always be the blueprint.
So, What Do You Do After Witnessing Greatness?
If you watched the 2023 Coachella performance live, congrats. You saw a piece of history.
If you didn’t? YouTube is your best friend, babe. Go binge the live cuts. Cry a little. Then stream BORN PINK like your life depends on it.