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What K-pop Demon Hunters can teach marketers about cultural connectionWith Kpop Demon Hunters now Netflix’s most-watched series, marketers are getting a front-row seat to a cultural shift. The anime’s viral success shows that modern audiences crave belonging — and that true influence is found through connection, not controlled. ![]() Source: Netflix Fan culture is the new growth engineA recent report by Sociallyin shows that campaigns built around participation, shareable sounds, trends, or memes can generate up to three times more engagement than traditional paid posts. The agency notes that audiences today want to be collaborators, and not just consumers, turning creative ideas into living, shareable moments. That dynamic is playing out in real time with Netflix’s Kpop Demon Hunters, which has overtaken Squid Game as the platform’s most-watched title with more than 325 million views. The animated K-pop fantasy has also topped global charts and fueled Oscar buzz, driven largely by fan-created remixes, choreography, and reaction videos. For brands, it’s a reminder that cultural dominance works best when it feels effortless, not omnipresent. “What’s happening with Kpop Demon Hunters shows how fans can become the most powerful part of a marketing strategy,” said Keith Kakadia, marketing strategist and CEO of Sociallyin. “People don’t just want to watch something; they want to belong to it. When fans start sharing, remixing, and joking about your brand, that’s when you know it’s crossed from marketing into culture. But the key is to keep it real and give people space to breathe. If a brand starts chasing every viral moment, it stops feeling authentic, and that’s when the magic fades.” How brands can build fan-powered momentum
Whether it’s a 30-second clip or a full campaign, stories create connection. Fans rally around emotion and identity, not algorithms. Keith noted, “Virality fades fast, but connection sticks. When people feel part of your story, they’ll keep showing up long after the campaign ends, and that’s the difference between attention and loyalty.” |