You Quiz Links Ha Chun-hwa's 65 Years to Teen Hip-Hop

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Ha Chun-hwa's 65-year career anchors tvN's new You Quiz episode about voices that shaped lives.
Ha Chun-hwa's 65-year career anchors tvN's new You Quiz episode about voices that shaped lives.

tvN's You Quiz on the Block is turning one June episode into a study of how a voice can change a life, bringing together a 65-year veteran singer, two 14-year-old hip-hop prospects, a rising actor and a former New York air traffic controller. The June 24 broadcast, episode 348, is built around the theme "The Voice That Saved Me," and its guest list makes the idea feel broader than a simple celebrity talk segment.

The episode is scheduled to air at 8:45 p.m. KST and features singer Ha Chun-hwa, actor Heo Nam-jun, teenage rapper Han Jae-hee and beatboxer Han Tae-woo, and former John F. Kennedy International Airport controller Hong Won-chul. For international viewers who may know the format only through clips, You Quiz on the Block is one of Korea's most recognizable interview programs, often mixing star promotion with life stories that can travel well beyond the studio.

A 65-Year Career Meets a New Generation of Sound

Ha Chun-hwa gives the episode its longest historical arc. She debuted in 1961 at the age of six and is marking her 65th anniversary as a singer, a milestone that places her career across several eras of Korean popular music. Korean reports describe the program as looking back on the hidden stories behind a performer long associated with records, firsts and national recognition.

Her segment is expected to balance humor with reflection. Ha revisits intense fan culture from earlier decades, including unsettling stories from performances where fans behaved dangerously, while also speaking about the meaning behind her reputation for celebrity giving. The episode also teases a lighter moment in which she responds to an image shaped by comedian Kim Young-chul's impersonation of her, saying she does not actually roll her eyes in the exaggerated way the parody suggests.

That mix is why the segment has more weight than a routine anniversary appearance. Ha's career began before K-pop became a global language, but her longevity helps explain the performance culture that younger idols and musicians inherit today. Her voice is not only a musical instrument in this episode; it is a record of how Korean entertainment moved from local stages and variety shows into a media ecosystem that can now be watched and clipped around the world.

The generational contrast arrives through Han Jae-hee and Han Tae-woo, a 14-year-old rapper and beatboxer duo described by Korean outlets as part of the future of Korean hip-hop. The pair reportedly received calls from seven agencies, a striking number for performers still in their early teens. Their appearance also includes stories from their attempts around Show Me the Money, the survival-format rap program that has shaped public awareness of Korean hip-hop talent.

Han Jae-hee is said to have participated in work connected to Kim Ha-on's music and will perform part of "Yarrr" during the broadcast, while Han Tae-woo is expected to demonstrate the beatboxing that impressed the studio. Reports also say the two will build an impromptu rap around the story of how one set of parents first met. It is a small variety-show device, but it fits the theme: voice as memory, play and identity rather than only performance technique.

The Human Stakes Behind a Voice

The episode widens the idea of a meaningful voice through Hong Won-chul, who spent 31 years working at New York's JFK International Airport. His story is unusually concrete for a variety program because it carries numbers that instantly communicate pressure. Korean reports say JFK handles about 2,800 flights a day and that Hong once landed 68 aircraft in one hour.

Hong's appearance also gives the episode a direct connection to Korean viewers abroad. He moved to the United States at age 13 and later pursued the demanding path to become an air traffic controller after letting go of a pilot dream. Reports describe the controller exam pass rate as under 10 percent, a detail that gives his career path the shape of a long, difficult climb rather than a simple professional profile.

One of Hong's best-known moments came from a control exchange with a Korean Air captain, in which he used Korean to help explain the situation. The clip reportedly reached 9 million views, turning a technical workplace interaction into an emotional point of recognition for viewers who understood the comfort of hearing their own language at a tense moment. On You Quiz, he is also expected to speak about the pressure of protecting countless passengers and his memories of witnessing the September 11 attacks while working in aviation.

That gives the episode its most literal reading of the title. For performers, the voice can create a career, a fan base or a moment of connection. For a controller, a voice can help organize fear, guide a pilot and protect people who will never know the name of the person speaking from the tower.

Heo Nam-jun Adds the Drama-Fan Hook

The guest list also includes actor Heo Nam-jun, who is drawing attention for his role as Cha Se-gye in the drama Brave New World. Korean reports frame him as a rising romantic-comedy figure, with host Yoo Jae-suk acknowledging his recent buzz as soon as he appears. For viewers following K-drama conversation online, Heo's segment is likely to be the easiest entry point into the episode.

Heo is expected to explain why he kept his You Quiz invitation secret even from his fraternal twin brother and close acquaintances. He also looks back on building the Cha Se-gye character, crediting his partnership with Lim Ji-yeon and discussing lines that became fan talking points. Reports specifically highlight behind-the-scenes stories around memorable romantic lines and an ad-libbed scene that helped shape audience reaction.

The actor's personal background adds texture beyond promotional talk. He is set to speak about first imagining acting as a possible dream while doing dictation, preparing for practical music department entrance exams, working part-time jobs ranging from a department-store shoe section to apartment construction sites, and growing up around farm work. Those details give his rising profile a grounded frame, especially for readers who are encountering him through one drama role and need a quick sense of the person behind the character.

Why This Episode Could Travel Online

On paper, the lineup looks scattered: a trot legend, teenage hip-hop performers, a controller and an actor. The organizing idea makes the episode more shareable. Each guest connects to sound in a different way, from Ha Chun-hwa's lifetime of singing to the boys' rhythm and rap, Hong Won-chul's calm professional communication and Heo Nam-jun's scripted romantic lines.

That structure is important for overseas readers because Korean variety shows can be difficult to follow when coverage focuses only on names. The appeal here is not simply that several guests will appear on a popular program. It is that the episode turns very different careers into a single question: what happens when a voice becomes the thing people remember, trust or emotionally return to?

Ha's segment brings nostalgia and the weight of a career that began when she was a child. Han Jae-hee and Han Tae-woo bring the excitement of early talent being noticed before their adult careers have even begun. Hong brings the hidden drama of a job where calm speech matters more than fame. Heo brings the current fan energy of a drama actor learning how quickly a role can change public attention.

For You Quiz on the Block, that combination fits the show's strongest formula: recognizable guests, simple emotional framing and enough specific detail to make clips travel after broadcast. The 65th-anniversary reflections, the seven-agency interest in two young performers, the 9 million-view aviation clip and the drama anecdotes all offer different hooks for Korean entertainment fans.

The larger takeaway is that the episode treats voice as more than a sound. It can be a career that lasts 65 years, a beatbox rhythm from a teenager, a line that makes drama viewers replay a scene, or a calm instruction that helps a pilot and passengers move safely through pressure. That is why the June 24 broadcast has a better Discover case than a standard schedule notice: it gives viewers a clear emotional reason to click, and it gives general readers enough context to understand why these four stories belong together.

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저작권자 © KEnterHub 무단전재 및 재배포 금지

Park Chulwon
Park Chulwon

Entertainment Journalist · KEnterHub

Entertainment journalist focused on Korean music, film, and the global K-Wave. Reports on industry trends, celebrity profiles, and the intersection of Korean pop culture and international audiences.

K-PopK-DramaK-MovieKorean CelebritiesGlobal K-Wave

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