Seattle's Child

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K-pop dancing is all the rage at Bellevue's CoffeeDance Studio(Image by Cascade PBS)

Local K-pop dance studio really pops

Classes invite kids and adults to 'show a different version of themselves'

K-pop, short for Korean Pop, has gained widespread popularity in the U.S. Earlier this year, the hit “Golden” from the movie KPop Demon Hunters made history by being the first K-pop song to win a Grammy and the first to win an Oscar.

While the genre is growing nationwide, the [U.S.] is home to the most K-Pop fans, according to a Billboard survey from last summer.

One of those fans, Tory Tao, wanted to share her love for the genre, so she founded CoffeeDance Studio in Bellevue in 2020 to teach K-Pop and related dance styles. She said the community is now around 11,000 people.

“I wanted to build a place that can make people feel so good about themselves,” Tao said. “People carry different social roles in daily life. I hope they can have ‘me’ time here, so when they come to the studio, they just enjoy the dance and show a different version of themselves.”

The genre incorporates elements of pop, hip-hop and R&B. But almost equally important is the power of a spotlight. The folks at CoffeeDance Studio get that.

So, in addition to offering dance classes for kids and adults, they also offer a program to develop K-pop music videos.

“K-pop is not just about music and dance. It’s about storytelling,” Tao said. “I feel like it’s really easy for people to express themselves, and, also at the same time, bring joy and connections and confidence to them.”

Check out the video story by Cascade PBS:


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About the Author

Paris Jackson & Jaelynn Grisso / Cascade PBS

Paris Jackson is an editor-at-large at Cascade PBS and the host of “The Newsfeed”. She’s an Emmy Award-winning journalist with 15+ years in TV news and public media. A former anchor/reporter at KOMO-TV in Seattle. She is an editor-at-large at Cascade PBS. [email protected]. Jaelynn Grisso is Cascade PBS’s investigative multimedia journalist. Prior to Cascade PBS, Grisso founded a nonprofit news outlet and worked for Mother Jones, Honolulu Civil Beat and Scripps.