The breakout catchphrase of early-2026 Korean short-form video was, without question, "Geoje Yaho!" Coined by Woni, leader of the five-member girl group RESCENE, the single line was crowned the "buzzword of the year" — and became a textbook case of how a meme can lift a still-rising group's actual music career.
On Woni's YouTube channel, Japanese member Minami showed up in heavy gyaru makeup. When Woni quipped, "You'd get scolded for doing this in Geoje," Minami deadpanned back, "Geoje Yaho!" That short clip got picked up by the algorithm and spread across short-form platforms.
| Metric | Detail | |---|---| | Reach | Dominated short-form platforms; crowned "buzzword of the year" | | Views | Millions of views across related clips | | Channel growth | Woni's YouTube channel passed 400,000 subscribers within three months of launch |
The attention translated straight into streams. RESCENE's 2024 single 'LOVE ATTACK' climbed back up by word of mouth, reaching No. 5 on the Melon chart at midnight on June 10, 2026. Unlike the usual "viral then gone" story, this is a rare case proven by real chart performance.
"Geoje Yaho" is more than a passing phrase — it is a 2026-style textbook of K-POP meme marketing that cycled virtuously from place (Geoje) → group (RESCENE) → core work (music) → industry (tourism & TV). What stands out is that the hometown of the member who created the meme is tied to real regional tourism, turning online buzz into offline economic impact.