Translation result
The K-content industry faces a mounting structural dilemma. Production budgets are rising and global demand remains strong, yet distribution is increasingly concentrated among a handful of major streaming platforms. Against that backdrop, SM Entertainment—one of K-pop’s most influential companies—has moved into the FAST market, signaling a new phase in the industry’s search for broader distribution.
On May 22, SM announced it will launch Monthly SM Concert on Samsung Electronics’ FAST platform, Samsung TV Plus. The series kicks off on May 30 with a broadcast of NCT WISH’s encore concert and will continue monthly, each episode featuring a different SM artist.

The move matters not only for SM but for the broader entertainment business.
For SM, the partnership advances a long-running effort to diversify how its artists’ intellectual property reaches fans. The company has expanded beyond traditional music releases with initiatives such as Beyond LIVE online concerts, theatrical screenings and VR performances. The Samsung TV Plus arrangement extends that approach into a viewing environment shaped by shifting consumer habits and device ecosystems.
But the wider significance goes beyond a single company’s ambitions.
The collaboration speaks directly to a core challenge for K-content: dependence on external distribution platforms. As production costs climb and monetization options remain limited, the FAST sector has emerged as an alternative growth channel. Industry observers increasingly view ad-supported streaming television as a place where content owners can grow audiences while developing additional revenue streams.
FAST—Free Ad-Supported Streaming Television—has become one of the most closely watched segments in the North American and European media markets. Unlike subscription services, FAST platforms offer viewers free access to programming funded by advertising, creating new opportunities for both content distributors and advertisers.
In that light, SM’s entry carries symbolic weight. K-pop is among Korea’s most powerful cultural exports, backed by highly engaged fandoms and a steady flow of premium content. Placing that IP on Samsung’s global hardware and media infrastructure signals a willingness to explore distribution models beyond conventional streaming services.
The implications could reach far beyond music.
Korean dramas and other premium content producers are also examining FAST as an alternative to increasingly crowded OTT environments. If partnerships like this succeed, they could help diversify distribution and reduce the industry’s reliance on a small number of dominant platforms.
Ultimately, the SM–Samsung collaboration matters because it recognizes that producing high-quality content alone is no longer enough. Strengthening distribution capabilities and building sustainable media ecosystems are now critical components of K-content’s future.
Whether distribution diversification—driven in part by K-pop’s global reach—can move beyond pilot efforts and secure a stable place in everyday viewing habits remains a story worth watching.
Reported by News Culture M.J._mj94070777@nc.press











Most Commented