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K-dramas get most of the international attention, but Korean television's actual cultural engine is its variety shows (예능, yeneung). These long-running entertainment programs combine game-show challenges, celebrity panels, travel segments, and personal storytelling into formats that have shaped Korean comedy, K-pop fandom, and Saturday night family viewing for over two decades. If you want to understand modern Korean pop culture, you eventually have to watch a few episodes of Korean variety.
This guide walks through Korea's most popular variety shows, the format archetypes that define the genre, why these shows have such loyal fan bases, and how to start watching them with English subtitles.
What Are Korean Variety Shows?
Korean variety shows are long-running TV programs that mix scripted segments, improvised reality moments, game challenges, celebrity interviews, and travel or cooking content. They typically run for years (some have crossed 500 episodes), feature a stable core cast of comedians and rotating celebrity guests, and air on weekend prime-time slots that command huge family audiences.
What separates Korean variety from American or European entertainment shows is the editing style. Korean variety editors layer thick on-screen captions, reaction graphics, slow-motion replays, sound effects, and emoji overlays to amplify every reaction. The format is dense, fast, visually rich, and designed to convert ordinary moments into laugh-out-loud comedy.
1. Running Man (SBS)
Running Man (런닝맨), broadcast by SBS since 2010, is the most internationally famous Korean variety show. The format pits the seven-member cast against rotating celebrity guests in a series of mission-based games, often culminating in the iconic name tag tear-off elimination round where contestants chase each other through buildings, theme parks, or city districts trying to rip off rival players' name tags.
The core cast (Yoo Jae-suk, Ji Suk-jin, Kim Jong-kook, HaHa, Lee Kwang-soo, Song Ji-hyo, and rotating newer members) became some of the most recognizable Korean celebrities in Asia and Southeast Asia. Running Man's international fan base extends into Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines, where the show has dedicated networks and fan tours. K-pop idols regularly appear as guests, making it a primary K-pop variety crossover.
2. 2 Days and 1 Night (KBS)
2 Days and 1 Night (1박 2일), broadcast by KBS, is Korea's longest-running and most-watched travel variety show. The format takes the cast on overnight trips to Korean regional destinations: a fishing village in Jeolla, a mountain temple in Gangwon, a small island off Jeju. Along the way, they play games, eat local food, and compete for the right to sleep indoors versus outside in the cold.
The show has worked as both entertainment and tourism: featured destinations regularly see visitor spikes after appearing on 2D1N. Now in Season 4, the cast (Yeon Jung-hoon, Kim Jong-min, Moon Se-yoon, Kim Seon-ho before his hiatus, Na In-woo, DinDin, Yoo Sun-ho) has rebuilt the family-trip dynamic for a new generation. The English-subtitled version on KBS World is one of the easiest entry points to Korean variety.
3. Knowing Bros (JTBC)
Knowing Bros (아는 형님), also titled Ask Us Anything, is the Korean answer to a high school comedy classroom. The show stages itself as a "school" where the seven cast members (Kang Ho-dong, Lee Sang-min, Lee Soo-geun, Kim Young-chul, Min Kyung-hoon, Seo Jang-hoon, and Heechul from Super Junior) play themselves as classmates and "interview" celebrity guests through games, role-play, and rapid-fire questions.
K-pop fans especially love Knowing Bros because every K-pop group eventually appears as guests, often performing parody dance routines or competing in fan-game challenges. The show's high schooler classroom premise lets celebrities act loose in ways serious interviews don't allow. Heechul of Super Junior in particular has become known for his comedic timing on the show.
4. I Live Alone (MBC)
I Live Alone (나 혼자 산다), broadcast by MBC since 2013, is a reality-style observational variety show focused on the lives of single Korean celebrities living alone. Each episode follows two or three cast members through a typical day at home, with the in-studio cast watching and commenting on the footage in real time. The format is gentle, voyeuristic, and curiously addictive.
The show has built superstars out of comedians like Park Na-rae, Kian84 (the webtoon artist), Henry Lau (the SuperM violinist), and Sung Hoon. The format also serves as a cultural mirror for Korea's rising single-person household demographic. Many episodes simply show the celebrity grocery shopping, cooking, or reorganizing a closet, and the format still draws several million viewers per week.
5. Infinite Challenge (MBC)
Although it ended in 2018 after 13 years, Infinite Challenge (무한도전) deserves a permanent place in any Korean variety guide. The show was Korea's longest-running comedy variety, hosted by Yoo Jae-suk with a rotating cast that included Park Myung-soo, Jeong Jun-ha, HaHa, Noh Hong-chul, and others. Each season threw the cast into absurd "infinite challenges" ranging from world tours to a fictional rock band concert.
Infinite Challenge essentially invented the modern Korean variety show template that Running Man and others now follow. Many of its segments became cultural touchstones: the rock band concert at Yeouido, the wrestling special, the calendar photo shoots, and the cast's annual graduation episodes. Reruns are still widely watched, and the show's influence is visible across the entire Korean entertainment industry.
Other Korean Variety Shows Worth Knowing
Beyond the big five, Korean variety has a long bench of beloved shows. Master in the House features the Running Man cast learning from Korean masters in various crafts. Hometown Flex follows celebrities returning to their hometowns. The Genius was a high-IQ strategy competition show. New Journey to the West is the comedic Tang dynasty road trip show created for Naver TV. SNL Korea is the Korean version of Saturday Night Live.
For food and travel, Three Meals a Day follows celebrities cooking on rural farms or remote islands. Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha Variety Special and Hyori's Bed and Breakfast blend variety with reality TV. Korean variety also includes recurring K-pop specific shows like Idol Star Athletics Championships (ISAC), where K-pop idols compete in track-and-field events.
How to Watch Korean Variety Shows with English Subtitles
Several platforms now stream Korean variety shows with English subtitles. Viki covers Running Man, Knowing Bros, and several smaller shows. KOCOWA (or KOCOWA+) carries Running Man, 2 Days and 1 Night, I Live Alone, and most KBS/MBC/SBS variety. Netflix hosts select archives. YouTube has official KBS World and SBS channels with English-subtitled clips for free.
For first-time viewers, start with Running Man (high action and easy to follow) or 2 Days and 1 Night (gentle, beautiful Korean landscapes). Knowing Bros is great if you already follow K-pop. Infinite Challenge reruns are best after you have absorbed the cultural context. Try one episode of each and let your preferences guide your watching from there.
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