
Just days before Oasis’s highly anticipated reunion tour launch in Cardiff on July 4, frontman Liam Gallagher ignited controversy after posting the derogatory slur “Ching-Chaeng-Chong”—a racially offensive term mocking East Asian speaking patterns—on X (formerly Twitter) on July 1.
Though the post was quickly deleted, screenshots circulated across Asia and beyond, reinvigorating dialogue around racism and public figures. Gallagher later issued a brief apology on X:
“Sorry if I offended anyone with my tweet before it wasn’t intentional you know I love you all and I do not discriminate. peace and love LG x.”
Fan outrage was swift and global. As Oasis prepares to perform in Seoul, Tokyo, and Toronto, Asian concertgoers have voiced discomfort and disappointment. One Canadian ticket-holder, Yifan Liu, called the term “troubling” and sought a refund from Ticketmaster, stating he could no longer attend due to the slur . However, Ticketmaster denied the request, citing final sale terms and distancing themselves from the controversy.

Reactions online ranged from anger—one X user wrote: “not a proper apology and I don’t accept it” —to doubt: “A simple ‘sorry’ isn’t enough to make up for this” . In Asia especially, fans question whether the apology is adequate or performative.
The slur surfaced just before Oasis’s Cardiff opening night and ahead of high-stakes Asian tour dates at venues like Goyang Sports Complex and Tokyo Dome . While organizers have not officially canceled events, the incident casts a shadow over upcoming performances and raises concerns over ticket sales in key markets.
Asia-based media are closely monitoring the aftermath. Reuters reported the backlash, warning officials and fans in countries like South Korea and Japan are watching how Gallagher and his team respond .
Gallagher’s apology—widely criticized as vague and conditional—did not directly acknowledge the slur’s harmful impact. Many online commentators, particularly Asian fans, dismissed the statement as insufficient, urging a more sincere reckoning for such offensive language .
This incident comes amid a period of heightened sensitivity to public figure remarks, with audiences increasingly demanding concrete accountability—not just post-deletion apologies.
Liam Gallagher has a long history of outspoken—and often offensive—comments during Oasis’s 1990s heyday and subsequent solo career. But this racially-loaded slur carries fresh weight in today’s climate of global cultural awareness and rising anti-Asian sentiment. As Oasis embarks on its global reunion, the controversy emerges as a key test: can legacy rock icons reinvent themselves or will past behaviors undermine their comeback?