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Hani Makes Everyone Jizz

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View more here and thank Grey/comekpop for your daily Kpop boner. My EXID will be up sometime in the coming week, but I'll be playing golf this morning followed by studying and homework all day when I get back. And then I'll be doing some studying and shit the rest of the week. Hani will help me get through this week.

Jolin Tsai - Now Is The Time

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"Now is the time" to fap to Jolin as she has released a new music video. Now I just have to wait for November until her new album comes out...

Don't Be A Koreaboo While Naming Your Kids

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So I just got home from school (before writing this post) and saw this topic posted on One Hallyu. I was facepalming myself before I even read the actual first post.



It's okay to be interested in Korean culture. We all are, or else none of us would be active here on AKF. On the other hand, there is a line that this poster crossed. Why would you give a black kid a Korean name? I don't see any Koreans naming their kids Santanio, Raekwon, etc.

Hell, I'm half Korean and don't even have a Korean name. I highly doubt I would give any of my future kids (if I'm dumb enough to have any) a Korean name, and I would actually have a legitimate reason to do so. There are things that should remain within their own culture. It's not like I'm rushing out to give my future kids black names so that they have a hard time even obtaining interviews for jobs.

Ladies' Code involved in accident, EunB passes away while other members are seriously injured.

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At around 1:20 AM, today while traveling to Incheon, Ladies' Code's van slipped on a rainy road after a wheel on the van they were traveling in fell off. While information is still coming in, EunB has died after she was ejected from the van during the crash, while two other members onboard, Rise and Sojung were critically injured. The other members as well as the manager were not seriously injured.

This post will be updated as more information becomes available.
Statement from Polaris Entertainment via Koreaboo:
We would like to explain everything regarding Ladies’ Code up until now. They were returning to Seoul after their schedule at Daegu, then around 1:30AM around Suwon, their back tire of the van fell out. This caused the unfortunate death of our member, EunB.
Currently, our other member Sojung and Kwon Rise are receiving treatment. The manager and other members received no major injuries. The members are on standby to move to a hospital in Seoul.
The location for EunB’s funeral has not yet been decided.
With an apologetic feeling towards everyone, including the fans who have received such a great shock [today], we hope that many of you will pray towards the members’ fast recovery. We will report back further details regarding the accident as soon as possible. Thank you.
Another statement from Polaris:
Polaris Entertainment released the details of EunB’s wake, which is being held at the Korea University Anam Hospital.
EunB’s wake will remain in Korea University Anam Hospital until September 5th.
Meanwhile, Rise and Sojung are currently being treated at the University Hospital in Suwon. Rise, who underwent surgery for nine hours, is currently being monitored, while Sojung is stable and will receive treatment for her fractures.
Rise’s parents who are living in Japan is said to have flown to South Korea to stay with Rise whilst in hospital.
Ashley and Zuny did not sustain any major injuries but are said to be in great shock. They are still undergoing several tests and treatments.

Images taken from this thread on reddit.

Image 1
Image 2
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Image 4 

Image 5 (Caution: Very soul crushing)

News video covering the accident.

Fancam of their last performance in Daegu.

Koreaboo is posting live translated tweets from other Korean celebrities.

Police have said the accident was likely caused by slippery road conditions but are investigating.

Update: Rise and Sojung are in surgery. Rise for major head trauma and Sojung for unknown injuries. They have been/will be transported to Seoul.

Update: It sounds like Sojung's condition has improved.

Update: Rise has now been in surgery for over seven hours.

Update: The hospital Rise and Sojung are being treated in is refraining from giving updates on their conditions.

Update: Rise has successfully ended surgery after 9 hours.

Update: It's been confirmed EunB was not wearing a seat belt.

Update: ultraman88 at onehallyu has given information on the extent of Rise's injury:
I am sorry to throw cold water to your post but RiSe is not okay. I am reading the tweets. She is in a critical condition.

They did a nine hours of surgery. The surgery was done.

They said the injury is so severe they will have to wait and see. They are saying her brain is severely dented in areas.

They had to do pulmonary resuscitation with defibrillation. That means her heart stopped and they had shock her heart either
with the electric charge or by hand.

They had to do the surgery on her brain three times.

Again, the surgery was for NINE hours. They say the afternoon will be the hurdle.
And again here. 

Update: Sojung's surgery has ended.

Update: Rise was transferred to ICU after her blood pressure dropped too low.

Update: The van they were traveling in has been transferred to the National Institute of Scientific Investigation.

Update: The manager is being charged with negligent homicide in connection with the incident.

Update: EunB's family: 
"We went to the hospital after being contacted at daybreak," "She entered the hospital in a deceased state. There was no medical malpractice," and, "We heard that she was on her way to her dorms after attending the recording of KBS's 'Open Concert' in Daegu."
Update: The airbags in the van did not deploy according to police. 

Update: The van in the accident was a rental.

This precious gift - In memory of EunB

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Remembering EunB, I see a lot of people saying to "not miss your chance" because you don't know when something will be taken away. I find that is a slightly selfish understanding, yet also accurate, even if perhaps an incomplete perspective that we should take away from such things.

Take a look at this page on Elvis Presley. He also died too soon, although he had more years in his work than EunB, years at the top. Even so, here is one of the biggest names in all music history and a massive influence upon it, someone who attained about everything a person who enters the field could ever dream for... and yet it is all so simply summarized here, on one page of a website.

The fact is that everyone, even those who live out their lives to the fullest thought as possible, can only live so long. So everyone who makes their life in sharing art is pouring themselves out with their moments, just as EunB has, though her opportunity ended so suddenly. We know that a summary on a website doesn't capture all that is "Elvis" in this world, not the full legacy or impact or experience. The same is true of EunB with her short time as an active idol, and of anyone still working as one.

When we share in the arts, even if somewhat cynically produced to appeal to as many people as possible, we are looking into the potential of the human imagination. We look to the dream, the hope that there can be a more beautiful kind of existence, and draw out of our desire and creativity to make it happen, even if but for a few moments on a stage. Performers are rarely wholly responsible for the music, the design, and dance at once, but they do always function as windows into that more beautiful place existing truly only as something longed for in the human heart.

As far as we know, we are the only beings around to appreciate the universe; plants don't even grow anywhere else of which we are aware. Without us to view it in our wonder, the wonder of this world would not be, and just as we bring wonder, we bring that dream of something even more wondrous that we struggle to convey and can yet never truly fulfill in full. We are not only the one small bit of the universe that can be aware of itself, but the only bit with a notion to try and make it better.

So while one can look at things in common views, taking things for granted in the matter-of-fact standards and notions of comparative achievement we have in civilization, I think in matters of life and death we need to stop and look at the simple fact of our rare and unique existence and the precious gift that it is. In looking at this, we can see what a grand gift EunB gave to the universe through her work, even if cut short, and yet also through understanding that, to more appropriately appreciate the gift of art from all performers and our chance to celebrate this effort of crafting a more lovely or meaningful existence.

In these dark times with international conflicts, economic and environmental strain, terrorism, corruption, and more problems, a person who makes the whole of their endeavors to bring something lovely and enjoyable to others is a noble sort. Likewise, looking at the unique nature of humanity to create art, to express ideas and feelings, to be an actual living impact on existence, we see the whole of a person isn't limited to their time of sharing, but is also truly in what they shared and where it goes. It is not just a cheesy sentiment; EunB has left us with a part of herself in the songs and videos and memories and feelings she gave.

Let us hope that Sojung and Rise can recover. Things look pretty grave for Rise, but miraculous sorts of recoveries have occurred in the past. Whether or not the girls will ever be able to perform again, this all applies to them as well. All their past givings are already, indeed, the past, yet living with us. So our concern for them is in regard to the future, yet whether there remains opportunity for more from them or not, the preciousness of their gift does not change. The same is true of every gift we share and celebrate.

Let EunB's passing remind us of how valuable every moment and song we have to experience together truly is, as all things must pass and are even now passing into what is next.

Stupid Things Fangirls Utter 66

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This week's photo comes from an anonymous asker from my Ask.fm:



Thank you for your submission!

~*~*~
That is literally creating evidence to support your own biased conclusion.

But it is kind of impressive in the sense that: who honestly thinks of trying these things? Who sat there thinking, "I want to mathematically show my love as a S<3ne!"? Using arithmetic to prove a useless point. These fangirls are evolving.

Typical Asian - using math to prove any point.


If anyone has submissions for future Stupid Things Fangirls Utter, please send them to zomg.oppa.sareanghae@gmail.com, tweet them to @akf_shinbi, ask them at ask.fm/akfshinbi, or leave them in the comment section below. Remember your rights on this site: anything you say or do here can and probably will be used against you. Thank you, FISHies!

Assholes Are Impersonating EunB

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I can't make shit like this up.



I don't understand how people can be so depraved and seek attention through impersonating someone who had just died. Seriously, someone needs to hire four or five buck niggers to beat the shit out of this person and round up a couple of horses to rape this person up the ass until he/she bleeds to death.

[MV Review] EXID - Up & Down

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EXID finally made a comeback and I'm finally writing a review. It's hard to believe that EXID had a 22-month hiatus for the main group, and an 18-month hiatus from Hani and Solji, the Dasoni subunit. I hope they studied/did other things during their long-ass hiatus because I doubt they could have made much money performing the same three two-year-old songs over and over again.

To me, Up & Down is a great song and a bad song at the same time. I love as many parts of the song as I hate, and how the individual elements add up together really affect how I think about this song. Just a couple of changes here and there and I think this song could have been one of this year's jams, but it's just a song I'll play a few times here and there.

What doesn't work in this song for me is LE. I know a lot of fangirls think LE is jjangbak and that her shit doesn't stink, but LE is too involved in the songs for my liking. She has two rap verses, the whole chorus to herself, and that isn't enough, as she has adlibs during Hani's verses. Bitch, just shut the fuck up for once and allow the other members to have their own time to shine. If you're a fan of LE, all of this doesn't apply to you, as you probably love everything I hate about the song. Aside from LE's overabundance in the song, the only other aspect I disliked in the song was Junghwa's verse. It felt forced in there and really disrupted the flow of the song.

Aside from my complaints of the song, I love the chorus of the song, even if LE is all over it. It is really addicting and keeps me wanting to replay the song, which is exactly what a chorus is supposed to do. I love the verses from Hani, Hyelin and Solji. While there are plenty of songs where the verses feel like filler just so the chorus doesn't get too repetitive, I actually enjoyed most of the verses in the song.

Aside from Hani being hot as fuck as usual, this MV made me notice Hyerin.

All in all, this song is like getting a blowjob from Hani and LE at the same time. On one hand, you want to have the hardest boner you ever had to blow a huge load all over Hani's face, while on the other hand your penis wants to cower in fear and shrink back inside of your body because of LE.

Who killed EunB?

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I'm sure almost all of you reading this have by now heard about the sad passing of 22 year old EunB (Go Eun Bi) from k-pop girl group Ladies Code.  Here she is in the great "Hate You" MV which has got to be one of the most visually astounding k-pop videos ever, as well as one of 2013's best songs.

eunblc

Looking around at various posts on the Internet, I can see that the incident of EunB's passing obviously affected many people quite deeply.  My heart does go out to all of you who are feeling shook by the loss.  My emotions on it are somewhat different to this though, however perhaps I can still help all you readers who are mourning by shining some light into the darkness, as well as giving voice to people who might not be reacting in the typical white-listed-by-society ways but still may wish to read about this incident in a way that they can relate to, in a way that is humourous AND educational AND sympathetic.  Trigger warning: if you're the ultra-sensitive type there may be better web pages for you out there than this one so feel free to not read further.  For the rest of you, read on.

Firstly, a bit of context for you readers.  Let's make one thing clear straight away: although my posts do have humour I don't take death lightly.  I've had plenty of experience with people in my own life that I care about dying, including both of my parents due to medical reasons, plus an old partner and several of my friends and acquaintances, mostly suicides.  Bom's "You And I" video makes me tear up every time I watch it because that's basically the story of my old relationship with the genders reversed.  I knew my partner wanted to die long before she did anything proactively about it, and I'd do my best to find new and interesting things to entertain her and motivate her to keep herself looking forward to living the next day instead of thinking of ways to off herself, which is exactly what Bom's character does in that video for her partner.  Getting the phone call from my own partner's mother after she found the body, less than 24 hours after I had last seen her, now that shit seriously fucked me up.  I put my phone on silent after that call, and it's still on silent now - ten years later.

That's precisely why hearing about Ladies Code's EunB dying in a car accident didn't affect me all that much.  I felt sad and reflective for a few hours, and maybe a little more paranoid than usual about cycling for the next day or two - and that was all I had.  Hearing about friends and family dying, yes that shit shakes me.  Some celebrity in another country who made some music that I liked dying on the other hand, well yes of course it's sad and I'd definitely prefer it if she was still alive for multiple reasons but I'm not exactly going to cry a river of tears over the death of someone I've never even met.  Who would you be more sad about, your own mother dying, or the mother of a stranger dying?  If you are thinking "equally", then you're lying - it's a fact that people's mothers die every minute of every day so how come you're not crying every single day of your life over some stranger somewhere.  The grief of another mother dying around the world every few seconds would be too much for people to handle, so people's brains naturally prioritise grief for the people who mean the most to them - it doesn't mean they're heartless, it's just a natural way for your brain to cope without being overloaded with sadness 24/7.  It's a phenomenon known as "Dunbar's Number" or the "Monkeysphere" which gives people the ability to maintain this emotional distance from strangers - human brains can only biologically hold so much "care factor" for the fate of others in them at one time.  Therefore as we didn't have any kind of personal relationship, EunB was simply just outside the zone of people who I care deeply about.  If some of these idols start returning my 50 calls and texts per day this could change, but for now they're all still strangers to me, unfortunately.

sulliphone

Society throws a lot of guilt and shame onto people who don't react in the prescribed socially acceptable ways to tragedy, and this creates even more problems because those people then feel not only confused emotions that they may not understand (because they're so unexpected) but also guilt and shame at not feeling the way everybody around them is saying that they are feeling.  This is why I feel it's important for me to state my feelings on it in this preamble - maybe others who reacted in a similar fashion can relate and understand why they feel the way they do without also feeling guilty.  I think it's okay to have different emotions to others about a situation, and to express them, as long as you're not stepping on anyone's toes in the process.

If anything, rather than feeling sad, the situation with Ladies Code pisses me off.  Just because I'm not openly weeping or sentimental about it doesn't mean that I don't give a shit, and in fact I think it sucks that lives sometimes are lost so wastefully for no good reason, the thought makes me angry if anything.  Whenever someone dies, I think it's natural for people to have a lot of questions, and mine is - who the fuck killed her?  I'm personally not a fan of sentimentality in tragedy, it doesn't comfort me, I'm a fan of answers, and that's what I look for when a tragedy occurs.  I want to know what happened, why, who did it, and what can be done about it for the future to prevent it happening again.  So let's check the facts and line up some suspects to see who the likely culprit is, because I want to know who is responsible for this shit.... don't you?

A quick summary of what happened, as far as we know it (a more detailed summary is here):
  • Ladies Code, along with some entourage, were driving from a scheduled appearance to their dorms
  • A rear wheel came off the van they were driving, the vehicle spun several times and hit a guard rail
  • Airbags did not deploy and seatbelts were not worn, also excessive speed on a wet road may have been a factor
  • EunB was thrown from the vehicle and died at the scene or shortly afterward, she did not make it to hospital alive

Suspect #1 - Hyundai

The vehicle that Ladies Code were traveling in was a rented Hyundai Grand Starex - it's apparently a piece of shit according to netizens' statements after EunB's accident, some of which are below:
Grand starex cars have 2 point seat belts and we can’t even tighten them. If a grand starex car flips and you’re sitting at the back of the front seat, it’ll be extremely critical. The ones that are exported overseas have 3 point seat belts. The domestic cars with 2 point seat belts were also a big reason of the death
That grand starex is said to be the trashiest work of the brand. Years ago, university students were in the same kind of car and it flipped a bit on grass. The roof of the car ripped hard and 6 students died. The car is a definition of a weapon resulted by using cheap materials. It should never be ridden by celebrities or children. If it gets into an accident, it totally destroys itself. If it was a starcraft van, it would’ve been different. They might’ve been seriously injured but they wouldn’t have died or get into a critical condition. This is very unfortunate. Seeing how an innocent person can face a sudden death, it darkens my feelings. I have nothing to say. I can only pray for the dead and hope for the injured ones. Never buy the starex. It’s a total trash that can’t even be exported
There's a reason celebrities ride vans.. there are more safety features that prevent big accidents. TVXQ and Wanted got into similar accidents but TVXQ was riding a van and got injuries while the Wanted member died because he was riding a Starex.
How true are these claims?  I couldn't dig up any solid dirt apart from what netizens were saying but I did note that the vehicle's (supposedly) safer European-market cousin only gets a 3/5 crash test rating, and that's with crash test dummies in 3-point belts and rear child safety seats.  It's true that car companies can sometimes be cunts, and Hyundai certainly wouldn't be the only culprit there.  If you haven't seen the film Fight Club, go and see it straight away (you might need to be over 18 in some countries, so just tell your parents that Kpopalypse says it's okay to watch), not just because it's a great movie, but specifically for this scene:


The Fight Club "recall" scene is probably based on the case of the 1971 Ford Pinto.  The Pinto had a little design fault which was causing the vehicles to explode in flames in rear-end collisions and cremate the occupants inside - surely worthy of a recall, right?  Not according to Ford who calculated that recalling the vehicles to fix the problem would cost more than just continually paying out settlement claims to relatives of the deceased... so Ford just said "fuck it, so what if some people die, let's save the money"... and if you think that car companies these days have left that kind of mentality back in the 1970s, think again.

So it's entirely within the realms of possibility (although certainly not confirmed #legallycoveringmyass) that the Grand Starex may be recall-worthy and have regular airbag/structural faults but the company just doesn't care.  Maybe it could have better safety features - even some of the exported versions of the Grand Starex don't have rear 3-point seat belts, but on the other hand what kind of seat belt is in the thing is surely irrelevant if you're not wearing one anyway.  Sure, the airbags on the vehicle EunB was traveling in didn't deploy, but airbags are near-useless on their own anyway, they're a supplemental system designed to work in conjunction with seatbelts.  However why would the company make the Korean version of the Grand Starex with decent seat belts if almost nobody in Korea even wears them, which brings us to...

Suspect #2 - Korean road manners

It's no fucking secret that Koreans seem to drive with a massive disregard for their own and others' road safety (not that there aren't even worse countries for this, of course).  SeveralYouTubershavenoticed that Koreans have a somewhat sketchy relationship with road rules, and there's tons of video evidence out there, but let's not just take their word for it, here's some quotes from some friends of mine who have lived in the country off and on for a year or two doing that ubiquitous westerner-in-Korea occupation, English-language teaching:
The bus drivers are insane, they'll floor it as soon as people get on the bus, they won't wait for you to sit down, even if you're an old lady or on crutches or a walker if you don't grab onto something straight away you'll just go flying and nobody even cares.  I helped someone up who was knocked over by the bus driver and she looked at me weirdly, she seemed really surprised that someone was helping her, you can tell that it doesn't happen often.
People in cars often won't stop for you as a pedestrian even if there are pedestrian signals and it's at a pedestrian crossing and you have right of way, so you just have to wait for your moment and then go for it and walk out into traffic and hope for the best.  At first I was scared to cross the street at all.  I'd add hundreds of metres to my walking journey and use the subway as often as I could to avoid crossing a street.  [when asked "but what if there was no choice"]  Eventually I worked out that I could just find some other people who seemed to know what they was doing and whenever they walked across, I'd try to keep up with them, because cars seemed more likely to stop for a bigger group of people, if you're just one person the drivers will almost always bully you out.  There were always lots of people crossing roads so it wasn't a problem to find people to do this, but even in a big group I never felt really safe and drivers would still cut in front of you.  I basically spent my entire time in Korea living in fear whenever I was within 100 metres of a road.
Nobody wear seatbelts over there, I never saw anybody else wear them besides me and other English teachers from abroad that I was traveling with.  I was in a van with some Koreans and the first thing I did was put on my seatbelt, and the others all looked at me like I was an idiot.  I stared back like "fuck you, you can go through the windshield if you want".  Of course I had to hunt around for 20 seconds to even find the fucking seatbelt because nobody had used it for so long that it had slipped in the gap between the seat cushions and was hanging down the back of the seat somewhere.  Of course, they didn't wait for me to do this, they just started driving anyway.
Perhaps this has something to do with the quicker development of driving culture in Asian countries compared to the west, I'll leave it for someone else to write a huge-ass essay on that part.  All I know is that scary Korean driving is a thing that exists and I wouldn't have believed all the Internet stories myself if these stories weren't backed up by literally every single person I know who is in Korea, has been to Korea, or is in a relationship with someone Korean.

So we've got a (possibly) shitty van, (possibly) being utilised with minimal regard for driver and passenger safety.  Now imagine combining this with the pressure of:

Suspect #3 - The k-pop industry

The craziness of idol schedules is old news.  However it's not just idols who are overworked and pushed to breaking point, road managers driving their artists around on non-stop engagements may be functioning on little sleep, which is a very effective killer on the roads, even with relatively safe vehicles.  Idols can at least get a nap on the road sometimes.
tatasleep copy

Check out this recent itinerary for a j-pop idol with three scheduled appointments on it, which is pretty full.  Now imagine that instead of three appointments per day, these idols have up to twelve, and someone has to drive them to and from all of those and stay awake during all of it.  That's your road manager's job.  Your options as a road manager in this scenario are, at best:
Not very good options, but whoever is your boss is pushing you hard because they had to loan millions of dollars just to get the nugu group you're driving around to this point in their careers where they're a wanted commodity, and everything is riding on them.... and they're riding with you.  Combine this with the harsh competition for limited gigging opportunities and it's easy to see the ticking time-bomb nature of this scenario.  But why is it this way?  Maybe it's got something to do with:

Suspect #4 - Korean culture

An anecdote from someone who is married to a Korean and has been to the country several times:
If you're a westerner in Korea with a group of good Korean friends, and you want to go out with them and have a good time, don't even bother bringing any money with you - you won't need it.  You'll be able to eat like a king and get as drunk as you want, your friends will happily pay for everything, and not only that, they'll always look out for you, they will make sure that you don't get into any trouble even if you're acting like a bit of a drunken dickhead.  You'll be treated like royalty and you could honestly never possibly meet a nicer group of people.
However, Koreans will treat you like shit if they don't know you.  They'll push in front of you in lines, they'll cut you off in traffic, and if you're a stranger and start talking to someone you've never met at a bus stop you'll be stared at as if you just tried to pull down your pants and take a shit in front of them.  They just don't give a fuck about you if you're a stranger.  This all changes once you've been formally introduced though, as soon as you've been introduced by a mutual friend to a Korean all of a sudden you'll find that they're incredibly sweet and nice people.
When thinking about this, everything else falls into place.  Perhaps what we're seeing is a more extreme example of the "Monkeysphere" stuff I was on about earlier - maybe if you live in a very populous country (like an Asian one) the quantity of people around you means that it's harder to give a fuck about each individual that you see, so you have to shut more of other people out and be a bit more me-first just in order to function.  (It could also be the reason why citizens of population-dense New York have a reputation for being ruder than other Americans, just to give an example of how this theory plays out outside of Asia.)  Therefore, Hyundai makes a car with minimal safety features on the cheap because who is going to be driving it - just some stranger, certainly someone outside the "Monkeysphere".  Everybody drives in a very pushy "me-first" kind of way because everybody else on the road is also a stranger to them, they're on the outside of that "care zone".  Clienete of k-pop groups push CEOs to push artist managers to push road managers to push idols because the distance between one end of the chain and the other ensures that the opposite ends are still on "stranger level".  My theory is that the above culmination of factors creates a perfect storm of elements which make it inevitable that k-pop idols will disproportionately die on the roads, and the most truly shocking thing for me about the EunB incident is not that it happened, but how it hasn't happened more often.  I've always worried about exactly this type of thing happening, and now it has, so I hope that things change for everyone's sake.

qrcari

Don't ask about how the not wearing seatbelts thing fits into all this though, I still haven't figured out that part of the puzzle, so it's entirely possible that my theory is full of shit.  It's just a theory after all, but I think it's important to at least think about these things, because without people willing to really think deeply about the problem, how is anyone ever going to arrive at a solution?  For what it's worth I think it's great that idols are now starting to speak up and encourage seatbelt use, but it really sucks that someone had to die for this to happen, it should have happened a long time before now.  Even though Korea has about five times the road fatalies of western countries, current seatbelt use among back-seat passengers in cars in Korea is at roughly 6% despite it being illegal to not wear a rear seatbelt, and Ican'tcounttheamountofselcasI'veseenofk-popidolssittingincarsdoingvariousshenaniganswhilenotwearingseatbelts.  Some seatbelt education is certainly needed (or maybe even enforcing some laws, perish the thought), but it also seems to me to be the easiest part of the problem to tackle, I wonder if much else will ever change unless the country undergoes a massive cultural shift... and cultures are notoriously resistant to change.

But maybe this is all thinking too deeply for some people and perhaps they'd rather just:

Suspect #5 - [insert any female you don't happen to like here]

...blame it on a woman, because they're lame fangirls with insecurities a mile long.  It's worked for almost every single other k-pop controversy ever, so why not this one too?  Start by grabbing a 20-sided dice of the type used for Dungeons & Dragons and other such pen-and-paper roleplay games (and if you're even worthless enough to be thinking that this is a good idea you're probably a nerd who wants to escape your miserable reality any way you can so there's no doubt that you already have one of these):

d20

Now roll your number, and consult this list of trendy-to-hate people to find out who you should blame!  Weak strawman reasons to hate them also included below just in case you can't think of any.
  1. Minah (is cute, is dating someone, good enough reasons to hate)
  2. Hyeri (screwed that Tony guy, who is like, so gross, that you totally don't have a secret crush on)
  3. Dani (14 years old and already more successful than you)
  4. Kemy (hates Bom for attention)
  5. Bom (plastic druggie, should be in jail)
  6. Sulli (lazy cao ni ma)
  7. Jiyeon (cyclopean threat to your oppas)
  8. Eunjung (probably fucking Amber your lesbo girl crush)
  9. Hyomin (how hot is she, also an iljin or whatever, you read about it on the Internet so it must be true)
  10. Nana (looks like a supermodel, it's not fair, also was rude once or something, fucking bitch)
  11. Hong Jin Young (is hot and probably stealing any of you oppas with cougar fantasies)
  12. Anyone in Sistar (iljin whores, also manipulated the chart, who knows what else they're capable of)
  13. Eunji (dangled oranges out of a car window once, how unsafe)
  14. Naeun (in the same group as Eunji, probably watched her do it and cheered her on)
  15. Hyosung (ilbe bug, also underwear-flaunting oppa-stealer, no proof just means she hasn't been caught yet)
  16. Taeyeon (how dare she steal your EXO man away)
  17. Hyuna (complete whorebag)
  18. Yura (no reason but just including her name here to shut up the crybaby Yura fans on my ask.fm)
  19. Sojin (looks snobby, she must think she's the female president, just like the song says)
  20. Park Geun Hye (actual female president, looks even snobbier)
    eunjiorange

    There there, a bit of irrational hatred of somebody you've never even met over something you read on some lame gossip site and "confirmed" on some other lame gossip site will make everything better.  You dumbass.



    The EunB incident is tragic, but I hope (perhaps in vain) that some good comes out of it in the form of driving reform and also reform of the culture of the industry.  I also believe that for all the insensitivity of the timing of his Tweets, Taewoon is right - the time to appreciate, pay attention to and reward people is when they're still here, not after they leave.  We'll all die one day, so make the most of your own life and the lives of the people you care about while you're able to do so.

    Ladies Code can have the final word.  RIP EunB.


    Rest in peace, Rise of Ladies' Code

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    We all hoped for a miracle, but the reason we call them miracles is because they are rare.

    Unfortunately, Rise did not recover from her severe injuries and passed away at 10:10pm.

    Rest in peace, Rise. Thank you for the gifts you leave us with. You were loved and will be remembered.

    Don't Like My Bias?

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    Oh snap, Kpopalypse and AKF team up once again to do a collaboration post. Both of us get a lot of spam on our ask.fm accounts, but one recurring type of message that we both receive is about anons telling us that our biases are ugly. Not content to do it just once, they spam our ask.fm queues with the same kind of questions.



    The other day, while checking my email account, I saw about ten notifications from ask.fm, all of the messages occurring within a few minutes of each other. I knew one person had to have asked all of those at once. Judging by the questions, my assumption is likely correct.


    I don't understand how insulting idols that I like is somehow an insult to me. Am I supposed to get mad that you don't like the same people that I do? I don't have time for that shit because I don't care about others' opinions when it comes to things and people that I like.

    For instance, even though Kpopalypse oppar states that sports and K-pop do not mix, a sports analogy works perfectly in this context.

    In the NFL, I like the Dallas Cowboys, which is America's team. That also makes them the most hated team among other fans. I still support them even though they have sucked so much dick the past few years. However, whenever other people criticize the Cowboys, I don't get mad and throw a hissy fit just because they don't like Cowboys. Hell, I even call Tony Romo "Tony Homo" because he always sucks a huge bag of dicks in the fourth quarter and loves to throw the fucking football to the other team when the game is on the line. I make fun of that fucker more than anyone else I know, so insulting him or anyone else on the Cowboys doesn't phase me, as I will join in with you.

    For college football, I like THE Ohio State Buckeyes. They are easily one of the most hated teams throughout the country and ESPN can't go five minutes without bagging on Ohio State whenever the network is covering college football. Sure, we Buckeye fans may be the most obnoxious in the country, but I love how everyone is so obsessed with OSU that they have to put the team down time after time just so that they feel their team is superior. If hating on Ohio State gives you something to masturbate to, why should I ruin your fun? It's not like I give a shit. Aside from making jokes about how much Michigan sucks dick, I don't have the time to follow other teams and ridicule them. I just like supporting the team I have been a fan of since I was a little kid.

    Back to K-pop, the same thing applies here. Just because you don't like the same groups/idols that I do, it doesn't mean that I care. I don't have to look to other people to like the same things I do to get confirmation that my opinions are correct. However, many Kpop fans think that way, which is why they get so defensive and have to hate on groups and idols to make themselves feel better. They get butthurt so easily whenever their favorite is made fun of...which is exactly why I go after low-hanging fruit like Hyoyeon, Bom, Hyorin, etc. because they are from popular groups that have a lot of fans who get butthurt easily. Contrary to what a lot of K-pop fans think, I don't hate anyone in K-pop. I don't have the time to be wasting energy hating on someone I don't even know. However, a lot of K-pop fans love to spend more time hating on idols/groups they don't like than spending time supporting the idols/groups that they do like.

    So to this person, go ahead and hate on Soyeon and Haeryung if it helps you to get off. Maybe one day we can sit back-to-back and fap to them together if that is what you wish for. With how much you're spamming my ask.fm account, I'm sure your hate-fueled rage helps you rub one off to Haeryung and Soyeon.




    When I was really young and still in school, I hated girls.  Why did girls and girly things even exist?  What was the point of Barbie dolls and fairy shit?  Nobody wants those dresses and pink toys and stuff, except one dude at school who seemed kind of effeminate and hung around with girls a lot and who was obviously gay.  Not gay meaning "guy who likes the cock" because my uneducated dumb ass didn't even know that gay sex and guys liking other guys sexually was a thing that existed, I just thought "gay" meant "someone who seemed kind of girly and likes girly things" because that's the only context I ever saw the word used in (these were pre-Internet days, you couldn't just look stuff up and discover immature snarky blogs like you can now).  I wasn't into any of that girly stuff, I liked my toy car and gun collection and 80s action films with guns and explosions and computer games where you get to kill and blow up shit.  Girls hated me too because I was such a misogynist little cunthole, as well as just a really unlikeable and ugly person with no personality or redeeming features generally, which was fine by me because I didn't want to talk to any of them anyway, and so all was well in my world.

    orangestory2

    Then, something happened to fuck everything up - puberty.   Those strange female creatures at my school who previously repulsed me became extremely interesting to me, all of a sudden.  I still wasn't interested in pink clothes, but I became suddenly very interested in what was underneath some of those pink clothes, so I tried to get to know some of these strange "girl" creatures that I had previously shunned in the hope of gaining easier access to these "areas of interest".  Of course, because I had been so rude to all of them previously, plus I had no social skills to speak of having never developed this side of myself and was a complete ugly drooling tits-obsessed pervert (having only just discovered the wonderous nature of female boobs), they very sensibly didn't want to know me.  In the meantime, that guy who I thought was gay actually was not gay, and not only that, he was surrounded by all the girls that he had previously been nice to.  It became clear to me quite quickly that I really hadn't thought any of this through.

    orangestory3

    Eligible girls in my school were in short supply.  Firstly, they had to be into decent music that I was into just so we'd have enough in common that my vastly deficient social skills could stand some chance of keeping up with any kind of conversation.  I'd also discovered heavy metal, so that knocked out about 97% of the female school population straight off the bat because they were mostly into trash like Bon Jovi (#1 heartthrob material of the day) and not cool stuff like Slayer and Metallica (this was before Metallica became a pop group with the shitty commercial "Black Album" and crushed the dreams of metalheads everywhere) and they wanted to talk about fashion and hairspray (this was the 80s) instead of how that guy from Kreator can possibly scream like that for such a long period at concerts.  On top of this, for me to consider a girl eligible she had to be hot, even though I certainly wasn't even remotely hot according to them -  but being a hypocrite hadn't bothered me up until this point so I figured I might as well go with the flow.  Girls being "hot" in my eyes meant a pretty face and some nice boobs... and for most girls at the time both of those things were still a "work in progress" so there went about 90% of whoever was remaining on the eligibility list once music taste was factored in.  This left an extremely limited pool of girls to work with, most of whom already justifiably hated me.

    orangestory4

    This problem was then compounded some more by the fact that I wasn't the only weird metalhead with a hard-on at my school, several other guys shared my outlook and naturally had similar preferences.  The other metalhead guys knew that they didn't stand a chance with some girl who was into New Kids On The Block or Vanilla Ice, how were they going to compete with the carefully chiseled features of American boy-pop?  So they also zoomed in on the school's few attractive "metal girls", who suddenly found themselves dealing with advances from desperate scungy-looking long-haired guys left and right - me included.  I found that whenever I'd start crushing on an eligible and attractive girl at school, as soon as I started making advances, one of my more charismatic and socially adept male peers would sense alarm bells ringing and swoop in to redirect her attention.  Being sensible and smart, the girl would choose the more attractive option (i.e not me), and soon they would be walking around in school lunch break holding hands and whispering sweet metal-related nothings into each others' ears and meeting each other after class at their houses for "music study sessions".  This happened again and again all throughout high school and by the time I had finally lost my virginity long after school days were over the metal soundtrack to it wasn't even any good anymore, the cool thrash and death metal of the 80s and 90s having been replaced with some hippity-hoppity garbage for fuckheads called "nu-metal".  No wonder I've since bailed out of the metal scene to the world of k-pop.

    orangestory5

    I developed a habit thanks to my high school experiences which has continued into my adulthood... whenever I really like someone of the opposite sex and want to get to know them better, I keep that shit as much under the radar of everybody I can as humanly possible.  I've found the worst thing I can do after meeting a nice girl is go and tell my male peers "gee, she's nice", because the risk that they'll notice this, agree and do something about it before I do could be quite high.  If I'm single I don't have conversations with guys about other girls and I don't like to hear about what they like, because then they might start asking me about who I like and I don't want to tell them - mind your own fucking business thanks cunts.  Although I haven't been single for many years, whenever I get questions or comments about my k-pop biases along the lines of "she's ugly" or "how can you be into THAT?" I smile to myself.  It's an indicator that my sexual tastes can stray far from the majority, and that makes me feel very comfortable - if I ever am single again, there'll be less competition... for Raina.

    rainadot

    T-ara's Sugar Free Teaser

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    Based Shinsadong Tiger teams up with Korea's bullying queens once again and I am stoked for the song. Summer is just about over and we have had some good songs (a few great ones), but a lot of mediocre tracks thrown at us. However, T-ara's next track with Shinsadong Tiger has me hyped for what the fall will bring.



    However, the MV looks like another schizophrenic mess. I'm sure every T-ara fan is tired of getting a seizure while trying to fap to the MVs. Oh well, hopefully a dance practice version comes out.

    [MV Review] AOA - Miniskirt - Japanese Version

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    What do you do when you take one of my favorite songs of the year and translate it to the Japanese market? YOU HAVE TO MAKE IT FUCKING SHIT TO SUIT JAPAN.



    The first problem I have with this version is the Japanese language. The original Korean version had some lines sung at a fast pace, and when you translate that into an extremely similar language with vocabulary words almost twice as long, hearing those rapid-fire lines in Japanese makes it sound like shit. It's not just this song in particular, it is every single Korean-to-Japanese song that has this problem, and songs with faster-sung lines such as AOA's Miniskirt exacerbates the problems.

    I find the Japanese language to be a terrible match with genres such as pop and hiphop, though it is possible for Japanese in pop songs to sound good. For that to be the case, you have to start from the ground up and compose original Japanese songs. Being lazy and using a Korean track won't do. However, the problem with going with original Japanese songs is that 99% of Japanese pop composers suck gigantic dick. To make matters worse, J-pop has been using the same style of instrumentals for over 20 years now. Shit is stale as fuck.

    On the MV side, the girls look hot (<3 Mina), but seeing as this is a Japanese MV, I'm surprised the girls were this provocative. Although Japan is the weird-porn capital of the world, the MVs are usually so disgustingly cute that even an Orange Caramel fan would throw up watching a Japanese idol MV. Therefore, I'm assuming that this was filmed in Korea because I don't see overly cute things in the MV nor any tentacle monsters defiling the members.

    I would be more interested in seeing the band version of AOA working in Japan, as rock is a genre that Japan can actually do well (except for garbage bands like ONE OK ROCK). I would hate to see AOA abandon their Korean image just to suit the shitty-as-fuck toddler concepts that wotas in Japan love to fap to.

    But in the end, I'm just disappointed that AOA debuted in Japan. Aside from SNSD and After School, every Korean girl group has shitty original Japanese songs. It's just the law of the land.

    Ladies' Code - Kiss Kiss

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    I've been debating on whether to write this article, but I'm going ahead with it anyways. While it is terrible that EunB and RiSe are no longer with us in this world, their music will still live on. As a music listener, it is okay to continue to enjoy the music from deceased singers. I find it better to associate the girls with the energy and happiness they provided while performing than to associate EunB and RiSe with death.

    (For casual AKF readers and/or people who read the site from time to time and then spread lies about AKF, yes, I knew of Ladies Code before the incident and yes, I knew that Kiss Kiss was released because I fucking translated an article on Soompi about their then-impending comeback. Usually, MV reviews on AKF are on a 2-4 week delay mainly because I'm not trying to be the first person to review a music video. Plus I'm busy as fuck and don't have the time to sit around and write about the music videos when they first come out. Kiss Kiss came out 4 weeks ago, and this would be around the time I usually review songs. So no, we're not like Koreaboo or allkpop using Ladies' Code for page views because we don't have fucking ads on here because no one on the staff wants ads or to receive any revenue from this site.)



    I still have no idea what the MV is about. Is it about a guy who was a huge Ladies' Code fan that wanted a kiss from each of the members, so he pretended to go into a coma to be like the male Snow White and have the five girls kiss him in order for him to wake up from his "coma"? I'm probably wrong, but that would have been an awesome idea if that was his intent. Instead of trying to kidnap or stalk the girls, his plan is to have the girls come to him.

    The MV is the standard dance-in-a-box with some individual scenes and some story shots thrown in. It's a formula that works for K-pop, and the results are good. The members look good in the MV, and I momentarily mixed up RiSe and So Jung because of their hair colors. So Jung was blond for the longest time, so when she went brown and RiSe went blond, well, I got confused. As usual, I was partial to Zuny.

    The MV was standard K-pop, and the song, like the MV, was a standard Ladies' Code song. That's not to say it's a bad thing; Ladies' Code's songs usually have solid instrumentals and good hooks, but the vocals tend to drown out the instrumental. Ladies' Code was a group formed to please both vocalfags and the average K-pop fan. There really isn't a weak singer in the group, which is great because there's no designated rapper in the group. However, there is some vocal wanking in a lot of their songs (Pretty Pretty being the worst offender), but the vocalfagging was toned down for Kiss Kiss, making it more enjoyable for me to listen to.

    While Ladies' Code was only able to perform as a five-woman group for a short 18 months, the group released a lot of solid songs for us to enjoy. Remember to enjoy the good times with the group.

    Last November when the Saturday Shitfest series was still ongoing, there was this article revolving around Ashley.

    One of the Fancam Appreciation posts was about EunB. The readers here on AKF got me to know her.

    Ahjussi wrote an article about how much he liked Ladies' Code's So Wonderful.

    We have no idea if Ladies' Code will continue as a three-member group, and I hope they do sometime in the future to keep their dreams, along with the dreams on EunB and RiSe, alive. For now, all we can do is enjoy what the group has released up until now.

    Question of the Week 81

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    This week's question comes from an anonymous asker on my Ask.fm:

    What are your favourite Kpop covers?

    Thank you for your submission!

    ~*~*~

    Please leave your responses in the comment section below.


    If anyone has submissions for future Question of the Weeks, please send them to zomg.oppa.sareanghae@gmail.com, tweet them to @akf_shinbi, ask them at ask.fm/akfshinbi, or leave them in the comment section below. Remember your rights on this site: anything you say or do here can and probably will be used against you. Thank you, FISHies!

    SM's New Project Group(?) Is Wasted on the Masses

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    If you hadn't heard, SM Entertainment has debuted* a new project group (I call them this cause I have no idea who they are or what they look like) called Hitch Hiker. Their debut song is a little ditty called "11 (ELEVEN)" and it's FREAKIN' FANTASTIC.


    More after the jump.

    *A quick glance at their Facebook fan page indicates they've been around since 2013. I'm assuming this could be an in-house producer/DJ that's finally secured the OK to go public, but who knows?



    So the visuals of this MV are what immediately blew me away. There's no bullshit dance-in-a-box here, no pretty boy/girl idol zoom-ins -- absolutely nothing from the SM playbook of MVs. Hell, we don't even see the artists at all in this, instead choosing the graphic pop art approach.

    There's a ton of eye-catching visuals here, and it's a good mix of eerie and artsy and what the fuck am I watching to keep you entertained. Lots of vibrant colors are mixed with clip art, CGI, and scary green-screen antics superimposed on real backdrops (or stock photos, who cares). No gifs this time because it's definitely a spectacle you need to watch for yourself to appreciate. *TRIGGER WARNING* Your mileage may vary. I definitely see how someone could go into epileptic shock or get some unpleasant feels from this, especially considering how often the animation dips into the Uncanny Valley.

    The song itself is a really fun electronic piece with huge Die Antwoord vibes. The vaguely creepy girl's chant/rapping/speaking/everything sounds a LOT like Yo-Landi Vi$$ER, please tell me it's not just me!

    I really enjoyed this song/MV, but the teeny boppers over at SM Town clearly don't get it. It's a shame, but they've got this ingrained image of SM Town as a Disneyland-esque place of wonder, idols, and shiny visuals. Hitch Hiker obviously does not fit the factory mold, so people are reacting with the typical understanding, open-minded approach all KPop fans take towards new music.


    Just kidding. Of course I've cherry picked some of the choicer hate comments, but a surprisingly large amount of people are striking back either in support of the song's awesomeness or just admonishing the close-minded haters. How much of that is genuine appreciation of the song/MV on its own merit or blind SM faptrain bandwagon support for the company remains to be seen. At any rate, the MV sits at the most dislike-heavy ratio I've seen on a KPop video (let alone an SM video) in a while as of this writing.


    Quite a shame, but we'll see how it all shakes out in a few weeks. Whatever this is, project group or not, I hope we see more crazy zany stuff like this that goes out of the cookie-cutter factory press of KPop, and not just from the big entertainment companies. Of course, having a song like ELEVEN come out under a major label like SM never hurts to get this kind of thing on a more mainstream level of exposure, but it's a step in the right direction.

    [MV Review] Girl's Day - Darling

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    Oh yeah, super fashionably late as this song is two months old by the time this review goes live, but who cares? No one reviewed it on here, though Fany said something about the MV have gratuitous buttshots on her site, so now it's time for a review on AKF.



    I'm not a huge fan of the song. I know a lot of people will like the song, as it is reminiscent of swing music, but I have never been a fan of the genre. Add on top of that this is another song shitted out by Duble Sidekick this summer, this song was never going to enter any of my playlists. I thought K-pop was ridiculous when Brave Brothers was composing a lot of songs, but he never had so many songs out at once like Duble Sidekick has this year. (Yeah, DS is a team of 11 composers, but Jesus Titty Fucking Christ take a two-week break or some shit).

    The MV is glorious, on the other hand. Just mute the video and I could watch it all day. I can't complain about gratuitous buttshots when Sojin and Yura are in this group.


    The only reason I can think of not to watch the MV (aside from Hyeri's/Harry's nose) is Minah.



     SHE IS A WHORE THAT LIKES TO SHOW OFF HER UNDERWEAR ON A G-RATED PROGRAM! THAT SKANK! BOYCOTT EVERYTHING GIRL'S DAY TO KEEP YOUR PURITY INTACT!

    Subin is Awesome

    Kpopalypse Nugu Alert Episode 5: Kisum ft. Risso, 912 Crew, Rok Kiss

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    That's right folks, it's that time again!  Welcome to yet another episode of:

    nugu5

    Kpopalypse will yet again bring you fresh (or stale) nugus to enhance your life (or not)!

    Nugu criteria as per usual:
      * Less than 20,000 YouTube hits on the MV *
      * Your friends who are all into EXO don't give a fuck *

      Let's get the party started.


      T-ara new song and video "Sugar Free" just came out, and of course it's great.  Naturally, this beacon of light from the k-pop heavens is suffering the usual slings and arrows from the small handful of haters still left who can't deal with the fact that T-ara have put out yet another song that is really really good and better than anything their faves have done in years so they'll have to listen to it secretly 6921 times so they don't get busted and thrown out of their little imaginary Internet Kool Klub.  One of the criticisms directed at "Sugar Free", which is the same one always directed at all T-ara videos (even the ones that cost over $1 million USD) is that it " looks cheap".

      sugarpree

      Never mind the blatant incorrectness of this complaint in terms of CCM quitting drama MVs, or even T-ara themselves quitting drama MVs (not that it's exactly up to them), or the laughable inference that the scandal did some sort of permanent financial damage to T-ara on a business level (hahaha nope).  I'll write the "692 reasons why people who clutch at weak straws to hate on T-ara are dipshits" blog some other time, let's keep things simple for now and just focus on the word "cheap".  It's pretty achingly obvious confirmation bias and/or shocking ignorance weighing in when someone calls a video by T-ara or in fact any of the well-known groups in k-pop cheap.  Genuinely cheap k-pop videos are extremely rare - to get to the cheap seats in k-pop forget all the groups you know about and have heard of, you need to go straight to nugu town and search hard.  It's time to show you folks what a truly cheap k-pop MV really looks like, and as usual, Kpopalypse Nugu Alert will take you straight there.  We will not pass Core Contents Media.  We will not collect $200.



      KISUM ft. RISSO - Like It



      There are so many k-pop videos made every year, and so much competition out there, that a little bit of double-up of visual ideas is inevitable.   Some are easy to spot - most people for instance know that GD&TOP's tank in "Knock Out" was given a girly spray paint job and recycled for f(x)'s "Hot Summer", and why not, after all who wants to build a fucking fake tank twice?  It's just good sense to recycle expensive materials when you can, and I'm sure YG appreciated SM buying the plastic tank off them so it didn't have to sit around in the YG basement taking up space where they could store their hydroponics equipment away from prying eyes.  However you know you're firmly in broke nugu territory when you see video directors start to recycle things that really weren't all that fucking expensive to obtain in the first place:


      Girl group Tint are also nugu, but in no way nugu enough to qualify for Nugu Alert, after all this video here has nearly half a million views.  Sure 50% of those hits are probably from angry EXO fans trolled into clicking it to see if it's a sly EXO diss (which it is) and the other 50% are likely from masturbating fangirls hoping to catch a glimpse of Teen Top's Chunji... but no such luck, girls (check the comments for some amusing tears)!  He might be the one under the wolf's head though, and observant viewers will notice that it's exactly the same wolf's head that's in the Kisum video.  Not even one that looks a little bit the same or another model from the same costume shop but exactly the same one - look at the creases and dents on the ears, they're in identical spots.  This was just sitting around in some storage room somewhere with a bunch of old furniture and other video props after Tint's director used it, and Kisum's crew found it and thought "okay this'll be a good visual gimmick for Kisum and she can get all gropey with the wolf's head without annoying any censors".  They went ahead and not only used the wolf head but brought in some camera lighting and shot the whole damn video in the storage room they found it in - look at the utterly random props lying around like the clothes dummy and the wall colours that don't match (because these walls were probably painted different colours to shoot two separate scenes for different MVs with on two different sides of the room, a common practice in TV studios).  This is gonzo shoestring MV making at its finest, the type that only true nugus can bring you.

      YouTube views at time of writing: 6338

      Notable attribute: Tint's wolf mask actually still intact and not burned by angry EXO sasaengs

      Nugu Alert rating: high



      912 Crew - Roller Skate



      One of the biggest and dumbest myths surrounding k-pop music video making is that the popular "box" and "indoor scene set" style videos used to showcase dance-based MVs are somehow the "cheap option".  Nothing could be further from the truth - these are actually some of the most expensive MVs out there of all, because fabricating an entire room inside another room to shoot an MV in is a royal logistic pain in the ass.  Large k-pop labels go to extraordinary lengths to give their "scenes" and "boxes" a lot of detail and details cost money - it's not unusual to see these type of MVs spend six-figure sums just on set design alone.   CGI is also used a lot less often than you think - check any behind-the-scenes video for a box MV and you'll be surprisedhowoftentherooms are actuallyreal.

      On the other hand if you're complete nugus with no money and I mean zero fucking money, you do what 912 Crew do - you go to an outdoor location on a day when it probably isn't going to rain and you hope for the best (and bring your umbrella - just in case).  Consistent use of outdoor locations is a nugu MV signature, because nobody had to be paid to build any shit.  If you then want some "box MV" action, go find a white box and do some moves - if it looks a little crappy because there are dark spots in the corners just throw some weird filter over the footage later.  It'll all work out in the end.  It certainly won't fuck up your totally cool 80s style rap song about roller skating - in fact it'll probably fit really well because most music videos that had anything to do with skate parks, roller skates or skate boards from western countries were also aboutthischeap-looking so fuck it.

      YouTube views at time of writing: 1884

      Notable attribute: pudgy rap girl actually cuter than 90% of k-pop idols

      Nugu Alert rating: very high



      ROK KISS - ROK KISS



      Rok Kiss seem to get everything wrong - terrible dancing, dodgy leather costumes, laughable group name, awful music (of course), horrid budget CGI, uncanny-valley makeup and styling, even a cheesy bas-relief logo... but despite all this there's one thing that sticks out immediately from them as strangely up-to-par.  These guys are as buff as any k-pop star... actually, maybe even more so because they're a bit heavier than the usual lithe male k-pop physique. Why is that, I wondered?

      rokkiss

      Ahhh... thanks for clearing that up, channel owner!  It's easy to see why Rok Kiss exists.  Imagine that you're Nicole's personal fitness trainer and gym coach (if you're not into Nicole, substitute her name for whoever you bias is).  Every day you get up early, you go to work, and you spend hours per day, every day, helping Nicole stretch and tone her abs and thighs correctly.  Then at the end of each long and hard day of work only matched by the longness and hardness of your throbbing unsatisfied boner, you go home to Starcraft while Nicole skips along to the dorm of some guy in some k-pop group that she's banging.  Months of this and eventually the sexual tension becomes too much - why can't you be that guy in that group?  You talk it over at the local pub with your fitness-trainer friends who are all in the same situation, they're also training girls they have mad crushes on who they will never get with because the girls don't want to date "just the trainer".  The decision is made: time to start a group and finally release those fitness trainer blue-balls - the rest is history!  That is, if starting this mega nugu k-pop group actually counts as a history-making activity.

      Rok Kiss also earn themselves a special distinction of a type never before seen here on Nugu Alert, but which was probably inevitable someday.  Those who have long memories will remember back in Nugu Alert Episode 2, I highlighted a Nickelbackesque female rock group called Amor Fati and their ultra-average "stadium rock that will never see the inside of a stadium" snoozer "Say The Word".


      Observant types will notice that Amor Fati and Rok Kiss are using exactly the same building!  Sure, Rok Kiss have moved a few bits of furniture around and wheeled in some gym equipment, but it's definitely the same rooms, same light fittings, same architraves, same pointless stairway to nowhere, same everything.  This means that Rok Kiss are the first k-pop group on Kpopalypse Nugu Alert to recycle sets not just from anywhere but from another group that also made it onto Kpopalypse Nugu Alert, which earns them massive amounts of extra bonus nugu points.

      YouTube views at time of writing: 13506

      Notable attribute: I've actually seen some of these outfits on sale at Adult Superstore

      Nugu Alert rating: extreme



      nugu7

      That's all for this episode of Kpopalypse Nugu Alert!  Kpopalypse will return in the future with more nugus, until then try and listen to something that's not from SM or YG for once in your life!  You can do it!

      An hour with the Music Core livestream chat

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      As a kind of experiment in masochism, I decided to focus my attention on the chat section during this week's Music Core livestream.

      The livestream chat on Youtube is filled with the dregs of kpop — fanwar spam, petty bickering, and all the emojis and exclamation points you could want!!!!

      Between Super Junior competing against Sistar and Winner and comebacks from 2PM, Teen Top and T-ara, it was bound to be a long program. Join me as I recap an hour in kpop hell.




      From the beginning, the chat consisted of almost nothing but group spam, primarily for the biggest acts of the evening: Super Junior, 2PM and T-ara. Three songs in, someone already just could not anymore.


      In hindsight, that should have been me.


      Then, during Nasty Nasty of all things, came a plea for some sanity.




      By the time Secret came on, someone finally vocalized what it was like to be a non-crazy person in the chat.


      Oh yeah, and the video quality got shittier throughout the hour, too.
      That only made me enjoy it more.


      Then came T-ara, which unsurprisingly caused bickering.




      Although, that didn't stop one especially motivated ELF from creating this work of art, which was then was copy and pasted ad nauseam throughout the rest of the show.




      I breathed a sigh of relief when T-ara finished performing, thinking that at least that drama was done, but some hater had to slip one last one in during the next act.


      What did I tell you about the video quality? By this time, it was like I was staring at a pile of dung
      with a bunch of flies going to town on it.


      Luckily, I was not the only one. 


      I screen-capped this for the top highlighted comment, and after I got it, I noticed the bottom one.
      I had no clue what he was talking about at first, but Anti Kpop-Fangirl later explained it to me.


      Teen Top proved to be a crowd-pleaser, with some over-the-top spamming. But then there was this guy:




      Next came the sanest comment of the entire night. Sane, but futile.


      You don't belong here.


      Finally after 50-some minutes of near-constant ELF spam, the last act of the evening, Super Junior, took to the stage, which gave us this.




      A headache-inducing time was had by all.
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