Fans hoping for a lengthy appearance might have been disappointed by the relatively brief showing the popular K-pop idols made on both talk shows. Sans interview, Girls’s Generation performed the Teddy Riley-produced remix of their U.S. debut single “The Boys” to a live band in the Ed Sullivan Theater. Decked out in skin-baring black outfits, the girls worked the stage with slinky moves and perfectly in sync choreography. Guest Bill Murray joined them on stage for the closing. The following morning, the group performed their single on “LIVE! With Kelly Ripa” followed by a brief, casual interview with host Kelly Ripa and guest co-host Howie Mandel. Ripa appeared pleasantly surprised by the warm audience response to Girls’ Generation, saying: “I’ve never seen such audience participation in my life, congratulations.” “We were just saying you are such a gorgeous group of women,” Ripa praised the girls. Guest co-host Mandel had the audience and the girls laughing when he said, “I loved the dancing. Your moves were tremendous. It reminded me of me.” A representative of Girls’ Generation’s agency S.M. Entertainment said that the talk show appearances were not about targeting an adult audience so much as introducing the group to “general viewers.” “Those in their teens can learn about Girls’ Generation through various channels like the Internet,” the representative explained over the phone. According to the representative, plans for an official U.S. debut have yet to be made as well as future plans with their U.S. label Interscope Records. “I think we will continue to do promotions,” the representative said regarding working with Interscope. Meanwhile, K-pop continues to hit American TV this week with South Korean girl group the Wonder Girls’ upcoming TV movie, which is scheduled to start airing on TeenNick in the States followed by airing in South Korea.
K-pop News Archive
KPop’s Frontiers: How Does the Big 3 Teach Foreign Languages to Their Trainees?
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Recently, with SNSD’s groundbreaking appearance in U.S. shows, their excellent English attracted attentions. The so-called Big 3 Entertainment companies, SM, JYP, and YG all have their own strategies to train their idol stars in foreign languages.
SM Entertainment: Language learning through everyday experience and opportunities for learning abroad.
SM provides selected members with opportunities to study abroad. Super Junior Choi Shiwon and SNSD Hyoyun had one year of language training in China before their debuts.
YG Entertainment: School system and regular classes.
Language classes are an essential part of YG’s training program. Big Bang members all took regular classes, every day. They studied Japanese most intensively to prepare for their activities in Japan.
JYP Entertainment: One-on-one training.
JYP is particularly known for their “strategies” in language training of their idols. For example, as the U.S. activities of Wonder Girls were planned, the members all had intense one-on-one English training to prepare for their U.S. debut.
It’s common most idol groups have “native speakers” or fluent foreign language speakers within the groups through whom the other members can learn. SNDS’s Jessica and Tiffany, Big Bang’s Taeyang, 2NE1′s CL and Sandara Park are such examples.

Photo Gallery

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TVXQ Arrival in Thailand to Film Commercial
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2PM Fan Meeting in Seoul
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21st Hi-One Seoul Gayo Awards
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JYJ’s Jaejoong Successful Turkey Fan Meeting
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f(x)’s Crystal Clean Casual Look in Mulberry
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TVXQ’s U-Know Yunho Clean Casual Look in Mulberry
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Super Junior Taiwan Concert Over 40,000 Fans In 4 Days!
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KARA Nicole And 2AM Become Models! Photo Shoot
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BEAST Opens Their World Tour With Whopping 12,000 Fans First Day

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K-POP Stars In France Greeted By Fans At The Airport
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Fans in Europe got together at the airport in France to greet K-pop stars.
KBS 2TV “Music Bank” held their first world tour “Music Bank in Paris” that included SNSD, 2PM, T-Ara, Beast, 4Minute and other K-pop stars; who all arrived in France on the afternoon of the 7th.
K-Pop stars had a difficult time leaving the airport because of the number of fans that showed up. Whenever idol stars were seen, fans screamed and flashed their posters. It was impressive to see that K-pop stars have gained so much popularity even in Europe as well as in many other countries in the world.
On February 8th, “Music Bank in Paris” will be aired. The episode will feature Girls’ Generation, SHINee, 2PM, Beast, 4Minute, T-Ara, U-Kiss, Sistar and etc.
Starting in Paris, “Music Bank” will be hosting another concert in Jakarta and HongKong in May, followed by LA and a city in Brazil in September.

Photo Gallery

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TVXQ Arrival in Thailand to Film Commercial
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2PM Fan Meeting in Seoul
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21st Hi-One Seoul Gayo Awards
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JYJ’s Jaejoong Successful Turkey Fan Meeting
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f(x)’s Crystal Clean Casual Look in Mulberry
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TVXQ’s U-Know Yunho Clean Casual Look in Mulberry
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Super Junior Taiwan Concert Over 40,000 Fans In 4 Days!
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KARA Nicole And 2AM Become Models! Photo Shoot
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BEAST Opens Their World Tour With Whopping 12,000 Fans First Day

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Teen Top Makes Shinhwa’s Andy Cry
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K-Pop Singers Target Global Market
K-pop seems ready to take the world by storm this year to capitalize on the momentum of the resurgent Korean Wave, with leading bands such as Girls’ Generation, Big Bang, and JYJ staging world tours or debuting overseas in the coming months.
Big Bang plan to launch their first world tour next month, with 25 cities in 16 countries packed into their whistle-stop itinerary. The group will return to the stage with their mini album “Alive” on Feb. 29, and will tour Asia, North and South America, and Europe after a concert in Seoul on March 2.
Experts from around the world will participate in directing and producing their world tour as production agency Live Nation, which formerly managed the tours of Madonna and U2, has signed a deal with the band’s management agency, YG Entertainment.
Furthermore, famous creative director and choreographer Laurieann Gibson, who has worked for the likes of Michael Jackson, Lady Gaga and Beyoncé, will help oversee their world tour. And Leroy Bennett, who has worked with Paul McCartney and the Eagles, among others, will be in charge of stage and lighting design.

Big Bang
Girls’ Generation, which drew much attention with their recent appearances on CBS’ “The David Letterman Show” and ABC’s “Live! with Kelly,” plan to release their first album in Europe on Monday.
“The Boys” will be released by Universal Music Group’s French label Polydor. This will be first album on the Continent by a Korean band since Koreana, a family act that gained worldwide fame by performing at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, released a French-language single in the mid-1970s.
The girls’ agency SM Entertainment said their potential beyond Asia is now being recognized after they participated in a large ensemble performance of K-pop bands in Paris last year called “SM Town Live.”
Meanwhile, boy band BEAST recently held a series of concerts in Brazil and England. The group will kick off their world tour on Sunday, which takes them to 21 cities in 14 countries including China, Europe, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, and the U.S., starting with Berlin in Germany.

BEAST
JYJ, the first idol group from Korea to hold solo concerts in Spain and Germany, will continue their extended world tour in Chile on March 9 and Peru two days later.
Meanwhile, Super Junior recently gave concerts in Japan and Taiwan, and will head to the U.S., Europe and South America for more performances after staging a concert in Singapore late next week.
“Along with their word tours, K-pop singers should sharpen their skills and diversify their musical repertoires to sustain their popularity,” said music critic Im Jin-mo. “Regardless of their commercial success overseas, they need to recognize that they can be cultural ambassadors to deliver Korean culture to the world.”
New music show to draw foreign tourists to Jeju
A new live music show offering foreign tourists a chance to enjoy performances by A-list K-pop stars on Jeju will be launched in late February, an affiliate of Seoul Broadcasting System said Monday.
Titled “Music Island,” the weekly music talk show will feature K-pop artists as the main guests and will invite foreign tourists visiting Jeju as the audience.
The show will be aired on SBS cable channels and also simultaneously on MTV channels in eight Asian countries, including Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and China on Friday, starting Feb. 29.
Sunny
IU (SBS ContentsHub)
The first recording of the show will take place on Feb. 14 at the International Convention Center located in the south of the island, SBS Content Hub said. It is expected to have an audience of about 1,000 foreign tourists, mainly from Japan. The concert tickets, which are free of charge, are included in their travel package, Lee Jung-mi, the show’s PR manager told The Korea Herald.
“‘Music Island’” integrates K-pop and tourism to bring together K-pop artists and their fans from overseas on the beautiful island of Jeju. There are many K-pop stars going abroad to meet their fans, but the show clearly reverses the concept by bringing many hallyu fans here,” Lee said. The Jeju government has provided the venue for the show for free and has been cooperating with the show operator, she added.
K-pop stars performing with the scenery of Jeju as the background are expected to attract overseas fans as the show will be broadcast on eight MTV channels in Asia and SBS-MTV, another SBS affiliate recently acquired from MTV Korea.
The first recording of the show will feature IU, MBLAQ, Black B, Dal Shabet and RB singers Lim Jeong-hee and Jung Yeop. Sunny of Girls’ Generation will host the show. This marks her debut as a solo TV show host, SBS-MTV said.
SBS-MTV plans to run the show for the next six months and will decide whether to extend it depending on its performance.
By Cho Chung-un (christory@heraldm.com)
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K-Pop Cuties Girls’ Generation Shine on David Letterman
Girls’ Generation, (also known as SoShi (소시) or SNSD) the K-Pop (Korean Pop) sensations who dominate the Asian airwaves brought their talent to “The Late Show With David Letterman” on CBS Tuesday night. For their first U.S. television appearance, they performed a English-language version remix of their very sexy hit song “The Boys”. The nine-member supergroup has already had success in the United States with a sold out show last October at Madison Square Garden with other K-Pop acts and with their YouTube videos.
The group debuted in 2007 and are now the number one Korean girl band. They were formed by S.M. Entertainment and took off before they even released any music! At the time, they starred in a documentary called “Mnet Girls’ Generation Goes to School” that showed them moving into an apartment and preparing to release their first single. “Into the New World” was released in August 2007 and made it to the #1 spot on Korean music program “M! Countdown”. Five years later, now much more sexy than cute, these young women are taking America by storm. Their YouTube video for the song “Gee” has over 64,570,000 views and most of their other videos have well over 1 million views. They are a pre-teen girls dream group, and a young man’s dream come true.
Watching their early videos, it is clear that these girls were headed to the top, and they’ve made it. They have hit after hit and have starred in many TV programs all over the world. There’s also the Girls’ Generation number one books, posters and a staggering amount of endorsement deals. In December, “The Boys” became the number one selling album in Korea for 2011. They have tons of awards, most recently winning two Golden Disk Awards on January 12th (including the best award given, the “Digital Daesang”) and two awards from the Seoul Music Awards on January 19th. To round off their great January, they did the David Letterman show Tuesday night and will perform on “Live! with Kelly” this morning. Hopefully, they will be a huge hit in America.
Girls’ Generation: Taeyeon, Jessica, Sunny, Tiffany, Hyoyeon, Yuri, Sooyoung, Yoona and Seohyun. Their ages are between 20-22. Members Jessica, Sunny and Tiffany are all from California.
Photo: Sry85
© Margie Wilson-Mars 2012
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Nicole, IU, and Koo Hara become “Dr.K-Pop”

The three “Inki Gayo” MC’s Nicole, IU, and Koo Hara transformed into K-Pop Doctors during the February 5th episode of the music program. The three singers, donning white lab coats, acted as scientists delving into the research of K-Pop’s success.
In addition to lab coats, Nicole wore a headband with a big red and white bow, IU pinned two blue bows with polka dots to her chest, and Koo Hara sported a headband with a black sparkly bow. These accessories added an adorable touch to the girls’ ‘lab-look’ leaving male fans doting over their cuteness.
This week’s “Inki Gayo” featured MBLAQ, T-ara, Se7en, FT Island, J-Cera, NS Yoonji, Rainbow Pixie, Sunny Hill, Teen Top, ChAOS, Dalshabet, Nine Muses, Boyfriend, Brian, B.A.P, DIA, X-5, and Block B.
The Big Bang – Welcome To The Brazen Glitz Of Korean Pop
“Balmain to KTZ / Many styles from A- Zee / Jeremy Scott, Givenchy / Bitch, you ain’t got shit on me!” ‘Can’t Nobody’ – 2NE1
K-pop. Korea’s unabashed, high-octane celebration of helium-filled vocals, fashion labels and style initially played second fiddle to her bigger brother J-pop, restyling a Euro-pop sound for the Asian market. In turn, it smashed the shores of the West. Japanese stars might have laid the groundwork with franchises like Pokemon and Japanese pop stars providing the vocals for video games back in 2004, but since then K-pop has grown, and now, outlandishly dressed she has barged her way into the US and European music scene. The speed of K-pop’s rise to popularity is impressive. Distributed and disseminated at an accelerated pace that only the Internet can provide, its urgency and immediacy runs like a pulse. And its palpitations are being felt all over the globe.
A quick low-down. This year Time magazine readers voted K-pop male idol Rain one of the most influential people of the year. Big Bang, a K-pop band, reached the US iTunes Top Ten album chart, and in August this year picked up an MTV VMA. “K-pop is a massive industry,” Time noted, and, with global sales worth over £18 million in 2009 and doubling year-on-year, they have a point.
It is interesting that while in the US and Europe contemporary pop music often aims for loftier lyrics, Korean pop shows an honest and funny disregard for such pretensions. Take Rihanna’s and Calvin Harris’ ‘We Found Love’ as an example. Even though Harris might add a racy amphetamine backdrop to a thoughtful meditation on love, the video seemed to take its cue from art house film. K-pop, in contrast, doesn’t care one bit for such gritty aspirations. K-pop is a look for the plasma screen generation. Life is a screen saver. Save it, upload it and share it with your friends.
When contemporary Western pop does opt for an uplifting tinny sound it goes for the ubiquitous hum of auto-tune that permeates nearly every chart music track. K-pop largely focuses on cartoonish vocals, shoehorning English lyrics into bubblegum BPMs. Most K-pop tracks are littered with meaningless ciphers and phrases that sound like Korean expressions having been force-fed through online translators where what you get, is what you get. Tumblr, YouTube and Twitter have all play their part in K-pop’s greater exposure, more then ever before generating fans all over the globe, not just Asia; from trendy East London kids listening to KARA on their iPods to American designer Jeremy Scott, who chose K-pop girl band 2NE1 to front his campaign for Adidas Originals, claiming that he listens to their music in his studio.
It doesn’t come as much of a surprise that someone like Scott would like K-pop. Scott is known for his own cute limited edition Adidas trainers and other sports wear. If Scott takes the masculine, graphic hard-edge of trainers and reinvents them with cuddly gawky pandas bear cubs, it is much a similar way as K-pop taking an existing template and overly liquoring it in sugary coats for aesthetic overload. Yeah, we are talking superficial, but K-pop does it unashamedly. This is refreshing. The irony is that K-pop could be far more sophisticated that it appears. While manufactured pop bands have always got it in the neck for essentially being a deception – i.e. false, contrived and untalented – K-pop celebrates that model by liberating it, injecting it with naïve and youthful energy to ridiculous ends that are somewhat surprisingly subversive. Of course, this is not coldly intended – it’s wonderfully by accident.
In K-pop videos, fashion labels are bandied about to ridiculous irreverence, treated more like theatrical props than clothing, upping the ante on anything Lady Gaga might aspire to. If they’re not wearing Balmain, well they’ll just throw on all the labels they name-drop in the lyrics for good measure. There’s a definite sense of androgyny with K-pop boy bands – boy bands and girl bands are often styled quite similarly, which can make for men looking effeminate. Which flies in the face of their western counterparts, who want a starker dichotomy between the boys and the gals.
The styling is all done by Korean stylists and is adored in equal measure by the bands’ fans. One of the most prominent K-pop stylists is Yang Seung Ho, who is said to have been drafted into the Korean army. He pioneered 2NE1’s style direction. 2NE1 are currently one of the most fashion-forward K-pop bands in the charts – possibly one of the most fashion-forward bands in the world! Their ‘I Am The Best’ video is an example of their “editorial” looking styling. When they’re not strutting about in latex, leather, and studs, they’re wearing brands such as Cassette Playa and Gareth Pugh. When it’s rumoured that even Lady Gaga finds it difficult to get the okay to use Pugh, the ease at which a K-pop band can don anything they want shows the respect and interest from the fashion houses over in the West. This doesn’t come cheap though.
Some bands consist of up to thirteen members, so producing a K-Pop band is a pricey business. Combined with the costs of choreographers, stylists, and extra marketing, a lot of stake is placed on the success of a band. South Korea’s pop industry is big business in Asia and the government is keen to promote its new national identity in the hope they could rival Japan’s universally cool cultural image. With K-pop turning into big business, the money at stake with K-pop is what could threaten its appeal. While an innocence and youthful disregard for the refined look, sound and appeal of Western pop is K-pop’s strength, it might well be undermined if money dictates the template. If this were to be such an influencing factor, how can we take the sparkling eyes and the garish smiles of band members in the same vein we take them now? But now is not the time to worry – just plug in and enjoy.
Words by Matthew Josephs
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Asia’s K-Pop clones dance to South Korean beat
SINGAPORE — Twelve-year-old Sabrina Kaur does not understand the lyrics of her favorite South Korean boy band Big Bang’s songs and, until recently, had never met Koreans in real life.
But that did not stop her from joining more than a thousand other Singaporean girls at an audition in the city-state in January to discover a new pan-Asian Korean pop (K-Pop) band to be promoted by a talent firm across the region.
“I want to be the first Indian (Singaporean) girl to join a Korean girl group,” she quipped moments before stepping into the audition room, outnumbered by aspirants from Singapore’s ethnic Chinese majority.
From pre-teens to retirees, millions of fans across Asia have transcended ethnic and age barriers to share a common obsession with South Korean pop music and dramas — a phenomenon known as the “Hallyu” or Korean cultural wave.
The industry is now trying to cement its hold on its fan base by creating non-Korean versions of the hugely popular stars and groups idolized by followers worldwide for their striking looks and slick productions.
“There is no turning back from here,” Eric Yun, CEO of talent search company Alpha Entertainment Korea, said at the Singapore audition, one of several planned for various Asian capitals.
Alpha’s rival SM Entertainment — which boasts South Korea’s biggest female group Girls’ Generation — recently announced plans to hold similar auditions for pan-Asian K-Pop stars in five different countries this year.
South Korea’s music industry held its star-studded Mnet Asian Music Awards in Macau in 2010 and in Singapore last November, breaking out of its domestic confines to further promote itself.
“After Asia, the next step is for Korean culture to conquer the world,” Yun told AFP.
The multi-million dollar-selling K-Pop industry has also set its sights on the Western pop world.
Girl’s Generation headlined a sold-out K-Pop show at Madison Square Garden in New York last year while Google has said it intends to set up a YouTube channel for Korean pop music.
South Korean popular culture first made major inroads into East Asian countries in the early 2000s with the widespread popularity of sensational romantic melodramas such as “Winter Sonata.”
Glamorous single-gender K-pop groups like Girls’ Generation, TVXQ, Super Junior and Shinee took the Hallyu explosion in the region to the next level.
According to a survey conducted by South Korea’s cultural ministry last year, there were an estimated 2.31 million Hallyu fans in Asia, based on memberships in official fan clubs alone.
Asia has already spawned other pop genres such as Bollywood song-and-dance routines and Hong Kong martial arts flicks, but Hallyu is distinct from past fads, according to Singapore-based cinema researcher Liew Kai Khiun.
“The spread of Korean popular culture is exceptional as it was not founded upon the traditional factors of military and economic dominance that characterized that of Western imperial powers, or the diaspora networks of India and China,” said Liew, who has been tracking South Korean popular culture for almost a decade.
Liew cited the globalization of American popular culture, which he said went in tandem with the US “imperial expansion” in the 20th century, as an example.
However, the jury is still out on whether non-Korean K-Pop performers will catch on.
“I have to admit that their look is one of the reasons that Thai people like Korean pop stars,” said Chanika Sriadulpun, editor for ‘The Boy Kimji’, a Thai magazine inspired by K-Pop.
The phenomenon does have its detractors who take umbrage at what they see as South Korea’s exhibition of soft power.
In August last year, thousands of Japanese staged rallies to protest against the Fuji TV network for allegedly “forcing” South Korean programmes on its audiences.
“We cannot stand the fabrication of a boom any longer,” read one placard held by a protester.
But 62-year-old Tokyo retiree Emiko Shimizu is unfazed, professing her love of Hallyu even though it might mean “dancing to the tune of South Korea’s export policy.”
In the Philippines, talent manager Chris Cahilig said he was worried that the Korean wave could seriously impede the growth of local talent.
He told AFP he was “deeply concerned” that “many of our youth have lost their Filipino identity and psyche due to their exposure and preference” for Korean entertainment.
Cahilig said that, compelled to capitalize on the Korean wave in 2010, he put together 1:43, an all-Filipino K-Pop-inspired boy band that became an instant hit.
The band’s debut album became one of the best-selling in the Philippines the following year.
Liew, the Singapore researcher, rejected such worries and said that on the contrary, the K-Pop phenomenon has had a positive impact on Asia’s entertainment scene.
The popularity of Hallyu has raised production standards that regional and local networks have “taken for granted for a long time,” he said.



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