Páginas

quinta-feira, 9 de maio de 2013

Foto do Cantor Yesung (Super Junior) causa polemica.

YeSung, integrante do grupo Super Junior, postou na última segunda-feira, dia 30 de abril, uma foto em que aparece vestido de Nick Fury, personagem do Universo Marvel, mas as reações dos fãs foram diversas, com algumas pessoas apontando para o problema do rosto preto, pintar o rosto de preto para representar um negro.



YeSung escreveu a mensagem: “Todo mundo, parabéns pelo seu retorno. Coronel Nick Fury (YeSung)…
Parece que o vocalista, que não esteve com os outros membros, quis se juntar à diversão das fantasias, como indicado pelo rapper EunHyuk na resposta à fotografia: “ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ Ah, hyung você precisava estar lá ㅜㅜㅜㅜㅜㅜㅜ,”
Enquanto alguns fãs acharam graça da imagem, outros comentaram que a foto é ofensiva e racista.
Considerando o fato de que uma fraternidade asiática-americana (Lambda Theta Delta) recentemente foi alvo de críticas por produzir um clipe musical com blackface, a foto de YeSung está recebendo uma atenção negativa consideravelmente menor, talvez porque muitos coreanos não estejam conscientes da história e da conotação negativa da blackface.
Conforme definido na matéria sobre a fraternidade em questão, ablackface é um tipo de maquiagem teatral popularizada em shows americanos em que tipicamente artistas brancos pintavam seus rostos com tinta para criar uma caricatura de uma pessoa negra. O shows geralmente reforçavam estereótipos raciais e desapareceram de cena há muito tempo.
via: sarangingayo


Contagem regressiva para o tão esperado COMEBACK do 2PM


Nesta sexta-feira, 3 de maio, o grupo 2PM revelou em seu site oficial uma nova prévia, desta vez em vídeo, para o seu retorno com a canção Comeback When You Hear This Song, de seu novo álbum Grown.
Confira:
                      PS: ai sishussss ... meus Amores estão de volta ~Lê hottest entrando, em colapso  

sábado, 7 de abril de 2012

J-park

Interview: Jay Park scores big after a 'turbulent couple of years'

Interview: Jay Park scores big after a 'turbulent couple of years'

After going top 10 on iTunes in eight countries, the K-Pop charmer is back in the spotlight with tricky dance moves (watch them here) and the music he's always wanted to do
Jay Park once again dumbfounded the K-Pop industry this past April when his new album hit the Top 10 in Korea and seven non-Asian countries.
Beating out Big Bang’s Taeyang album “Solar” for best international debut of a K-Pop artist, Park’s “Take a Deeper Look” went to number one in Canada and Denmark and peaked at number two in the U.S. and Australia on the iTunes R&B/Soul album charts. The record also sold well in Italy, France and Norway. 
“I didn’t expect this at all,” says the 24-year-old Park on the unexpected worldwide response to his solo debut. “It’s been surreal to find out that I have all these fans in countries I have never been to before.”
With a more urban/hip-hop feel, Park’s new music is different from that of his boy band days.
“It’s the music that I wanted to do,” he says, adding that his sound is still K-Pop.
Park is once again active on the K-Pop performance scene in Seoul after a two-year stateside hiatus. 

Korean drama

Park’s story to date is dramatic, even for the Korean entertainment world, which has recently been rocked by scandals involving secret marriages, having teeth pulled to avoid army service and international man-hunts inspired by gambling charges. 
The former boy band member’s very public 2009 expulsions first from Korea and then from his management agency, JYPE, were the result of immature Myspace comments blown up to epic proportions by netizens and local media.
Armed with his video camera, Youtube account and penchant for singing covers of American R&B artists, Park slowly reinserted himself into the music scene while headquartered at his parents’ house in Seattle, Washington.
His Youtube channel, which initially featured him singing in the bathroom, soon garnered record hits for Most Viewed Musician Channel, Most Viewed Music Channel, Most Viewed Music Video and Most Subscribed Channel in Youtube history, marking his eminent comeback to the music scene.

Au naturel 

In English, Park’s accent is as "street" as any rapping b-boy from the West Coast. The minute he starts speaking Korean, however, he transforms into a charming, awkward colt. 
Park's appeal lies in the fact that he has no filter in either language. Unlike other K-Pop idols, who reliably deliver manufactured and rehearsed responses, Park is famous for blurting out anything that comes to mind.
“He doesn’t have that ‘entertainer disease’ of talking himself up,” says Jenny Lee, a 22-year-old Park fan. “And I like the fact that he’s not two-faced. He’s unaffected.”
Park says that he doesn’t watch his words because if the media wants to twist things, they can do so any time, regardless of context. He would certainly be the person to know. 
Now that he's back in Korea, Park enjoys hanging out at his favorite Seoul haunts, including barbecue joint Donsadon and Taco Bell. His favorite coffeeshop is Caffe Bene. 
He doesn’t cook (“I microwave things”) and orders Papa John's pizza when he stays in. He doesn’t watch movies, shop (“I wear what my fans send me”) or sing karaoke (“I sing for a living”). 

Upcoming plans 

Park says that he follows both American and Korean music closely and plans to work in the U.S. next year. He's currently meeting with different producers to find “the right fit.”
One possible upcoming stateside collaboration is with will.i.am, who he met last week in Seoul.
When asked who he’d like to collaborate with in the future, he rattles of a long list that includes Usher, Trey Songz, Lil Wayne and Jay-Z.
“Whoever’s down to work with me,” he says. 

K-Pop taking over the world? Don't make me laugh

K-Pop taking over the world? Don't make me laugh

K-Pop is great for Asia, but don't believe the hallyu hype about global domination. The world's biggest music markets simply don't care

Having followed the Korean media for some time, I’m all too familiar with the unrestrained embellishment of hallyu.
Every time I read an article raving about how successful the Wonder Girls are in the States, or how Rain is a “world star,” I can’t help but cringe.
Don’t get me wrong. I agree that K-Pop is being listened to outside of Korea and that it has an international fan base, but the media’s coverage of hallyu and K-Pop feel-gooderies is ridiculously one-sided.

Crash and burn

When BoA debuted in the U.S. several years ago, every major Korean news website claimed that she was spearheading the hallyu movement in the Western hemisphere, saying BoA might just as well stand for Bring On America.
Unfortunately, she didn’t Bring On America; she bombed instead, even though her American album “Eat You Up” was produced by Thomas Troelson and featured tracks by Bloodshy and Avant, a duo that has worked with Madonna, Britney Spears and Jennifer Lopez.
Se7en
Se7en admitted on the show "Golden Fishery" that his U.S. foray was a failure.
Like BoA, Se7en also tried to find success in North America and worked alongside Mark Shimmel, Rich Harrison and Darkchild. The result? Complete flops.
More than with their disastrous results, I was intrigued with the Korean media coverage that touted these singers as ambassadors of K-Pop to the U.S. 
What I'd like to ask is, if a singer, regardless of nationality, debuts in the U.S. with English songs produced specifically for an American audience, is that artist still a part of the Korean Wave?
Take Jay Park (aka Park Jae Beom), a Korean-American and ex-member of the boy band 2PM.
After leaving the group in 2009, he reappeared on YouTube and his rendition of “Nothin’ On You,” originally sung by Bruno Mars, reached well more than a million views.
Korean news websites immediately claimed Park was on his way to becoming an international hallyu star.
These types of articles always puzzle me. Yes, Park is ethnically Korean and debuted in a Korean boy band -- but calling a Korean-American singing in English a hallyu star, and even a promoter of K-Pop, seems to be a wild leap in logic. 

Misnomer 

Before stamping the word "hallyu" on every song with a connection to Korea, it is crucial to first deconstruct the notion of the so-called Korean Wave. 
BoA and Se7en have sung songs in English that were produced by Americans, and were transformed and marketed (albeit, unsuccessfully) in a way to suit the American public. Is there, therefore, anything that is so specifically and exclusively “Korean” about their U.S. debuts or their music?
Instead of simply glorifying the concept of hallyu and obsessing over the “exclusivity” and “uniqueness” of K-Pop, the Korean media should understand that when artists are debuting in the U.S. with English songs, people don’t care if it’s J-Pop or K-Pop.
Once these artists cross over to a different cultural arena and play by its rules, the notion of hallyu no longer applies.  

The opinions of this commentary are solely those of Esther Oh and do not reflect the views of CNNGo.

Esther Oh, a California native currently residing in Seoul, is a freelance writer for CNNGo. She received her B.A. in East Asian Cultures from UC Irvine and obtained her M.A. in Modern Korean Literature at Columbia University. She currently works as an online news editor at CJ E&M.

quinta-feira, 5 de abril de 2012

Dia de Fã ~> Saranghae <~


Amor de fã é o mais puro e lindo amor que existe. O nosso amor é capaz de mover montanhas, capaz de mover oceanos e as milhas que tornam o nosso mundo e o dos nossos ídolos separados. Nós somos capazes de amar alguém mesmo que não seja esse pouco , somos capazes de nos dar por inteiras, de acordar, respirar, de viver a custo de um único sonho que é poder tocá-los, e dizer o quanto é grande esse amor. O amor de fã não tem limites geográficos, físicos ou mentais,pois não se há limite para amar. Amar é para todos que estejam dispostos a ficarem loucos. O amor de fã supera todas as críticas injustas e as fases ruins do seu ídolo. Ele supera tudo e todos.Não importa se você não está com o seu ídolo desde o começo, mas sim se você estará com ele até o final. Não existe uma pessoa mais fã ou menos fã, existem apenas os fãs verdadeiros, aqueles que batem no peito com orgulho e dizem: ''Eu sou fã '' sem medo de ouvir o que as pessoas em volta vão pensar ou dizer, sem medo de serem julgadas por amar alguém. s2


O meu amor È por Jun Ho dos 2pm's ......
esta coisa linda que meche com meu interior de uma forma inesplicavel!!!~