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Allkpop (stylized in all lowercase) is an American website which features Korean pop [1] and gossip [2] news. It is one of the most trafficked K-pop news sites, with over seven and half million readers per month. [3] In its list of useful websites, The Korea Herald called it the "fastest news breaker" for K-pop. [2]
KBS, MBC, and SBS are the three networks, and account for the vast majority of banned K-pop videos. Between 2009 and 2012, they banned over 1,300 K-pop songs. [1] This list only includes titular K-pop songs that have an accompanying music video, but many K-pop songs that were not title tracks have been banned as well.
The Jung Joon-young KakaoTalk chatrooms was a South Korean entertainment and sex scandal publicized in 2019 as part of the Burning Sun scandal.The two scandals were tied together by the release of revealing KakaoTalk messages that exposed alleged crimes at the Burning Sun nightclub, and separately, by K-pop singer and entertainer Jung Joon-young and his friends and colleagues.
All the K-Pop (Korean: 올 더 케이팝) was a South Korean variety show, which aired Tuesday nights on the MBC Music channel. [1] [2] The show was hosted by Boom, Park Jae-min and MBLAQ's Mir. [2] Episodes 23 and 25 were the two most-viewed Korean videos (not counting music videos and music shows) on YouTube in 2013, and episode 26 ranked eighth.
It contained five Korean-language songs plus the title track also in English. A music video for "Scandal" was released, which showcased a dance battle between Kangta and Vanness, and featured Korean singer Lina, from Korean girl group The Grace (band). Later, a music video for "127 Days" was also released, featuring Lina's bandmate Stephanie.
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pages in category "Scandals in South Korea" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
During this time a review committee censored all Korean music and music videos for sexual and explicit content. [7] The committee was disbanded in June 1996. [ 7 ] After an economic crisis in 1997 and success of K-pop outside South Korea, the innocence morphed into a more romantic and hipper image in the early 2000s.
The title track, "Shampoo", was composed by Japanese producer Daishi Dance, [41] and the music video was released later that day. The music video for "Let's Step Up", the intro track on the album, featured After School performing a tap-dance routine, which was praised internationally by tap dancers such as Joseph Wiggan.