Guys if I reposted any vile solos, or shippers, do let me know, please! If I ever did that, it was to defend the member other fandoms were hating on, and I didn't check if they are a solo or not. It's a genuine mistake, so please to tell me!
[NEWS] TWICE’s Jihyo said in a recent interview that #BTS PAVED THE WAY for South Korean artists to become better known worldwide, adding that she’s grateful for everything they’ve done!
“Jihyo credits..groups like her seniors and BTS, for “paving the way” for South Korean artists to become better known. She shares, “We’re just following in their footsteps, and I’m grateful for what they’ve done for us.”
[NEWS] TWICE’s Jihyo said in a recent interview that #BTS PAVED THE WAY for South Korean artists to become better known worldwide, adding that she’s grateful for everything they’ve done!
“Jihyo credits..groups like her seniors and BTS, for “paving the way” for South Korean artists to become better known. She shares, “We’re just following in their footsteps, and I’m grateful for what they’ve done for us.”
Let’s actually read the legal text instead of farming cheap timeline interactions off a headline.
First of all, if you open the actual paperwork, BTS’s RM and producer Pdogg are explicitly NOT named as defendants in this lawsuit. The legal dispute is strictly a corporate/publisher matter regarding Western demo submissions between labels—the members are legally cleared.
Second, let’s talk about the plaintiffs’ "expert witness," musicologist Alexander Stewart. This is the exact same guy hired to sue Ed Sheeran over "Thinking Out Loud". During that trial, the jury completely rejected Stewart’s reaching claims and ruled in favor of Sheeran after less than three hours of deliberation.
If you need more comedy, he is also the exact same "expert" who tried to sue Led Zeppelin over "Stairway to Heaven" and lost that federal case too because he literally admitted on cross-examination that he was trying to sue them over basic, commonplace musical elements that have existed for over 300 years.
Imagine trying to drag a No. 1 hit song using a guy who makes a living fabricating fake reaches for a check just to lose every single major pop case he touches. Wrap this desperate narrative up immediately and learn how the music industry actually works 🤡📉
Also post where this generic kpop slope fan was genuinely enjoying the song
Before he realised it's not his usual slope with random eardrum tearing beats
He kept asking for choreographies and pre releases for a reason.
It's because he's used to the kpop fast fashion songs