Saturday 2 February 2013

Wonder Girl Wallpaper

Source(google.com.pk)
Wonder Girl Wallpaper Biography
"When we sang the song 'Irony,' some students were jealous of me," says Sun-mi, 15. "But recently everybody likes the 'Tell Me' dance. There's even another Wonder Girls group at school. Five students made up a group and dance to 'Tell Me.' They even asked me to teach them the dance."

The Wonder Girls enjoy watching UCC (user created content) in their free time. "I was impressed by a video from a group of soldiers who danced to 'Tell Me' in their uniforms," says Ye-eun, 18. "They rolled up their pants like hot pants. They were pretty good dancers, but the video was hilarious."
Each of the members has been through a long period of training. "My dream was to become a singer. Of course there were tough times, but I had confidence in myself that I could do well," says Sun-ye, who spent seven years preparing for her debut. "I got frustrated sometimes during my two-year training period," says 19-year-old Yu-bin with a smile. "But two years seems like nothing compared to Sun-ye's seven years."

The Wonder Girls say they were stunned by the outfits and choreography for "Tell Me" when they first saw them. "We didn't like wearing the outfits. But once we shot the music video in them, it was fun," says So-hee, 15. The music at the time was still new to them and it wasn't easy to get the choreography right. "The choreography looks simple but it's actually quite complex. Small repetitive motions with the hips, chin and shoulders -- it makes a strong image," said the Wonder Girls.
Wonder Girls looked tired in their short skirts. "We sing seven or eight times after finishing school every day," says one of the Wonder Girls, somehow managing a bright smile. The five Wonder Girls -- Sun-mi, Sun-ye, Ye-eun, Yoo-bin and So-hee -- were wearing heavy makeup and their individually unique, funky outfits. "We really feel our popularity when 30-year-old guys ask us for autographs. It's amazing. It seems like people have been waiting for easy songs like ours."

"People who were students in the 1980s say our retro-style song 'Tell Me' feels familiar. And teenagers like it because it sounds fresh. People think of us as a group rather than as individuals. I just really appreciate it when they recognize us," says Sun-ye, the 18-year-old leader of the group.
South Korean rapper of the moment PSY says he never imagined that “Gangnam Style” would be viewed more than 150 million times on YouTube. The video’s viral success was an even bigger surprise to the Korean music industry, whose chief export had been (until a minute ago) young, eager, camera-ready pop groups perfected by years’ of media training, gunning for crossover fame overseas in the United States. Compared to those svelte 20-somethings, Psy—age 34 and of average size—considered himself to be an industry misfit. To further prove his point, he’d learned to dance to “Single Ladies” for live shows.
It’s fitting, then, that when Schoolboy Records manager Scooter Braun announced that Psy would join Justin Bieber and Carly Rae Jepsen on his roster, he made one particular goal known: Psy will be “the first Korean artist to break a big record in the United States.”

To US ears, “Gangnam Style” may sound like an LMFAO collaboration beamed from overseas. To first-time viewers of his music video, as Britney Spears and Ellen DeGeneres can now attest, PSY’s Running Man-meets-rodeo king choreography looks easier to nail than it actually is. As immediate and infectious as “Gangnam Style” may be, thousands of YouTube users have attempted to dissect nearly all aspects of the sudden hit and its accompanying, ridiculously viral music video: its rhythm, its apparent symbolism, if not its actual lyrics. (Despite its title being clearly displayed, English-language listeners — Usher included — apparently heard it as “Open Condom Style.”) But to PSY, “Gangnam Style” is simply a way of life, at least in Korea. Named after one of Seoul’s most affluent districts, this song off his sixth (!) album is about a couple “acting noble at daytime and going crazy at nighttime,” as the rapper told Ryan Seacrest.

PSY’s crossover success reminds of all the Korean artists that have previously set their sights for US fame — and also the US artists who then looked to the K-pop industry for inspiration. Let’s talk about them.

Number of times Rain topped TIME’s 100 poll: 3
In 2006, JYP Entertainment’s first crossover hopeful Rain performed two sold-out concerts at Madison Square Garden and one in Las Vegas — the sort of events that surely cemented his #1 spot in TIME‘s annual reader poll of most influential people, before he’d top it again in 2007 and 2011. The incredibly eager support from his fans (nicknamed his “Clouds”) once even helped Rain edge out Stephen Colbert for the poll’s #2 spot in 2008, a score that Colbert tried to settle via dance-off. Rain’s one failure: not recording an English-language album before he began his compulsory military service, as required of all Korean males.

Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper

Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper
Wonder Girl Wallpaper

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