In a collision of K-pop and American R&B, legendary K-pop group MONSTA X meets Grammy-nominated American singer and songwriter Gallant! Witness the incredible first meeting between these two influential artists from different parts of the globe. Crossing languages and cultures, they tell the stories of their humble beginnings, their dreams and inspirations, and their long journey towards success. Through the power of music, they connect to each other, and the world.
Director: Andrey Kolyadich
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From May to December 2014, EXO toured Asia for their first concert tour EXO from Exoplanet #1: The Lost Planet. For the Japan leg of the tour, the popular K-pop boy band held nine sold-out concerts in three cities – Fukuoka, Tokyo and Osaka. Catch the boys' hit songs and exciting dance performances with this live video release of their Tokyo concert!
A breaking K-pop group finds themselves mistakenly stranded in Waco, Texas, just days before their American debut at Madison Square Garden. Left with no phones, no money and no transportation, the group must overcome their differences and a host of crazy obstacles to make it to New York City. Along the way, they learn to love Texas, and Texas learns to love them back.
Winter Fairy Tales: The Lost Memory is an online concert presented by the K-Pop group Oh My Girl. It is the third installment in their season themed concerts. The moon rising that signals the coming of winter. When the day we meet the snow begins. The glow of seven colors from the deepest part of the sea, Reveals its appearance to the world.
TOMORROW X TOGETHER are back post-pandemic and are ready to embark on their first world tour from Seoul to North America. The band's nerves and excitement are kicking in, but they have challenged themselves to give the performance of a lifetime.
A cafe is growing, tucked in to the mountainside air raid shelter of the DMZ borderlands. A light light flickers, illuminating the past, present, and future. I'll see you at the DMZ! Shim was a free, one-day pop-up cafe staged in Yangji-ri village’s air raid shelter at the Korean DMZ. Referencing Korean cafe culture’s fixation on third place, the DMZ’s evolution from security tourism, to ecological peace tourism, and its repurposing as art production site, Shim attempts to intervene and align the past and present. Yangji-ri was one of many minbuk propaganda villages established by the Park Chung Hee regime in the 1960s to showcase the farming bounty and prosperity of the south for a North Korean gaze. The village was formerly part of the Civilian Control Line (CCL) until 2013 when it was reterritorialized as a normal part of South Korea.
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