K-pop has a distinct recipe for creating global hits: A catchy hook song, signature dance and flashy video are packaged for social media, where a devoted fan base gives the song a life of its own.
This method helped make K-pop an international phenomenon. wapo.st/3i6xomV
Many K-pop songs follow a classic song-writing style: an intro and a verse with hooks in the chorus. These “hook songs” emphasize catchiness through devices like repetition.
Like the crab dance in “Gee” or the “Up & Down” dance, most K-pop videos contain a signature dance move — called point dances — that are intentionally easy to imitate.
This makes it easy for fans to share as dance challenges on Twitter and TikTok. wapo.st/3i6xomV
Of the 10 music videos with the most views in their first 24 hours, nine are songs by the K-pop groups Blackpink and BTS.
Today, roughly 90 percent of views for K-pop videos on YouTube come from outside of South Korea. wapo.st/3i6xomV
Now, #KpopTwitter is the largest shared-interest group on the platform.
In 2020, there were nearly 6.7 billion K-pop-related tweets globally. In the first six months of the pandemic, there were 28 percent more tweets about K-pop than covid-19. wapo.st/3i6xomV
K-pop fans use Twitter to coordinate the use of specific hashtags — called a “total attack” — to support artists.
Through these “attacks,” they publicize information about everything from streaming a video to voting participation and award celebrations. wapo.st/3i6xomV
Most groups’ fandoms have physical identifiers — colors 💜, names 🍭, glowsticks 💎 and chants ⚫🎀.
Fans are actively involved with how the groups are portrayed online, going so far as to reorganize search keywords and keep track of negative comments. wapo.st/3i6xomV
Industry insiders say BTS fans will buy everything the group touches, from cars to dolls.
The group’s recent McDonald's collaboration was so popular that some used bags with the BTS logo are selling for thousands, with one bid as high as $20,000, on eBay. wapo.st/3i6xomV
For many K-pop fans, it’s not just about the music, but the sense of community.
“It feels like one ginormous family,” said Jackie Alvarez, the chief financial officer of the US BTS ARMY. “We can … give back to them what they’re giving back to us.” wapo.st/3i6xomV
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The sandwich helped save restaurants, @TimCarman writes.
“The sandwich pop-ups/ghost kitchens became a byproduct of the pandemic. They were, in many ways, survival tools, but they also expanded a D.C. sandwich scene already packed with terrific options.” wapo.st/36RRnk9
Accounting for all the choices around D.C. was no easy task, but @TimCarman sampled 139 sandwiches for this guide, “and that doesn’t include the ones I tried more than once, just to make sure they were worthy contenders.” wapo.st/36RRnk9
“This list is comprehensive, but imperfect. I wanted diversity: in cuisines, in locations, in the types of bread used as the base.” wapo.st/36RRnk9
(Photos by Rey Lopez for The Post; food styling by Lisa Cherkasky for The Post)
To reconstruct the anatomy of a ransomware attack, The Post conducted its own data analysis and spoke with nearly a dozen cybersecurity experts, law enforcement officials, negotiators and victims. wapo.st/36pZP9N
Ransomware attacks in the United States more than doubled from 2019 to 2020.
Some experts conservatively estimate that hackers received $412 million in ransom payments last year. wapo.st/36pZP9N
Some attacks happen when hackers find a vulnerability in a company’s software and use that to get into their system.
But most use relatively unsophisticated methods to break into computers. wapo.st/36pZP9N
Army Gen. Austin “Scott” Miller, who has overseen the war effort for nearly three years, relinquished responsibility in a ceremony at the top U.S. military headquarters. Miller departs Afghanistan as the war’s longest-serving senior U.S. officer. washingtonpost.com/national-secur…
A former commander of the elite Delta Force, he oversaw a tumultuous period that included the Trump administration’s 2020 deal with the Taliban that set the stage for withdrawal, and the final call by Biden in April to remove all troops. washingtonpost.com/national-secur…
Conspiracy theories about the pandemic had penetrated deep into a community in the Appalachian highlands.
Nurses there were enduring a trauma that many nurses elsewhere were not: the suspicion and derision of those they risked their lives to protect. wapo.st/3xgQME1
For some nurses, it is as if they fought in a war no one acknowledges.
“You’re living this reality that people don’t understand, and there’s nothing you can say that will convince them,” said nurse Emily Boucher. wapo.st/3xgQME1
(📸: Katherine Frey/The Post)
When Boucher became the first person to receive the coronavirus vaccine in the 21 counties served by her hospital’s parent company, Ballad Health, Boucher hoped her example would at least inspire others to get inoculated. wapo.st/3xgQME1
Five-year-old twins Ruhi and Mahi often wake up crying or seized with fear. In the morning, they ask their great-uncle the same question over and over: Where are our parents?
They lost both parents to covid-19. And what happened to them is not unique. wapo.st/3ABfYXS
Nearly 600 children in India have lost both parents to covid-19, said a government official.
Even that figure may understate the tragedy. Across India, over 3,600 children have been orphaned due to covid and other causes since the pandemic started. wapo.st/3ABfYXS
Although India’s situation is extreme, the country is far from alone.
Researchers in the United States estimate that about 43,000 American children had lost a parent to covid-19 since March of last year. wapo.st/3ABfYXS
In 2019, a Post analysis of temperature data across the Lower 48 states found that major areas are nearing or have already crossed the 2-degree Celsius mark — a critical threshold for global warming. wapo.st/3dV9wRP
In any one geographic location, 2 degrees Celsius may not represent global cataclysmic change, but it can threaten ecosystems, change landscapes and upend livelihoods and cultures.
Before climate change thawed the winters of New Jersey, Lake Hopatcong — where workers once flocked to harvest ice — hosted boisterous wintertime carnivals. As many as 15,000 skaters took part, and automobile owners would drive onto the thick ice. wapo.st/3dV9wRP