Created pages edit

List of article page that successfully be in the mainspace
Article Name Year Description Improve
Exchange 2024 South Korean dating reality show from TVING Episodes short summary
Ha Hyun-sang South Korean singer-songwriter; born in 1998 Artistry + Career & concerts section + Songwriting credits + Accolades and achievements
Kim Seung-min South Korean singer; born 2000; member of Stray Kids Artistry + Philanthropy + Accolades and achievements
University War South Korean brain reality show from Coupang Play Day 2 Investigation Signal & Day 4, Day 5 Game Summary
My Sibling's Romance South Korean dating reality show from JTBC x Wavve After the show ended (Episode summary and short summary)
Jonathan Yiombi Democratic Republic of the Congo entertainer in South Korea Career section
Gomak Boys South Korean reality program from Kakao TV complete history & episode summary

On-going Draft edit

List of on-going draft project that I plan to improve with goal of moving it to mainspace :

People
TV / Radio show

Stub/Start article edit

TV / Radio show
Discography
People

Stray Kids Artistry section edit

edit progress xtools.wmcloud.org/topedits/en.wikipedia.org/Shenaall/0/Stray%20Kids

Original paragraph

Stray Kids' music is generally K-pop, hip hop, electronic, and rock.[1][2] The group labelled their music genre as "Stray Kids genre" themselves.[3] They are considered a "self-producing" idol group as the members are almost always involved in songwriting and composing, and sometimes assist in arranging.[4] Since the release of "God's Menu" in 2020, Stray Kids' discography has also been described as being of a unique "mala taste genre"[1][better source needed] and "noise music", a label that inspired their album Noeasy.[5]

Improvement
  • remove medium + soompi source   Done
  • divide musical style and songwriting lyrical themes and stage aesthetic (see reference BigBang (South Korean band)#Artistry) and concept(?)
  • new sources!
1. BBC: dark experimental albums.[SKZ 1]
2. Time: headbanging anthems.[SKZ 2]
3. Teen Vogue: Noeasy.[SKZ 3]
4. Teen Vogue: Go Live.[SKZ 4]
5. Korea JoongAng Daily: Rock-Star Showcase.[SKZ 5]
6. Korea Herald: Super Rookie Group of 2018.[SKZ 6]
7. Teen Vogue: Rock-Star.[SKZ 7]
8. Teen Vogue: 5-Star.[SKZ 8]
9. Hankyung: Miroh track from other + prod. Brian Atwood [SKZ 9]

New Paragraph edit

Musical style Outline (each # means different paragraph)
  1. Skz music is dark experimental genre, fuse of many different elements. They got criticized for being too loud, too noisy, and too "construction music-y" but they embraced it as the main topic of noeasy and use it as their weapon. They keep the tenacious music with strong spine (jutdae). Their goal is to continously pioneer new musical subjects and their music be recognized as a 'Stray Kids' genre. (which is they did as more producers are asked by ent companies to write songs like skz do, but need to find reliable source for this to include)   Done + Mala taste genre.[SKZ 10][SKZ 11][SKZ 12][SKZ 13]   Done
  2. I Am Series, Cle Series, dst (basically explain each albums genre and style). notes= partly done means musical style have not been added yet
  3. Mash Up for Album Spoiler!!!
Songwriting and lyrical themes Outline
  1. Self-produced group even before debuted. Main producers 3Racha since 2017. 3Racha once worked with producer Mike Daly and how they worked together.   Done
  2. Eventho 3Racha largely responsible for crafting skz music, other members also participated in the making process (theme, idea, goal, lyrics, etc) so it is not "3Racha music" but "Skz music". They have mixtape project (placebo, behind the light, for you, broken compass, hoodie season) where they remake 3Racha's soundcloud song with all members write their own lyrics, unit songs in noeasy, self digital project (skz-player), and two kids songs where 2 members in each team worked together to write a song with the same beat as its base.   Done
  3. Lyrics' topic about searching their own sound, their process of growth (relatable meaning)   Done
  4. Solo songwriting preference for each member ← in each member's artistry section
Stage and performance aesthetic
  1. brief mention daesang for performance & K-Performance Leaders (K-퍼포먼스 대장주) [1][2]   Partly done
  2. dance matches with song lyrics + strong performance and live vocals 실력 (Kingdom 100secs, The First Take!)
  3. overall concept theme (mention Culinary in God's Menu, Korean folks in Thunderous, SKZ Gayo Daejeon 2021, wolf and deadpool + antman in kingdom)
  4. outstanding stage property (fan [35th GDA], knife, sword)

Go Live edit

"God's Menu" ("神메뉴")[SKZ 4]

  • culinary metaphore.
  • word play: album title combine english word "go" and hanja "life", read as go-saeng lit meaning = "hardship".
  • 2018's I Am… trilogy of EPs, which focused heavily on the theme of identity as they charged away from systems that sought to control them. The Clé series followed in 2019, which threw Stray Kids head-first into the thorny, often exhausting labyrinth of adulthood. Bang Chan, Changbin, and Han, who comprise the group's in-house production trio, known as 3RACHA, write about their own experiences, etching their personal dreams and worries into a diverse discography that spans six EPs, multiple mixtape singles, and special releases. But with Go生, they've emerged with newfound perspective.
  • "Easy" delivers boundless swagger over a trap beat (and it's already been immortalized on stan Twitter); "Airplane" is Stray Kids at their most relaxed, a chill summertime vibe that's also a tremendous showcase for singer Seungmin; main rapper and all-rounder Han lets his voice soar on "Phobia," an electronic-synth track that examines the paranoia of losing someone (it was also the final song added to the album); "TA" is all high energy and thunderous chaos, perfect for a future encore set; and "Blueprint" shines with its funky bass line, bright verses, and fierce optimism ("I'll proudly achieve my dream," Felix sings in Korean, as translated to English).
  • Go Live background story: title song change

Noeasy edit

Sorikkun ("소리꾼")[SKZ 3]

  • In “Thunderous,” contemporary synths and drops blend in with traditional Korean instruments in a boisterous sound storm. The single is both a dig at haters and a celebration of Stray Kids’ essence — noise and debris included. Korean traditional element: hanok, ddokkaebi tales, pungmul folks, white lion, jjasorikkun.
  • word play: Stray Kids aren’t sorry, and they aren’t just “소리” either. They are the definition of grit, unafraid to explore their dirty and noisy sides in order to bring forward unforeseen surprises.

References edit

  1. ^ Savage, Mark (February 21, 2024). "Stray Kids: How K-Pop took over the global charts in 2023". BBC. Retrieved February 21, 2024.
  2. ^ De Guzman, Chad (October 5, 2023). "Stray Kids Found Global Success by Embracing a New Sound". Time. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  3. ^ a b Assis, Tássia (September 1, 2021). "Stray Kids Talks New Album "NOEASY" & Embracing Their Noise Music Label". Teen Vogue. Archived from the original on September 2, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  4. ^ a b www.teenvogue.com/story/stray-kids-members-go-live-interview-2020
  5. ^ koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/2023-11-10/entertainment/kpop/SHOWCASE-All-we-think-about-is-how-to-improve-Stray-Kids-are-RockStars-in-new-album/1910604
  6. ^ https://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20180328000681
  7. ^ www.teenvogue.com/story/stray-kids-rock-star-ep-review
  8. ^ www.teenvogue.com/story/stray-kids-5-star-album-could-usher-in-a-new-era-for-skz
  9. ^ www.hankyung.com/article/201903253556I
  10. ^ Go Live www.chosun.com/entertainments/entertain_photo/2020/09/21/X3ABSXG7FNB5LU4OPH2VFIH34A/
  11. ^ Go Live www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR20200617072900005
  12. ^ Noeasy www.chosun.com/entertainments/entertain_photo/2021/09/14/4JC57J6FBOWE47L7X3KLIQ6IJE/
  13. ^ Noeasy QnA sports.donga.com/ent/article/all/20210823/108716732/1

University War edit

Question

 
300 mathematic questions for Round 1 Main Match


1   34   67   101   134   167   201   234   267  
2   35   68   102   135   168   202   235 268
3 36 69 103 136 169 203 236 269
4 37 70 104 137 170 204 237 270
5 38 71 105 138 171 205 238 271
6 39 72 106 139 172 206 239 272
  1. ^ a b Knight, Rinn; Lopez, Amanda (July 24, 2021). "Cookin' up a new sound: Stray Kids and the mala taste genre". Medium. Outro Words. Archived from the original on March 26, 2023. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  2. ^ Savage, Mark (February 21, 2024). "Stray Kids: How K-Pop took over the global charts in 2023". BBC. Retrieved February 21, 2024.
  3. ^ De Guzman, Chad (October 5, 2023). "Stray Kids Found Global Success by Embracing a New Sound". Time. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  4. ^ hgordon (August 26, 2019). "10 Self-Produced K-Pop Idol Groups You Really Should Be Stanning". Soompi. Archived from the original on June 30, 2022. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  5. ^ Assis, Tássia (September 1, 2021). "Stray Kids Talks New Album "NOEASY" & Embracing Their Noise Music Label". Teen Vogue. Archived from the original on September 2, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2022.