
- Does j line in twice speak in japanese to each other archive#
- Does j line in twice speak in japanese to each other plus#
Was it understandable that the girls wouldn't be singing at their best, given that it was an impromptu performance and they may have been working with a bad/broken mix? Or is it inexcusable that even after four years at that point, only certain members which ones is itself a bone of contention, though Jeongyeon is always included are able to stay on-key and stable? At any rate, ever since the "More & More" incident, Twice have been increasingly and noticeably nervous whenever an encore stage happens. * If you watch closely, you can see her grimace and look embarrassed when she realizes how she sounds.

Does j line in twice speak in japanese to each other plus#
By 2022 they'd managed to release 10 EP's and 3 LP's in Korea alone (that's over 100 songs), plus 20 Japanese adaptations of their Korean title tracks AND 4 Japan-only LP's.

Does j line in twice speak in japanese to each other archive#

Momo turned out to be one of the most popular members internationally. JYP's decision to bring Momo back upset many Koreans who felt JYP had changed the rules on the fly he also used Loophole Abuse to add Tzuyu after her elimination in the final episode.

She had been eliminated halfway through SIXTEEN due to a combination of weak performances by her two group-mates and perhaps a bit of racism (the other two girls up for elimination that round were Korean). Momo was only included in the final lineup thanks to open Executive Meddling on JYP's part.Then their followup EP Page Two with its title track "Cheer Up" catapulted them into superstardom. As it turned out, "Like OOH-AHH" did far better than expected. In their very first livestream they expressed only modest hope at the start that fans would tune in. Before their official debut stages, members promoted their debut song and EP by performing at campus auditoriums (not unlike they had done during SIXTEEN). SIXTEEN didn't get very good ratings by K-pop elimination show standards, and the general consensus in 2015 was that, with the demise of miss A and Wonder Girls plus the collapse of 6Mix (the group Nayeon, Jihyo, and Jeongyeon were supposed to debut in), JYP Entertainment was destined to fall out of the "Big 3" Korean Agencies and SIXTEEN was simply a last-ditch attempt to stave off the inevitable.
