Most Popular
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Samsung entangled in legal risks amid calls for drastic reform
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Heavy snow alerts issued in greater Seoul area, Gangwon Province; over 20 cm of snow seen in Seoul
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Seoul blanketed by heaviest Nov. snow, with more expected
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[Herald Interview] 'Trump will use tariffs as first line of defense for American manufacturing'
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Samsung shakes up management, commits to reviving chip business
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Seoul snowfall now third heaviest on record
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K-pop fandoms wield growing influence over industry decisions
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Heavy snow of up to 40 cm blankets Seoul for 2nd day
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Seoul's first snowfall could hit hard, warns weather agency
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How $70 funeral wreaths became symbol of protest in S. Korea
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[Herald Interview] Korean-American Aaron Yoo, surfing roles in Hollywood for over a decade
Korean-American actor Aaron Yoo has been building a low-key yet eclectic career since starting out in off-Broadway shows in the early 2000s. A University of Pennsylvania theater graduate, Yoo has gone on to play recurring characters on the small screen, as well as supporting roles on the big screen in movies such as “Disturbia” (2007) and “21” (2008).Yoo has jumped onto the web space in his most recent project. Taking up the role of Machiavellian billionaire venture capitalist Alex Bell in web s
TelevisionSept. 28, 2016
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Twice gearing up for return
K-pop girl group Twice is getting ready for its return to the spotlight. The nine-member act is currently working on a new release, scheduled to be unveiled sometime next month, according to the group’s management agency JYP Entertainment on Wednesday. Although the date and the concept behind the upcoming release is as of yet undecided, the girl group is reportedly collaborating with Black-eyed Pilseung, the leading producer and songwriting duo behind the group’s hit tracks “Like Ooh-Aah” and “
PerformanceSept. 28, 2016
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Chin Un-suk named new SPO artistic adviser
Longtime Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra composer-in-residence Chin Un-suk, 55, has been named the orchestra’s new artistic adviser, replacing current interim artistic director Michael Fine, a Grammy-awarding classical recording producer.Chin, a famed local classical music composer based in Berlin, will officially begin her role as new artistic adviser starting Oct. 1. “Back in February I took a business trip to Berlin and met up with Chin Un-suk and practically begged her to take up the position,”
PerformanceSept. 28, 2016
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‘Asura’ expected to draw big crowds
Directed by Kim Sung-soo, “Asura: The City of Madness” is predicted to become a blockbuster hit this fall. Nearly 250,000 people had reserved tickets for the movie in advance of its Wednesday release, with estimated ticket sales of over 1.6 billion won ($1.46 million), according to data from the Korean Film Council as of Wednesday morning. The recent summer blockbuster “Train to Busan” currently holds the record for the highest number of pre-sale reservations, with over 320,000 pre-sold ticket.
FilmSept. 28, 2016
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Chicago blogger Luvvie Ajayi offers wit, wisdom in new book ‘I’m Judging You: The Do-Better Manual’
“I’m Judging You” By Luvvie AjayiHenry Holt (256 pages, $17)The wit of culture blogger Luvvie Ajayi (AwesomelyLuvvie.com) has earned her quite the following.She has been called upon by the likes of McDonald’s, Comcast and wine brand Rosa Regale to take over their social media accounts, live Tweet events and blog about “Scandal” and “Being Mary Jane.”And earlier this month, Oprah herself crowned the Chicago web strategist, naming her to the inaugural list of Super Soul 100 leaders recognized for
BooksSept. 28, 2016
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‘Children of the New World’ finds virtual realities disenchanting
“Children of the New World” By Alexander WeinsteinPicador (240 pages, $16)The typical protagonist of Alexander Weinstein’s cautionary tales in “Children of the New World” is a man who could benefit from reading these stories, but probably never would, unless someone found a way to pipe them directly into his eyeballs.He’s no longer young, though sometimes youngish, emotionally connected to few people beyond his wife (if he has one) and easily swept away by virtual reality, shared-world environme
BooksSept. 28, 2016
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Adele cracks 10 million US sales again
NEW YORK (AFP) – Adele’s “25” has topped 10 million sales in the United States, her second album to cross the threshold as the English singer cements her status as the century’s top-selling artist.The US industry body presented Adele a plaque certifying that “25,” released in November, had gone diamond platinum, or sold 10 million, at a ceremony backstage at New York’s Madison Square Garden where she just played six sold-out shows, her publicist announced Tuesday.The Recording Industry Associati
PerformanceSept. 28, 2016
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Portugal to keep Miro collection
LISBON (AFP) - The Portuguese government said Tuesday it has decided to keep 85 works by famed Spanish artist Joan Miro in the country after an uproar over their proposed sale to foreign buyers.The paintings, estimated to be worth around 35 million euros ($39 million), came under state ownership in 2008 when the government nationalized the failed bank BNP which had built up the Surrealist collection.The former center-right government put them up for auction in London in 2014 to raise cash, but t
PerformanceSept. 28, 2016
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‘Tristan’ makes Rattle want to ‘curl up in a fetal position’
NEW YORK (AP) -- Simon Rattle thought back to his first staged performance of Wagner’s “Tristan und Isolde” in Amsterdam in 2001.“I remember wanting to lie down on the rostrum and curl up in a fetal position and sob,” he said. “While every bone of my body was asking me to do that, the rest of me was saying, no, actually you have to be professional and keep on conducting.”Wagner’s hypnotic love story, composed from 1857-59 and premiered in 1865, returned to the Metropolitan Opera on Monday night
PerformanceSept. 28, 2016
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Lee Young-Ae’s return TV series put off to next year
The airing of the South Korean TV series “Saimdang, Memoir of Colors,” which stars Lee Young-Ae, has been postponed to early next year, according to TV sources. The SBS TV series was scheduled to simultaneously hit South Korea and China in late October. But the broadcast has been put off to January, as China has delayed its screening procedures for the show, possibly because of Seoul’s decision to deploy an anti-missile defense system on the Korean Peninsula, the sources said Tuesday. The drama
TelevisionSept. 28, 2016
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My Hometown: Springsteen launches book tour in New Jersey
FREEHOLD, New Jersey (AP) -- The Boss was back in his hometown. Bruce Springsteen’s latest tour opened Tuesday, and the rocker who usually lets his songs do the talking yielded to fans to take a turn and share their stories of what he meant to them.They simply wanted to say thank you.“I want to just tell him he’s been my therapy for 40 years,” said Joan Forman, of New Jersey.Fans from all over the world lined up hours before Springsteen’s appearance at a Barnes & Noble in Freehold to promote h
BooksSept. 28, 2016
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Mara Wilson is not Matilda anymore
When Mara Wilson was a little girl, Hollywood couldn’t get enough of her.She was one of those child actors who seemed preternaturally mature. Her vocabulary was surprisingly expansive. She could carry on full-blown conversations with adults. And she appeared to be in full control of her emotions, bringing out the puppy dog eyes at just the right moment.Interviewing Wilson on the “Today” show in 1994, Katie Couric declared: “Every time I see you in a movie, I just want to put you in my pocket and
BooksSept. 28, 2016
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ICC sentences jihadist to 9 years in jail for attacks on Timbuktu UNESCO site
THE HAGUE (AFP) -- War crimes judges jailed a Malian jihadist Tuesday for nine years for demolishing Timbuktu’s fabled shrines, a landmark ruling seen as a warning that destroying mankind’s heritage will not go unpunished.In the first such case to focus on cultural destruction as a war crime, the International Criminal Court found Ahmad al-Faqi al-Mahdi guilty of directing attacks on the UNESCO world heritage site during the jihadist takeover of northern Mali in 2012.Mahdi “supervised the destru
CultureSept. 28, 2016
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Iraq opens new antiquities museum in Basra
BAGHDAD (AP) -- Iraq opened a new antiquities museum in the southern city of Basra on Tuesday with pottery, coins and other artifacts dating back more than 2,000 years.Only one hall was opened due to a shortage of funds, Qahtan al-Obaid, the museum director, told the Associated Press by telephone. It will showcase artifacts dating back to 400 B.C. that tell the history of the oil-rich city on the Persian Gulf.He said there are plans to open other wings that would exhibit Babylonian, Assyrian and
CultureSept. 28, 2016
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Experts call for UNESCO listing of S. Korea’s ancient education institution
South Korean scholars have highlighted the significance of the country’s oldest historical educational institution, papers showed Wednesday, as the Seoul city government pushes to list it as a UNESCO world cultural heritage site. The foremost education institution during the Joseon era (1392-1910), Sungkyunkwan, has been keeping the ritual called “Seokjeon” alive at the Confucian shrine Munmyo on the grounds of what is now Sungkyunkwan University in central Seoul, said professor Chang Jae-cheon
CultureSept. 28, 2016
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Expats join in Zandari music bonanza
Venues across Hongdae will open their doors for a multistage showcase festival this weekend.Zandari Festa’s acts are mostly Korean, including well-known acts such as Crying Nut and Kingston Rudieska, but also visiting acts -- particularly from the UK and France this year. And several expat performers will be among the Korea-based acts.Patrick Connor, who is part of the festival’s organizing team, said the festival aimed to bring together music professionals and musicians from Korea and overseas.
Expat LivingSept. 27, 2016
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NK rights campaign film getting global release
An expat-made documentary on campaigners for North Korean human rights has arranged distribution for release in more than 100 countries this fall.“While They Watched” won awards at over 12 international festivals and was listed as one of the “12 Documentaries You Cannot Miss” at the Human Rights Dignity Festival hosted by Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar. “I feel honored that audiences can watch our film and people of such influence are aware of it,” said director Jake Smith.“Hopefully it will help c
Expat LivingSept. 27, 2016
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Sounds of strings to usher in the fall months
Classical music fans may be seen flocking to the Seoul Arts Center in the upcoming autumn months of October and November to witness some of the finest one-night-only performances from three world-class musicians. Anne-Sophie Mutter has been internationally regaled as being one of the greatest violin virtuosos of modern times for the past four decades. The four-time Grammy Award winner gives concerts in all the world’s important music centers, her fame much accredited to her early career under t
PerformanceSept. 27, 2016
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Demand on the rise for Han River’s cruise ship
The Han River’s multipurpose cruise ship Araho will continue to expand its onboard cultural services to lure more visitors, the Seoul Metropolitan Government said Monday.Akin to the well-known Bateau Mouche boats on the River Seine in Paris, the Araho has since July been operated by the travel agency Lets Go Korea. (Yonhap)According to the Seoul Metropolitan Government, the private company has diversified cultural content available on the ship, resulting in an increase in visitors. The city gove
CultureSept. 27, 2016
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[Foreigners Who Loved Korea] Soong Meiling, China’s first lady who aided Korea’s independence movement
Soong Meiling was born in 1898 as the third daughter of a wealthy businessman in Shanghai, China.She was educated in the West and threw herself into assisting her husband Chiang Kai-shek when he became China’s top political leader of the time. She was an especially proactive supporter of Korea’s independence movement. Soong’s father, Charlie Jones Soong, studied abroad in the United States and graduated from a Methodist theological seminary. He returned to his country as a missionary, starting a
CultureSept. 27, 2016