Hey all! I know many of you have been waiting for new reactions/FESTA stuff, but a lot is going on here including a surprise move (where I have to help build my new apartment. A lot of my nights have been hours of pack and construction work!) and a lot with Ashlen that I can't really talk about yet in case it doesn't happen, but could be really good for the channel! So thank you for your patience and understanding. It gets tricky when we have to focus on the not-UA-cam parts of our lives, but are happy so many of you stick around long enough that we can keep this friend group going when we can come up for air again. This is the last video in the most recent set of videos I've done with my dad, but I'm hoping we can film again very soon and there will be no breaks. If we can't, I'll do my very best to get something up for you all at least once a week until I'm settled enough to return to video making/editing.
Now I have to go check out Nights of White Satin. Conflicted emotions is probably my favorite BTS. I always think about RM and Suga and JHope's "lyrical colors" -- like vocal colors. Even Jimin writing lyrics the way he talks (cute), and hmm, the others feel too hard to pin down with the little we've seen. But back to this -- JHope continually referencing flowers, throughout his notes and philosophy. Even on Hopeworld, he is so... _bright flash of color_ . His poetry is very transient and vivid. Like the whirlwind his production takes you on as well. Like the idea behind that Keats poem (God, I can't remember, Jishi ma'am from sophomore year highscool will be so disappointed) where beauty lies in a moment, and that is all that is/was ever needed. So it serves a dual purpose in being an intro to this album, but I can see him having those 'narrative habits' (for lack of a better term) in other songs of his. Of course, on Hopeworld, we had enough 'scenes' to tell the entire story, but I think one of his primary foci when songwriting is _'would I dance to this?'_ . (Who am I kidding? Jhope can probably dance to everything) Suga is more your confessional poetry style, I want to say... And... I don't have a bias, don't like picking favorites, but RM _might_ be my favorite lyricist of Bangtan. What he does is just so unmatchable. You can especially see his growth and evolution as a songwriter with Mono. I would suggest your dad listening to/analyzing the lyrics of Mono, but I'm a very strong believer of _'Mono needs to be listened to in one sitting,_ continuously.... So I don't want to subject your dad to anything he would find tiresome. Do I think Mono might be absurdly similar to your Dad's idea of "start depressed and take me deeper and away from this feeling"? Yes. Would I subject my own dad to it? No. Love my dad to pieces, but he doesn't really "get" BTS. Mind you, I don't think either of my parents are all too passionate about being invested in any art, but they love me. And I've snuck in Singularity into my dad's superior car-sound-system enough that he uses it as a reference to how good the bass sounds on his car... And he likes to try crooning along with V, always asks me "wait, this is BTS?" haha, cute, I digress (do you think me watching these videos is me displacing?) Anyway, I definitely see it as about ambition. Similar to your view Launa, but I loved your dad's view too! To me the evil is something I have seen, that I still see here in Asia surrounding the medical community, funnily enough. The college entrance exams are pretty wicked, in that it is so _competitive_ that the way young people interact itself is completely changed. In subtle yet devastating ways. Like how you grind away at nutmeg with a mortar-and-pestle slowly, continuously, until it is fine dust. I've lived half my life in the American Midwest and half out here, and I can decisively say that America has never experienced anything like it. Like No More Dream sounds powerful out in the West, sure, but for children who have grown up in the East, it can be visceral. Painfully relatable. You can understand N.O. on an intellectual level, then you can listen to it in an atmosphere where we study while on the public bus, scarf food down in 10 min, test and despair.... So the evil is something embedded in the _industry_ sure, but beyond that, embedded in the Kpop industry, maybe. In a youht that has twisted democracy in cramped, confined spaces. (Dang it, now I'm missing my American Dream childhood, ha) The evil is the natural continuation of the HYYH series into the Love Yourself series. *It is giving up the 'self' for the 'dream' until you can no longer remember the 'self'.* You can't remember how you interacted with any beyond the 'dream'; you try to retrace your steps. In HYYH they were still chasing. They were full of youth, begging Lady Most Beautiful Moment of Life to stay, desperately chasing her. In Wings they have chased her down and they are upside down. Asking what is right and what is wrong. Acknowledging some things may be wrong, but they've established such deep habits that it is easy to give in, flirt with her, drink from her cup knowing the grail is poisoned. To me, LY is the climax, Wings is the eye of the storm. Last thing: with so many BTS songs, they are storytellers that come from the Kpop industry, so they have to make use of _every single medium_ available to them..... So you can get distracted by the fashion and _healthy_ boys and color, or distracted by the rhythm and the dancing, or distracted by set design and performance structure, or distracted by musicality and lyricism... What I am saying is that even the most beloved BTS songs can be underrated, simply because no one can keep up with every element that went into it. So yeah, Boy Meets Evil is criminally underrated. Honestly, Jhope as a philosopher/fan-of-fiction is underrated. But the man he chooses to present himself as is just as valid as the man he may be in a particular setting/moment. So I would never fault an Army for being distracted by JHope's dancing. I reckon he wants you to be distracted by his dancing! First and foremost. Anyway, Mono wa more of a throwaway suggestion. Would I adore it? Yes. Am I a sadist? No. But maybe the Spinebreaker music video with captions, hehe? :) Lemme think.. If you have read this all. Thank you for letting my words have meaning. Thank you (for these videos Launa and Launa's Dad!) Luv you. Purple you!
Hi to both of you! Thank u for another good discussion session. When I first listen to the song with the lyrics, I believed that it was mainly talking about how we tend to fall for people, things or ideas that is being deemed as 'evil' or bad for you and it will ruin you. However, there are always a silver lining and we can always find something good in anything so nowadays I think that even if we have fallen to temptations, we can always learn about something out of it which will help us to live in a better ways onwards.
I think you’re right, too! It’s so cool that they just take a concept like “temptation” and make the kind of art with it that can be interpreted a ton of ways.
Definitely! I adore both of those songs and it would be fun to both show my dad a song proving BTS chastises the youth, too and talk about our hometowns!
can you show him epiphany please? i can already imagine him liking the mv & i really love your reactions and i hope you'll be reacting with your dad to bts for a long time :")
They really are. I adore Tear, but I can’t seem to put any album above Wings as my fav. Maybe it’s because it was my first comeback and first concert, but the themes and album story were just so well done!
@@SecondBreakfastClub ooh, I like Tear, more. Wings was glorious, put them into the stratosphere, but Tear was cohesive. Experimental in a youthful way, but mature. Wings was so much ambition, but there was a lot unpolished. And Singularity is so unbeatable, maaan, haha... But then again, I started calling myself ARMY at LY:Wonder, so..
How about spine breaker, baepsae, ma city, paldogangsan? Arirang? And Arirang explained by a korean by dkdktv? ARIRANG is so underated but its one of the songs that I really like. The sound of Korean culture and The parts that represents the regions and history of Korea. I AM not a korean, but I like studying culture. I Really like it when you do a reaction with your dad, my father died in 2004 and I can see how much resemblance of how I get along with my Papa. My love for culture, literature, ,poetry, music and arts are all because of his influence. I hope you can show him Arirang not just the music but also the explanation...
@@JeffKSorensen sir you really reminded me of my father. Belated happy father's day and I hope you can react to the song Arirang and its explanation by a korean by dkdktv. Thank you in advance and Godbless!
@@lendlg.9271That will all be up to Launa and Ashlen as I am only a guest on their channel. But I really enjoy the relationships I have with them. I can tell by your responses and kindness that you were a really wonderful daughter and turned out to be a wonderful human being. And God bless you also Lendl!
Not everything has to have an ending. I usually like your discussions and respect your views (like the rule about swearing, no problem with that), but this thought came to me, that only liking a story that was told from the beginning to the end is... How should I put it. It's like you only think that art is supposed to represent something real, like a landscape or a portrait, and you think that abstract art has no sense. It's like you only understand and enjoy what fits into certain rules. This song of course is an intro but it's also a complete work by itself, and this work is supposed to leave you with this feeling that you can just continue thinking in my opinion because it resembles that abstract art, and in no way it's repetitive (I was really surprised to hear that it is), literally all the lines are different but in the end there's a lingering thought, it's like you're coming to this state of mind with a lingering thought. It's not there to help listeners to sing along in my opinion, there's almost nothing to sing if you don't know the whole Korean part and I personally don't even want to sing along with those lines when it comes to them, it's not a song like that. It makes me want to dance but not sing somehow, maybe because freestyle dancing is more free and abstract than singing to a certain melody, and I have this feeling of abstract art from this song so I don't even want to sing as singing just that chorus will be like following the rules. If I were to learn all the lyrics and just sing a song it would be a different thing but I'm talking about that statement that repetitive lines are there to make it easier to sing because you can't sing along to his nonrepetitive rap, I don't feel like it's the case with this song.
I interpreted evil as success. It may sound odd to say success is evil, but it can be evil if it takes away the real you and replaces it with a facade persona. It can be evil if it prevents you from being you, being true to yourself. Evil appear in Agust D the Last but under the name of a monster: "My monster named success that I traded my youth for, he wants a bigger wealth.." I know it's from Yoongi's mixtape but the depiction of success as evil is a theme that reoccurs a lot. Maybe this is how they felt towards their success during bs&t era (what I mean by this is the price that comes with success). And I think that they (BTS) have found a resolution to this dilemma in Fake Love era (take off the mask and be true to yourself).
HELLO MY LOVELIES. I'M NOT TOO MUCH INTO BTS ANYMIRE BECAUSE LIFE'S GOT ME BACK. BUT I HAVEN'T FORGET THEM NOR YOU. STILL WITH YOU. PLEASE KEEP GOING.❤
5:30 a lot of parents now days still thinks that way about music or dancing or acting, etc...mostly in the eastern (Asian) cultural thing! They think actual job and career is to go work get a paycheck!
I think it’s pretty universal. It’s one of the big reasons (I believe) that a lot of millennials were genuinely unprepared for the way the world turned to freelance culture and unpaid internships. We were taught our whole lives to get lifelong jobs from people who did pretty well with lifetime jobs and they just don’t exist en masse anymore. I’m really thankful my dad never pushed us right into college/a regular job because I may have gone to college later in life, but I have enough job juggling survival experience now to exist okay.
In my parents and mostly surrounding cases are even more rigid. If you are working in private sectors or self-govern jobs, you are not really considered as a good job too. You need to work as a government servant to really be considered as a person with a good and stable job. 😑
Unfortunately he won’t react to any songs with swearing and I promised not to bring him any, so all the cyphers are out. But there are plenty of good songs on my list to come!
Definitely! I have to check lyrics for swearing, but songs with no swears go right in the list and songs with throwaway swears (like “Daydream”) or translation error swears I can make my own lyric vids for so he can appreciate them better.
Also, Never Mind and Autumn Leaves are two of my very favorite songs (I have Never Mind tattooed on my inner arm and an Autumn Leaves phone case, lol!) so they’re pretty high up the list!
@@SecondBreakfastClub Never Mind and Move are my very favourite songs, especially Never Mind. I came to know BTS from Agust D mixtape and Never Mind. Autumn Leaves holds a special place in me, I don't listen to it often tho. Can't wait to see these songs reaction and discussion.
6:02 it's not repetitive except for the last part. I didn't exactly like how he heard this song... did he even read the lyrics? it talks about much more than love... and it doesn't even mention breaking up...? not sure where he got his thoughts from. prejudice maybe? misinterpretation?
maybe the lyrics were too fast but this song was CLEARLY about a boy meeting the temptation of love and having to push himself away from the love because it only hurt in the end. "Because of my childish love I lost my way on a path of dream". "When I woke up I was surrounded by landmines" signifying an unhealthy relationship. landmines representing traps, as he mentions, set by this so called "lover" that only sucked the life out of him.
I imagine the 'break up' he mentioned is just him talking about what 'kind' of songs BTS makes, referring to Let Go and OUTRO Tear, probably. I don't think BTS needs to prove themselves to him that they aren't shallow, though. He knows First Love, he has seen Wings he knows that these are artists that feel deeply and express sincerely, that they are beloved for a reason. And he has mentioned before that rap lyrics don't lend themselves to sticking to his brain as easy as song lyrics. A bit of prejudice is human, in the end; I don't mind if he doesn't like rap. He clearly loves his daughter and they share common enough interest that the premise of these videos itself has become engaging. Like how many -- casual older ARMY (pretty much, anyway) willing to deeply discuss and navel gaze a bit, without necessarily critiquing or giving some sort of professional literary analysis -- are out there?
Hey all! I know many of you have been waiting for new reactions/FESTA stuff, but a lot is going on here including a surprise move (where I have to help build my new apartment. A lot of my nights have been hours of pack and construction work!) and a lot with Ashlen that I can't really talk about yet in case it doesn't happen, but could be really good for the channel! So thank you for your patience and understanding. It gets tricky when we have to focus on the not-UA-cam parts of our lives, but are happy so many of you stick around long enough that we can keep this friend group going when we can come up for air again.
This is the last video in the most recent set of videos I've done with my dad, but I'm hoping we can film again very soon and there will be no breaks. If we can't, I'll do my very best to get something up for you all at least once a week until I'm settled enough to return to video making/editing.
The way he explained it you can really tell it was the perfect intro for bst :3
I totally agree.
Now I have to go check out Nights of White Satin.
Conflicted emotions is probably my favorite BTS.
I always think about RM and Suga and JHope's "lyrical colors" -- like vocal colors. Even Jimin writing lyrics the way he talks (cute), and hmm, the others feel too hard to pin down with the little we've seen. But back to this -- JHope continually referencing flowers, throughout his notes and philosophy. Even on Hopeworld, he is so... _bright flash of color_ . His poetry is very transient and vivid. Like the whirlwind his production takes you on as well. Like the idea behind that Keats poem (God, I can't remember, Jishi ma'am from sophomore year highscool will be so disappointed) where beauty lies in a moment, and that is all that is/was ever needed. So it serves a dual purpose in being an intro to this album, but I can see him having those 'narrative habits' (for lack of a better term) in other songs of his. Of course, on Hopeworld, we had enough 'scenes' to tell the entire story, but I think one of his primary foci when songwriting is _'would I dance to this?'_ . (Who am I kidding? Jhope can probably dance to everything)
Suga is more your confessional poetry style, I want to say... And... I don't have a bias, don't like picking favorites, but RM _might_ be my favorite lyricist of Bangtan. What he does is just so unmatchable.
You can especially see his growth and evolution as a songwriter with Mono. I would suggest your dad listening to/analyzing the lyrics of Mono, but I'm a very strong believer of _'Mono needs to be listened to in one sitting,_ continuously.... So I don't want to subject your dad to anything he would find tiresome. Do I think Mono might be absurdly similar to your Dad's idea of "start depressed and take me deeper and away from this feeling"? Yes. Would I subject my own dad to it? No. Love my dad to pieces, but he doesn't really "get" BTS. Mind you, I don't think either of my parents are all too passionate about being invested in any art, but they love me. And I've snuck in Singularity into my dad's superior car-sound-system enough that he uses it as a reference to how good the bass sounds on his car... And he likes to try crooning along with V, always asks me "wait, this is BTS?" haha, cute, I digress (do you think me watching these videos is me displacing?)
Anyway,
I definitely see it as about ambition. Similar to your view Launa, but I loved your dad's view too! To me the evil is something I have seen, that I still see here in Asia surrounding the medical community, funnily enough. The college entrance exams are pretty wicked, in that it is so _competitive_ that the way young people interact itself is completely changed. In subtle yet devastating ways. Like how you grind away at nutmeg with a mortar-and-pestle slowly, continuously, until it is fine dust. I've lived half my life in the American Midwest and half out here, and I can decisively say that America has never experienced anything like it. Like No More Dream sounds powerful out in the West, sure, but for children who have grown up in the East, it can be visceral. Painfully relatable. You can understand N.O. on an intellectual level, then you can listen to it in an atmosphere where we study while on the public bus, scarf food down in 10 min, test and despair....
So the evil is something embedded in the _industry_ sure, but beyond that, embedded in the Kpop industry, maybe. In a youht that has twisted democracy in cramped, confined spaces. (Dang it, now I'm missing my American Dream childhood, ha)
The evil is the natural continuation of the HYYH series into the Love Yourself series. *It is giving up the 'self' for the 'dream' until you can no longer remember the 'self'.* You can't remember how you interacted with any beyond the 'dream'; you try to retrace your steps. In HYYH they were still chasing. They were full of youth, begging Lady Most Beautiful Moment of Life to stay, desperately chasing her. In Wings they have chased her down and they are upside down. Asking what is right and what is wrong. Acknowledging some things may be wrong, but they've established such deep habits that it is easy to give in, flirt with her, drink from her cup knowing the grail is poisoned. To me, LY is the climax, Wings is the eye of the storm.
Last thing: with so many BTS songs, they are storytellers that come from the Kpop industry, so they have to make use of _every single medium_ available to them..... So you can get distracted by the fashion and _healthy_ boys and color, or distracted by the rhythm and the dancing, or distracted by set design and performance structure, or distracted by musicality and lyricism... What I am saying is that even the most beloved BTS songs can be underrated, simply because no one can keep up with every element that went into it. So yeah, Boy Meets Evil is criminally underrated. Honestly, Jhope as a philosopher/fan-of-fiction is underrated. But the man he chooses to present himself as is just as valid as the man he may be in a particular setting/moment. So I would never fault an Army for being distracted by JHope's dancing. I reckon he wants you to be distracted by his dancing! First and foremost.
Anyway, Mono wa more of a throwaway suggestion. Would I adore it? Yes. Am I a sadist? No.
But maybe the Spinebreaker music video with captions, hehe? :) Lemme think..
If you have read this all. Thank you for letting my words have meaning. Thank you (for these videos Launa and Launa's Dad!) Luv you. Purple you!
I envy your relations between a daughter and a father. Looks very good. I never had the discussions you had. You look happy.
Boy meets Evil is a favorite intro of mine
Not just the mv but the lyrics, ugh so good XD
Hi to both of you! Thank u for another good discussion session. When I first listen to the song with the lyrics, I believed that it was mainly talking about how we tend to fall for people, things or ideas that is being deemed as 'evil' or bad for you and it will ruin you. However, there are always a silver lining and we can always find something good in anything so nowadays I think that even if we have fallen to temptations, we can always learn about something out of it which will help us to live in a better ways onwards.
I think you’re right, too! It’s so cool that they just take a concept like “temptation” and make the kind of art with it that can be interpreted a ton of ways.
Please react to Ma City lyrics and Spine Breaker 😊
Definitely! I adore both of those songs and it would be fun to both show my dad a song proving BTS chastises the youth, too and talk about our hometowns!
I second this!
can you show him epiphany please? i can already imagine him liking the mv & i really love your reactions and i hope you'll be reacting with your dad to bts for a long time :")
Boy meets evil and Blood sweat and tears are the first and second tracks in the album. They're like one song and so perfect order.
They really are. I adore Tear, but I can’t seem to put any album above Wings as my fav. Maybe it’s because it was my first comeback and first concert, but the themes and album story were just so well done!
@@SecondBreakfastClub ooh, I like Tear, more. Wings was glorious, put them into the stratosphere, but Tear was cohesive. Experimental in a youthful way, but mature. Wings was so much ambition, but there was a lot unpolished. And Singularity is so unbeatable, maaan, haha... But then again, I started calling myself ARMY at LY:Wonder, so..
How about spine breaker, baepsae, ma city, paldogangsan? Arirang? And Arirang explained by a korean by dkdktv?
ARIRANG is so underated but its one of the songs that I really like.
The sound of Korean culture and
The parts that represents the regions and history of Korea. I AM not a korean, but I like studying culture.
I Really like it when you do a reaction with your dad, my father died in 2004 and I can see how much resemblance of how I get along with my Papa. My love for culture, literature, ,poetry, music and arts are all because of his influence.
I hope you can show him Arirang not just the music but also the explanation...
Thank you for your detailed comments and I am glad you had a good relationship with your father.
@@JeffKSorensen sir you really reminded me of my father. Belated happy father's day and I hope you can react to the song Arirang and its explanation by a korean by dkdktv. Thank you in advance and Godbless!
@@lendlg.9271That will all be up to Launa and Ashlen as I am only a guest on their channel. But I really enjoy the relationships I have with them. I can tell by your responses and kindness that you were a really wonderful daughter and turned out to be a wonderful human being. And God bless you also Lendl!
Please make him react to epiphany and awake. Thank you so much.
Yes do more!!!
Not everything has to have an ending. I usually like your discussions and respect your views (like the rule about swearing, no problem with that), but this thought came to me, that only liking a story that was told from the beginning to the end is... How should I put it. It's like you only think that art is supposed to represent something real, like a landscape or a portrait, and you think that abstract art has no sense. It's like you only understand and enjoy what fits into certain rules. This song of course is an intro but it's also a complete work by itself, and this work is supposed to leave you with this feeling that you can just continue thinking in my opinion because it resembles that abstract art, and in no way it's repetitive (I was really surprised to hear that it is), literally all the lines are different but in the end there's a lingering thought, it's like you're coming to this state of mind with a lingering thought. It's not there to help listeners to sing along in my opinion, there's almost nothing to sing if you don't know the whole Korean part and I personally don't even want to sing along with those lines when it comes to them, it's not a song like that. It makes me want to dance but not sing somehow, maybe because freestyle dancing is more free and abstract than singing to a certain melody, and I have this feeling of abstract art from this song so I don't even want to sing as singing just that chorus will be like following the rules. If I were to learn all the lyrics and just sing a song it would be a different thing but I'm talking about that statement that repetitive lines are there to make it easier to sing because you can't sing along to his nonrepetitive rap, I don't feel like it's the case with this song.
I interpreted evil as success. It may sound odd to say success is evil, but it can be evil if it takes away the real you and replaces it with a facade persona. It can be evil if it prevents you from being you, being true to yourself. Evil appear in Agust D the Last but under the name of a monster: "My monster named success that I traded my youth for, he wants a bigger wealth.." I know it's from Yoongi's mixtape but the depiction of success as evil is a theme that reoccurs a lot. Maybe this is how they felt towards their success during bs&t era (what I mean by this is the price that comes with success). And I think that they (BTS) have found a resolution to this dilemma in Fake Love era (take off the mask and be true to yourself).
HELLO MY LOVELIES. I'M NOT TOO MUCH INTO BTS ANYMIRE BECAUSE LIFE'S GOT ME BACK. BUT I HAVEN'T FORGET THEM NOR YOU. STILL WITH YOU. PLEASE KEEP GOING.❤
5:30 a lot of parents now days still thinks that way about music or dancing or acting, etc...mostly in the eastern (Asian) cultural thing! They think actual job and career is to go work get a paycheck!
I think it’s pretty universal. It’s one of the big reasons (I believe) that a lot of millennials were genuinely unprepared for the way the world turned to freelance culture and unpaid internships. We were taught our whole lives to get lifelong jobs from people who did pretty well with lifetime jobs and they just don’t exist en masse anymore. I’m really thankful my dad never pushed us right into college/a regular job because I may have gone to college later in life, but I have enough job juggling survival experience now to exist okay.
In my parents and mostly surrounding cases are even more rigid. If you are working in private sectors or self-govern jobs, you are not really considered as a good job too. You need to work as a government servant to really be considered as a person with a good and stable job. 😑
I think the cypher series will be a good reaction from your dad! Mr. Sorensen, please react to all the cyphers series 1-4 by the rap line! 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Unfortunately he won’t react to any songs with swearing and I promised not to bring him any, so all the cyphers are out. But there are plenty of good songs on my list to come!
Never Mind and move
Autumn Leaves
Definitely! I have to check lyrics for swearing, but songs with no swears go right in the list and songs with throwaway swears (like “Daydream”) or translation error swears I can make my own lyric vids for so he can appreciate them better.
Also, Never Mind and Autumn Leaves are two of my very favorite songs (I have Never Mind tattooed on my inner arm and an Autumn Leaves phone case, lol!) so they’re pretty high up the list!
@@SecondBreakfastClub Never Mind and Move are my very favourite songs, especially Never Mind. I came to know BTS from Agust D mixtape and Never Mind. Autumn Leaves holds a special place in me, I don't listen to it often tho. Can't wait to see these songs reaction and discussion.
6:02 it's not repetitive except for the last part. I didn't exactly like how he heard this song... did he even read the lyrics? it talks about much more than love... and it doesn't even mention breaking up...? not sure where he got his thoughts from. prejudice maybe? misinterpretation?
maybe the lyrics were too fast but this song was CLEARLY about a boy meeting the temptation of love and having to push himself away from the love because it only hurt in the end. "Because of my childish love I lost my way on a path of dream". "When I woke up I was surrounded by landmines" signifying an unhealthy relationship. landmines representing traps, as he mentions, set by this so called "lover" that only sucked the life out of him.
I imagine the 'break up' he mentioned is just him talking about what 'kind' of songs BTS makes, referring to Let Go and OUTRO Tear, probably.
I don't think BTS needs to prove themselves to him that they aren't shallow, though. He knows First Love, he has seen Wings he knows that these are artists that feel deeply and express sincerely, that they are beloved for a reason. And he has mentioned before that rap lyrics don't lend themselves to sticking to his brain as easy as song lyrics. A bit of prejudice is human, in the end; I don't mind if he doesn't like rap. He clearly loves his daughter and they share common enough interest that the premise of these videos itself has become engaging. Like how many -- casual older ARMY (pretty much, anyway) willing to deeply discuss and navel gaze a bit, without necessarily critiquing or giving some sort of professional literary analysis -- are out there?
@@emanas2530 Thank you for your very kind comments and defense.
Plz react to everglow music video bon bon chocolat.
영상잘봤습니다..^^ 다른 한국가수(박효신) 리액션도부탁드려요..(마샤?!)친구분과함께..^^
ua-cam.com/video/Xp8Ep1W-azw/v-deo.html