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Really enjoyed it. Compared to that terrible HIStory "Love In The Future" series this is already a masterpiece.
Cooper and Marc are well cast, and so far the supporting players are really good too. Cooper is great at comedy and Marc is good at projecting a more serious personality, so for me the chemistry is on point.
i just think that mixx in this show....... outsold everyone and everything. like visuals, acting, chemistry...…
Mix was phenomenal.... he really came into his own with this performance. We don't want that to get lost in all the accolades for everyone else, as much as they also deserve them. :)
I've watched the Chuang, Idol Producer, and Youth With You shows, all of which had their own issues with bias, but they have nothing on this one when it comes to fixing the game from the start.
What's surprising, though, is that Boys Planet doesn't try too hard to hide how much it's rigged. After all, this is a show where they're willing to make a blatant last-minute change to the rules of a DANCE CONTEST in order to make sure that the Korean team can come from behind and win.
If they're willing to do that when the prize is just a pizza dinner, why should anyone think they wouldn't do it when the stakes are higher?
There's a statement at the beginning of each episode where it says that votes are being tallied by a third-party company so that the results are fair, but the problem here isn't how the votes are counted -- it's how the contest is set up in the first place. So far, the trend is that any faceoff between Koreans and non-Koreans will be staged to ensure an overall victory by the Koreans.
How else can anyone explain that the bonus points awarded from the seven faceoffs between Korean and non-Korean groups were based on the votes of a live audience consisting mostly of -- wait for it -- Koreans? Sure, the tally of those votes was done fairly, but given who was voting was it any surprise that SIX OUT OF SEVEN of those faceoffs were won by the Korean teams?
This meant that EIGHTY-FIVE PERCENT of the available bonus points went to Koreans, and that certainly doesn't seem like a statistically valid outcome if the playing field were fair.
The most agregious aspect of this hit home when I watched this week's episode, since it was stated that many of the Korean guys who were not eliminated were saved specifically because of their bonus points.
That is what I call a rigged game.
Anyway, let's use that "85%" number as a predictor on the makeup of the final nine ... with 85% being Korean and 15% from the Global team. This will result in (0.15)*(9) = 1.35 members being Global.
We can round that up to 2, resulting in 7 of the final nine being Korean and 2 being non-Korean. This is my prediction.
I also predict that Jay will not be in the final nine because he would shine too brightly, and that they'll find a way to keep Hui in there while also bringing in Park Gun Wook, who is a favorite of the mentors.
I have a question...If Hui makes it to the final lineup, will he debut as a member of a new K-pop group? If he…
"If" he makes it to the final lineup? As soon as he was announced as a contestant I assumed he'd be in the final group. It would be humiliating for him not to be, so I suspect the producers will do what they can to make sure he makes it. Kinda like the way the K group suddenly won the dance battle.
The bias of this show, on full display. They're shameless.
G group was behind in the 1:1 battles so Lip J (or more likely the producers of the show) decides that the final battle will decide it.
I don't feel any suspense as I watch anymore. Until they do away with the "K vs. G" nonsense and let every boy fend for himself, K will continue to win. The final group will probably have one or two token G boys so that they can claim everything was fair.
One time when this happened she almost quit subbing.
F*ck "bladdictongoing", what a POS.
That kind of performance isn't easy to pull off unless you got it in your genes. π
Cooper is a natural comedian. I love it when he interacts with the adults, especially his friends from the past. He brings out the kid in everyone.
The sixpack scene was funny, and gave him a nice excuse to show he still has one of the sweetest bods in BL.
I think Cher will get Boss and Thyme to make amends and reunite, which might be why the romance is moving pretty quickly.
A series that suits a Friday mood just right. πππ
Cooper and Marc are well cast, and so far the supporting players are really good too. Cooper is great at comedy and Marc is good at projecting a more serious personality, so for me the chemistry is on point.
Dropping.
I've watched the Chuang, Idol Producer, and Youth With You shows, all of which had their own issues with bias, but they have nothing on this one when it comes to fixing the game from the start.
What's surprising, though, is that Boys Planet doesn't try too hard to hide how much it's rigged. After all, this is a show where they're willing to make a blatant last-minute change to the rules of a DANCE CONTEST in order to make sure that the Korean team can come from behind and win.
If they're willing to do that when the prize is just a pizza dinner, why should anyone think they wouldn't do it when the stakes are higher?
There's a statement at the beginning of each episode where it says that votes are being tallied by a third-party company so that the results are fair, but the problem here isn't how the votes are counted -- it's how the contest is set up in the first place. So far, the trend is that any faceoff between Koreans and non-Koreans will be staged to ensure an overall victory by the Koreans.
How else can anyone explain that the bonus points awarded from the seven faceoffs between Korean and non-Korean groups were based on the votes of a live audience consisting mostly of -- wait for it -- Koreans? Sure, the tally of those votes was done fairly, but given who was voting was it any surprise that SIX OUT OF SEVEN of those faceoffs were won by the Korean teams?
This meant that EIGHTY-FIVE PERCENT of the available bonus points went to Koreans, and that certainly doesn't seem like a statistically valid outcome if the playing field were fair.
The most agregious aspect of this hit home when I watched this week's episode, since it was stated that many of the Korean guys who were not eliminated were saved specifically because of their bonus points.
That is what I call a rigged game.
Anyway, let's use that "85%" number as a predictor on the makeup of the final nine ... with 85% being Korean and 15% from the Global team. This will result in (0.15)*(9) = 1.35 members being Global.
We can round that up to 2, resulting in 7 of the final nine being Korean and 2 being non-Korean. This is my prediction.
I also predict that Jay will not be in the final nine because he would shine too brightly, and that they'll find a way to keep Hui in there while also bringing in Park Gun Wook, who is a favorite of the mentors.
G group was behind in the 1:1 battles so Lip J (or more likely the producers of the show) decides that the final battle will decide it.
I don't feel any suspense as I watch anymore. Until they do away with the "K vs. G" nonsense and let every boy fend for himself, K will continue to win. The final group will probably have one or two token G boys so that they can claim everything was fair.