Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Nine members of K-pop girl group LOONA have reportedly filed injunctions to terminate their contracts with label BlockBerry Creative. JTBC Enternews reported on Monday that most of the members of ...
In March 2017, the group's first sub-unit, Loona 1/3, was introduced, consisting of previously revealed members HeeJin, HyunJin, HaSeul, and a new member, ViVi. [7] Loona 1/3 released the extended play Love & Live and an accompanying single of the same name on March 13, 2017, [8] with a television promotion on SBS's Inkigayo. [9]
On October 2, 2016, Blockberry Creative launched their first girl group project, Loona (Korean: 이달의 소녀; RR: Idalui Sonyeo; lit Girl of the Month), which was expected to run for 18 months. [3] The project would individually introduce each member of the new group by releasing a solo single, and by March 2018 all members had been introduced.
Meta will pay President Trump $25 million to settle a 2021 lawsuit brought by the president over the social media company’s decision to suspend his accounts in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021 ...
Meta said Wednesday it would pay $25 million to settle a four-year-old lawsuit from President Donald Trump over the social media company’s decision to suspend Trump’s accounts after the Jan. 6 ...
On June 1, 2021, at midnight Korean Standard Time, Loona announced through social media that they will be releasing a new extended play titled [&] on June 28. [3] [4] They also shared a cryptic teaser image containing the Latin words "citius, altius, fortius. Acta est fabula, plaudite" which translates to "faster, higher, stronger.
In 2024, Musk described himself as "kind of pro-China", [36] and a year later, during a visit to Beijing, he declared he was a "huge fan of China." [37] In December 2024, US Representative Rosa DeLauro declared that Musk had pressured House Republicans to remove a restriction on investment in China from a bipartisan government funding bill ...
The American Federation of Government Employees, a union representing some 800,000 workers, said Trump would be breaching legally binding contracts. The union called it an attempt to “frighten ...