On February 18, 2013, a song called the "Gwiyomi Song" was released by South Korean singer Hari. The song was inspired by Jung Ilhoon's 'Gwiyeomi Player'. The song gained the attention of Jung Ilhoon himself, who uploaded a cover video on his music label Cube Entertainment's YouTube channel, performing the gestures while singing the song with his own version of lyrics.[3] Singer Hari was then interviewed by Korean Media outlet Sports Seoul where she demonstrated the gestures while singing her song. The filmed clip was then uploaded online.[4]

According to The Bangkok Post, Gwiyomi or Kiyomi is Korean slang used to refer to a cute person.[5] The lyrics of the song can be interpreted as "1 + 1 = Cutie, 2 + 2 = Cutie", etc.[5]


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Following the song's release, Jung Ilhoon showed his appreciation by uploading a cover video on his music label, Cube Entertainment's YouTube channel, performing the gestures while singing the song with his own version of lyrics.[3] After singer Hari was interviewed by Sport Seoul, a clip of herself making the gestures with the song was uploaded online. This video eventually went viral and has since inspired many South Koreans to upload their own version of it on the Internet.[4][7] According to the K-pop website Soompi, many of these videos subsequently went viral on various Korean language websites.

The "Gwiyomi Player" was mostly recreated by teenage girls from Southeast Asia, where the K-pop music genre has a huge and loyal fanbase especially in Thailand and in the Philippines.[8][9] A few Thai actresses including Nuengthida Sophon also performed their own version of Gwiyomi. On March 26, The Bangkok Post described the "Gwiyomi" song as the latest web-viral sensation that has unseated "Gangnam Style" to become the new K-pop craze.[5]

In early April 2013, the China Internet Information Center (a web portal operating under the auspices of the Chinese State Council Information Office) reported that large numbers of Chinese Internet users have uploaded their own version of the "Gwiyomi" song.[10] On April 2, an article by a regional newspaper was republished by Xinhua News Agency (the official news agency of China), hailing "Gwiyomi" as the latest South Korean melody surpassing the popularity of "Gangnam Style".[11]

The Gwiyomi phenomenon began trending in several other countries in the region, including Malaysia,[12] Singapore,[13] Hong Kong[14] and Taiwan.[15] The Japanese girl group x21 had a cover of this song on their album "Love Summer" released in 2014.[16]

not sure if this completely related to kpop but the song and the gwiyomi gesture/dance was a phenomena back then. i remember everyone was doing it and posted their videos on youtube. i used to be intrigued to do the challenge but im not cute enough for it? the trend also spread out to SEA countries and i basically cannot escape the song, be it at shop, restaurant or mall. but now the only place you can listen to it is probably at the toy claw machine in my country where they play old kpop songs in it.

Did you know that "Gwiyomi song" actually has version 2? While the track remained iconic among K-pop fans, its singer Hari, unfortunately, had short-lived popularity that some are not even aware she sang the song.

Initially, she wasn't successful but in 2013, she suddenly rose to popularity after releasing her viral song, "Gwiyomi." It became popular in Korea thanks to former BTOB Ilhoon, who inspired the legendary gestures used to dance the song.

The "Cute Song" has established itself as a success story that caught the public's ears without any intention to promote it. But when the song became famous, Hari focused on her activities in Southeast Asia and China. In 2014, she even released, "Gwiyomi Song 2," the sequel to the viral song.

Since then, Dandi, the producer of the song established a foothold in comprehensive entertainment with his history of successfully completing overseas promotional tours in various countries after signing a contract with global company Warner Music through Hari and played a pivotal role in establishing SD Entertainment in 2018.

But Hari only experienced 15 minutes of fame as, despite various releases after that, Hari who stuck with her cute singing style wasn't enough to beat the influx of singers at that time releasing songs with an experimental, new and fresh sound.

Unfortunately, Hari who only has "Gwiyomi Song" as her most popular song was affected by Dandi's sexual assault controversy in 2020. Because he's the track's producer a lot of netizens boycotted the track, leading to the song's instant collapse from the music charts.

Phonetic Pronunciation:

il-deo-hagi ir-eun gwiyomi > i-deo-hagi i-neun gwiyomi > sam-deo-hagi sam-eun gwiyomi > sa-deo-hagi sa-neun gwiyomi > o-deo-hagi o-neun gwiyomi > yuk-deo-hagi yuk-neun jjok jjok jjok jjok jjok jjok gwiyomi.

The gesture became popular among various Korean idols and Hari decited to release a song inspired by Jung Il Hoon's 'Gwiyeomi Player' called "Gwiyeomi Song". Hari was then interviewed by Korean media outlet Sports Seoul where she demonstrated the gestures while singing her song, the video was then uploaded online and got over 4 million hits.

After she was featured on the South Korean variety show Weekly Idol, other K-pop idols from popular bands such as miss A, Girls' Generation, Infinite, SISTAR and T-ara also exhibited the hand gestures and movements of the 'Gwiyomi Player'. Internet Netizens started releasing their own versions of the 'Gwiyomi Player' with Hari's song playing in the background, the song and dance went viral and started a craze.

Gwiyomi is a viral video meme based off of the Gwiyomi Song, a pop song released in 2013 by Korean indie singer Hari. The song is basically about a girl telling her boyfriend to be faithful and not look at other girls. Full English lyrics here. Though the song is Korean, this viral video trend has spread throughout Asia - mostly due to the cute gestures that accompany the lyrics.

Those who can't stand anything cutesy or fluffy might want to stop reading now - the "Gwiyomi" singalong song drips with bucketfuls of KoreanĀ  /"aegyo" (cuteness) sweet enough to cause a toothache.

Its basically a cutesy song about a Korean girl's adorable love for her boyfriend and how she wants him to promise that they will be together forever (via a pinky promise), ending with six kisses - one for each finger and thumb.

The Gwiyomi song first made it's debut early this year as a digital single by singer Hari but did not gain fame (or notoriety) until K-pop boyband BtoB rapper Ilhoon made his own rendition of the song-and-dance on variety show "Diary Many".

"Maybe it seems a bit too cutesy in the Singapore context, but in South Korea, where it's very common for girl friends to be 'aegyo' and act adorable, its just a fun song that they perform for their boyfriends," said K-pop fan Lesley Goh, 19, who enjoys watching the videos. 0852c4b9a8

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