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  • NewJeans’ Hanni tearfully testifies on workplace harassment at HYBE: “I was honestly convinced that the company hated us”

NewJeans’ Hanni tearfully testifies on workplace harassment at HYBE: “I was honestly convinced that the company hated us”

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NewJeans’ Hanni has tearfully testified on workplace harassment at South Korea’s National Assembly.

Hanni, real name Phạm Ngọc Hân, alleged that the entertainment agency HYBE deliberately undermined the group, while she also accused senior management of deliberately ignoring her

Hanni’s bandmate Minji gave HYBE chairman Bang Si-Hyuk an ultimatum to reinstate Min as CEO by September 25, but on that day HYBE rejected the request and cited its principle of keeping management and production separate, though affirming that Min would continue as producer.

One of Hanni’s claims was that, when she greeted the members of another band at the offices of their record label, a manager had told them to “ignore her,” and that her concerns had been disregarded when she brought them up.

In her testimony, she gave more context about the exchange, explaining: “We have a floor in our building where we do hair and make-up. And at that time, I was waiting in the hallway because my hair and make-up was done first.”

She said that, while she waited, three singers from another band came past with their manager so she said hello to them. “They came back about five or 10 minutes later,” she continued. “On her way out, [the manager] made eye contact with me, turned to the rest of the group and said, ‘Ignore her like you didn’t see her.’

“I don’t understand why she would say something like that in the work environment.”

She alleged that this wasn’t a standalone incident, with senior members of the agency’s management ignoring her too, adding, “Since my debut [in NewJeans], we ran into a person in a high-up position many times, but they never greeted me when I greeted them.

“I understood from living in Korea that I have to be polite to older people and that’s part of the culture,” said Hanni, who is Vietnamese-Australian, “But I think it’s just disrespectful as a human being to not greet us, regardless of our professional status. There was a certain vibe that I felt within the company.”

Other allegations she made were that employees had been bad-mouthing NewJeans on the communications app Blind and that HYBE’s PR department had asked a journalist to downplay the group’s achievement – reinforcing her feelings that “the company hated us”.

She became emotional during her testimony, finishing by wiping away tears: “A lot of people have been worried about us. Some fans apologised for making us go through this, but I’m grateful to Korea for allowing me to do what I love. The ones who should be apologising are avoiding responsibility, and that frustrates me.”

Meanwhile, fellow Korean singer Jungkook of BTS seemingly shared a message of support for NewJeans last month. He wrote on Instagram, “Artists are not guilty” and “Don’t use them.”

 

 

His management then released a statement, as translated by Soompi, which read: “We have confirmed that he made the posts because he thought that under no circumstances should young artists be dragged into conflicts or used as a shield,” though it did not explicitly mention HYBE, ADOR or NewJeans.

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  • Ozzy Osbourne, Chris Cornell, Joe Satriani almost joined Van Halen, Alex reveals in first interview since brother’s death

Ozzy Osbourne, Chris Cornell, Joe Satriani almost joined Van Halen, Alex reveals in first interview since brother’s death

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Van Halen could have had new additions to their line-up over the years in Ozzy OsbourneChris Cornell, and Joe Satriani, Alex Van Halen reveals.

The former drummer and co-founder of the hard rock band is set to release Brothers, a memoir of his life with brother Eddie – who passed away in October 2020 due to complications from throat cancer – from childhood to 1984, when the band’s first line-up with David Lee Roth ended.

In an interview with Rolling Stone published today (October 15) promoting the book, Alex reveals more moments from the band’s storied career over the decades – for one, how Osbourne was originally tipped to front the band in 2001.

Alex and Eddie had met Ozzy with wife and manager Sharon Osbourne to lay out plans for him to record an album with the band. “When you get a dog, you don’t expect it to be a cat,” Alex tells Rolling Stone, noting that the brothers were open to the implications of the former Black Sabbath frontman joining their band. “When you get an Ozzy, you get Ozzy. Play the music, he’ll sing, and it’s gonna be great.”

However, Ozzy became entangled with MTV to launch The Osbournes, the reality show about the family that became a smash hit upon its debut in 2002, and couldn’t follow through with joining Van Halen.

“Yes, we were discussing it,” Osbourne tells Rolling Stone via email. “It is something that if it had come to fruition, would have been phenomenal. Eddie and Alex were great friends of mine for a very long time and it’s a regret of mine that we never got it together. The Osbournes got in the way of creating new music at that time, unfortunately.”

Alex also reveals in the interview that the brothers once jammed with Cornell and found they had something to work with. “Chris was in a very fragile part of his life, so to speak,” Alex notes.

“I got behind the drums, and he started playing bass. We played for 45 minutes. This motherfucker got so into it he started bleeding. I said, ‘This is the man you want.’ And then he died.”

Decades later, after the death of Eddie, Alex had reconvened with Roth to explore continuing the band in 2022, with early rehearsals taking place alongside musicians from Roth’s solo band.

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Alex Van Halen and Eddie Van Halen in 2015. CREDIT: Daniel Knighton/Getty Images

The idea, Alex shares, was to rope in Satriani to take Eddie’s place on guitars, along with former bassist Michael Anthony, who hadn’t played with the band since 2004 since being replaced by Eddie’s then-teenage son Wolfgang Van Halen. The tour did not materialise, with Alex noting that physical problems he began facing around the time made him wonder if it was an “omen from above” to not follow through with the reunion plans.

He notes that after phone calls with Queen‘s Brian May, Alex brought to Roth the idea to pay tribute to Eddie during each gig. “I said, ‘Dave, at some point, we have to have a very overt — not a bowing — but an acknowledgment of Ed in the gig. If you look at how Queen does it, they show old footage.’” he recalls.

“And the moment I said we gotta acknowledge Ed, Dave fuckin’ popped a fuse.… The vitriol that came out was unbelievable.” This moment was “the thing that broke the camel’s back”, Alex adds. “‘You talk to me like that, motherfucker, I’m gonna beat your fucking brains out. You got it?'” he recalls how he felt towards Roth. “And I mean that. And that’s how it ended.”

“It’s just, my God. It’s like I didn’t know him anymore. I have nothing but the utmost respect for his work ethic and all that. But, Dave, you gotta work as a community, motherfucker. It’s not you alone anymore.”

Last month, Alex shared a snippet of ‘Unfinished’, the last song he recorded with his late brother. The track will be included in the audiobook of Brothers, which is set for release on October 24.

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