
r/cortis

IS ACAI ABOUT ACAI?
Ok I can't believe I have to ask this but I'm concerned...is acai not about acai bowls??
The reason I ask is because I thought it would be fun to see a reaction video to greengreen with different people reacting to the songs. And when acai comes up, they are just quiet and look at each other and smile weird and shake their heads... am I missing something? They seem to think it has a dirty meaning or innuendo especially when certain lyrics come up...
Please I must know is this true?? Is it not about eating acai bowls??? Or am I just oblivious 😭
I feel like Cortis is overworking themselves
They're the most employed group I know rn, they have like so much concerts and even collabs with a lot of YouTubers and content creators, and especially they just released their new album, but like give them a break bruh they're still teenagers 😭.
260513 CORTIS will be performing in the afternoon at Lollapalooza’s T-Mobile stage
260513 CORTIS earns 3rd music show win for “REDRED” on Show Champion - Acceptance Video
fashion is my 3rd most streamed song of all time
it's probably somewhere in the 300's if i count mv views and physical cd streams too GOD IM OBSESSED
Jonas Brothers Dancing to CORTIS’ ‘REDRED’
Back on our pre show hype
discussion about coers ♥️
credits: (https://x.com/dinohshi/status/2051787414859866185?s=46)
obviously not all of them, and i’m not in any way disregarding coers that are above 18 years of age (as i am, turning 19 this year too), but i think it’s just so amazing to think that this is partially the reason why i was hooked the moment i saw a video from tiktok about them. aside from their music, and fashion style, i think us being in similar ages played such a huge role as well.
there’s this unwavering instant friendship instinct i found with them, when i found out about their ages. it feels nice being able to keep up with their growth and achievements, while being in the same age range too
260512 Cortis Instagram Update
Who is choking I don’t care🫰
How long has James been dancing?
basically the title. james is widely recognized as a highly skilled dancer + choreographer, but in their roller hockey video, james mentioned that he decided to switch from hockey to dancing when he was 14-15. has he seriously only been dancing for 5-6 years?? is this guy a prodigy or something?? i feel like you normally only see this level of talent in someone who's been dancing since they were in diapers.
also, i'm pretty sure martin and seonghyeon were trainees for 4-5 years, which means they've been dancing for almost as long as james. and don't get me wrong, they're both amazing dancers, but even the members unanimously agreed that james is a league above the rest of them.
260513 CORTIS “REDRED” secures its third music show win on Show Champion
260413 Cortis Instagram Update
Like a donkey, donkey, north east south west, once around the globe 🫏
What is it about Keonho that makes him so fun to watch?
I’m very new to Cortis and know almost nothing about the group. In the last couple of days my feed was flooded with Cortis videos; all of the members seem great but Keonho stood out to me. This is genuinely the first idol after jungkook who truly impressed me. I was shocked to find out he’s only 16! I wanted to ask you guys what do you think makes Keonho so fun to observe? He’s good looking and charismatic but so are a lot of other idols. Maybe he’s just meant to be a star. He definitely has a very bright future ahead of him
i didnt know i needed to draw Seonghyeon from Acai MV until now.... (he is GLOWING)
260511 [Weverse Magazine] CORTIS Comeback Interview | MARTIN “I bet I’ll still be making music in my next life, too.”
English:
Music and the stage, friends and COER, experience and love—those are the components that make up MARTIN’s ideal view of the world.
I heard you tried a dopamine detox this past winter.
MARTIN: At the time I wanted to try living a little differently—to avoid judging things based only on how they come across on social media. I felt like I had a dopamine addiction. There were so many things I wanted to try firsthand. Like they say, there’s no substitute for experience. But it turned out I had less time for that than I thought. (laughs) I basically failed at it since I ended up getting back on social media to look things up, but I’m thinking about giving detoxing another shot once we start promoting again.
Isn’t it harder to do that while you’re actively promoting?
MARTIN: I want to try reading during downtime, and just do more cultured stuff in general. There’s so many famous books out there, and I especially want to read the ones that have been adapted into movies before I see the movie. I feel like there’s a certain mental image you only get from text. I read “Project Hail Mary” before the movie came out, and it was even more fun because what I pictured was different from what was in the film version. JUHOON recommended “Hunger” to me recently after a walk. It makes me wonder what kind of music would work with it. I wanted to quote some lines from it in a song, too. What I think’s so fascinating about literature is that it feels like you’re being whisked away to inside the writer’s mind.
What pushes you to keep trying things like that?
MARTIN: When I was a trainee, even though I was young, I really wanted to be great at doing this. I think maybe I feel like I missed out on some experiences since I basically lived in the practice studio. Experience can mean visiting a mountain range, trying all kinds of new foods, having a conversation with someone. In that sense, books have become a kind of alternative for me. I get a lot of inspiration from reading other people’s thoughts.
Seeing COER from up onstage after you debuted must have been a whole new kind of experience for you.
MARTIN: When the fans show they like something, it makes me want to do it more. (laughs) It makes me feel what they tell us is what makes our group keep growing. When we say this is something we make together, we’re not just saying it—it’s for real. That’s why we gave COER a shoutout when we accepted that award. You can’t exist without your fans when you’re an artist, so I want to be completely open with them. I’m into the punk scene, and I know it means different things to different people, but for me, punk’s a way of life—doing what you want to do, not caring about how you come across to others. COER seems to really like that too. I think that might be why people think of rock bands when they see us.
I imagine your fashion sense plays into that rock band vibe too. (laughs)
MARTIN: Just like with literature, fashion basically conveys a person’s thoughts. I think it shows how they go through their day-to-day life. It can be a way of making an impression or a tool to express how you feel. I mean, you dress differently depending on who you’re seeing that day. Today I paired a ripped tee with some destroyed jeans. It’s getting warmer and you get some airflow (laughs) and I’m practicing after so I just need to change my pants. I consider hairstyle a part of fashion sense, too. If COER likes my spiked hair, I give them spiked hair. If I want to give them something new, I grow it out. Being able to show so many different aspects of yourself is what makes fashion so exciting and fun.
The ideas and approach you’ve consistently shown seem to have a connection to the message behind your new album and the lead single, “REDRED.”
MARTIN: We’ve done so many different shows, so I focused on writing songs that are fun to perform. I wanted to create new textures and sounds that matched those new experiences. Early on in working on the album, things weren’t really coming together, so the group got together with the producers for a meeting to look things over. The hardest part for all of us was figuring out the direction first. It felt like we were just wandering aimlessly. We had a long conversation about what we were listening to lately, what movies we’d seen, what was going on in our lives, what was on our minds. The conclusion we landed on was to experiment without worrying about the genre. We still had to have our own unique sound, though. Experimenting with different rhythms is what led to “REDRED,” but it wasn’t an easy process at all. There were so many demos and so many versions of them. The one we all loved unanimously became the final version.
The live performances for the songs on the new album, “REDRED” included, are going to be worth the wait.
It seems like you’ve put a lot of thoughts into all your hand and other movements.
MARTIN: What I really want this time isn’t so much to show my moves as to connect with the fans. There were times I’d watch footage back and think, “I could’ve brought more energy … I could’ve made it more fun for the fans … I could’ve emphasized the collaborative aspect better.” This time I was practicing with making up for that in mind. And for “TNT,” there was a point where JAMES and I were really into long leather jackets, and the vibe we got from performing in them felt uniquely well-suited, so I wanted to bring that energy into the moves too.
Read the rest in the interview linked above ⬆️
CORTIS dance collabs
I was scrolling through CORTIS dance collabs with other kpop idols and I noticed that they only did it with hybe kpop idols and not other kpop idols from other groups, like did I miss something or is this normal?
260512 [Weverse Magazine] CORTIS ‘GREENGREEN’ Comeback Interview | JUHOON: ‘I guess everything began with having fun’
>I heard you were in LA recently. [Note: This interview took place on April 18.]
JUHOON: We’ve been working in LA since the debut album, so at this point I feel just as at home there as in Seoul. (laughs) When I saw our album on display in the K-pop section at Amoeba Music, it made me realize how we’re actually out there in the world now. The sun’s brighter there than in Seoul and everything’s bigger. You definitely feel open and relaxed there. It’s the kind of place that’s so inspiring it actually makes you want to work, and I feel like it changes the way I dress, too. (laughs)
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>So did you pull off any bold new looks while you were there? (laughs)
JUHOON: (laughs) Umm … I usually wear a lot of Adidas, but I picked up a Nike t-shirt there while I was shopping, so I tried this completely unhinged combination of a Nike tee and an Adidas hoodie. (laughs)
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>Quite the mash-up. (laughs) What kind of style are you into these days?
JUHOON: I don’t have a hard preference for any one aesthetic right now. You have to try a lot of things before you know what actually works on you, and I feel like I’m still in the middle of that process. I look at Pinterest to see how other people pull things together. I draw a little from here and there and try to make it my own. Overall I’d say I’ve gotten more into minimalism than I used to be, just wearing things for what they are instead of with a belt or a bunch of accessories. I want it to feel like it’s something that’s just a natural extension of me, just me being really human and natural, not like I’m dressing to impress anyone. That’s the feeling I’ve been going for lately.
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>That pursuit of authenticity is actually one of the defining qualities of your group’s music.
JUHOON: That’s why figuring out what made sense for where we’re at right now was such an important part of the process. We wanted to show off CORTIS’ true colors, but we didn’t want to repeat anything we’d already done in other songs. The key to “REDRED” was finding the right subject matter, and at first we had absolutely no idea what to even write about. We went through session after session, and then JAMES threw the phrase “GREENGREEN” into the mix, and that’s when the song found its unique angle. What we’re aiming for, and what we’re trying to avoid—we decided that would be a good topic to explore and wrote the hook around that. When I look back now, I think it was exactly the right call.
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>In what way?
JUHOON: The lyrics just flow really smoothly from start to finish. Like, when you first meet someone, you usually don’t dive straight into the deep stuff, so the first verse starts with light, everyday small-talk things. Then we wrote the hook that comes next to feel like a declaration of who we are. And in the second verse, we went deeper, trying to lay out all the things we’re typically thinking about.
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>What kind of things did you want to say?
JUHOON: MARTIN’s part in the second verse hits me especially hard—the lyrics from “a cold abandoned city” to “my head turns bright red.” I think it captures something all of us as a group feel. We felt the world keeps getting more individualistic, losing warmth. That part’s also about wanting the people who watch us to really give themselves over to the performance. When the whole crowd’s cheering together, you feel way more energetic.
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>Your musical instincts and taste seem a lot more defined than they used to be.
JUHOON: I was in the songwriting camp for our debut album right when I first started making music, so it was more of a learning experience for me to figure out how the whole process works. This time around, I wanted to push a little further with what I’d picked up from that. JAMES and I wrote the second verse of “Wassup” together. The chords for that song feel darker than the other tracks, so I approached the work looking to sort of neutralize that effect. I was also careful not to let things get too emotional while recording. We took turns freestyling during those sessions one by one, and I got right in there. And when all five of us were freestyling around a single mic at the same time, I got a little more into it.
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>It can’t be easy to get all your different perspectives on the same page when you’re all trying to make the best choices for the music.
JUHOON: All five of us have strong personalities, so getting everyone on the same page isn’t so easy. (laughs) When we’re divided on something, we try making every vision into its own version and see how they feel. It happened with the music video we made for “TNT” too. We couldn’t reach a consensus. (laughs) We were shooting at the location we planned for, and then suddenly, right in the middle of the road, we ended up in a 30-minute debate. (laughs) “I think we should do it like this.” “No, we should stick with the plan.” (laughs) In the end, three of us shot the original idea as planned and the other two shot a reworked version using the new idea, and we sent both to the director and the label. That way we could hear everyone out and make a final call from there.
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>So you respect each other’s ideas but still have to prove it works to the crew.
JUHOON: At the end of the day, we have to make something. We have to make the best version possible, whether that means picking the best idea or combining a few of them. But honestly, when we’re just having fun doing the shoot, the final result tends to come out pretty good. We shot freestyle this time too. We were never really built for planning anyway. (laughs)
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>How did shooting the “REDRED” music video yourselves go?
JUHOON: We spent a lot of time thinking about how to bring the raw feel of “REDRED” to the screen. We ended up making two versions. The one that became the main music video grew out of an idea to capture a vintage Korean feel. When we were first working on “REDRED,” we were imagining boys from a British hood. We wanted to evoke that and layer in something distinctly Korean at the same time, which is where the idea for an old local restaurant came in. We shot at a minmul jangeo place that someone on staff found for us. (laughs) There were so many things we could just grab right there and use as props. We threw on bibs, went into the bathroom, got a shot of the calendar on the wall. And there were two welcome mats at the entrance—one green, one red. (laughs) The second we saw them, we got the insert shot. That’s basically what the whole thing was—just one camcorder, no real plan, making it up as we went. There’s also a version that’s more focused on hand gestures, and for that one I suggested using a low frame rate to give the visuals a little extra something. JAMES handled shooting and editing for that one.
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>You have a real eye for video direction. I imagine the fact that you like movies and books feeds into that.
JUHOON: I recently read the novel “Pavane for a Dead Princess” before watching the movie that’s based on it, “Pavane.” I brought it along to read on the plane and during downtime when we were shooting in Japan, and I ended up reading the whole thing before we came back. If a movie based on a book comes out, I’ll usually read the book first. A movie gives you one definite picture, but I like how absorbed I get in my own version of how I imagine things when I’m reading a book.
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>Coming up with your own images in your head is certainly one of the great pleasures of reading. I understand you even reread “Annyeongira Geuraesseo” [“They Said Bye”].
JUHOON: Sometimes once just doesn’t feel like enough. I’ll finish a book and think, “Ha, there’s still more I can get from this!” And then I’ll go back and read it again from the beginning. I want to really make the book my own. With the one you mentioned, I found it a little difficult to follow the first time through. After I read the commentary at the back, I read back through it going, “Oh, so that’s what that line meant—that was foreshadowing.”
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>That drive to give shape to something until you’re fully satisfied with it seems to reflect your attitude toward yourself, too.
JUHOON: I think there’s a lot of people who don’t really know themselves all that well. I’m still in the process of figuring myself out, too. I used to look at things and think to myself, “This looks good, but that looks good too. I dunno which to choose …” But lately I know well enough that I can look at something and say, “I can tell, this one’s definitely better!” I can actually feel how I’m different from how I used to be. I think I feel more certain about my views now that I’ve gained more experience.
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>That might be why KEONHO called you the “loudest person” in the group. He talked about how you’re usually quiet but that you can get really firm about your opinions sometimes.
JUHOON: To make a good song, you have to commit to one good idea, for better or for worse. When we’re working, the only way to help the group is to have a strong opinion, so I try to share my ideas as much as I can. Normally speaking, though, I try only to speak up when I genuinely believe in something. And I just tend to think a lot before opening my mouth. (laughs)
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>That reminds me of something you said in an interview with “GQ”—that maturity means taking responsibility for your words and understanding the weight of your actions. You also mentioned wanting to work on reeling in your emotions when they stray too far from the center.
JUHOON: I think you have to accept your emotions for what they are but still be able to keep them in check on your own. I’ve been feeling a wider range of emotions than usual lately. Sometimes you need to express them, but I just try to keep them inside when it wouldn’t be a good idea to let them show.
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>But sometimes those emotions break through anyway, like on August 11 last year, the day they hung an ad outside the label’s offices leading up to your debut.
JUHOON: That was such an intense mix of emotions. I was ecstatic about the fact that we were debuting, but in that moment, it hit me that something that had always felt so far away was suddenly right in front of me. Seeing our huge faces up there on that enormous building, it was like, “Ah … It’s really happening. The big moment has arrived.” (laughs) I think the tears were from all of those emotions mixed together. At the time, I kept asking myself over and over whether I was really ready to present myself to the world.
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>What’s on your mind as you head into the promotional period for the next album?
JUHOON: Well, things are never easy. (laughs) This is a completely different world from when I was just doing my own thing, and I don’t think anyone can get used to it all in one go. I’m still finding my footing in this world. But whether it’s through music or something like this interview, I want to show people as much about what makes me unique as I can. It’s the kind of environment where it’s easy to get pulled in by what other people say. I just don’t want to lose what makes me me.
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>Is there anything you’re absolutely determined never to lose? You sing about wanting to be “the real deal” in both “REDRED” and “ACAI.”
JUHOON: That’s a tough one. (after thinking with his head down awhile) The feeling of having my own two feet on the ground. No matter what anyone says or what comes my way, I want to know I can hold onto my sense of stability. I think that would keep me from losing myself.
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>Maybe the process of working through that is exactly what it means to find your own sense of cool. In the “2024_Rookie Team_Interview.xlsx” video, you said, “I don’t find myself cool yet.” Has your thinking on that changed at all?
JUHOON: Maybe a tiny fraction compared to back then … (laughs) But I’ve still got a long way to go. (laughs)
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>You value stability, and yet you chose a career where change is constant and the pace never slows. What was it about it that called to you?
JUHOON: That it’s … That it’s fun, I guess. I think I wanted to lead a more exciting life. Making music and getting onstage like I do now just feels a little more fun to me. There’s definitely times when it’s physically and mentally draining, but I can say with certainty that I’m having fun.
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>So it’s because the light representing fun turned “GREENGREEN.”
JUHOON: You have to have fun to stay interested, and you have to be interested to be passionate. It’s the same with my personal projects—I just do it for fun. When I look back, I guess everything began with having fun.
I’m gonna emphasize on “concert” crowd here. CORTIS’ audience is not and should not be limited to one demographic, and it’s clear their music is enjoyed by listeners of all ages, races, and genders across the globe. But one thing I see that COER online consistently complain about are the fans who attend their live performances such as the recent Release Party. Fans aren’t putting their phones down when the boys tell them to, and they aren’t exactly “moshing” like the way they describe in their songs. Concert behavior varies across the globe, and I know CORTIS are aware that pit crowds in Western countries are way more energetic than crowds in Asian countries. But even in the NBA performance, there were people complaining that the crowd were pushing each other just to be able to record the members the whole time.
I bring this up because after watching the TNT conceptual performance film, the moshing that was shown at the end of the video felt EXACTLY like what the boys want the energy to be like at a concert. They want their concerts to feel like a party and for the fans to have fun WITH EACH OTHER as well as with them instead of pushing each other around to get a video. And I hope I don’t come off as misogynistic, but the only crowds that pull off this energy are ones that have just as much boys around as girls. I was in the pit at a Fakemink’s concert (Fakemink is an underground UK rapper that Juhoon has once recommended) recently, and I saw an equal amount of boys and girls in the pit, who were all moshing along to his songs and having fun together instead of only recording him. I think this is the kind of crowd that CORTIS deserves at a concert, and considering fakemink is the same age as James, I think they can achieve it if they are able to attract more young male listeners who want to go to their concerts.
Apologies for the long post but feel free to share your thoughts in a respectful manner.