Former members Saena, Sio, and Aran of the girl group FIFTY FIFTY, who were released from their group last year after an exclusive contract dispute, are looking for a new agency.
Recently, the three former FIFTY FIFTY members' fan club communicated through their official SNS, “We contacted the legal team representing former FIFTY FIFTY members Saena, Sio, and Aran to inquire about how fans can support the ongoing legal lawsuit.”
Read the whole announcement here:
FIGHT FOR FIFI recently reached out to the legal team representing former FIFTY FIFTY members Saena, Sio, and Aran to ask how fans could support their ongoing legal proceedings.
— FIGHT FOR FIFI (@FightForFifi) December 29, 2023
On December 17th, 2023, their lawyers forwarded an unprompted message from the former members, who… pic.twitter.com/FZT250c4uG
According to this, the three-member legal team said, "As a result of the current lawsuit, the desired termination of the exclusive contract was achieved through mutual notification, and since we are no longer ATTRAKT’s artists, there is no situation in which fans can provide us with special legal help.”
“However, the three associates, Jeong Ji-ho, Jeong Se-hyun, and Jeong Eun-ah, are continuing to practice steadily while recovering their health, and are trying to find a new agency…There are artists who have the will to maintain music activities and who can have a positive influence. I still have hope that it will happen. “We will do our best to stand in front of the fans as soon as possible, and we hope you will trust and support me even if it feels a little slow,” he added.
Meanwhile, FIFTY FIFTY set a record for entering the US Billboard main chart just half a year after their debut. Still, in June, the members filed a provisional injunction against their agency to suspend their exclusive contract. The court dismissed this, and member Keena withdrew the appeal alone and returned to ATTRAKT, but the three remaining members' exclusive contracts with ATTRAKT were terminated. Afterward, ATTRAKT filed a civil lawsuit worth 13 billion won against the three members, their parents, and officials of the outsourced production company The Givers.
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