Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Business

(VIDEO) BTS Breaks Spotify Record With ‘NORMAL’ Music Video, Most-Streamed K-Pop Video in a Single Day

Published

on

Deadliest Catch Dedicates Episode to Capt. Keith Colburn's Nephew Gregory

BTS set a new streaming milestone this week after releasing the music video for their song “NORMAL” exclusively on Spotify, with the platform confirming Friday that the video became the most-streamed K-pop music video in a single day in Spotify’s history.

The video, released Friday at 1 p.m. Korea Standard Time, marks the latest visual from the group’s fifth studio album, “ARIRANG,” which itself became the most-streamed K-pop album in Spotify history on March 20. Spotify announced the new record on its Instagram and X accounts shortly after the video’s release, according to reporting from The Music Universe.

“NORMAL” offers what Spotify described as a deeply personal look at the seven-member group, moving between scenes captured during a late-night celebration and the quieter moments of the following morning. The video follows each member through that arc, portraying what daily life looks like for BTS when they step away from the stage and the spotlight that typically surrounds them. According to Big Hit Music, the group’s label, the setting was a deliberate creative choice intended to offer fans an unfiltered look at the band’s everyday, private side in contrast with their more polished on-stage personas.

Advertisement

One of the video’s most talked-about moments recreates a viral promotional image the group had teased in the lead-up to the release, showing all seven members standing in a row in front of a set of urinals with their backs to the camera. That image originated from a midnight teaser clip posted to HYBE Labels’ YouTube channel the night before the video’s release, which showed the members in the restroom setting before BTS leader RM squeezed past the group in an unguarded, comedic moment. The teaser also resolved a mystery that had been circulating online for days, tied to a series of attention-grabbing advertisements that ran earlier in July in print newspapers including the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Post. Those ads featured the urinal-themed photo beneath a tabloid-style headline reading, “BTS Members Seen in Bathroom Amid Mysterious Gathering,” part of a broader promotional campaign that the music video ultimately brought full circle.

Alongside the video, BTS released three additional versions of “NORMAL,” including a Korean-language rendition that had first been revealed during the group’s concert in Busan, as well as an instrumental version. A physical single CD is also being made available through the Weverse platform. “NORMAL” serves as the second single from “ARIRANG,” following the album’s lead single, “SWIM,” and originally debuted at No. 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated April 4, drawing praise for its understated vocal delivery and conversational sing-rapping style.

“ARIRANG” itself has continued performing strongly on the Billboard charts in the months since its March release. The album spent three consecutive weeks atop the Billboard 200, the top albums chart in the United States, and remained at No. 25 on the chart dated July 18. “SWIM” has extended its own run on the Hot 100, sitting at No. 84 in its 16th consecutive week on that chart as of the same date.

The “NORMAL” video’s Spotify-first release continues a broader partnership between BTS and the streaming platform that began earlier this year to mark the group’s return following an extended hiatus. As part of that collaboration, Spotify hosted a series of immersive live events bringing fans, known collectively as ARMY, together in cities around the world. Among those events, BTS performed at Pier 17 in New York City in March, marking the group’s first U.S. performance in four years. Spotify also introduced in-app features tied to the album’s release, including an interactive experience called Decoding ARIRANG and a dedicated BTS Music Quiz, giving fans new ways to engage with the group’s music directly within the app.

Advertisement

The video’s exclusive debut on Spotify, rather than a traditional platform such as YouTube, reflects a broader strategy tied to the group’s digital footprint on the streaming service, where BTS draws roughly 35.5 million monthly listeners. The video is currently available only in select beta markets for Spotify Premium subscribers, part of the platform’s ongoing rollout of music videos as a feature alongside exclusive content such as live performances and cover recordings. Spotify noted that the “NORMAL” release followed closely behind another artist’s video exclusive on the platform, with country singer Jelly Roll launching the video for his song “Hands Up” exclusively on Spotify for 48 hours just days earlier.

The “NORMAL” video itself is set to remain a Spotify exclusive for 48 hours before becoming available on other streaming and video platforms, following the same release pattern used for the platform’s other recent artist exclusives.

BTS’s commercial dominance extends well beyond this latest record. According to Spotify, the group’s tracks appear on more than 130 million user-generated playlists on the platform, and BTS has had six songs inducted into Spotify’s Billions Club, a designation reserved for tracks that surpass one billion streams. Those songs include “Dynamite,” “My Universe,” “Butter,” “Boy With Luv” featuring Halsey, “FAKE LOVE” and “Life Goes On.” Listenership for the group spans a wide global footprint, with the United States, Japan and Peru currently ranking among the top countries streaming BTS’s music.

The group’s promotional push around “NORMAL” arrives during an active stretch on the touring front as well. BTS is currently wrapping up the European leg of its Arirang World Tour, with concerts scheduled at Paris’s Stade de France. The group is also set to make a high-profile appearance this weekend, joining Justin Bieber, Madonna and Shakira as co-headliners of the halftime show for the FIFA World Cup final, scheduled for Sunday, July 19, at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, adding another major milestone to what has already been an eventful comeback year for the group following their extended hiatus.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Tracking Stanley Druckenmiller's Duquesne Family Office Portfolio – Q1 2026 Update

Published

on

Tracking Stanley Druckenmiller's Duquesne Family Office Portfolio - Q1 2026 Update

Tracking Stanley Druckenmiller's Duquesne Family Office Portfolio – Q1 2026 Update

Continue Reading

Business

The hidden cost of the night shift and how to sleep it off

Published

on

St James's Place, London -  street gas lights are illuminted in the early morning light

Among the waste products the system clears are proteins called amyloid and tau, the deposits that accumulate in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease. A single sleepless night measurably raises amyloid levels in the fluid surrounding the brain. Do that repeatedly, year after year, and the implications are troubling.

A Swedish study by researchers at the Karolinska Institute, tracking more than 13,000 shift workers, including night shift workers, for up to 41 years, found that shift work in mid-life was associated with a 36% higher risk of dementia – with the risk rising the longer someone had worked shifts.

Foster is careful not to overstate the link. “You wouldn’t say poor sleep causes dementia,” he says, “but if you’re vulnerable, it’s a potential risk factor.”

Markus’s data shows a possible link, but he cautions that it is a hypothesis at this stage and there are likely to be many other factors at play.

Advertisement

“Sleep matters,” he says, “but so do the big vascular things – blood pressure, smoking, diabetes. What’s never mentioned is how much of the risk of Alzheimer’s comes from those – things we could actually do something about.”

There are also tentative but growing indications of how sleep disturbance might increase the risk of heart disease. An analysis of 35 studies published last year found that sleep reduced to around 4.5 hours for three or more nights significantly raised the activity of the body’s immune system. This is normally a good thing when it is roused to fight infection but also causes inflammation in the body which if persistent is associated with heart disease.

Disrupted sleep raises the stress hormone, cortisol, which in turn promotes insulin resistance and pushes the body toward a diabetic state. Higher levels of cortisol also worsens sleep further, locking workers into a self-reinforcing cycle. Add to this the sugar-hit snacking that keeps some shift workers going overnight and it makes for an extremely unhealthy cocktail.

As if that were not enough, the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), has classified night shift work as “probably carcinogenic to humans” and put it in the same risk group as red meat, citing evidence for links to breast, prostate, colon and colorectal cancers.

Advertisement

This may be because disruption to the body’s circadian system alters timing of the production of melatonin, a hormone thought to have tumour-suppressing properties, as well as reduced vitamin D from lack of daylight, and the chronic low-level inflammation that broken sleep promotes.

Continue Reading

Business

ICICI Prudential AMC among top 5 midcap stocks with highest MF selling in June

Published

on

The Economic Times

Patanjali Foods, ICICI Prudential AMC, IREDA, NMDC and Oil India saw the highest net selling by mutual funds among midcap stocks in June, according to a Motilal Oswal Financial Services report.

Continue Reading

Business

New EU system tripling time to get through border, airport boss says

Published

on

People move through the queue for the Entry Exit System process at Fuimicino Airport in Rome, Italy.

The EU’s new border system has nearly tripled the time it’s taking for Brits to get through passport control even after improvements have been made, a boss at Rome’s main airport has said.

It comes as Ryanair has warned passengers travelling to Europe this summer to prepare for extended waits.

Border police at Portugal’s Faro airport also told the BBC the Entry Exit System technology suffered from bugs, but insisted any queues there would go down quickly.

The European Commission (EC) has said in most EU airports disruption is limited, and added that it will continue to support member states in the system’s implementation.

Advertisement

It added: “This support will continue to the fullest extent possible.”

The digital Entry Exit System (EES) requires non-EU citizens entering the Schengen area – made up of 29 European countries – to register fingerprints and a photo when they arrive. The information is checked as they leave.

It’s often done using standalone, automated machines known as “kiosks” and sometimes with border officers – for example, for children under 12. The new process and machines have been phased in since October.

Some European airports have seen hours-long queues at passport control. Passengers have even reported missing flights home.

Advertisement

This week, Ryanair said “the failed EES rollout” was causing unnecessary delays and long queues.

The airline said UK passengers should “allow extra time for their journey and be prepared for extended waits at passport control.”

In Rome, a perennially popular destination for tourists from the UK and around the globe, everyone we spoke to in the Piazza di Spagna had an EES story.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Mutual Fund NFOs: 5 new funds open for subscription this week. Check dates, details

Published

on

The Economic Times

Mutual Fund NFOs: 5 new funds open for subscription this week. Check dates, details

Continue Reading

Business

Lebanon’s Aoun to meet Trump at White House, hoping to generate pressure on Israel

Published

on


Lebanon’s Aoun to meet Trump at White House, hoping to generate pressure on Israel

Continue Reading

Business

Refining Margins Hit a Record. What That Means for Gas Prices.

Published

on

Refining Margins Hit a Record. What That Means for Gas Prices.

Refining Margins Hit a Record. What That Means for Gas Prices.

Continue Reading

Business

Building Permits Fall 3.0% In June

Published

on

Building Permits Fall 3.0% In June

Permit about building activity and construction industry

Rafmaster/iStock via Getty Images

Originally published on July 17, 2026

By Jennifer Nash

Building permits fell 3.0% in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.367 million. The latest reading missed the forecast of 1.400 million. Building permits are down 2.3% from

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Stock Market Selloff: The Unanswered Questions Driving the Drop

Published

on

Stock Market Selloff: The Unanswered Questions Driving the Drop

The biggest problems aren’t caused by what you don’t know, but what, as Mark Twain put it, “you know for sure that just ain’t so.” And that’s a massive problem for the stock market right now.

Continue Reading

Business

Elevance Health CEO Snaps Up Stock After Post-Earnings Slide

Published

on

Elevance Health CEO Snaps Up Stock After Post-Earnings Slide

Elevance Health CEO Snaps Up Stock After Post-Earnings Slide

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025