Man, MixNine was such a rollercoaster! I followed the show religiously, rooting for my favorites week after week. The whole premise was so promising—mixing talented trainees from different companies to form this dream team. The final lineup was actually announced: 9 boys and 9 girls were chosen based on votes. But here's the kicker—despite all the hype, the group never officially debuted. YG Entertainment cited 'contract disagreements' as the reason, which left fans like me totally heartbroken. All that buildup, all those emotional performances, and then... nothing. It felt like watching a drama with no finale.
I still wonder what could've been. Some of those trainees were insanely talented—like Hyojin from ONF or Ryujin, who later blew up with ITZY. The show had this electric energy, but the abrupt ending left a sour taste. Even now, seeing clips from MixNine pop up in my recommendations makes me nostalgic for what might've been one of the hottest co-ed groups in K-pop.
From a more casual viewer's perspective, MixNine was like that project everyone talked about but never saw through. I tuned in occasionally, mostly for the performances, which were undeniably fire. The final episode was wild—viewers voted, the top trainees were picked, and then... silence. No album, no stages, no nothing. It's almost funny how anticlimactic it was, like planting a tree and never watering it.
What's interesting is how some trainees moved on to bigger things. Ryujin became a star in ITZY, and others redebuted in groups like DKB or BDC. The show itself became a cautionary tale about the risks of survival programs. Still, those covers of 'Just Dance' and 'Like OOH-AHH'? Timeless.
MixNine's collapse was both baffling and predictable. YG's history of delays and mismanagement kinda foreshadowed it. The final lineup had stellar talent—Lee Soomin, Woo Jinyoung, even pre-ITZY Ryujin—but logistical nightmares killed the debut. Fans speculated for months, clinging to hope until YG finally admitted defeat.
Honestly, the show's legacy lives on through meme compilations and 'what if' discussions. It's a shame, really—those trainees deserved better.
2025-09-14 19:04:55
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The Last of 99 Goodbyes
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When my appendix bursts, my parents, my brother, and even my fiancé are all too busy celebrating my sister's birthday.
I'm outside the operating room, frantically calling every family member I can think of to sign the consent form, but every call is either ignored or hung up on.
After hanging up on me, my fiancé, Joel Graham, texts back.
"Sophie, stop being dramatic. It's Yvette's 18th birthday today. Whatever it is can wait until after the party."
I quietly set my phone down and sign the consent form myself.
It's the ninety-ninth time they've chosen Yvette Norton, my sister, over me. This time, I choose not to care.
I'll stop letting their favoritism hurt me. Instead, I'll do everything they ask of me without complaint.
They'll all think I've finally learned to be obedient, and they'll never realize that I'm preparing to leave them for good.
On the day of the crash, I called Enzo Vitale ninety-nine times on the emergency channel.
On the hundredth call, his Consigliere finally picked up.
"Don Enzo has already used family resources to escort Miss Moretti to a private hospital," he said. "Her condition…isn’t good. Don asked me to tell you not to disturb him again."
But that was not the worst part.
When I woke up, my baby was gone. The doctor said the accident was too severe and they could not save the child.
Then I heard the truth.
“Chiara is carrying my child,” Enzo said. “Her last wish is to have a child before she goes. I gave her that. But this must stay between us. Alessia cannot know.”
“We had no choice,” my mother Rosalina said, her voice flat. “Chiara doesn't have long. We want her last days to be peaceful.”
“Alessia will understand,” my father Alberto said. “She's always been reasonable. She'll see this is about giving a dying woman her final wish.”
They were comforting a dying woman. My child was dead. But all they cared about was Chiara's baby.
I stumbled away. Chiara stood at the end of the hallway and smiled at me.
“I am not dying,” she whispered. “I just want everything you have.”
I picked up my phone and dialed a number.
“Professor Luciano,” I said quietly. “I've changed my mind. I am ready to join your closed medical research program.”
The woman who once begged for love had died with her child.
During the long National Day holidays, I planned a Golden Highlands trip for the whole family. I even booked tickets for a luxurious train ride so we could enjoy the scenery.
But on departure day, my husband and son vanished.
I called my husband. I could hear an airport boarding announcement in the background.
My voice trembled. "Where are you?"
He panicked and mumbled that the company had an emergency before hanging up.
I tried calling again, but the line was busy.
The next day, he posted an update on his social media.
In the photo, he stood beneath the snowy peaks of Wintercrown with one arm around his old love while the other held our son.
The caption read: [If we had been a little braver back then...]
A friend commented: [Where is your wife?]
I stared at his reply: [She's sick and resting at home.]
Three expired train tickets sat on the table as my eyes welled up with tears.
A decade of marriage.
A pack of lies.
It was time to bring it all to a close.
Two months remained until debut evaluation night.
Before our unit performance, our main dancer suddenly offered me her center position.
I stared at her, confused, "The trainers always praise your stage presence. Why give up your spot?"
"You... you deserve center more than I do."
Her smile was painfully forced, and she was fidgeting with her practice clothes - obviously not saying what she really felt.
Puzzled by her strange behavior, I asked, "Are my moves too big? Am I making it hard for you to perform?"
She suddenly started shaking, looking at me with pure fear in her eyes.
After what felt like forever, she finally choked out, "Please, just stop. I won't try to compete with you for center anymore!"
Once upon a time, Leonard truly loved me.
In order to establish a Mate Bond with me, he confessed 99 times. On the 99th time, I was finally moved.
On the day of our Marking Ceremony, I gave him 99 forgiveness coupons. I promised him that I would forgive him 99 times. As long as he still had coupons left over, I would forgive him and stay with him no matter what he did.
We were bonded for six years. In the first five years of our Mate Bond, I rarely ever used the forgiveness coupons. Since his childhood friend Judy returned, however, I started burning through the coupons.
When I tore up the 98th coupon, Leonard noticed that I had changed.
I no longer made a fuss or fought him over Judy. I simply asked him calmly, “If you go to Judy, can I use up one forgiveness coupon?”
Leonard paused and then recovered his cool. “Sure. I only used up slightly over half, so use another if you want.”
I stayed silent as he left the house.
As it turned out, he had no idea he had just lost his 98th coupon.
He only had one chance left.
After that, I would leave him forever.
My sister abruptly returns to the country on the day of my wedding. My parents, brother, and fiancé abandon me to pick her up at the airport.
She shares a photo of them on her social media, bragging about how she's so loved. Meanwhile, all the calls I make are rejected.
My fiancé is the only one who answers, but all he tells me is not to kick up a fuss. We can always have our wedding some other day.
They turn me into a laughingstock on the day I've looked forward to all my life. Everyone points at me and laughs in my face.
I calmly deal with everything before writing a new number in my journal—99.
This is their 99th time disappointing me; I won't wish for them to love me anymore.
I fill in a request to study abroad and pack my luggage. They think I've learned to be obedient, but I'm actually about to leave forever.
Man, the cancellation of 'MixNine' still bums me out whenever I think about it. The show had so much potential—unique trainees, YG's flashy production, and that edgy survival show vibe. But behind the scenes, things were a mess. Rumor has it YG bit off more than they could chew with contracts; they promised debut plans but couldn’t align the agencies of the winning trainees. Imagine grinding through months of competition only to hit a corporate wall. Plus, the ratings weren’t stellar, and YG’s notorious for axing projects if they don’t see instant profit. It’s a shame because that final lineup had serious star power—just look at how many contestants blew up later, like Hyojin from ONF or Ryujin before ITZY.
What really gets me is how YG handled the fallout. Zero transparency, just a vague 'circumstances' announcement. Fans invested time and money voting, and the trainees poured their hearts out. The whole thing left a sour taste, especially compared to how Mnet’s 'Produce' series (controversies aside) at least followed through. Maybe 'MixNine' was ahead of its time? Nowadays, survival shows like 'I-LAND' or 'Girls Planet 999' have tighter systems, but back then, YG’s disorganization killed what could’ve been a legendary group.
MixNine was such a wild ride, and the trainees totally stole my heart! The top contenders were absolutely stacked—Kim Byeongkwan from A.C.E. had this insane stage presence that made him impossible to ignore. His dancing was razor-sharp, and his vocals? Chef's kiss. Then there was Lee Soomin, who just oozed charisma. I still rewatch her performance of 'Havana' because she made that stage her own.
And how could I forget Woo Jinyoung? That kid had rap skills way beyond his years, and his chemistry with the other trainees was electric. The show had this weird split between boys and girls, so the rankings felt chaotic, but those three? Consistently on fire. Honestly, the final lineup drama still haunts me—so much talent that never got to debut together.