User:Biodin/sandbox

Available stadiums
FIFA requires a minimum of 14 stadiums with a capacity of at least 40,000 spectators. Below is a list of stadiums satisfying this requirement in the 5-country joint bid and ASEAN at large.

Rest of Southeast Asia
=TB=

Etymology
An etymology of Tân Bình is that Tân is a Sino-Vietnamese word (Hán tự: 新) meaning "new", while Bình is short for Quảng Bình, a province of Vietnam whose name was established in 1604.

Pre-1957
Between the 1st and 15th century CE, the area of modern-day Tân Bình was a part of the Kingdom of Funan, succeeded by Chenla and the Khmer Empire. As the Khmer's rule in the region dwindled, and the presence of Vietnamese increased, in 1698, Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh was sent by the Nguyễn rulers to establish Vietnamese administrative structures in the area. In the beginning, Tân Bình was the name of a sub-prefecture ("huyện") covering a swath of land roughly 11000 sqkm, stretching from Saigon River to Vàm Cỏ River. Tân Bình was upgraded to a frontier prefecture ("phủ") in 1808, and then incorporated into Gia Định Province in 1832. Tân Bình went through multiple reorganizations and administrative border changes afterward. In 1867, the French Empire annexed the remaining Southern provinces of Vietnam. Under the French colonial administration, "phủ" and "huyện" subdivisions were replaced with a system of arrondissements under each province in French Cochinchina. Saigon arrondissement was established in the general area of what previously was phủ Tân Bình. Consequently, Tân Bình as a place disappeared until 1944.

Between May 1944 and August 1945, Tân Bình was a province that wrapped around the city of Saigon–Cholon. The province practically dissolved after the August Revolution broke out.

South Vietnam
Under the South Vietnam administration, on April 29, 1957, Tân Bình was set up as a district of Gia Định Province on the foundation of tổng Dương Hòa Thượng ("tổng" was a subdistrict, lower than a district but higher than a commune), which was previously a part of Gò Vấp District. There were 7 communes: Bình Hưng Hòa, Phú Nhuận, Phú Thọ Hòa, Tân Hòa, Tân Sơn Hòa, Tân Sơn Nhì and Vĩnh Lộc. In 1960, Vĩnh Lộc was merged into Tân Hòa commune. In December 1965, Tân Phú commune was created from parts of Tân Sơn Nhì and Phú Thọ Hòa communes. In 1970, the district had an area of 113.8 sqkm with 418,781 residents.

= Blackpink World Tour (In Your Area) (2018–2020) =

Concert synopsis
The concert began with a montage of a rubic cube spelling out "Blackpink" and the names of the group's members on the main stage's screen. The cube then turned into an explosion of pink glitter and rising smokes as all members of Blackpink started rising to the stage and performing "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du" in light pink outfits. The quartet was then lifted on stage platforms to perform "Forever Young" with an outer space-like backdrop on screen. After performing the two verses and the second chorus on the main stage, Blackpink was raised on the platforms again and joined by backup dancers as they sang the final part of the song. The group then greeted and introduced themselves to the audience after the platforms were lowered back to the main stage surface level. Afterwards, Blackpink performed "Stay" on chairs on the main stage and walked to the B-stage during the final chorus. The group proceeded to sing "Whistle" on the B-stage for a majority of the song before being accompanied by backup dancers and returning to the main stage for the ending part. The group was then lowered down below the stage by lifts for a costume change to prepare for their respective solo stages.

Depending on the tour leg, the order of the solo performances changes. In the first Asian leg, Jisoo would commence the portion by coming out on a platform made of disco balls to sing a cover of "Clarity" by Zedd. Her stage would be followed by Lisa dancing to a medley of songs, both solo and with a group of backup dancers. In Seoul, Lisa danced to "I Like It", "Faded" (by Tink) and "Attention"; the dance number was changed to "Take Me" and "Swalla" from the Bangkok date on January 11, 2019 onwards. Subsequently, after Lisa, Rosé rose to the stage along with Dante Jackson from The Band Six on the piano and sang a cover medley of "Let It Be" by the Beatles, "You and I" by former label mate Park Bom and "Only Look At Me" by Taeyang. From April 17, 2019 to the rest of the tour, Rosé opened the solo stages instead of Jisoo. The solo stage portion then concluded with Jennie performing "Solo" with multiple backup dancers whilst a dance hall setting was on display on the screen. The Band Six played an interlude after Jennie went backstage for her costume change.

After the release of "Kill This Love" EP in April 2019, Blackpink opened Act III of the concert with "Kill This Love", dressed in street style outfits. The main screen featured different scenes from the song's official music video, served as the performance backdrop. A group of backup dancers joined Blackpink for the ending beat drop of the song in marching band outfits before leaving the stage for the quartet to perform "Don't Know What To Do" on their own. The group spent some time afterward to talk and interact with the audience. Next, "Kiss and Make Up" was performed with each member standing on their respective raised and moving platform while the screen was showing tropical patterns and imagery. The Band Six and backup dancers later returned to the main stage to accompany Blackpink, now back down on stage level, performing "Really" and "See U Later". They all exited the stage when a video interlude featuring Blackpink racing and drifting in Kia motorcars started playing on the screens.

Blackpink, in sparkly costumes, returned to the stage from below and performed "Playing with Fire" to a gate-like setting on the screen. The background changed to kaleidoscope-like graphics when the group sang "Kick It". They moved to the B-stage and proceeded to perform the final two songs "Boombayah" and "As If It's Your Last" there, after a small talk with the audience.

For the encore, the group reappeared on stage in more casual and sporty clothes to perform a remix version of "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du". Following that performance, Blackpink introduced members of the band and the backup dancer group to the audience and thanked them before casually enjoying an instrumental performance of The Band Six themselves. Only the group remained on stage after that to sing the final song "Hope Not"; they said goodbye to the audience before exiting the stage on a lift lowering them back down to the pit.

Critical response
The concert received generally positive reviews from the critics. Variety drew comparison between the all-dancing concert to Beyonce's 2018 Coachella performance, calling it "within the realm of earthly aspirational possibility" with "semi-rigid, semi-relaxed synchronization" and "major charm offensive from four quintessential Girls Next Door". Evan Real writing for The Hollywood Reporter said the girlgroup delivered "impressive vocals, dancing" that "not even the stage's extravagant light display or frequent bursts of fireworks could pull the group's focus from their exceptionally polished routine". Billboard described the concert as "hugely engaging" and applauded Blackpink's "remarkably natural aura" as opposed to the usual rigidity that K-Pop concerts usually have thanks to the group's improvisations and audience interaction, but also fell short during the solo segment, as they called Lisa's dance number "as baffling as it was boring" and Jisoo's cover of Clarity "uncomfortably close to a filler". The Guardian also shared a similar sentiment about the solo segment and gave the concert three stars out of five, saying while the show had "brilliant moments throughout", it didn't "take enough risks". However, Jan Lee of The Straits Times felt the solo performances were enjoyable and the concert's energy was infectious as he described the members of Blackpink as "exuberant, charming and visually stunning onstage", though he felt the concert in general needed more original material from Blackpink.

2018 Seoul concert
A DVD titled Blackpink 2018 Tour [In Your Area] Seoul was released on August 8, 2019, coinciding with Blackpink's third anniversary. The DVD captured Blackpink's first ever headlining concert in South Korea with the concert portion filmed on the 2nd Seoul date while the commentary film portion contained footage of the group's preparation for the tour and clips filmed throughout the rest of the tour.

2019 Tokyo concert
Blackpink 2019-2020 Tour In Your Area -Tokyo Dome was released on June 5, 2020.

Set list
The North American setlist was performed at the May 1, 2019 concert at the Prudential Center in New Jersey. It does not represent all shows throughout the tour.

Personnel
Blackpink
 * Jisoo
 * Jennie
 * Rosé
 * Lisa

Band


 * Omar Dominick – music director, bass
 * Dante Jackson – keyboards
 * Justin Lyons – guitar
 * Bennie Rodgers II – drums
 * Brandon Finklea – Protools

Dancers


 * Oh Hye Ryun
 * Kim Ga Hee
 * Park Eun Chong
 * Kim Se Jin
 * Son Soo Bin
 * Kim Eun Sun
 * Kwon Young Don

Show


 * YG Entertainment – executive producer
 * Teddy – creative director
 * Hwang Bo Kyung – executive supervisor
 * Lee Jae Wook – choreographer
 * Kim Hee Jung – choreographer

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=List of busiest airports in Southeast Asia by passengers=

By country
(as of 2018)