SEVENTEEN’s powerhouse duo S.Coups and Mingyu are back with a bold global collaboration teaming up with American rap star Flo Milli for a new remix of their hit single “5, 4, 3 (Pretty Woman).”

A Fresh Take on the Disco Original
Released on November 7 at 2 p.m. KST, the “Pretty Woman (Remix)” reimagines the duo’s original disco-pop track with an edgier, more international sound.
While the first version featured Rae Banks with sharp, rhythmic verses, the new remix adds Flo Milli’s signature confident flair a playful, bouncy rap that blends seamlessly with the song’s groovy base.
The result? A modern, genre-blurring anthem that fuses K-pop energy with U.S. hip-hop swagger. The remix gives fans a new layer of “HYPE VIBES” while staying true to S.Coups and Mingyu’s effortlessly cool charm.
Flo Milli Adds Global Appeal
Flo Milli, one of Billboard’s Top 10 Hottest Female Rappers, brings a refreshing tone to the track. Known for her viral hits like “Conceited” and “In the Party,” she has been praised by Rolling Stone, which listed her debut album among “The 200 Greatest Hip-Hop Albums of All Time.”
Her collaboration with SEVENTEEN marks one of the most high-profile crossovers between K-pop and contemporary U.S. hip-hop this year. Fans worldwide are calling it an “unexpected but perfect match,” noting the synergy between Flo Milli’s punchy flow and the duo’s rhythmic precision.
Record-Breaking Unit and Rising Global Power
S.Coups and Mingyu’s first mini album “HYPE VIBES” broke records upon release, achieving the highest first-week sales for a K-pop unit album over 880,000 copies sold. The success cemented their reputation as one of K-pop’s most dynamic sub-units, celebrated for sleek visuals, stage charisma, and musical experimentation.
With this remix, the duo once again proves their versatility and international pull — seamlessly bridging cultural and genre boundaries.
Their fans, CARATs, are already predicting that “Pretty Woman (Remix)” will dominate both local and global charts.
Editor’s Insight
What makes this remix interesting isn’t just the collaboration it’s the direction.
K-pop has been moving toward global sounds for years, but the difference here is execution.
This doesn’t feel like a strategy-first project.
It feels like a vibe-first decision.
Flo Milli wasn’t added to make the song international. She was added because she fits the energy.
And that distinction matters.
If S.Coups and Mingyu continue in this direction, they’re not just expanding their reach they’re reshaping what a K-pop unit can sound like on a global stage.

