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Nice Guy: Episode 2

Who doesn’t like a heroine who can eat fried chicken and still do her job all from a hospital bed? Eun-ki’s really winning me over with her sass, even though little hints reveal that she’s not just the workaholic ice princess she tries to be. It makes for some really lively scenes whenever she comes into contact with Possibly-Evil Stepmother Jae-hee, and I’m just hoping that even with the future promise of amnesia, Eun-ki won’t lose her spark. Rock on, Eun-ki.

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Explosions In The Sky – “What Do You Go Home To?” [ Download ]

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EPISODE 2 RECAP

If looks could kill, the one Maru sends Jae-hee’s way would be the end of her. He continues on until Eun-ki is stabilized, and leaves Jae-hee flustered and staring as he returns to coach class.

Only when he’s out of her sight does he stumble and struggle to catch his breath.

Once the plane lands, Jae-hee accompanies Eun-ki on her way to the hospital, still looking as though she’s seen a ghost.

Maru drives silently while Jae-gil chatters from the backseat, revealing that he knew the woman in first class was Jae-hee. He’d apparently tried to tell Maru that there’d been rumors of her marrying a businessman, but Maru went into such a rage that it was never mentioned again.

Jae-gil clucks his tongue at the fact that Jae-hee used to visit Maru in prison constantly, but her visits became less and less frequent over time until she finally stopped altogether.

However, he does seem to suspect Jae-hee as the perpetrator of the murder, once he considers Choco’s story that Maru went out to meet Jae-hee that fateful night. Plus, murder just doesn’t fit Maru’s character.

Maru finally slams on the breaks, and snaps back to Jae-gil that he’s not his personal chauffeur (since Jae-gil has been sitting in the back). I love that Jae-gil’s reaction is so innocent, since he just grew up so privileged, and is left totally bereft when Maru leaves the car because he doesn’t know how to drive. Hah.

Cue flashback of childhood Maru and Choco, and his first meeting with Jae-hee as she comes running, beaten and bruised, from a boy chasing her. Maru Lite tends to her wounds since his lifetime dream is to become a doctor, and they share introductions and smiles.

We fast forward a bit to their college years, with Jae-hee failing to hold in her envy over a rich girl with her eyes on Maru. That girl would be lucky to get a catch like him, which has Maru saying as casually as you please, “That catch. Can’t Noona grab hold of that catch?”

Taken by pleasant surprise, Jae-hee is practically giddy as she says yes, and makes him pinky promise never to betray her so that they’ll be together for a thousand years.

Back in the present, Maru sees a street stall and remembers the happy times he used to spend there with Jae-hee. He mentally kicks himself to snap out of it, reminding himself that there’s no returning to the past, and even then, he’s not the same Maru he once was.

He tells himself that from this moment on, it’s over. Now is the time to move on. He lets the past image of himself and Jae-hee walk away, and struggles not to look back.

It’s sort of funny when Joon-ha finds Eun-ki scarfing down some fried chicken while she digs into her workload, all from her hospital bed. Even though Maru saved her life, she harps on the fact that he wasn’t an actual doctor, and she could have died.

However, it seems that the reason she’s so upset about it is because she’s done her research and knows that her doctor impostor and Jae-hee have some sort of history.

She takes a call from one of her spies, reporting that Jae-hee took something close to one million dollars from the bank, and orders the man to see what Jae-hee uses that money for.

So Eun-ki’s spy follows Jae-hee as she heads back to her old neighborhood dressed to the nines and loaded down with gifts. She stops when she sees an image of her childhood self in front of Maru’s house, until her attention is drawn to the commotion happening outside.

He’s got an angry husband demanding to know Maru’s whereabouts, and Jae-gil calmly explains that it just isn’t possible that Maru would sleep with a married woman, since even gigolos have principles. The wife finally confesses that it was all a misunderstanding, and that she only had pictures of Maru on her phone. Unsurprisingly, Maru has a pretty large ajumma fan base.

No, I don’t quite know why Jae-gil breaks a plank of wood on his head, other than to seem more intimidating(?). In a funny turnabout, the wife wonders if she’ll be more available to Maru if she gets a divorce, which sends both her and her husband running out the gate. Good riddance.

Jae-hee asks Jae-gil if the cause of the fight was Maru, and seems almost indignant as she asks, “What is he doing with his life right now?”

Turns out he’s accompanying Choco to a doctor’s visit, and even though the doctor says she’s much better than before, she still mouths to Maru: “I’m still sick.”

She keeps making this point as they leave the hospital, and Maru seems used to this “I’m sick” song and dance. Once he tells her that she’s not allowed to go drinking or clubbing she bursts out that she should have just died back then.

Choco: “Oppa, you abandoned me back then! You were crazy for Jae-hee Unni and ruthlessly abandoned your sister who was sick. It’s your fault that I’m suffering such pain now. If I die, then it’s all your fault too!”

Even though she does have a point, something about her words makes this conversation seem oddly manipulative. Especially when she turns right back around and tells Oppa to give her a piggyback ride, since she’s tired from yelling at him.

Meanwhile, Jae-gil explains the whole gigolo thing to Jae-hee as being born out of necessity, especially with his father’s debt looming over him and Choco’s constant medical bills. Also, no one hires former convicts.

As Maru carries Choco home, Jae-gil explains that the only reason Maru is alive is because of Choco. But even so, he’s still dead inside. Interestingly enough, Jae-gil asks why God is so cruel to Maru, which is the same question she’d once posed to him.

She asks him why they haven’t moved out of the same old dump, and Jae-gil says that it’s because of her. Because Maru was worried that if he moved, Jae-hee might not be able to find him, so he waited every day. Oof. Do you feel like a boob, Jae-hee? You should be.

She’s gone by the time Maru gets home, and once Choco’s in bed Jae-gil hands him an envelope of money from Jae-hee, and that she said she was repaying her debt to him. Oof, times ten. It would have been less terrible if she’d given him nothing at all, but money? Harsh. Really, really harsh.

Maru grabs the envelope and goes running to try and catch up to Jae-hee, who’s broken one of her fancy heels (and the one-shoe deal is reminiscent of her first meeting with Maru).

When he doesn’t find her, he crushes the money in his fist.

Jae-hee’s already driving away, but she remembers the moment in the motel as well as a new part of the scene we haven’t seen, where Maru gave her his shirt and she’d hugged him as she swore that she’d repay the debt for the rest of her life.

And in the present, she sits hunched over the steering wheel in her parked car, just taking it all in.

Eun-ki is in the yard to greet Jae-hee when she arrives home, and explains that she snuck out of the hospital. Her tone is icy even through her forced smile, as she asks Jae-hee what gave her the right to let a med school dropout take care of her.

Her tone turns even icier when she asks why Jae-hee gave almost a million dollars to that same dropout, which has Jae-hee surprised. I like that Eun-ki doesn’t mince words and explains upfront that she’s had spies tailing Jae-hee ever since her own mother was pushed out of the house which, presumably, caused her premature death.

“I’m going to get revenge,” Eun-ki informs her. “I’m going to find your weakness and kick you out just as my mom was kicked out.”

Jae-hee tries to counter that her words are harsh, and I love that Eun-ki’s defense is that she’s the one playing fair by revealing her strategy, compared to Jae-hee, who she pretty much calls a deceptive snake. I’m likin’ Eun-ki’s metaphorical balls of steel.

When Eun-ki talks about releasing the photos of Jae-hee delivering money to Maru, Jae-hee tries to cover her tracks by saying she gave him the money out of gratitude for saving Eun-ki’s life, a thought which makes Eun-ki burst out in laughter. She doesn’t believe one word of it.

She beats Jae-hee at her own game by poking holes in her story, and easily shows how she could turn the situation around by claiming that Jae-hee paid Maru to kill her. Eun-ki: “There’s no need for you to get so worked up. I just think this rationale is more convincing.”

But Jae-hee brings out her claws and shows that she’s no wilting flower by lying to Eun-ki that Maru threatened her with the scandalous secret of Eun-ki getting slapped with a drug possession charge seven years ago.

Whoa. This is a side of Jae-hee we haven’t seen, and she’s just as icy as Eun-ki as she turns the tables and not-so-subtly threatens her with outing that possibly damning secret. It’s a regular blackmail-a-palooza up in here.

We get a peek into the drug incident in question, where it turns out that Eun-ki took the fall for a friend (or boyfriend) who promised to use his dad’s influence to help her company’s financial situation. Iiinteresting.

Back in the present, she gives that same man a call, and can hear the sound of his wife and baby on the other end. That knowledge seems to hurt her, but she tamps it down to retain her cool facade.

She tells him that she didn’t take the fall for him in order to save her father’s company, but because she loved him. And we can totally see that flash of vulnerability on her face, which makes it all the more tragic. Obviously her former boyfriend was/is a tool, and she says as much before she hangs up.

When he calls her back, Eun-ki drops her phone into an aquarium. Good for her.

It’s raining out, and Maru picks up a call from Jae-gil, who’s happy as a clam with a girl under his arm. He claims he’ll be gone for a week, which Maru just shrugs off.

Am I the only one who finds it a little weird that Eun-ki’s family dinner includes two lawyers? After her father gets carted off in a wheelchair, Eun-ki shares an almost mischievous glance with Joon-ha before she drops the bomb: she’s reported Maru to the police, for threatening Jae-hee, thus trapping her in her lie.

Oooh, I love this odd couple and their clever game of one-upmanship. I love that Joon-ha is totally on Eun-ki’s side, and that they coordinated this together. Heck, I just love that Eun-ki won this round, which means I’m firmly in her corner.

Maru finally works up the nerve to return Jae-hee’s money, but he can’t bring himself to ring the doorbell and plops it in the mailbox instead, with a note.

A call from a frantic Choco sends him running home – the police have arrived. They inform him that Han Jae-hee has brought blackmail charges against him and place him under arrest, which has got to be like a kick to the family jewels.

Choco runs after them in the rain, begging the police not to take her Oppa. Maru tries to calm her hysterics, but she pulls out the tried-and-true “So what if I die?” card, which finally brings Maru to a breaking point.

“Then die,” Maru says coldly, catching Choco by surprise. I wonder what it’d take to have him really lose his cool.

Jae-hee has to go to the police station to confirm her statement with Maru, an idea that has her wringing her hands. When Maru’s brought into the room he just levels this look at her – a mixture of hurt and resignation – that says volumes more than words.

The policeman present asks her if her claim was true, and after a looong pause, Jae-hee steels herself. “The man sitting in front of me has threatened my family.” Ouch. I know where she’s coming from, having been trapped in her lie and all, but she had a long time to think about whether she should throw Maru under the bus. And then she did. That makes this all even crueler.

As this hits home, we hear Maru in voiceover: “I was planning on understanding you. I know that I no longer have the right to have Noona anymore. That Noona and I now belong to entirely different worlds. Because I knew that more than anything else in this world, even if you didn’t go this far, I was planning to forget you, Noona. Even if you didn’t go this far, I was planning on sending you, Han Jae-hee, to the person you wanted to go to.”

Someone needs to knock some sense into this boy. Regardless, he remains completely silent, which the police take as a confession to his crime.

And of course, once Jae-hee gets home, she’s handed the envelope of money Maru returned to her. Upstairs, Dad is tearing Eun-ki a new one, not for sending her stepmother to the police station, but over business matters.

They both have pretty different opinions on unions, with Dad being 100% against them and Eun-ki willing to cooperate, provided the result is mutually beneficial. Dad even shatters a glass in a rage, cutting Eun-ki’s cheek in the process. Which she takes like a boss. No surprise there.

He tells Eun-ki that he won’t give his precious company to someone who can’t protect it, and voices her worst fears – that Jae-hee and Eun-suk can fill her spot if needed. “If you can’t handle it, run away,” Dad yells. “Run away like your mother.” Wait, what? Dad thinks Mom just… left?

Later, Jae-hee checks in on Eun-ki, now sporting a cheek bandage. Eun-ki already knows all about the mini hearing, and says that due to the lack of evidence or confession, Maru could get out scot-free.

However, Eun-ki doesn’t plan on letting him go that easy. We see Jae-hee’s inner word-that-rhymes-with-witch come out as she tells Eun-ki that the money was returned to her – after all, Maru failed to kill Eun-ki. (In this super complicated hypothetical situation/lie.)

Jae-hee thinks she’s putting Eun-ki in her place by threatening her with the drug scandal, and knows that one-third of the board opposes Eun-ki’s succession, because they think she’s weak. Which, really? Have they met her?

Eun-ki’s smile stays frosty as she lets Jae-hee get in a few more parting jabs. I’m guessing the payback will be on a scorched earth level.

Maru gets to cool his heels in jail for the night while Jae-hee gets to read bedtime stories to her son. As for Eun-ki, she burns the midnight oil at work and drinks alcohol straight from the bottle. That’s just plain impressive. (Don’t do this in real life, folks.)

He’s released the next morning, only Choco is nowhere to be found. A local ajumma tells him that Choco fainted in the rain and was taken to the hospital.

Maru is by her bedside in no time, but he can’t stop thinking about the harsh words he said to her. When he takes her hand, he also remembers her blaming her sickness on him abandoning her. A different, harsher look crosses his features, like he’s found new resolve.

Eun-ki’s cool enough to go on a dirt-biking excursion, though she’s soon joined by another rider. It’s a pretty cool action/scenic jaunt, even though the other faceless rider crashes, and Eun-ki’s breaks stop working as she veers dangerously close to the edge of a cliff.

She tries and fails to skid to a halt, and the dirt bike falls over the edge while she hangs from a jutting branch. She starts losing her grip…

And strangely enough, the other rider is revealed to be Maru, and he arrives just in time to grab hold of her hand.

 
COMMENTS

I have no idea what was happening in that last scene, but I’m pretty excited to find out. At least, I doubt a “Whoops, I just happened to be dirt-biking on the same scenic route as you” will suffice.

This episode was a little light on the Maru and heavy on the Eun-ki, but you won’t find me complaining. I like that our two main characters are getting enough time to be fleshed out as individuals before we end up seeing them collide, which is a rare thing in the whole Fated To Be aspect of the dramaverse. Sure, some freaky coincidences put Jae-hee back in Maru’s orbit, but all their decisions from the end of the plane ride have come from choice, and not Fate, which is refreshingly nice to see.

I’m guessing that we’re either in for a dramatic reveal later that will somehow try to justify Jae-hee’s behavior, or that she’s just lost her humanity. Because while I believed her wide-eyed innocence, it just took that one moment of her going stone cold to Eun-ki in order to shake up my entire perception of her.

Granted, Eun-ki is capable of turning her bitchiness off and on too, but she seems much more honest about her actions as opposed to Jae-hee, who made that jump from wide-eyed and wondering to cold and calculating like she was flipping on a light switch. That takes a different kind of character, and a different level of deceptiveness, than someone like Eun-ki.

I started out with a somewhat mild level of understanding for Jae-hee, just waiting to see a justification for her actions, but the confession scene pretty much killed that hope. Deliberating over her decision to damn Maru further for the longest time didn’t do much to help her cause, since that just means that even with careful thought, Jae-hee will do wrong.

Maru is no knight in shining armor either, which makes for some rich (if not sometimes frustrating) character conflict. I wasn’t really annoyed with him doing the whole “I’ll take the fall for Noona” bit, but his inner monologue about how he was going to forgive and forget nearly had me climbing up the walls. Is there a limit to how much this boy can be stepped on before he fights back, or is he destined to remain a beautiful doormat?

If Eun-ki does get to stay the way she is, I hope she teaches Maru a thing or two about toughing it up. Then again, she also has a painful history of self-sacrifice-gone-awry along with a healthy dose of daddy issues, so maybe the two of them aren’t so different after all.

But really, Maru, I’m just trying to get on your level. You have to help me help you.

 
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=a0KUm43aXqU

some of the behind the scenes of some yet to air stuff.

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He is so adorable!

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Omg i was thinking that Nice Guy was gonna be good and boy am I glad that I turned out to be right! And yes, Maru could really learn a few things from Eun-ki. Though I was sad to see Gaksital go, I am just SOO glad to see this one come in.

One thing that I really found weird though, in this is the brother/sister relationship. Last episode, I thought that it was heartless of him leaving his sister sick, but then watching this episode made me realize that even his relationship with his sister is hella complicated. I mean, how she's kinda spoiled at the hospital, but then gets really worried and scared for him when the police come but then ends her worry with "so what if I die??" I feel like her bratty/bitchyness stems from her worry that her brother will leave her and thus makes it so that she emphasizes her sickness(although she is actually sick) in a bratty way.

Plus, I really like Maru's character a lot more in this. While we knew that he had a lot of things going on in the first ep, I feel like his character was just like, "im in love with a girl who dumped me and now im so sad and my life sucks." Understandably, it was just the first episode, but im glad we've gotten some depth tacked on.

sooo all in all this looks like its gonna be great and im super exited!!!

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I never watched a series like this but I'm sticking around for this one. I have to know how this ends. I'm impatiently waiting for a shoe to drop. A murderous calculating badass shoe that will have Jae Hee and Daddy Dearest tumbling down.

One thing I don't understand is why would a company board think Eun Ki weak? It seems like a cliche to have the next head be put through the ringer to prove her/himself when they obviously have the skill to takeover the company. It would make more sense of them trying to oust her out of fear and loathing than her so called "weakness".

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Korea is not USA. Korea is a very misogynistic country and most, NOT all, men and women are born into it can't see that. Ever hear about SlutWalks in just about every country?

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I don't get all the blame thrown at JH because it was the Primo b*th who put a stranger, who actually saved her life, in jail just to play JH.

EK used MR to one up her stepmother; he wasn't even a person to her, just a on object in a game.

The sister's recent hospitalization? Not JH's doing but EK.

There are so many things that will be discovered. While is Daddy in a wheelchair? Why JH stopped visiting MR in jail? How did EK's mother die?

It I remember correctly, the writer never creates an ultimately bad character and gives some kind of redemption to everyone at the end.

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But no one force JH to betrayed Maru by telling the police that he blackmailing her family... just right in front of him. And JH DID tell EG that Maru blackmailed her for EG's drug case.

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My point is that JH and EG both lie, scheme, and betray. JH lies about Maru blackmailing her after EG accuses her in hiring MR to kill EG on the plane. They both use MR in their dirty little game.

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Agree. The women are going to use MR, Maybe EG will tell her dad that MR was and still is JH's lover. That could get MR & JH killed, which leaves only JH's son for EG to destroy. Just saying but still it's a LKH drama...

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Only Jae Hee actually knows Ma Ru, so her "using" him is much more personal, though Eun Ki's actions are just as hurtful to him. I mean, Ma Ru is going to use Eun Ki, now, in the same dehumanizing way that she used him because his goal is to hurt Jae Hee. I think there's enough blame to go around for everyone in this drama, even Choco.

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well said!

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You are right. I was trying to convey exactly that. Everyone is messed up and using others pawns in a game to win.

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I agree that both JH and EG scheme, but I don't think EG is a liar. All she has done thus far is back JH into a corner about the 800,000 that she took (from EG's family, naturally) to pay off Maru for unknown (to EG) reasons. I think EG is actually quite honest and has an intense proud streak in her that drives her to prove she's right in spite of the collateral damage. While she certainly isn't sunshine and rainbows, she's not underhanded like JH and I actually kind of respect her odd sense of integrity. She doesn't seem to give a shit about anything except protecting the company and herself, but she doesn't pretend to be anything other than what she is. Like she was telling JH, at least EG is brave enough to be upfront and honest about her end goals and her tactics.

JH is cowardly in addition to being a schemer, which makes her much, much scarier because she pretends (to herself and to others) that she is more noble than she is. So yes, in this instance EG hurt Maru but she didn't lie or do anything underhanded to do so. I doubt that she will actively use Maru as a pawn against JH unless JH continues to make stupid mistakes like she did in this episode, since I don't think EG likes to get her hands dirty. She much prefers to let other people dig their own graves.

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i think we have to remember how the characters look from each other's perspectives with the knowledge available to them, rather than from the totally omniscient perspective of the viewer.

for example, how maru would appear to eunki: a stranger who, despite lacking a medical license, treated her in a highly precarious situation with rather scary looking needles and with bizarre timing, has suspicious connections with her stepmother, and was involved in a questionably large monetary transaction with said stepmother who is revealing herself to be scarier by the minute. and if she did any sort of background check, the fact that he was an ex-con for murder would probably have stood out.

with all that and the toxic paranoia that eunki's home fosters (seriously, wtf eunki's dad), it wouldn't be that far of a stretch to presume that maru is an agent working for jaehee against eunki. in which case, her actions do make logical sense.

and as for maru's anger towards jaehee, he doesn't know about eunki's involvement, or really anything about eunki's existence except as 'jaehee's step-daughter because now jaehee left me for some old rich dude.' all he knows is that jaehee left him money to ostensibly absolve herself of a debt she had promised to never forget and then bam -- she's accusing him of blackmail, turning what had already been humiliating and unasked for compensation into an even worse betrayal, a set-up.

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I am questioning your line of thinking. EG did not see the needles as she was unconscious; the stranger definitely saved her and she knew that; if he was working with JH, that would be foolish of him to save her, wouldn't it?

I don't understand how EG could accuse JH in planting MR on the plane when it's impossible to predict when she might collapse because of heart condition?

JH "paid" MR a large sum of money for saving her? Not killing? EG did not do any background check on MR so she is not aware of his criminal past.

It just looks to me that EG's mind is always scheming and looking for the same in others. She is going to be played by MR soon, how is that for karma?

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First of all we know from EG that she has her eyes and ears everywhere and probably her lawyer was also on the plane reporting to her what happened.

JH first told EG that she paid money for saving her but changed it because EG didn't believe her. And because JH didn't want to reveal that she wanted to pay MR money to compensate his pain... she told EG that MR was blackmailing her. That's why EG decided to go to the police.

And JH didn't do anything but to confirm her lie at the police station.

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This, this, this. Totally agree with what you and Viv said. From EG's perspective, all the shit that went down (including the huge monetary transaction) is HUGELY suspicious and frankly I don't blame her for jumping to the conclusion that JH wants her dead. Yes, that is absolutely a sign of her own POV coloring her assumptions of others' minds, but given what a destructive force JH is turning out to be, I can't blame her. All EG did is call JH's bluff. It's JH who was too cowardly to admit that she did wrong (AGAIN) and who let an innocent man take the fall for her misdeeds (AGAIN).

The situation is certainly weird, but how else was EG supposed to interpret the fact that her sworn enemy--JH--seems to be intimately familiar with the non-doctor who barely succeeded in rescuing her on the plane, and paid him an outrageously large sum of money shortly after? A thousand dollars might make sense to give him as a reward for saving EG's life (if she were somehow able to believe that JH values her life in the first place), but $800,000? That just doesn't make any sense.

Of course, from our perspective, Maru ended up being a pawn in EG's game against JH, but from her perspective he was not collateral damage, but JH's co-conspirator. So for her, he was not a pawn, but a target.

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What would her lawyer tell her? She collapsed, was dying, a man showed up and started saving her, JH said that he was not a doctor, he went ahead and saved her life anyway, and that was all JH's plot? It makes absolutely no sense. But that was the only hypothesis that came to EG's mind. It tells a lot about the way her mind works.

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I have to backtrack a little b/c after rewatching the scene/rereading the recap (no, I'm not obsessed at ALL!) I don't actually think that EG believes the hypothesis. As Heads points out, it was a tactic that EG was using to poke holes in JH's excuse that she gave the Dr. the billion won as a reward for his heroism. And whether you'd buy it or not, the argument that JH & MR were conspiring to kill EG holds as much water as JH's lame excuse that she was paying MR an exorbitant sum to thank him for saving her mortal enemy of a stepdaughter.

Don't get me wrong, I think EG's totally paranoid. But she's not stupid or irrational, and she has pretty good reasons for being paranoid given that EVERYONE around her is dishonest and underhanded in one form or another. She presented the hypothesis to JH to illustrate that she's aware of how easily facts can be manipulated to suit one's agenda. In other words: she knows JH is up to something sketchy, and that the Dr. is involved, and she is not going to let them off the hook for whatever is going on. Because she is taking JH down.

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The lawyer visited her in the hospital and she was the first one to say that the quack doctor almost killed her on a plane. The lawyer tried to tell her that he saved her. But EG's mind was already at work concocting a story that JH planned faulty emergency care to kill her. It all happened before EG found out about the money. Honestly, I see people retelling the story in a way that it fits their conceptualization of EG and JH.

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Honestly I'm not sure if we're still disagreeing at this point, haha. I'm with you that EG was totally freaking out at the hospital, and that she jumped to 5 million conclusions that were led by her paranoia and not her rational mind.

Given the information she was working with at the time (ending up in a hospital w/out knowing what exactly happened to get her there, overhearing that the man who jammed giant needles into her chest was not in fact a doctor and was somehow connected to/known by Jae Hee), her reaction makes total sense to me. I'm not saying it was the morally "right" thing to do (which, given these characters and this genre, what does that even mean?), but it makes sense to me that she'd jump to that conclusion.

I don't see my interpretation as retelling the story (any more than any interpretation by its very nature retells a story), but to each his/her own.

I actually don't hate Jae Hee at this point. I think she's a coward and I want to smack her but I don't know enough about why she chose to send Maru to jail in the first place to draw any definitive conclusions about her character. I also think that Eun Gi continuously reads way more malice into Jae Hee's intentions than is actually there. That said, I'd take Eun Gi's overly suspicious, paranoid approach to relationships over Jae Hee's subtly manipulative behavior any day. At least I don't get the sense that Eun Gi lies to herself about what she is.

Jae Hee seems cling onto the idea that she is a good person but she ends up destroying everything/everyone that she touches because she's not brave enough to actually stand up and do the right thing when she's called out on it. She is also extremely opportunistic. EG doesn't seem to give a rat's ass what is "right" or "wrong" but at least she doesn't try to fool others and herself into thinking that she does. Because all that does is cloak selfishness in a veneer of good intentions and earnestness, which is what made Maru feel the need to "rescue" Jae Hee continuously back in the day, and what made it possible for JH to screw him over yet again.

This is why I don't blame EG for Maru being jailed. EG caught JH in a lie and called her bluff. JH had any number of opportunities to clear the air but she didn't. The fact that (to EG's knowledge) Maru accepted nearly a million from Jae Hee implicates him in whatever dirty dealings JH was involved in. Whether or not EG believes that Maru was trying to kill her, IMO she has reason to believe that he and Jae Hee are up to no good. Had EG taken action to bring harm to Maru before discovering the billion won transaction, I would probably be in your camp: bitch is crazy and needs to be taken down. However, given that she caught both JH and Maru in a lie together, I believe that given the information she has, EG can and should try to ferret the truth out of them however possible.

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I agree with this. Remember, EG thinks the universe is her enemy. Very pessimistic of people around her. And the fact that she has always hated JH, it's not surprising that the 'act of kindness' is interpreted negatively. Plus, JH and the 'fake doctor' knows each other...and she gave him money. If such supporting information are added to negative perception, then viola! JH-is-trying-to-kill-me analogy.

Also, it seems that JH hasn't done anything suspicious so far aside from what happened 6 years ago - she and her dad hugging and becoming her step-mom. JH is def scheming behind EG 's back but I don't think EG's 'that' aware of the extent of JH's 'selfish' or 'take over the company' plans yet (if there's already going on). If she knows something, she knows very little. But this is just a theory of mine.

Her attitude towards JH is coherent with how she treats the rest of the people around her.

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I am not obsessed either but if you watch the scene at the hospital, paranoid EG tells the lawyer that the "quack doctor" almost killed her while the lawyer tries to argue that he actually saved her. It was before EG found out that JH gave MR a large sum of money. This was the first thought on her mind, people are trying to kill her.

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Thanks for the recaps, HeadsNo2! I just read recaps for episode 1 and 2 in quick succession and I am so into the story.

Your writing is reminiscent of javabeans' and that's about the highest praise this reader could give! Looking forward to your next installments. :)

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By the ways, does anyone have an idea about when Eun Ki will become amnesic? O.o

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considering how we seem to be diving straight into conflict like that *snaps* for this show, I conclude it may be sooner than we think.

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i think that eun gi does not desperate want the company since she takes the fall for love not the company's finacial problem. but the reason why she's sticking to the company is maybe her mom wants her to become the heir so that they can live together . and heard some say that because the drug case, eun gi's father is cold to her. and if that really the case between them then the father also owns eun gi for saving the company yet protect her love.

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AWESOME EP!

i don't dislike jaehee...she had to lie at the police station cos if she revealed any trace of knowing maru then eunki and her dad and the family lawyers will learn about jaehee's past....

and yeh that motorbike race was so random.... but we'll know why in ep 3 :)

i've always liked SJK cos he's such a pretty boy but he can sure act !!! <3

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Dad knows JH's past doesn't he? and the lawyer who accompanied her to the police station is her ally (or more than just an ally)

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I feel like stabbing someone with a pencil as soon as I finish the episode. Not because I didn't like it, but, because it messes with my brain even when there are just two episodes out and I have to wait until next week to find out what else they have in store for us. I do like how Maru and Eun-ki sort of mirror each other in some sense and similar to each other as well. I don't know whether the writer was trying to make them connect or whether they're just trying to play us out.

I still can't find myself pitying Maru though... I know he's suppose to be that pitiable character that we could relate to, but, I don't pity him. In fact, I just find myself extremely irritated by him with each second. It was his choice, he had a choice. He didn't have to go to Jae-hee and left his sister, yet, he did. He didn't have to take the fall, but, he did anyway. I might not understand love, but, I know stupidity when I see one and that was plenty stupid. I mean, come on man, how much can you love a person to put yourself on the line? I'd do a lot for love, but, taking a fall for murder is not one of it. If you love a person, you'd have helped them learned the lesson and stick by them, not take the damn fall!

Eun-ki... I don't have that family drama, but, I find myself feeling sorry for her right away. I feel bad at how she had to put a wall around her heart and put up with a lot. She didn't ask for her dad to marry a woman who was old enough to be her older sister, she didn't even ask for her mother to leave. It wasn't her fault and she was trying really hard to deal with it and she can't. To top it all up, she fell for a douche and take the fall for him -- That I still call stupid. But, in her case, she was really just hungry for love of which she was deprived from and she allowed herself to be used if it was just to believe that someone truly cared for her. That was just tragic. Still, I like that the writers were smart enough not to let her be your typical whiny heroine, instead - even with all the pain -- she's a kick-ass career woman that can basically give you a run for your money ^^

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Do a lot of people really like Eun Ki? I haven't warmed up to her yet. And Jae Hee, well... I don't hate her but, of course, after what she did to Maru... Really frustrated at her because how could she treat him like THAT after what he did?

I didn't even expect anything this dramatic because I was only interested in seeing Joongki heheh... but wow. Melodrama is an interesting genre! P:

And on another note, very random last scene.

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I like her a lot so far. But I tend to love smart, gutsy, complicated female characters.

That's not to say that I think she's a good person or that I don't want to smack her sometimes. But I look forward to her screen time and can't wait to see how her story progresses. Also, I find her straightforward ballsiness a LOT more compelling than Jae Hee's cowardice and underhanded scheming. I can see Eun Ki becoming a true hero and am rooting for her to find healing away from her horrible abusive father, whereas at the moment I just want Jae Hee to crawl into a hole of shame and wither away.

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@rearwindow: I am calling the truce. I realized that I don't really care for both; I liked JH because she was abused and grew up poor but tried to make something as a career woman. Then she was a loving mother and tried to remediate MR situation with Choco's medical bills. She is not evil and many things she does out of good intentions get screwed up for the purpose of upping this drama angst.

Now I see that she has long-standing plans and is able to betray and lie and turn bitchy if needed.

EG is paranoid and I am sad that her paranoia prevents her from being grateful to a stranger who saved her life and that she is a hard-ass toward her baby brother. I see cracks in her defenses and feel sorry for her. At the end of the day, they are fictional characters and I am not in anyone's camp. It's when people demonize one character for the very same thing that the other does, I take notice.

For example, poor EG is abused by the father and that explains why she is so harsh. But JH too was severely abused as a girl and grew up poor but no, she is a baddy.

Ok, off my high horse. Peace.

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For what it's worth, your comments definitely got me thinking about Jae Hee in a new light and realize just how much about her we don't know. I can think of some semi-admirable reasons that she might have chosen to screw over Maru previously (who knows what EG's dad had over her, for instance, and her child now is certainly a liability to her in that she may feel the need to protect him at any cost). Initially, I had written her off as the Big Bad but I definitely see her more in shades of gray now. Anyway, thanks for the thought-provoking debate!

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for the last scene it must be maru who set it up. he must has followed eun gi.

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That scene, where Eun-gi was super pissed, working and then downing that alcohol from the bottle like a boss, the music all intense.. and then, right after, you have this soft melody and then eun-gi's body on table where she's practically hugging herself all vulnerable-like. I really liked this scene, shows alot about her already.
Poor girl. hope she finds true love (which we all know she will!)

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I'm liking this show a lot...but please...possible amnesia? Ah gee.

Saw an interesting youtube video on Nice Guy that made me say "uhmmmmmmmmmmm." I remember Marathon. http://youtu.be/C1Myz0FwdOM

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Eun Ki is not a bitch and she is not a bad person so is not Maru. People who have been trampled on and cheated on in their past (Eun Ki taking the blame for the person she loved, Maru taking the blame for the person he loved) decide to put an armour up and become 'cold-hearted'. That way they can protect themselves from being hurt again. Sure Eun Ki might sound mean and cold hearted but did she do anything bad?
That will also be the case with Maru. They might seem mean but they're good people with good hearts.
Past experiences can change a person to such extent that they go from sweet to sour. But the person's core doesn't change. They are still good people.

Sometimes when I read people's comments on drama's I feel like they haven't experienced much..it's easy for them to call a character bad or mean or good or etc..
It's kinda like in real life. But there's a story behind every person, also a reason for every decision.

I'm really glad a drama like this is airing..It's very realistic as things like this and people this actually exist. As oppose to the sweet and cute naive girls that we see in drama all the time.

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The person I thought would be a bad guy after watching the promos,turns out to be the nicest of all the characters :D

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and by that I mean Ma Roo..

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I'm liking Eun Ki and Jae Hee so far, but Maru? Not so much. My impression of him is still tainted by the fact he chose Jae Hee over his sister, but I'm hoping there's more reason or history behind it all.

Also, is Choco actually a Korean name? I can't help but be reminded of Chocobo (FF VII) every time I see that name now...

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She likes chocolate as a kid. His dad couldn't care less to even think of a proper name for his daughter so he ended up registering her with the name Choco (since the rest of the neighborhood has been calling her as such).

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*Her!

What am I thinking? Haha.

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Joong-ki oppa is to cute...when he gets serious he still looks like a little boy seeing his teddy beaten up.

THANK YOU SO MUCH DB FOR EVERYTHING!!!

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Could have sworn the money that Jae Hee gave to Maru was $100,000 and not $1 million... Also, is anyone else getting flashbacks of Can You Hear My Heart, with the names Maru and Joon-ha floating around. Plus, I'm sure the name Jae Hee has been used in at least 5 different dramas. K-dramas need to come to with some original names! Sam Soon!

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Maru is turning into a scary person. And Song Joong Ki is doing so well playing him. And gotta agree, Eun Ki makes an interesting female character.Jaehee is interesting too. bring on the revenge plan!

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How in the world did Maru know where Jae-Hee is living? someone please enlighten me:P thank you! AWESOME DRAMA

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AHH I can see why eunki and Maru will end up together...both have sacrificed themselves for the sake of someone whose abandoned them, both turned cold hearted. It's a perfect fit. There has to be a legit reason why jaehee did what she did. The memories Maru had of her...can she really turn into a a mega, ultimate cold bitch just like that ?

Btw park si yeon is incredibly beautiful

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Thanks for the recap! I'm really enjoying the show so far.

Song Joong-ki's baby-face amazes me over and over - I can hardly believe that he's older than me. I mean, I regularly get mistaken as 10 years younger than I actually am, but I think he STILL looks younger than me. Good genes.

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