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Heirs: Episode 1

Finally—and I mean FINALLY—we see the premiere of the most-hyped drama of the year, Heirs: He Who Wears the Crown, Endure Its Weight, which for purposes of efficiency and just plain sense we will be calling, simply, Heirs.

My biggest concern about Heirs would that it would be all hype, no follow-through. All talk, no action. All big names, no plotular significance. With the massive promo machine accompanying this drama—which got going about seven months in advance of its premiere, which is approximately six months more than the average other drama—you had to wonder if they were building it up to a fever pitch that no reasonable drama would be able to match in execution.

My reaction to the premiere: Measured optimism. I liked it. I know, I’m a little surprised that I did, but also relieved because I was pretty much going to watch this drama regardless. I see flashes of promise here and there, in between the parade of stars and starlets, poking its head out from behind the wall of embarrassing English. (I can NOT wait for the show to head back to Korea.) There are hints at emotional depth and layered characters—well, some of them, but as the ones I refer to are mainly the principal cast I think we’re fine on that score. And perhaps most importantly for a romantic comedy, I really like the leads together. There’s acting talent on both sides, individually, as well as character warmth and depth, and then you add in chemistry to the mix and I think we’re looking at a potential sensation. Just a hunch.

Okay, enough dithering. On to the show!

SONG OF THE DAY

Lee Hong-ki – “말이야” from the Heirs OST. [ Download ]

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EPISODE 1 RECAP

Southern California coastline. Our hero surfs the day away with his buddies, laughing it up and looking light-hearted. And then… a broody shower scene on the beach. HAHA. I dunno whatchoo got to be so angsty about, uber-rich teenager hero-manchild, but the music and mood tells us he is Very Serious On the Inside about something.

May as well introduce him off the bat: This is 18-year-old KIM TAN (pronounced tahn and not, say, like the English word tan. He’s played by Lee Min-ho, but you either knew that already or this is your first drama ever).

His narration tells us of the parting words with which his older brother sent him abroad to the States, so blunt and succinct: No need to get good grades, just have fun and live lightly. “People with money just eat and play—they don’t bother with dreams,” he’d said. “If possible, don’t even come back.”

And thus Tan realized that his study abroad was more like exile, and that his cold older brother was staking his claim on what he thought Tan might steal from him. Hyung’s name is KIM WON (Choi Jin-hyuk), and at 31 he’s the president of Jeguk (Empire) Group. Their father is the Jeguk chairman and Tan its future heir. But while there’s no literal throne at stake here, royalty seems an apt metaphor: There’s only one crown in this family, and Big Bro’s gonna wear it.

Tan sits at a cafe and is served by a waitress who speaks to him in Korean. (Why hello there, Yoon Jin-seo, what are you doing in Heirs?) Overacting American Friend asks how Tan feels about his family relationships, or rather his lack of them. Doesn’t it sting that nobody’s on his side? Tan just looks around idly and thinks, “I’m too lazy to hate anyone.”

Next we meet CHOI YOUNG-DO (Kim Woo-bin), hotel heir and Big Man on Campus back in Seoul. He bullies a hapless fellow student with a baseball while his lackeys snicker. Aw, why you gotta be an asshole, Woo-bin-ah? His good cheer makes his actions all the more chilling, because everything is laced with underlying menace.

But more than being hit by the ball or mocked, the sense of terror comes from Young-do’s icy reminder that no matter what the victim does, his fate is sealed: His life will continue to be this way forever, and one day these bullies will be his employers.

Young-do gives the guy props for standing up to him, then leaves with a pleasant “See ya after vacation.” Behind him, his sidekicks start the beating.

Young-do drops by a motorcycle shop, where our heroine drops in to deliver a food order. She’s CHA EUN-SANG (Park Shin-hye), a no-nonsense high school student who won’t take crap from anyone (yay for that), calling the cops right away when a couple of the shop ajusshis harass her for a date. The ajusshi hastily backs the hell off, and she marches out to make her next delivery. She catches Young-do’s eye, at least for a moment.

As though we weren’t sure she were a poor Candy girl, she’s got a whole string of part-time jobs. Her friend drops by the cafe where she works; he’s YOON CHAN-YOUNG (Kang Min-hyuk), a platonic childhood buddy who has a girlfriend and encourages Eun-sang to find herself a boyfriend. She scoffs that any time spent not earning money is a waste. Chan-young eyes her with pity, though I’d say Eun-sang has no use for his pity. I do like that about her.

Then, a shrill voice orders Chan-young to look elsewhere—ha, this is the girlfriend, and right away we can tell she’s the high-maintenance type. Her name’s LEE BO-NA (Krystal), she’s an heir (to Mega Entertainment), and she shoots Eun-sang a glare, ordering her to stop flirting with her boyfriend.

Eun-sang is used to Bo-na’s possessive nature and has perfected the way to disarm her fuse with wry nonpliments about how Bo-na’s plenty pretty and how Eun-sang is too busy for this. I get the sense that Bo-na knows she’s being mocked but isn’t quite smart enough to figure out how (it’s all in the tone). Haha. I’m liking Eun-sang more and more.

Bo-na drags Chan-young away, griping about how much she hates Eun-sang. He assures her that they’re buddies, and Bo-na snaps that guys and girls can’t be “just friends.”

Eun-sang launches into her own set of complaints about Bo-na on the phone, although her rant goes unheard by her unni. On the other end of the line, unni is having a fight with her boyfriend in English—ah, this is Yoon Jin-seo. Ignoring the terrrrible English (cringe cringe), unni calls the guy trash. The guy slaps her in the face and says, and I quote, “Bitch get out of my house.”

On her way home, Eun-sang gets caught in the rain and pauses under an awning, where the dreamcatchers in the storefront catch her eye and bring a smile to her face.

Chan-young is on good terms with his father, as we witness as they cook dinner together and chat about his upcoming plans to move to the States. Bo-na insists on following him there, but he hasn’t had a chance to tell Eun-sang yet, with her up to her neck in part-time jobs. As for Eun-sang’s mother, well, Dad refers to her as “the center of power for Jeguk Group”…

…in the sense that she is the Jeguk family housekeeper. She’s also mute, writing her responses on a notepad she carries with her. Mom is warned that the madam of the house is emotional tonight, given that her son (Tan) is ignoring her calls.

Madam Han is on rather rocky terms with stepson Won; when told he has arrived, she downs her wine before he can see her—for whatever reason, she’s not allowed to drink. Hm, so she’s the lady of the house but Won has power over her. That’s interesting, and rather sageuk-like.

Mom scrambles to hide the wineglass for her employer when Won appears. He barely spares a glance for his stepmother as he coldly orders his room cleaned again. Madam Han orders a replacement wine bottle sent to her room, forgoing dinner: “If I were able to swallow any food after suffering this indignity, I’d be a concubine.” So perhaps the sageuk allusions are intentional, then.

Mom wraps up the mistress’s dinner to take home to Eun-sang, telling her that eating and surviving is the most important thing so she should just take it without complaints. Eun-sang says with a bite to her voice, “Is it my fault we live like this?” Is that resentment I hear?

Eun-sang stomps to her tiny room and tearfully blames her sister for leaving them to live in comfort on her own (she’s supposedly going to college in California, though I have my doubts). Then Mom gives her a bankbook to send a large chunk of funds to America—unni is getting married.

Eun-sang is awash in curiosity over her sister’s impending marriage, while Mom is content to stay out of it. She won’t go to the States for the wedding lest they dampen unni’s image, either. Eun-sang says defiantly that they’re not blots on unni’s character, and a slip of the tongue reveals that Eun-sang carries resentment for her sister running away from home. Ah, the subtext is that Eun-sang was left behind in poverty while unni skipped off into the sunset. So rather than wiring that money overseas, Eun-sang says she’ll deliver it in person.

Marriage is also the issue for another of our rich folks, YOO RACHEL (Kim Ji-won), heir to RS International, whose mother announces that she’ll be getting remarried. Rachel balks but Mom breezily tells her to prepare to meet her new daddy.

Rachel is dragged along to lunch, as is the son of her stepfather-to-be, whom we’ve already met as the bullying badass Young-do. Both teenagers sulk in silence while their parents chat pleasantly, occasionally letting out a scoff or sneer. And then Young-do brings the conversation to a screeching halt with the comment, “My sister is exactly my style.” Ha. Oh no you di’n’t.

Young-do’s rudeness earns him a slap to the face (now we see where he got his violent streak) and he leaves the room. Rachel follows him out, though it’s not out of any warm and fuzzy feelings, as she informs Young-do that she’s as opposed to their parents marrying as he is. However, she notes that he probably hates it more, since she is engaged to Kim Tan. And if both weddings happen as planned, then Tan becomes Young-do’s bro-in-law. Aw, is that too much ego for one family?

She think she’s got him all sized up, but Young-do surprises her: “I never said I hated this marriage.” He calls marriage in their class a business merger and points out that her mother holds a number of shares in Jeguk Group: “Who will end up with those?” His words cast a shadow over her face—does he have a point?

Eun-sang works yet another job scrubbing dishes, a Sisyphean task that comes close to cracking her composure today. When her boss asks about her school vacation plans, she answers frankly that she’s going to the States and doesn’t plan to return: “Unni getting married means she doesn’t intend to return to Korea, and that means I’m stuck forever washing dishes and living with my mother.” Leaving is an escape plan she’s been dreaming of for the past ten years.

She packs her things, putting away some blank notebooks for Mom’s use. Eun-sang flips through one of the used ones on the shelf, and the messages weigh down her heart—it’s all stuff like “I’m sorry madam” and “Please don’t be angry, madam.” She cries silently while flipping through the pages, and writes a message in a fresh book: “I’m sorry, Mom. I’ll make something of myself and send for you. Wait just a little.”

Rachel plans a trip to California to see Tan, and while packing she and her mother bicker back and forth some more about Mom’s marriage. Basically her mother offers to cut her free (read: cut her off from her inheritance), and that gets Rachel to back down from her teenage rebelliousness.

Back in his beachfront estate, Tan ignores his calls from Rachel while narrating to us that at first, he’d thought of using his exile to rebel against his brother. But ultimately he ended up taking his advice and living easily, not thinking about too much.

Tan tells Overacting Surfer Bro-Dude that it’s his engagement anniversary, and the exceedingly uncomfortable English conversation at least provides us with one winner. Friend: “You look like none of that is a good thing.” Tan: “No, I always look this good.” (God, these California scenes make me cringe down to my soul. I’ll be so glad when they go back to Seoul.)

Eun-sang lands at LAX with a bit of wide-eyed little-girl-in-the-big-city nervousness. She clutches a page of carefully written notes as she makes her way outside, where she spots Rachel curbside answering a call in Korean. Rachel’s obviously lying (about Tan coming to pick her up and complimenting her about getting prettier), and Eun-sang smiles a bit to herself.

Rachel gets offended and calls her out on it, and after a failed attempted to pretend to be Japanese, Eun-sang apologizes. It wasn’t a mocking smile, though, she assures her—rather, she felt a sense of solidarity for not being the only one to land without a welcoming presence. That just rubs it in more for Rachel, whose mood darkens further.

More surfing. Eun-sang arrives on the pier and notices Tan briefly before continuing on her way. But when she arrives at the address, she’s puzzled at the rundown house and sketchy neighborhood. A sleazy duo answer the door, and Eun-sang fumbles for her English phrasebook. The guy hazards a guess and says her name—must’ve heard it from her sister at some point.

Eun-sang is let in and looks aghast at the frankly disgusting house. The floozy stomps out in a huff and Eun-sang asks the guy about her sister Stella. He laughs at the idea of them getting married and says unni doesn’t go to school, and Eun-sang demands to know where she is.

Tan turns down his friends’ invitation to party hardy, choosing instead to get introspective over his journal at his usual cafe. (“It’s when I’m writing that I think about the fact that I am thinking.”) It’s where Stella unni works, and she chats briefly with him before leaving him to write about how writing makes him think the thoughts that his brother told him not to think. Yeah, it’s all a bit meta, but everybody needs their phase of angsty adolescent journaling, right?

Back at Jeguk Group, Won heads a board meeting where he receives bad news about lower than expected sales for their premium shopping malls. In a nutshell, this scene tells us: (1) President Hyung is a hardass, (2) President Hyung has a tense relationship with Chairman Dad, who technically runs the company though he doesn’t come to work on a daily basis. Not that he needs to—he has eyes and ears in the company reporting to him, behind Won’s back. Hence the tension. Oh, and (3) Chan-young’s friendly dad is one of the board members and looks to be aligned with Chairman Kim, rather than Won.

Back on the beach, Tan looks up and notices Eun-sang on the boardwalk with her suitcase, looking out of place. She spots her sister inside the cafe as unni manages customer leers and accepts their tips. Gahhhh, this ain’t no strip club people. I know this is a Korean drama and not an American one, but aughhhh.

Tan clocks Eun-sang’s upset reaction as Stella flirts with another customer (who asks her to “work for me tonight, you know, work”). He stares at her intently, so intently that it’s actually rather moving, and that’s how Stella finally notices her sister standing there.

The sisters face off on the boardwalk and Eun-sang confronts unni with all the made-up stories of a good school and wonderful fiancé. Unni looks abashed to be caught in her lies, but that doesn’t stop her from opening up her sister’s suitcase right then and there to look for the money.

Eun-sang bursts out that unni was her last hope in this goddamned miserable world, and that she was just hanging in there with mom waiting for her to come back. Unni says sorry, but asks for a pass this time and goes rummaging for that cash.

Eun-sang warns her sister not to dare touch that cash, the money Mom worked so hard to collect, but unni wrests it away and tells her to hurry home. Eun-sang cries after her not to leave, but unni grabs the money and dashes. So Eun-sang is left sobbing over her suitcase crying for her sister to wait for her, and Tan watches sympathetically.

Cringeworthy Surfer Friend pops by to lure Tan away to a party (please make him stop talking, won’t somebody make him stop?). This is when I mute my screen and read the Korean subtitles, because goddamn is this bad. Surfer Brah sees Eun-sang crying and jumps to play wingman, helping her with her things. He calls her a fallen angel and fawns over her, then grabs one of her plastic bags from the suitcase and starts running. Wait, does he think those are drugs? Ha, I do enjoy Eun-sang’s reaction: “On top of everything else, am I being robbed?!”

She chases him onto the beach while he giggles and runs around like a little fiendish Rumplestiltskin, until he runs face-first into a volleyball net and goes down. You twat. Eun-sang tries to grab the plastic bag out of his hands, because it’s a grain powder her mother made for her sister, and the powder goes flying everywhere. And up Surfer Dude’s nose, from the looks of it, as he begins to gag and gurgle.

Tan rushes to his side and recognizes that his buddy’s in trouble. A trip to the emergency room assures them that he’ll be fine, despite his allergic reaction to the beans in the powder. Annoyed, Tan asks what the heck she was doing carrying around that powder, and Eun-sang gets indignant—she was the one robbed.

He stalks off in annoyance, leaving Eun-sang to confront a disapproving-looking cop on her own. In her broken English she tries to explain what her grain powder is, but the cop gives her the hardline—where does she live, are they drugs, is she underage, is she illegal? Ah, so many hot-button American political issues, boiled down into an embarrassing cliche soup of a character.

Then Tan comes strolling up and slings an arm around her shoulder, telling the cop she’s cool, she’s just his girlfriend. And of course Tan is on a first-name basis with the officer, who knows enough of Tan’s checkered history to say that they’ll definitely have to look into it with Tan involved. He confiscates Eun-sang’s passport to hold until they’ve investigated.

Of course Eun-sang doesn’t have a place to stay and no cell phone, though she considers calling her sister. Tan points out that it’s not likely that’ll happen given their huge blowup, and she asks for a ride and his phone, offering to pay for every imposition. He points out her money fixation: “Are you rich?” She mumbles, “It’s because I’m afraid you’ll leave.” Aw, that’s not the answer he was expecting, from his expression.

He drives her to unni’s ramshackle house and waits while she knocks on the door. No answer. She supposes she can wait here till unni shows, and he points out exasperatedly how very naive that is. Fine, do as she wants, he says, and drives off.

Eun-sang huddles on the stoop as a group of rowdy guys spot her and make a few catcalls before thankfully moving on. She decides she can’t stay here and starts to walk off nervously… and Tan’s car comes screeching back. YOU BIG SOFTIE.

“Want to go to my house?” he asks.

 
COMMENTS

There are a lot of characters to get through, and we’ve only gotten through maybe half the main cast. So this first episode presents a lot of setup, and there are a lot of names and relationships to get straight. I do think Heirs does a pretty good job with the introductions, in that I wasn’t frantically flipping through character charts and writing notes to myself to keep everyone straight. (That could be helped by the fact that the setup is, despite all the frills, a very basic one.)

I do have reservations about this writer, but I don’t doubt her ability to create witty dialogue and compelling character relationships, and Heirs has that touch. It also has a nice stylistic moodiness woven in and out of scenes, which I like; we’re given glimpses into characters’ inner lives that belie their outer circumstances, and I like that. A lot. Like how Tan is on the surface a troublemaking rich kid who does nothing but party, but that there’s an internal pull to resist that shell that’s expected of him. More on that in a second.

One of my reservations about the writer is that while she is very good at making hit dramas that start with sparkling romantic banter and are later sprinkled in melo angst (or drowned, in some cases), sometimes I feel like her writing is of a different era. As in, an older, less narratively sophisticated one. Her dramas are all modern gloss, but the themes and conflicts sometimes feel like they belong a couple generations back. It’s actually for this reason that I hoped Heirs might offer something fresh, because by making her characters younger, it actually works with those limitations. In a drama about independent thirtysomething careerwomen, you wonder why they can’t just get over the angst and either make up or break up. But youthful passion mixed with the idea that you don’t quite know yourself yet, that you’re still struggling to make it in the Real World? I think it works.

Heirs actually works on a secondary level for me, and that’s in its invocation of the whole royalty theme. They could have played it as a one-off metaphor and left it there, but as the episode unfolded I felt like I was watching a modernized sageuk drama, and I really liked that.

Consider the family at the center: You have the older chairman on his way out, still in charge but leaving the day-to-day business dealings to his ambitious and competent older son. The drama proper hasn’t outlined the exact family relationships yet but the character descriptions tell us that older brother Won is the son of the first wife, who died when he was young. There was a second wife who has since divorced Dad, and now Madam Han is the young new mistress of the house. The concubine, if you will, who has the safety of a son-heir (Tan), but not eternal security for as long as Tan is not registered under her name in the official family registry. That keeps her as an outsider, and she’s putting all her hopes in Tan to grow up, take over the corporation, and change that registry. Taken on its own I might consider the conflict a bit simplistic (archaic even), but seen as a reimagined Joseon-esque power struggle, I actually dig it.

It also explains the brotherly strife, in having the elder son protecting his interests by keeping his younger brother out of the picture. Tan currently has little power, but he could choose to be a rival should he exert himself… so hyung makes sure to keep him far away and occupied with frivolous pursuits. Sound like a few sageuks you’ve seen? Quite a compelling setup.

As for our hero: Who else is glad he’s not the raving asshole (however entertaining) that this writer loves to make popular? I found the heroes of Secret Garden and A Gentleman’s Dignity lots of fun, but when I heard we were getting more chaebols I feared we’d be getting more of the same, and I’m tired of that. Granted, there’s plenty of room for Tan to show some snobbery, but I like that already he’s got some depths—which is particularly interesting because he’s been encouraged not to have them.

I like that his proclivity is to actually be studious and serious, and that the playboy persona seems put-upon, like it’s the only thing he can do with his life. It reminds me a bit of Hong Gil Dong or other stories of disenfranchised heroes who find their preferred paths barred to them by society… although I do suppose it’s a bit perverse in this scenario to have a man of such overwhelming privilege feeling shackled by it. Cry me a freakin’ river, right? Still, it’s a twist on the expected, and so I welcome it.

I am NOT a fan of making Eun-sang such a typical Candy character, because haven’t we hit the ceiling on what you can do with that same ole character? Please prove me wrong on this, but I don’t expect the show to do anything exceptional with her storyline. On the other hand, at least if it had to be done, you got an actress like Park Shin-hye who could make you care about her, who injects some sass into the role anyway.

Most of all, I’m excited about the romance, because there was something about the way Tan looks at Eun-sang that hooked me good. It got me invested right away, and while Lee Min-ho has had his ups and downs as an actor and romantic lead, I am SO READY to fall in love with him… and moreover, to fall in love with him falling in love. C’mon Heirs, be good. You can dooooo eeeeeet!

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I just think he is a little "Tan" for a California surfing boy! Lol

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I realize that not very many people will see this comment but because I don't have the time to scroll through all of these or even a few, could someone please write their opinion of whether I should watch it or not? A yes or no answer with just a quick few words as to what you felt would be great.

I just hate the chaebol/poor girl storyline. I think it's THE most cliche and overused idea in the book and as much as I love LMH, I don't want to watch it if it's not refreshing or new.

Thanks guys!

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You should give it a chance. LMH's character Tan seems to be different from your average male lead that starts off as a jerk. He seems intospective and layered (slacker, deep thinker, helpful, realist, etc.) Based upon this writer's previous work (Secret Garden, City Hall, A Gentleman's Dignity, etc.), the writer is building up to something...possibly with the dreamcatcher.

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There was so much unintentional humor in this. It brought me many a good laugh (which I needed). However, I will be thankful when this show is set solely (Seoul-ly?) in Korea.

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Agree!! I laughed so hard at a couple of unintentionally funny scenes in the first episodes. It's like, I might not buy some parts of this narrative yet but boy did the (unintentional) comedy keep me entertained.

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After watching Master's Sun...this was pretty boring for me.

I think Rachel and Tan are interesting. Everyone else can go away for me. I don't like EunSang. She's so naive...Some of the stuff she did in the states annoyed me . First the traveling to the states to deliver ~ $8000 was a waste of money for me. A trip itself would cost about $2000. I don't get it...What did she do with the money? She shoved it in her suitcase. I notice that when she visited her sister, she just abandoned her suitcase in the sketchy neighbourhood. If i was in a sketchy neighbourhood with $8000 in my suitcase, I wouldn't take my eyes away from it.

The whole suitcase rummaging scene annoyed me too. She was so angry that she just let her sister rummage her suitcase??? If that was my sis, I'd grab the suitcase and run away. WHY did she let her sis get the money? She could have put a bigger fight when her sis was searching for it. I thought it was pathetic how she ran after the cash (cuz I really thought she didn't care, that's why she didn't put a fight).

Anyways, if anything, I'd be watching it for Rachel and Tan's storyline.

I think I find it slow partly because there isn't much background music to help set the mood or make it lighter.

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Have to agree that MS set the standard pretty high for writing, thrills and pace. (And this is considering that it followed IHYV, which was quite frankly addictive for many.) Wonder how Heirs will hold up.

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First, @weirdnshort, I know you probably aren't around anymore after (checks date) more than six years, but your handle is great, and I'm sad that you thought of it before I did. Please don't be offended if I knick it and add it to my own someday.

Second, how, how, how, did she get through airport security and customs with that kind of cash and a large stash of a substance that very closely resembles drugs? Who travels with $8000 in a suitcase. I'm pretty sure that Korea in (checks date again) 2013 had these new fangled things called banks.

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You're making the grave mistake of looking for logic. That she had a passport ready to go at a moment notice was when odd enough. If you go & try figure out the logistics of it you'll drive yourself insane.
She's the human hose, she cried her way through legalities.

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I always have a passport ready to go at a moment's notice, for me this is normal. The giant bag of powder and huge stash of cash is another issue now. I can't even get onto a plane with a full water bottle.

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I also have my passport always at the ready. The three weeks when I was renewing it, and did not have it on hand was slightly unsettling.

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Ready in the sense she had one already issued when she's poor & doesn't look like the type who'd realistically have the option of travelling anywhere, let alone outside of SK.

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@shayri Her family had 8,000,000 won in a bank account that they could clearly spare. Last time I did the math that was about USD7k or 8k. I'm not saying that's chaebol level, nor are they that well off. But truly poor people don't have those kinds of savings. She clearly aspires to a lifestyle of never having to work at all rather than struggling with real poverty (she could also afford the flight!)

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I will look for logic and if I want to. You can't tell me what to do.

Seriously though, the powder and cash would not get through security. Honestly, I would think something would have been flagged when she did such a huge currency exchange (It was US currency right?).

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I'm struggling to write grammatically lately. Please excuse all errors, and chalk it up to excitement over this amazing drama.

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Lol do so. Please be kind on your hair while you're at it. If it were me the hair pulling would be at a crazy level.

Yeah they definitely don't allow any seeds or powders of unknown origin. You can't even take those that are clearly marked.

My grammar isn't stellar either atm, I'm blaming it on insomnia 😅

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@maybemaknae, now who's looking for logic? :)

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But see I'm spared of actually watching it. You're already watching it.... I'm a fellow comrade & trying to lessen your agony.

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@leetennant those really aren't hers to have are they?
I also had the same thought while writing my comment. Her mum is the main housekeeper of a chaebol family, insults aside, I'm sure they pay well enough.
That amount of money in savings isn't poor level, I'd call it lower middle class. I don't see a dad, maybe he's in hospital or something? Maybe there's a reason why the FL feels she's so poor?

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Hey now, @weirdnshort may actually get this; they were active in November last year so you never know.

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hahaha. I logged back in! lol this is my gamer tag too...XD now I know if I can't get it, who is to blame.

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Can I ask one thing?
What is Tan doing in USA? Studying as a foreigner who can speak English fluently or as a student who wants to study English to fluent his English? *excuse my grammer . Sorry if I can’t catch what he is doing in US.
For me, as a foreigner, speaking in ENGLISH, is awkward thing to do too. Because, if Tan is in US to study English, so I think it’s ok if his pronunciation is embarrassing. Since, I am experiencing the same awkwardness when in English conversation. But I cringed too when he spoke English. HAHAHA.
I remember when I was a fresh graduate and working in purchasing department. Once I received phone calls from foreigner, he (the supplier) laughed at my Engrish.
Gosh, it was embarrassing. I rather writing in English more than have to talk in English, eventhough my grammer are not perfect.
So, I learned English from elementary school, but still can't talk fluently. Sad Sad Sad. Shame on me :'(.
BTW, who likes LMH, is it JB or GF? :p *sorry for asking this silly question.

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I believe he is studying as a foreigner who speaks English fluently. That is just my opinion though.

Your grammar is fine except you would want to say 'to study English to become more fluent in English.' and 'is not perfect.'

I wouldn't stress over it. I have dealt with a lot of non native English speakers and am happy that they are at least attempting to learn the language. If anyone is mean or rude just remember there are a lot of us who are not. I am really expecting to be embarrassed when I visit Japan and Korea in a few years. My daughter and I are practicing now ( why boats and planes I don't know) but I too prefer to write. I have a twisted tongue when I try to speak.

As for who likes LMH, I'm not sure. Have a great day. :)

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Thank you, thank you JB for an awesome recap! I haven't laughed this hard in awhile...or at least since I watched Surfer Doofus & all the terrible English being spouted out during this episode ;) I agree with your analysis from top to bottom as I found this a solid introduction to the world of HEIRS that made me hopeful for its run. I too lowered my expectations months ago after my supreme excitement for FAITH last year exploded in my face (but still got nothing but love for Min Ho!). I am quite pumped for the romance to kick-start as well because the scene of Tan keeping full eyes on Eun Sang gave me romantic chills! Thank you again for your hilarious, insightful recap and fingers crossed we've got a winner on our drama watchlist :D

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Well, talks about speaking in english, Go Kyung Pyo at Potato Star was better than Lee Min Hoo. Just sayinnn

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Fun recap as usuall! I didn't mind the episode, but it did feel like I had seen most of it with the trailers.

As for the Cringlish... oh well. It's a shame his pronunciation can't be better especially since others managed to do their one or two lines better (in ep.2) but what can you do?

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I liike it!
Hopeful for a better episode though...
Shin Hye never fails to be a good actress. Great for speaking in English

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So far the verdict is : I will continue watching. It was pretty good and the characters are fascinating enough to keep me watching. I am looking forward to the Kim brothers' showdown and the Youngdo-Kim Tan showdown.....

But please...less English!!!

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I just found out about this show today and after reading all the funny comments I decided to jump in and see what it was about. It actually wasn't all that bad tbh, it did have a lot of laughter moments, both intentional and unintentional, the Drggie Surfer dude had me rolling on the floor with laughter, what an absolute moron that bloke is eh?

The stereotyping of California was very funny, I really enjoy that. I do wonder how the show runners would have portrayed somewhere like the UK for example if they were filming here instead, I have always wondered how Asian's imagine us to be like.

I agree that the characters being in High School makes no sense, they should be in college at the least, maybe even having just graduated. I know Asians are notorious for looking extremely young for their age, to the extent where the collective term for Asian women among friends of mine is "Jailbait", but apart from a handful, everyone else looks much too old to play the parts.

The actors bad English was the highlight of the pilot, it was comedy gold. Like someone mentioned earlier I thought most Asian countries had mandatory English classes in schools, it really shouldn't be that bad. Mind you, they still speak better and more understandable English than many people I know, especially people from Liverpool.

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omigod!..d english? *cringes*..i hope they return 2 korea next episode

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i wasnt anticipating this drama but couldnt resist because of the much compelling cast and somehow ended up watching it and to my surprise it wasnt bad,i mean i liked it.
the only thing that bothers me are those foreigners, they seem so out of place ,i dont know how to put it but they dont quite fit in the picture anyway hope i wont get to see them in the future and that the drama would get even better

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"Why hello there, Yoon Jin-seo, what are you doing in Heirs?" Bahaha. I finished watching 'Return of Iljimae' literally 20 minutes before tuning into Heirs. My first thought was that I was seeing Wol hee everywhere :P

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Hi all ~ What exactly is a Candy girl? Is it just someone who is sweet, or is there more to it? ~ Thanks!

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watching all the english actors were so cringeworthy. Cringworthy surfer bro friend asided, even the english white doctor and the fat black cop were so cliched and there acting was so cringy.

I hope they go back to korea soon...

I cried a couple of times watching this ....most when her sister ran away with her money... who does that ?

I wonder if she'll ever be redeemed, and what is she doing with the money anyways ?

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"There are hints at emotional depth and layered characters—well, some of them, but as the ones I refer to are mainly the principal cast I think we’re fine on that score. And perhaps most importantly for a romantic comedy, I really like the leads together. There’s acting talent on both sides, individually, as well as character warmth and depth, and then you add in chemistry to the mix and I think we’re looking at a potential sensation. "
I totally agree with this Javabeans. It perfectly mirrors my own impression of the first episode.. I'm very glad to notice that maybe the characters are not what they seem and are multi-layered!!! :)
But let me tell you that the first half hour of this episode, I was pretty annoyed with all the stereotypes; the polished faces and the beautiful setting..I still am. Sorry but I can't stand the all-polished looks of the actors...It all seems so artificial like all these characters live in another world. they almost look like aliens to me..Honestly!! I'm also annoyed with the way American people are portrayed!
Plus, Lee Min Ho must have changed something in his face or his hairdo brings out all these changes, but the result is that I don't recognize him anymore, he's not much eye-candy to me anymore (where's the good looking hunk who was City Hunter and in Faith? ) Anyway, the introduction of his character gave me a first impression that was rather negative: another "pretty" boy who is loaded, has a beautiful car, beautiful house and does nothing during the day except surf and flirt on the beach!! the shower scene was the last straw!!!
I was relieved to discover further on that Kim Tan was not just that. Same with other characters. So there's definitely potential concerning the characters because they're all very interesting in the end! I think the whole theme about the American dream and Korean immigration to the US is going to be developed, well, I hope so because this is a very interesting theme to me!!

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Hello jb, thanks for the recap. I tried to wait for this drama to finish before watching it but it's like holding my breath for half minute. I can, it just toturing myself. For the drama, put aside the bad English anda stereotype, I like it. I love how Tan is slowly falling in love. I love his gaze, his teasings and when its clear that he's checking her out. I agree with the old generation era vibe given by the writer.

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Funniest question was at the beginning of the drama when ES asks "is this the only coffee shop in Soul?" Hee, were we just given a hint about the DESTINY of that coffee shop in our drama? Have those writers been reading other dramabeans posts?

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You "can't wait until they go back to Korea"? Just because they were overseas doesn't make the show bad(I know you didn't say 'bad', but I'm simply saying is all to make a point.). You just seemed bothered by it. The American actors werent too great though. Anyway, I thought it was cool how the show was overseas for a little while. It was refreshing and fun :) It was something I wasn't used to seeing in a kdrama.

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"Do I like this show?" I must really like this show because I'm reading the recap and the discussion board over and over again. After, I go over to Dramafever.com and do the same thing over there. I also scourge Youtube for any video about "Heirs." I do it to fill in the time while I wait for the next episode. I cannot get it out of my head while I'm sleeping or working. Last times this happened were "That Winter, the Wind Blows" and "Secret Garden." I have long waiting periods in between shows that captured my attention. I was not too keen on Lee Min Ho's dramas before, so I know it is not him, even though he is an eye candy. Of course, Choi Jin Hyuk and his voice give me goose bumps. Kim Won Bin's portrayal of the bad boy is also attention grabbing. I think it is because of the look of the show, the story line, and the funny dialogues.

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One of the things that bothered me with this drama was the overvoice for her mute mother. I did not like that they had her do a voice-over as she was signing... It just ruins the whole idea of her being mute... they should have given subtitles instead...

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I got hooked with this drama, it looks promising and I also like LMH, to me he is a great actor

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Giving the drama a chance. And I don't like the count at which the comments had stopped

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Thanks dramabeans for the recap..

I actually agree with u about the over promo of this drama..i just wanted to give this drama a try.. But im shocked that this drama is more than a mere teen high school drama..they r way much mature than that.. once u finished watching the first ep, u will find urself clicking the next ep.. The characters, the plot, the twist were great.. Love i watched this..
And i found my new heartthrob.. KWB!!

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i want to know how to download the korean dramas? will u help me?

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Find it very hard for me to watch Lee Min Ho as a student. Still can't get over him as 'Jeon Ji Ho' in Personal Taste. Ehmm...yummy ?!

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Not so bad even though I hate Lee minho and his childish acts as if he is not grown up like
15. But I like letstal and also hate park shin hye and of course know ji won

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its really a nice drama even though its the first episode I was Soo exited to watch it I hope that there will be another new movie of them in future to come they are Soo nice and cute couple
.........

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Crap, now I might be committed. This is the db equivalent of subtweeting.

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Elle Tea, when you plan to watch ep 1?

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*do
Now half of our future comments might just be me correcting my typos. *sighs*

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Consider your typos an homage to the very very bad English dialogue.

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Just don't bother correcting them. How many times must I say this. Lord Typo is a cheating bastard but you might as well embrace his consistency!!!

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But I don't want to hug him, Sica. Boys have cooties :P

But whatever Emu says to do, I will do!

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I said brace his consistency not him!!! Never in a million years would I let my god sister near my ex in physical form, don't worry.

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*wipes sweat off forehead* Phew!
I'll consider embracing his consistency then.

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I feel like the glorious potential awful of Heirs might be better than the realised awful of Heirs. But if we are going to do this, I'm happy to watch the first episode tonight. May as well just dive on in.

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We could always rewrite it in the comments. I've no idea what it's about though so I better get to reading the recap lol

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I'm in, but the drama in the comments on page one diverted my attention. @leetennant, I look forward to your reaction to this classic tale.

Anyone else miss Lee Min Ho's BOF perm?

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I do not, no, not at all

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*crickets*

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That hair should only be on the head of a poodle dog 🐩..... Not a human guy.

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Come on you guys, that hair was great. (not really)

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The only way I’d suffer through this is if we did a Discord watch of it—because the snark and I could just pop in for 5 minutes at a time and say something droll and be out again! But I’ll anticipate all your reactions and be rolling in laughter at JB’s recaps. See you on the second episode! I’m already enjoying the recap mini-drama!

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If you won't be committed then I will just have to talk to myself and get my comments deleted because dB will think they're spam... and we wouldn't want that now would we

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I. am. going. in.

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Hwaiting!

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@katakwasabi has expressed interest in joining our adventure.

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Is there a wager on when Chingumode will quit?

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I'm about ready to quit and I only made it to the Angst Shower.

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Please join @katakwasabi!!! I miss our fun!

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Okay - seeing these comments as the most recent ones in the Beanies section makes me almost tempted to join you. But, I'm maybe too busy with the 30B17 rewatch - the show in which all characters are nice. Isn't Heirs the show in which all characters are horrible?

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I don't know I've never seen Heirs hahahaha
But feel free to discuss how much better 30B17 is than Heirs on here anyway :P

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30B17 is guaranteed to be 200% better since it's already 100% better than most other dramas.

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You're kidding right? You're not forgetting the uncle & the plot holes of the last stretch of the show which were obviously brought about due to the episode cut.

It was really good 2/3rd in... & even with the FL acting like 6 instead of 16 it is still better than many other dramas... I mean im sure it was better than heirs... Anything except Thrashy will be better than heirs.

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I'm not forgetting. The pacing was a mess and the plotting was full of holes. I don't care @maybemaknae because of the chickens and the joy.

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The chickens.! 🐔 🐥 Ofcourse
I loved the robot housekeeper Jennifer & Ahn hyo seop & even the leads.... Good memories.

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Basically I'm not thinking I'm filling.

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30B17 had charm and heart that filled in the gaps created by the plotholes and unfortunate pacing. Heirs? Well, it has a star studded cast, and as we embark on the watchapalooza, all I really remember was that Kim Woo Bin had the only character that I liked, and he was a baddie.

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@egads, there's nothing wrong with the most likeable character being the baddie. I get that feeling from a lot of dramas.

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@leetennant @egads @ndlessjoie @katakwasabi @lugirl131415
Okay first of all I didn’t realize that this show’s full name was “Heirs: He Who Wears the Crown, Endure Its Weight”… which is just absurd, even for Kdrama titles

Second of all Javabeans saying 7 months promo for a show is a lot and a long one just PULLS YOU BACK IN TIME because I swear now hearing about a show 7 months before it comes out, whilst not normal, is a lot more normal than it apparently used to be.

Thirdly for some reason I decided to react to this recap and type it out so…

- “And then… a broody shower scene on the beach. HAHA. I dunno whatchoo got to be so angsty about, uber-rich teenager hero-manchild, but the music and mood tells us he is Very Serious On the Inside about something.”
”He’s played by Lee Min-ho, but you either knew that already or this is your first drama ever”
*laments the demise of snarky recaps COME BACK JB PLEEEASE*

- “People with money just eat and play—they don’t bother with dreams,” he’d said. “If possible, don’t even come back.”- WAIT WHAT THIS DRAMA ACTUALLY SAYS THIS???

- Oooh JB even put little translations in to help us get the meta I’M SAD

- Is this like a modern retelling of a sageuk or something? Brother who fight over a throne??

- OH MY GOSH HE ACTUALLY SLAPPED HER WHAT?

- Oh my crivens ofc someone is mute

- How many outdated tropes did we hit in under half an hr folks

- “That’s interesting, and rather sageuk-like.” I KNEW IT

- “If I were able to swallow any food after suffering this indignity, I’d be a concubine.” So perhaps the sageuk allusions are intentional, then.” – yes this is a retelling of a sageuk in a modern setting isn’t it

- Is unni marrying the guy who hit her? Gosh I hope not

- ““My sister is exactly my style.” Ha. Oh no you di’n’t.” wot. This is wild already

- and now the second female lead is married to the male lead who is the second male leads rival who is gonna be step brother to the second female lead SHOW SLOW DOWN. I CAN’T KEEP UP.

- Oh nope unnie isn’t getting married at all ofc she isn’t like duh Sic

- I forgot how insane kdramas used to be wow

- ““It’s when I’m writing that I think about the fact that I am thinking.” OH IF you all could SEE MY FACE

- “he giggles and runs around like a little fiendish Rumplestiltskin,” jfhdlkjhfakdlhfkladhjkljsaha this frakking description is god tier

- A lot happened. Even though I love JB’s writing it has not actually yet convinced me to start the show, probably because her writing will be infinite times better than the show

- Do you ever look back at old dramas and think “how the HECKITY HECK did I even get INTO THESE” because I do

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I may sound like a broken record because I've said this several times but Heirs brought me to DB and This is why. I loved the way JB and GF bashed and criticized the show for what it was worth rather than fangirling over oppas. DB isn't the same anymore, someone needs to write to JB to occasionally throw a
mini recap on her Twitter for our sanity.

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No wonder Beanie snark is appreciated in spades now.
I always liked JB's recaps even if I didn't agree with her about a show.
Going back to an old one like this is highly entertaining: I had to stop reading several times to laugh.

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"Oooh @javabeans even put little translations in to help us get the meta I’M SAD"

Yes she did. This was basically the greatest thing about DB back then. I understood My Girlfriend is a Gumiho, Best Love, Que Sera Sera, Personal Taste and lots and lots of others like Korean Language was my mother tongue, and k-entertainment jargon and Korean culture were second nature for me. Her recaps were INCREDIBLE with millions of details that non-koreans simply don't get. Now I get tears in my eyes.

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I was reading recaps on DB from the very beginning (2015) and I do remember that the reason I read them was because they helped me UNDERSTAND things like meta and slang and idiosyncrasies to the language I didn't get in the subs. Like you said, they added so many details that added to the dramawatching experience that were imperative to my Korean education as it were.
When I got better at understanding Korean, I realised I didn't need the recaps as much, and started to go on them less... and JB and GF weren't recapping as much anyway, soon to leave completely, so in a way it was probably a good thing I didn't need them to understand as much anymore. And yet, oh the fun I have had reading through an entire show recap before.

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Sica if you don't actually watch the show you will not fully understand it, because you need to be made aware that LOVE IS THE MOMENT at all times.

It is vital to the emotional experience of this show.

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Are you sure. My skim reading/ watching abilities are Olympic level... and so is my brain's ability at conjuring OSTS I've never heard of out of mid air. I promise. :P

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Oh there is NO Heirs without Love is the Moment. Maybe you could just see a scene with it playing in the background and from then on wards...this song will haunt you till eternity. But it's worth it, always gets a smile on my face when someone mentions it, not to forget the automatic play button that it triggers in the mind.

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Is it as bad as, in no particular order:
1. Almost Paradise from BoF
2. You are my destiny from MLFTS or
3. Eternal love from Healer?

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@leetennant If there was to be an order then I'd be:
Love is the moment
Almost Paradise
You are my destiny
So yeah, it's worse but really when you come to it (the point where it's played) you'll realize the scenes worsen it, it's hilarious though.

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Wow, worse than Almost Paradise and You Are My Destiny? I'm going to be having this awful song pop into my head at random moments for no reason forever, aren't I?

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@leetennant maybe this makes me heathen but I don't hate Eternal Love... Lol

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Not so weird, a lot of people like it. I'm the only one who rewatches parts of Healer on mute. The worst thing was when they played it over scenes with him and his mentor.

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@leetennant well I mean that love IS eternal hahahaha but yeah the sound editor probably needs a talking to.

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@leetennant YES! It popped in my head 20 times today, thanks to this discussion. Not a really pleasant experience.

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@sicarius I too don't hate Eternal Love. Yes it was heavily used but its no way as bad as the rest 3.

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I unironically love 'Love is the Moment'.

Everybody hear me out.

We all know that Heirs' attempts to an epic love story fell flat, but hey, the music at least makes me feel like anything I'm watching is a moment in an epic love story. It's of those uncomfortable instances where I feel something for a terrible show because it's actually the MUSIC doing all the work. Like when Meteor Garden 2018 used 'Say Something' and I was crying but I hated myself because the actors were barely acting and I didn't care about the characters but SAY SOMETHING I'M GIVING UP ON YOU.

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The music in Graceful Family, which was almost another character and did 95% of the mood work for the drama.

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Rumplestiltskin lmfao 🤣🤣🤣

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Is it the writing of the recap that makes it sound good? I'm almost tempted to watch this.... Then I remember the clips of heirs I saw when dramafever was still alive & I'm like... Uh huh definitely the magic of the recap writer, because Heirs was cringe af.

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The writing or Woo Bin's face.

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Woo Bin's face was a big draw for me but still not enough to make me watch it. Recap wins.
___I love snark when it's not directed at me hehe 😅

I think I'll safely camp out in the recap while saving myself from going through the agony of the episodes....

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Yes the recap was so well written it almost made me want to watch it. Almost.

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Same. Ditto. Same.
Can you miss a person you never knew?

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Yes. Happens to me all the time.

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Is this....a recap of a recap? *chuckles*

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And what of it? :P

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I love it. ^_^

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I thought it was brilliant.

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Touching on the long promotion period, I don't think i've seen so much related posts (23!) under the 1st ep recap before..and you can tell DB is just over it by some of the titles:

(Could there be any) more stills from Heirs
Heirs releases another teaser
More stills from the set of Heirs
More Heirs: the Kim Woo-bin rendition
Kim Woo-bin in Heirs, rejoice!
Jung Yong-hwa cast opposite Park Shin-hye again, seriously

🤣🤣🤣

Ahhh I kinda miss the old voice of DB now.

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How could I forget that this show's female lead was the Human Sprinkler? I knew this. I KNEW this.

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Park Shin Hye in the rain
*twitch*

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Is it worse than MOA...

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I have no idea, there's a billion characters and we're just introducing all of them. It's the standard corporation-as-kingdom modern sageuk. They do have a few characters who can actually deliver a line in English though, which is rare. Not going to win an Oscar or anything but they're not 'WHAT THE HELL!' level bad.

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I TAKE THAT LAST COMMENT BAAACCCKKK

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Krystal is a Korean American so I guess she was the only one given a whole paragraph of dialogues in English, the rest have a line here or there and they are weird but I'm also a mess when I try speaking Chinese which I barely and just rote learned a few phrases of, so I give them that lee way.

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having read the recap all I have to say to that is: LMCAOOOooo

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You scared me for a moment @leetennant, the English NOT GOOD.

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MOA PSH crying human sprinkler was a repeated trope in itself, this is less but bad, very bad.

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Yikes.
Are their copious drips too?

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She sobbed in that annoying screeching way in the first episode. It's okay, I survived her first attack.

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I haven't see MOA but I can confirm a lot of Candy tears were shed in this show.

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That will be hard! Even with the same pot plant! Also Chingumode,i am adding human sprinkler to my dictionary and will also make my mom add it to hers. We suffered a lot of WTF moments because of a real life human sprinkler! Lol!

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It can't be worse than MofA because there she was a flower pot cum parrot. She didn't do ANYTHING. Here at least she's doing some & not just parroting off the same things other said a moment ago.
No matter how dumb, she's saying & doing things. She sadly isn't replaceable in this instead of a hologram or a aigo expression cardboard cutout

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I think LT should take a tally of how many times she cries in this, and then I will... maybe... go back and take a tally of how many snivellings there are in MOA and then that can be the new standard of how to rate kdrama. :)

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I guess it depends on just how much liquid fortification I need per episode. I may forget. @sicarius

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@leetennant we'll bug you about it if you wanna be masochistic about it?
Cool? 👀

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😂

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The main thing I learned from this recap is that 2013 was the Year of the Great Thank You Scandal.

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And also apparently when "first" became an inappropriate word. lol

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Ahh you didn't get to experience the creation of the rules of conduct!

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I'm terribly sad about that.

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The Thank You Scandal had me glued to my screen. Poor @redfox, just being appropriately sarcastic only to find themselves right smack in the middle of a feud of sorts.

Also, lowkey sad that JB won't be hopping in reprimand us if we start our own fight.

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Is THAT what was happening? Without the context of others recaps, it is so unclear what everyone blew up about.

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pffff.

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I hope we aren't bothering you.

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no no. just internet is... real communication beat all.

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Wait. What is this "Great Thank You Scandal"? I need to know!

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Me too! You have to tell hoobaes all the scandals ...

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Go to the very first comment on the recap and you can watch it unfold.

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I just spent 20 mins trying to read all of the comments. The Great Thank You Scandal is an even better drama than Heirs. Now I want to rewatch this mess.

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@sensationalfantasy, welcome to the madness.

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Well, it was no where near fun as oppa wars, it was like a non-issue made specifically into an issue and was not even intended to be one in the first place.

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I was so curious and lost when I scrolled up trying to find the scandal. Then I realized I was on page 5 of this thread.

Haven't visited here before... xD

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Silly me. I read the 2020 comments, then the recap (yes!!!) and then I thought I should read the old comments to get up to speed. I got about half-way thru the first page -- meaning I saw 2 main comments and about 800,000 replies. Yikes!

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Thank you

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This is way more funny now! Thank you! ^^

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The opening montage is giving me a
headache.
what am I letting myself in for.....

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Fun (in laughing about this show) and misery (that you'll want to put yourself out of)? I'll tell you now it's probably both.

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More shows need an angst shower at minute two

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They do! No need to introduce the character's name, we need abs and angst!

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I think abs and angst is the only real reason anyone kept watching.

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@hotcocoagirl also, maybe the wine cellar kiss scene?
(is there a wine cellar kiss scene or am I just imagining it? I do remember there being a lot of "Love is the moment" moments in that cellar)

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I'm starting to understand what you mean, I'm 10 minutes in and this show is already too long.

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Why are you guys doing it seriously 😂
It's not fun, this show is downright depressing and a mess and idk what, don't do this to yourself guys 😅

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But this, this is fun.

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The show might not be fun but making fun of it is most certainly fun

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Are you actually watching this? Or skimming at high speed? Just curious...

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As far as I'm aware I'm the only person who's actually watching the drama, everyone else is just reading recaps. And I'm watching an episode a day. I did watch the first episode all the way through. Although my ff finger twitched when the Human Sprinkler started spraying water everywhere.

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I am not watching it.
That's what LT is for.
I am merely recapping the recaps for amusements sake :P

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I'm here to watch LT watch it.

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Don't be too optimistic, I so far only watched one episode...

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You've made it longer than I thought you would.

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I hope you didn't lose the bet against yourself.

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I had no expectations but I really didn't think we would get introduced to the entire cast in 15 minutes!
PSH is making a great debut as Hard Working Candy.
Not to mention the whiplash from surfing to sad sad chaebol life, to bullies... I'm exhausted.

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I don't even know who half these characters are and I watched the episode AND read the recap. Hard Working Candy hates her status and is prepared to ditch her mute mother and rock up to another country to sponge off her sister, while the Chaebol is kind of pleasantly useless. It'd be the kind of subtle trope subversion I'd be into if I didn't already know this show is an awful train wreck. Thank God for hindsight.

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The first episode was thrilling to watch, a great lesson on writing for television 101. Pay no attention to tone and introduce all the characters in 15 minutes, make sure every scene has a corresponding track.

The highlight for me was Tan. A very, very deep sensitive soul who thinks about thinking.
PSH cries very well, but I would have liked her to be more proactive when her sister left or when she was faced with those rowdy boys.
Rachel is the only character who has a glimmer of interest. Why should we care about these characters if they haven't been introduced properly.

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She lets her sister run off with about $7000 but pursues a stranger over bean powder...

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I mean, is it really bean powder? I'm beginning to have my doubts.

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Secretly, this whole thing is about drug dealers and the Human Sprinkler is a drug mule. They just needed to couch the morality tale in terms of Chaebols due to Korean sensibilities.

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I might rewatch just to see this plot which has been hiding under chaebol/candy tropiness for six years. We may be the first to crack the code.

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I'm now watching this entire show under the assumption it's really about Korea's secret heroin trade and will report back my findings in the recap thread each episode. We're on to something!

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Yeah that didn't make sense and she leaves the suitcase. That would have been stolen in a heartbeat.

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Maybe we should do that more often. Look where she ended up. Chasing after her sister will get her... catfight and losing hair?

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Blood is denser than bean powder?

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'Most Commented' section on landing page brought me here in January 2020. 🙂

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You're welcome.

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Kim Tan doesn't look 18. At all.

Eunsung is such a sad character. Her sister is awful.

Kim Tan's bro for now is as robotic as bodyguard Na Wang Shik (TLE).

Kim Woo Bin is a bully. I wonder how his redemption arc is. Hehe

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Great recap, thanks! I have to comment on something, having watched many C Dramas and K Dramas, it seems that they always choose the worse actors to play the Americans. Its so cringeworthy I have to mute every time it happens. Even the teachers at his school made me cringe.

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