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Plus Nine Boys: Episode 2

Plus Nine Boys is just full of sweetness and heart, and I’m loving every minute of it. The boys all know the shape of their “plus nine” curse now and they each respond in different ways, giving us a bit more insight into the kind of men they are. I’m enjoying watching all four of them floundering as they try to figure out what happened to their previously-normal lives, though I can’t help but hope for their sakes that they find their curse-breakers soon. But not too soon, because the journey is just so endearing.

Track 2: “Suddenly one day”

After seeing the girl he loves kissing his best friend, Jin-gu heads home for a broody shower and realizes that this must be his “plus nine” fate his family warned him about. He wonders how his life went so wrong so quickly.

In the morning, Uncle Kwang-soo whines at breakfast about the healthy fare, but Mom (she’s his older sister, but we’ll just call her Mom) reminds him of his high blood pressure and tells him to get a wife if he wants to eat something different. She pushes vegetables that are good for stomach problems on Second Son Min-gu, who complains that he needs meat for athletics. A mopey Jin-gu leaves without breakfast, too upset to eat.

The new upstairs neighbors are making a lot of noise, so Min-gu holds Maknae Dong-gu up to bang on the ceiling in retaliation. Mom cheers them on, while Kwang-soo sarcastically congratulates her on her awesome parenting.

Jin-gu drags into work with a long face and has to steel himself when he sees Se-young, thinking back on her kiss with his best friend Jae-bum the night before. He ponders how you have to see some things to believe them – but even then, you may not want to believe.

When he sits at his desk she tells him to smile, but he’s in no mood to smile or even look at her. Finally Jin-gu gives her a fake grin and she laughs, saying that it’s true that if a man has a big smile and his eyes wrinkle when he laughs, it means he’s a player. She’s teasing him but the joke hurts, and Se-young asks what’s wrong but he refuses to talk about it.

Jae-bum gets to work and exchanges a few mysterious looks with Se-young. Jin-gu wonders when they became a couple and finds an article online detailing how you can tell if someone is in an office romance. He watches with increasing dismay as Se-young and Jae-bum do pretty much everything on the list, like using work as an excuse to be close, checking their phones at the same time, and leaving the room within minutes of each other.

While on a break, Jin-gu watches as Se-young is thanked for the Valentine’s chocolates by seemingly every male in the building, including the janitor. His face falls to realize that his box of chocolates from her really wasn’t anything special. He sees how she flirts with all the guys, which is another giveaway that she’s possibly dating a colleague.

Kwang-soo is approached by a work friend who complains about his unfair demotion, and Kwang-soo tells him that he’s been transferred to work on Sponge, an “infotainment” variety show about little-known trivia. It’s a decided step down from Music Camp, but he makes out like he’s only helping out temporarily over at Sponge.

A music producer comes to kiss up to Kwang-soo about his awesome broadcast last week, trying to get his band on the show, and it’s obvious he hasn’t seen the show or heard about the pantsless musician incident. Kwang-soo’s friend (cameo by Kim Jong-min as himself) tries to give him the universal sign for shut up, stop talking you idiot, but the guy misses the hint and just goes on and on until Jong-min finally tells him what happened.

Kwang-soo makes his way to the Sponge studio, thinking how he thought he’d be more settled by the time he was 39, but instead it’s like he’s going through a second puberty. He finds the Sponge writers in a room full of old props and junk (and is that a random live duck? HAHA), and it’s immediately obvious that they’re the dregs from the bottom of the writing barrel.

The writers present their ideas, like how rubbing your ears makes you resistant to tickling or rubbing a frog’s belly to make it sleep, and Kwang-soo rejects them all. The head writer says they can’t film their show if he shoots down all their ideas, but Kwang-soo just excuses himself before he can blow his top.

He talks with his friend Young-hoon, saying that he’d planned on working hard at this but the show is just so stupid. Young-hoon says variety is just weird like that (which is driven home when a couple of his own show’s comedians approach to ask which facial hair looks better on the woman) and that he should be glad to still have a producing job.

Young-hoon gives him the number of someone called the Telefairy, a sort of telephone psychic, and tells him to call her. He attributes the popularity of Grandpas Over Flowers to the Telefairy’s advice to use older actors instead of idols, and claims she’s even responsible for Crayon Pop’s famous helmets, hee. Kwang-soo understandably thinks this is all ridiculous.

Se-young has lunch with her friends and plays with her friend Da-in’s adorable daughter. Her coworker Go-eun sighs that Se-young is so popular with children and men, and gets suspicious of all her text messages lately, wondering if she’s dating someone at work. Jin-gu arrives just in time to hear Se-young deny that there’s anyone she likes. He doesn’t miss the look she throws towards Jae-bum as she says it, though.

He and Jae-bum join the ladies for lunch, and Jin-gu is uncharacteristically quiet as he watches Se-young while she plays with the little girl. Gah, the expression on his face just beams with love for her – he’s not even trying to hide it.

In a meeting that afternoon, Jin-gu frowns as Se-young and Jae-bum talk with their heads close together, and rolls his eyes when Jae-bum supports Se-young’s ideas against Director Jo’s criticism. After the meeting, Jo pulls Jin-gu aside to talk privately.

He starts by complimenting Jin-gu on being a such a hard worker and sooo very honest, and wonders if Jin-gu is upset that he never gives him credit. Jin-gu is mystified until Jo reveals that he got a low score on an anonymous employee evaluation, and strong-armed HR into telling him it was from Jin-gu.

Jo yells at him for giving him a bad review, while Jin-gu can only weakly mutter that it was supposed to be confidential. Jo says that he lost a promotion because of it, and tells Jin-gu to keep being so honest, and he’ll be honest too. Oh, this is going to be very bad. Then to make things worse, Jin-gu gets back to his desk to find Se-young and Jae-bum laughing together. He thinks to himself that at age 29, both his work and personal lives are in a shambles.

Kwang-soo pleads with his boss to take him off of Sponge, that it’s not fair since he gave everything to Music Camp and only made that one mistake, but he’s told that this was the best that could be done for him. He begs to be put back on a music show, but his boss says the order came from high in the ranks and there’s nothing he can do.

Kwang-soo sits alone (well, alone except for Random Duck) and reconsiders calling the Telefairy for advice. He gives in and calls, and is shocked when she immediately mentions a recent embarrassment involving a naked man. He hasn’t said a word, but she says his “plus nine” year will be very difficult and warns him to be careful. He asks when he’ll get married and the Telefairy says she doesn’t see any new connections in his future, so she advises him to search among his exes if he wants to get married.

Young-hoon finds Kwang-soo looking at the text receipt of the call and asks what the Telefairy said. When Kwang-soo tells him, he says that he should go find his exes — what could it hurt? He suggests Kwang-soo look up his first love Min-kyung, prompting memories of a young woman with lovely long hair, though Kwang-soo pretends disinterest.

Min-gu tells his judo coach that the doctor diagnosed him with Irritable Bowel Syndrome, and had chastised him on his impatience and gave him a tip to massage a nerve in his hand when he feels nervous. Min-gu is a beast during practice, punishing his disloyal body and thinking to himself that 19 is a chaotic age both physically and emotionally.

Min-gu takes himself to a noraebang after school, and sings to work out his emotions (“Confession” by Lim Jae-bum, one of my favorite songs). Afterward he takes moody selcas on a bridge, but he’s snapped out of his self-involvement when he sees the pretty mystery girl doing the same thing right next to him. He watches her walk away, not noticing him at all, and rubs the nerve in his hand to soothe his jumpy stomach.

Mom drives Dong-gu to acting classes, even though he whines that classes are for bad actors and he’ll be embarrassed. Mom says they need to focus on his skills rather than relying on his face, telling him that if he works hard he can be a big star like Yoo Seung-ho. Ha.

Dong-gu holds hands in class with an adorable girl, JANG BAEK-JI (Lee Chae-mi) and pouts as the other children practice facial expressions and small scenes. When the teacher asks why they’re holding hands, Baek-ji chirps that they’ve been dating for three years now (that’s so adorable I can’t even) but Dong-gu cringes in embarrassment and pushes her hand away.

Dong-gu stands to read a scene and he’s even worse than before, if that’s possible, and even the teacher can’t keep the smile on her face. The kids all laugh at him and he tries to leave, but Baek-ji stops him. She’s curious why he’s so irritable lately, and pouts that he’s changed. These two are too cute. Dong-gu wanders the hallway and thinks that his mother is right, that something strange is happening to their family.

At the end of the work day, Director Jo brings Jin-gu some extra work to take care of before he can leave. He plays it off like it’s not much, but he’s to reply to an entire year’s worth of customer complaints, individually, without copy/pasting. He can do it because he’s so very honest, right? And so Jin-gu’s torment starts.

Jin-gu works late into the night, and Se-young calls to see if he’s eaten. He tells her to bring him something and her joking “No way, I’m not your girlfriend!” hits below the belt. She offers him the snacks in her desk, but everything he finds, she’s all, Not that, I still want that. Finally she cries frustratedly that he should just eat chicken, and he turns to see her standing in the doorway holding a bag of takeout. Awww.

He picks at his dinner while she stuffs her face as usual, just enjoying the time with her alone. That is, until Jae-bum shows up with coffee and Se-young asks why he’s so late. Ugh, my heart can’t take much more Sad Jin-gu Face.

Jin-gu tells them that Director Jo read his evaluation and that’s why he’s getting all the extra work, and it’s sweet how Se-young gets all indignant on his behalf. Jae-bum waxes nostalgic about a chicken place he and Jin-gu went to in high school, and the conversation turns to a time when Jin-gu and Jae-bum were younger and they tried to invent something to get rich. Their inventions were all flops, and also hilarious, and the three best friends laugh together.

Jae-bum gets misty over the old days (he may look stern-faced but it’s obvious he’s a big old softie), and Jin-gu says it was hard but they got through them together. Se-young comments on their beautiful bromance (hear hear) and she and Jae-bum leave Jin-gu to finish his work. He gets back to his desk and notices the thickly-falling snow, and runs out to take Se-young his umbrella. When he gets outside though, his face crumples as he sees Jae-bum and Se-young sharing an umbrella. He just sadly watches them go, remembering that he’s the third wheel now.

Jin-gu talks with his friend from the bar, who asks how he didn’t know Se-young and Jae-bum were dating since he’s always with them. He’s a good friend as he says that Jae-bum is too cold, and he doesn’t understand how any girl could like him over Jin-gu. Jin-gu gets a call from Jae-bum who asks him to meet him this weekend, because he has something to tell him.

His friend assumes Jae-bum is going to tell him he’s dating Se-young, and asks what Jin-gu will do once he officially knows. He counsels Jin-gu that not telling Se-young he likes her is the same as lying, and something crosses Jin-gu’s face as he processes this.

Dong-gu rehearses at home, to his uncle and brother Min-gu’s dismay, though Mom tries to stay positive. Min-gu finally addresses the elephant in the room and says Dong-gu sounds like a robot. The upstairs neighbor starts up their noise again, and Min-gu hooks up a fan with a weight on it to pound on the ceiling (Mom, on seeing his ingenuity: “You should have studied harder!”).

Kwang-soo stomps off to his room and thinks about his disappointing life, when Young-hoon calls to tell him he’s found his first love Min-kyung. She’s still single, works as a curator of an art museum, and there’s an exhibit this weekend. Kwang-soo says he won’t be going, though he can’t stop thinking of his first love affair with the beautiful Min-kyung.

That weekend Min-gu and Jin-gu head out to meet Jae-bum for some basketball, and they invite their uncle, but Kwang-soo looks downright depressed and he refuses to go anywhere. Mom runs the vacuum into Kwang-soo’s foot and tells him to go out, date, get some fresh air, something, but he only whines and ignores her.

Young-hoon calls Kwang-soo and tells him again to go to the exhibit and Kwang-soo again refuses, but Young-hoon hears his car’s GPS in the background and smirks. He teases Kwang-soo and asks for a report later, and gets hung up on.

Kwang-soo gets more nervous the closer he gets, and keeps checking his hair in the rearview mirror. Cute. He thinks how his life has been stable for ten years, just going to and from work, but today he’s starting an adventure. He smiles a tiny smile at the thought that anything could happen.

The boys play basketball, and Jin-gu can’t stop himself from playing a bit aggressively, then glaring when Jae-bum excuses himself to take a call (assuming it’s Se-young). The two take a break and Jae-bum asks Jin-gu what’s wrong, noticing that he’s been really down lately.

Jin-gu blames it on work and Jae-bum loyally offers to get Director Jo fired, which softens up Jin-gu. Jin-gu asks when Jae-bum will get promoted – it turns out that he’s the son of the company’s CEO (guess that offer to get Jo fired wasn’t entirely a joke). Jae-bum doesn’t want to succeed through contacts though, and wants it kept a secret.

Jin-gu nervously asks what it was that Jae-bum wanted to tell him, and Jae-bum swears him to secrecy before he admits that he confessed to Se-young. Jin-gu steels himself for the news that they’re dating, but Jae-bum says that he was rejected… WHAT?! This changes everything, and Jin-gu’s surprised-but-hope-filled face just gets me right here.

Jin-gu has a hard time hiding his shock, and asks if Jae-bum really liked Se-young. Jae-bum says that he moved too fast, and now he’s going to wait. Jin-gu thinks again about times he heard Se-young say she didn’t have anyone she liked, seeing her comments from a different angle now, and wonders what he should do.

Kwang-soo finds the art gallery and when he hears a woman’s voice from another room, he recognizes it immediately. An employee confirms that it’s Min-kyung but won’t let him enter the private area, so he waits. He smiles as he looks at the art and remembers his college sweetheart, until he hears her call to him from behind. He turns and sees her… but something in his face changes when he sees his first love for the first time in many years.

Min-gu tells his friend that he’s met the girl of his dreams, and that he doesn’t know who she is but he knows they’re destined to be together. His friend scoffs that he watches too many movies, as that very girl passes unseen behind them and enters a store.

Back home, a newly-hopeful Jin-gu gets a call from Se-young, and they talk about nothing in particular as he smiles a genuine smile for the first time in days. He narrates that if life suddenly becomes difficult, hope will come to you. Again we see Kwang-soo turn at the voice of his first love and see his face freeze at the sight of her.

Mom has lunch with the fortuneteller and brings him up to speed on her boys, and asks if a ritual would help. She says they’re all so depressed, but the fortuneteller tells her to have hope, that there will be a good relationship later this year. She asks who it will be, and he can only say that it won’t be the youngest, but one of the other three. It will be a tough relationship but a strong one… but only for one of them.

COMMENTS

This drama is just such a wonderful surprise for me, because it’s not at all what I expected but at the same time, it’s so much better. I was anticipating a bright and silly rom-com, but what we’re getting is more of a thoughtful and sweet introspective story on family and friendship. I absolutely love the relationships within the core family of guys and Mom, and the satellite relationships that spread out from them like Kwang-soo and Young-hoon, Dong-gu and his adorable little girlfriend Baek-ji, and most especially Jin-gu and his friendships with Se-young and Jae-bum.

I think my favorite relationship in the show so far is actually the friendship between Jin-gu and Jae-bum — these guys have been friends since at least high school, and they know each other inside and out. They’re loyal and they accept each other for who they are, even though on the outside they’re complete polar opposites. It’s going to be hard to watch them as they realize that they both love the same girl, and have to weigh their friendship against their hearts and make some difficult decisions. You could see that starting even in this episode, with Jin-gu struggling to hold his feelings inside so as not to let his friend know that he liked (what he thought was) his girlfriend. And the moment when Jae-bum tells Jin-gu that he got rejected, and Jin-gu had to fight to keep the hope off his face, was such a great foreshadowing of the emotional struggles on the horizon. Will he follow his heart and go after Se-young, or step back and let Jae-bum try for her? Does Jae-bum even have a claim on her just because he admitted his feelings first? Doesn’t Se-young have some say in all this? And if Jin-gu does go after the girl Jae-bum likes, how will he deal with his own feelings of guilt for betraying his friend?

The “plus nine” boy I’m most worried about right now is Kwang-soo. Yes, something happened that was out of his control and he got punished for it which is terribly unfair, but he seems much more down about it than the situation seems to justify. It’s clear that even before this year, Kwang-soo pretty much went to work and came home and did nothing else, and I worry that he’s not just upset about this situation but actually clinically depressed. Unlike Jin-gu who is pretty happy with his life except for his unrequited love, Kwang-soo seems to be perpetually stuck with nothing going on in his life other than his job. I doubt that just meeting a woman is enough to pull him out of the hole he’s sunk into, and I’m concerned that he’s putting all his hopes in that basket and will be let down horribly when it doesn’t change his whole life for the better.

I’m looking forward to seeing more about Min-gu and Dong-gu and their troubles, because I have a feeling that what’s come is just a preamble and that they’re both in for a big fat helping of Life Sucks. I would just love it if Min-gu’s “fated” love interest turns out to be a really difficult piece of work, because I have a feeling that he’s really used to things coming easily to him and could benefit from someone making him work for something he wants. And Dong-gu definitely needs a dose of reality, because all he’s ever known is that his looks got him fame, and he’s never had to actually work for it. He’ll need to think about whether it’s worth the humiliation of acting classes and a public fall from grace in order to get his celebrity status back, or if it’s easier to just give up and be a normal kid.

Plus Nine Boys is starting off on such a wonderful foot, and I find myself with really high hopes that it continues in this vein of focusing on the relationships between the characters. While I think the premise of four men at life’s crossroads is interesting, and would have enjoyed something sillier with more slapstick, the direction the show is going is so much better than if it had relied on cliched superstitions and silly pratfall-like humor. In that sense, the teasers certainly misled us, but I can’t be upset because I think that what we got is so much better than what it could have been. Instead of being fluffy and full of light humor, the show has buckets of heart and emotion, is thoughtful and smart, and I already find myself loving and rooting for all four of our guys and their loved ones. It’s absolutely fantastic to get something even better than you expected, and I look forward to more of the same as the story gets underway.

 
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This show has been so lovely so far. Only 2 episodes and I'm already invested in the characters and their stories to come.

I've definitely been charmed.

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What I love is the genuine love the 9 boys have for each other that's visible through the light teasing, their comfort around each other at home and that the ball match was Hyung Jingu and Dongsaeng Mingu vs. Their Besties :3
Thanks for recap Loll!

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Thanks for the recap Lollypip!

I really like how consistent the narrative is, despite having four main leads. You can see each of their struggles, and hopes along the way. I'm more invested in Jin-gu's situation most likely because I'm in a similar age gap.

But whoa totally did not see that coming from Se-young! I think she's one of those girls who just genuinely get along real well with guys. Like she treats them as her brothers, and just enjoy their company. That's what I'm thinking for now, until we get a hint of her romance.

Lastly Dong-gu, ugh he's like this adorable mini man on my screen. He's so cute with his lil girlfriend. I do love how they at least had her confront him about his behavior, instead of crying about him being mean.

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I am loving everything in this show, except the color palette (c'mon! couldn't they borrow MSH's camera?) and the vindictive boss.

And ditto on the trio. A triangle between friends is always a bit more messy rather than when it's between strangers. I sincerely wish is that they'll come out of it with their friendship intact and improved, with no noble idiocy rearing it's ugly head.

One more thing I liked is how they dropped the info on Jae-bum being a chaebol. It was no grandiose declaration, just an accepted fact for both of the friends, and that it does not provide any divide between them.

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Funny, I weirdly prefer this color palette to MSH's. Or rather, I believe it fits this drama better, while MSH's works perfectly for what it is.

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MSH is (literally) so dark for me that I always have to stop to readjust the tv settings. I like this shows palette better, too.

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Thanks LollyPip! Glad to have you recapping my new drama addiction again right after the last one :)

I'm so in love with this show. I really adore all the characters and relationships. Like the family is wonderful and then when you add that the individual worlds the boys inhabit each have something lovely, yet different to offer in terms of the relationships and coming-of-age growth, I mean, can this drama even go wrong? I have very high expectations for this one.

One of my favorite moments of the ep, for some reason, was just when 39 was all-depressed in front of the TV and his head was resting in 9's lap. It was freakin' adorable.

Something I'm really liking about this drama so far is how effectively they've set up the dynamics between the three friends (29's) in just 2 episodes. I already feel so invested in how they'll come out of this drama as close as ever. And the wonderful thing is, I already get the sense that that's what's most important to all of them. It's not just a classic case where the girl is just getting between two best friends. They're ALL equally important to one another, and I'm so with them already.

Now to address the recent twist: Only one of them gets a happily ever after (for the course of the drama, that is)?! GAH. I both love and hate this. It certainly makes things interesting and I like the sense of realism it brings to the drama. But I like how this drama probably won't be about everyone getting a happy ending, but rather be about the journey they take and growth they experience as they begin to fight for their happy endings. I'm fine if they don't get them right away, as long as the ending gives hope for the future.

I'm definitely banking on either 29 or 39 getting lucky and I am SO TORN between who I want it to be!!! On the one hand, I seriously ship 29 and Se-young. Like, I love them together already. But, I want 39's happily ever after! I can already tell this dilemma is going to plague me to the end. But I am certainly excited for how it's all going to unfold :)

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Hi Chandler! Nice to see you here on this thread!

Agree with all of you said! I adore the guys in this show!! For two episodes, it felt like the introduced a lot of elements and Im surprised to find that I care for all of them.

With that said, I'm a little worried for the show. I don't know how they'll gonna hold it with this recent plot twist. At first, though I like the story lines, there has been no definite goal yet to carry the plot through the end. And then comes this plot twist... I already see a lot of frustrations both from the characters and audience ahead. I sure do hope that the writers know exactly what they are doing, and not just conjure some deus ex machina when the mess starts rolling. I do hope they get to wrap everything up so that it doesn't hurt in the way I am already dreading it to.

But all in all, I think I'm sticking with this show. It's TVN, after all :D

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Hey Ssie! Great to see you too :)

I see what you mean, and, of course, there are reasons to be worried about how they handle it. But there's something about the execution of these two episodes that oddly has me not too worried.

Plus, I think that this really only means that the relationships they embark on throughout the drama may not yield any (except for one) lasting relationships, but this doesn't mean that they won't be worthwhile to watch or that they won't attain a lasting relationship in the future. And it certainly doesn't mean that they won't come out of the drama with a hopeful, and happy ending.

I'm hoping the drama will explore the relationships in a realistic way and that the whys for them not working out in the long run resonate with me. And that, in an individual sense, this will be an uplifting story for them. What IS tricky and bothersome about it, is that now we're going to be watching all the relationships with this knowledge and that tends to affect the watching experience in a way I don't always like, BUT if the execution is as spot on as it's been, then I will have absolutely no problem :)

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Why do I feel like the drama wants us to believe that there will only be one happy ending for one of the couples, but will totally cop out and give us puppies and rainbows for everyone? What if the fortune teller was referring to a completely new relationship? If 29 and 39 are already in love with their respective women and if the women feel the same way(deep DEEP down), then well it's kinda sorta something that already exists and the fortune teller is only talking about 19.

And even if that's not the case, I'm not too bothered coz there's always next year ;)

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Let's cross our fingers and hope you're right!

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I love ur line of reasoning that would make complete..... TVN sense ? ...... I just want them all to be happy lol

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And the fortune teller could be wrong! Let's remember that. Does anyone else get a little vibe off him for Mom?

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Aw, did anyone else know that Jin-goo and Se-young were in a music video before?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGGPG0Hbh8w#t=33

Also this OST was released:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqNfhxvF2cc

Seriously though, does anyone know the tracklist for this drama? I want all the songs so badly!!!

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Gosh! I did remember that music video, I only watch it because of jin gu and now I realized that he's with se-seyoung XD and se-young looks different in the video though. :D

And thats freaking OST with just ONLY ONE WORD lyrics of the song hahah, so funny, but i love itt :D

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Haha IKR. That OST is the fastest I've ever memorized a Korean song, that's for sure :)

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I really hope they release a full OST soon because the musical cues are awesome and always on point. You can tell a lot of thought has been put into it.

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Right? I LOVE the music. I have a feeling that they're using already released music for the most part, but I wish they would release a track-list or something.

I've been searching for the songs though and I found the one that plays in episode 1 when 29 is running to confess at the end. It's Neoneun Naege by Peterpan Complex. And if you search Peterpan Complex on itunes, it's their most popular song so you should see it right away :)

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Also found the song from the umbrella scene!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWiliIm7D4c

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Personaly it's my hope that tvN will put all their couples in the same building. So I hope that the noisy upstairs neighbors are Go Ara and Trash and above them Shi-won and Yoon-jae.

I love everyone except the kid, probably at least partialy because children under the age of 10 scare me.

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And here I was thinking the noisy neighbour will be Min Gu's destiny girl :P I like your idea better though.

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I really love the uncle. He's just so.....charming in his dourness.

Well I love the whole cast and I'm sticking with this delightful show.

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Am I the only one who thinks chorong's character like sunjae too?? because when she walk passed by sungjae she was smiling. XD sorry maybe I'm wrong or totally wrong. hahah just predicting :D

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Yay, it's great to see you recapping this, LollyPip. You're always so positive and insightful. I loved your commentary and definitely agree that so far, this show is turning out much better than I expected. I didn't expect it to have this introspective, almost quiet feel to it (especially in Jingu's scenes). It seems almost like a slice of life show at times and that's a genre that is sorely missing in K-dramas.

I really love the friendship between the 29 year olds so far and I think the show has done a great job of setting up their relationships already. I love their little trio and it makes me sad that this love triangle could break things up but I want to believe that their friendship is strong enough to move past however things play out. I also think Ma Se Young is all types of awesome and a refreshing female character.

I wish Kwangsoo had taken more initiative about Sponge! He could have found a way to revitalize it and make it less silly and more fun. Most variety is inherently silly, it's true, but it doesn't have to be completely nonsensical. I think he needs a change of attitude too. He has to stop looking at Sponge as a punishment and think of it as a challenge. At least he didn't lose his job completely.

I also really love the family dynamics so far - seeing the two younger boys ragging on each other and the older two playing basketball with their friends. It seems really natural and realistic. And even though Mom is a total nag, it's obvious that it comes from a place of love and fear. I really liked how SeYoung told JinGu she and her siblings just go along with it because she knows it helps put her mother's mind at ease. That was a lovely moment.

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Kim Mi-kyung is everywhere..not that I dont like her but she's like the mom in every drama I've seen these last two years..I'm sure there are other actresses in Korea who can play mom.

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Yayyyyy such a great replacement after MND. Nice to see you recapping this! Im really enjoying the romance but more than that i feelzzz for mom. Must be tough taking care of those boys. Hoping this will be a fun and memorable ride!

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I love this drama so far...

The 29 year old's relationship - love the bromance, the 3-way friendship and love and heart Jin Gu's love for Se-young. i love that one on hand. he's playing the cassanova, but he only loves one girl. Something tells me that his cassanova ways are just a put on - to disguise his fondness for Se Young - that he is what his mum says he is - someone 'innocent', too shy to even speak to girls - that he developed this playboy persona to fool Se-young and so that he can tease and flirt with her and back hug her (all the things he actually wants to do with her), but done in such a way that she won't know that he likes her.

i also think that Se-young actually likes him too - the 'office- romance' signs were just Jin Gu mis-reading the situations. She really likes him but doesn't approve of his cassanova ways and is doubtful that he'll return her feelings genuinely...hence, her rejection of Jae Bum. I mean, he's the opposite of Jin Gu, so why doesn't she like him? She reads Jin Gu too well and rejects him too much to NOT like him. I seriously hope all ends well with them.

I also wish the Kwang Soo will find true love. I am rooting for him and Jin Gu to find true love - and seriously hope that the fortune teller is soooo wrong. It would be a real twist if he was - that would teach Mom not to be so superstitious!

The upstairs neighbour? I'm almost 100% certain it's Min Gu's dream girl's family.

All in all, I think that all the boys will change their paths and find meaning and satisfaction doing something else.

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OH I like that! I would LOVE it if the show tricks us into expecting only one of them to get the girl...only to have the superstitions be wrong and all of them getting the happily ever after they deserve. That would be awesome. Don't know how likely it is, but still :)

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What a twist! Se Young actually rejected Jae bum, aww I feel for him. But now Jin Gu is not hopeless, let's see how long it takes him to master up the courage to confess. Hopefully not too long, maybe together with of what happened between them years ago...

For now I think Kwang Soo deserves a happy ending more than the other guys. Poor guy did all his dating in college and has been forever alone since. It's going to be fun seeing him track down his ex girlfriends.
His nine plus year is going to bring him happiness as to the misfortune the other plus nine boys are getting.

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After two episodes I can say, this drama is quite funny, but I don't find it especially engaging.
I must say, the superstitions are rather forced into the plot, as the problems are made by the people themselves and can be solved by themselves. Some of them can be qualified as the hard landing, like one learns that life is tough indeed.
Dong Gu was spoilt by his mom and has a hard time transitioning from a little adorable kid who can get by just by being cute into a bigger boy who is expected to be something more. Allowing a kid to say "I am a celeb!" was an obvious mistake and now both mom and her son feel lost and think they're unlucky. They aren't. The mum is just a little clueless when it comes to showbiz and that's all.

Jin Gu isn't unlucky either. He just seems to believe that he deserves any girl just because. Sure, as a smooth talker and a handsome guy, he's a naural ladies' favourite, but it still doesn't mean any girl will love him or reciprocate his feelings. Simply because it takes more for two people to become an item. Sometimes one side just doesn't feel it, and you can be sad or even upset about it, but still it's no reason to feel miserable and consider yourself jinxed. It's just the way it is. Learning about it yourself can hurt, that's for sure. Partially, he can blame himself for sending wrong signals to Se Young, presenting himself as the ultimate player who can't be bothered to keep his eyes from wandering. He can try to win her, but he will succeed or not. Not a big deal, right?

The other two guys can believe that what happens to them is a bad luck, but I would like it better if drama didn't accentuate the "fate", "luck" and such BS, because even if we took all the "9" thingies away, it would be still the same - a funny history. Nothing more or less than it is now.

I need to mention one moment that literally cracked me up. It was when Dong Gu left the acting classroom after fighting with his girlfriend. When he was walking the hallway, Leonard Cohen's "I'm Your Man" was played. It was only the intro to the song, but it evokes an image of a mature man with a past - I know many versions of the song, all of them sung by older singers with those low, husky voices, and the lyrics are rather mature, too - and there we see a young kid walking with a gloomy face. A hilarious contrast.

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I think that's kind of the point; everything that's happening to these guys is just part of the regular ups-and-downs of life (or for 39, it seems to be more the downs and downs of life). Yes, Mom is superstitious and has this big hang-up about the plus-nine thing that's influencing her family's view of their situations (and the show is also using the number 9 gags all over the place), but I don't think the show needs us, as viewers, to believe that the plus-nine thing is the cause of their bad luck. In fact, I think the heavy-handed use of the number 9 jokes and puns is kind of tongue-in-cheek. I don't get the feeling that the audience is really expected to buy into the whole plus-nine jinx; we are expected to believe that the characters, with varying degrees of initial skepticism, buy into it and therefore that has an influence on how they perceive and handle their situations. That's the impression I get (so far, at least). But it's a first impression, and subject to change with additional episodes!

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the heavy-handed use of the number 9 jokes and puns
That's actually my problem - it's done in a clumsy, over the top way. Not really funny.

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Ah, I see. I don't find it especially funny myself, but it doesn't really bother me either. It is a bit overdone, but I can overlook it.

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Thanks Lollypip ! I'm fully enjoying the Plus Nine Boys recap.

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Loving this show. Thanks for the recap.

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Thanks for recapping this and for all your great insights.

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Aww,i started this drama not expecting very much but in just 2 episodes its got me hooked.After completing and throughly enjoying Marriage not Dating,i was wonder what drama to pick next.Looks like i made a good choice.
I've watched Kim Young-kwang in dramas(good docter,love rain,my fair lady) and movies(hot blooded youth) before but he never caught my attention! I totally cannot remember his scenes,all seems a blur.But after watching this drama i'm like-"how did i miss this Hottie"!!
I'm really really enjoyin Tvn dramas,plz continue to be awesome all this.

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Another great episode, so cute and so thought provoking. Looking forward to more!

Thanks for the recap!

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Was the flashback of Se Young stealing a glance at Jin Gu from Jin Gu's point of view? Or was that reveal only privy to the viewers? Obviously, Se Young is in love with Jin Gu, but I am wondering whether he already knows in the second episode. Then again, he was on the verge of confessing in the first episode, so this drama moves awfully fast. I am crazy curious what happened between them in the past. He got hung up on the lying part, so perhaps the incident had something to do with him lying to her?

Director Jo made me so mad in this episode. Those were supposed to be confidential evaluations. I wanted Jin Gu to quit so bad, so 1) he wouldn't need to suffer under a tyrannical boss anymore, and 2) he wouldn't need to see Se Young and Jae Bum together anymore. Se Young's chicken gesture was very sweet. She can't not be in love with him.

As for good fortune being bestowed on only one boy, I am conflicted between Kwang Soo and Jin Gu. I am already ruling out Min Gu because he's young, he can bounce back, and I need him out of the way in order to give his uncle or hyung a chance.

Thanks for the recap, LollyPip!

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