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You’re the Best, Lee Soon-shin: Episodes 25-26

Phew, the cat is out of the bag, finally, after desperately clinging to the walls of said bag and shredding it to pieces until there was hardly even any bag left to hide in. It took some bloody scratches, bruised hearts, and a heckuva while to get here, but we did make it. Huzzah.

Plus, our hero’s romantic feelings are inching closer and closer to a point of no return, I think. One of the best things about the show is Jo Jung-seok’s slow build of tension—and if we were to go back to the beginning and only plot his character arc, I think we’d find that he’s been playing this with a finely controlled hand. Very cool.

SONG OF THE DAY

Lee Seok-hoon – “연애의 시작” (The start of dating) [ Download ]

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EPISODES 25-26

Soon-shin comes home just in time to see Mi-ryung exchanging heated words with Mom, and wonders what she’s doing here. The others uneasily cover up the reason and say that Mi-ryung knew Grandma from back in the day, while Mom brushes aside Soon-shin’s questions and sends her up to bed.

Outside the house, Mi-ryung matter-of-factly tells Jun-ho that Soon-shin is her daughter. This kind of serious talk calls for a venue change, and at her house Jun-ho angrily takes her to task for not telling Soon-shin about the truth before she even came to him to plan a press conference. I mean, unless she wanted to look like a self-absorbed manipulator and egoist, but what are the chances of that?

Mi-ryung says that he isn’t in a position to worry about Soon-shin, however, and should be more focused on his actress Song Mi-ryung’s impending career crisis. On that score I give her the point, at least until he fesses up about his feelings. She says she’ll worry about Soon-shin and directs Jun-ho to take care of the press.

It’s a bad night for everyone, with Jun-ho feeling frustrated and Mom tossing in turning all night. In the morning, everyone stares at Soon-shin while pretending nothing is wrong, which is awkward for everybody.

With Yoo-shin still out of the loop, she starts nagging Mom to quit working at the chicken shop, which is an added argument that nobody needs to deal with right now. Hye-shin tells her to ease up on Mom today, which hardly assuages Yoo-shin’s curiosity about the strange air in the household.

Yi-jung pops up at the clinic to ask Chan-woo to lunch, which he curtly denies, citing prior engagement. He asks her not to send him any more text messages and reasserts that he has a girlfriend, just in time for Yoo-shin to hear.

Yi-jung lays it on thick by appealing to his sympathy, tearing up and saying that she can’t help how she feels about him. Thankfully Yoo-shin steps in to rescue him (and us) from too much of that and whisks him off to lunch.

She’s pretty cool about it, too, saying that he doesn’t have to explain the scene since she understands. She’s more concerned about her mother working for his mother, and I think she has a great point about the power imbalance, except she says it in her typical blunt way and doesn’t take into consideration the fact that she’s borderline badmouthing his mother. Chan-woo takes issue and says that just as she feels for her mother, so does he for his.

Then he gets an apology text from Yi-jung, and now Yoo-shin sees the whole screen full of messages and revises her opinion—is he playing the field? She’s not accusing him of cheating, but more like keeping potential backup girlfriends around. Again I don’t think she’s being totally out of line, but her way of accusing Chan-woo isn’t exactly helpful and she barks that Yi-jung keeps pestering him because he’s giving her opportunities. She throws out the “Let’s break up” line and stomps out of there.

Mom spends the day in a daze, then decides to do something about it and heads over to Mi-ryung’s house. She asks Mi-ryung not to hurt Soon-shin with this truth, and Mi-ryung is genuinely confused (in her bubble of privilege, this one), asking what hurt she could have possibly given the family. Is there an eye-roll big enough for that statement? She thinks that because she never asked the family to raise Soon-shin, she has behaved perfectly justifiably. I like how she conveniently forgets the part where she abandoned her baby.

Mom gets angry for a different reason, accusing her of sneaking around with her husband, and Mi-ryung seems so taken aback that I’m betting he isn’t bio-dad. She merely says that Mom has too little faith in her husband, adding, “I feel sorry for Chang-hoon oppa. I see how his marriage must have been.”

Mom is raging and yelling, so Mi-ryung says that it’s clear she won’t believe anything she says. Thus she won’t try to explain and Mom’s free to think whatever she wants. Also, Soon-shin should know the truth about her parenthood. I know Mi-ryung’s cold and unsympathetic, but in the face of Mom’s shrillness I have to say her coolly logical response is a bit satisfying.

Mom attacks Mi-ryung for being a terrible mother and practically throws herself at her. She’s dragged out screaming, “Don’t you dare mess with my daughter!”

Mi-ryung is huffy, but Manager Hwang has misgivings about one big tidbit: “That family believes she’s Chang-hoon hyungnim’s daughter.” Aha. Finally, confirmation of what we all suspected, but weren’t positive on: Soon-shin isn’t Dad’s daughter, thus he didn’t cheat. I’d feel sorrier for Mom’s misdirected rage if she hadn’t been so hard to swallow the last twenty episodes.

Manager Hwang suggests that they tell the truth about the father, but Mi-ryung decides to stick to that story. She says warningly that Soon-shin IS his daughter—her tone indicating, And don’t you dare try to suggest that’s not the truth, because it is from now on.

With nobody else to appeal to, Mom visits Jun-ho to ask him to help stop the story from breaking. He wants nothing more, and says that he’ll do his best.

Knowing what he does, Jun-ho is (extra) awkward when Soon-shin spots him outside and asks if something happened with Mi-ryung, because things were very strange after she dropped by yesterday. He feigns ignorance and says no, though he does add, “Don’t worry. Nothing will happen.”

Grandma asks Hye-shin to go with her to confront Mi-ryung, and gets angry when Hye-shin advises her against it. So Grandma does that thing that drives me batty, which is turning her anger on somebody who did nothing to deserve it, and says that Hye-shin is just like Mom, and that’s why they both got cheated on. Yeeeesh. Then this turns into a diatribe on how disappointed Grandma is in Hye-shin: “You were so smart in school, why did you turn into such an idiot?” And there we have it, Worst Granny of the Year.

Hye-shin calls out Yoo-shin for coffee to ask her to lay off with the mom-nagging, and suggests that it might even be good for Mom to work with Chicken Ajumma. Yoo-shin doesn’t understand why unni keeps referring to Mom going through stuff right now when she isn’t aware of anything, so finally Hye-shin fills her in—on Mi-ryung, Soon-shin, and Dad’s supposed affair.

Jun-ho makes a last-ditch appeal to the reporter to ask him to pull the article, offering him anything he wants. Reporter Park isn’t interested in a payoff, saying that nothing he is writing is false, and it’s about time people saw past Mi-ryung’s image. Jun-ho tries to make a bid for the daughter’s privacy and emotional state, but the reporter counters that it’s too bad for her, but that’s not a reason to withhold the truth.

So finally Jun-ho pleads for extra time—just a few days to let the family prepare emotionally for the shock. At least Reporter Park agrees, though it’s only for a few days.

Next Jun-ho goes to Mi-ryung to tell her he intends to push back tomorrow’s press conference, until she tells Soon-shin the truth and gets her agreement. His proposal is the decent thing to do, but Mi-ryung points out how ridiculous he sounds, given that he was betting with her as the object only recently.

Jun-ho agrees that he hurt her, but he doesn’t want to inflict any more pain. Mi-ryung says Soon-shin has no reason to be hurt by the truth since she should be glad to know she’s her mother. It’s almost amazing, how high her opinion of herself is. She declares that she’ll make Soon-shin happy, lift her out of her pathetic life, and support her if she wants to act. Completely blind to the irony, she yells at her housemaid to reject Yeon-ah’s call.

Thus Jun-ho has to call Mom to tell her regretfully that he couldn’t stop the press conference, which is proceeding as scheduled. He asks her to tell Soon-shin the truth gently.

Jun-ho catches Soon-shin as she’s leaving the restaurant, having just said goodbye to Young-hoon and Jae-bum. He keeps stumbling over his words, unable to meet her eye, and finally just says with difficulty, “I’m sorry.”

Yoo-shin comes home in a fury that night, upset that she’s been left in the dark and screaming mad at their father for cheating. She’s indignant on Mom’s behalf, but it comes out more like anger at Mom for being too nice and passive and not ripping out Mi-ryung’s hair for stealing her man. Taking a page out of Grandma’s book, Yoo-shin turns her anger on the victim and yells that if Mi-ryung wants to take Soon-shin away, they should just let her. Good lord, this family. I get that this is the knee-jerk reaction and that they (probably?) don’t mean what they say, but to be so quick to renounce your sister because your father was an adulterer (allegedly)?

Hye-shin follows her outside and tries to calm her down. She isn’t successful, and Yoo-shin sobs that this can’t be true, that Dad wasn’t that kind of person. I know this is a radical thought, but maybe, just maybe, instead of jumping to assumptions you could have faith in your dead Dad? Just saying? A suggestion? …no?

Jun-ho drinks alone at the restaurant, and asks Young-hoon how he felt when he first learned he was adopted. Huh, hello there coincidental factoid. Did you just write your way into the show last night?

Young-hoon says that it hurt, even though he had caring parents. Without explaining the cause of his mood, Jun-ho says he’s pathetic: “All I do is talk a big talk, but I can’t do a thing.” Young-hoon: “You only figured that out now?” Ha.

Mom suggests a mother-daughter date tomorrow, so they go shopping for clothes and have lunch together. Soon-shin promises to do better from now on and apologizes for being a troublemaker, since Mom must’ve been disappointed that she was so different from her unnis. Mom assures her that that’s not true.

Soon-shin suggests visiting Dad’s gravesite, so up the mountain they go. Mom’s mood has been heavy all day as she prepares for the big reveal, and Soon-shin seems to understand that something big is coming. She steels herself when Mom starts her talk, recalling the day she “first met Soon-shin” as a baby. It sounds like a poetic way to say “the day you were born” so it isn’t immediately clear that she’s explaining the adoption, until she gets to the dreaded truth: “You were born to a different mother.”

Speaking of whom, Mi-ryung presides over her press conference, playing her part perfectly—subdued demeanor, humble language, tearful apologies for deceiving her fans. She explains that she had a daughter whom she hadn’t had contact with, whose current whereabouts she only recently learned. She asks the reporters not to bother her daughter, who didn’t know of all this, and fears that her mistake will hurt her. Oh, she’s good—she just took all that stuff about concern and hurt from Jun-ho’s speech, didn’t she?

Soon-shin struggles to take in the truth while Mom begs her to believe her, that she never stopped considering her a daughter. The initial disbelief turns to anger and she demands to know who her mother is.

She already knows the truth by the time she and Mom make it back home, but it’s rubbing salt in the wound to see the family watching Mi-ryung’s press conference on television. And now the dam breaks and she scoffs at this woman who is supposed to be her mother: “Then who am I?” she yells. “How do you expect me to believe it? How can she be my mother?” And why are they only telling her now, after twenty years? Good questions all.

Soon-shin runs out of the house in shock and Hye-shin follows her out, only to lose sight of her pretty quickly. Bread Man joins in on the search as they make their way through the streets.

They run into Jun-ho as he arrives in the neighborhood, and it’s cute how Bread Man again steps up to play big bro, staring Jun-ho down. Of course he has to back down when he realizes Hye-shin knows Jun-ho after all, haha.

Jun-ho scours the neighborhood on his own, checking Soon-shin’s usual spots. He even hikes up the mountain, but he has no luck. Soon-shin spends the day wandering aimlessly, still in shock.

With no other recourse, Mom says she’ll wait for Soon-shin to calm down and come back on her own. She leaves worried phone messages, but can do little else.

After fielding phone calls and dealing with reporters at her gate, Mi-ryung decides on the strategic move of faking a collapse and admitting herself to the hospital. Man, she should be the genius agency CEO in this drama. She’s got the media plays down pat.

Yeon-ah has to be told of the scandal by her makeup artist, and hurries to Mi-ryung’s bedside. I actually feel bad for her, fretting about Mi-ryung genuinely while Mi-ryung merely pretends to be in weak health.

Soon-shin isn’t home by morning, so Mom tries calling Chan-mi to see if she spent the night there. Chan-mi’s confused at the question, but Chicken Parents immediately realize that le shit must have hit le fan, and a slip of the tongue has Ajumma admitting the truth to her kids. I’ll give it to her, Ajumma held on longer than I’d thought.

Yoo-shin finds Mom preparing a huge breakfast of all of Soon-shin’s favorite foods, and that gets her angry, for what reason I cannot reasonably understand. Yoo-shin yells at Mom for being stupid and demands a DNA test, and when Mom says that DNA isn’t important Yoo-shin gets even shoutier. She says Dad was mocking them all his life and barks that it’s incredibly wrong for “a kid like that” to upset Mom, and for Mom to respond by cooking her special dishes.

I’ve said it a lot already, but this drama really brings it out in me: Good lord! Now that we’ve exhausted our supply of awful moms and grandmas, is it time to move on to the sisters?

Then Yoo-shin actually accuses Mom of not catching on to the affair. Geez, way to blame the victim. Mom slaps her across the face, and I’m not sorry. Mom yells that she’d better not say that again, because Soon-shin is their daughter and sister. Yoo-shin storms off crying.

Hye-shin tries to soothe her and says Mom’s hurting. Yoo-shin cries that she knows, and it’s because she knows that she’s saying this stuff. Yes, because rubbing salt in wounds totally makes them heal faster.

But making things even worse, they find that their house is surrounded by a phalanx of reporters. The phone calls come pouring in, inquiring about Lee Soon-shin, and all the furor has the family at a loss. It also means that getting out of the house is a trial, and Hye-shin asks for Bread Man’s help.

So Jin-wook comes out to face the press, playing the gruff ajusshi and acting like he doesn’t know who this Soon-shin is. They’ve got the wrong house—the only people living here are his pretty wife, his daughter, and himself. HA.

He threatens to call the cops on them and gets them to scatter, thankfully. To hammer in the family man image, he takes Woo-joo’s hand in his, and she allows this with the utmost reluctance before stomping off at first opportunity.

Bread Man doesn’t know what’s going on but he thoughtfully doesn’t press Hye-shin for details, just assures her that he’ll help however he can. Her thanks has him marveling, “She said Jin-wook-sshi… She knew my name.” Aw.

Soon-shin walks through the neighborhood toward her house, but stops at the sight of reporters camped outside. She turns around.

At the Shin household, the ladies gossip about Mi-ryung’s scandal while the men roll their eyes inwardly at them. At least, I’m pretty sure that’s what they’re doing, because that’s definitely what I’m doing.

Mom somehow makes this about her—how could Mi-ryung fool HER?—and Yi-jung smirks that she totally knew something like this would happen. Schadenfreude is such an ugly color on you. Even Dr. Shin points out how she’s excited about the gossip, while Mom just asks, “Who, me?” Yes, she who takes glee in a supposed friend’s downfall.

Jun-ho continues to call Soon-shin with no answer, and heads to the restaurant. A beer, first thing in the morning? Well I suppose you’re justified today.

Thinking that Jun-ho’s upset about the headache of dealing with Mi-ryung’s scandal, Young-hoon offers a sympathetic ear. I do love that we as viewers have the secret knowledge that Jun-ho really couldn’t care less about Mi-ryung’s crisis, I think—this is all about Soon-shin.

When Young-hoon asks about Mi-ryung’s daughter, Jun-ho tells him, “Ask Soon-shin yourself. It’s her.” Young-hoon assumes he’s pulling his leg, but Jun-ho’s grim reaction is confirmation enough.

Soon-shin finally picks up her phone, answering when Manager Hwang calls to ask for a meeting. But she’s only talking to him to instruct him never to call again, as she has no intention of meeting them.

On the upside for Mi-ryung, public sentiment is swinging around in her favor, with positive reactions far outnumbering the negative ones.

Yeon-ah takes news of the daughter pretty well, actually, and says that she intends to extend a hand and treat her like a new sister. Only to have her face fall when Mi-ryung names that sister. Of all the sisters in the world…

Deciding to visit Mi-ryung, Jun-ho’s mother sets out cooking a large spread. I find it amusing that while Mom prepares her salad, she cluck-clucks that Mi-ryung’s “heart must be torn in two,” just as she rips a head of lettuce in half with her bare hands. I’m pretty certain this is unintentional—I don’t give this show credit for doing that level of subtlety—but it’s hilarious. Mom does at least turn this into a teaching moment, telling Yi-jung to come cheer up Mi-ryung, because ignoring someone in their time of need is bad behavior. I’d say rubbing their nose in condescending “I told you so”s is a close second, but Mom gets points for trying.

Despite huffing at her phone earlier when Chan-woo didn’t call, Yoo-shin ignores his calls when he does. He shows up at her office after work, and she continues to rebuff him, saying they’d broken up. He disagrees and tries to talk it out, wanting to lend her his support during her emotional time.

But Yoo-shin has taken it into her head that this is further proof that all men suck, that they’re all disgusting pigs who cheat, and therefore she will never date or marry. Her blanket denunciation of all manhood has Chan-woo arguing that he isn’t like that, and that she should know him well enough to know that, but she retorts that she thought she knew her father too. Sigh. Maybe we cut this one loose, Chan-woo. It’s her loss.

Soon-shin wanders some more, and this time Chan-mi spots her in the neighborhood and takes her aside for coffee. Chan-mi offers up her sympathy and support, encourage Soon-shin to buck up. But mention of Mi-ryung and the reporters stirs Soon-shin’s anger, and she barks that Mi-ryung isn’t her mother.

She calls Jun-ho to demand Mi-ryung’s whereabouts, then heads over immediately. He’s both incredibly relieved to have heard from Soon-shin and worried about what’s about to go down, and hurries to the hospital.

Soon-shin arrives first and steps inside the room with a hard glare. Mi-ryung has been expecting the visit to come at some point and says all the right things—that she’s sorry, she was wrong, Soon-shin must hate her. You get the sense she had this speech all rehearsed in her head, maybe pulled from a script or two.

But this scene veers off-script when Soon-shin cuts her off, calling her Teacher (not mother) and issuing one request: Keep reporters away from her family.

Soon-shin: “I don’t want to be someone who brings difficulty to my family. I really don’t want them suffering because of me. My family is precious to me. My mother, grandmother, sisters—I can’t live without them. It’s because of them that I’ve come this far. Do you understand? So don’t contact me anymore. I don’t want to meet you again.”

She turns coldly and walks out without a second glance. Her strong facade starts to crack as she exits the hospital, just as she runs into Jun-ho. He tries to talk to her, offer her comfort, and then pulls her wrist to hold her back when she tries to dismiss him and walk on. He asks where she slept, how she’s been, and she answers dully that she’s fine.

He presses her to react, to get angry, reminding her of her words from before—that she has a heart, and she can get hurt. Soon-shin asks tearfully, “And if I get angry, does anything change? Does it go away? Can I return to the me of the past?”

He doesn’t have an answer to that, but he does takes her hand (not the wrist—he’s evolving!) and offers to take her home. But she pulls her hand free and walks away, and as he watches her go we see that Yeon-ah is watching in the background. Ho-hum, don’t care about her.

Mi-ryung is upset to hear about the reporters hounding the Lee family, because this means somebody leaked the info to the press. Manager Hwang admits he did it because there was no point in hiding it, and she reacts angrily. I guess she did at least mean to keep it quiet, even if she was just out to protect her welfare and not theirs.

Mom walks home that night and finds Soon-shin sitting curbside, to her great relief. Soon-shin approaches like a scared little girl and cries that she’s sorry, asking, “Nothing’s going to change, right?”

She rattles off all the family connections that will stay the same, anxious to be reassured that she’ll still be part of them. “You have to treat me just like before. Just like before, okay?”

Mom gathers her to herself as Soon-shin cries, and they stand there sobbing together. And that’s the scene that Mi-ryung witnesses on her way over to talk to them.

 
COMMENTS

These episodes were heavy on the angst, which is a double-edged sword: On one hand, this means the secret is finally out and that everybody knows and now we can move on already, thank goodness. There’s only so much hiding you can do of the same old secret before you get really tired of it, and I think we were there ten episodes ago. But on the other hand, it means we have to deal with the resulting angstrosity as a necessary plot pass-through, like we did after Dad died. And this is a show that, at its worst, is barely watchable—i.e, when it’s being overly melodramatic and tearful, because it just doesn’t handle angst with any level of subtlety.

What has kept me hanging on, then, are all the side characters that I do really enjoy and the light funny moments, and the slow build of the romances. I really like that the development of Soon-shin and Jun-ho’s relationship is so gradual, which gives us a close-up look at the growth of their feelings. Particularly with him; it’s a satisfying thing to watch the growing depth of his caring. Jo Jung-seok plays those moments so well, that we can feel his inner conflict—how he wants to do more and force his way into her life, but how he’s barely restraining himself out of respect for her wishes. And his struggle to deal with feeling powerless to help her when he just wants to swoop in and be the white knight.

It’s why I loved the moment he took Soon-shin’s hand, rather than letting his hotheadedness dictate again. He has a tendency to drag her along, which is an affliction that ALL K-drama males have issues with, but it was an especially sweet moment in this context. And that moment in this episode made a lot of things worth it. It’s a little like digging for clams, I feel. You stick it out because those interactions are so gratifying—but on the downside, a bad week can leave you feeling like you did a lot of digging for not a lot of reward.

I do think that this is a show that is more enjoyable to watch and not so much to recap, because as the recapper I’m struggling to make my way through the bulk of the shrill, overblown, angsty scenes. As a watcher I’d zip forward and pick out the good stuff, bypassing a lot of personal frustration, but I don’t currently have that option. It’s also why we are so wary of taking on longer shows here, because it’s such a commitment, and one we enter into relatively blindly in Week 1. We’ve made exceptions before, but not lightly. ‘Cause let’s face it, I’m a commitment-phobe—I like my stories to the point and punchy, so sue me.

So this is me giving fair warning that weekly recaps of this show may be on the way out—the week-to-week output of this drama offers too little payoff to make it worth it. On the other hand, if that happens I wouldn’t be abandoning the show entirely, because I plan to stick around as a viewer through the end, and may pop back every eight to ten episodes, or at least at the end to wrap things up.

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thanks jb for stickin to tis so far & I can understand why you wanna stop recappin tis coz it's really gettin on my nerves...keep increasin the screen time for characters i hate but reducing screen time for characters i care ... i hardly see baker man nowadays sigh

I tink IU's cried scene had been pretty good so far but other than dat is all right but I totally can't get her when she stare at Miryoung at the hospital scene...dat expression looks totally blank for me

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Thanks JB for the recap it's at the half way mark and it would be a shame if you gave it up now. How about a recap every four episodes?

I have said this before so many times but can't help saying it again. I'm always shocked at how easily people are thrown away in Kdrama's when it is discovered they have no blood ties.

There is no way in similar circumstances I would stop thinking of SS as my sister. Nor would it occur to me to blame her for my dad cheating on mom.

Now that we know the dad is not the father the question becomes why did he lie about where he got the baby in the first place. He could have told the truth without revealing who the mother was.

I find myself disliking the Gma more and more with each appearance, her only concerns are for her dead son's reputation, and who is going to talk about him outside of the neighborhood. Most of them were probably already saying this behind his back when he came home with SS and that lame story. Yep she would be headed for the senior's home. I can just imagined how she treated the young MR. We saw the way she treated SS when she believed her to be a foundling.

MR vanity know's no bounds. Again when the truth would be easier she chooses a lie. Why not tell them that the dad is not SS father? This means the birth secret is not over, the dad will have to be at some point.The family may be relieved but the blow to SS will devastating. So who will the mystery man be? Have we seen him or has he yet to have been seen.

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MR has zero empathy. I don't understand how she can actually be a good actress without even a drop of empathy... to act, she has to be able to relate to the way people feel, but she doesn't. And her own range of feelings is so limited that she can't just draw on that either.

*mindboggles*

All she knows is ME ME ME.

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Thanks, Javabeans. I wouldn't blame you if you do stop the recapping. Sometimes I feel like tearing my hair out in frustration when after a whole week's wait, it feels as though the plot has hardly moved an inch. It can make the wait really disappointing. I must admit this is not a topnotch drama in terms of acting or plotwise - the lightheartedness of various moments and the easy to digest plot makes the show one that's worth to catch - if one is feeling drama-deprived (like me!) or having some lazy time to while away and just want to have something light-hearted. That said, the amount of angst can really get on one's nerves (first, it was mom, then grandma, then SS, then God knows who else). I'm sure when the truth about SS's real dad and her foster dad's death is out, there'll be much more angst and anguish to come (again). Still, I will also watch it to the end, I kind of look forward to it, given the recent dearth of nice K dramas. Am not much of a GFB and MoH fan but thanks to dramabeans, I'm catching up on the stories via your recaps!) The only other show I'm catching now is Shark, only to see where the story goes (but not very inclined towards the angsty KNG at the moment, although that might very well change later. Keeping my options open.

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I am liking the drama well enough, but I am watching it for Jo Jung-seok. I have heard people rave about him from previous dramas, but this is my first time actually watching a drama he is in. I really like the choices he is making with the character and find his character kind of adorable. I loved when he took Soon-shin's hand. So sweet.

I am glad the birth secret is out and as I have watched a lot of 50+ episode dramas, I'm surprised by how early it came out (which is saying something). I really hate the way the characters act when they find out a piece of news (Mom, Grandma, Yoo-shin). I understand where the reaction is coming from, but really. Those women have these emotional outbursts, say hurtful things at the wrong people and think they are totally justified and it's okay. I know they are hurting, but it is unjustified and massively frustrating as a viewer. As long as the show can keep these ridiculous emotional outbursts to a minimum, I will be happy. :)

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lol I am too also surprised how early it was revealed.

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Does anyone else find the intense drinking of water really funny in here?

hehe anyway i enjoyed the episodes. They could have been angstier so I'm okay.

I feel like I'm the only one who understands Mi Ryung in here. When she said she could provide everything for Soon shin i feel like it's her regretting her choice to give Soon Shin up. Maybe it was the delivery of lines, but the way she said it made it sound like that's all she could offer her right now after letting her go.

We also don't know exactly why she gave her up. She should tell the truth more often tho.

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To the one who recap these episodes , you shouldn't point Yoo shin as a bad girl. I agree she overreacts.But she found out one of the two men she trusts betrayed her/her family. That must hurt , especially since it's her FATHER. She going through pain so please when you recap , think what would you do in her shoes. I know people would hate me for saying these but i had to. Sorry if i offended.

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She pretty much denounced LSS as her sister as soon as she found out. LSS had no fault in this and they've been sisters for 20 years but she just tossed her away. And why is she blaming her mom for it? Regardless of how mad she is at her father, I don't think that's right at all.

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you're right, she's wrong to do that. but i think that it is what is expected of her character. you cannot expect everyone to react logically or according to what you think is right coz what fun is a drama where everyone agrees and are mature people...where would be the conflict--and growth-- in that?lol

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I'll understand if you stop recapping this show. I'd love for you to write some final thoughts when this drama ends though :) thanks for the recaps as usual JB!

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Many thanks DB and GF for your wonderful, insightful, humourous recaps which mean so much to all of us. We look forward to them before we can catch the episodes themselves.

I always read your recap before watching the show and am always amazed at the many subtle nuances which I would have missed. So often I would also reread your recap after watching to reinforce my enjoyment.

We will surely miss your input and our enjoyment will be greatly reduced. However, we also understand your reasons and believe that as much as we would like to just sit back and totally enjoy our viewing so should you.

Once again, many thanks. Do sit back and enjoy our JH-LSS and Breadman and his future family.

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If this show just focused on the sisters and their romances, with of course, the OTP front and center, I'd be a very happy camper. It would also be nice if at least one character over the age of 35 was a positive character!

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Thanks for the recap even though I watch I read your thoughts and insight so I hope you can recap now and again I have a silent chat with you on when you do and it is one fo the joys of the all recaps. But I get if it if you don't do them till the end so Thanks for the hard work
Peace

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I really really dislike Yoo Shin! I get she's mad at her dad for cheating and she's projecting that anger onto her mom but wth did LSS do wrong? She didn't know about this! And now she knows and her entire world is falling apart, Yoo Shin treats her like dirt. Does 20 years of being sisters not mean crap? IDGI and it's pissing me off that LSS is being blamed and treated so badly by everyone! Does she not have feelings? Doesn't family mean anything? And the mom and the grandma and SMR (especially the grandma), I want them to be out! Gone forever!

In contrast, I love Jun-Ho. He cares for LSS so much but still respects her wishes. He feels the heartbreak for her. And the way he does it is so subtle and quiet. His eyes show all the misery without him having to rage out or cry. And the way he just stares, so lost about what to do, that sadness hits me the most. I literally cried because of him. It speaks a whole lot about JJS's acting too - he's brilliant at conveying emotion. IU's acting is really good as well. Why are they wasting such strong main characters?

LSS, become angry and take revenge by becoming an actress better than SMR. Ask Jun-Ho to help you do it. And how I wish Yeon-Ah realizes SMR's true colors and help LSS too. That would be wonderful. At this point, I feel bad for even her. (and c'mon, I rarely see any sismances in dramas...it would be so nice!)

How I wish every character disappear besides LSS, Jun-Ho, Jun-Ho's secretary, Chan Woo, Hye Shin, bread guy, the restaurant peeps, and Chan Mi. So far they're the only ones that haven't made me want to hurt them. :(

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I have rants about adoption about this series and they aren't the good kind. I'm involved in the adoption community and I should have more empathy for Soon Shin on that regard, but I don't.

I had a lot more feelings towards adoption in My Princess than Lee Soon Shin. (Though Thorn Birds and I'm Sorry I love you are far worse. Seriously, the killing himself because he's adopted was really horrible.)

Yes, there are adopted people who do feel that the adoptive family *is* their family, but there are also people who feel in between and feel that they belong only to the birth family. (though I tend to avoid that term...)

I honor that, *but* it fails to resonate like it did in My Princess. Mostly because there isn't much of a choice for Lee Soon Shin. Both families kinda suck. She has a NPD family in either situation. In My Princess, there *was* a good choice--choosing her adoptive mother and changing her register had an impact *because* she could not choose. Because her family in either direction *was* a good choice and she didn't want to choose either. There was a greater dilemma.

The drama seems to posit that Lee Soon Shin can spend two days in an identity crisis and get over her adoption issues. Not so. People I know who have suddenly discovered they are adopted, usually take years to try to sort things out. Even if they know who they are. Lee Soon Shin takes two days and then decides on one family. She has four options, which the drama never explored, because there isn't enough weight in any direction, which makes for poor writing.

If you're going to do all the melo, then do it right.

She could have:
1. Weighed feelings of abandonment. (Which it never voiced through her).
2. Weighed feelings of rejection.
3. Weighed feelings of need for love from *both* parties.
4. Shown her struggle between being labeled for the rest of her life and wanting to feel *normal*.
5. Shown other adopted people in the series, struggling with the same questions with different answers. (The singular story is dangerous).
6. Not portrayed adoption as a constant source of a sob fest... (The balance in My Princess was really good, because she functioned as other things besides adopted... and it wasn't *the* main plotline.)

But wait, that requires, ya know, a trip to the GOA'L office to actually *ask* some adopted people on what it's like to be adopted. *sighs* Or asking KoROOT.... (though they tend towards a political agenda position)

Also, during her spiral downward, I think it could show her struggle between those questions by the locations she goes, such as maybe her old school. Also by asking questions.

Her options are:
1. Accept both families.
2. Reject both families.
3. Reject the adoptive family.
4. Reject the birth family.

She can effectively do any of those. Usually lying like that results in a long time rejection of the adoptive family, which results in a lot of hard examination.

I knew of an adopted person that rejected his adoptive family after they lied to him and his adoptive grandparents had told him he was going to be returned to the orphanage before that. So in another words, he already *knew* but his parents pretended that they didn't know, so the actualization of it, resulted in him having a severe down spiral.

The legalities also have issues, the lack of a pregnancy... the lack of neighbor awareness of the sudden appearance of a baby (No, Harry Potter doesn't work in any country). (They did something really, really illegal...). Even the Korean government would have done vetting and required a birth certificate for the registration of Soon Shin. And if they were to officially adopt and go through the long process, where Soon Shin would be in foster care until then, it would leave a huge paper trail, in addition to psychological analysis and home study. (Which apparently is more strict than it is in the US mainly because they've learned from the US's mistakes). Though it is true, at 20 years old (about) Lee Soon Shin wouldn't need the initial registration, there were still restrictions 20 years ago.

The handling of adoption in this series is less than stellar and less than realistic--and I know a lot of adoption stories. I'm not pleased, which is why I ended up ignoring most of the melodrama. There was no weight behind it.

I'm also cranky because of the less romance. I like that Joon Ho is stepping up his game though.

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yes, i'm guessing the adoption was illegal..but truth is, that is also what happened with my family. Until now, my cousin doesn't know his adopted (though everybody--even the neighbors know) so maybe that's why I don't really hate the birth secret plot since I can relate to it...

and I think LSS haven't totally figured out what her stand is on the adoption issue. She reacted with the idea that its only her birth mother that's different, as with everyone else in the family, and that's why she chose her current family over her real mom. I think the adoption issue will be further explored once everyone finds out about her birth father.

I agree with you on one thing though, there should be more SJH-LSS moments! maybe they can do whole webisodes of just the two of them like what they did in playful kiss? hahaha

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Sorry, but being a cousin of someone adopted, usually isn't the same thing as being in the community. My own cousins don't know much about adoption...

You still need to in the Korean system report with a birth certificate to REGISTER. Which makes the story impossible. You need to register the adoption. Also, you can get into some serious crap if you adopt illegally in the US, such as kidnapping, or just picking up a baby without reporting it to social services. I mean serious trouble.

There are instances where the birth parent (not REAL, which is frowned upon in this community) agrees to the adoption, but you are still required to go though the state and home study to make it legal, get citizenship rights, etc. It's irresponsible of adults to do it illegally, because without a birth certificate, etc, it's hard to do things like get a license, a passport, and so on. It makes the census reporting difficult and without those things it's hard to get a job.

I'm saying the lack of Home study is problematic and the lack of registration of Lee Soon Shin as part of the family would cause serious issues in Korea... I have no idea how she got a job without a registration number.

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sorry if i hit a sensitive topic with you...i only meant that our family adopted our cousin via illegal means so I know its wrong but its very possible so I don't think that this scenario is impossible. and from previous episode, i think LSS is registered as a part of their family registry (that's how MR found out about her, remember), so I assumed they probably did it illegally as well.

also, not sure if you're asian but we have extended families, so when I was talking about my cousin, i don't mean someone who I only meet every family reunion. We've actually lived together ever since we were kids and I personally witnessed my family hiding this fact from him--especially since his birth mom is our household help.

i guess what I'm saying is that everything you mentioned are true, but I can also understand the premise of the story as I have also witnessed it happening in the real world, that's all.

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I don't think Soonshin is anywhere NEAR over being adopted. As you see, it's more like she's in denial, which is why she was so quick to go to Miryung and act so cold- after which she went to her mom to beg her to act like it didn't happen, because she wants things to just be normal again. I think this is a reasonable reaction, especially since she wasn't aware she was even adopted until this episode. She essentially IS struggling for normalcy in the only way she knows how.

Secondly, the story with the two families is obviously nowhere near done. The drama is described as a story about two moms + their daughter, so I'm 100% sure Soonshin will eventually get to know both families and deal with themes like abandonment/rejection. The "choice"- if and when Soonshin decides to make one- will likely come later after Miryung's character is more fleshed out/they have more interactions. Also the basis behind the love triangle and the reason she will later on get close to Younghoon will likely be the fact that he, as a fellow adoptee, can relate to her struggles and can help her cope. This was a part of the plot/his character description since the beginning, I believe. And again, his choice to live apart from his family is likely going to be very different from hers- so it's not like they're portraying the options as one dimensional, either.

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Did the actress playing Mi-ryung have plastic surgery? I remember her looking better than this... her eyebrows have that permanently surprised look and its sooo distracting.

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Episode 27 is coming... amp up Soon Shin's and Jun Ho's relationship. Now. I want more cute. I NEED MORE CUTE! No more angst!

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hahaha...ditto on the cute! i need more SJH/LSS!!!

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I'm so glad to know I am not the only one becoming fed up at all the angsty turmoil. VERY disappointed at how little screen time our main OTP had together. Maybe, now, with the Birth Secret finally out of the way, this show will begin to zip past all the UGH and get on with the WOW!!

I admire you for having the determination to recap thus far. If I had to actually WATCH the scenes with the petulant, surly, condescending, patronizing, pompous, self-deluded characters, I believe my head (or my heart) would explode - so I completely understand your reluctance to continue. FFing through shows, such as this, has saved me many a (literal) headache.

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FINALLY, the reveal. We have a drama called Birth Secret, thank you very much, and I don't imagine it likes having its thunder stolen. There's no way we've seen the end of it, but maybe we can pick up the pieces and advance some other plot lines now. Like, oh, the acting? The ROMANCE, maybe? Jo Jung-seok keeps doing heartbreaking things with his eyebrows, and that's not getting nearly enough attention. The feeeeeelings are there on his side, whether he owns up or not, and I'm going to be annoyed if I get shortchanged on similar development from Soon-shin.

(I'll miss the recaps, but I'm with everyone else: I'd absolutely understand if you guys call it quits. That's a lot of work for not enough payoff. I'm too much of a completist to fast forward, but more power to anyone who can skip the parental generation. )

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I've been following the recaps and not the drama and want to first thank you because it is a lot to take on. Like you are planning to do I honestly skip most of the side stories and read the parts pertaining to the main couple because they are WAY cute. In my heart I wish you could recap the last 24 episodes for parts pertaining to the main couple and just let the rest go hahaha but I'll be satisfied with a wrap up!

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I thought these two episodes were good, if only for the fact that everyone knows Soon-shin is Mi-ryung's real daughter. I do think it was dragged out to long. If this is any indication of how this writer handles "Big Secrets" we probably won't know the identity of Soon-shin's father until the final two or three weeks. I don't think it's Jun-ho's dad. That would be too makjang for me. I need a light drama to watch, and that's what YTBLSS has been for me so far. You know, when we're not trolling through angstville. I was glad for all the Jun-ho moments, where he's stepped up a lot to help Soon-shin, even though she doesn't know it. I absolutely loved that hand-hold!

I thought Yeon-ah handled the news really well until she learned who the daughter really is. I still hate her, and don't care about her either. The same goes fro Mi-ryung. She has too high an opinion of herself for me to care about what happens to her.

Yoo-shin seems to have gone back to square one, blaming Soon-shin for things she has no control over, and that aren't even true. I thought she'd grown, but was that just an illusion? How can Chan-woo put up with her? He must really love her.

Bread Man remains to be one of the few saving graces of this show. I luff him so much!

I will continue with this show, even if it irritates me in future. I like it a lot; too much to stop now, even if recaps cease.

Thanks for the recap, JB!

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I do think that long dramas don't have a lot to chew on but well written ones are to be enjoyed with family. Maybe do the recap conversational style like you varieties? It is tiring to highlight every event that happens when there is so little plot development. In the end it just becomes a chore of listing.

Though with the same salary I'd rather list drama scenes than going through the pile of admin work that I cannot avoid no matter what job I take on.

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Thanks...

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What..you mean I have to actually start watching the series....?

Thanks for the awesome recaps!

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I drove and later walked past Song Miryung's house today. No kidding! It's actually a jewelry gallery called OVOCO in a posh Seongbuk-dong neghbourhood of northern Seoul. This is also my neighbourhood - although my hill is on the wrong side of the tracks, a.ka. far more down to earth than Miryng's. Wow! At a walking distance from me there are Sungshin, Junho, Chanwoo Oppa, Breadman... not to mention all the screaming/creecheing hysterical mothers, sisters and grandmothers. No wonder I have to use earplugs to sleep well at night. I'll try some stalking around the gallery in hopes of getting a glimpse at our lot. I agree with everyone who thinks that the drama is quite slow and that some scenes are just like running on empty, esp. ones with the super annoying grandmother. I don't have a lot of love left for the adoptive mother and Yooshin. I mean, how irrational and crazy can you get before you deserve to be locked away?
The only sane thing that came out of Yooshin's mouth is to have a genetic test. Miryung had a point when she said to the other mom: "so, you trust your husband so little." Can you imagine how grandma treated Miryung when she was dating her son? In Korea, being an orphan is considered almost a crime (among older generation). Has anyone thought that Miryung, as self-grandiose dame as she is, also wants to get Soonshin out of that crazy house? All that she has seen of mother and grandmother are hysterics of the hair-pulling furious kind. She alreayd witnessed adoptive mother not wanting to support Soonshin's acting carreer. She may genuinely think that her daughter had a helluva a time in that house that is so resentful of her. I wish for Soonshin to move out, become independent, persue acting, persue Junho... But I guess I'd have to wait for a while for that, and maybe even in vain. Someone commented on Lee MIsuk's (Miryung's looks). Isn't she married to a famous plastic surgeon who can lift those eyebrows daily? I hope this weekend will be filled with more shin-shin couple and less, no I stand corrected NO grandma, NO Yooshin, no adults from the Chicken Family. I have no problem with Miryung, actually. I find her intriguing, and I do hope for a long painful redemption. We saw in the hospital scene and through all her boozing and crying that she cares not only for her carreer but even more for Soonshin. As someone who grew up in an orphanage and being treated as a 4th rate citizen, is it any surprise that she doesn't know any better? She's built an impenetrable armour, a proper Popemobile. She is going to get it bad when she really 'fall in love' with her adorable daughter. Oh, and thank you, dramabeans team for your recapping this far. In spite of slowness and OTP female hysterics, I find it still very enjoyable.

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Noooo! Please don't stop these recaps:( I love reading this series so much!

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Que triste.
1. Las mujeres tan resentidas unas entre otras.
a. La abuela odia a la señora con la que ha vivido toda su vida como su nuera; no hay ni el mas mínimo asomo de afecto entre esas dos mujeres.

b. La rabia infundada con la mujer que dio en adopción la hija; hay miles de mujeres que en el mundo han tomado esa decisión y creo que ese hecho ha tenido un mal direccionamiento. Es más un escándalo de celos por un muerto y como dicen en mi tierra échele tierra a eso que lo que paso , paso...

c. Las tres mujeres mayores llevan caos a la familia , son problemáticas , egoístas y resentidas. Parece que actúan como adolescentes.

2. Los protagonistas se ven desde lejos
a. se miran pero no pasa nada , nada y nada.. No hay avances y todo por un me dijeron, y desechan a un lado los buenos momentos.
b. La protagonista debe cambiar mantiene un comportamiento que uno pensaría que solo ha pasado por el bachillerato y ya, no actúa como alguien seguro de sus sentimientos y de si misma es lo que los demás quieran hacer con ella.
c. El protagonista como que gana muy poquito plata en su negocio por que todavía vive con sus padres. ya no es un niño y los hombre de cierta edad requieren amigos y de salir y tener una vida propia.

3. Las pataletas: Rabietas caprichosas cuando un niño no alcanza su deseo fácilmente listas de personajes que son infantiles
a. La niña
b. La mama
c. La abuela
d. La hermana de SS
e La hermana del protagonista JH
Por que las mujeres en las K drama las ponen tan en la necesidad de llamar la atención desde una posición tan infantil; seria bueno que les den la oportunidad de ser personajes más balanceados, en ocasiones los escritores exageran

4. Mi personaje dela serie
a El administrador de la cafetería
b El Joven de los tratamientos estéticos.
Curiosamente en las serie K drama los hombre son emocionalmente más maduros.

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Am I the only one who noticed that SJH called LSS by "Soon Shin-ah" for the FIRST TIME when they met outside the hospital?

Isn't that a dead giveaway of SJH's feelings for LSS??!!

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And what about the fact that when LSS wanted SJH to let go of her hand outside the hospital, she did not just yank her hand away, but with her left hand, she gently, tenderly and heartbreakingly pealed SJH's fingers away from her right hand BUT still held onto SJH's fingers for another second before finally letting go and said goodbye...siiiiiiggghhh...

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For the commentors who commented that LSS has yet to show any signs of her feelings for SJH, we have to remember that she is still unaware that SJH and Yeon-ah ARE NOT an item because the last she heard, from both her bio-mother and Yeon-ah herself, they said SJH and Yeon-ah are together...

so it makes sense that LSS is so aloof, detached and striving to keep her distance because she is under the impression that SJH is off-limits...

I would be behaving exactly the same way if I were in LSS's shoes - why would I show my feelings for a man who is taken?

When LSS finally finds out that SJH and Yeon-ah are not an item, then we will definitely see how her behaviour, mannerisms and actions may undergo a dramatic, and much-awaited, transformation... ;)

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"What has kept me hanging on, then, are all the side characters that I do really enjoy and the light funny moments, and the slow build of the romances. I really like that the development of Soon-shin and Jun-ho’s relationship is so gradual, which gives us a close-up look at the growth of their feelings. Particularly with him; it’s a satisfying thing to watch the growing depth of his caring. Jo Jung-seok plays those moments so well, that we can feel his inner conflict—how he wants to do more and force his way into her life, but how he’s barely restraining himself out of respect for her wishes. And his struggle to deal with feeling powerless to help her when he just wants to swoop in and be the white knight.

It’s why I loved the moment he took Soon-shin’s hand, rather than letting his hotheadedness dictate again. He has a tendency to drag her along, which is an affliction that ALL K-drama males have issues with, but it was an especially sweet moment in this context. And that moment in this episode made a lot of things worth it. It’s a little like digging for clams, I feel. You stick it out because those interactions are so gratifying—but on the downside, a bad week can leave you feeling like you did a lot of digging for not a lot of reward."

Javabeans, your words above are simply PERFECTION!! You have a way of expressing your thoughts and feelings so precisely, right-on-the-target/money and so spot-on that you literally take my breath away!! I do not have the gift that you have and so THANK YOU so much for articulating EXACTLY what was on my mind while watching the SJH and LSS moments because I wish to do the same but since I cannot, it is such JOY and PLEASURE to be able read your words and agreeing with every single thing you said, especially the above-mentioned words... :)

Which is why your recaps are SO PRECIOUS, Javabeans! None of us who read your recaps can do without your take and insights of the drama that so enrich our lives and provide us with so much joy and delight, more so than simply watching the drama. So, if you could continue recapping, even if its every 4 or 8 or 10 eps, I would be so grateful. Thank you, Javabeans! :)

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I cannot watch this becuz of iu's scandal..n when my sister watches it, ill straight go to sleep..

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Hmm..didn't quite like these two episodes. What attracted me to this drama first was the cutesy parts. Also don't like the fact that Yoo Shin is yoyo-ing back to being annoying. They should write her character better.

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