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Superdaddy Yeol: Episode 4

It’s an episode where nothing goes to plan for anyone, and like Yeol, I’m getting mixed messages. Do Mi-rae’s ends justify her means? Meanwhile, Yeol has to adjust to his new housemates, whose lifestyle is pretty much the antithesis of his, and everyone finds that it takes more than living together to make a family.

In such close quarters, it’s inevitable that his and Mi-rae’s unresolved past will keep snapping at their heels. Yeol’s answer is to grab the bull by the horns, while Mi-rae takes the tried and proven avoidant approach. We’re reminded that behind all things seen lies an untold story — but what happens if you’re the only one who knows it and you don’t tell?

EPISODE 4 RECAP

Sa-rang is perplexed by finding her mother and Yeol together. Yeol is shocked to find out Mi-rae is Sa-rang’s mom, and the three of them make an uneasy triangle.

As they watch Yeol mess around with his players a little later, Sa-rang emphatically disapproves of Mom’s choice. She thinks Woo-hyuk is better than loser Yeol, and is convinced that Mom can’t love him — how could she, when she’s 100% awesome and he’s so pitiful? Mi-rae halfheartedly says she does, and Sa-rang calls her out on it immediately. She boasts that she can tell love when she sees it, after all, isn’t her name “sarang” (love)?

Mom tells her they’re going to try living together for three months and see how he does as her dad, before making a decision. Sa-rang insists her mind is already made up.

She stalks out and confronts Yeol. “Teacher!” she calls, and kicks him in the shin. Hm, did you learn that from your mom? That’s what she’s going to call him, she says, and scoffs at the idea of him being her dad. Yeol makes it clear that he doesn’t want a headache like her, either.

Sa-rang asks if the woman who chases him and sticks to him is her mom, but before he can answer, she gives him another one-two in the shins. He’ll never be her dad, she spits. Sang-hae is outraged by her rudeness, and she gives him a hard kick, too, before marching away.

Mi-rae watches, and says to Yeol that it must be fate that he’s already met Sa-rang. He observes that she’s just like her mother (I’ll say), and they’ll have to see whether it’s a good fate or a bad fate between them.

Mi-rae catches up to her daughter, and Sa-rang demands that Mom tell her just one good thing about Yeol. Mi-rae thinks, and replies that he’s an “analogue.” The opposite of her, he’s bumbling but in touch with his emotions. She tells Sa-rang that he keeps his promises and inspires trust. On the other hand, he’s unpredictable, and Mi-rae vows to “fix” that. So he’s an old-fashioned caveman, Sa-rang concludes, unimpressed.

The coaching team come out together to see off their superiors, and Ki-tae takes a jab at Yeol — the Mi-rae story must be a fib, right? Yeol, pretending to fix Ki-tae’s tie, laughs that he’s just jealous because she’s prettier than his wife. But Ki-tae gets the upper hand by pointing out Yeol’s demotion to trainee. He sneers that even after twenty years, Yeol is still his inferior — a fact as true as the earth is round and Kim Tae-hee is pretty.

Before Ki-tae can leave, Yeol leaps on him and tackles him to the ground, and punches him in the face. “Now you’re below me. I’m above you,” he crows. And Jeon Ji-hyun is prettier than Kim Tae-hee, he finishes. Haha, this can only be real in his imagination.

Yup. Sang-hae (who knows him so well, lol) tells a zoned-out Yeol to snap out of his violent daydream, and they watch Ki-tae go.

The night sees Mi-rae packing her things up to move. She rediscovers a photo album of Sa-rang’s baby and childhood pictures, and can’t help tearing up over them.

Sa-rang, in her pyjamas, finds her like that. Mi-rae turns away so she won’t see her tears, and Sa-rang asks if the reason they’re going to live with Yeol is so she gets her wish to have a dad. Mi-rae says it’s for herself, but adds that that’s because Sa-rang’s needs are her needs, and gathers her into a cuddle. “You are me,” she tells her daughter — that’s how all moms feel.

Sa-rang gently tells Mom that in three months, she’ll do what she wants, “Because I’m me, and you’re you.”

Yeol and Sang-hae are hashing out Yeol’s new lifeplan at their favorite watering hole. Sang-hae calculates the ways Mi-rae’s recent interventions have saved him, and figures it’s a fair trade to be the kid’s dad for a few months. “That’s not all. I started to want to live with her,” Yeol confesses. He wants to try at love again. But, he asks, can they live well together?

The next morning, Mi-rae and Sa-rang turn up at Yeol’s door, to his shock. He scrambles to throw on clothes and tidy up, before he lets them in. Mi-rae announces that they’re moving in, and shrewdly guesses he was loafing around in his underpants. Yeol is even more dismayed when Papa the dog bounds in — he’s allergic to dogs.

Mi-rae proceeds to move in all her furniture, too. She lays down the rules to Yeol: For three months, they’re to live together and sleep apart. She instructs him to rehabilitate Sa-rang’s sports and school performance.

Yeol drops Sa-rang off to school, and she gives him the cold shoulder. Their voiceover conversation continues, and Yeol says her daughter is just like her — rude and cold. Regardless, Mi-rae tells him that Sa-rang has to sincerely see him as her dad, until the three months is up. Yeol retorts that the rehab marriage ends then, too.

The bachelor pad has been remade to Mi-rae’s elegant tastes, and Yeol wakes up to Beethoven’s 5th, much to his disgust. When he tries to begin his morning routine, he discovers with horror that his record player and LP collection are all gone. Mi-rae’s rejoinder is that they’re bad for kids and he should raise his tastes.

Meanwhile, Sa-rang comes out and lets out a long scream because Yeol’s in his underwear. He flees.

He tries to de-stress with a game on his computer, but it’s been replaced with “Princess Maker,” haha. When he finds that even his adult entertainment collection is gone, he confronts Mi-rae.

She denies any knowledge of it, but lets him know that inappropriate stuff isn’t acceptable with a kid in the house. Yeol suddenly remembers his backup, and leaves happy.

Sa-rang asks Mom if she deleted them, and Mi-rae nods. Even the backup, she adds gleefully.

Yeol moans in his room, until his eyes light on a fat dictionary — nested in a cutout inside it is a secret backup drive. Yeol rejoices. He swaps out the identical one already plugged in, and leaves it. Well that’s an accident waiting to happen…

Breakfast is pretty much rabbit food (“Is this some kind of grass-based punishment?” lol). Yeol frantically searches for his tinned staples, but Mi-rae’s dumped them and the fridge is full of greens.

He indignantly rescues his junk, and Mi-rae insists they eat healthily, and as a family. Sa-rang tires of his complaints and sets her dog Papa on him. Mom is impressed by her training prowess, and they ignore Yeol’s plight.

In the car, Sa-rang tells Yeol to escape while the going is good, because her mom will get her way in the end. Yeol retorts that he knows her mom better than she does, and lists her quirks, like eating uncooked ramyun to hold back tears, or that she’s afraid of water. But Sa-rang points out Mom doesn’t eat ice cream anymore, and is too smart to make calculation mistakes.

But Yeol’s point is that Cha Mi-rae is still Cha Mi-rae: “No matter how much people change, their basic nature remains constant.” Sa-rang guesses his nature must be “analogue” and tells him that Mom plans to fix him.

He huffs to himself how Mi-rae must think she’s the digital to his analogue when a wail from Sa-rang distracts him. She accidentally sent a text she didn’t mean to — to crush boy (whose name is Min-ho) asking to meet him alone later. She blames Yeol, but he smirks that she should just confess to him.

All the drama makes him nearly skip a light at a pedestrian crossing, and Sa-rang suddenly ducks out of sight. Min-ho knocks at the window. He thought he saw Sa-rang, he says (Yeol: “So did I”), and wonders why Bo-mi’s uncle is hanging out with Sa-rang. She can’t contain herself anymore, and breaks for it, out of the car.

Yeol chases her, but she wants him to go away because he’s embarrassing. She cusses him out, calling him a bad driver, clueless, and an analogue, before stomping away. Yeol’s day gets better when he turns around to find his car getting towed.

Dr. Hwang introduces Mi-rae to her doctor team at the rehab clinic, and both of them overrule Ji-hye on being in charge of Yeol’s re-education. Ji-hye suggests they let Yeol choose, but Mi-rae firmly nips that in the bud with the explanation that her choice is his choice, since they live together now. Yeol’s arrival curtails the discussion.

In her office, Mi-rae tells Yeol to concentrate on Sa-rang’s rehab — his assignment is to find out her problems and fix them. She meets his complaints with one explanation: He’s her dad now, so he should act like it. He argues that he can’t be insta-dad — and why does she even need rehab for what are probably growing pains? She snaps and tells him to do as he’s told, 100%, since she’s his supervisor.

It’s evening and Yeol’s dad sips tea at their place. Mi-rae announces that she’s going to be his doctor from now on, so he can leave the nursing home. But he’s not going to be living with them — he knows better than to cramp the almost-newlyweds. Instead, Mi-rae’s got a place for him elsewhere. Yeol objects, but Dad says family is about sharing everything — happiness, sadness…material goods.

Dad also says he’s seeing someone, and suggests they doubledate from now on. Even Mi-rae blinks at that. Yeol scolds him, but Dad scolds right back — does he have any idea how hard it is to scratch your own back when you’re old? Dad disavows all interest in marriage — he just wants to date as much as he likes, now that he’s fulfilled Yeol’s mother’s last wish. Mi-rae, as his doctor, heartily approves.

Mi-rae hears from Woo-hyuk that Sa-rang is with him. She wants homework help, and also passes him her report for parents that the teacher gave the class earlier. She asks him to go secretly instead of Yeol, but he refuses to lie to Mi-rae. He asks her why she doesn’t like Mom’s choice of dad, and she replies that she hasn’t made her choice yet.

Woo-hyuk groans that it’s Yeol who comes for Sa-rang. She sits outside the room speculating on whether the two men are fighting, when she gets a text from Min-ho asking to meet.

Meanwhile, the men stare off with each other, to the ominous notes of Beethoven’s 5th (again!)…which turns out to be Woo-hyuk’s ringtone, lol. Woo-hyuk hands over Sa-rang’s worksheets and explains that she doesn’t like Yeol or trust him. Yeol isn’t worried — she naturally would regard him as a rival for her mom’s affections. He corrects Woo-hyuk’s tense about his and Mi-rae’s relationship — it already happened.

Woo-hyuk asks him what he has to give to Sa-rang as a dad. Yeol doesn’t plan anything so mercantile — he won’t be giving anything, because family is about sharing, and he shamelessly rips off his dad’s words. Woo-hyuk is left feeling the worse off from the encounter.

Yeol can’t find Sa-rang in the waiting area, and that’s because she’s traipsing around alone to meet Min-ho in a fancy restaurant. But she’s nonplussed to see it’s a party — specifically, Bo-mi’s birthday party, where she wasn’t invited.

Yeol gets a text from her instructing him to wait for her signal, like how she gives Papa. He tries to rehearse them, but catches himself and fumes at the implication, “Am I a dog?”

Sa-rang takes Min-ho aside to talk, but only gets as far as asking how he feels about not being with her, when she catches sight of Yeol at the window. She signals, and he okays. Then Bo-mi joins them, eager for juice on the man who dropped her to school. Sa-rang vehemently refutes her. He’s not her dad — yet. And that’s when Yeol comes in, oh noes.

He almost blurts out Sa-rang’s crush right in front of Min-ho and Bo-mi, and only Sa-rang’s hand over his mouth stops him. She’s furious that he ignored her signal to wait. Durrp. He thought it was “Go, bite!”

He’s about to slink out when Bo-mi asks if he’s Sa-rang’s dad. Sa-rang tries to drag him out, but he boldly declares he is, to the kids’ shock. Upset, Sa-rang bolts.

Locked in her room, Sa-rang bawls loudly. Mi-rae rounds on Yeol: What did he do? He’s understandably grumpy about being blamed. She yells that he’s her dad and she’s his daughter, and he snaps that just saying that doesn’t make it true; they don’t even share a drop of blood.

That makes her fly further off the handle, and he points out his deal was to live with her, Mi-rae, to be her man, if only for three months. “Isn’t that why you came back to me?” he asks.

He tells her that it’s fine if she changes everything in his house, but the two of them can’t change: “Like before, I’m beside you and you’re beside me.” So she should believe him. He reminds her that she left on her own and came back again on her own, and she fiercely interjects that it wasn’t one-sided. He replies that he finally heard her voicemail now, but it doesn’t matter either way, because she didn’t show up that day ten years ago when he waited for her.

Crying, she’s about to say something when Sa-rang interrupts her, looking for Papa. They discover the door left open and the dog missing, and all three take to the street in search. But it’s late and Yeol reminds Sa-rang that she has school. She cries that they have to find Papa — he’s her number one treasure.

Yeol promises to find the dog before she gets home tomorrow. “Really?” she asks. “Really,” he promises.

The next day, Sa-rang finds her assignment sheet filled in and wonders if it was Caveman Teacher (aka Yeol). She lets herself into his room and finds a sheaf of “Lost” posters for Papa, and she’s impressed despite herself. On Mom’s instructions, she grabs the flash drive plugged into the laptop for her schoolwork. Oh no.

While Yeol spends all day handing out flyers and pasting up posters, Sa-rang works at school. She plugs in the drive, and pretty soon, the whole class gathers around to watch the naughty videos with a combination of horror and curiosity.

The teacher reassures Sa-rang that it’s okay to make a mistake, and encourages her to read her worksheet to the class, about her relationships with students, teacher and friends.

“Don’t trust Teacher. If you’re not a nerd, she’ll treat you like rubbish,” she starts. The class sniggers at Yeol’s handiwork and she continues: Friends’ll stab you in the back (she’s lookin’ at you, Min-ho), parents are irresponsible, and love and promises will only be broken.

Yeol hasn’t found Papa yet, and after school, Sa-rang confronts him for not keeping his promise. He asks if he can’t get a new dog, and she bursts into tears. Would the new one would be the same as having the old one she treasured? There’s only one Papa, she cries, just like his number one treasure. Her outburst is cut short when Yeol gets a call from someone with a tip about Papa. He tells her to stay right there while he gets the dog, and she promises to wait until he comes back.

After an encounter with a Papa-lookalike and its glamorous owner, Yeol is met by the real Papa (lol it’s like watching Lassie), accompanied by the ajumma who called him. He’s overjoyed, at least until his allergy kicks in, and tests the dog with the command signals.

Sa-rang falls asleep waiting for Yeol. Mom finds her and takes her home. She tucks her in, and sleepy Sa-rang hands over the flash drive to her. It’s Yeol’s number one treasure, she tells her.

Yeol brings Papa back to where he left Sa-rang, but finds her gone. It pours with rain and Yeol runs for shelter, the dog in his arms.

Mi-rae begins her sweep of the second backup, deleting all the porn, when she comes across a folder titled “Number 1 treasure.” It’s full of happy pictures of them, of her, from before. She remembers how precious and priceless he said it was — his whole youth — and tears spring to her eyes. She wonders why he didn’t get rid of them.

She heads into the rain, and her memory shows her another rainy night where past-Yeol stood at her door waiting, after his final game. She finally decides to go to him, and steps onto the road, only to be hit by a truck. Yeol stands mere meters away, drenched and oblivious, while she fades out of consciousness.

In the present, Yeol shelters in that same doorway, still cradling Papa, nose twitching. In voiceover, Sa-rang quotes her mom, who said the Caveman Doc is “analogue”, and repeats Mi-rae’s earlier description. He’s impulsive and makes mistakes, but he’s warm-hearted. He’ll stake his life on keeping his promises.

Mi-rae makes it to him, this time. So, Sa-rang continues, he’s someone you want to trust.

Without opening his eyes, Yeol tells her he found Papa. She crouches level with him, and strokes his cheek. She leans in, and as their lips touch, Sa-rang finishes: “Mom…likes analogue.”

COMMENTS

I have mixed feelings about this show. I have an unnaturally high ability to be immersed in a story’s moment (this is how I enjoyed Heirs), but this one keeps losing me. The devices and execution are clumsy and contrived in a way that takes away the organic quality that a heartfelt story needs to have. The ten-year-old voicemail started a decline into ungainliness that got increasingly pronounced this episode. I can see the intention here: the crossed wires and the missed moment, but it stretches credibility cross-ways when such a typical got-hit-by-a-car-and-couldn’t-meet-you scenario is enacted mere feet away from your waiting lover. I mean, REALLY? It has to at least pretend to make sense, otherwise it can’t ask you to believe in it. And that’s why I found myself almost laughing at it.

I’m at a point where the secondary characters like Woo-hyuk or Ji-hye are more interesting to me, and the central trio give me a headache, as well as regular whiplash as they flit between varying flavors of inexplicable behavior. Despite the source material, it’s somehow failing to tap deeper emotions. My biggest stumbling block to continuing to engage with this show is Mi-rae, and by extension Sa-rang (I liked you so much last week!). It’s not because she’s prickly and contradictory, or a tease (Hae-soo was all of those things in It’s Okay, It’s Love, and I loved her), her problematic trait is that she’s manipulative without conscience or consequence.

She tries to manipulate Yeol into going along with her by saying it must be fate, and it frustrates me that that she won’t just tell him the truth. The thing is, I understand not wanting to disclose her terminal status, at least not immediately, but doesn’t it end up being counterproductive for her, with Yeol? Her line all along has been, “anything for Sa-rang, no matter what,” so telling him seems like it would serve Sa-rang’s interest better. She wants a father for her child; stringing him along as a paramour (as he thinks) is a waste of resources. She wields enough power over him emotionally that he’d co-operate, although that becomes irrelevant when her method of choice is coercion, not persuasion. Her only saving grace at the moment is that Yeol is a willing participant (although this annoys me, too).

Yeol, on the other hand, tries to dissemble and can’t — honesty seems to win out despite himself. He’s unashamedly open about his feelings to her, the good side and the bad, and I don’t think he’s held back on saying what needs to be said. The problem is that frankness needs to be met with frankness. As long as it’s one-sided, they won’t get anywhere. Now that it’s become clear that there’s more to their story than simply that she stood him up, if she doesn’t say something, she can’t blame him for misunderstanding. With her discovery of his number one treasure, maybe she’ll get her head out of her butt now. I don’t even know why she’s so touched — he waited for her last time, too. Or perhaps that’s it — the fact that he dependably doesn’t change, which reaffirms the reason why she sought him out again in the first place.

But it did endlessly get my goat how Mi-rae and Sa-rang, in their mother-daughter bubble, encroach on Yeol’s life in every possible way, and then make him the outsider. She acts like he owes her something — and he really doesn’t! I get that she has some (misguided) resentment, but that problem is pretty much all hers. A guy who left his mother’s deathbed for his girl has surely done his share of sacrificing. On the kid side, if Sa-rang going around kicking everyone is meant to be cute or funny, I’m not laughing. She’s clearly had a very loving (and economically privileged) upbringing, and growing up without a father hasn’t given her more than occasional discomfort. That’s miles away from traumatic or even troubled, so I don’t think there’s an excuse. Maybe it’s just poor characterization.

Yeol finds this hour that he has to start over with Sa-rang. His introduction as a prospective dad wipes out all his previous credit with her, and that makes his promise to find Papa all the more significant. That moment between them is the beginning of trust, and this is the kind of emotional realness I’d like to see more of. It’s important for both him and Sa-rang, because they both need proof that she can rely on him. Although Mi-rae’s been lambasting him with “You’re her dad,” as Yeol points out, it doesn’t become magically true if you say it enough times. While outwardly, they present the perfect image of a nuclear family, that’s far from their actual reality. But I really like that they’re is setting out to show that it isn’t biology that makes a dad. I actually think it has the makings of a much better story if they aren’t related at all, because then, all that ties them together is mutuality and trust. There’s something much more heart-tugging about choosing to pour yourself into such a deep bond.

Because it strikes me that Yeol and Sa-rang, who don’t have anyone else, both need a family. With Sa-rang’s future life at stake, maybe Mi-rae is, in her own way, doing him a favor after all.

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Honestly, I agree with your recap. Mirae confuses the heck out of me and I can't figure out why she can't be honest with him. She broke his heart before and she is about to do it again when she dies and leaves her child behind. Why can't he part of the decision whether he wants in or not? An "informed" decision.

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I feel this pretty completely. I am watching it for LDG, who in his projects is usually interesting (and in some cases refreshing amidst a wash of overacting). But really, some of these twists in the plot are pretty typical of a show that only has a Point A and a Point Z.... and doesn't know how to get to a realistic alphabet of points in between.

Also, it's sometimes hard to believe MiRae's motivations for choosing Yeol over Mr. Doctor, when they both are obviously interested in being with her rather than being a dad. She's dangling their past love on a stick for Yeol, but unless she seriously does carry a torch for him (perhaps an error in the editing or acting, but I'm not seeing it too clearly), it's so hard to go with it. There's so much scheming and overstepping of boundaries in Yeol's life... a plot can get easily weighed down in it, unlike Healer or Liar Game, where you can trust the scheming to turn itself out, and it becomes a screaming rollercoaster instead of a plodding train. I really want to like her, but Mirae's a walking red flag.. I really hope her characterization gets rounded out from here. The "You are me" mom moment was a gem.

Sarang. Sarang, what are we going to do with you? She was the realness! From the fighting older girls to the jealous glares at Bomi who dared to steal Minho from her to the runing, I loved the little insights we had into her personality. She was the most relatable out of any of them, to be honest (who hasn't lost a crush to some prettier girl and been bitter about it? Raise your hands~). But there's a line between having a cold personality and outright being a jerk, and she's crossing it. If someone is coaching Lee Re, they need to step it up. If my student did that to me or any other adult, they would catch it!

As a viewer, it's really taking me out of the illusion to see her on screen and think, "Oh, another Sarang scene. Time to turn down the volume because they're going to have her screaming and wailing and the audio gets all overmodulated." Bring back badass Sarang, Show!

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AND SOMEONE PLEASE FIX BOMI'S FACE MAKEUP. Her face's so pale, paler than any students I have, and much paler than her neck!

Don't make me go over there, TvN... seriously it's like two hours from my house by subway please don't make me go.

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The thing I'm most unhappy about with this show is that I'm pretty sure MiRae's choice is about biology, Sarang is Yeol's kid. The timing, decisions and repeated mystery of the father all point to this.

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Mirae and Sarang made me close the tab...I couldn't finish the episode. Maybe later now that I've seen your recap

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I hope Yeol turns out to be Sa-Rang's biological dad. If he isn't, then there isn't really any concrete reason for Mirae to insist or expect him to take on this responsible after 3 months just because she is going to die. How is that fair? He signed up to love her she signs up to dump the kid on him?!

That's just crazy loons.....or the brain tumor acting up.

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well with the age thing she pretty has to be his, I mean when did she have time to have a lover between getting hit by a truck and all. As for all the anti agasint her..well it is fair but I can also understand why as a mother she willing to screw the guy over so her daughter can be happy, she just dosn't have time to be 'nice' about things with her limited time frame, it also points at him being the real father, that she seems fixed on him being Sa-Rangs father. And of course for those blaming her for dumping him in the first place..that ten ton truck says other wise

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I am giving Mirae a lot of slack just because she is doing all this for the sake of her daughter's happiness. What mother would not try anything to ensure the future of her child? It's pretty clear that he is the father and it does bother me though that she is holding on to that secret. The car accident was pretty cliche' and it boggles my mind how he did not notice that when it happened even with Kdrama's propensity for disregarding character's peripheral vision.

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They paint Yeol as some lose but why do I feel different. I feel like Sarang and MR are the crazy ones.

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I feel bad for the actors who seem to be doing their best to make sloppy writing work.

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There is a lot of that going around KD land these days.

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Okay, I've skip-watched a bit of this show and read some of the recaps (mostly because anything more would seriously frustrate me), but I've got a question. Why is it that Mi-rae wants a Daddy for Sa-rang? Did the show establish that both her parents are dead and that she has zero friends that could take care of Sa-rang when she dies? Why has she, as a single mother, not thought about guardianship before (did she never contemplate what would happen to her daughter in the case she died in an accident?)?

I just don't understand why she aggressively pursues Yeol to become insta-Daddy, rather than seeking out someone she knows/trusts and Sa-rang knows/likes but instead seeks out someone she knew years ago (a lot can happen, people change!), even with the thought in mind that if he doesn't change according to her perfect-Daddy-template that she'll look for another Daddy (a random guy plucked from the street?).

The only explanation I can see if Yeol is indeed the biological father, in which case Sa-rang should get to know him – although it still doesn't mean that he should be her guardian.

Why she isn't open about her quest and the reasons for it is beyond me, because if she really wants to protect Sa-rang, Yeol should be informed (and should have been informed long ago) that he's bio Daddy and not a romantic prospect.

Such a frustrating character... If anyone ever maliciously deleted files off my computer because they didn't like them, they'd be out of my life (or definitely out of my house). This woman has no respect for anyone.

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yes, the show did establish that she has no friends or family and that shes all alone except for sarang.

she never thought about guardianship before since it was only recently that she found out about her illness.

she seeks yeol because he is the one she knows and trusts.

my only complaint would be mirae not telling him that sarang is his daughter. but i guess shes reasoning that if she does tell him that, then he would be even more curious as to why shes just only coming back to him after 10 years. and she doesnt want to tell him shes going to be dying soon.

look, if im a guy and my ex from 10 years ago comes to me and tells me to raise her daughter because shes dying, i wouldnt agree to that easily especially since they broke up not amicably.

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Of course, if Mirae were remotely sane she'd tell Yeol he's the dad, get the DNA test done, and lock in that guardianship ASAP. Illnesses are not predictable. That said, we wouldn't have a drama if she did that.

It's also a little nuts to think that a woman as organizes as Mirae wouldn't have guardianship plans for Sarang. Maybe Mirae has a god complex?

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Not fond of extreme "no family no friends no nothing" characters – it's just not very realistic, not when she did have a boyfriend once. Seriously, she's only ever had one close person in her life (two, counting her daughter) and never wanted anything else?

But even if that's the case, i.e. that she's a person that doesn't want to develop ANY relationships with others like humans generally do (even if our social circles will vary, depending on how outgoing or introvert we are), even more so she should have thought about guardianship! She would indeed need to have a God complex, as Miranda says!

@Miranda – I think you could have a drama, a much more realistic one at that. One were the person that didn't know he was a father suddenly has to come to grips with the fact that he has a child now, which could mean a) figuring out whether/how he will take on the guardianship or not b) getting to know the child and, if getting involved in Mi-rae/Sa-rang's lives c) coping with the decline of Mi-rae's health and how this and her death affects Sa-rang.

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For dramas about that (instant fatherhood) see TW/C Drama Sunny Happiness and I think that might also be in Last Scandal of My Life?

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"Do Mi-rae’s ends justify her means?"

No. And that's all I'm gonna say.

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i feel like lee dong gun shld just avoid dramas where the female lead's name is mirae.

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I agree with everything said in the recap....literally you were standing 10 feet away from her and the truck was honking really really loud!!! How could u not see or hear an accident happening? I dont like the way MiRae is acting as well...barging into someone's life, changing everything and giving the flimsy line of making him Sarang's dad.... gurl u need more than that....

So many things that I am not liking about this show but yet the emotional beats get to me and here i am anxiously awaiting episode 5....sigh! Show DO NO MAKE ME REGRET THIS!!!!

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Oh my god, NO. The mother/daughter duo made me so angry I can't keep watching, and I don't even like Yeol. But the idea of anyone being so arrogant and invasive and flat-out RUDE and then being rewarded for it, as I suspect they will be? Dear lord no.

Mirae is a terrible human being and she's raised her daughter in her image. I can't believe Yeol's family and friends are just going to let her nest at his house like a cuckoo.

I can put up with slow shows, I can put up with nonsensical shows, but Mirae's an unconstrained sociopath.

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What killed me was how she treats him and his belongings. An obviously precious record collection that he's been creating for years? It's in storage now, and she's going to get rid of it. All the porn he has? Let's just delete that. God forbid we talk to him about deleting it off the computer and just keeping it hidden on a separate drive. Or, you know, creating different accounts on the computer so the kid can't access it. I mean, it's Windows. Even my mother-in-law can figure out how to do that. (Well, she can figure out how to use them...) And clearly, there can be no bending on what we eat for meals. And sure, the kid loves the dog, but the person you're living with is ALLERGIC to dogs. Can we not even compromise and keep the dog in a certain area?

And why, with the huge, nice house she had, are they moving into his tiny place and cramming all their stuff in?

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It's so completely bizarre. She's taking a man and making his life miserable, throwing away anything she doesn't like, and basically terrorizing him. Meanwhile she had a perfectly malleable baby doctor just begging to fill her every need - if she wanted to boss the hell out of someone, why not him?!

It's like she's realizes she is going to die, so she's putting Yeol through boot camp for "How Mirae and Sarang Live". He is both interchangeable and unnecessary - she's just realized that her engine is going to wind down, so she's lining up a new engine while ensuring that NOTHING CHANGES.

And she's just awful. And her daughter - seriously, kicking a man repeatedly? Nope.

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@ Miranda, you act as if they were real people, they are not they are characters in a drama. Also believe it or not there are people like that in the world not everybody has the perfect personality. This drama is about growth, they will grow and learn from each other it's just the beginning. Heck we haven't even gotten to the part were they find out and cope with her cancer. This is episode 4 it's barely the beginning. What story would you have if they were all perfect, with no room to grow? Also the questions will be answered with time, that is how dramaland works, First they are annoying misunderstanding and then find the truth and we learn it along with them, patience.

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I get what you're saying, and I agree somewhat. But I also agree with Miranda. She's basically treating him like she's remaking him from the ground up. If she wanted to mold someone, why wouldn't she have gone with the doctor? She said it couldn't be him because she didn't want to have to raise him too, but that's essentially what she's doing with Yeol (or what she's trying to do). I get that she still has feelings for him, but it seemed like she didn't notice until after she'd already made the decision that it was going to be him.

But yes. Not real people. Drama rules. It just seems to me to not make sense given her reasoning and actions.

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I like drama characters to be somewhat relatable. I can take characters who are awful people, I can take flawed characters, but what I don't like is one-dimensional characters behaving in a way that makes no sense and is bizarrely tolerated by others.

It's not Yeol's responsibility to help Mirae grow out of what appears to be a personality disorder by letting her bulldoze his life. I don't like watching characters that make no internal or external sense. If the writer is blinkered enough to think that this works, then I am not interested in whatever else they have in mind.

C'mon. If you saw a woman doing this to your friend, you would be horrified. And based on the entire "growth" premise, she's going to get rewarded.

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Yeaahhh. I'm finding myself very torn. I feel like the directing, at points, knows what I want this show to be...but the writing is taking it to places I definitely can't get behind.

It's so weird because in certain moments (& I would have said most moments before this episode), I love this show.

For the most part, I haven't had the same problem as some with Mi-rae (again, pre-episode 4). Girl is dying in a year and is essentially facing the supreme horror of leaving her daughter alone in the world. It's one thing to realize that you won't get the chance to see your daughter grow up, but to realize that there's no one in the world you can trust to take care of them when you're gone? I completely understand that sort of cruel reality driving her to this point, even if I find it a little unbelievable that she has no one to turn to to take care of Sa-rang. Could I do it myself? Probably not. But this is why I almost feel a strange respect for her precisely because she can be so heartless for the sake of her daughter.

That said, the turns this episode? Appalled me. I was ready for him to just be really bad at parenting and that she would simply steer him in the right direction so that he could become the best dad ever. But the fact that she's disregarding so much about him AS A PERSON pisses me off. It makes me feel like she never loved or respected him at all. And the drama just makes it out to be funny and completely expected! Like, throwing out his record player and all his records?! That's just not okay. So now if he wants to be good enough to be Sa-rang's father, he has to change every-freakin'-thing about himself to satisfy Mi-rae's expectations?! That's just ridiculous.

I'm hoping that the end of this episode is hinting at her changing her methods, and looking at and respecting who he is more, but still it's going to take some massive character development to get me to like and understand her and her actions again and I'm not sure that's in store for this drama.

I'm not dropping it quite yet because I really do love Lee Dong-gun here. I'm still going to hold out hope that the drama gets back on track for his sake because I still enjoyed it up until this episode. We'll see how episode 5 goes.

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Thank You for the recap :)

I agree with some of the things you have said but I am going to have to disagree with some.

From the very beginning they did let us know the kind of person Mi-rae was hence she is described as digital. It's always one way or another with her there is no middle. We were let known from the very beginning and from the last episodes that she is indeed a very calculating person.
She is the kind of person that likes to be in control of everything and most likely feels helpless when she can't be in control. For example the cancer, she has no control over that therefore she is trying to control things she can, which is most likely keeping her sane.
While some people watching the show may not like that I hate to break it to you but people like that do exist in the world. She only cares about her objectives and how to achieve them and while that is indeed a very dis likable characteristic in a character well it has to start somewhere to permit character growth in the future. It would be really boring if she was nice and perfect from the very beginning I myself want to actually see her grow as a character.
There are so many things all three of them can learn from each other. Mi-rae will most likely learn that the best things that happen in life happen when you least expected and when you don't plan them, because we all know that it will most likely not go according to her plans. Instead of changing Yeol he will most likely change her....

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Also about Sa-rang's character, can you really blame her? She has grown all her life with Mi-rae of course she will be like her mother. She is also controlling and like things to happen according to her plans. However, she also has something of Yeol that will most likely come out more once she starts interacting and learning from him. Again it would be really boring if all of them were perfect from the beginning I mean where is the growth and fun of that?

I agree with you about the accident though I mean was he deaf and blind didn't he hear or see her get hit by the car!!?!
Also all the noise effects I really wish they would stop, but regardless I will continue watching I just hope it's not a disappointment in the end. Also if they are following the webtoon then there is a reason for why Mi-rae is how she is, it doesn't justify her actions but it makes you understand why she is how she is...

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Yeah, ok, I mostly agree. The problem is that the show is not selling what you said about the characters nearly as well as your comment. It's all in the tone- the show is like, "Isn't this hilarious that their lifestyles are clashing so terribly?! Let's all laugh, knowing that it will all work out later!" Given how over-the-top Mirae's manipulation and Sa-rang's bratty-ness were in this episode, I found the jokiness really off putting. If the show had mixed in some pathos and showed me Mi-rae's vulnerability and fear of losing control by compromising with Yeol, then I would have been able to connect with her and enjoy the inherent humor of the situation. Instead I felt like the show was inviting us to laugh at Yeol along with Sarang and Mi-rae, which was grating and not funny at all. I can take Mi-rae as an unpleasant character, but I don't want to be required to share in her unpleasantness as a viewer.

Luckily, tone is something that can be fixed so the show could definitely improve from here. But if next week is more of the same, I'm probably dropping it.

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I do like and agree with these points, but I guess I'm just getting nervous?

I think this drama could be great if that character development happened for her, but I'm not clear on whether that's really in store for her or not. I'm going to keep watching in the hopes that it will, but, if it doesn't, I'll be so disappointed.

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That is what watching dramas is like is a gamble. You never know what you will get, or if it was worth watching until sometimes even the end. Ex. God's Gift.

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Why* instead of the first what, sorry.

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Mi-rae and Sarang are hilarious and literally the only reason to watch the show. I feel the show is going toward the illogical and makjang with the car accident tho so I'm a bit bummed.

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A beautiful doctor who looks like she's 30 with a 10 year old daughter? Episode 4 and nobody brings up the girl's father? A seriously beta male with a funny haircut who is totally clueless and has been waiting for his ex for 10+ years? Everyone seems to work like 1 hour per week? Pretty soon we'll find out she has cancer, wait a minute she has cancer!

Yet I'm hooked. What the heck is wrong with me?

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I think I'm gonna end up dropping this show... It was so good last week! But now Mi-rae and Sarang are beyond my understanding. They're just so...rude. This whole ep I was like wait wtf at so many scenes. Don't even get me started on the house barging...there's something called compromise. -_-
I'll watch it next week but at this rate...well I guess I won't be finishing it after all.

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My biggest gripe with this series thus far has been with the characterization of MiRae. Considering she is spark enough and capable enough of becoming the head of neurosurgery at such a young age and has already made a name for herself (as evidenced by her sunbae's confidence in MiRae's ability to perform surgery), I don't understand how she has not thought through many of the considerations needed to meld a family (mainly how to be considerate of both Yeol and her daughter in creating this new living arrangement).

Also, as a doctor, I would expect MiRae to have the foresight to realize that taking Yeol's father out of a care facility is a responsibility that she should not be allowed to make considering she has this rare diagnosis that puts a timeline on her ability to care for anyone other than herself. I may not know as much about Korean healthcare but as a doctor she needs to think of not only what the patient is capable of now but of what the patient will need in the future. I find it weird that she undermines Yeol's more familiar understanding of the situation by taking the father out of the nursing home. Then there are the issues brought up in the above comments. So many considerations that are bowled over rather than addressed. How unfortunate.

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I'm assuming Yeol is really Sarang's father. But even so, Mi-Rae thus far has to be the most selfish heroine in K-drama land to date.
That big truck rendered her unable to use a telephone, a computer, or a piece of paper and a stamp for the next ten years?

I'm not seeing any possibility of a reasonable explanation for MiRae here. If Yeol's not Sarang's bio-dad, her behavior is absolutely disgusting in the level of selfishness.

If he is the real dad, her behavior is worse, because there's no pending death emergency to possibly explain her behavior for the last ten years. She had his child, and he had a right to know that. Even worse, Sarang herself had a right to know that, and not to be lied to by her mother about her father being dead. She deliberately chose to deny her daughter a father, to give them a chance at a relationship- and her only reason for changing her mind even now is that she's dying. Otherwise, she'd still be lying, keeping a parent and child apart without giving either of them any choice at all.

Moving in to his house and throwing out his stuff? Also jerkitude and selfish.

In addition, she's physically abusive. I know dramaland is different and K-dramas portray this as funny, but I do not think her going around kicking people just because they aren't submissive enough is an amusing trait. It's battering, and there's nothing cute about it at all.

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in any case, yeol looks so hot in this episode~ (*_*)

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Agree, Saya. (And thanks for the recap).

Mi Rae crossed the line for me when she dared to throw away Yeol's LP collection. Perhaps because I grew up with my father's LP collection and it feels a bit sacred for me... but that was the moment when I stopped being amused and got annoyed and irritated. If they don't give Mi Rae some big growing arch, I will be PsdOf.

I also found some of the turns too sudden... like Yeol's acceptance of living together... or the kiss...

I will still watch as I like the funny scenes (like cheering crowd in the pub) and I like Yeol (*ehm*Lee Dong Gun*ehm*). But don't know how long still...

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NOT THE RECORDS! WHY WOMAN WHY?!

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