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The Producers: Episode 6

Aw, our clueless maknae is starting to wise up and learn the ropes, and this makes for some moments of hilarity as he figures out how to play the game everyone else knows how to play, as well as moments of bonding and sweetness. A lot of relationships take strides forward, though an important one hits the skids, and our characters have to learn how to clean up the aftermath of their emotional accidents.

 
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EPISODE 6: “Understanding broadcast accidents”

Seung-chan asks Joon-mo whether he remembers Ye-jin’s drunken words the other night. Joon-mo thinks, “Of course I do, why wouldn’t I remember—that accident.” He explains that accidents arise after three factors provoke it, and that night Ye-jin got upset (at being embarrassed over the Cindy incident), she drank on an empty stomach, and Joon-mo felt the urge to drink.

We jump back to the events of that night, after Ye-jin passes out at the pojangmacha. Joon-mo carries her home on piggyback, and Seung-chan zigzags tipsily behind him while admonishing Joon-mo not to zigzag so much. God I love drunk Seung-chan. He insists on seeing them home, while staggering off at intervals to fall down and puke into bushes.

Joon-mo looks after Ye-jin that night, then tells us that after spending the night in confusion, he decided to forget the accident, which would allow them all to return as things were. “But of all things, this kid had to remember everything.”

Back to their confrontation, where Seung-chan says that he finds Joon-mo’s actions cowardly, because even if you edit things out, the original content exists somewhere. Joon-mo continues the metaphor, saying that it’s up to the tape’s owner to decide what to do with that original, whether it be saving it or getting rid of it.

Seung-chan replies that Joon-mo must have never experienced a one-sided love, because if he knew how it felt to like someone and be unable to give up, he’d never be able to pretend not to know Ye-jin’s feelings. Joon-mo tells him he ought to be a prosecutor instead of a PD, but Seung-chan counters that his role in this case is as witness, with a duty to tell the whole truth to Ye-jin.

Joon-mo picks up on Seung-chan’s answer, in siding with Ye-jin, but breaks the moment by reminding them they have to go edit. Not a metaphor this time, since they have an episode to get out.

Back in the editing bay, Seung-chan delivers iced coffee to Joon-mo, then waits with anticipation for him to take a sip. Joon-mo’s face screws up in disgust, and Seung-chan hides a smile before pretending with a totally innocent face that he thought Joon-mo requested tons of syrup, rather than none at all. HAHA. He’s finally using his clueless reputation to his advantage, the wily little nerd.

Then when Joon-mo chuckles over a funny clip, Seung-chan hides his own laugh to say blandly that it’s kind of old-fashioned and obvious.

Joon-mo doesn’t buy Seung-chan’s innocent act and calls him a terrible liar, and Seung-chan just silently gets up and leaves the room. He calls Ye-jin to meet outside her building, and tells her that Joon-mo was assuredly drunk and doesn’t recall her confession.

Ye-jin brightens in relief, and when she admits to feeling embarrassed to have him know all this, Seung-chan tells her that liking somebody isn’t anything to be embarrassed about. She explains how her apartment came to be Joon-mo’s apartment, and they realize they’d both grown up here, playing on this playground.

In a flashback to 1997, we see Ye-jin crying on the same swing set, with Joon-mo sitting next to her. She’s upset about having to leave Seoul and giving up her apartment to Joon-mo’s family, though she’s touched when Joon-mo cradles her head and pats her shoulder, telling her not to cry.

In the present, Ye-jin ruefully notes that she’s confiding a lot in Seung-chan, and he looks pleased at that, reminding her that she can talk to him whenever she wants. She ruffles his hair affectionately, which makes him even more bashful.

Ye-jin’s the one who points out that his phone’s been ringing all this while, and it’s only now that Seung-chan notices and hurriedly assures Joon-mo he’s on his way back. He dashes off, then returns to give Ye-jin a bow before running off again. And that’s when she finally changes his saved ID in her phone log, from “Door Dent” to his actual name.

Brownnosing PD Hong-soon spies Office Nazi driving in a fancy convertible and fixates on how she can afford the car. He wonders whether she’s siphoning office supply money to fund her lifestyle (which would take her a hundred years to amass that amount, Joon-mo points out) or blackmailing higher-ups. Ye-jin asks if he likes her, tired of hearing about this for days on end.

Hong-soon asks Ye-jin for her help on a special broadcast he’s putting together of KBS Big Show, a music concert program. The special features families of politicians and bigshots as guests, and he’s got his eye on sucking up to the VIPs and asks Ye-jin to manage the stage performances (which she points out is his job).

Cindy is slated to perform and hears that this program often uses PDs from other shows, which makes her wonder whether any 1N2D PDs might be working there. Her manager oppa guesses she means Umbrella PD, and for one hot second she looks alarmed that he knows about her interest—until he declares that she must be worried Seung-chan will muck things up.

He’s about to make the demand to keep Seung-chan far away from the show when Cindy snaps at oppa to stop reading extra meaning into her words, to which he points out that she’d ordered him to read more the last time.

In anticipation of their new season’s premiere, the 1N2D team makes a pool betting on their first episode’s ratings. They range from 7 percent (pessimistic, but certainly not likely to happen, says CP Kim) to 15 percent (overly optimistic, though it makes them all feel good), until Seung-chan offers up a precise 6.8 percent prediction with all the research to back it up. It kills the mood, though not as much as Joon-mo assuring his team that he has a really good feeling about this season—strangely, his optimism puts his team in panic mode.

The FD explains to Seung-chan that Joon-mo has a reputation for jinxed predictions—if he thinks something will be great, it’ll tank, and vice versa. Flashback to Joon-mo insisting everything we know to be false: that Lee Seung-gi should only sing and not do variety, that Suzy is the least appealing of her group, and that Norazo will be the face of Hallyu. He’s so reliably wrong that managers go to him for his opinions—and then do the opposite. (Ha, it’s running joke on the real 1N2D that Cha Tae-hyun has terrible luck, always guessing the exact opposite of what’s true, to comical results.)

Showtime. Seung-chan’s family welcomes him home as they all sit around waiting for the show to come on. CP Kim, on the other hand, has to actually beg his daughter to turn the station from competitor show Running Man to 1N2D instead.

Seung-chan’s parents are excitable and enthusiastic, though as the show goes on, the mood grows quieter and quieter—they don’t quite see the appeal of the show and Dad wonders, “Why do they sound the laughing noises when things aren’t funny?” Seung-chan: “It’s supposed to be funny…”

Then the show airs the bit of Seung-chan and Cindy hiking through the woods, him catching her when she trips, and him bending down to tie her shoelace. It’s a lovely romantic moment and Cindy smiles to watch it—although it puts Seung-chan’s family in an uproar that some hussy who dances in her underwear would dare make their precious son stoop to tie her shoe.

Joon-mo and Ye-jin watch together, and she comments that Seung-chan looks good onscreen, and manly—a remark that Joon-mo doesn’t appreciate. But a bigger problem strikes when a mistaken caption comes onscreen, labeling their location with the wrong province name. Eek!

Ye-jin steps aside to take a call from Joon-mo’s mother, who asks her to make sure Joon-mo makes his blind date with the prosecutor’s daughter. He’d missed the first one and is refusing to go to the rescheduled date (to Ye-jin’s pleasure), and when Mom threatens to barge into his home herself to see about his hidden woman, she hastily promises to do what she can.

The caption error is going to be a headache to deal with, and Joon-mo’s already dreading the fallout. Ye-jin tries cheering Joon-mo up, then broaches the topic of his date—but before she can say much, he tells her he already went on it. Huh.

She looks him face to face while he studiously avoids meeting her eye, and she calls him out on the lie. It makes her conclude that he heard her confession after all, and he’s drawing the line between them. He insists she has it wrong, calling her confession an accident—and if he acknowledged it, things could get awkward between them. “We’re good right now,” he says. “It’s comfortable.”

Disappointed, she just agrees and says she caused the accident and apologizes for the inconvenience. “You’re right, it was an accident. I didn’t mean it,” she says. “But strangely, right now I’m a lot more embarrassed and hurt than when I’ve been dumped by someone. You did this.”

She retreats to her room and buries herself under the covers, and Joon-mo can’t do anything but feel terrible.

Ratings are posted at the office, and turns out, Seung-chan was right on the money. He wins the pool and everyone hands him cash, which doesn’t make him feel any better—especially when Joon-mo pettily pays him in singles. He compliments Seung-chan’s foresight sarcastically, and word spreads quickly about his supposed clairvoyance.

Seung-chan’s broadcast appearance makes the Office Nazi look at him differently, too, and when he goes to her desk on an errand, she hands him a ream of paper he didn’t even ask for. “Keep it, and use as needed,” she says breathily. Omg, that’s hilarious. Then she asks him about her future, hoping he can read her fortune.

Joon-mo is taken to task for the caption accident, and stays late writing a report of how the accident came to pass, and how the critical issue with accidents is how you handle the aftermath. He looks over at Ye-jin, wondering what to do with both accidents.

Seung-chan catches up to Ye-jin as she’s heading home, bounding up to her wearing a huge smile. He makes up the excuse of wanting meat for dinner to invite her along, and buys expensive beef that he grills for her. She tells him that Joon-mo heard her confession after all, and when he asks what she likes about Joon-mo, she sighs that she doesn’t know. She asks him what he liked about his sunbae, and he thinks it over: “She’s pretty… and… she’s pretty.”

Ye-jin figures that men just need women to be pretty, and says wistfully that to Joon-mo, she must be a comfortable longtime buddy: “I must not be pretty to him.” Seung-chan blurts, “You’re pretty.” She looks up in surprise, and he repeats, “You’re pretty too.” Aw, so sweet. It makes her smile, though she just takes the kind words as evidence of his improved social skills.

Joon-mo sits around waiting for Ye-jin to come home, visibly disappointed when it’s kid bro Ye-joon instead. Ye-joon guesses that they fought and offers up the information that Ye-jin’s looking into month-to-month housing, and does his Cupid thing by trying to make it seem like part of a dating game power play so Joon-mo can step in and dissuade her. But when he does ask Ye-jin about it, he finds that she’s serious, and that moving out is her method of cleaning up her “accident.”

Hurt, he tells her to do whatever she wants, which he seems to regret right away. But she leaves the apartment and spends the night at her office rather than coming back home.

In the morning, the bratty writer is first in and sees Ye-jin sleeping in a chair, and offers her something to cover up with. It’s a grudgingly nice gesture from the rude upstart… until she drops a towel over Ye-jin’s face, saying she’ll want to cover that up. God. Why are you still employed anywhere? I don’t get her, but I hate her. Learn manners and get off my lawn!

It’s the day of the Big Show taping, and Ye-jin gets her crew in place, which includes Seung-chan on standby duty, making sure all the performers have everything they need.

Cindy arrives in the parking lot, and runs into Lee Seung-gi, playing a hilarious version of himself that may very well be true, where he’s super nice and helpful, but mostly because that’s his established image and he’s in too deep to risk damaging it. He adds that he’s envious of Cindy for being able to get angry and act out whenever she wants, since that fits her bratty image.

Cindy rolls her eyes and wonders why he went for the perfect boy-next-door image in the first place. Seung-gi says you don’t know what’ll stick when you debut, so you just go with what works. He admits that it’s stressful keeping it up all the time, but whispers a secret: There’s a special group of celebrities with good images, which includes Yoo Jae-suk (national MC known for being awesome) and Sean of Jinusean (famously philanthropic with his wife, Jung Hye-young).

Cindy asks how that gathering helps relieve stress, and Seung-gi says they compete with things like community service and donations. LOL. That’s awesome and hysterical. You guys would relieve stress by doing more good deeds. Then Seung-gi rushes off to help a boy who tripped and makes a photo op of it.

Cindy watches Seung-gi’s display shaking her head, but when it’s time to ready for her performance, she wants to change her image up this time, ditching the strong, sexy look for a softer, cuter one. She asks her manager if the PDs will be by to check on her before the show, and oppa is proud to inform her that he told them to leave her alone today. She glares, and he asks, “Was that… not right?”

He fixes things by bungling them again, naturally, and sends Ye-jin in to check on her, having demanded the PD in charge to come in person. Cindy says very casually that she only meant for minor checks, which could fall to a lower PD, and Ye-jin’s happy to call in Seung-chan instead.

Cindy sits up straighter when he enters, and perks up visibly as Ye-jin informs her that Seung-chan will be going through all the pre-show checks with her.

As Ye-jin and Seung-chan leave the dressing room, Seung-gi grabs her from behind in a bear hug, and they have an enthusiastic reunion that sours the expression on Seung-chan’s face. Ah, I love when he’s jealous.

It says something about Seung-chan’s improvement in feigning innocence that I’m not entirely sure he’s being serious when he says that he didn’t know Seung-gi was a singer, and brings up one of the dramas he did AGES ago (rather than, say, any of the huge hits in the meantime) which his mother loved, and then gets his character’s name wrong to boot.

Ye-jin jumps in to sing Seung-gi’s praises, but in the process inadvertently ruffles Seung-gi’s feathers by getting his song titles wrong. Ha, Seung-gi is unexpectedly sensitive about this, correcting her minor errors (“Marry Me” instead of “Will You Marry Me,” for instance). They head off for coffee together and leave him behind, sulking.

Cindy smiles at Seung-chan as they head off to the stage together, and her manager and stylist are absolutely floored: “Did she just… smile? Not sneer, or snort, but just smile?”

Seung-chan gets Cindy miked up for her performance, and she stands frozen with heart pounding as he leans close to affix her mic pack. Then he apologizes for the discourtesy before leaning in even closer, brushing her hair aside, and fixing the earpiece that’s slipped. It’s a wonder she doesn’t melt right into the floor.

Next he ushers her to the lift to rehearse her entrance, offering her a hand, which she clasps, and then grabbing her arms to steady himself when the lift lurches. All the while Cindy clenches her fists tightly, trying to act cool on the surface while he remains oblivious.

CP Kim and Hong-soon stuff themselves on their lunch break, only to run into the station director on their way back, who suggests lunch. Both of them are ever keen to seize opportunities to get in with their superiors, so they uneasily agree to another lunch, though CP Kim is the smarter of the two brownnosers and excuses himself to check on the show, earning extra points for his dedication.

Ye-jin is onstage preparing for the show when a mechanized platform begins moving onto the stage. She calls over to Cindy, who’s standing in the middle of the stage with eyes closed, listening to something, and when she sees that Cindy isn’t aware that she’s in the platform’s path, she rushes forward to shove her out of the way. In the process, Ye-jin gets hit with the platform and falls with a thud.

Seung-chan hears of the accident and races for the hospital, where he asks about the KBS accident. He’s directed to an area, but to his surprise, it’s Cindy lying in the hospital bed. He asks for Ye-jin, but Cindy doesn’t know where she went.

Turns out Ye-jin got up from being hit, only to see that she’d shoved Cindy into the lift pit, hurting her ankle. He finds Ye-jin in the waiting area nursing a bruised arm, and she’s defensive about being hurt too. Seung-chan is so relieved she’s okay that he just smiles doofily while she complains about Cindy getting all the medical attention while she has to wait.

Joon-mo is out with his team scouting locations when a message pings in Hong-soon’s chat room. He ignores it, thinking it more nonsense, so it takes a while for him to actually read it. (In typical Hong-soon fashion, he makes the accident announcement all about his hardship in directing the show alone.)

Ye-jin and Seung-chan head to check on Cindy, having heard that the doctors recommended a minimum four-day stay in the hospital. They encounter a wall of Cindy’s oppa fans outside her wing, who hear that they’re PDs and ask for information—is it true somebody pushed Cindy onstage? Ye-jin gulps and says she knows nothing, and when the oppas recognize Seung-chan from 1N2D, she hurriedly pushes him along before they get caught up by the fanboys.

Ye-jin approaches cautiously, but Cindy’s surprisingly reasonable about the accident, saying that she knows it wasn’t intentional and that she doesn’t blame them. She even says it afforded her a rare chance to sleep more than three hours, and will consider it a nice break.

CEO Byun is of a different mind entirely, though, and arrives in high dudgeon, slapping the manager oppa for letting this happen. Then she turns to Cindy oozing premeditated concern, saying how of course her injury is most important, and she worked so hard to cancel all Cindy’s engagements for the day, but she absolutely must make her Japan event in two days because the breach fee is so high.

Ye-jin balks at this disregard of doctor’s orders, and Seung-chan chimes in with his own protests. Together, the two defend Cindy’s right to rest, citing potential legal ramifications if she insists despite the medical diagnosis.

Then as they leave Cindy’s wing, they see the wall of fanboys outside and Ye-jin grabs Seung-chan’s hand tightly. He smiles bashfully the whole time, as Ye-jin pulls him past the fans’ clutches.

Meanwhile, Joon-mo hurries back to Seoul, receiving no answer on Ye-jin’s phone and getting stuck in bad traffic. Cindy listens dully as CEO Byun presses her to make all her engagements, Hong-soon bemoans his bad luck at actually having to direct his show (instead of hobnobbing with the VIP guests), and Ye-joon looks for new apartments while wishing they could stay here.

A look at Chapter 6 gives us the lesson for today, regarding broadcast accidents: “No matter how much you reflect on it, it’ll happen again.”

Cindy’s manager oppa trembles in the aftermath of being slapped, while Cindy cries to herself in her hospital bed.

Joon-mo pulls up to the hospital just as Ye-jin walks out with Seung-chan, and in his great relief to see her in safe health, he does his usual (wrong) thing and covers it up by picking on her. He asks after Cindy instead, blaming her for the accident and clucking that he knew she’d get into trouble. Aw, don’t you rub salt in the wound!

So when he tries to check on her arm injury, a stung Ye-jin recoils and says she’s sorry for hurting his cast member and making his life difficult.

She walks off crying, and Seung-chan finds her and silently hands her a handkerchief. She asks why he’s always around to see her making mistakes and asks to be left alone.

“Sunbae,” he says seriously. “I’m sorry too. I think I’m about to cause an accident.”

Then he steps forward to cradle her head and hold her to him, in a position that echoes teenage Joon-mo.

 
EPILOGUE

Seung-gi surprises Ye-jin backstage, and while he’s heaping on the compliments, Seung-chan watches sourly and trudges off feeling jealous. But then he spies Seung-gi’s name on the dressing room door, takes a furtive look around, and whips out a pen.

He scribbles furiously for a while, and then the door opens and Seung-gi steps out. He greets Seung-chan with alacrity, then bounds off to do more good deeds for a passing writer. And Seung-chan looks back at his graffiti with a satisfied smile: Instead of reading “Lee Seung-gi nim,” it now just reads “Lee Seung-gi.” Oooooh, that’ll show him!

 
COMMENTS

I love Seung-chan so much, in all of his iterations, and it’s no wonder that Kim Soo-hyun has another hit on his hands. How is it that every project he does is a career-making one? Some of this must be attributed to luck and good fortune and good projects, but at this rate, his amazing success rate really has to point to his talent. I know he’s acting, particularly since he’s played such a wide range of personality types at this point, but his Seung-chan feels completely real and in the moment, which is a huge part of the reason he’s so compelling. My admiration may be for Kim Soo-hyun the actor, but all of my sympathies and emotional investment is with Seung-chan the character.

I love that Seung-chan is childishly petty while at the same time conveying a wisdom that speaks of greater maturity. His juvenile pranks in earlier episodes regarding his noona crush were funny as comic beats on their own, but the show has tapped into something even better by repeating that dynamic with Ye-jin as the cause, because I care about her (and his crush on her) in a way that I didn’t care about his noona. And now that he’s cluing in (a little bit, and in pieces) to how to be sarcastic or roundabout or doubletalking, and gets to use his reputation as a clueless kid as his shield. It’s the best thing to see him learning how to say the opposite of what he means, and dishing things back to Joon-mo.

Of course, when it really matters he’s the most honest and stiffly principled of everyone, so I’m glad that this foray into sarcasm and passive-aggressiveness isn’t, say, tainting his eternal soul. He’s straightforward in an admirable way, which contrasts with Joon-mo’s passivity.

Granted, Joon-mo is the one who acts more like a normal person, with all of a normal person’s attendant insecurities, fears, and defensiveness. I’m mad at Joon-mo right now and reserve the right to hold today’s episode against him for a good long while (okay, at least another episode or two), but I totally understand his reactions. Seung-chan had it right by calling him cowardly, but it’s not more cowardly than the average person trying to protect themselves and fearing rocking the boat—better to hold onto the thing you want than to dare hope for the moon, isn’t it?

It’s the classic underachiever’s dilemma, where trying to protect yourself actually ensures yourself against the one thing that would make all that pain worth it. But in this mode, you’re more about hedging your bets and hanging on to what you have than venturing out into the unknown. It’s ironic that his comment about editing was all about giving up something good to hold onto something better, because from the perspective of us, the omniscient viewer, the “something better” would be to have Ye-jin’s love, which is what they both want. But from his limited perspective, he can’t know that, and so for him something better is the bird in the hand, not the two in the bush.

I’m not sure where things are headed for Cindy, but I really like the way the show depicts her budding feelings—it’s all in the sidelong glances and hopeful looks, and what’s not said rather than what is. When we’re in her point of view, all time slows to a crawl and every one of Seung-chan’s movements is magnified in glorious slo-mo… and then we cut over to him and he’s going about his business briskly, not noticing that this very small touch, interaction, or look is a momentous thing to her. It’s so reminiscent of a youthful crush, and makes me thrill a little for her while also feeling pre-emptive pity for the fact that it’s all unreciprocated.

I suppose the romantic feelings are unreciprocated for Seung-chan too, but that dynamic feels different to me, because you can see that he’s becoming an important person to Ye-jin. She may not love him, but he’s definitely a comforting presence, particularly since her supposed best friend is actively inflicting wounds now. (Seriously, Joon-mo. You’re on my shit list for the week.)

I don’t know yet how I want this romantic tangle to work out, because I like Ye-jin and Seung-chan so much that I want both of them to get what their hearts want, but those things are at odds with each other. But maybe the important thing isn’t their romantic roles for each other but their friendship ones, where she’s a guiding hand in his career struggles and he’s a spot of comfort in hers.

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I really feel for Ye-jin! Unrequited-but-actually-not-unrequited-love hurts so much and it also doesn't help that Joon-mo says a lot of shit things at the wrong time. That gets me so frustrated all the time but I'm still waiting for the time when Joon-mo finally develops perfect timing when saying things. I'm still rooting for Ye-jin and Joon-mo tho! Gotta root for the bestfriends who has feelings for each other...always a winner!

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Hahah! Someone like Joon Mo i can totally believe :D. i'm hoping the write erases their misunderstanding as soon as possible because seeing them like this frustrates me so much. Best friends or more is always a good story line for me!!

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Yeah, Im still waiting for that. :) i hope We will see that on next ep.

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saaaaame guys. i'm totally waiting for that moment where he says all the right things and ye jin gets what she deserves, my poor things. That part where he went straight to talking about Cindy ... yes, it was really dumb of him to say, but I didn't really feel like 'dude what did you just say' simply because I was thinking that its going to be epic when he manages to communicate things properly to her ... but he'd better learn fast, its going too slow.

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Did anyone else think cindy was sleeping prior to the accident?When you have a schedule as packed as hers, you would sleep walk anywhere.

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I can't find the comment now, but I agree with the commenter who felt that BSC was using what he'd found out about YJ to his advantage - and I don't mean in a good way. To me it feels like BSC is taking advantage of her vulnerability, which I guess is how a person less experienced in matters of the heart MAY do things, and unwittingly at that - thus I don't fault BSC for doing this although I find his immaturity in this regard seriously off-putting (sorry, KSH fans and BSC+YJ shippers).

Although JM should get some balls, CTH has really got me rooting for JM - he's done a great job with bringing out JM's fears and insecurities, and I empathise with JM because it seems like he really likes YJ but is just too damn scared of taking things further with her (thinks he's not a good enough PD, issue of evil mother etc).

I do think this is building up to a JM+YJ ending, simply because with all that's gone on so far, even with this BSC+YJ storyline, it just feels like it would be so WEIRD if it was any other way. And if BSC really doesn't end up with anyone, then kudos to the show for staying true to itself. I'd like that.

I really like IU in this drama, but I don't quite see a BSC+Cindy ending either, though I would like them to be good friends and Cindy becoming a nicer, better person through their friendship.

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I disagree that BSC was using what he’d found out about YJ to his advantage. To be fair, it's BSC who pointed out to JM how much YJ loves him and He shouldn't pretend not to know Ye-jin’s feelings. While he criticized JM for being a coward, BSC himself didn't break the truth to YJ, which showed his consideration of not hurting YJ's feeling. However, to his frustration, JM didn't take any chance to improve their relationship and YJ eventually found out the truth by herself.
YJ was hurt even more outside the hospital when JM blame her for accident, which led to her crying and BSC hugging and comforting her. So far, I didn't see BSC did anything wrong as far as JM-YJ relationship concerned.

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I don't like the way that BSC is treating YJ either. It might be well-intentioned, and perhaps he's not exactly taking advantage of her vulnerability, but there's just something very off-putting about his interactions whenever she's upset about JM. I don't know how to put it, but his jealousy over YJ is kind of horrible to watch and it's made me dislike the character. I feel like he's not being aware of YJ in the right manner - sure, he's sensitive about what she's feeling, but not sensitive in the way that somebody else would realise, hey, it's JM she needs right now. I don't know how to explain it. I think its the fact that I feel that BSC falling for YJ should never have been pursued as a storyline, because I think he would have made a far better character as somebody who understands YJ, maybe has a little crush on her, but not too possessive either, maybe just a figure who makes JM step back when he's being an idiot and makes JM AWARE of how much he hurts YJ. You know, just a perceptive friend who tells it like it is. It think that role would have been perfect.

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agreed!!

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BSC is not a character with perfect personality since day 1. Actually all the main chars in this dramas are flawed, in a way that the writer did it in purpose. That's actually one of the reason that I like this drama better than a lot of typical K-dramas that the main lead acting like god. BSC has a crush on YJ , but all he's done by ep6 is just hugging and comforting her after she got hurt from JM's words. Obviously, JM was not what she want to see at that moment. We don't know how BSC-YJ relationship will develop but it's too early to qualify his behavior as being selfish.

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The one scene that hurts me so much is the one when YJ was walking with SC outside the hospital and JM arrived in a cab. The moment YJ saw JM, the look on her face... gosh... she was holding back her tears as though trying to say, "Joon Mo Bal... I'm in pain... my arm is swelling... look!" But JM just brushed off (as though he didn't notice the look on YJ's face) and asked about Cindy instead.... aaahhh.....

It's so painful to watch... ;(

I cried when YJ cried on the bench.... gosh.. it hurts so much... :(

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is this drama actually good or are people just interested because of the possible pairings?

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well, i personally think that if the drama wasn't good, people wouldn't be invested enough for the pairings. the script is good. the acting is good also, from all 4 leads. but i don't know, people have different tastes and see things differently. it seems to me that people who love it really love it, people who don't really don't, there's no in-between :D. if you haven't watched yet, i suggest watching at least to ep 4 and judge it for yourself ^^ reading comments also help a lot in taking new views. :)

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I just want to make sure it's not overhype train in motion :D

I don't have much time to watch dramas these days so I have to be picky! I'll check it out and be patient with the first few episodes. Thanks!

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I feel sorry that most of comments here are focusing on the pairings and relationships while the show actually delivered a lot more than that. It offered a vivid depiction of the people and the working environment of Korean variety show development, as well as the best dry humor that I haven't seen in K dramas for a long time.

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I don't get these comments. People enjoy things for different reasons. Some people watch for the plot, their favorite actors, romance, etc. For this show, people shouldn't be criticized or looked down upon if they're watching because of the romance. Honestly just let everyone be.

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Yeah as ı have considered so far this show trying to convey variety of feelings , if you looking for romance look at Cindy if it's comedy look at BSJ as for natural feel JM and lastly sympathy or sincerity through YJ , if you love variety shows you will enjoy ep with interviews in it, otherwise there is so well filmed scenes in it for drama lovers right ? So it may not be perfect for everyone too but in my opinion it's remarkable

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I agree that the romance element (as to who is going to end up together) is the LEAST interesting aspect of this drama.

Aside from showing life in the K-entertainment industry from the other side (even if a bit stylized), just the development of the relationships of the various characters (which doesn't have to be romance-based, such as the one btwn JM and SC) has been interesting, as well as the humor (this has been way funnier than the rather lame attempts at humor in "Warm & Cozy").

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Well, what do you want? People are interested in different things. You can't just lament over why people aren't discussing the things you personally feel are the highlights of the show.

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it doesnt turn out as experimental drama-variety as it was planned initially but in other hand, it turns out as one of best rom-com for me... it's so endearing and heartwarming, and the big bonus is you get to see how is K-variety-department looks like... I enjoy and love it mostly for it's story-line..... not just cute, sweet and aegyo scene, but more because how it's presented realistically without being over-top, it feels simple, and looks ordinary compare to usual rom-rom, but leave me stronger impressions and real feeling than usual rom-com...

as for me, it's ep 5-6 that finally makes me get fully enjoying Producer because honestly I felt so disappoint at first since I love GHJ the most among actors but her character just stand out endearingly for having crush at RJM... but then like RJM said about editing, you sometime have to give up one of good-better things, if you keep being greedy, you'll lose everything, so I give up on hoping for more story about TYJ as female PD, and just enjoying her as tak ye jin.... :D

rather than saying being picky, I watch drama mostly base on mood.... even sometime good drama doesnt work for me, hehehe so rather than asking if the drama good enough, better you watch it first and see if you want to keep watching or not. ;)

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I dont know why but im more interested with KJK and GHJ pairing when i watched ep 5 and 6. They are not linked in romance way but they looks cute and good together. Eventhough its just a short scenes but their bantering was really fun to watch and its looks natural too. I wish HS appear a lot with JM but looks like HS and YJ was more closer. I think HS character was the core of comedy in this drama, ambitious but in childish and cute way.

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I'm surprise how good Kim Joong Kook is!
this is only his debut acting and he is already so good.
KJK as Hong Soon, yup agree, he and TYJ are enjoyable to watch... but... I ship him with that paper-toner lady hahaha so I wish to see more scenes of HS and that lady than HS with other casts :D

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I'm a BSC & Cindy shipper, but my heart couldn't help but be tugged at BSC & YJ's relationship development. ARgh to tell with shipping, I just want them all to find happiness by the end somehow.

My heart really went out to Cindy & her Manager. Like many have said before Manager Oppa probably understands and cares for Cindy the most. I feel Cindy is most comfortable around him since he's pretty much around her 24/7, plus he sees all sides of her. When he misinterprets her needs, it shows beneath he does try his best to help her in some way.

When Cindy was crying in her sleep, it reminded me of Britney Spears "Lucky" lyrics

"She's so lucky, she's a star
But she cry, cry, cries in her lonely heart, thinking
If there's nothing missing in my life
Then why do these tears come at night"

I really want BSC to heal her somehow, even if it's not romantic, girl just really needs a friend some way.

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Manager Oppa is with her the most, but after 10 years he still doesn't read her right (in fact, wrong most of the time), so I doubt the feelings could be developed, at least from Cindy's side :) But yes, I feel very sorry for him too. The scene when he was alone in last minutes of this episode made my heart sink.

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Ah I don't want them to develop a romantic relationship, I quite like it the way they are now. Though if Cindy is a bit nicer to him it might make a day a bit brighter haha

I think it's nice that the drama doesn't forget the minor characters like him too.

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I've been rewatching this episode for seung chan's goofy grin at the end. Does anyone else miss the office-esque sequences? They were so funny but this episode went by without any of it. :(

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I found this in Korea Herald: Kim Soo Hyun answers during The Producer presscon.

Q) What was the reason for choosing this role, which is very different from the one you previously played in “My Love from the Star”?

A) I chose this role because I wanted to just let loose and play a goofy character. I wanted to show audiences a more relaxed side.

Q) You were able to gain explosive popularity in China and other Asian countries, and rise to international stardom after your last drama, “My Love from the Star.” Did this put pressure on you in working on this new project?

A) I try not to put pressure on myself. As I said earlier, I tried to let loose and relax in this drama. Of course, that doesn’t mean I didn’t work hard. As usual, I practiced and rehearsed and worked hard, and I really hope (the show) is a success. But I try not to pay too much attention to ratings and things like that.

The thing I’m most focused on is letting the audience relate to my character. Everyone at one point in their lives was a rookie in some area, so I would like people to relate to that experience. If I’m able to portray that well, then I think the show will be a natural success in terms of popularity.

Q) What particular efforts did you make in order to portray the “rookie” character?

A) The best and most perfect guide is always the script. So I tried to be honest to the script and express that in earnest. If you see rookies, they try so hard to not be clueless, but they’re completely clueless. But they’re really, earnestly trying not to be clueless. I tried to show that.

Sometimes, I feel frustrated at my own character. There’s a scene where Tak Ye-jin (Gong Hyo-jin) and Cindy (IU) clash at work, and it’s a serious situation. But at that moment, Seung-chan suddenly says to Cindy, “You are really pretty.” (Laughs) If I were Ye-jin, I think I would have wanted to hit him.

I also learned that so much hard work happens behind the scenes. The hidden efforts of the production crew... I hope that comes through in our show.

Anyway, my biggest goal is for audiences to relate to my character and feel close to him.

By Rumy Doo (bigbird@heraldcorp.com)

...................

Oooh..... we do love you so much Baek Seung Chan..!
aja..aja..fighting!

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I went through many comments about kissing scene between BSC and YJ, will it be watchable, believable ???? well if I ask myself, right at this moment I am not very much comfortable about a kissing scene between these two.

believe me it is not about age or looking aged !!!! I just dont find them compatible for a kissing scene. I have many noona romances, age has never been an problem. Like Ha Ji Won is nine years older than JCW, but their romance was nice to watch. anyone remembers the steamy scenes of "Witch's Romance" ???? the female lead was 14 years older than PSJ, but they nailed it !!!!!! Lastly, I want to mention my one of most fav k dramas, IHYV, Lee Bo Young was older than LJS , even looked very much older than he, but that was the cutest noona romance :) :)

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same thought here

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me too, i don't feel comfortable imagining it.

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I think that's probably because his characterization is so boyish and his look resembles that. So many ppl are infantilizing him that they forget that BSC is supposed to be a 27 year old grown MAN. Plus GHJ is almost the same height as KSH so when they're seen onscreen, he looks more boyish. The shows you've ref'd have tall men and shorter women. And in YWCFTS, DMJ was playing a 400 year old gruff alien and again his acting reflected that.

I have no worries abt possible kissing scenes cos they'll do just fine. But the production may want to at the very least flip his fringe, or whatever, up which would age him a little more.

Btw you may say it's unrelated to age or looking aged but it sure is coming across as that, as with some other comments. This sort of ageist attitude needs to stop, where only a certain aesthetic of a 'noona' is acceptable.

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@AP if you have no problem with it, then it's okay :) I just convey my point of view, in YWFS KSH did look younger than JJH, he is actually has a baby face but I could feel romance so obviously for me at least that did not bother me

And about height difference, well untill you mentioned it I honestly did not think about it, that might be unconsciously the case because I can't deny I like taller boys.

And Aesthetic Noona??? Well I find GHJ very gorgeous!!! And she is rocking here

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I'm sorry if it comes off as "ageist attitude" to you. I think we're just stating our feelings as it is. I believe many of us have no problem with noona-dongsaeng romance, just that this time there's something in it that doesn't feel right. Now that you mention it, maybe it's true that it has something to do with their heights which we count it in subconsciously. Like with Cindy, Seung Chan's still the same with the haircut, but he appears to be very manly even with his adorkable side (scared of the lift). Their scenes are hot and steamy even when it's all about Cindy's feeling. When he's with Ye Jin, I can only think of it as cute. Imagining a kiss is a bit... That's just how I feel, sorry if you think it's attitude against age difference and noona romance.

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@AP

I think we just should accept that some peoples cant help but get concern too much when it comes to visual looks... though for me, visual looks never become my concern, no matter how ugly the looks as long as everything making sense such acting, chemistry, script, story, dialog, etc, it's all matter to me... if I concern about looks so much, for sure I've already missed many better things out there :(

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I think the point initially isn't about look though. I agree that Seung Chan and Ye Jin have chemistry, but I think for many of us, it feels more like a little brother who cares a lot for his sister and wants to protect her at all cost, especially from the painful feelings he himself experienced. It's cute and heartwarming but I didn't feel romance there. Please don't judge us thinking we're all about looks. We all have the ability and right to see and interpret and feel things differently.

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if it's really the case, then it's not about visual looks, but its about their characteristic or probably about how their character behave...

you see, in MLFS - KSH character is mature and manly, isnt? while her leading lady acted more child-alike than his... while here in producer, KSH character is boyish one and her leading lady is the more mature one, which is why in producer, it's making more obvious the age gap between BSC and TYJ...

if TYJ's character is more childish/girlish and KSH's character is more mature and manlier, I bet you can enjoy this pairing better.... like GHJ and Seo In Guk in TMS, SIG's character is more mature and manly while GHJ's character is more childish, they looked good on screen.

Though for me it's refreshing to have a boyish younger man have crush on mature older woman, because it's what make TYJ-BSC looks even cuter..... I'm my self root RJM to be the right person for TYJ, because for story's sake, it's making more sense... but dunno if writer will go with fans' sake or story's sake.

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@agoodheart I'm sorry if I interpret your comment wrong, it just that I'm become more sensitive everytime people mention "Looks"... too much negative comments already about ghj's looks... so that I kind of emotional... bian, :)

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I totally agree with the lack of romantic chemistry between these two, and I am a huge fan of noona romances. I was totally on board in IHYV even when Lee Bo Young certainly looked older and more mature than Lee Jong Suk. Secret love affair or Witch's romance had also noona romances full of chemistry and the large age gap was not a problem for me... SC and YJ are just mehh as couple, they have a cute friendly rapport though. But ok, I understand that this is a matter of personal tastes.

I hope that the tables turn and at some point SC is going after Cindy, that would be fun. Not sure I can keep going the whole drama, witnessing how Cindy suffers in silence...

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@readlead: I'm glad we seem to come to a middle ground here. I understand, you can't help but being protective when it comes to the artist you like. Just know that we're not attacking Gong Hyo Jin's look here by any means (at least I don't see it in this small sub-threat that few of us are discussing between each other), it's simply that we don't feel the romantic chemistry between Seung Chan and Ye Jin.

I myself separate quite well between the actors in real life and their characters on screen. When I watch the drama, I see the characters as real people living their real lives, and I don't question much why I feel the way I feel. Only later on, I will sit back, think about the actors, the acting, what they've done well, what could be the reason for my feelings. In this case, after giving it some thought, apart from the chemistry thing, I think one of the reasons why it takes me away from the 'romance' between Seung Chan and Ye Jin is that, Seung Chan didn't like Joon Mo right from the beginning, and seeing Ye Jin suffering by the same reason he suffered somehow brought him closer to Ye Jin. Joon Mo took away Hae Joo without being serious then made Ye Jin miserable, which serious wasn't nice of him, but he had his reason and he was the one Ye Jin needed. What Seung Chan did was reasonable, and his feelings were genuine of course, but to me it was a bit selfish in a way. I don't think Ye Jin could be at peace to be with Seung Chan when there are still so much to figure out between her and Joon Mo. It's like a knot that needs to be untied, otherwise it will continue to prevent me from feeling for Seung Chan and Ye Jin. But when the knot is untied, if I were Ye Jin, I would definitely return back to Joon Mo. After all, he's the one she loves all along, she wants him above anyone else no matter how others treat her better.

... I think I've drifted away a bit too far lol. Anyway, my point is that, I don't think I cared about looks (Gong Hyo Jin, in particular) when I watched the drama, and I believe many of us who don't see the romantic chemistry between Seung Chan and Ye Jin would agree with this point at least.

I also hope the writer(s) hold their gun and don't be swayed too much by the public. I just don't like it when real life things interfere too deep with what happens in the drama, e.g. age, class between actors, public opinion. I want something that makes sense and reaches its potential.

Somehow I'm a bit sorry for Joon Mo and Cha Tae Hyun though. It can't be too bad that Joon Mo and Ye Jin reconciles, Seung Chan takes care of Cindy who's like a drenched and scared kitten at the moment, and four of them be friends in the end. It may be too perfect for some, but it would be the satisfying ending that I wish for. There's enough broken dreams in real life.

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@Appelsin: Me too. My heart was shattered to pieces to watch Cindy being like this. She's so small and fragile, so powerless against the system, so lonely and vulnerable. When I watched the scene when she cried, I wondered how many times she weep in silence like that, and I remember thinking, "please, someone, love her". Many would argue she needs friends more than a lover, but I think she needs lots of nurturing from a lover first, someone genuine who she trusts and has enough patience and warmth for her. It takes time for her wounds to heal, and the best way is to gain strength from love and gradually open her heart to others. Seung Chan is perfect for this but I don't know. I'm sad to see things to be divided like this, and it seems there's the idea that IU isn't at Soo Hyun's league to end up with him too (which imo is silly). I feel so sad for both Cindy and IU. IU has been doing great for this project and Cindy is my most favorite character of her. I wish a drama wouldn't affect me this much but whenever I think about it, I'm just sad overall.

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This is true, I am D: at the sexist and ageist attitudes that seem to creep in in the analyses of what ship ~belongs together etc. I admit that KSH and GHJ are doing nothing for me, because I'm not feeling their romantic chemistry per se, but GHJ is killing this role, she's really great in it. My last big ship was Go Bok-dong and Jo Kang-ja, and I shipped them madly and without any qualms, but I could still understand some of the criticism, since Bok-dong was in school and incredibly young, so it could be a legitimate squick, but here KSH's character is definitely not too young by any stretch of the imagination. I much prefer the KSH/Cindy narrative potential, but there is nothing wrong with the KSH/GHJ visual at all.

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I luff the way Ye Jin looks, so it's not about that. I find that there is a chemistry ... but it's kinda all on BSC's side, in a way? Their interactions remind me very much of an aunt/nephew. Maybe it's got something to do with BSC's childish mannerisms, which tend to accentuate just how boyish his face looks (and makes me completely forget that he's 27, yunno?) and YJ's very mentor-like way of looking at him. I don't feel uncomfortable with the idea of them both in a non-platonic relationship, but the child/parent dynamic to their interactions is difficult to sidestep and I'M JUST SO INVESTED IN THE JM/YJ COUPLE.

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I rest my case?

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i saw this drama on tv last weekend, the 2nd half of the 1st episode, and it was really funny and not boring at all. seung chan's family is very funny, poor guy. i like how he is pure but also flawed, like he keeps trying to get revenge, showing his jealousy by doing dumb useless things.

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Wow the comment count is amazing, of course as expected whenever there's a KSH drama! This must be the most comments dramabeans has had right O.0

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Uhm no, the final episode of Healer they had over 7600 comments, so :D

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And people are still commenting in ep 20 recap of healer :D

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Thanks for the recap. I always check out DB when watching my fav shows.

I'm definitely watching this for the Umbrella couple, mostly because I find Cindy's character sad, yet complex. She's tired and grumpy because she's been a commodity for most of her life, with everyone wanting to grab a little piece of her, and now she's longing for something more. Someone genuine. That whole concept is just endearing to me. But I'm worried things aren't going to work out for her :(

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So BSC has a boyish crush on TYJ? Just like that? I really don't like it at all. A big NO~NO from me.

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Now the love line is Cindy->BSC->YJ->JM, maybe the 2nd half would be the other way round? JM->YJ->BSC->Cindy? :P

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Oh then it will be something I would totally dig! :D

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oooOOOo yess that would be a really good comeback!

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Ok. Writer-nim, if Cindy doesnt go with Seung Chan, I will ship her with Tak-Jins brother. She already knows what he looks like (just by looking at the bts).

Also, in real life he is 1 year older than her.
Just my opinion guys...

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I want to ignore SC's feelings for YJ because I'm rooting so much dor YJ and JM. But I can't help but ship them too...ughh this drama is messing with my life!

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First of all, the concept of "PDs" is what swirled me into this drama. To be honest, I wasn't expecting a lot of romance like where it's heading to now. But it's not that I don't like it, in fact, I found myself obsessed with this. And I haven't felt anything like that towards any drama for a long time.

Anyway, for years, I'm obsessed with the "best friend/childhood friend" kind of romance. I always found it cute. I didn't like much the concept of boy-meets-girl kind of scenario. But surprisingly, I'm shipping Seungchan and Yejin more than Joonmo and Yejin. This is the first time I'm not that strongly attached to the bestfriend couple. It's strange. Maybe because it's unique? I mean, you don't get to see an older woman and a younger man ship in K-dramas that often.

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does anyone know where you can watch this with subs? someone recommended dramayou, but it looks like dramayou is down or moved somewhere.. :[[

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Viki or dramacool , both are fast. Viki has mostly detailed subtitles, on the other hand dramacool has HD option which ever you like

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착해.?

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I feel like his episode had the biggest impact on me. It wasn't really addressed in this recap. It was when Cindy was crying, the manager shivering, and lee seung gi greeting people and helping people. When I watched this, my mind instantly went back to the beginning where seung gi was first introduced, how he didn't want to act that way but had to. When I saw Cindy crying and the manager shivering and seung gi bowing, I just bawled. From that moment, a pitied idols so much, because they now have to live as a person they don't want to be to appease the public, or in Cindy's case to appease her 'mum.' How much effort would it have to take to constantly keep yourself in check? Imagine not being able to be yourself for the rest of your life. Lee seung gi's glcharacter really did a number on me. And I still feel the affects today.

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what is the song title from the "stage lift scene" of CINDY and BSC? I really love the song... anyone who could give me the title?

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