American Fan:
I second this and agree with everything said. And the markets, even if you don't shop. Truly worth your time and vacay dollars.
It's not that I couldn't go to Thailand - but somehow I don't have much desire to travel anymore. I did too much of it when I was younger (including also business travel, which gets really tiresome), plus I've made three trips to the U.S. in the past six months. I hate airports! However, if Angeliviki comes through on arranging my date with Fluke Natouch, I will definitely pull myself together.
+++
Although I was intending to wait and binge, I've started on the first episode of "Sangmin Dinneaw". My expectations weren't really high, but it's surprisingly enjoyable.
My main reason for starting, however, was curiosity as to how they handle the language issue compared to the three other recent Thai-Korean collaborations which I've watched:
"Eccentric Romance" handled it poorly but was cute and gave me tingles because of my love for Save Saisawat. (OK, I admit it: the series was otherwise quite weak.)
"Love Is Like A Cat" was a general train wreck, and not only for the really pathetic and lazy handling of the language issue.
And "Close Friend Season 3: Soju Bomb!" wasn't really BL (i.e. deceptive queerbaiting, thus the punishing MDL ratings), although it was a funny comedy with cute boys and actually handled the language issue adequately.
In short, the track record to date on Thai-Korean collaborations is not good.
Anyways, so far "Sangmin Dinneaw" is handling the language issue much better. At least Choi Sang Min (living in Thailand) speaks some Thai, and throwing in some English to bridge the communication gap is also realistic. (Actually, I suspect that he speaks Thai quite well and is dumbing it down for the story.) Added bonus: Nice rural Thai scenery. Chemistry also seems promising. Fingers crossed.
P.S. I'm watching the uncut version on iQiyi. Already in episode 1, there are some tantalising moments, and I suspect things will get juicier in future episodes.