What this agency wants is the power to order sites to remove comments they don't like. The issue itself is extremely complex, there are too many reasons posts get made, positive or negative, some are genuine, some are false. Only a few scenarios have been covered in the comments here - what other reasons might be behind 'malicious' comments, and what does an agency gain or lose with actions like this?
What's wrong with that? Not only they highlighted his next project but also complimented the brilliance of both…
He's a troll, he hates more than he likes and is unable to articulate - he generalises then insults when challenged. He pretends to be clever... but is a fake, which you'll find out if you push the right buttons. Saying that, don't waste your time, it isn't worth it. If you see his posts, picture a very small, ugly toad and it will help resist the urge to engage.
I must say I have no enthusiasm to watch a 16 episode version of a film I've already seen. Feels like a waste of time. The singing will be pitch corrected too.
Why a damn love triangle? 😫 Please let this be a mistake in the synopsis
Love triangles are fine. It depends how they're depicted. Some writers can only do it in an antagonistic style, but it can make great drama when done well.
Han Ye-seul slaps a young idol in this drama. She deserved to be slapped. Not in real life, it happened in drama form. Is this why people got the wrong idea that she slapped Jennie? Well, if it did happen, Jennie deserved it too, nobody gets slapped for nothing. Team Ye-seul!
I'd like to read details about why and what is considered racist, misogynistic blah blah. These are just buzzwords. What are the details, reporter lo_ve? I mean, America could ban something because it's not to one's ideology, even if it's a work of fiction featuring legitimate characters with such weaknesses. That would also mean we can no longer have dramas featuring murderers either. If it seems the author is projecting through his characters I suppose it could be disturbing, anyone read it? Not just one caption, but properly read it in context?
An apparent suicide.
You don't care, but you care?
It appears you do care but want to appear morally superior to others.
I'm calling out virtue signalling, not your opinion.