Well, that's the trajectory the drama is taking. Every one is flawed one way or the other except JM & BH.…
I get what they were going for, but it was bad acting and bad direction. They could have conveyed her selfishness and frustration without making her look like a toddler in that scene.
They should have found another way to show Seo Rin's displeasure with Jang Mi getting her share of the family assets. The way that scene played out was so cringeworthy because Seo Rin was portrayed as a spoiled toddler. Everything from her body movements to her facial expressions was so off that I couldn't take her seriously and expected Grandpa to put her in a time-out.
As much as I don't like what's happening to Seo Rin's character, I expected her to react like that. She grew up…
I am glad to see Hong Ju finally get in the game, but I can't forget that she fails so damn much and never thinks through her attacks. San Wol should take the chance amid all the chaos and figure out a way to get her side of the story to the chairman and out from under Hwa Yeong's blackmail. But she is also a big failure.
Lameeee looks like some of you were right and with the extension they’ll be going with the sibling rivalry 😂…
Well, they have to fill these episodes with even more over-the-top drama, so sibling rivalry (Jang Mi vs Seo Rin, and Baek Ho vs Jun Ho) seems like the logical place to go at this point.
Seo Rin certainly isn't going to just snap out of it after years of Hwa Yeong's total brainwashing. Even she still doesn't recognize Hwa Yeong's true nature and the fact that she is just a tool and not actually loved by her.
I have a feeling the chairman knows about Kim Myeong Hui identity
I keep getting the same feeling. He had to know she had a twin. He was having a baby with her, and she never talked about her twin, ever is hard to believe.
You might be. I know for a fact I was. On another note: A lot of countries have histories of stealing babies from…
South Korea admits to 'mass exporting' children for adoption
South Korean governments committed numerous human rights violations over decades in a controversial programme that sent at least 170,000 children and babies abroad for adoption, a landmark inquiry has found.
It said the government's lack of oversight enabled the "mass exportation of children" by private agencies that were driven by profit, and found examples of fraud, falsified records and coercion.
Since the 1950s, South Korea has sent more children abroad for adoption than any other country, with most sent to Western countries.
South Korea has since moved to tighten its adoption processes, but some adoptees and their biological parents say they are still haunted by what they went through. The BBC spoke to one woman who claimed her adoptive parents "took better care of the dog than they ever did of me".
"This is a shameful part of our history," said Park Sun-young, the chairperson of the commission, at a press briefing.
i'm afraid that if i investigate a little, i'll discover that i'm adopted too... how scary... so scary...
You might be. I know for a fact I was. On another note: A lot of countries have histories of stealing babies from their bio-parents and adopting them out. Even sanctioned by the governments. South Korea is one of those places from the 50s to the 90s.
If today was episode 96 I feel like Hwayoung will be back to power by episode 100. We all saw how she manipulated…
Oh, she will be back for sure, and it will be the twins' fault for not going for the kill. Jun Ho should be gone also, but as usual, in typical K-drama fashion, they want to keep a secret that harms them more than helps them.
Seung Ri had no right to question or lecture Eun Ae on why she was at the hospital and why she didn't leave right away. That was none of her business, had nothing to do with work, and she isn't family either.
Seo Rin certainly isn't going to just snap out of it after years of Hwa Yeong's total brainwashing. Even she still doesn't recognize Hwa Yeong's true nature and the fact that she is just a tool and not actually loved by her.
South Korean governments committed numerous human rights violations over decades in a controversial programme that sent at least 170,000 children and babies abroad for adoption, a landmark inquiry has found.
It said the government's lack of oversight enabled the "mass exportation of children" by private agencies that were driven by profit, and found examples of fraud, falsified records and coercion.
Since the 1950s, South Korea has sent more children abroad for adoption than any other country, with most sent to Western countries.
South Korea has since moved to tighten its adoption processes, but some adoptees and their biological parents say they are still haunted by what they went through. The BBC spoke to one woman who claimed her adoptive parents "took better care of the dog than they ever did of me".
"This is a shameful part of our history," said Park Sun-young, the chairperson of the commission, at a press briefing.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwyjryv1kpgo