How's the rating for ep7? I saw it gets like 18%or something
The Nielsen Korea ratings for episode 7 of My Royal Nemesis have not yet been released. The drama has been experiencing a steady rise in viewership, with previous episodes achieving significant ratings. For instance, episode 6 recorded a peak rating of 10.3%, while episode 5 reached 9.5%. Despite a steady increase in ratings, 18% seems to be too high a number to be believable.
My Royal Nemesis grabbed No.1 on Netflix Global Top 10 Non-English Shows, garnering 3.9 million views from May 8-10. top10.netflix.com reports the series is on the Top 10 in 44 countries across the Americas, Europe, Africa, and Asia.
I've been impressed by a string of J-Dramas available on Netflix over the past year or two. Fresh storytelling, intriguing characterizations. I expect I shall enjoy this one as well.
I want to ask about something I read on the internet, did Kim Sae Ron really kille herself on Kim Soo Hyun's birthday…
Yes. It is true that Kim Sae Ron took her own life on Kim Soo Hyun's birthday. Try to imagine how she must have felt and what she was thinking at the time.
I'm here for this, but I confess that I'm currently watching the similarly-themed J-Drama 'Reborn' on Netflix, and the way it handles the ML's do-over is so fresh that I'm worried I'll be disappointed with Reborn Rookie.
Over the past year or three, I've been repeatedly surprised & impressed by unique & insightful storytelling in J-Dramas — and this is the best one yet!
I don't understand. Are they going to ban this drama and will we not be able to see it again after the controversy?
I am entirely confident that Disney would never pull it under any circumstances. Nor will any of the bootleg streamers ever give it up. At worst, MBC will be prevented from re-airing the drama in the domestic market. But even that is doubtful.
or the show the man in the high castle 🏰 where it’s similar The Man in the High Castle is an American dystopian…
Yes. FWIW, TMITHC is based on an award winning novel by author Philip K Dick (Bladerunner), first published in 1963. The story is set in a parallel world which exists alongside the real one (and characters move from one reality to the other)—a concept which has also been used in the K-Drama, The King: Eternal Monarch. While the world of Perfect Crown has no connection to reality.
They're not worried about so many things going on in their country but want to ban a drama instead?
I came here to post this same thought. I used to think that life in Korea wasn't perfect for many, but now I realize they are all living in cotton candy houses with magical comfort-unicorns, considering this is what gets them all riled up in the morning.
Finally rewatched this after several years. I maintain my 10/10 rating, but also now consider this my all-time favorite K-Drama for its outstanding script, production, & performances. Bravo! 👏🏼
After cancelling two K-Dramas last year and the current cancel-culture fervor against this one, I wonder if Disney is considering getting out of the Korean market altogether? If they were smart, they'd have made an animated musical (something the studio was actually built on). But Netflix beat them to it with K-Pop Demon Hunters—a critical success which must be entirely humiliating for the "Mouse House Imagineers"!
My Royal Nemesis grabbed No.1 on Netflix Global Top 10 Non-English Shows, garnering 3.9 million views from May 8-10. top10.netflix.com reports the series is on the Top 10 in 44 countries across the Americas, Europe, Africa, and Asia.