Both dramas follow the exploits of stay at home dads in communities that don't appreciate their non-traditional roles. While the issues of gender roles and inequality are heavy, both of these comedies lighten it up :) Dare Yori has more colorful characters than At Home Dad, but both are good.
They tell the stories of men who suddenly become the primary caretaker of children in a society that values the tradition of female caregivers. I think Marumo is more complex (and better) than At Home Dad, but they are both good and worth watching if you like family dramas.
they are both shows about a person who is peculiar and sticks to their rules and peculiarities and still they manage to make friends.
Saionji, a housework-application employee who doesn't do housework, is enjoying the freedom of single life she's finally obtained after 38 years! However, she meets Kusumi, a genius engineer from Silicon Valley. The strange younger man has a big "secret"! This is a story of love and family, where Saionji-san, who has no housekeeping skills, takes on the challenge
Mi Yeon is an independent career woman and a documentary producer who became a widow after her husband died in a car accident over nine years ago. Despite that, she dreamt of having her own family so with the help of a sperm donation she gave birth to a boy. After her son turned nine years old, he set off to go to China in search for his biological father. Mi Yeon also went after him, and together they met the boy's father, Zhou Li Yan. The three of them go through some unexpected situations and become a family.
Even in modern-day Taipei, women feel the societal pressure to get married and have children before the period to have them.
Thankfully, there is a solution: freeze your ovum and prolong your fertility.
Zeng Mei Bao freezes her ovum and looks for the right man to start a family. In the pursuit of this man, she ends up in a wintry Swedish Province, where ice and snow becomes a metaphor for the unborn child who is waiting to be born
Thankfully, there is a solution: freeze your ovum and prolong your fertility.
Zeng Mei Bao freezes her ovum and looks for the right man to start a family. In the pursuit of this man, she ends up in a wintry Swedish Province, where ice and snow becomes a metaphor for the unborn child who is waiting to be born


