Quantcast

Teach You a Lesson

참교육 ‧ Drama ‧ 2026
Completed
michelleoc
20 people found this review helpful
Jun 8, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 6.5
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

This would make sense in a dystopian world...

There was good about this show, and some not so good. I struggle watching anything about bullying, but when reading a lot of comments saying it was so funny, I decided to give it a chance. I didn't find it funny. There were some humorous lines, yes, but the subject matter was very dark. It was well-done, and I realize that most people will enjoy it, which worries me a little. I would like to think we are not becoming desensitized to violence and profanity.

It was well-acted. I had a difficult time watching the ML, because he looked so much like John Cena! He's attractive, but I kept wondering why John Cena was in a Korean drama.

The premise of the different stories for each episode was good. I also liked how they addressed the problems with teachers and parents as well as students.

However, the thought that adults can come into a school and beat up kids is just too far-fetched. Bullies terrorize those weaker than them. You are saying it's wrong to bully, but yet with adults it's okay? I did, however, really like how the ML dealt with the crazy stalking parent.

Must there be so much cursing? Has anyone ever watched something and said, "Boy, I wish there was more cursing in that."? The innumerable times the 'F' word was used - more often than not translated for a lesser curse word being used. It's a Netflix show, I get it, but it bothers me.

I'm aware that most will disagree with my thoughts. That's what they are, my thoughts, so please don't come at me.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
danisdiary
19 people found this review helpful
Jun 7, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 4.0
Story 4.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 4.0
This review may contain spoilers

What lesson are they trying to teach?

I caved and watched Teach You A Lesson. Let me tell you: a student getting slapped around should be the least of your concerns about this kdrama.

There are some serious WTF moments and the way some issues are dealt with are definitely laced with korean right wing ideology.

Spoilers ahead.

As usual, when talking about social issues from other countries, disclaimer: I am not Korean. Just an art curator studying asian cultures and histories to better understand the creative processes. I am not here to put my western POV into this story, just to point out some things I found interesting.

Yes, Teach You A Lesson is a fantasy-action kdrama about confronting severe school bullying and protecting victims when institutions fail. I will also say it puts in the table school violence and educational issues that are rarely dealt with in a proper way in South Korea.

First, you should approach it as part of the kdrama family of Weak Hero Class 1 and Study Group. Except here, it’s a government agency doing the dirty work and not students beating the lights out of each other. The power dynamics are not the same.

Second, some episodes are really well done. I liked the one about a primary teacher being harassed by an overly critical parent telling them how to treat their “precious” children. There’s been several reports primary teachers taking extreme desicions because of it and government remains inactive.

I also liked the episode dealing with a mother pressuring her son to get into one of SKY med schools. It shows how children are pushed to extremes (mentally, emotionally and physically) to the point of pill dependency and burn out before they are even in university.

There are other issues such as online game gambling, something that has become a problem for high school student and parents around the world. Also, wealthy parents paying teachers to get exams ahead of time to the detriment of middle class/poor families whose children work and excel on their own.

BTW, the kdrama treats all kind of addictions as a crime and uses prison as “rehabilitation” but never questions if there should be new legislation to deal with this crisis, nor offers any message about access to psychological treatment.

And sure, a few episodes are pure fantasy.

With that said, let’s move on to the episodes that made me rise by eyebrows: A teen influencer accuses her male teacher of sexual harassment that leads to his death. Spoiler, she lied. This my first red flag.

Teach You A Lesson ot once takes this girl’s accusation seriously and offhandedly writes it off as a bully acting out. Using THIS particular issue to make a point about “teachers right to protect themselves against kids” is wild.

This episode could have been a good opportunity to explore the complicated relationship between teachers and students in a hyper-mediated environment. How both are left to become victims due to lack of government legislation or the naturalisation of a culture of online shaming, doxxing and harassment. Some reports published lately could have been enough for a solid episode if Teach You A Lesson really wanted to lean into a more realist approach. But this is not that kind of kdrama and you should be aware of that when watching it.

There’s also a direct or underhanded commentary, depending on the story, about kids hierarchy according to social status and economic circumstances. As well as “broken families” being an excuse to dwell into crime, even when we see some of these rich kids are probably the worst of all.

There’s a lot of talking about violence when it comes to this kdrama but I don’t see anyone saying anything about corporal punishment becoming an issue in South Korea only in the 2000s. And it was only by 2021 that all corporal punishment of children was banned under South Korean law. This means that, until 5 years ago, physical punishment was widely accepted in families, schools, the military and the justice system. And it’s likely still very much a thing today (when people are not looking… or not). Just giving context for those following the discourse of Teach You A Lesson.

Now, the most WTF moment of them all (for me): a governmental office illegally holding in prison four juvenile delinquents (shaved heads and all), refusing their parents habeas corpus, and exposing them to hardened criminals for bullying and dealing drugs is perhaps a right winger’s wet dream.

The fact this comes in the coattails of Shinsegae Group’s Starbucks Tank Day campaign leaves me speechless. This episode is truly tone deaf or outright propaganda.

Teach You A Lesson’s production team had no way to know this “controversy” would happen weeks before the release of the kdrama. But it does give pause, to say the least, they everyone involved in this kdrama thought that practices usually seen during dictatorships or extreme right wing regimes was a proper resolution to the issue of juvenile delinquency. Characters are criminals or victims. There’s no middle ground.

I said at the beginning this kdrama belongs to a particular genre of kdrama but, unlike those, Teach You A Lesson seems to want to deliver a message about the education system. That’s why I think it’s a missed opportunity to point out the need for legislation and educational reforms.

You can read more about the very real social issues the kdrama and original webtoon are based on here:

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-66655572
https://thediplomat.com/2025/06/south-koreas-education-obsession-is-a-national-emergency/
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/2187691/how-south-koreas-metoo-generation-fights-sexual-abuse-schools
https://world.kbs.co.kr/service/news_view.htm?lang=e&Seq_Code=192623
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwangju_Inhwa_School
https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/southkorea/society/20260515/80-of-teachers-fear-child-abuse-accusations-for-routine-classroom-guidance
https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10576776
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/06/starbucks-south-korea-tank-day-promotion-blunder

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
cwk1997
11 people found this review helpful
25 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 1.0
Story 1.0
Acting/Cast 1.0
Music 1.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers
# kisskh Review
**Headline:** A Disastrous, Cringe-Inducing Power Fantasy That Robs the Real Victims of Their Voice
**Status:** Finished Watching
**Spoilers:** Yes
**Language:** English
### My Ratings
* **Overall:** 1.0 / 10
* **Story:** 1.0 / 10
* **Acting / Cast:** 1.0 / 10
* **Music:** 1.0 / 10
* **Rewatch Value:** 1.0 / 10
### The Review
I completely forced myself to finish all 10 episodes of this show, and it is hands-down one of the most frustrating, poorly conceived dramas I have ever watched. If you are looking for a meaningful story about school life, bullying, or systemic reform, stay far away. This show is nothing more than an edgy, unrealistic adult savior fantasy that completely misses the point of what makes school stories compelling.
#### The "Cringe Teacher" Problem
The absolute worst part of this entire show is the Educational Rights Protection Bureau (ERPB). Watching Na Hwa-jin, Im Han-rim, and Bong Geun-dae crash into these schools like some knock-off Special Forces superhero squad is pure, unadulterated **cringe**. The show tries so hard to make these adult teachers look cool, badass, and dark when they interfere in student bullying. Instead, it just looks ridiculous.
Every time Na Hwa-jin stands in a classroom smirking, delivering an edgy monologue before physically assaulting a minor, I rolled my eyes. It feels like it was written by an adult who has a bizarre, power-tripping revenge fantasy against teenagers. The adult characters are completely unlikable, overpowered caricatures who never face real stakes because the plot completely bends over backward to make them look right.
#### The Victim Should Have Been the Protagonist
This show completely robs the actual victims of their agency. **I desperately wanted the victim students to be the actual protagonists of this story.**
Instead of watching a traumatized student find their inner strength, learn to stand up for themselves, navigate the harsh realities of school social hierarchies, or grow as a human being, the narrative completely pushes them into the background. The victims are treated like helpless, pathetic props just to justify the ERPB coming in to throw punches. We don't get to see the kids overcome anything; we just watch a grown man with Special Forces training beat up a bunch of high schoolers. It’s lazy writing and completely unsatisfying.
#### A Trainwreck of Cartoonish Plotlines
Every single arc across this timeline is cartoonishly exaggerated to try and make you root for the ERPB's extreme methods:
* **The Politician’s Son & Cyber-Clout Influencer:** The villains are completely one-dimensional. A teenager running a school like a military dictator? A girl destroying lives entirely for internet fame without any real nuance? The show lacks any understanding of real human psychology.
* **The "Monster Parents" and Drug Conspiracy:** Shifting the blame to toxic parents and underground academic drug rings just felt like an over-stuffed mess. The escalation from simple school bullying to a massive, multi-million dollar juvenile mafia run by Assemblyman Hwang Gi-tae was utterly laughable.
* **The "Going Rogue" Finale:** Episode 10 was the final nail in the coffin. The government freezes the ERPB, so these grown adults decide to go completely rogue and launch an off-the-books assault on a student-run syndicate. It completely throws away any realism the show pretended to have left.
#### The Toxic "Philosophical" Core
The show tries to pass itself off as deep by claiming that "true education requires accountability" and that the Juvenile Act just breeds monsters. In reality, it’s just an excuse to glorify violence and state-sponsored fascism in schools.
The acting across the board was stiff and over-the-top, the music was generic and forgettable, and the rewatch value is absolute zero. This is a massive miss. Avoid it at all costs unless you want to watch adults have a massive power trip over fictional teenagers.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
poetrylover2101
4 people found this review helpful
18 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 1.0
This review may contain spoilers

enjoyable drama with problematic aspects

Really enjoyable and satisfying to watch with out group running around as vigilante avengers. Trying to correct the wrongs and save victims, and while I understand the intentions were noble, there was, at many points, I felt like the drama was trying to condone physical violence, human rights abuse and other such things unintentionally.

Things I disliked:

A teacher beating a child is never okay, even as a last resort, I found it very problematic that the show showed the age old conservative way of beating kids in good light, just coz it was a bad character.
Same episode had another really problematic thing- showing that female students deliberately wrongly frame their teachers, what a fucked up thing to show in a society already as misogynist and patriarchal as South Korea, where women are raped murdered and assaulted till date.

And adults using excessive force against kids, even if they were bullies was again something that seemed wrong to me. Though at the same time I understand sometimes you have no choice but to make the abusers go through the same abuse they inflicted on their victims to make them realise the extent and affect of it.

Another thing- it had a really unnecessary forced romance that made me cringe and wish that the makers really hadn't done that.

Also the characters weren't very well fleshed out, even the male leads seemed to be too chill related to the murder of their fiance and daughter respectively, I don't think it's humanly possible to be so chill with the murder of someone who was basically your life and then interact with the murderer and even go as far as forgiving them, why? just because they are younger than you?? and "you are supposed to be an adult"? So illogical
Which is why I disliked the climax with them redeeming the murderer. So what if he was a young person??? He literally murdered the only person who cared about him. Seems like a psychopath to me.

Things I liked:
The way they were empathetic with the victim and their situation
Making kids who took the wrong way understand their mistakes (the ones that weren't too far gone)
Leads trying other ingenious ways to make abusers realise their mistake, like in the case of non violent abuse, making the abuser go through the same abuse

I think the drama could have been improved more, and it was indeed good as is, but some of the problematic aspects are too problematic so I have to deduct -1.5 stars for it. Otherwise this is a solid 8.5 star drama

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
The Butterfly
8 people found this review helpful
26 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.5

"I look forward to teaching you a lesson"

Teach You a Lesson took on the South Korean school universe leveling criticism on both sides of the podium and both sides of the front door. When it came to incompetent and/or corrupt teachers, ineffectual and/or harmful laws, bullies-both child and parental---Na Hwa Jin and his team were primed to slap people awake or into shape.

Education Minister Choi Gang Seok, former special forces officer Na Hwa Jin, Na’s former subordinate Im Han Rim, and IT specialist Bong Geun Dae comprise the Educational Rights Protection Bureau team. The ERPB has immunity and special privileges when it comes to teaching students, teachers, school admin, and parents a lesson. The team hopes to decrease student and teacher suicides…and murders. They seek to make bullies understand how it feels to be bullied, show them the consequences of their actions and hold them accountable. Na takes a very hands-on approach with physical bullies. The team also deals with those bullied by social media, false police reports, or corrupt teachers gaming the system to line their wallets. Na and his crew use their special skill sets to bring justice for the innocent and punishment to the guilty, always with the desire to help the students and teachers do their best.

The drama sought to highlight a separate danger to students, teachers, and the school system in each episode. I quite liked the episodic quality as it kept certain stories from dragging on too long. In the first two episodes Na used restrained physical force which was a bit jarring, but I’m sure also cathartic for the students around the world who have been brutally bullied with no recourse. The cure might not have been realistic, but the disease unfortunately was and is. I also didn’t mind that the bad guys were often easily vanquished. Opposition to the bureau was shown but Minister Choi always kept his cool and refused to back down from protecting the innocent.

Due to the varied nature of the stories, different episodes will appeal more to different people. There were darker episodes where the bullies drove students to suicide. One episode left me laughing to the point of tears as the tables were turned on an adult bully. The drama was never subtle in their accusations as there wasn’t time to delicately beat around the bush. It also didn’t pretend that what the team did in the schools would resolve all the problems. Physical and emotional violence are complex social issues that require complex solutions. The weak job market and crushing pressure to be accepted into a good university put the students and parents through an emotional wringer for years. Even when laws had been enacted to protect students, both student and adult bullies used them as weapons against the innocent or to escape punishment. Students, teachers, admin, parents, and politicians were told they would have to be responsible for taking the next steps to improving the learning and life experience for all involved.

There were only a few things that truly bothered me. The age discrepancies while obvious are just a part of the genre going back to Grease or Steve Buscemi going undercover in 30 Rock, “How do you do, fellow kids?” Im was brought on to meet crazy with crazy but her screaming caused my eardrums to bleed. The total immunity clause was truly problematic for a country that not that long ago dealt with secret police who tortured and disappeared dissident students all in the name of national security. The immunity issue could very quickly lead down a disastrous path and was a huge red flag for me. And the story regarding the murdered teacher ended up making her look unbearably naïve at best and idiotic at worst. Her actions could have been interpreted as stalking or sexual harassment. When she was presented with evidence of a crime, she didn’t report it and confronted the person in an isolated area. Instead of the angelic representation, she looked like a walking, talking billboard for how to not handle the situation.

While Teach You a Lesson sought to highlight very serious problems in the school system it was also laugh out loud funny on numerous occasions. Most people know someone who was mercilessly bullied and the justice meted out was cathartic to see bullies finally get their due. The fight scenes were well choreographed and Kim Mu Yeol was believable as the Man in Black with the send the perp flying slap. Much like Taxi Driver or Leverage, TYaL was wish fulfillment, that a team could come in and easily right wrongs, stand up against the wealthy and powerful, and bring peace to students who had enough stress studying as it was. Maybe not a role model, but an entertaining drama with a world where the shameless were held accountable for their actions.

14 June 2026

Trigger warnings: Suicide and attempted suicide. Drug usage. Gambling. There was also a bone crunching fight scene with non-students.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Kate Flower Award1 Clap Clap Clap Award2
16 people found this review helpful
Jun 8, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 9
Overall 10
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Rage healing and glorious slaps.

Let’s start with the fact this drama is borderline fantasy. This is not a show you watch for realism. This is a show you watch for rage healing. Half of these teens would be dead or in coma after even one of these slaps delivered by one and only Na Hwa Jin. With that in mind, you just cannot take the delivery seriously, but at the same time, you can appreciate the serious and realistic themes presented.

Teach You a Lesson is the purest form of entertainment. Gripping stories presenting many social issues that we all struggle with one way or another. Great heroes with fun and distinctive personalities. Complex dynamics between being victim and perpetrator and the moral dilemmas of rightful punishment and empathic help. Villains that are rage inducing enough it’s worth paying attention to their schemes, but not powerful enough to feel like the stakes are greater than life. Amazing fighting choreographies, great styling, soundtrack that makes your heart race and slaps that make your head spin. What more can anyone wish for?

This is by all means an easy binge watch type of a drama. While the bullies and abusers are awful, the way the stories are structured makes it easily digestible. No matter what, you know Na Hwa Jin will deliver his lessons and justice will be served. And the way he serves it is just magnificent. I have never seen better slaps in any drama ever. I am a strong believer that a good slap is better than a punch.

What’s more, I really like how balanced the characters were - cool Na Hwa Jin, professional Choi Gang Seok, crazy Im Han Rim and adorable Bong Geun Dae. Their personalities mixed and matched in all the right ways creating this unique and energetic synergy. While we had a rather meaningful and clear set up for Hwa Jin, Gong Seok and Han Rim and their involvement with ERPB, I wish we got the same clear answers for Bong Geun Dae. They hint what his background is, but it’s never as well stated as the others.

As a team they had their small conflicts and hiccups, certain disagreements on how to deal with presented situations and problems, but at the end of the day they always knew how to unite and work together.

For the cases, I’m not gonna sit here and pretend like they were well explored analysis of complex social issues, but I do appreciate how even with the simplicity they were able to highlight, even if just one the suffice, how complex these environments and dynamics between people are. Things like why do bullies bully? How much of them being prior victims should be considered when delivering punishment? Is resocialization always an option? Does everyone deserve a second chance? Do parents always want the best for their kids? Do kids bear sole responsibility for their actions? How much should the system be blamed for failing these kids? These are just a few examples of the themes tackled in the plot.

While Teach You a Lesson for sure highlights the bad deeds done by kids/teens and the lack of protection and authority teachers have, I do appreciate how we still got few examples of kids being the victims, teachers and parents being the abusers, and the system not protecting anyone - if the system does not protect the teachers, it does not protect the children either. If people who are supposed to educate and help raise these kids cannot do their job, at the end of the day it will mostly fail the students who will grow up into awful adults. Nothing was truly black and white (well, maybe some characters were closer to one or the other end of the spectrum), it was not all kids are evil and all teachers are poor victims. Everyone took part in upholding that failed system.

What I liked others can see as a flaw, so it’s worth pointing out. They don’t stay in one school for more than one episode. They are all one time close cases, there is not that much time for deeper exploration. This is not a character driven drama. The structure is simple, the set up is simple, the solutions are straightforward. But all that simplicity is just well crafted and delivered and that’s why it works.

On the actual flaws (though this is gonna sound bad), I hate how the female perpetrators did not get the same treatment as male. Ain’t no equality here - not one slap was delivered even if the girls were just as vicious as the guys. Especially since I heard it’s not the case in webtoon and there Im Han Rim does not hold back. It was especially evident with the set order of the episodes and the cases presented - one episode teen boys get their fingers broken, the other episode the girls get their collars grabbed and shoved a little bit.

For the more technical aspects - the performances were phenomenal. Shallow of me, I know, but Na Hwa Jin was extremely hot in this role. After every episode I kept thinking how attractive Kim Mu Yeol is in this role. Add actually amazing acting skills - that’s a whole package. Whenever empathy, ruthlessness, sadness, excitement, annoyance - no matter the emotions needed, he delivered. I don’t think I need to convince anyone that Lee Sung Min aced the role. I’m here just stating the obvious. Jin Ki Joo and P.O also shined in their own way - the roles they were playing were a bit less rooted in reality and extreme - nice contrast that worked well on screen. And then we have Lee Bong Joon - I am sorry, but I am going to question the goodness of any character he ever plays, this role had quite an impact.

Then we have production - I don’t think I have any complaints. The fighting scenes were perfect. That one cinematic experience in rain? I rewatched it a number of times. Not only was it exciting to watch, it was also shot in a truly aesthetic way. I also really like when dramas use light as a framing tool. The soundtrack? Perfectly matched to the scenes and emotional impact it’s supposed to have - “First And Last” being my favorite song for sure.

Overall, eye for an eye does not work in real life but damn it's healing to watch it in fiction. Na Hwa Jin literally treating the bullies and abusers 1:1 how they treated their victims was such a blast to witness. I was honestly having a huge grin on my face watching the episodes.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
oakowl62
10 people found this review helpful
Jun 8, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 3
Overall 5.0
Story 4.5
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 1.0

A unique, if unrealistic, take on school bullying

On the one hand, this show is deeply satisfying if you enjoy watching bullies get a taste of their own medicine, especially when those bullies are snot-nosed kids who think they're above the law. It also addresses a wide range of issues that affect students, teachers, and parents alike, including students bullying fellow students, students not respecting their teachers, teachers favoring students with connections and rich parents over students from poor backgrounds, parents bullying teachers, and the enormous pressure students face from their parents to perform well academically.

On the other hand, this show is also ridiculously over the top and not at all realistic. The ERPB itself is government overreach to an absurd degree, and I found it really hard to believe that, in South Korea of all places, where public scrutiny of celebrities and elected officials is almost suffocating, there was not an immediate outcry over adults physically assaulting literal children, no matter how much the children deserved it. Not to mention the invasion of privacy and constant surveillance by the ERPB. Honestly, as much as I liked the main characters individually, I was actually rooting for the opposition party to disband the ERPB entirely. There's also the fact that the Bureau was founded after the murder of a teacher at the hands of her student, yet somehow no one knew that Ga-Yun, the murdered teacher, was actually the daughter of the Minister of Education who founded the Bureau and the fiancee of the Bureau's lead investigator until well after the ERPB was established. Han-Rim and Geun-Dae both routinely going undercover as students makes for some funny scenes and I get that they both look young but COME ON, you're telling me none of the students ever suspected them of being narcs?? Do not even get me started on their "romance," the negative amount of romantic chemistry they had should be studied. Also, what the actual HELL did they do to my girl Jin Ki Joo with that haircut?? South Korea's obsession with bangs should also be studied, my god, they treat foreheads like the Victorians treated ankles.

The last two episodes center around the student who murdered Ga-Yun as the big bad who has set up an extensive drug ring that spans multiple schools and goes so far as to commit multiple murders to maintain said drug ring. And yes, murder is bad, and yes, kids are capable of committing horrific crimes, but like, he's literally in high school. His brain's not even fully developed. I'm not downplaying his actions but there's a reason juvenile offenders often get lighter sentences and that is because their brains are literally not fully developed yet and as a result, they don't always know the consequences of their actions. Again, I'm not downplaying the actions of the bullies in this show, but it does make it hard to really root for the good guys when you remember it's literally a group of grown ass adults beefing with a bunch of teenagers. There's another episode earlier in the show where a group of kids who are also dealing drugs get thrown in a juvenile detention facility and basically get the shit scared out of them by the other prisoners who are legit murderers, and frankly, it's hard to really view this as justice when you consider that there's a very real chance they will get murdered before they get released. Maybe this is just my American worldview showing, but juvenile detention is not really considered a rehabilitative success here when most juvenile delinquents just end up becoming adult delinquents and commit further crimes.

As someone who doesn't particularly enjoy school bullying dramas primarily because it's so frustrating to watch the adults sit by and do nothing, I initially felt like this show was a breath of fresh air. The first episode in particular is fast and fun and I loved seeing an adult actually stand up to the school bullies and bully them back. But as the show progresses, it becomes harder and harder to stomach some of the extreme lengths the ERPB goes to to deliver justice. I've seen a lot of people compare this show to Taxi Driver because they're similar stories about people using violence for a good cause. Unfortunately, vigilante justice can only actually be delivered by vigilantes, and the ERPB is not that, they're literally a government agency. And when the government does it, it feels less like vigilante justice and more like the beginnings of fascism. I'm sure this show has more appeal to its native audience, but as an American, it hit a little too close to home for me, and not in a good way. If this show came out in 2024, I might've been able to just enjoy it for what it is and not think too much about it. But in 2026, when the U.S. government is figuratively and literally waging war on its own citizens and weaponizing different government agencies to do so, it's a lot harder to watch this and feel like it's anything other than a particularly insidious form of propaganda.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
priya
3 people found this review helpful
29 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 9.5
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers
teach you a lesson is basically taxi driver set in schools, and honestly, it was ridiculously entertaining. the case-of-the-week format kept things fast-paced, tackling everything from bullying and cybercrime to toxic parents and academic pressure, while still tying it back to the tragedy that started it all. it's definitely unrealistic and leans heavily into wish-fulfillment justice, but watching the erpb give bullies a taste of their own medicine was undeniably satisfying. the cast had great chemistry, making this a fun, cathartic watch even when its message occasionally became a little too heavy-handed.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 10/10
Betsy3491
3 people found this review helpful
22 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 7.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 3.5

Might Makes Right

What lesson is it that this series wants to teach? That to get ahead in life, we have to hit harder or run faster to escape the bullies–or find someone who can do it for us?

That lesson is front and center in episodes one and two of TEACH YOU A LESSON.

There’s nothing in TEACH YOU A LESSON about learning for its own sake, or about the value of decency and empathy. Everyone in this drama, teachers, students, and parents, abides by the law--- the law of the jungle, that is, whether it’s at school or in the adult world of business and politics. Although similar in some ways to WEAK HERO (1,2), it’s much darker.

Here in the real world, we’re awash in dimwitted slogans, idiotic conspiracy theories, thought-terminating threats, and cliches playing the part of actual arguments.

Will beating up the bad guys make it all better? Should we stop doing the hard work of not giving in to our worst impulses?

For a lot of people, the answer seems to be–yes. Make your body into a fighting machine and throw your brain out the window. Let the nukes fly. Because it feels good to see everybody else get what they deserve.

Pretty simplistic...and it never works in the long run, in spite of what this series implies.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Latte
40 people found this review helpful
Jun 6, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 1
Overall 1.0
Story 1.5
Acting/Cast 1.0
Music 2.0
Rewatch Value 1.0

.

FL is so annoying and always talks by shouting stupidly. ML constantly has the same facial expression, just smiling. But he is so good looking. Even if the story were excellent, I would still give it a low rating because the acting (especially the FL) prevented me from enjoying it.
It’s too overdone. And by overdone, I don't mean the fight scenes but the students and the events (For example, the students and the state of the school in ep2 are very exaggerated) Every episode has the same vibe. Overall it's soulless, not funny, and boring.
Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Ramnyli
3 people found this review helpful
29 days ago
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 6.5
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 4.5
Rewatch Value 4.0

Good but overhyped and overrated

I checked out this drama to see what all the hype was about. And after watching it, I get it — but only partially.

What worked for me: This might be the first time I've watched a drama where bullies actually got exactly what they deserved, delivered in the same way they treated their victims. That was deeply satisfying. The first episode was easily the strongest and hooked me immediately.

However, I do think this drama is overhyped. It's good, but nothing more than that.

The main issue for me was a lack of emotional connection to the characters. Toward the end, I found myself losing interest. I believe the drama would have benefited from featuring fewer individual stories and exploring each one in greater depth. That would have allowed viewers to properly invest in the narrative and the characters. Instead, it felt more like watching a fantasy play out rather than a grounded, emotionally resonant story.

Verdict: Worth watching for the satisfying comeuppance and a strong opening episode. But temper your expectations — this is not the masterpiece the hype might suggest.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
kara
2 people found this review helpful
Jun 10, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 7.5

Better Than Expected

I started watching this drama on a whim and ended up loving it. It gave off the vibe of early 2020s kdramas, largely because the writer mixed comedy and drama so well. The highlights were the acting and chemistry of the main cast (the core four), the intriguing plot, and the ending.
However, the story telling it self isn't flawless. There are a few minor issues, and some of the casting choices regarding the supporting and guest characters were questionable. Overall, it was an enjoyable watch from start to finish.
I'd recommend this drama to anyone who has been missing good justice dramas.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Teach You a Lesson poster

Details

Statistics

  • Score: 9.0 (scored by 31,030 users)
  • Ranked: #65
  • Popularity: #386
  • Watchers: 51,542

Top Contributors

318 edits
109 edits
67 edits
21 edits

Popular Lists

Related lists from users
All Time Favorite Dramas
883 titles 2144 loves 40
Short KDrama
2162 titles 571 loves 16
Upcoming Korean Dramas
348 titles 242 loves 4

Recently Watched By