This drama does not make sense from the start ep 1..she worked 10 years so ofc she has money or even not she can…
...🤣 Your comment made me laugh. I just learned about this series existence, however in healthy solid relationships - yes, it does matter. In fact, it doesn't matter what age you are or your parents are, your parent’s opinion still matters. To make it even worse for you - even if you are in an unhealthy relationship with them or even if they are already dead, their opinion will still affect your decisions. Congratulations for being adult, hooray! 🥳
Oh thank you for the clarification and I am sorry I didn't verify how you meant it on my end on either. So we're initially I meant Chinese series and movies. And of course I meant those that don't have serious issues with the actress and such. Or I can accept if there are some issues with money and reputation But if it is just on the basis of it being centered adaptation, I can't accept that. And I just cannot stomach they would delete someone name out of series if they died - aka committed suicide. Like those concepts are very strange to me and from my big perspective it's just a known, but I will abandon for this discussion these issues and stay in the real of BL series or censored versions of it. especially if it is censored version of it.
Thank you all about the clarification of how you think it was for this series and the bcg of the sisters, I just so much hope that a) the laws will not ditch the actors completely, and b) It is going to be phrased so they are still able to air series through secondary means, and c) Did this for actress will be able to portray characters in series a) tgt, b) of bl genre, and the importance of these for me goes exactly in the order as stated in this.
it's probably about preferences but I just don't get how actors who were banned don't go to another country and don't continue acting. like if they prefer to stay in the country or they prefer to stay with their families I can understand but many of these actors are traveling anyways for their careers so if I were to be canceled in this country I would probably try to pursue my career some place else. but that is not your course of action for most of them so maybe there are loopholes for them to be forced not to pursue careers out of the country if they don't want to be punished way more than day currently for the things they were deemed to do wrong. But it's just pure speculation on my part. But I would definitely do this if I were a certain actor from Word of Honor for example, but it's just one representative example.
As for Zi Yu - I mean they're very loads of clips of him singing even before revenge love and basically starting to pursue his career as an idol and those floated even to my lands as the series was airing, so I kind of feel like this was his goal since scratch one. And I have no questions or doubt about many of these current actors trying to pursue their singing career not being successful enough so they detour to do BL series and then once they gain the fame and fanbase they go back to pursue their original careers and many times it's either idol or singer. It's not only I think of China it's as well I think of every other country including Korea and just again to name a representative Thailand Nunu? - He is not an actor but he has a good training while acting and for him to do the ice breaking and making well known and build his funbase he started I believe as an BL actor, but most of his career revolves around singing what he is the most stunted in. And modeling, because that brings money to the company. But if you ask me what I would choose in his case - I wouldn't miss a heartbeat and say singer. Or what he should ditch first - I wouldn't hold my breath for a long - it would be acting. From that equation he is not an actor he is a singer but his acting is decent enough considering circumstances ( and I am particular about BL actress so I don't want to lose one - but still it makes sense for him to do only the singing).
I mean under this tight control I very much doubt anyone will go into this project unless there is some benefit that overshines the risks of creating such project. Or you need to be 1000% certain you are baked up about doing such a project. so I don't expect many more to happen I don't expect overflow to happen I don't expect explicit to happen but I would still like To see if nothing nothing at all then at least three once a… quarter… or 3 once a year, But 3 series where we don't have to fear the actors will be banned from acting (or banned from acting together for that matter) that their careers might be ruined for participating, where none of the creators will have issues with the laws because of this, where we will be certain those 3 series will a) definitely air and not be shelved and b) be worth it. Then no need for them to be as frequent as from Thailand and they will still be a small treasure coming, but sans the tension and the bitter after taste.
As for MDL negativity: I am so glad to be picky about my discussions on this platform. 😂
Thank you, I have definitely heard that some straight series did air in the end. Which is why I am asking this question. Do you think that Abo Desire was able to air because of the author's rich background? I mean if it is the case then at least for that people should stop hating on it. I am positive some people will get jealous over some work being able to go through just based on that while others are stopped because of no strings pushed in the background, but I still prefer seeing some series going through than none at all. if for nothing else then at least for it gives some precedence and hope for other series too. and it gives people hope and power to search for ways how to push bl stories through to public. As for the list you provided: Norway original company of KP series was actually Chinese? Wo w, I kind of missed that information. as well in many cases of this titles I didn't know they are Chinese. Like I didn't know at all My Engineer 2 were supposed to be paid with Chinese money. To the contrary I have thought it is all thai series. Interesting. 🤔 Thanks for the info!
Fangs of Fortune (China), though not labeled as such, bromance and sismance is here more than... well, u can couple anyone with anyone and it still works, it is fire. Go watch it too. The Devil Judge too (Korea). Goblin (Korea), though here it is more the canonical couples you will agree with, but still. :D Justice in the Dark (China). I am checking out I Am Nobody (China) too right now. An Kei×Yaku: Abunai Aibou (Japan). :D
As a diehard kpop fan, I have been seeing the usage of the terms Alpha, Omega for last couple of years (although…
I used to do PhD, but I'm through and through creative person. I kind of think I poisoned myself and potentiallay my family with doing taba squishy the other week.🥲
What do you mean he was REMOVED FROM A SERIES HE ACTED IN?! Ok, i never liked Eternal Love that much, but if this is the case, i am deleting it from my fav series altogether.
I don't know if it is just me, but I have been noticing more people using "omega" and "alpha"…
I'm afraid there is one more source that is very undesirable and has a role in usage of these terms, and that is manosphere rhetoric.
See esp. point 1 - 2nd paragraph and pt. 3 in this explanation:
1. Alpha, Beta, Omega in pop culture Originally, these terms came from animal behavior studies (wolves in particular), where “alpha” was used to describe the dominant leader of a pack.
Later, this “alpha male” idea spread into self-help books, dating advice, and manosphere rhetoric.
Eventually, fandoms (especially BL/yaoi fan communities) expanded it into the A/B/O trope, where “Alpha,” “Beta,” and “Omega” became categories of gender/role with strong characteristics:
Alpha: dominant, protective, leader-like, often aggressive.
Beta: neutral, balanced, sometimes ordinary.
Omega: submissive, sensitive, nurturing, often tied to stereotypes of fragility or receptiveness.
Even though it started in fanfiction, the language has seeped into everyday online banter—sometimes as a joke, sometimes as shorthand for certain types of masculinity.
2. K-pop and A/B/O language Some K-pop idols or variety shows will throw around “alpha”/“omega” jokingly (like teasing someone for being dominant or soft).
Fans also borrow this language when describing idols’ personalities: e.g., calling a charismatic leader “alpha” or a sweet, caring member “omega.”
What’s interesting is that non-K-pop fans and non-BL readers have also picked it up—so you’ll hear girls in real life describe men as “alpha” or “omega,” even if they don’t know the trope’s fanfiction roots. It has become a sort of meme vocabulary for describing personality types.
3. Connection to feminism and “Strong men” discourse The “alpha male” myth is heavily used by manosphere influencers like Andrew Tate and red-pill communities. They push the idea that men must be dominant, unemotional, financially powerful, and sexually successful to be “real men.”
Feminist critiques point out:
The science behind alpha wolves was actually debunked (wolf packs are family structures, not dominance hierarchies).
Labeling men “alpha” or “beta” is a toxic oversimplification of masculinity.
It reduces people to stereotypes instead of recognizing healthy, varied gender expressions.
Meanwhile, in fandom spaces, people use A/B/O playfully, exploring gender roles, power, and even critiquing these very stereotypes through fiction.
4. Why girls might use it casually Even outside fandoms, “alpha/omega” shorthand is convenient: Alpha → the confident, cocky, leader-type guy.
Omega → the soft, emotional, “puppy-like” guy. It’s become like saying “sigma male” or “golden retriever boyfriend”—a quick pop-cultural code for personality types, without necessarily buying into the ideology behind it.
To make it even worse for you - even if you are in an unhealthy relationship with them or even if they are already dead, their opinion will still affect your decisions. Congratulations for being adult, hooray! 🥳
Thank you all about the clarification of how you think it was for this series and the bcg of the sisters, I just so much hope that a) the laws will not ditch the actors completely, and b) It is going to be phrased so they are still able to air series through secondary means, and c) Did this for actress will be able to portray characters in series a) tgt, b) of bl genre, and the importance of these for me goes exactly in the order as stated in this.
it's probably about preferences but I just don't get how actors who were banned don't go to another country and don't continue acting. like if they prefer to stay in the country or they prefer to stay with their families I can understand but many of these actors are traveling anyways for their careers so if I were to be canceled in this country I would probably try to pursue my career some place else. but that is not your course of action for most of them so maybe there are loopholes for them to be forced not to pursue careers out of the country if they don't want to be punished way more than day currently for the things they were deemed to do wrong. But it's just pure speculation on my part. But I would definitely do this if I were a certain actor from Word of Honor for example, but it's just one representative example.
As for Zi Yu - I mean they're very loads of clips of him singing even before revenge love and basically starting to pursue his career as an idol and those floated even to my lands as the series was airing, so I kind of feel like this was his goal since scratch one. And I have no questions or doubt about many of these current actors trying to pursue their singing career not being successful enough so they detour to do BL series and then once they gain the fame and fanbase they go back to pursue their original careers and many times it's either idol or singer. It's not only I think of China it's as well I think of every other country including Korea and just again to name a representative Thailand Nunu? - He is not an actor but he has a good training while acting and for him to do the ice breaking and making well known and build his funbase he started I believe as an BL actor, but most of his career revolves around singing what he is the most stunted in. And modeling, because that brings money to the company. But if you ask me what I would choose in his case - I wouldn't miss a heartbeat and say singer. Or what he should ditch first - I wouldn't hold my breath for a long - it would be acting. From that equation he is not an actor he is a singer but his acting is decent enough considering circumstances ( and I am particular about BL actress so I don't want to lose one - but still it makes sense for him to do only the singing).
I mean under this tight control I very much doubt anyone will go into this project unless there is some benefit that overshines the risks of creating such project. Or you need to be 1000% certain you are baked up about doing such a project. so I don't expect many more to happen I don't expect overflow to happen I don't expect explicit to happen but I would still like To see if nothing nothing at all then at least three once a… quarter… or 3 once a year, But 3 series where we don't have to fear the actors will be banned from acting (or banned from acting together for that matter) that their careers might be ruined for participating, where none of the creators will have issues with the laws because of this, where we will be certain those 3 series will a) definitely air and not be shelved and b) be worth it. Then no need for them to be as frequent as from Thailand and they will still be a small treasure coming, but sans the tension and the bitter after taste.
As for MDL negativity: I am so glad to be picky about my discussions on this platform. 😂
Do you think that Abo Desire was able to air because of the author's rich background? I mean if it is the case then at least for that people should stop hating on it. I am positive some people will get jealous over some work being able to go through just based on that while others are stopped because of no strings pushed in the background, but I still prefer seeing some series going through than none at all. if for nothing else then at least for it gives some precedence and hope for other series too. and it gives people hope and power to search for ways how to push bl stories through to public.
As for the list you provided: Norway original company of KP series was actually Chinese? Wo w, I kind of missed that information. as well in many cases of this titles I didn't know they are Chinese. Like I didn't know at all My Engineer 2 were supposed to be paid with Chinese money. To the contrary I have thought it is all thai series. Interesting. 🤔 Thanks for the info!
Justice in the Dark (China).
I am checking out I Am Nobody (China) too right now.
An Kei×Yaku: Abunai Aibou (Japan). :D
See esp. point 1 - 2nd paragraph and pt. 3 in this explanation:
1. Alpha, Beta, Omega in pop culture
Originally, these terms came from animal behavior studies (wolves in particular), where “alpha” was used to describe the dominant leader of a pack.
Later, this “alpha male” idea spread into self-help books, dating advice, and manosphere rhetoric.
Eventually, fandoms (especially BL/yaoi fan communities) expanded it into the A/B/O trope, where “Alpha,” “Beta,” and “Omega” became categories of gender/role with strong characteristics:
Alpha: dominant, protective, leader-like, often aggressive.
Beta: neutral, balanced, sometimes ordinary.
Omega: submissive, sensitive, nurturing, often tied to stereotypes of fragility or receptiveness.
Even though it started in fanfiction, the language has seeped into everyday online banter—sometimes as a joke, sometimes as shorthand for certain types of masculinity.
2. K-pop and A/B/O language
Some K-pop idols or variety shows will throw around “alpha”/“omega” jokingly (like teasing someone for being dominant or soft).
Fans also borrow this language when describing idols’ personalities: e.g., calling a charismatic leader “alpha” or a sweet, caring member “omega.”
What’s interesting is that non-K-pop fans and non-BL readers have also picked it up—so you’ll hear girls in real life describe men as “alpha” or “omega,” even if they don’t know the trope’s fanfiction roots. It has become a sort of meme vocabulary for describing personality types.
3. Connection to feminism and “Strong men” discourse
The “alpha male” myth is heavily used by manosphere influencers like Andrew Tate and red-pill communities. They push the idea that men must be dominant, unemotional, financially powerful, and sexually successful to be “real men.”
Feminist critiques point out:
The science behind alpha wolves was actually debunked (wolf packs are family structures, not dominance hierarchies).
Labeling men “alpha” or “beta” is a toxic oversimplification of masculinity.
It reduces people to stereotypes instead of recognizing healthy, varied gender expressions.
Meanwhile, in fandom spaces, people use A/B/O playfully, exploring gender roles, power, and even critiquing these very stereotypes through fiction.
4. Why girls might use it casually
Even outside fandoms, “alpha/omega” shorthand is convenient:
Alpha → the confident, cocky, leader-type guy.
Omega → the soft, emotional, “puppy-like” guy.
It’s become like saying “sigma male” or “golden retriever boyfriend”—a quick pop-cultural code for personality types, without necessarily buying into the ideology behind it.