This is some writer. The tags are deceiving. Not all romances are written equal.
I am enjoying the story so much. The romance is solid but the whole plot is so well fleshed out. The casting is spot on; even baby Seo Jun looks like Seo Jun.
I was expecting repercussions from ep 9 but the conclusion to the plot line was unexpectedly sweet.
I am really, really enjoying this intelligent drama. It has the most impactful elevator scene. The conversation with Seo Jun was extremely well done as its not a typical drama explanation.
This photo...keeps reminding me of Shen YuRong and Xue FengFei even their outfits are same 💀https://kisskh.at/photos/JBAj2o_3
Man I've never been so glad to hear those words. Their story has to resolve in order to move on to the 5th sister. And I've seen another spoiler. Why am I smilling at the upcoming angst? Hah! Because its so enjoyable. I relly like the 4th couple and I am on ep 31 of The Double as well. Rewatching it.
Eh? I can't go back to watch but she switched to calling her older cousin's wife right? After the court.But yes…
Isn't cousin the same generation? But you wrote aunt? Like I said when I actually get time I'd ask someone familiar with the terms.
I've been semi- ignoring the subs from netflix from the series anyway because whoever is subbing Isn't very good. I am still peeved with the American slang in it.
Just a translation precision about ep 23 : at the end of her story, Guiniang called Haode "Aunt" ( and not "Haode"…
Eh? I can't go back to watch but she switched to calling her older cousin's wife right? After the court.
But yes the translation from Netflix and using names not honorifics has been an issue. I remember reading " ... Louise " as an exclamation in ep 23 yesterday.
I am now going to have to go back and revise all my Chinese maternal/paternal familial terms terms.
I am also half asleep answering this. If anyone thinks they are more specific then they can answer it. Providing…
Right... gotcha. That sounss about right. Not all places have access to help. This is fairly recent where there was a heart attack in a remote area/mining. And the ambulance had to drive from 170km away before the plane could fly. There were othwr jobs tasked. I have lived in remote area for work before. My states rescue choppers fly to the site of the accidents but some of the other states use choppers more. Those that need to fly to islands. Mine are planes. And we have Lear jets coming in from the North because they can fly longer distances faster. Not as flashy as the Black Wings ones. I have another friend who does overseas medical repatriation.
Excuse now while I go back to my trashy romance which is relaxing. Now I know what's missing in the drama. Paediatrics and obstetrics. My centre handles both as well as adults.
Crikey Mikey I have a Netflix subscription but K**sh just hyperlinked it directly to Netflix. Man its bold.
I also thought a S+ drama is because it has spent a lot of money and there are a lot of advertisers. However it has to be a high budget drama. Was this ever a S+ or S drama? I am curious. I couldn't understand the comments further down about it.
What else would you call them? I actually googled alternative translations for 泼妇. They were loud. Virago?…
Oh its not commonly used however if you read older books especially by British authors you'll come across it. English is not my first language by the way although I am quite fluent in it as I live in Australia. However I read extensively.
I am also half asleep answering this. If anyone thinks they are more specific then they can answer it. Providing…
Thanks for the info. I'd ask my Korean colleagues to go onto Naver. I was on my days off and just came to watch a drama so wasn't checking the source. I am going back to my usual light drama. There are helipads everywhere in Seoul so couldn't work out the chopper part. The Korean hospitals are huge and the staff so well trained. I happened to visit 2 of their ERs recently but its not as if I could ask questions.
Anyway have a good day. The acting was really good in the drama. I really enjoyed watching Han Yu Rim. He reminds me of a few characters at work.
Addit- found out that the author was an EnT specialist. Plus now you've got me listening to Korean doctors reviewing the series. I don't think there are English subs but guess some of us will be able to understand. The actual English articles about this series were just normal journalistic talks.
😊🍵 I don't mean to start nothing but Master Sang wouldn't have called three women arguing to save the reputation…
What else would you call them? I actually googled alternative translations for 泼妇. They were loud. Virago? Its not a common word to use. Some definitions for it include loud, aggressive and argumentative.
No wonder it has anime-ish vibes and the Black Wings subplot just screamed very comic book to me, it's based on…
I am also half asleep answering this. If anyone thinks they are more specific then they can answer it. Providing you work in emergency services. Preferably in a trauma centre if you want me to be biased and guess familiar with ATLS style. And mass casualty triaging. S Korea must be different as we actually will have a command post/ vehicle for a disaster this size and the first responders do needle decompression, intubation and iGel at least. And run up adrenaline infusion as well. I would not do a surgical airway in a fast moving ambulance but guess since they don't mind blood on their faces in dramas...
And JJH is tall right? He would have backache crouching.
And yes found an improbable drama mistake. No security for all these reporters at the hospital.
All these off the top of my head. And the bullets didn't fragment as in it wasn't frangible bullets for this drama. Well I guess the person lived to be the patient in the episode.
And goddamit the more you make me think now I have to be analytical. Blast zone for the fire. He had the burns but didn't have perforated eardrums and could hear the conversation. That is a mistake.
Oh. Whatever. Just enjoy the show. I did and I work in this area. Its still one of the most factual medical drama. The donor thing was highly improbable.
I think we should stop analyzing and enjoy the show as it is. I don't feel like doing an M& M for each case you see. Let me just enjoy the fast paced, great acting and entertainment. Its always nicer to see someone else suffer in a fictional story.
No wonder it has anime-ish vibes and the Black Wings subplot just screamed very comic book to me, it's based on…
I helped check the medical accuracy of several Korean medical dramas including 2 Emergency Room ones. I count Dr Romantic as 1 dramas even though there's 3 seasons.
Procedure wise its a lot more detailed. Scenario wise its a lot more specific. Dr Romantic had a lot of pre- hospital scenes too and the surgical scenes were more close up here tha for other medical dramas for Trauma call.
The scenario here- if you want me to analyze- has been more detailed than the others. No other series has mentioned mercenary doctors or actually did scenes of actual war zones closely.
Injuries wise the medical conversations are more detailed. I remember a conversation in - can't recall now which drama about a obstetric kit. And the doctors actors love shouting medication names loudly to make it sound impressive.
I am not saying these scenarios don't happen as I've seen it happen in my country but we have rescue paramedics/doctors who do rapppel down. In fact someone was winched off the sea last week to a chopper. One of the rescuers was a teenager from my kids club- surf lifesaver waiting for rescue chopper to arrive. There was a crew that stayed overnight on a boat- not a ship SHIP- as the winds were too strong. That is also a real story- we work closely with the aeromedical team. I did work in another hospital where we went out for rescues- now that was fun.
The disaster and mass causualty triaging is standard in real life but I don't recall many or any dramas who actually did follow these principles and the scenes were over 5 minutes long.
The medical complications are real. Let me put it in simple terms. It felt like a real conversation. The medical advisors in Kdramas don't or didn't feed the writers such lines. The incisions. The conversation about the injuries as you open up sounds like normal conversation to me.
I mean nothing felt like " drama dramatic " like in other dramas. I mean they actually had people cut the clothes off here. And there were only like maybe under 10x were they shine the torch onto a patient's eyes.
*scratching my head " here. It feels normal to me. The only thing was the Ahn case. I seriously swear I don't know why they couldn't just cut the bullet out. I guess there was no imaging until the Black Wings medical centre? The fractures were impressive. And he can't go back to active duty. Let me count the ways- Kwire will not repair the humeral fractures, he had too much bowel removed to have the stoma reversed. He will have tissue loss from the necrosis but I guess the escharatomy will heal. I presume it was actually a fasciotomy.
However at the end of the day the emergency scenarios were dramatic. Probable? Yes. Difficult. Very. You would have to very good. Can a writer think up such scenarios? Some. I have seen maybe all of them in other dramas but not as well done. Any of them happen in real life? Yes. Some scenes made me laugh but the medical aspects of it sounds fine. I was relaxing as I watched it so was not really nitpicking. But nothing struck me as being " wrong." It was a bit dramatic perhaps. I have had someone attend a lecture where a baby was delivered caesarean section when the patient was awake. This is for remote area emergencies. This was a lecture talking about obstetric emergencies.
Personally though, it felt like work place conversations for me. Oh yes something struck me as authentic. None of the other dramas really made the anaesthetist talk. This show has very specific medications for specific conditions and it was fed into the scene. Even ultrasound guidance for a central kine has been mentioned.
I don't recall medical advisors giving detailed medical scenes.
Wait. Improbable. Er maybe the burr hole? No one has dared do burr holes in a moving ambulance. The paramedics usually pull over to the side of the road to do a surgical airway. I am struggling to remember.
Dunno is my verdict. Entertainming yes. It is definitely something to do. JjH has caught the personality of a trauma surgeon well. Cool and laconic.
No wonder it was highly rated. I just cackled laughing at the last few episodes.
MAN. That was entertaining. That's why I love trauma. Let me pause to reflect on the poor fictitous Captain Ahn for a moment.
The drama literally threw the whole shebang into the series. The sad thing is that all the swearing isn't allowed in real life. And in real life I have to make sure a debrief is done after each case. For all those viewing- otherwise people burn out. And the injuries... are not that far off the mark. You should speak to some of the army doctors sometimes. Mine was an Israeli giving a talk about those sort of injuries. And they would know more than anyone the damage modern weapons can do. That and speaking to those who work in the South African EDs. Real life is way more scary than the warning labels on Netflix for this drama. And I really didn't realise that rescue choppers and special medical teams are not available readily. My state has them and we have medical choppers and fixed wing planes. I used to work at a pl
And choppers- I was wondering why the helipad was in a field. Its actually dangerous with the pebbles flying etc.
Nice drama. Great show. Its like a cathartic release from all my work stress. Its been seriously entertaining. I actually watch a lot of Korean medical dramas and used to help with the accuracy of the medical procedure subs on viki. This has been the best - talking about procedure potrayal- and more close ups than normal. And oh yes you don't do such procedures routinely on a chopper and moving ambulance. I don't know about the others but I did get motion sickness.
Ciao. Its been a blast watching this the last 2 days. It really was entertaining. I don't know about the relaxing part because it felt like being back at work.
Did everyone have a new year resolution or something? We cannot stop watching a drama once we start.
Life is short enough. Do something that you enjoy.
Go to the producer's Weibo page and complain about the casting THERE. Who in the China drama industry is going to come to the MDL page?
Get real guys.
The 5th sister story took an unexpected turn. I was very surprised it began like that in ep 25. I didn't see that coming...
Episode 25 and 26 you better be worth it since I am exhausted.
I am enjoying the story so much. The romance is solid but the whole plot is so well fleshed out. The casting is spot on; even baby Seo Jun looks like Seo Jun.
I was expecting repercussions from ep 9 but the conclusion to the plot line was unexpectedly sweet.
I am really, really enjoying this intelligent drama. It has the most impactful elevator scene. The conversation with Seo Jun was extremely well done as its not a typical drama explanation.
Excellent episode 10.
I've been semi- ignoring the subs from netflix from the series anyway because whoever is subbing Isn't very good. I am still peeved with the American slang in it.
But yes the translation from Netflix and using names not honorifics has been an issue. I remember reading " ... Louise " as an exclamation in ep 23 yesterday.
I am now going to have to go back and revise all my Chinese maternal/paternal familial terms terms.
Big sister.
3rd brother in law
4th bro in law.
4th BIL not bodyguard but deputy?
Who else?
4th BIL's looks younger than him.
https://youtu.be/nV4gVpPNtZQ?si=9Nes0HlmMj7UTqVf
This was a very enjoyable interview. If you can pay attention to the Korean there is a lot more warmth between them.
https://youtu.be/eV729cozxF0?si=wg5Xc9IZzf5s3Y6w
Excuse now while I go back to my trashy romance which is relaxing. Now I know what's missing in the drama. Paediatrics and obstetrics. My centre handles both as well as adults.
Thanks for clarifying.
I also thought a S+ drama is because it has spent a lot of money and there are a lot of advertisers. However it has to be a high budget drama. Was this ever a S+ or S drama? I am curious. I couldn't understand the comments further down about it.
Anyway have a good day. The acting was really good in the drama. I really enjoyed watching Han Yu Rim. He reminds me of a few characters at work.
Addit- found out that the author was an EnT specialist. Plus now you've got me listening to Korean doctors reviewing the series. I don't think there are English subs but guess some of us will be able to understand. The actual English articles about this series were just normal journalistic talks.
And JJH is tall right? He would have backache crouching.
And yes found an improbable drama mistake. No security for all these reporters at the hospital.
All these off the top of my head. And the bullets didn't fragment as in it wasn't frangible bullets for this drama. Well I guess the person lived to be the patient in the episode.
And goddamit the more you make me think now I have to be analytical. Blast zone for the fire. He had the burns but didn't have perforated eardrums and could hear the conversation. That is a mistake.
Oh. Whatever. Just enjoy the show. I did and I work in this area. Its still one of the most factual medical drama. The donor thing was highly improbable.
I think we should stop analyzing and enjoy the show as it is. I don't feel like doing an M& M for each case you see. Let me just enjoy the fast paced, great acting and entertainment. Its always nicer to see someone else suffer in a fictional story.
Procedure wise its a lot more detailed. Scenario wise its a lot more specific. Dr Romantic had a lot of pre- hospital scenes too and the surgical scenes were more close up here tha for other medical dramas for Trauma call.
The scenario here- if you want me to analyze- has been more detailed than the others. No other series has mentioned mercenary doctors or actually did scenes of actual war zones closely.
Injuries wise the medical conversations are more detailed. I remember a conversation in - can't recall now which drama about a obstetric kit. And the doctors actors love shouting medication names loudly to make it sound impressive.
I am not saying these scenarios don't happen as I've seen it happen in my country but we have rescue paramedics/doctors who do rapppel down. In fact someone was winched off the sea last week to a chopper. One of the rescuers was a teenager from my kids club- surf lifesaver waiting for rescue chopper to arrive. There was a crew that stayed overnight on a boat- not a ship SHIP- as the winds were too strong. That is also a real story- we work closely with the aeromedical team. I did work in another hospital where we went out for rescues- now that was fun.
The disaster and mass causualty triaging is standard in real life but I don't recall many or any dramas who actually did follow these principles and the scenes were over 5 minutes long.
The medical complications are real. Let me put it in simple terms. It felt like a real conversation. The medical advisors in Kdramas don't or didn't feed the writers such lines. The incisions. The conversation about the injuries as you open up sounds like normal conversation to me.
I mean nothing felt like " drama dramatic " like in other dramas. I mean they actually had people cut the clothes off here. And there were only like maybe under 10x were they shine the torch onto a patient's eyes.
*scratching my head " here. It feels normal to me. The only thing was the Ahn case. I seriously swear I don't know why they couldn't just cut the bullet out. I guess there was no imaging until the Black Wings medical centre? The fractures were impressive. And he can't go back to active duty. Let me count the ways- Kwire will not repair the humeral fractures, he had too much bowel removed to have the stoma reversed. He will have tissue loss from the necrosis but I guess the escharatomy will heal. I presume it was actually a fasciotomy.
However at the end of the day the emergency scenarios were dramatic. Probable? Yes. Difficult. Very. You would have to very good. Can a writer think up such scenarios? Some. I have seen maybe all of them in other dramas but not as well done. Any of them happen in real life? Yes. Some scenes made me laugh but the medical aspects of it sounds fine. I was relaxing as I watched it so was not really nitpicking. But nothing struck me as being " wrong." It was a bit dramatic perhaps. I have had someone attend a lecture where a baby was delivered caesarean section when the patient was awake. This is for remote area emergencies. This was a lecture talking about obstetric emergencies.
Personally though, it felt like work place conversations for me. Oh yes something struck me as authentic. None of the other dramas really made the anaesthetist talk. This show has very specific medications for specific conditions and it was fed into the scene. Even ultrasound guidance for a central kine has been mentioned.
I don't recall medical advisors giving detailed medical scenes.
Wait. Improbable. Er maybe the burr hole? No one has dared do burr holes in a moving ambulance. The paramedics usually pull over to the side of the road to do a surgical airway. I am struggling to remember.
Dunno is my verdict. Entertainming yes. It is definitely something to do. JjH has caught the personality of a trauma surgeon well. Cool and laconic.
Wow.
No wonder it was highly rated. I just cackled laughing at the last few episodes.
MAN. That was entertaining. That's why I love trauma. Let me pause to reflect on the poor fictitous Captain Ahn for a moment.
The drama literally threw the whole shebang into the series. The sad thing is that all the swearing isn't allowed in real life. And in real life I have to make sure a debrief is done after each case. For all those viewing- otherwise people burn out. And the injuries... are not that far off the mark. You should speak to some of the army doctors sometimes. Mine was an Israeli giving a talk about those sort of injuries. And they would know more than anyone the damage modern weapons can do. That and speaking to those who work in the South African EDs. Real life is way more scary than the warning labels on Netflix for this drama. And I really didn't realise that rescue choppers and special medical teams are not available readily. My state has them and we have medical choppers and fixed wing planes. I used to work at a pl
And choppers- I was wondering why the helipad was in a field. Its actually dangerous with the pebbles flying etc.
Nice drama. Great show. Its like a cathartic release from all my work stress. Its been seriously entertaining. I actually watch a lot of Korean medical dramas and used to help with the accuracy of the medical procedure subs on viki. This has been the best - talking about procedure potrayal- and more close ups than normal. And oh yes you don't do such procedures routinely on a chopper and moving ambulance. I don't know about the others but I did get motion sickness.
Ciao. Its been a blast watching this the last 2 days. It really was entertaining. I don't know about the relaxing part because it felt like being back at work.