Who cares, you do you, no need to inform the whole wide world. Cashero is great entertainment and Lee Junho (and the rest of the cast) does a fantastic, layered portrayal of Kang SangWoong.
Listen to Reviews , Skip it . Don't waste your Time watching this
Absolutely not true! Saying skip it to another outstanding role played by Lee Junho is irresponsible and reeks of a hater. If you don't like it, you skip it, leave others be to make their informed opinion while watching.
What a vaste of ressources! The director and the screen writer seem to confuse placing the story into the time…
'A waste of resources'??? More like your brain went to waste to say something so harsh. Just to prove you wrong, the writer Jang Hyun of the hit K-drama "Typhoon Family" actually won the Best Writer Award at the 2025 APAN Star Awards!! Admittedly, everything in life can be improved, but to say what you said is insufficent intelligence quality control on your part.
Actor Lee Junho keeps proving it once again with his role as Kang Sang-woong in Cashero. Unmatched versatility, total immersion, excellence in every role. A joy to watch, every time. 🔥 Cashero easily deserves at least a 9. It is one of the best action superhero dramas around. It is not your conventional superhero drama. By tying its hero’s strength directly to money, it delivers sharp social satire on capitalism, inequality, and the fragile nature of power in this cash-driven world of ours. This series blends action, humor, and symbolism to question what heroism really means when access and privilege determine who gets to act. Lee Junho’s grounded, nuanced performance anchors the concept in emotional realism, making the struggle feel both personal and systemic. Love it or not, Cashero is thoughtful, provocative, and far more ambitious than it might first appears, and dramas that take risks are always worth discussing. All in all, Lee Junho’s dramas generally are not designed for shallow viewing. The deliberate downvoting often seen around his projects reflects fandom bias rather than the actual quality of the work, and it has become an unfortunate pattern with his dramas. Personal preferences aside, the effort and quality on display warrant fair recognition.
This is too harsh. If you don't like it, at least have the decency to wait for all the episodes of the drama to…
Yeah, hilarious indeed. The thing here is that reducing this good drama to nothing is really beyond exaggerating. The actors worked so hard for this drama especially the ML who managed to create a demanding, complex, memorable character. While the drama airs it is dependent on the buzz and good feedback, also out of respect for the actors. When I don't like a drama I don't go crushing it so as to put other people off watching it, especially not while it is still airing. I don't see such harsh critique to some other, weirdly successful, dramas with ridiculous plot and scenes, otherwise their fandoms would eat you alive. Be decent enough to wait till the drama airs and THEN express your intelligent grievances about it. It's also good manners.
My thoughts on Typhoon Family: A historical allegory disguised as a “company drama” Set during South Korea’s 1997 financial meltdown, Typhoon Family captures the economic chaos and social anxiety of that time. The antagonists - notably Pyo Bak‑ho and son - don’t just represent evil people, they act as symbolic forces: greed, corruption, systemic failure. Their schemes to crush small companies, especially Taepung Sangwsa mirror how actual economic policies and institutional failures left countless ordinary people vulnerable. When critics reduce Pyo-type characters to "just villains", they ignore this implicit allegory - the personal tragedy becomes a metaphor, the company's collapse becomes a ghost of a far deeper socio-economic collapse. It's not melodrama. It's hope building itself, episode by episode. Tae-poong evolves from a carefree 'heir' to a man with real responsibility, learning to value people over profit, as was his father's motto. The stories and sacrifices of the people around him build layers of empathy and realism, transforming the "company drama" into a portrait of ordinary people in crisis. This dramedy is supposed to end with hope, healing, redemption, but without sugar-coating the scars - it will prove that Typhoon Family never stopped being what it promised and set out to be: a human story, rooted in history, about fighting back when everything feels lost. The resilience and hope of the people in the face of an 'unwinnable' system is the heart of the story. For me, that’s why I watch it and advocate for it, apart from superb performances by Lee Junho and all the rest of the cast. Because in a world saturated with escapist dramas and surface-level romance, Typhoon Family dares to be deeper in its own unique way of storytelling.
This is too harsh. If you don't like it, at least have the decency to wait for all the episodes of the drama to…
Not everyone has a brain and a heart to appreciate this layered drama. Typhoon Family is not a surface-level story. It’s emotional literacy, ethics, responsibility, grief, loyalty, and resilience against all odds - the kind of themes that impatient viewers completely miss.
It is not meant for people who only want loud twists and cheap thrills every episode. It’s for people who can read between the lines, who feel the subtext, who understand life’s real storms, through tears, heartache, struggle, but still with optimism and love and laughter.
Really really great concept only to be wasted by trashy scriptwriting. Story was all over the place. The writing…
This is too harsh. If you don't like it, at least have the decency to wait for all the episodes of the drama to air so as to 'air' your grievances with it. Just don't watch it and don't bring negativity to the cast and crew's hard work, putting people off who'd want to watch it. It is worth watching despite what you say.
This isn’t a binge-drama. Typhoon Family is full of layers, details and psychological beats that need space; rushing through it means missing the heart of it, with emotional and psychological depth that’s meant to be absorbed slowly.
I love this show but I'm tired of spending the whole time saying "get married already" so can they get…
It would not be interesting... their relationship is growing organically and is sweet to watch. It's not at all all about the two of them. That said: I understand what you mean lol
A great article by Elle Korea on the comfort provided by Typhoon Family in hard times, against all odds.. To paraphrase Taepoong's declaration: "It's the times that are in crisis, not me."
Set during South Korea’s 1997 financial meltdown, Typhoon Family captures the economic chaos and social anxiety of that time.
The antagonists - notably Pyo Bak‑ho and son - don’t just represent evil people, they act as symbolic forces: greed, corruption, systemic failure. Their schemes to crush small companies, especially Taepung Sangwsa mirror how actual economic policies and institutional failures left countless ordinary people vulnerable.
When critics reduce Pyo-type characters to "just villains", they ignore this implicit allegory - the personal tragedy becomes a metaphor, the company's collapse becomes a ghost of a far deeper socio-economic collapse. It's not melodrama. It's hope building itself, episode by episode. Tae-poong evolves from a carefree 'heir' to a man with real responsibility, learning to value people over profit, as was his father's motto. The stories and sacrifices of the people around him build layers of empathy and realism, transforming the "company drama" into a portrait of ordinary people in crisis. This dramedy is supposed to end with hope, healing, redemption, but without sugar-coating the scars - it will prove that Typhoon Family never stopped being what it promised and set out to be: a human story, rooted in history, about fighting back when everything feels lost. The resilience and hope of the people in the face of an 'unwinnable' system is the heart of the story. For me, that’s why I watch it and advocate for it, apart from superb performances by Lee Junho and all the rest of the cast. Because in a world saturated with escapist dramas and surface-level romance, Typhoon Family dares to be deeper in its own unique way of storytelling.
It is not meant for people who only want loud twists and cheap thrills every episode. It’s for people who can read between the lines, who feel the subtext, who understand life’s real storms, through tears, heartache, struggle, but still with optimism and love and laughter.
https://www.elle.co.kr/article/1890017