my man really told wyw that loving her feels like loving a cat πππππππππ
That actually put me off. If my man told me loving me was like loving a cat, I would have said, "We're done." WYW was right to say it was an inappropriate analogy.
I know we are all angry about this and donβt see much logic behind it, but Iβm still asking in case I missed…
In the episode where Suyeon has the blind date with Hairy Boss, Min-Woo's jaw drops when Suyeon walks around a corner and lets her hair down. That's about it.
*in the middle of a meeting**shows laptop with 'macrosoft' virus*"do you see anything wrong with this?"- group…
When you expect to see Microsoft, that's what you see.
My parents ran a small Mom & Pop department store decades ago. They ran an ad in the local newspaper for a sale on knit shirts. Only the newspaper printed knit "shits." Nobody caught it. The proof reader didn't catch it. The editor didn't catch it. My parents didn't catch it. But the customers? THEY caught it. So many people came in asking for knit shits. It turned out to be the most successful ad they ever ran. But the people who knew what the ad was supposed to say, didn't see the error. Only the people who didn't know what the ad was supposed to say, saw the error.
Hanbada CEO wants Dad and Young-Woo to take an extended vacation so they are out of town when the news that Mom is Young-Woo's mother hits. "It's the only way."
But Mom's son is the hacker. That's a scandal that can take Mom down without anyone knowing that Young-Woo is her daughter.
But why does son go to Young-Woo for help? Does he know she's his half sister?
And who is the person who told son that the Cyanide guy was OK? Was it the coworker with the glasses who went to school with him? Did that coworker hack his own company?
And will Young-Woo tell her fellow attorney's that she's Mom's daughter and that's how she'll be able to talk to Mom?
And how is Hairy Boss staying in business if he never has customers, but his food is great? What the heck is that? Even Gimbap Dad has more customers.
Dammit, I don't want Min-Woo to get our Spring Sunshine. I want Jun-Ho to end up with Young-Woo, and I want Jung back. Jang is grossly incompetent.
On the other side, Mom is about to get a double whammy of 2 scandals. Young-Woo being revealed and her son being the hacker in the case she is the prosecutor for.
So the Checkov's attorney was shown a couple of times being the antagonist of Jung. I wondered why they gave him any screen time, and now I think I know. With Jung out having surgery and recovering from cancer, our rookie team is going to be under Checkov's attorney, who I think will love Min-Woo and hate Young-Woo.
Maybe, just maybe, Min-Woo is not getting a redemption arc. Maybe he's still playing the tactician.
He called our Spring Sunshine "Princess" and mentioned her Dad being promoted to the Supreme Court, which means he's still very much affected by people with connections he doesn't have. Maybe he's being nice to our Spring Sunshine because she knows he has it out for Young-Woo. Maybe he's being all nice because he can see that Jung will be out of the picture and another senior attorney will not be as nice to Young-Woo, so when she gets the boot, nobody will suspect Min-Woo had anything to do with it. So he gets the benefit of getting Young-Woo out of Hanbada without looking like the bad guy.
If this really is the case, I hope when Mom falls, so does Min-Woo. If Mom's scandal comes out, Min-Woo will not get his Taesan job.
Finger's crossed. I really do not want Min-Woo to get a redemption arc with all the crap he's pulled.
Hanbada CEO seems to know that Min-Woo was behind the anonymous chat room nepotism posts, so I wonder if Min-Woo will not get his contract renewed at the end of his rookie period?
why is no one talking about eunbin's voice in last song ????????
I don't even notice the songs. Since I don't speak Korean, they songs are all just background music to me. It's only when the songs seem to go on toooo long that I think maybe the words mean something, but they're not translated on Netflix.
I was snort laughing at your Harry Potter analogy, and then I got to "marries George Clooney" and I spit tea all over my keyboard. Thanks for the laugh!!!
I'm confused. Jung wouldn't take the wife's divorce case because they had represented the husband in the lottery case. BUT, Jung wants to represent the Buddhist temple right after representing their opponent. That doesn't ring right to me. And Hanbada doesn't have an office on Jeju island so they'd be too far away.
Also, after episodes 13 and 14, I'm not wanting to do a rewatch. Before that I would have rewatched the whole thing over and over. 15 and 16 better be good.
UGH! The breakup was unnecessary. Min-Woo's redemption arc is unnecessary. Jung's cancer is unnecessary. The writers were doing so well. We need FEEL GOOOD. We don't need crap to happen just to feel good later. BOOOOO!
-- We never saw the diagnosis given to Jung, so him being so wistful and looking back on his life.... is never…
They showed Min-Woo mentioning that our Spring Sunshine is a Princess because her dad got promoted to the Supreme Court. Of course he's making nice to her. He's trying to climb the ladder, and she knows it. She hates him. Let's keep it that way.
My parents ran a small Mom & Pop department store decades ago. They ran an ad in the local newspaper for a sale on knit shirts. Only the newspaper printed knit "shits." Nobody caught it. The proof reader didn't catch it. The editor didn't catch it. My parents didn't catch it. But the customers? THEY caught it. So many people came in asking for knit shits. It turned out to be the most successful ad they ever ran. But the people who knew what the ad was supposed to say, didn't see the error. Only the people who didn't know what the ad was supposed to say, saw the error.
"The subway."
"You need to lower yourself."
Squat.
Honestly, I could watch the Young-Woo/Jung show all day.
Hanbada CEO wants Dad and Young-Woo to take an extended vacation so they are out of town when the news that Mom is Young-Woo's mother hits. "It's the only way."
But Mom's son is the hacker. That's a scandal that can take Mom down without anyone knowing that Young-Woo is her daughter.
But why does son go to Young-Woo for help? Does he know she's his half sister?
And who is the person who told son that the Cyanide guy was OK? Was it the coworker with the glasses who went to school with him? Did that coworker hack his own company?
And will Young-Woo tell her fellow attorney's that she's Mom's daughter and that's how she'll be able to talk to Mom?
And how is Hairy Boss staying in business if he never has customers, but his food is great? What the heck is that? Even Gimbap Dad has more customers.
On the other side, Mom is about to get a double whammy of 2 scandals. Young-Woo being revealed and her son being the hacker in the case she is the prosecutor for.
But at least Kang Tae Oh knows he still has a job when his army time is over.
He called our Spring Sunshine "Princess" and mentioned her Dad being promoted to the Supreme Court, which means he's still very much affected by people with connections he doesn't have. Maybe he's being nice to our Spring Sunshine because she knows he has it out for Young-Woo. Maybe he's being all nice because he can see that Jung will be out of the picture and another senior attorney will not be as nice to Young-Woo, so when she gets the boot, nobody will suspect Min-Woo had anything to do with it. So he gets the benefit of getting Young-Woo out of Hanbada without looking like the bad guy.
If this really is the case, I hope when Mom falls, so does Min-Woo. If Mom's scandal comes out, Min-Woo will not get his Taesan job.
Finger's crossed. I really do not want Min-Woo to get a redemption arc with all the crap he's pulled.
Hanbada CEO seems to know that Min-Woo was behind the anonymous chat room nepotism posts, so I wonder if Min-Woo will not get his contract renewed at the end of his rookie period?
Also, after episodes 13 and 14, I'm not wanting to do a rewatch. Before that I would have rewatched the whole thing over and over. 15 and 16 better be good.