Netflix really should not align itself with dictatorial laws that lead to the public stoning of an individual who has done no harm to anyone except themselves (let's not investigate the reasons that still lead to the ferocity of Korean society).
This series should not be canceled because just one example of civility would be enough to promote change. And maybe in the future, an actor in difficulty would see another way out instead of hanging themselves somewhere in loneliness.
I get what you mean. Countries with a more sophisticated social structure such as Japan, SK, (many...) could teach…
I would pay close attention to taking as an example a country where classism reigns supreme and where people die like flies because they decide to end their intolerable existence. Perhaps, and I say perhaps, it can be a symptom that there is something wrong. With this I absolutely do not say that the rest of the world is a paradise (far from it), but I also do not justify a dictatorial-style legislative system.
Well you clearly know nothing. Robert Downey Jr got cancelled. He got better and fought his way back, starting…
Nope......in South Korea, once you are marked, you can never go back. You are boycotted on all fronts. You lose contracts, your campaigns are canceled, and no one will ever offer you a role again. You are abandoned by the show business and ostracized in your private life as well. They create a void around you and exclude you from society, gradually leading you to total isolation. This is what is called exemplary punishment, from which no one, once found guilty, can escape. Even public figures unjustly accused have suffered serious damage to their image, and despite their innocence being confirmed, they have never returned to their previous status. Few contracts, no campaigns, and zero chance of returning to the top. Korean society is truly a nightmare-pressure society, where there is even the death penalty for repeat drug offenses.
This series should not be canceled because just one example of civility would be enough to promote change. And maybe in the future, an actor in difficulty would see another way out instead of hanging themselves somewhere in loneliness.
Perhaps, and I say perhaps, it can be a symptom that there is something wrong. With this I absolutely do not say that the rest of the world is a paradise (far from it), but I also do not justify a dictatorial-style legislative system.
This is what is called exemplary punishment, from which no one, once found guilty, can escape.
Even public figures unjustly accused have suffered serious damage to their image, and despite their innocence being confirmed, they have never returned to their previous status. Few contracts, no campaigns, and zero chance of returning to the top.
Korean society is truly a nightmare-pressure society, where there is even the death penalty for repeat drug offenses.