Today, we’ll be discussing Episode 13 of Start-Up, the hit K Drama on Netflix starring Bae Suzy as Seo Dal-mi, Nam Joo Hyuk as Nam Do San, Kim Seon Ho as Han Ji Pyeong, Kang Han Na as Won In Jae, and Kim Hae Sook as Choi Won Deok. We discuss:
The songs we featured during the recap: Dream by Jamie, Ransomware by Kim Dong Hyeok, Remind by Park Sejun
Joanna’s epic night at the TWICE concert at Capital One Arena — 21,000 fans, multi-generational crowds, and how “Takedown” from KPop Demon Hunters is bringing TWICE to new audiences in the U.S.
The meaning of the episode title “Comfort Zone” and how it perfectly captures Han Ji Pyeong’s three-year stalemate with Seo Dal Mi.
Ji Pyeong’s awkward confession while making skewers, why saying “I want to be the first person you think of” wasn’t quite enough, and whether jewelry is a bold romantic move or a panicked leap out of the friend zone.
Yeong Sil’s iconic baseball analogy — “Two outs in the bottom of the ninth and a full count” — and why it may be the motivational speech Ji Pyeong needed to finally swing the bat.
Nam Do San’s three years in Silicon Valley: success, stock options, Napa wine, yachts on the Bay… and whether coding became his emotional safe haven after heartbreak.
The ransomware attack on CheongMyeong Company — port 22, SSH vulnerabilities, decryption keys, and whether finding the key was even remotely realistic (thank you to our cybersecurity friends for weighing in!).
The thrill of problem-solving: why Do San says he hasn’t felt this alive in years — and whether returning to Korea means stepping out of his own comfort zone.
The complicated dynamic between the sisters as Dal Mi (now CEO of CheongMyeong) and In Jae (대표님) maintain strict professionalism at work while still struggling to reconnect personally — especially around Chuseok.
Ji Pyeong’s heartbreaking timing yet again — arriving just after Do San saves the company — and why Dal Mi hesitated to call him during the crisis.
The bromance vote over street skewers and tteokbokki outside Sandbox — and the emotional moment when the three friends decide to stay in Korea together.
Our favorite lines:
– “Two outs in the bottom of the ninth and a full count.”
– “Don’t throw a pebble into a calm lake.”At the end of the episode, Ji Pyeong confronts Do San in the elevator, gift in pocket, promotion title acknowledged (상무님!), and the rivalry officially reignites.
Joanna’s interview with real-life venture capitalist Tim McLoughlin of Cofounders Capital — decision-making under uncertainty, making peace with imperfect data, and why looking backward can slow you down.
Next week, we recap and analyze Episode 14 of Start-Up and begin narrowing down our choice for Season 14. Send us your recommendations!
References
K Drama Chat is a weekly podcast where we take one Korean (K) Drama each season and and recap and analyze each episode. K Drama Chat is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Pandora.

I absolutely loved the interview with Tim McLoughlin! Hearing from a real VC added so much depth, was so informative and entertaining as well! His success is no surprise, with great communication skills. Harvard did NOT make a mistake on this guy.
ReplyDeleteHere are some thoughts and extra questions! Maybe he could get back to us on some of these:
1) He mentioned the importance of the team in the new enterprise. I would assume that this means that you could have a good business idea, good technology and a strong business plan, but that without a strong common vision and leadership, you would pass?
2) Having worked as a contractor for a startup med device company, our VC had a strong role in larger decisions as the product moved to market. Is this typical?
3) on the show, the balance of ownership stakes for the CEO and the xx character who led the technology was a factor. How important is this IRL?