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14.2 - Podcast Review of Episode of Our Unwritten Seoul

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Today, we’ll be discussing Episode 2 of See You In My 19th Life, the hit K Drama on Netflix starring Shin Hye-sun as Ban Ji-eum, Ahn Bo-hyun as Moon Seo-ha, Ha Yoon-kyung as Yoon Cho-won, Ahn Dong-goo as Ha Do-yoon, and Cha Chung Hwa as Kim Ae-gyeong. We discuss:

  • The songs we heard during the recap: “Yellow Spring” by Choi Yu Ree and “Piece of Cake” by Nam Hye Seung and Park Sang Hee.

  • The sisters’ risky decision to switch lives again after many years, and how quickly they realize adulthood makes this far more complicated than before.

  • Mi Ji’s chaotic first day at the office, highlighting her bold personality and complete lack of awareness about workplace dynamics and past conflicts.

  • Director Choi’s ambiguous behavior, especially in assigning Mi Ji a seemingly simple but actually impossible task.

  • The stubborn restaurant owner who refuses to sell, and how this echoes familiar “holdout vs. development” narratives seen in books and other shows..

  • The significance of chicken giblet stew as humble, nostalgic food tied to Korea’s past, and what it reveals about the restaurant owner and her customers.

  • The symbolic meaning of salt in Korean culture, and how the restaurant owner uses it to reject and “ward off” Mi Ji.

  • Mi Rae’s experience at the strawberry farm, where being paid to do nothing becomes its own kind of psychological test of character and integrity.

  • Ho Soo’s moral conflict as a lawyer who successfully wins cases for unethical clients, and how this begins to clash with his conscience.

  • The revelation that Ho Soo may have played a role in Mi Rae dropping her complaint, adding emotional weight and tension to their relationship.

  • The episode’s ending reveals: key people (the grandmother and Ho Soo) begin to see through the sisters’ deception, raising the stakes much earlier than expected.

  • The background and career of Park Bo Young, including her rise to fame, career setbacks, and reputation as a rom-com queen.

  • The filming techniques used to portray twin characters, including body doubles, sync acting, and the technical challenges of stitching scenes together.

References


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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 PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyAmazon Music, and Pandora

Comments

  1. My first thought on hearing 'The Error Note of the Perfect Score' is that it refers to a musical score, and a wrong note in the performance of that score.

    So maybe Miji and Mirae 'appear' perfectly the same, but their performance of each other doesn't chime perfectly. They each hit a wrong note.

    For example, Miji finds it difficult to (literally) 'walk in Mirae's shoes' (which are in close-up when Miji climbs out the window -- why is she wearing shoes inside? Anyway...) while Mirae struggles to make her way in Miji's world on Miji's bike.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I mean when *Mirae* climbs out the window!

    ReplyDelete

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