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Golden Time writer puts foot in mouth, insults cast

javabeans: So, did you read this news? *passes story along.* *waits for spit-take reaction.*

girlfriday: *SPIT TAKE*

javabeans: Because it’s crazy, right? To be the writer of a successful television drama (in this case, scriptwriter Choi Hee-ra of MBC’s medical series Golden Time), and then give an interview bashing all your stars and calling them puffed-up on ego pills?

girlfriday: And that they ruined your Work of Art? Siiiiigh. It’s a drama!

javabeans: And saying that you had to write around their failings and reduce their scenes — when they’re the leads — because you couldn’t trust them with your material?

girlfriday: I’m pretty sure at one point she calls them pigs. That… can’t be right.

javabeans: Omg, she totally called them pigs. Okay, to show you all that we aren’t just exaggerating for the hell of things, let’s quote things verbatim. Here’s one gem: “From the midpoint on, I couldn’t trust the actors so I even took away some scenes from them.” Or this: “Each actor has his part and is supposed to carry along the story and then step aside. That’s what a lead actor does. But once he started getting more popular, the lead character started to get ruined. He started to get drunk on his popularity. I thought he was like a stuffed pig.”

girlfriday: I’m not sure if I’m more stunned by her ego, or by her balls. What is she thinking? For one, the drama is over and it was a big success.

javabeans: So she was joking, right? Or maybe planning to retire from showbiz forever and thought she’d go out with a bang? It’s a debacle of the hugest order that she said any of this in public. Or, you know, at all. Did she decide she had two dramas under her belt, that was a good run? (The other was OB-GYN.)

girlfriday: Or she was drunk. It’s the only explanation.

javabeans: It’s also super specific and long, so you can hardly backpedal and claim, “Oh, it was taken out of context!” She’s saying it was “edited” wrong, but pshaw. Everyone knows the cardinal rule of reality television: If you say it, it’s game. SO DON’T SAY IT. She just kept digging that grave. Inserting extra feet into that mouth. Who’s stuffed now, lady?

girlfriday: Seriously. Way to fulfill your own worst metaphor. It sounds like stuff she’d vent to another writer, perhaps with some liquor involved, but to a reporter? Was it a secret spy interview?

javabeans: The worst thing is that she doesn’t even try to veil her words, or hide who she’s talking about. And now the big question is: Uh, so no Season 2 then?

girlfriday: Dude, forget Season 2 — will anyone want to work with her on anything, when there’s the likelihood of being called a stuffed pig looming overhead the whole time? I wonder what she calls the actors of projects that fail, yeesh.

javabeans: There were no names named, but gee, I WONDER WHO SHE MEANS. Especially since she added, “In comparison, Lee Seon-kyun had the most scenes but he still pulled back to balance his role with the other actors and allowed his character to shine. I could see why he had been the lead in so many dramas all these years.” So… process of elimination sez: She’s talkin’ about Lee Sung-min. Who was awesome, by the way.

girlfriday: He’s totally awesome. He made me cry like a little girl in The King 2 Hearts. And now he’s having to release all sorts of stupid press releases saying he’s clueless as to why the writer, with whom he had no friction, is dragging his name around publicly. He’s being really polite about it too.

javabeans: That’s so sad, but also sweet of him. I mean, granted I’m going to be on his side since he was the one called the pig by a crazy lady. But wait! There must be a GIF perfect for this kind of situation.

Via Hankook Ilbo, Kyeongin, Star News

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There are a lot of assumptions going on. How do people judge based on what you read and what is projected publicly? Nobody know exactly what is going on. The entertainment industry is known to be very harsh and not very nice behind the screen..

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HAHAHA love the gif. Dude I don't know what went on behind the scenes. Could of been crazy diva attitudes galore for all we know. Or some other bull that happens when actors, writers, directors, etc. are put in the same room with each other. Saying that... It's completely unprofessional what this writer said. I would be surprised if she got any work again. Who would want to work with her? She messed up royally.

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I can't help but only focus on the fact that she only has 2 dramas under her belt. Holy moly I would fear for my career if i were her.

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Soooo, according to the comments I`ve read so far a woman can`t have a strong opinion about something, however controversial, unless she`s drunk, crazy, pms-ing or being rejected. And I thought the readers of this blog were mostly female. Sad.

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Totally agree. She shot first so she's the baddy and she's crazy. There is tons of records out there about people badmouthing each other professionally. Apparently that girl is the devil and he is an innocent victim. We all know everything's grey in dramaland. Not black or white. Readers must prefer the hypocrisy. "We get along very well! We worked hard together. We love each other, puppies and rainbows." I'm so sick of that saccharine that is served in all the post-dramas interviews. Even for the worst piece of junk...

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I don't think anyone is saying she can't have any opinion she wants to have about something--unless she is drunk, crazy, pms-ing or being rejected.

I think what most people are saying is that voicing those opinions in a public manner is impolitic and could have such far-reaching consequences that it is likely her internal censors were turned off when she said what she said--if she said it. And drunkenness, insanity and rage are things that frequently put internal censors to sleep.

I watched Golden Time and found the writing prosaic. I could not understand why I kept watching because it really wasn't that enthralling an experience. But the acting and the two or three interpersonal relationships made me continue with the show.

I thought Lee Sung Min was the best thing in the series. But I understand how annoying and painful it can be when you have written something and a director takes it over and decide to tell a different story than the one you intended to send out into the world. The only thing that makes that experience more painful is when the bastardization of your story becomes a hit and people compliment you and you have to stand there and be gracious when all you want to do is scream "that is a piece of crap. One day you will actually see the amazing story I wrote." If it were a play, she'd set another chance, but since it in taped--she is unlikely to get a reinterpretation.

But even so, when they take your golden script and turn it into television dung, you respond graciously because the product is not your work alone. It isn't you sweat and blood alone. All the people involved contributed their sweat and blood so that it could happen, and if you are unhappy with how it turned out, tell it to your friend and lover, not the press.

Now if the actor was a jerk on a human interaction level--say what you want. But if you attack his work--people will think you are crazy because the man can act.

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But, also consider that this is a bit of Korean news and we aren't getting a whole translation, just a general idead of what's going on from the people who run this site. So there may be a whole lot we are missing that points to the writer's irrational behavior.

And let's also think, if the writer was a man, would you be saying the same thing? I'm all for a woman having strong opinions, I am a woman with strong opinions myself, but there is a difference between a strong opinion and just going OFF on ALL the people who acted out your script and made it a success. Why? Because, she didn't have to do it. What does it do to get the public involved in this? It just creates scandal and unnecessary controversy. I can understand her being upset that things weren't going the way she intended, but I feel that is something she could have discussed with the actors and staff in private and not to a larger audience. Doing THIS just makes her look petty and ungrateful and dismissing of a perfectly good actor's talent. If she was going to do this all along, it would have been better if she was at least polite about it saying that even though it did not come out the way she would have liked, she would like to thank the people for making it a success.

But, to say publicly you had to write around the casts failings and your art was ruined is all ego talking and quite rude. If the actor's behavior was something appalling, she should have personally talked to him about it--even if it lead to something bigger that eventually got leaked out to the public, it would still have been better than to throw him under the bus for, might I add, seemingly no reason except for the fact that he didn't act her character the way she would have liked. And then to go back and say it was "edited" wrong seems weak, like it was an excuse for all that she said and now she is regretting it. It may very well have been edited wrong but how do you explain calling someone a stuffed pig? Now, she's practically ruined whatever reputation she had in the industry and as a woman I think that was not a smart move at all.

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I'm still wondering why this is important. So freakin what she called them on their behavior/performance be it right or wrong it not that serious! Really it not that serious. Is it a suicide move on her part? NO! As long as she can write good drama there a network that will bank on her! Her comments were harmless Ego and Pig; I heard worst Lion, Tiger and Bears OH MY.

There are so much more real damaging things going on in the industry right now like (rape). A screen writer rants a little about the behavior she might or might not have witness with some of these A and B actor/actress is just not important.

Are her comments going to stop them from getting offer? No but if any of the comments holds any truth maybe the next time the persons doing a drama will remember an actor/actress success is an revolving door IN/OUT especially in Korea so don’t cut of you nose in spite of your face……just saying

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Huh??!! What??!!
That is so crazy and incredible: I have to laugh at it... Hahahahaha!! :D

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The drama did good? I never got around to watching it.. For a second, I thought she was talking about Lee Soo Kyun. I can't believe she said those things... We can totally see who's the one drunk on popularity (or something else..)

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thanks for the news but i really wish i didnt read it.... this has just freaking blowed my mind...it would be as if after watching coffee prince all the actors decided to hold a press conference and continuously insult each other for 2 hours...seriously golden time was my drama for the year as a viewer i was sooo emotionally involved that even after it finished i carried the characters in my pocket for the next couple weeks...i feel all sad now that no amount of javabeans and girlfriday antics can cheer up :'(

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This is For real?

She wrote OB/GYN too?

Boy! She must have been totally ticked off.

Just started watching Golden Time... which is pretty interesting so far. Will view it a little differently now...

I guess she is burning her bridges behind her. Whatever the circumstances, this is totally unprofessional behavior to air dirty laundry in public....so screwed up.

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Holy Mackerel! What was she thinking? Apparently, not at all! How can you bash a cast who has put in their all to bring her story to life? Why would you single somebody out? He is an amazing actor. He annoyed the heck out of me in Pasta, but won me over as big bro in King2Hearts! He's flipping amazing if he can do that! The writer is crazy. Crazy!!! Or perhaps wants her moment in the limelight and thought the best way was to criticize her cast. Well lady, I can do a full analysis on your show too!

*Insert Rant*

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Um. That's harsh. Did she confess her love to him and get rejected or something? I don't see why she would lash out like that and so publicly. Especially, on such a good actor.

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Generally, if a person does not have anything pleasant to say about another person, then it should be kept to oneself. If the writer was not happy with how her drama turned out (regardless of whether it was successful or not) and she was not happy with the acting skills of some actors, then she can frame her criticism of that with at least some tact. However, to go on and call a colleague a pig is rather rude and unprofessional.

For those who have argued the idea that there is "no smoke without fire" and that there could be more this bit of drama behind the scenes, I want to say that if you call someone a pig publicly, then at least provide legitimate reasons for saying so and that too publicly. Insulting without reasonable explanation just seems like a publicity stunt more than anything. And I don't believe that if one's acting is not up to par, then that person can be considered a pig.

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unbelievable. but reading this while having breakfast and coming across that gif , I almost choked on my char siew pau.

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While this seems an ill advised action on the part of this writer, for someone, especially a woman, in K dramaland to do this merits more consideration beyond a whoa, she's a nut-ball. How frustrated would someone have to be to do this in the context of the environment she works in when public image is so paramount?

I am the first to say the actor's performance was stellar and to me the writing had issues, especially the medical aspect. That really has no relevance in the situation here. Our opinion of her writing has nothing to do with her comments about the working situation. Our admiration of his performance doesn't mean he's a peach to work with. Some of the most brilliant people I've known are total asses. We do not know the situation.

People saying this woman is crazy for having an opinion or being upset or for doing it in a public forum, or speculating her relationship with the actor, is exactly why and how women get called crazy bitches and discredited in the workplace. If the situation was reversed, wow, would he get called a crazy bitch or unprofessional? Probably not, he'd probably be called a perfectionist artist. Men are rarely, rarely EVER called out for being unprofessional. If a woman raises her voice, she's deemed temperamental. There is a double standard on what is considered rude and unprofessional. Again, we do not know why she felt compelled to do this. Is she out of control or is she pushed to the limit? We do not know what went on behind the scenes.

Unfortunately she's not done anything but harm to herself. If in fact any of her comments are valid, all the cast has to do is shake their heads ruefully and keep mum. I don't know if she is really a little out there, or if she is really brave for voicing her opinion, or really stupid for fighting a losing battle. I'm not really defending this writer, I really do find her actions quite unprofessional, and frankly it makes me feel embarrassed for her. But I do feel it's shortsighted and quite cavalier to make assumptions that she's some evil crazy bitch.

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If she was not drunk..or got some serious knock in the head..maybe...she was a wohman spurned? LOL to me she sounds like she's out for revenge for something?... maybe she had a thing for him and he didn't.... and she was spurned by him LOL...
Hell has no wrath like a woman scorned? but in this case MAYBE spurned.... *chuckles* ...*shrugs* just a thought... I think I'm a case of too much drama!

Lee Sung Min was so awesomeeeee in Golden Time and in Kings2Heart - LSM Hwaitin' !!!

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hahaha I love the gif.... it took me a while to remember that it's from Zombieland.

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So unrelated but I'm watching Can You Hear my Heart and Lee Sung Min is in it and I am appalled that he was offended! Not only that, Hwang Jung Eum is one of my favorite actresses and I'm just saddened that these actors work so hard only to be criticize. It's one thing if the drama wasn't sucessful, but the fact that it was makes me even more angrier.

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People sometimes lash out in the heat of the moment, and later, much later when they have calmed down, they start to regret shooting their mouths off. I think she could have aired her grievances more privately - but then she was probably so mad she wanted to air her grievances in public and damn the consequences.

I had a stuffed pig once. He was pretty cute with his red and white checks and fluffy woolly insides. I called him Oinky.

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wow, i've missed a lot of drama for the last 24 hours. had trouble reloading dramabeans yesterday, was so frustrateddd ! no idea why. gosh ! but hey thank goodness, everything went back to normal today. anyone else had the same problem?

haha okay now onto the article, so what's up with the writer?? read the article but still couldnt find a reason why she was bashing the actors. is she a butthead or something? tho i've never even heard of this drama but hey now it makes me want to start watching it.

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What she said wasn't a smart move and it has nothing to do with her gender. A writer with two dramas under his belt bitching about how SOME actors (with much longer and well-respected careers) are STUFFED PIGS and let their popularity go to their heads is pulling an equally dickish move.

No special treatment for having boobs. No leaning on PMS as an excuse. You're just an idiot.

Tension behind the scenes is probably par for the course given the close quarters and intense environment of shooting 20 some odd episodes over 3/4 months. Lashing out with it in such a vicious fashion is not acceptable, particularly someone who is (theoretically) at the beginning of his/her career. Keep that shit on lockdown until you have enough weight that no one is going to touch you publicly. With only two dramas under your belt, you don't have that kind of influence yet.

That said, the writers of "King of Dramas" should totally be taking notes and trying to figure out how to use this. It probably wouldn't work for Lee Go Eun to go on such a rampage, but maybe Writer Jeong since she's had one meltdown on the show already.

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Really enjoyed Golden Time. For me, the weak link in the drama was the script, not the acting. Ridiculous that the entire staff, other than Lee Sung-min, were portrayed as totally inept. Whole hospital defined medical malpractice. Writer is lucky, the only thing that saved her script was the acting of the four leads. In fact, the reason we need a season 2, is because her script didn't complete the story & we were left wanting a real ending. Good luck to Miss Writer.

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Professionally: It is a bad move. In GB, the US, Canada, Korea, China and Japan. The universal thing is that writers are on the lowest rung and you have to just learn how to take it.

About calling her a bitch, a cow, PMS, moody, drunk, etc.
That's kinda out of line too... that doesn't make you better than her. That brings you to her level.

About writing scripts: Scripts are not just actor and writer. They are crew members, coordis/stylists, sponsors, directors, actors, etc.

It might have been that she noticed a lot of her lines under that particular actor were being unilaterally changed by him in such a way that she had to clean up his mess by changing her script. That would be frustrating for her if she's on a deadline and she has one concept about the character and the actor has another. You wouldn't know... and the idea that writers get to visit scene locations in real life and do it often is laughable. Sometimes the writer is invited, but there is something hanging over them to the effect of "This is a courtesy invite--don't come"

She might have issues with the PD, but not realize it. Sometimes the director changes lines here or there or gets the cutting wrong on purpose or directs the actors against what the script says.

If that's given, she might believe that she had a better direction for the drama and be frustrated after a lack of sleep. Cramming scripts can't be easy. She'd effectively have to write about 132 pages per week, live and subject to sponsor add-ons, changes from the director and actors going wild with what she's written. If they read it in a different direction, they won't fix it, so she would have to clean up what they've done. (And remember that script writers have been hospitalized under the live shoot schedule.)

Also in the scenario I wrote up for you, it doesn't make the actor necessarily bad either... but if he keeps doing it and the director keeps asking or changing the script... it would reflect on her, and make it harder for her to produce...

Since this is just after her writing the drama. She's likely to be frustrated, sleep deprived and since she's young she probably doesn't know better, even if she worked as an assistant.

This doesn't excuse her unprofessional behavior, and the previous scenario is a best guess on my part... but really? Launching at her with name calling for name calling? Where did trying to rise above it go? Where did trying to understand a person's situation go?

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Who knows what happened, really?

In any case, writers are artists as well. So, I'm not supremely surprised that some may have dramatic opinions.

The difference between writers and actors in terms of public interviews, though, is that actors are more likely to have had media training than writers.

What she said came off as rude, but it also sounds an awful lot like the honest frustration of an artist who was having an honest conversation with a girl friend. Think about it -- if your coworkers and your boss were driving you nuts and it was a very stressful situation that had you drinking giant mugs of Bitter afterwards, you probably wouldn't mince words -- with a friend -- either. It would come out EXACTLY the way she had said it.

Which makes me all the more interested in under what context the interview had taken place.

I don't know. The oddness of the interview kind of has me withholding judgment for the time being.

It's also difficult to judge knowing that when it comes to the talented-but-socially-awkward/backward nerd and the media-trained-popular-well-liked-good-looking guy, even if the talented nerd was telling the truth, it's sad to watch to the whole world just pounce.

For all we know, she could have been totally right. And the fact that it's so outside the boundaries of social norms in that world to put out there, publicly, without filter, if you were to set aside the intense, negative emotion, there is something quite refreshing about it.

We know tensions can be high and remain high long after the storm is over.

Plus, talent is talent. Whether you're an actor or a writer.

I really don't care if someone comes off as a pompous, arrogant asshole in the public eye as long as that person gives me something of substance that I can enjoy.

Plus, talent doesn't always translate into having amazing social skills when it comes to expressing frustrations the size of Jupiter.

IN RECAP: it was a successful series in which the writer and the actors did not always see eye to eye, and the writer took it upon herself to express her frustration on a public front and is probably being publicly lynched or mortified as we speak as a result of making a bad PUBLIC decision.

Still, it was a little odd, wasn't it? The interview? So odd!

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“It is a wise thing to be polite; consequently, it is a stupid thing to be rude. To make enemies by unnecessary and willful incivility, is just as insane a proceeding as to set your house on fire. For politeness is like a counter--an avowedly false coin, with which it is foolish to be stingy.”
― Arthur Schopenhauer, Wisdom of Life and Counsels and Maxims

Oh poor enraged dragon, it feels good throwing our thunder around & telling asses off but , you'd be lying , if you said , the morning after , doesn't feel like a bad hangover . I understand the occasional need to shot someone's head off but seriously , there's a better way so that it doesn't come back & bite you in the behind.

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smh! maybe she thought they would be up for the part! and got disappointed in the end lmaoooo! like i said above she has a right to not like her actors

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