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Master’s Sun: Episode 15

It feels like a mini-finale of sorts, resolving one of our long-running mysteries and affording our characters some closure. I like that we get to put the necklace-kidnapping-twins plot behind us now, because while it served its purpose in moving us along, it’s also nice to get that lesser conflict out of the way before we hit finale week—when you leave everything till the last minute, often things don’t feel adequately gratifying because we’re rushing to hit all the points. I’m crossing my fingers that this means next week we’ll get to devote ourselves fully to the main couple. And you know, if they run out of material, I wouldn’t say no to some fanservice makeout sessions, you know. Just sayin’.

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EPISODE 15 RECAP

Joong-won stops Gong-shil from throwing her necklace away, telling her that she’s supposed to be a wreck without him since he’s a unique and special person to her. Gong-shil keeps her stern face on and says that she’d only be mildly disappointed without him, not heartbroken to death, and that she’d been about to toss the necklace. Joong-won bristles—he’d been hustling his ass to find the missing pieces, and she’s just going to throw that away?

She carelessly hands him the necklace and tells him to do whatever he wants with it. So he calls her bluff, threatening to throw it over the railing… while Gong-shil looks stricken… and HE looks stricken… gah don’t play chicken with your hearts!

Then he fakes sudden back pain and doubles over. Oh, I LOVE HIM. Always pretending he doesn’t care and then giving her one more chance, just one more chance…

Gong-shil rushes to check on him as he exaggerates his injury and slings his arm around her, taking thorough advantage of the excuse. She offers to call help, and he argues that she should take care of him since she’s the reason for the injruy. Off they go, with him faking cries of pain the whole way, lol.

Joong-won insists that she drive him home, then places a hand on her shoulder with the excuse that it’s to ward ghosts away. Aw, and then he brushes her hair with his finger when she’s not looking.

Back at the hotel party, Aunt apologizes to Hanna for Joong-won’s sudden departure. Uncle plays the imp and emphasizes Joong-won’s connection to Gong-shil (love him being the sly saboteur), which offers Hanna the surprising tidbit that Gong-shil was the reason Joong-won got injured.

And finally, we get clarification on the twins’ identities and motives in a flashback, where the twins are conveniently color-coded as Good and Evil: the now-dead girl in white, and the Hanna we know in black. But curiously (unless you’ve anticipated this twist, and a lot of you have), the Good Twin calls the Bad Twin Hee-joo… which means that somewhere along the way, these names got swapped.

Good Twin (Hanna) tells Bad Twin (Hee-joo, who is now Hanna) that she wants to come clean about her real identity to Joong-won. Ah, Good Twin gave him the wrong name when they met, so he thinks he loves Hee-joo. Now Bad Twin is in the picture with that name, and she seems to enjoy his misdirected love. Bitch!

Secretary Kim explains to Kang Woo how Good Hanna grew up in England, while Bad Hee-joo grew up in a Korean orphanage. Before he had the chance to meet the lost sister, Hanna returned to England and told him that Hee-joo died. That’s when he noticed she was different, and they fell out of touch shortly thereafter.

Kang Woo supposes that Bad Hanna (er, the real Hee-joo) is the co-kidnapper, and cautions Secretary Kim about revealing his blood ties to Joong-won. It’s quite possible that he’d misunderstand and think he had ulterior motives all these years.

Gong-shil helps Joong-won home, then tries to leave. He shoves her in a chair and bolts up to grab drinks, no longer pretending to be hurt. She comments on it, and he points out that they both knew why he was doing it and yet she came with him anyway. Well he has a point.

Joong-won sits her down to clarify where they stand, understanding that she must have gotten scared off by his near-death. He tells her not to feel too guilty because he bears blame for rushing headlong into the situation, and will be careful in the future. He admits that when he’d anticipated that they’d end things at some point he’d wanted to keep one foot out the door. However, after confronting death, “I knew for certain—I don’t want to end things with you. I won’t end things. Stay with me. I’ll handle everything.”

Aww. Total reversal of the relationship burden, given how it was previously up to her to make sure she could handle it. I love how proud he is of finding this very satisfactory solution, and that all she has to do is accept.

Gong-shil pops his balloon by saying that she won’t just fall for him that easily—she’s not terrified of ghosts anymore, so she doesn’t need an emergency shelter, and therefore he’s lost his appeal. Ha. She compares it to liking a man for his money, only to have him lose it all. Double HA.

Flustered, he tells her he’ll take a good hard look in the mirror to find some new appeal about himself (aw), after which he’ll come to her for renegotiations. Hearing that he’s got no appeal is a serious blow to his ego, and his hand literally shakes.

His fix: Joong-won returns to the matchmaker to make his proposal to buy out Gong-shil’s contract, threatening her with bodily harm if she reneges.

Then he shows up at her door that night as she’s heading out for graveyard patrol and tells her that he managed her contract. Huh, so that’s the end of that? So easily? He’s awfully pleased with himself and tells her he doesn’t need her thanks—she can just add a few points to his appeal-o-meter. Pwahaha.

She doesn’t react with the big display of emotion he’d love to see, and he says wryly that it would be nice to hear some better words like devotion, sacrifice, love. She scoffs that that kind of poetry exists only in fairy tales, and that it’s nice to read about the wolf and goat wanting to be together in the book—but it wouldn’t work in the real world. Plus hers was a dark fairy tale, where one person dies and visits the other as a ghost, so she got scared and came back to her world. So he should leave and head back too.

Joong-won complains that she’s told him to get lost three times today, and that’s before they’re interrupted by a grandma ghost who arrives to ask Gong-shil for help. He indignantly tells her to pay attention to their conversation, and I love the look on his face. It’s so whiny and Listen to meeeee! But she heads out to deal with the problem, leaving him sputtering, “Now you’ve told me to get lost four times! I’m counting!”

He does, of course, tag along as she talks with the ghost. I love that he wants her to be scared so she’ll cling, but she barks that she’s quite fine. He also fidgets to be left out of her conversation, wanting to know what they’re talking about, seething when Gong-shil laughs with grandma and points at him, “He really is, isn’t he?” He huffs, “I know you’re insulting me! I can tell!”

They arrive to find the ghost’s son sprawled in the street, drunk. It’s not the first time Gong-shil has come to a scene like this, and she rouses him by pretending to emcee a singing contest—the drunkard pops up and starts singing on cue. She sends him home and he complies readily.

Today they were lucky that the man woke up in a good mood and obeyed, but Gong-shil says that he could have been dangerous—what if he threatened them with a weapon? Was Joong-won intending to jump in to save her again? That’s why she’s decided to stop dragging him into her affairs, because it’s more dangerous when they’re together—he can’t see and hear the things she can.

Offering his hand, Joong-won says she could hold him and stop seeing and hearing those things. She replies that she can’t live her life clinging to him, because she has a life of her own. And that finally rings true for him, as he realizes she meant it when she said she was going to live without him.

Gong-shil says that she really did bewitch him with her persistent clinging. “I’m sorry,” she says tearily, “There’s absolutely no reason for you to stick with me.”

He concedes that her words make sense, and yet he can’t understand them. With hurt feelings, he heads off before she can tell him to get lost for a fifth time tonight.

Coffee Boy appears to inform Gong-shil that somebody wants to meet her. So they head to the coffee shop, where a nervous Chun-hee greets her familiarly and asks, “Gong-shil-ah, do you know who I am?”

She nods—she saw him in a dream. But he tells her it was no ordinary dream, because for the entire time she’d been asleep, she was with him. When she’d been lost in the woods, her spirit had come to him and led him to find her body. So her ghost remained outside of her body for three years, which they spent together. Aw, that’s so sad. I mean, I guess it’s great for Chun-hee that his beloved is alive after all, but he was in love with a ghost for three years.

Chun-hee (okay, his name is Jin-woo, but c’mon it’s Chun-hee!) slides over a photo book—she was with him when he shot all the locations in it. He asks her to revisit those places with him to bring back those memories.

Secretary Kim goes to see Bad Hanna (aka Real Hee-joo), and now that he recognizes her, she calls him Uncle. It’s sad because you can hear the hope in his voice as he asks what happened between the sisters, and whether she has anything to do with that accident. He wants to believe the best, even as everything points to a less happy answer.

Joong-won lights up to see Secretary Kim back at work, just bursting at the seams to talk to somebody. His enthusiasm is adorable, but Secretary Kim has his news to break too, and informs him of his relation to the girls.

They confront Hanna with the photos and postcards, but she’s had a lot of time to think out her story. Asked whether she’s been following Joong-won all these years, she says it was really her uncle she’d kept tabs on. He would write her regularly to check in on her, and she didn’t want to lose contact with her only blood relative.

She acts shocked that her sister would have orchestrated the kidnapping, but acknowledges that Hee-joo always was a little dark and ambitious. Secretary Kim confirms that Hanna would have no motive for going after his money, because her adoptive family in England was exceedingly wealthy on their own.

To explain how she first heard knew about Joong-won, we get a flashback from her point of view: Once again color-coded, the sisters watch Joong-won in a library as he reads. Hee-joo (dressed in black) is the one who points him out to Hanna as the boy she has liked since childhood, because Joong-won would come to her orphanage every Christmas “like a prince.”

Present-day Hanna explains that since Hee-joo never had the courage to show her feelings, Hanna encouraged her to be bolder. She explains her recent interest in Joong-won as arising out of curiosity toward the man her sister loved, and she had thought he returned the interest. To the contrary, Joong-won calls her a fake, though he will accept her words as truth if only because Secretary Kim vouches for her.

Secretary Kim is awash in guilt for not telling Joong-won about his niece, and explains that he’d initially sought him out because he wanted to find out about the dead Hee-joo. However, once he saw how hurt and damaged Joong-won was, he decided to stay and look after him. He offers to quit if Joong-won no longer wants him around, and Joong-won agrees to let him go. Ahhh! They clearly don’t really want him to go, but I suppose it makes sense.

Gong-shil hears the details from Kang Woo, and when she crosses paths with Secretary Kim and Hanna, she assures him that she doesn’t assume the worst of him. After all, she can see Hee-joo, so she knows the truth. Hanna asks if that’s really true, her smug look fading when Gong-shil answers that Hee-joo said she was here to “protect her co-conspirator.”

Everyone’s circling around to the idea of Hanna being the criminal, and Kang Woo urges Joong-won to find proof before Hanna skips the country. But despite being positive Hanna is guilty, Joong-won isn’t driven to take her down—which he can’t without evidence anyway—because he’s found out everything he wanted to know. If Kang Woo is so insistent on getting the full story, he can investigate behind his back. Kang Woo takes him up on that.

Gong-shil finds Joong-won in a down mood, not wanting to think about Hee-joo anymore. In the brief time he was dead, he saw her and recovered his ability to read—thus he no longer hates her and wants to move on.

Gong-shil’s point is that he still doesn’t understand Hee-joo’s motivation for acting as she did, but just then the ghost of Hee-joo (Good Hanna) materializes and shakes her head sadly to keep Gong-shil from pressing. He tells Gong-shil, “Don’t see dead people anymore” and touches her shoulder, making the ghost disappear.

Gong-shil agrees that she doesn’t want to force him to understand the things she sees. She’d wanted to solve this one case for him, but her radar is no longer needed. He says insistently that the more she tries to understand the ghosts, the less she needs him. Aw.

“But you’ve become more comfortable,” she points out. “The less use we are to each other, the easier our lives will become.”

Kang Woo puts in his resignation at work, then hears from Yi-ryung that she’s going to the States after all. She asks for a last meal together, picking a simple snack place that he rents out for her sake. He suggests that they treat their relationship like high schoolers who went on a couple of dates and parted ways—light and fleeting. The minute he steps aside, Yi-ryung furtively spikes the cola with soju, muttering that she’s no high schooler, haha.

It’s not until the soda’s gone and he’s droopy-eyed that she tells him about spiking the drinks, and asks why he doesn’t like her—doesn’t he think she’s pretty? He says that she is, but he has somebody else he wants to protect, “Even if she doesn’t know I’m protecting her.” He sighs that he’s all prepared to help if she’d only call out for him, but she doesn’t. So he just hopes she’ll become safe so that he can leave his guard post.

Gong-shil tells her unni about the man who can see ghosts who wants to take her abroad to revisit those locations in his photos. Her sister supposes that it’ll be nice to be with someone who understands her situation, but on the other hand, can she leave behind the man she loves to go with Chun-hee?

Gong-shil says she can’t stay with someone who sees and hears things that he doesn’t want to know about—they won’t be able to be comfortable.

She packs her things and gets ready to leave, only to be confronted with Hee-joo’s ghost. Er, Hanna’s. This is getting confusing. Good Hanna appears to make a plea to use her body again, and Gong-shil again refuses. But Good Hanna is desperate today and apologizes as she zooms into the body anyway. Can she possess her like that? Did the soul take?

Joong-won heads to the airport to intercept Bad Hanna before she skips the country. He hadn’t wanted to hurt Secretary Kim or take it to the police, so he’s here with a third option: Settle everything here, now. He holds out his hand and asks for the necklace and her exit, in that order.

When she mentions Gong-shil’s name, he snaps at her not to involve her in this, and Bad Hanna says that he must have forgotten all about Hee-joo. He makes the barb that although they were twins, he never once looked at her with interest.

Hanna’s face hardens, and she offers up the full truth: that the girl he loved wasn’t Hee-joo but Hanna. She tells the story in the third person, of how Good Hanna had seen her sister pining after Joong-won and approached him to get the ball rolling, only those two fell in love. Hanna was the girl who had everything, and she ended up with Joong-won too—stealing him away from dark, unhappy Hee-joo. Thus the whole plan was conceived out of Hee-joo’s anger.

Joong-won protests that it was a conspiracy between both sisters, but (Bad) Hanna says that Hee-joo did everything on her own. “Think back and remember,” she tells him, “that girl you liked. One of the two died—you saw it with your own eyes. Which girl do you suppose died?”

Narrowing his eyes, he asks if she’s really Hee-joo. She answers, “I’m the nice Hanna. The one who died was the bad Hee-joo. That’s what you’ve known for the past fifteen years, that the dead girl was the bitch. If the one who died was the nice one, it’s too tragic.”

In a flashback, we see the aftermath of the car crash. Good Hanna is injured in the passenger’s seat while masked Hee-joo staggers out and reveals her face to her sister, who’s shocked at the discovery—so it really was all her own design. “Cha Hee-joo dies here,” she tells Hanna, threatening to kill Joong-won if her sister doesn’t go along with it. Yeeesh. She’s actually worse than we’d thought.

(Current) Hanna claims to be the real Hanna, who’d returned to claim Joong-won’s heart only to find some other woman worming her way next to him. Joong-won doesn’t buy it, calling her a fake, and asks if it’s true that the girl died because of him. She says yes.

As Bad Hanna walks away, someone calls to her, “Cha Hee-joo.” It’s Gong-shil, but it only takes a few key phrases to convince Bad Hanna that it’s her sister in that body.

She’s shocked, naturally, but Good Hanna makes an attractive proposal: Let’s go together. Bad Hanna can keep the life she hijacked, and Good Hanna will keep the body she stole from Gong-shil. Wonder Evil Twin powers activate!

Bad Hanna likes the idea, especially as it will keep Gong-shil away from Joong-won, and she reaaaaally hated seeing them together. She liked hearing about Joong-won being struck with the Cha Hee-joo Curse, and this way she’ll get to strike one last time by taking away Gong-shil.

Good Hanna asks Bad Hanna why she told Joong-won everything instead of just leaving—did she want to purposely torment him? Bad Hanna answers that she thought she could have him back if she returned as Hanna, except he’d seen her for a fake.

Joong-won wrestles with these new revelations, and finally recalls Gong-shil’s words urging him not to run from things that scare him. He gets up to confront his fears and spies the two ladies in conversation, beelining for Gong-shil… and gets shoved aside at the last minute by Kang Woo. Shh! Kang Woo motions toward the recorder in his hand… and the mic on Gong-shil’s shirt. Ah! This is a trap!

So Gong-shil isn’t possessed after all, and now we can see her steering the conversation to an admission of Hanna stealing her sister’s identity and saying, “I’m the real Hee-joo.” With that evidence on tape, Gong-shil says that the dead Hanna had been acting out of “sacrifice, devotion, and love” (using Joong-won’s words)—and that Bad Hanna hadn’t realized it.

Hanna realizes she’s been tricked and hisses that there’s no evidence of anything. But that’s when her uncle storms up with a small figurine that she left at her sister’s memorial vault. He drops the figurine and it shatters, revealing the diamond necklace hidden inside.

And wouldn’t you know, she’s arrestable after all, because she was hasty enough to return with a few days left before the statute of limitations expired. Poor Secretary Kim, who promises to stick with Hee-joo through this.

Joong-won looks shell-shocked by everything, and Gong-shil takes him aside to say that the dead Hanna has a few last words to say. The next thing we know, it’s Good Hanna standing there—presumably possessing Gong-shil—and when we circle around it’s teenaged Joong-won facing her.

Hanna hopes that she’ll no longer be a source of pain for him, while Joong-won apologizes for hating her without knowing the truth. Hanna raises a hand to touch his face, and I guess the universe is feeling kind today because it allows them to stay touching for an extended moment before she dissipates into the air.

Joong-won and Gong-shil are left behind to watch the aura disappear, and he congratulates her on a job well done. He offers to treat her out, but she tells him she’s leaving on a trip with a man with the same ability to see and hear things that she has. Poor Joong-won, who looks crushed.

She’s just glad she wasn’t a useless radar after all. She explains how when he’d been a ghost, he told her that she shined brightly like the sun. She supposes that’s her lot in life: “I just want to be a shining sun who’s popular with ghosts. But if I’m looking at you, I feel like I’m an unlucky sun who makes people die. That scares me and I hate it.”

She asks him to tell her to get lost again, and he says, “The reason I told you to get lost so freely all this time was because I knew you’d always come back to my side. I’ll do as you ask. Get lost, Taeyang.”

She heads back inside the airport, wiping at her tears, and Joong-won watches her growing smaller and smaller in the distance. He despairs, “If the sun leaves like this… it’ll destroy me.”

 
COMMENTS

I’ve never really loved the whole twins and kidnapping storyline, though for the most part I think it was used just enough to be relevant to our interests. Sure, we got more Hanna (the bad one) than was probably necessary (just how many meals did we have to see her having with Aunt and Uncle?), but for the way this storyline affected Joong-won, I’m satisfied with how it ended.

It’s a nicely bittersweet twist to have Joong-won realize that Hanna loved him all along and never betrayed him. I liked the earlier twist of revealing that Joong-won actually hated her (when everyone assumed he was unable to get over her), which makes this turn land even harder—he harbored a lot of unnecessary pain. So his first love was as sweet and true as he initially thought it, and maybe even deeper given that she chose to die rather than put him at risk. I wonder if this will make Joong-won more sympathetic to Gong-shil’s guilt-burden over bringing danger to his life, because the thing she fears is the thing that actually happened to him.

Hanna (the bad one) was a character I cared absolutely zero for—I didn’t even hate her because she was rather dull as a villain—so it’s interesting to see her given all this depth in the eleventh hour. I know the writing chose this route because of the way it wanted to drop its reveals, but I would have preferred to know more about the bitter sister envy earlier, because it gives Hanna dimension, whereas before I was just wondering what that evil girl’s deal was. She both loves and hates her sister, so I can see her feeling fondness while at the same time wanting to hurt her. It’s similar to the way she loves and hates Joong-won, and wants to simultaneously possess and destroy him. See, I would have preferred to go with that kind of twisty rationale, rather than the simplistic good-twin-versus-evil-twin dichotomy, as though one sister was lightness and purity, while the other was inherently bad.

I wasn’t sure of this late-game Chun-hee twist when he first showed up, but I like it better than the other storylines and think it raises some meaningful questions. It offers a great conundrum of being with someone comfortable from your world, versus being with someone from a different world whom you love but have to struggle to be with. The word that got used throughout this episode was “comfortable” or “easy”—she doesn’t mean that she needs Joong-won to sit back and relax without a care in the world, but that being together means that neither of them will ever be able to rest, to be at ease. It’s like living in a constant state of stress, which she doesn’t see as tenable. So being with Chun-hee would be the perfect situation, on paper, because he both understands her and loves her. If only for that whole complication where the heart is concerned.

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I have to say, episode 15 is the one I least like. I was disappointed last week because of the amnesia, because I was hopeful for what the drama would give, since the built-up was so intense and I had high expectations. But this episode made me upset with disappointment.

I really feel for Joong-won, I like his character better and better. I love how he is true to his feelings and never gives up. Every time Gong-shil leaves, he tries to reel her back. But I felt bad for him a lot here.

Actually, he is now the one I identify with and sympathize with, which in my case is bad, because I used to do that with Gong-shil. But in this episode, it's like she lost her shining, I only get annoyed with her. She might be stronger as a person now, but so much more boring to look at. T_T I know I should be understanding because she is getting real now, more like a normal person, but I can't help it, I liked her way better before, whereas I could take her side. Now it feels like she is the one who is hurting Joong-won, even though I know she is doing it out of love for him. But still, it's not okay.

The chemistry between the characters is still there, somewhere, if I try hard enough to feel it, but it's not at all like before. I hate it that they built up the feeling with the love couple, as an audience, you just feel all that giddy giddy and anticipate what the story has in store for you, for the love story to unfold, and then it's like someone just brought a knife and cut off the thread. We didn't even get those good moments when the couple did lovey-dovey things and now they're like strangers - even worse.

Evil Hanna is really someone it feels good to hate and I thought the twin's story was fascinating. Joong-won was just a victim, but it wasn't really about him. Hanna's motive was her sister, and the jealousy she felt towards her. Why she kept the necklace all made sense now. But to be honest, being able to guess all the storyline in this case felt weird. Either the story itself is too predictable or the writers throw out too many hints, because they wanted us to be able to guess.

I wonder if it's now that Gong-shil will go abroad for one year (or a couple of years) and then be back and she and Joong-won will meet again and be all "hi, long time no see, how have you been?" I hope not, I hate that kind of set up. >.<

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Gong-shil lost her "specialness" - which made her act not so "proper" and thus was a lot of fun.

Before, Gong-shil was similar to Mi-ho in MGIAG - not bound by society's conventions and human "reasoning."

What made the previous eps so much fun was that Gong-shil was like Mi-ho and Joong-won like Dokko Jin.

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"I just hate that unrelatable aspect of k-dramas where the characters have this strong feelings of love even though they did nothing that merits it."

Right here you put your finger on a problem with kdrama romcoms that you also find in bad American movies. Romantic love presented as a chemical thing so powerful it exists independently of any other consideration. Two people who dislike each other, hurt each other, lead separate lives in separate worlds, can barely communicate at all, but the script says they're in love, so they must be fated to be together.

Mind you, I'm not talking about a passionate or cold affair that goes sour when the partners realize they don't really have anything to hold them together. Kdrama romcom romances are, because they are G-rated, almost devoid of passion. You have people sometimes who cannot even touch each other, cannot speak with lashing out at each other, only one feels the attraction strongly (often a Chaebol male) and you wonder why the other even allows that person within speaking distance.

Yeah, I'm talking about Key Lime and that rich, horrible freak who chased her around calling her awful, cruel names for thirteen episodes until the script decided she had to be love.

Go Ji Sub and Gong Hyo Jin are better off than some others I've seen. They have human contact, like being close to each other, and try to be kind to each other, in their own way. In this episode, though, I found myself hoping one or the other would simply leave town. She doesn't seem to like him any more, whatever she says in the odd scene, and he cannot voice his feelings well enough to convince her to at least see other other socially, as equals.

The plot says it isn't over, but the actions of the characters all say it is time to move on.

She doesn't even like you touching her! Give it up!

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You described the leads in "Secret Garden" pretty much exactly.

There "relationship" was totally ridiculous.

One was a stalker and the other hated his guts and then all of a sudden they were madly in love w/ each other (basically, horrible writing).

At least here, the Hong sisters did a pretty good job in showing the progression of the relationship and how the 2 started to really get feelings for each other.

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I'm kind of bugged by Chun-Hee. If he had sent the coffee ghost to keep an eye on her all these years since her recovery, why didn't he show up sooner to comfort her and help her? She was living like a ghost, terrified, unable to cope with all the ghosts in her life and not having a clue what they were about.

Chun-hee seems to have know where she is all this time, so he must have known how she's been living? Why let her go through all that alone? If it was just so he would be more appealing when she returned, that's incredibly selfish and creepy.

Something about him and their whole story (which she only knows from him) worries me.

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You made me think back to his conversation with Coffee Ghost.

"Will GS go with me? If we go together, it'll be easier for her to get rid of that man. You have seen those two from the beginning. What do you think will happen?"

What if TY is as important to the ghost world as she jokes that she is? The brightest sun out there - like a Super Star Ghost that has accumulated more power than anyone before her. The reason Chun-Hee showed up NOW is because of JW's *POOF*ing ability.

Chun-Hee isn't just taking her WITH him, he is taking her AWAY from a person who seems to weaken her.
The JW/TY pairing will result not only in the loss of all of her ghost seeing power, but the spirits' ability to see her and seek out her help.

That makes Chun-Hee her handler rather than her lover. and explains the timing.

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Oooooo Good point!

Here take the whole cookie box!

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LOL! Good point, Jomo. Now that you mentioned it, perhaps all the other ghosts are now flocking to him because Joong-Won keeps poofing them away from Gong-Shil.

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Confused. Bad poor Heejoo is too timid to talk to him so good rich Hanna does? Though Hanna is good she decides to take Joong-won for herself? Though not able to talk to him, she kidnaps both and kills her sister to become her? She is suddenly so bold and strong, but too timid to talk to the guy earlier? But she only wanted to kill her sister and take her place? Why kidnap both then? How did Hee-joo Hanna hide her identity and pretend to he Hanna in front of her adoptive parents (and households, etc.)?
Then Gong-sil is possessed, but has a wire? Did the possessed ghost go get the others to set the trap?
It is as if a scene was deleted, or two versions of the story were merged accidently. Or something major has not been revealed yet.

The Chun-hee story line appears more like a setup for a sequel or a second season then part of this story--there isn't enough there yet to make it part of the current story--this episode felt like a series end. LEaving me to think, it is just another ghost story subplot to have Joong-won save Gong-sil and bring them together.

While I loved the show up to now, the last half of this episode did not have the emotional draw it appears to want to give, and left me quite disappointed.

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one other question, why is Secretary Kim unable to take care of his nieces at all that they go to an orphanage, but suddenly after one dies, he is immediately able to devote his whole life to watching Joong-won 24/7?

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He finally got a decent job?

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Yeah, the Hong sisters have a tendency to fill things in and not worry about the details (even if they don't make sense together).

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@mintchocolate My thoughts exactly nothing about that storyline made any sense, very disppointed there and in other recent aspects of a drama I've enjoying so much.

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this series is getting my brains work overtime....waaa.
Thanks for all the interesting and uber thoughtful debates...all your comments are really enlightening. (do not mean to be condescending.lol)
I agree with all the issues/angles/questions cited by our fellow viewers above.
However, what worries me and my housemate, who always watch TMS together, is the PRICE/DEAL/SETTLEMENT that joong won had to pay to get rid of gong shil's contract with madam eyeliner-go?!!! When madame said "she gave all of herself" in leading to ask joong won what can he give in return... (well sort of, coz the scene was cut). What if Madame Go also asked his life in return? NO SAD ENDING Please,,,
Plus at the end of the episode, Joong won said, 'if she really leaves like this, I'll be annihilated.." waaa does he mean it physically as in dead? or just the usual I-think-its-the-end-of-the-world-heartbreak?! I dont know if its just the subbing or if we just had a different paranoia that his life is the price for gong shil's freedom... WHat if chun hee and madame go are on the same side???
enough negative thoughts...
On the other side of the love hexagon, I do hope small sun and kang candy end up together and joong won and his father reconcile in the end...(im also for so ji sub and gong hyo jin couple in real life, wahaha)
anyways, its the final week next week and i think everybody who love this series will end up depressed and empty for sometime even if we get our much prayed for super happy ending...(aka Master's Sun withdrawal syndrome)
Thank you dramabeans, fellow viewers for all the funny, honest and intelligent comments, and most of all thank you subbers, you make it possible for people in the UK to have a piece of kdramaland.

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I actually really like the Chun Hee plotline. I'm really interested to see the process of Gong Shil spending time with someone who sees ghosts and understands her, and yet still go back to Joong Won. I think this is a great way to give our main couple one last big obstacle.

I'm so.glad the twins plotline was resolved. I'm looking forward to seeing all our side couples getting together and everything wrapping up in a nice bow. Hopefully.

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No matter what she has in mind in JW's eyes she just left him for some other guy because he doesn't even know if GS ever loved him at all. So it will look really ridiculous if she comes back to JS after 2 to 3 years and JS blindly takes her back and all is well. I don't know about JW's eyes but in my eyes she's just playing with me and would totally avoid her.

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After sipping in this episode better (meaning : re-watching it like a loon) i feel glad that finally the ex-GF story is wrapped up nicely (well sorta...but i've had enough of both of them, back to our OTP please).
I don't like the new Master (i know he's hot and all) but please make him a bad guy, so that GS will learn not to go anywhere with someone you've met only in your dreams (that meeting in the coffee shop isn't count, 1st meeting with a guy doesn't lead you to go with him to another country on the next day).
Poor Joo-gun T_T everyone's leaving him, Sec.Kim should go back to him ASAP! KW should just go to the US, find lil'Sun and make that adorkable girl happy.
Up to this point i think Joo-gun has done everything in his power to be close to GS, so perhaps on the next ep the ball in on GS on wether she'll grow a backbone and come to him (or else...or ELSEE!!! i demand a happy ending PLEASE T_T) it's not a guarantee that he's safer without her, he's definitely not happier...and being easy or comfy is not what love always meant to be.
But one thing i'm glad thou, i'm sure a person as sharp as he is - he knows that GS actually loves him A LOT (come on, even when we didn't count on the small subtle kinda conffesion things but bartering herself for his life...who would do that out of anything but love?), she just needs to come to her senses (fast)...and the fact that they didn't linger on the sacrifice GS made for him kinda upset me (a wee tiny bit, this show grows it soft spot on me - no complains whatsoever. Yes the KISS and other fanservice would be good. Come to think of it, why is there no showering scene? He's emotionally upset enough to have one...don't u think?)
I've been sensing my withdrawal syndrome eversince ep.12, darn it...really gonna be so sad when this ends. Will we be having a group therapy thread down here in DB?
I find myself still not in the mood for The Heirs, even with LMH on it...and that says a lot coming from a fangirl of Faith. Yes, SJS you stole my fangirl heart <3
Can't thank you enough for the great recaps on DB and also to the subbers , you guys/gals are the best!

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No, I'm not in the mood for Heirs either! Give us more SJS & GHJ pleez!!

Quoting from @nasus at the top of this thread:

"Just like this one meme i found on the internet, it says 'So Ji Sub knows what we will feel next week when The Master’s Sun ends: Without me, you have to feel like you’re dying.' Lol."

Expresses my feelings exactly!

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I saw that meme, mine too! lol

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can you guys tell me where to find that meme? It would perfectly described my feelings too.

P.S. try to find it, obviously I failed. Thx!

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Absolutely priceless!

Now I'll have to make a t-shirt with that on the back, "JESUS SAVE ME" on the front, stick one foot in a tissue box, pink high heels for the other foot - then I'll have my Halloween costume all ready to go!

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Um I thought this was a romcom! But we get no romance and there sure as hell was no comedy. Episode 15= FAIL

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Javabeans kinda touched on this but...
Is it just me,or does it seem that this would be finale to a really crappy drama?
I mean, it ties together one of the main conflicts, and kinda gives a resolution (not really). However, it just leaves plotlines hanging and barely ties up any ends.
To me it just speaks volumes about the Hong Sisters, despite their supposed major flop (which I didn't watch) with Big.

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oh YEAH - that last scene in this episode is SO out of character for that guy who when he isn't impersonating Christopher Walken is waving his hand in front of his face like he smells something bad - how does stoic guy turn his eyes HEAVENWARD and plead that he will DIE without his sun?

bleurrghhhhhh! so terrible - it's impossible. BLEURGHHH!

this whole time I'm watching this show I'm thinking PUHLEAZE he barely cares about that hot girl who was in on his kidnapping - he never even grabbed her and he can't keep his hands off his radar! It's so OBVIOUS but I totally understand about being adament about getting back your dead mother's necklace.

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I question why you guys are even bothering to watch this drama.

Unless you're masochistic, and just enjoy watching what you think are miserable shows. -_-

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"You're just the afterbirth, Eli!" *poke*

Shenanigans. She doesn't care about that sweater dude who looks like a Taiwanese aborigine and neither does he care for her. She's been awake from her coma for HOW LONG and he's been using coffee ghost to keep tabs on her - that is just used to TORTURE the audience ... with shenanigans.

Oh Lord. Hhhhhh. Clearly, this whole series has been about the chemistry between Cha Seung-Won's secret little brother and his costar. I barely remember the one scene sweater guy has with her. OMIGOD, did he even pick up the tab? I HIGHLY doubt these two are going ANYWHERE together.

Also, did coffee guy die on that trail with her or something? wth?

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"Taiwanese aborigine" . . . ?

I'm always learning something new from this blog and watching Kdramas. Cannot afford to travel or take college courses, but now I know that the native Taiwanese all look and/or dress like Chun Hee.

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I just watched Seediq Bale and now I think I have been looking at LOADS of Taiwanese aborigines but previously thinking they were Taiwanese i.e. Chinese. Jolin Tsai is half-native Taiwanese.

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I was really distracted by his army neutral sweater this episode - it made him look poor and unmoored and with YELLOW pants no less. Last episode, he was wearing pink pants and when he was sitting at her desk in the VIP closet, the camera angle from above made it look like he was pantsless!

But from the beginning of this show, they have always coordinated the couple's colors - sometimes obviously with gray for him when she is in her cleaning uniform or both wearing blue striped concentration camp type tops or full pajamas. Even in this last scene, she was gray and black and so was he but he and self-hating orphan were both dark - for their enemies at war status. He WANTS that necklace and he's not traumatized that Hanna died that he will not go after his own happiness and become her ghost groom. No way.

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So HJ liked Joo Won but couldn't approach him and Hannah approached him for her by introducing herself as HJ; So, where they both dating him together? Then, HJ got jealous and greedy and did what she did!

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Hi, comment stalker reporting in.
Thanks for the recaps; I love reading them whether I've watched the episode or not.

Overall, I enjoy this ep: To watch the tables being turned, with GS asking him to get lost is a nice change (& let him get a taste of his own medicine) heh

"I just do the seduction and all you have to do is fall for me" While it's cute and funny coming from JW, but that arrogance. I watched with glee while GS turned that down flat.

And lastly, GS is finally coming to terms with her ability. Like someone mentioned, she's becoming more stylish; like her hair, she's gathering it and getting her life back in control. She's transforming herself and I like that. A lot. It follows with her insistence that she doesn't want to be a Candy. Or be one who is forever hiding, in a gositel or shelter.

I hope that by the time GS returns, she'll be more of an equal to JW. And not lose any of the quirk and fun that the show has so much of.

And I'm so glad I finally don't have to see any more Hee Joo & Han Na xD

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the arrogant lines bothered me. reminded me of Go Ko Jin(sp?) actor character in Greatest Love. He talked very similarly there.

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The comment was indeed arrogant but its not out of character since he thinks that he's the special one and only for her in this whole wide world...so that kinda make sense, even more funny when she turned him down flat. But...now that ur leaving him all teary eyed (which made me wanna comfort him and go inside my screen to do the reversal thing from "The Ring") with another guy it's no longer funny GS! get back to your Master NOW!

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i often wondered why JW is the only ONE person in the world on whose touch the ghosts disappear....Is it a possibility that the three years her soul wondered abroad was the same place JW was? Maybe a connection....who knows she visits those places again and remembers......its just a thought.

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I am curious too, and need to take some notes from the heroine in k-dramaland...HOW on earth do they get to be miraculously attached to a perfect (*hot*cough) man? (well maybe not that perfect, but i'll manage) say...like the invisible magical link between Kim Joo Woon & Gil Ra Im, or Choi Young & Eun Soo (who doesn't want a hot guy LMH looalike from the past to appear in our house?), and this one GS & JW...and perhaps many more.

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I am curious, that the end or there is a happy ending for both of them?
That make me sad if that is the end :(

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I'm very glad that the "evil twin/good twin" portion of this story is over. I'm not sure how much more of it I could've taken. Also, I thought the whole black dress/white dress was metaphor overload. I'm still not certain if I fully understand this story. But, what's done is done.

I'm not sure how I feel about Gong-shil's decision to go on a memory-lane travel adventure with Chun-hee. I guess it is because I don't fully trust him. I assumed that Chun-hee would be able to give Gong-shil some incite into how she acquired her gift: NOPE! Turns out that Chun-hee is just as clueless as she is. So, what purpose will traveling with Chun-hee serve? I really hope that he hasn't been introduced merely as another stumbling block to Gong-shil and Joong won's relationship.

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thanks for the recap. for some reasons i love your recap so much more than girlfriday's. i dont usually check the author before reading but after reading till the the end of the recap and realised i dont like it, i'll srcoll up to see it's usually gf's one. i cant explain why. i think db tends to be a taddddd more objective than gf and it may also be the phrasing of parts that each of them are unhappy with such that even if i disagree, db doesnt get on my nerves. it's kind of a writing skill i guess. but of cos gf's is not a bad writer at all. a lot of my fav recaps are written by her too.

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After rewatching the entire series so far, I've realized that there still is one big question that remains unanswered.

Why is it JW who is able to dispel ghosts for GS? Why him exactly?

I have a feeling that the answer lies in GS going abroad with CH. When she was living as a ghost those three years out of the country, she might have encountered JW at some point, and may have been the cause of her awakening. Whatever happened then gave them the connection they have now, which is why he can make the ghosts disappear for her.

Now I'm really curious what happened!!

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Although the timing is kinda off... If I remember right, JW came back to Korea 5 years ago, and she only woke up 4 years ago. Granted they were in the same foreign country, that gives them a window of 2 years to have met there, and then maybe a year in Korea.

Can it be Wednesday already? Gahhh the suspense! I'm definitely having a send-off party come Wednesday Thursday!

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I hope it only needs 1 episode to connect this dot. Then, move on with lots and lots of happiness in ep 17.

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From your words to the script!

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@ luna
I was thinking the same thing as you...about Gong Shil spirit wandering around for those 3 years. When she was with the photographer guy travelling around overseas, she might have met with Joong Won who was still living overseas...she saw him shining brightly, went over to him, they touch...and when those two touch there's this intense electric shock feeling...her spirit went back to her body and she woke up...

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it would be great if they do a time jump and GS be rich and revenge on his aunt

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Joong Won is sooo cute this episode, talking to his hand and making that adorable face...then threatening Madam Go that he will be her ghost match-maker, but she has to die first...LOL...love him

And SJS...what a wonderful actor with great comedic timing...and he is always so serious in his other roles...loooove him

Can't wait for Wed to come...

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yeah..he should really do more comedies =D

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Ooh..i liked the twist. And Chun Hee appearing! I didn't hear any news of that....were they keeping it a secret or was it slotted it coz of the extension? Anyway, I'm happy to see him =)

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@Yumi
Wahahaha that just made my day xDD I was grinning like a loon at my phone lol

It'd me great if someone could post that meme with JW telling GS she has to feel like she'd die without the one special person. I Googled but can't find it :c

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I'm so puzzled by the last eps, I can longer pretend I have faith in the writers knowing how to finish this story. What is it about the Hong Sisters they fail so much after the 13 ep? Horrible habit.

We waited so long for an explanation about the kidnapping and the whole thing was totally absurd!
Like chocolatemint said:

"Confused. Bad poor Heejoo is too timid to talk to him so good rich Hanna does? Though Hanna is good she decides to take Joong-won for herself? Though not able to talk to him, she kidnaps both and kills her sister to become her? She is suddenly so bold and strong, but too timid to talk to the guy earlier? But she only wanted to kill her sister and take her place? Why kidnap both then? How did Hee-joo Hanna hide her identity and pretend to he Hanna in front of her adoptive parents (and households, etc.)?Then Gong-sil is possessed, but has a wire? Did the possessed ghost go get the others to set the trap?"

Besides, how would she live as Hanna??? Hello accent? Everything else? Why would Hanna forgive her murderer??? Sister or not seems totally absurd to me! If the Hong sisters are so unable to write anything complex with logic they should know to just stay away from stuff like that.

Many other absurdities as well. I didn't hate the amnesia plot but the scene when he remembered felt very rushed and awkward. The resolution of the Mme Go contract was almost pathetic.

It doesn't surprise me that someone wondered if a ghost writer was responsible for the last eps what does amaze me is that there are not more people here very confused about them. I guess the OTPs chemistry and their track of very good eps in the middle are convincing people to not care or even register these absurdities.

Everyone is just as curious bot Chunhee behaviour and that storyline and I'm just afraid the resolution will be just as crazy and absurd as what happened in the last eps. So bitter!

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This isn't the last episode is it !!??? Ohhhh I hope it isn't !!

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chun hee is he an evil ghost whisperer or what? i want to know more about him and why he has to appear in front of TGS now?

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제 가 이 드 라 마 를 가 장 좋 아 합 니 다

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It's always in Korea where twins are separated LOL. I think I've read somewhere that maybe Gong Shil saw Joong Won when she was still a ghost that's why there was a reason why of all people, sajangnim is the one whom she can call her safety hideout. Afterall, I think in all those times where her soul was travelling, Joong Won was overseas too, right?

I CAN'T BELIEVE this drama is ending, already missing it sooo much! I just hope Hong Sisters will not disappoint us in the last episode. (or else, I'll strangle them with the necklace LOL)

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omg....this drama is getting boring........when it will ended anyway????? just be together with tae yang and getting married...that's it!!!!:(

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can someone please explain to me their relationship
I really don't get it lol
Why can't they be together happily again?
I completely am not understanding the whole Candy thing and why she keeps rejecting him,
and that speech he made about her having no self-esteem, whaaaat D:

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i really LOVED this episode how they caught the hee jooo.. how wish this ghost seeing thing is true that

THERE ARE MANY REAL HANNA WHO DIED INSTEAD OD BAD HEE JOO

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Can someone please answer these questions? I'm REALLY confused!

1) Why did Good Han-na introduce herself as Hee-joo?
2) How did Uncle know where the necklace was?
3) Which twin met uncle in the flashback?
4) If all Bad Hee-joo cared about was money, then why is she after Joong-won?
5) Why did Good Han-na's ghost insist on taking over Gong-shil's body?
6) Are we human or are we dancer?

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so everything is laid bare now. Since TGS is unfazed by JW's wealth and looks and character - and she no longer really needs his emergency shield, what else can he offer her, really? without his special power, he now looks diminished - heck Kang Woo looks like a better hero and sweet to boot. JW uses his business acumen to calculate again how he can convince TGS to stay by his side. He appears desperate even poor sod. I likehow we can see JW tries hard to listen to his heart and probe deep into his feelings. previously, he always refused to know what TGS's feelings towards him were - cue to the pianist's wife who asked him slyly if he wanted to know how "this woman views you". and he said " i don't want to know". he shields himself from all feels behind his carefully erected walls until TGS comes barrelling into his life , clings on to him for dear life and thaws his frozen and embittered heart. it really is touching to watch him trying so hard to remember the very important thing he has lost and when he does, how he tries every tactic he knows to hold on to it... As for TGS, her noble idiocy is understandable and while i feel frustrated watching her barely holding it all in, i get that her greatest fear is to put JW in danger from all her ghost escapades. She cannot NOT help these ghosts but she knows that JW will always be in danger if he were beside her. how now then? the problem does not seen to have a solution, short of TGS losing her special ability to see ghosts and reverts to being normal. aigoo, think fast JW!!!

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What's the song called 55 minutes into this episode called?

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