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Heirs: Episode 14

Now it’s time for the girls to duke it out, because why let the boys have all the fun? Rachel starts poking around and generally being smarter than we’d all like her to be, and begins her reign of terror. You know she’s scary when Young-do is trying to reason with her. Yeah, think on that. But just when you expect it to be more of the same, Eun-sang shows that she’s not as toothless as she seems.

There are mixed reports that Heirs is considering an extension, to which I say: Please omg no no no no no no no. It’s likely something that SBS is promoting now that the show has reached 20% ratings, but producers have been pretty clear about it being a 20-episode project. Some reports say it’ll end on 20 as planned, while others say it’s still undecided. It’s likelier the show won’t extend, but anyway, just a warning that there’s a chance it will.

 
SONG OF THE DAY

Choi Jin-hyuk – “돌아보지 마 (Don’t Look Back)” for The Heirs OST [ Download ]

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EPISODE 14 RECAP

Tan arrives outside the broadcasting station at school to find Eun-sang pinned against the wall by Young-do, as he tells her that he’ll be messing with everyone but her, including himself.

Tan screams through the window and then just starts kicking at the door until it busts open, and goes crazy, grabbing the nearest chair to swing at Young-do. Eun-sang has enough presence of mind to get in between them, and hugs Tan, crying for him to stop. He calms down and ushers her outside so he can talk to Young-do privately. Uh, is that such a good idea?

Tan reminds him that he’s a dead man if he touches Eun-sang, and Young-do finally spells out his convoluted plan: Tan lets go of Eun-sang, and only then will he stop terrorizing them all.

Tan sighs that he’s tired of this fight, and asks how far he’s going to take it. Young-do has no plans to quit, ever, and explains that he lost his last opportunity to see his mother because he was fighting with Tan. “I want to kill myself every time I see you! How can I stop this fight now?” Are you scared it’ll be meaningless if you don’t see it through?

Tan tells him to stop being a child, and says he’ll bring himself down just to bring down others—he always has. Tan: “How can you not change at all?” Young-do: “And you? Are you happy that you’ve changed on your own?”

Young-do calls Tan’s bigger fight a senseless one (You’re one to talk. Please don’t bring sense into this, for your own sake.) and that he’ll end up kneeling in front of his father anyway. Tan says it does matter, and that if he has to kneel, he’ll kneel, but he’ll get back up again.

He tells Young-do to stay here all he wants, while he moves on to fight the big fight. I’d care more if this weren’t the seventy-billionth time you guys were having this conversation, but good for you.

Rachel comes by to ask Young-do what his deal is and why he’s always fighting with Tan. Young-do points out that she’s always fighting with Tan and hanging on even though he’s made it clear from the start that he didn’t have feelings for her. Young-do says she knows she’s in the wrong but hanging on anyway, and he’s doing the same.

Eun-sang asks Tan the same thing, and he jokes that it’s because of their love triangle. Well, you’re not wrong. Tan: “I’m in the middle of regretting, and Young-do is in the middle of hating himself.”

Eun-sang: “I think you and Choi Young-do are the ones dating.” If only. It would solve so many of our problems. She smiles to see he’s wearing his uniform again because she cleaned it herself, and when he starts to complain about the lack of care, she orders him to take it off.

He immediately jumps on the innuendo: “Right here? You want me to take it all off?” I love that she covers her eyes and then peeks anyway. Ha.

Bo-na and Chan-young are still on the outs, and this time when Chan-young passes her by without a word, Bo-na calls out to him. When he still doesn’t answer, she plops to the ground and cry-acts in her adorable, terrible way that she broke her leg. He smiles to himself, but keeps walking ahead, and she pouts.

Ye-sol comes up to Eun-sang in the hall and timidly asks if she’ll bring her the script she left at Myung-soo’s workshop, since she’s scared to step foot in there. She’s surprised that Eun-sang so readily agrees to help, and meekly apologizes for being so terrible before.

Eun-sang heads to the workshop to find Young-do sitting there glumly, and when he gets up to leave, she hands him a band-aid for his bruised lip. He turns it down and trudges out without a word.

Bo-na comes by soon after, looking for Ye-sol’s script, and Eun-sang smiles to see that she cares about her friend after all. And when she steps out, Young-do is outside waiting for her, and sticks out his hand to ask for the band-aid.

Eun-sang calls Chan-young to tell him about Bo-na thinking of her friend, and he admits that he had a hard time keeping himself from turning around when she was being so cute today with her fake injury. Eun-sang tells him to let it go before he loses Bo-na to someone else.

Madam Han comes into the kitchen to find Mom writing a list of things that the new housekeeper ought to do, and freaks out that Mom’s jumping the gun on leaving. I love that she takes it so personally like she’s being dumped.

But they’re interrupted when Rachel makes a surprise visit to see Madam Han, acting the part of the sweet fiancée. She says she has no intention of breaking her engagement to Tan, and calls her “mother” respectfully, which shocks Madam Han.

The thing Rachel really wants to know is why she posed as Eun-sang’s mother at the PTA meeting, and Madam Han just says the two moms are friends, which is why Tan is nice to Eun-sang at all.

Rachel seems to buy the explanation for the time being, except on her way out of the house, she sees Eun-sang’s school uniform hanging on the clothesline, with her nametag in the pocket. Argh.

Eun-sang panics when she finds her uniform gone, and marches over to Rachel first thing in the morning to demand her stuff back. Rachel says it’s in the trash, and watches spitefully as Eun-sang digs her way through the school trash to find the uniform her mother bought her.

She finally finds it, and Rachel confronts her about everything—being the housekeeper’s daughter, living under one roof with Tan, and playing the nouveau riche at school. She acts like it’s a personal affront to her that Eun-sang is poor, and orders her to clean up the trash with the skills she learned from her mother.

At that, Eun-sang slaps Rachel across the face, and when Rachel raises a hand to retaliate, she blocks her hand defiantly. I’m sorry—Fesity Eun-sang, where have you been all this time? Suddenly you can fight your own battles? Okay, I won’t dwell on it. I’m just happy you’re here.

Eun-sang growls at her that nobody insults her mother, and bites back, “Is that what your mother taught you?” Rachel fumes and tells her that she’ll do whatever it takes to make her transfer out of this school, including telling the whole world about Tan’s birth secret.

Rachel says that Young-do might not want to share the secret, but she has no such qualms, and will make them both pay if she can’t have Tan. Eun-sang realizes she’s cornered if she wants to protect Tan, and says through gritted teeth that she’ll think about transferring.

Suddenly Tan shows up, having overheard, and orders Eun-sang to walk away so he can talk to Rachel alone. Ugh, I seriously hate you when you bark orders at her.

Tan basically tells Rachel he’d have hit her already if she weren’t a girl, and that he thought he could salvage a friendship with her, but he’s fine letting that go now.

He’s mad at Eun-sang for treating him like he doesn’t matter in the equation, and she counters that he’s got it bad enough with his family. He points out that his whole life has been that way, and none of this is her fault. Eun-sang: “It isn’t yours either, Kim Tan.”

He asks if she wants to just run away together, but Eun-sang knows they can’t abandon their mothers a second time.

Tan and Young-do get punished for fighting, and this time Director Jung puts her foot down and tells Young-do to bring his father and Tan to bring his hyung. Eep.

Hyun-joo gets tasked with their counseling session where they have to write down their wrongs, and when they each insist it was the other’s fault, she tells them to fill the pages with what the other guy did wrong then.

They both sit in silence for a while, each thinking about all the things the other guy did to him. But in the end they both end up thinking about that last day that Young-do’s mother asked Tan to bring him to her. And they each think to themselves:

Tan: “I should’ve brought you there no matter what, if I knew it’d be the last chance.” Young-do: “I should’ve followed you till the end, if I knew it’d be the last chance.” Hyun-joo comes back to see blank pages, and asks if they did nothing wrong to each other, why are they fighting?

Bo-na sits in the broadcast booth chatting with Eun-sang, and asks if she’s telling Chan-young about how much she’s repenting. Hyo-shin comes by and sneakily puts her on air, and Bo-na gets broadcast all over the school, telling Eun-sang that she can’t breathe because Chan-young is her air and she feels like she’s in outer space right now. Hee.

It does the trick and gets Chan-young to come looking for her, but this time it’s Bo-na who’s running away because she’s mortified.

Hyo-shin finally runs into Hyun-joo for the first time at school, and she asks him to congratulate her on her new job. His face falls and he tells her he can’t really be that happy about his first love getting one step further. Aw.

Myung-soo asks Young-do how his first love is going, and Young-do asks if Eun-sang is really his first love. Myung-soo: “She is, if Tan isn’t.” Myung-soo asks what he’d do if he fell into the ocean with Eun-sang and there was only one life raft. Young-do chooses to die to save her, so that he’s forever in her heart and she can never be with Tan. Pfft. Myung-soo sighs that he always chooses the sad ending for himself.

Tan walks Eun-sang home and then sits in the hotel lobby waiting for Won, and Won even voluntarily sits down next to him for a brief moment. Tan muses that it’s pretty funny they’ve both left home, and asks hyung why he hates him so much.

Won doesn’t have an answer so much as, “What’s there to like?” and Tan says he’ll do better. Won shuts that idea down, thinking it’s more uncomfortable when he tries too hard.

At school, Bo-na runs around handing out invitations to her Back Together With Chan-young Party. Hahaha. You would have a party for that.

Young-do tells her that boys hate that stuff and it’s like advertising to the world that you’re a moron. Says the guy without a girlfriend. Just sayin’. She makes sure to invite Ye-sol, and they have a cute fight over who’s sorrier.

Hyo-shin gets dropped off for his college entrance exams, and why do I get the feeling he’s not even going to walk through those doors?

Tan spends the afternoon hanging out in his brother’s hotel room, and catches a glimpse of a list of employees. He calls Manager Yoon, perhaps to start discussing this stock war, but Manager Yoon is busier with the sudden announcement that Won has fired all the people on that list.

Chairman Dad gets the word and boils over with anger, while Won calmly asks Manager Yoon to make his choice: join his side or be the next person on that list.

Tan goes out to meet Eun-sang, which turns out to be a trap by Madam Han. It’s cute the way she grumbles that she needs hostages to get face time with her own son. She tells them about Rachel and warns them ineffectually to break up, and Tan hilariously informs her that she needs an envelope of money for a conversation like that.

He sweet-talks his mother like he always does, gets a winter coat out of the deal, and takes Eun-sang out for a date all without budging an inch.

They go for a walk and he whines that he wants to hold her hand, so when she offers it, he throws his arm around her instead. When she cuts the date short to go to work, he back-hugs her to hold her back, and then hugs her again, wrapping her in his coat for extra-warm snuggles.

She finds money tucked in his coat, and he jumps for joy and lets her go instantly, which she pouts at. I do like that the tables are flipped and he’s the money-obsessed one now.

He gets called to a meeting with Manager Yoon, who confirms that the battle has begun. And once Won is done fighting Chairman Dad, Tan will be next. Manager Yoon reminds him that this isn’t a war he can avoid—he was born into this responsibility, and there are sacrifices he’ll have to make.

Rachel tries to squeeze Bo-na for information about where Eun-sang works, and when that doesn’t pan out, she texts Young-do with the threat that she’s standing outside Eun-sang’s workplace right now.

He takes the bait and goes dashing off to rescue her, only what he actually does is lead Rachel right to Eun-sang’s café. He sticks around and gives her the warning that Rachel found out, and tells her to call him if anything happens.

She reminds him using his words that she’s got plenty of black knights on her side, and he notes that that’s likely the moment that he started to like her, when he said that the first time.

When she gets to work she’s told she has a catering order tonight, and on a hunch she calls Chan-young to ask where his party is tonight. She confirms that it’s the same address and guesses what Rachel is up to.

She lets Tan know that she’s headed to the party, and then shows up to fulfill the catering order anyway, dressed in her apron and ready to confront all her classmates. Rachel smiles while all the other kids wonder what she’s doing here, and then when she’s about to say it, Tan storms in to stop her.

She insists she has to stay here until all the coffee is dispensed, so he overturns the table and says she’s done. Good grief. Was that really necessary?

He brings her downstairs and asks why she’s doing this when she knew exactly what she was getting into. Eun-sang says she came here ready to tell everyone the truth, because what she was really ashamed of wasn’t that she was poor—it was that she lived the lie that she was rich.

He asks why they can’t just take the easy road, and she argues that going straight ahead knowing she’ll get hurt is something she learned from him. She sticks to her plan and goes back to get more drinks so she can do it all over again.

By the time she gets back, Tan has come around, and he tells her that if she gets scared she can quit and run into his arms.

So she braces herself to face the crowd, including Young-do who arrives behind her. She tells the whole group that she works part-time jobs for the money because she’s not rich.

This time Tan even stops Chan-young from running to the rescue, and they sit back as the kids all scoff. They ask Tan if he knew, and he pretends to be fooled just like everyone else. It seems like a weird choice, until he walks up to her and reacts like he doesn’t care in the least, which is a pretty good way to play it.

And then the lights dim and they get a spotlight above them, which is so unnatural I stopped and laughed for a good minute. He tells Charity Case Eun-sang that it’s nice to meet her, and introduces himself as Bastard Child Kim Tan. Rachel reels, and Young-do leaves.

Tan tells her it’s time to join the party now, and puts his arms around her to untie her apron. He undoes her hair and ties a corsage to her wrist, and everyone just stands around still watching them, because that’s not awkward or anything.

And then he kisses her on the forehead sweetly.

 
COMMENTS

It’s strange that Rachel and Young-do’s lives both revolve entirely around Tan—whether they get to have him or not, whether they come first in his life or not—and they basically spend all their energy fighting for the right to be relevant to Tan. It’s sad, really, that they value themselves so little… you know, except for the part where they’re both so mean and terrible that I feel no actual pity. But I guess it is fascinating in a dysfunctional way—they’re both clinging so desperately that they’d rather be Tan’s enemy than become irrelevant to him, and Young-do feels more hurt that Tan might grow up without him and decide their fight isn’t worth fighting anymore. And Rachel would rather be hated than inconsequential to Tan’s love life, even if she’s hurting Tan and herself just to keep one foot in his life. I’d pitch in for some group therapy, but I’m pretty sure you two could afford it.

At least Eun-sang coming clean about everything takes the power out of Rachel’s hands. And her hands are really not ones that should hold any power, over anything. Ever. I was scared that Eun-sang was going to be a noble idiot and transfer schools to keep Tan’s secret, because she’s exactly the kind of person who would do that, and I’m fairly certain she would’ve considered it seriously if he hadn’t overheard Rachel’s threats. I’m not always behind Eun-sang’s logic with everything, but I like that she decided to hell with ridicule and scorn from her peers—she’d rather take her life into her own hands than have the bitch on a power trip lord it over her. Now that, I can get behind.

What’s even better is that she doesn’t need Tan to rescue her or do anything at all except back off, and for the first time ever, she puts her foot down, and he listens and offers support in a—gasp—supportive way. Go figure. If you just let her stand up for herself, she’s all the stronger for it. It took way too long, but I’m glad she finally came around and realized that she’s only as scared and powerless as she decides to be.

The only thing I dislike about it is the fact that we had to live with Scaredy Eun-sang for the first, oh, two-thirds of the show, when Awesome Eun-sang was an option. I suppose I ought to thank Rachel for bringing it out of her, since she only seems capable of being feisty around her. Not that I trust this show to be consistent with keeping Feisty Eun-sang around. Let’s not go crazy with the expectations. Now that feelings, socioeconomic statuses, and birth secrets are all out in the open, let’s try moving forward, shall we? I’ll take baby steps over backpedaling any day of the week. Or yunno, just more of them:

 
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Eun Sang had a backbone transplant?

Who is the donnor?

Hope it's someone with really big guts so that this transplant is effective and permanent!

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I love Chan Young and Bo Na too! I wish Kim Woo Bin had a better role in this.... I've been watching School 2013 because I like him in heirs and... they are really under utilizing him here. Too bad.

And LMH is so cute too and i'm happy to see feisty eun sang....I loved when she blocked Rachel's hand and Rachel can't pull her arm away. I was all like "that's what working can do, make you strong, you weak ass little rich girl"

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Bo Na has shown the most growth as a character. Three separate people ruined her party and made it about them (Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!); yet, she didn't have a meltdown and even allowed Rachel to stay after their scuffle. I'm surprised Young Do didn't join in on the fun; I had expected him to swoop in and be the hero.

I loved the locker scene when Bo Na handed Young Do his invitation. “Is Yoon Chan Young coming?” Can Young Do please wear his hair like that always? Straight out of the shower, no gel. I cheered when Tan told Rachel not to talk to him. I actually wanted him to walk away from her right in the middle of her screeching.

Thanks for the recap, girlfriday!

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I loved the locker scene when Bo Na handed Young Do his invitation. “Is Yoon Chan Young coming?”
That part was funny lol.

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I love love love this episode, more than I loved Episode 13. Everything in this episode was good in that Eun Sang is finally making some progress! I especially lovvveedd the very last scene where Tan and Eun Sang stole the spotlight (lol, at a party that wasn't even theirs), with Tan undressing Eun Sang and letting her hair down. All I could think of while watching that scene was - excuse my thoughts here - damnn, all of that sexual tension. Lol.

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Whoo! Tell it, Mary! Major sexual tension and I LOVED IT! I always think it's hot when a guy removes an article of his woman's clothing and when he took her hair down and put that corsage on her wrist...whoo, baby!!

The ONLY thing that would have made it golden was if Eun Sang reached up and cupped Tan's face in her hands and softly kissed him on those big lips of his. I'm hoping she will get more bolder in the affection department in the next couple of episodes.

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Count me in. I think the same way for the last scene, sweet but hot !

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The worst kdrama after BOF is this one. I have never in my life rolled my eyes so hard, I'm done with it.

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If you think this is the worst drama, you should have stopped watching during the earlier episodes. Why comment now that we are on Episode 14? Stop watching!!!

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Far from the worst (though also far from the best). For the worst, try Nail Shop Paris.

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Actually, I preferred Nail Shop Paris to this.

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Is it me or did YD have his hair like KT at BN's party? Anywho, finally a pace that we can at least endure. Loved the subtle brotherly moments of Tan and Won and hope they'll shed more light on their story/history. KA is on ES side even if she doesnt want to admit it, why else would she be so nice to ES? Rachel and YD seriously need to have their own loveline since misery loves company. But my all time favorite LEE BO NA! I can't with her, she cracks me up. Even though she had a momentary lapse in bad judgment in the lunch scene, she gives her best to right the wrong she did. Love her.

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Nope it's not just you. I noticed he had Tan's hair when he went to see Rachel at Eun Sang's work place. I love his hair like that and hope he keeps it that way.

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YD did not get time to put gel in his hair. He was just out of the shower when Rachael texted him and told him that she was at ES's work place. He rushed out to help ES.

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I'm surprised that there are no "druggie" in this show. Is that particular stereotype a taboo in Kdrama?

Given the money, slacking behavior & most importantly vehemence.... in any other drama world, I would have pinned Young-do for a druggie :-P

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Oh yeah, forgot to mention self-destructive behavior :-/

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Almost anything to do with drugs is taboo in over the air TV dramas. You may rarely see something about a reference to someone being ruined by drugs, but never on screen will you actually see it happen.

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Lol about 90 percent of the drama would disappear if these characters just smoked a joint.

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Some people are so excited about the last few episodes.

Heck, after 12 episodes of slow moving stories you'll get excited (or relieved) with what would be considered as normal pace for other dramas.

The writer still has a long way to go to fix the story and I doubt she will be able to finally match it with the hype and excitement expected of her.

Even if the drama is now moving as a faster pace with more interesting plot, I doubt it will be enough to redeem this train-wreck of a story in my opinion.

No worries, there's Chan Young-Bona to save the day.

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This drama has a lot of wasted potential. Even if the writer is more about character driven plots than event driven ones, almost every single character on the show feels like they've had their potential wasted. The plot isn't original, but every character seems underwritten to the point where the motivation for their actions is always questionable (especially in the case of KT, who I feel I could have really liked, but whose actions annoy me so much).

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I agree with you. She should have spent time on character development instead of lobbying this bullying back and forth. How to explain it? Maybe this KES had a sex transplant and she was actually born a man!

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bona and Chanyoung kind of steals the show....Loved them in this episode......
I an totally hating Rachel...I mean she deosnt even have the reason to fight anymore,....
She is just there because Tan chose Eunsang over her....
And I am betting my life that she would have broke the engagement when she learned that Tan was illegimate if it wasnt for this traingle...

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loved almost everything about this episode..Tan is a little bossy at times, but I loved how he respected her decision and supported her..that was the best part of the episode. Eun Sang was wonderful too, giving Rachel what she deserves and then owning up so bravely to her poverty..liked that she was ashamed of the lie and not of her poverty.. Bo Na was cute too, from faking a fall to her confession on the broadcast..Oh, I loved Bo Na in every scene today..and the scene where Tan asks ES if he should take off his jacket had me LOLing too..the best episode so far..

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A "little" bossy?? He is a damned control freak.

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Well! you have your opinion and I have mine. IMO 'damn control freak' are too strong words for that character..each to his own, just expressed my opinion in reply to yours..

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and that comment of mine reeks of the word 'opinion':P...should've looked at it before sending it..

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I agree with you on that. He actually likes to control things and others since he is the heir!! I worry for girls who think he is cool.... I just hope those girls would end up with decent guys in future.

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Im not sure if this has already been asked but does anyone know the name of the instrumental that plays during the show? Its come out a lot during.young do and eun sang moments I'm in love with the song and its been bothering me for the longest time that I don't know what it is!

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I love that instrumental too. I think it's not released yet.

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I've been searching and asking about that song since episode 9! I initially thought it was an instrumental song but there were actually vocals when it played in episode 13. I hope they officially release it as part of the OST.

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One word:

Awwwww :)

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Ok the issue I had with this episode and actually some other episodes also, is how easily it is to come in this school without the uniform on. I know it might sound stupid, but coming from a private high school if you as much as didn't have the school shoes, they would penalize you in some way. I know I know it's a drama and not real life, but it's been bothering me and I needed to say it.
I was actually a good episode I didn't think it would take this long for them to find out she was poor and I also didn't think she would be the one to say the truth

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The funny thing is, the school where it is filmed does not even require uniforms (the real life one). It is an international school, mostly for foreign students, forgot the name.

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I went to a private school and this really gets me as well. If we didn't show up properly dressed, including our shoes, and without a damn good reason, we would receive demerit points. We even had uniforms for sports teams and P. E. classes. Like what kind of private school is Jejuk High anyway? Nobody ever seems to be in full uniform and it costs a fortune. It's weird and jarring.

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I don't know why but the last scene made me cringe. I know it was cute and all that, but in front of everyone it felt kind of embarrassing. Especially with the light all on them. It felt like the atmosphere they have for a marriage proposal

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BEST Episode of the drama to date I was all kinds of emotions watching it.
Tans mom is just adorable and I heard that she was once Miss Korea.
The last scene gahhh I think I'll watch that again HOT :)
The next few episodes will be about the stock wars ME THINKS and its gonna get dirty.
Would like for an extension cause it feels like the characters are just maturing.
Was so glad "Love is the moment"was not played in the last scene cause That would have just ruined it for me.
Can't wait for the next episode.

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This is the episode I've been hoping waiting for. This is how it's done.

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Alright! I finally loved an episode! Amazing how easily that occurs when stuff...you know..HAPPENS. Also, there were some excellent zingers in this episode that I kind of feel were fan service for the snarky fan. For instance Eun Chan saying that it seemed like Tan and Young Do were the ones in the relationship. Or Myung soo with "She is if Tan isn't." Also yelling at Young Do for always choosing sad endings. Preach it! He's clearly the audience surrogate with his sassy commentary. Anything that had to do with Bo-na was great. I do have to say that Young Do's story is even sadder now that I know his mother didn't just leave, she ESCAPED. I was trying to understand why that had to be the last time he saw her and why she couldn't wait for him at the restaurant. Now that I know she only had a tiny window of opportunity, and even then risked it trying to see him, that's so tragic. Was she trying to bring Young Do with her?
I kind of love how his hair totally was reflecting his mental state! He's tired of fighting, he's sad about everything, even his hair was feeling down (get it, down..cause you know..it was down)

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LOL

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all i wanted to comment on was that I'm glad Eun Sang told Tan to back off so she can fight her own fight or at least stand up for herself and then called on him when he told her to escape and hide. :)
thank god she didn't listen to him and thank god he finally accepted a decision of her's.

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dear show, i want more

-BROMANCE!!! tan and won, tan and young do (no fights)

-Bona and Chanyoung. they're both so cheesy its adorable. haha

-HYO SHIN!!!

-Won and Hyun joo

-Young do's post shower hair. because i'm sick of the slick back hair he keeps on sporting even after he takes of his helmet. ha.

-Madame Han and Tan moments. haha...

-and Eun sang becoming more you know...oh i don't know...not weak.

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"Tan and won, and tan and young do, the boys from Chaebol high school go walking . . . and when they pass her she smiles . . . but they're to stuck up to see"

Sing it to the tune of "The Girl from Ipanema" and you've got yourself an Internet hit.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJkxFhFRFDA

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Hahaha.

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I totally agree ....... No haters needed

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I'm a hater, sue me.

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Lol

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Lol

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Sue me too. Maybe I'll end up spending 4 years in prison, having a baby while serving my time only to have him taken away from me, breaking up with my fiance and losing my parent. But it's all better than the torture I got from watching Heirs... ㅋㅋㅋ

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**cough**

Don't forget that the man that emotionally and physically (almost choked me to death) abused me, I wind up loving and sleeping with him.

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I think that was the funniest thing I have read here today :D

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Yeah that's the glory and grandeur of Secret Love for you!

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@Windsun33 it's good that at least you assume what you are.it would have been even better if you could use your time in doing something meaningful,not hating,but hell,it's your time you waste.but it's kind of sad,that probably means you don't have better stuff to do.

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just as much as you like the drama, others are also entitled to dislike the drama. That is democracy, isn't it?

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My Herihead episode titles~

1 Dry Cleaning Only
2 Dreamcatcher
3 I ♥ California
4 Page 16
5 Wishbone
6 Parvenu (or New Money)
7 Pale Pink Angora
8 ‘Don’t Answer’
9 Mom Mother Mistress
10 Matching Shoes For Camp
11 Stocks Skyrocket
12 Open The Door
13 Kicked Out
14 Getting Back Together Party

Chan Young and Bo Na's break up and make up was the best !

Untying Eun Chan's apron, letting her hair down, slipping on a wrist corsage, and a forehead kiss - that's what Lee Min Ho does best.

I like Tan better and better each episode. Like he said, his life was difficult from birth (thanks to father). At 18 he is learning what his family's complicated relationships mean. He has developed principles and loyalties that are his own and are different than the chaebol role he has been born into. I respect that. I can now appreciate the title, "Heirs: He Who Wears the Crown Must Bear It's Weight."

This drama may turn out all right after all. Ooooo we got to see Woo Bin with shower hair (twice). And those long legs look so good on his motorcycle. So good ~

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Wonder what's so charismatic about Tan since young that Rachel and Young Do wants to practically own all his attention. Wonder why none of the first class students are not evil, not say they needa be nice, and even considering their viewpoint of leading the world in the future, they can be all business centered and critical. But nobody said you can't be a regular nice dude or dudette outside of your business life, like Chan Young and Bo Na per se. He's not exactly the nicest person out there I gather, but they are not necessarily evil and still reasonable to talk to in the reasonable sense.

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I'm slightly off topic here but...what happened to eun-sang's sister? y'know...the one who took the family's money and ran away? she like...vanished from the whole series after the first episode. I always thought she had a major part in the series but apparently not :o

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Isn't she the one who's in Oldboy?

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I think the writer forgot about her.

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Quite honestly speaking, I couldn't care less about Eun Sang's sister. Once she shamelessly took off with the money, and left her our lead with no where to go in a strange land, I was done with her in my mind. She was just a plot device, really; a reason for Eun Sang to find herself stranded and needing to be rescued by our hero. There are already quite enough characters whose story lines KES has to juggle, thank you very much.

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If the writer gets desperate, have her re-appear as a brainswashed, scientifically enhanced, highly trained fake-school teacher assassin. It would liven up the plot considerably.

Sorry, I've been waiting and waiting for the sequel to 'Killer Girl K' and watching 'Hanna' on cable.

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Does anyone know the ending song????

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Gr8t episode ever. Rachel deserved the slap and more for what she did to ES in Newyork. YD reli likes her doesnt he?
Bo-na n chan-young were sweet as ever. I rel hope nothing gets btn them

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Not quite the laugh riot as the last episode (there was some snarky comedy in that) but it was still very good and with some really interesting forward movement. Sometimes, though, I feel like I'm watching a different show. Tan seems to me like several case studies from my Abnormal Psych textbook at university all rolled into one attractive package. But whatever.

Yes, the last scene was very sweet. The spotlight, the removal of the apron, the letting down of the hair. Romance is in the air but I'm still not convinced because look what went on previously in the episode. First, the level of violence is escalating and all of it now on the part of Tan. He hits Young-do who doesn't fight back at all. He then picks up a chair to assault Young-do with a deadly weapon and Young-do still just passively stands there. Only Eun-sang saves him from what could easily be a fractured skull. Tan has zero impulse control and he could easily kill someone. Okay he's mad, I get that but picking up a weapon which is, in fact, what the chair is? Like I say, the violence is escalating and what happens when Tan's impulsive anger is directed to Eun-sang? Who's going to save her then?

Young-do seems to want to show Eun-sang something about Tan's nature, he even says he's even going to make himself a victim (along with everyone else except Eun-sang) to do so. It's like when he pushes her into the pool. He says that what just happened will happen again with Tan only worse. There is something else going on here beyond what has already been revealed and it's a good thing we have 6 (or maybe 8) more episodes to find out.

I really wonder what Young-do saw in his childhood. His father is a batterer. Did Young-do witness his father beating his mother? More than likely. By the way his mother furtively glances around in Tan's flashback, has only a small bag with her and is pressed for time, it's clear she's scared to death of something and is escaping, not leaving, the marriage. This is a woman on the run.

It's no wonder the kid is a bully and not exactly a stellar example of teenaged functionality but he certainly seems to be capable of sadness and reflection. Best case scenario for Young-do. He should also pack a small bag, get on his bike, ride far, far away, get a job because he is used to hard work and look for his mom. Study hard for a career that's not chaebol-centric, like maybe medicine, and join Doctors Without Borders.

So Tan's mother, using Eun-sang as her hostage, finally gets a meeting with her son. He's not taking her calls although he should, if he has any feeling for her at all, realize she's worried sick. But what does he want? Why money of course. When it's clear he's not going to get it, he walks out, hauling Eun-sang along with him. He then proposes getting a nice dinner on Eun-sang's tab of course because he "doesn't have his wallet."

Eun-sang finds money in his jacket pocket and I guess it's a lot of money because she, who does know its value, seems impressed. Either good old Mom put it there because she doesn't want to see her son starve or Tan himself has forgotten he had it. Then, instead of treating Eun-sang to a nice dinner, he takes a meeting with Secretary Yoon. Has Tan ever actually spent any real money on Eun-sang, like on a date or something?

About the whole outing himself as illegitimate after up-ending Eun-sang's catering cart in an attempt to use violence to get his own way and wrecking...

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Oops went over the limit.

I don't think his illegitimacy really matters anymore and is even a red herring because Tan already knows through his meeting with Secretary Yoon that he is going to inherit shares at least equal to Won's. This is going to happen even if his father is still very angry because for some high financial reason that escapes me, it has to happen. Tan is either going to be very rich or he is actually going to control the company because he is the second son of the Jejuk Group, illegitimate or not. It's a meaningless confession at this point because, whether the others know it or not, it's not going to have serious consequences for Tan,

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Please, tan gave YD many chances
He tried to reason, he tried to ignore and he tried to warn
YD pushed CEs against the wall,
That's his gf there (at this point they ARE already together)
YD deserved the punch.
Contrary to what gf mentioned I don't think their conversation after is a repeat, it was more heartfelt.
Both finally reached common ground
Bromance coming soon

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Do you think so? The way Young-do looked at the end watching Tan and Eun-sang together, I say bromance is pretty much impossible from this moment on. He looks like he knows he's lost. But I agree the conversation with you wasn't a repeat and was more heartfelt. It was real instead of the usual posturing, who has got the bigger pair ones they have had so far. Which is also why I think a bromance is not likely.

You mention the punch as being deserved but what about the chair? Does Young-do also deserve that? Because I don't get it. A punch, okay, they do have a history and Young-do is an ass, no question about it. But he hasn't taken the bait this time and hit back. He is just standing there, not responding at all. The only thing that saves him is Eun-sang. Would a metal chair hitting Young-do's head also be deserved? And why do people seem to want to see a sweet girl like Eun-sang with a guy like Tan who picks up a chair to hit a guy who is clearly not going to fight back anyway? What is so romantic about being with a guy like that? Like I say, I don't get it.

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I agree with you that Tan picking up the chair to hit Young-Do was excessive particularly since he had already punched him in the face.

As viewers, we have heard several characters say that Tan was worse than Young-Do. We have witnessed the conversation on the golf course between Tan and Young-Do...with Tan warning Young-Do and saying something along the lines of Don't make me revert back to who I used to be...I don't want to go back to that place.

In this instance, I think the scene of Tan grabbing the chair was a hint at/reminder for the audience of how far Tan has come in trying to reform and how scary Tan's nature of the past could be.

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This conversation is so ambiguous that different viewers can have completely different and equally valid takes on it. I don't see it as evidence of Tan's reformation and how far he has come at all. He's still a bully but he's now using his brain and becoming a more sophisticated bully. I think what he is doing to Eun-sang is bullying, just he's now using romance to do it. Just one example: he tells her that if she can't "like him in her heart" she and her mother should just move out. He already knows this is not an option for them and I call this bullying.

If Tan were really serious about ending the bullying culture he's admitted to starting and he is truly reformed, why isn't he doing something real to stop it? Why be so ambiguous about it? He's already told Young-do that he knows Young-do won't out him as illegitimate because the secret is more important to Young-do than it is to Tan himself.

I guess I still find Tan's actions to be far more revealing of his character. He's already kicked Young-do hard in the chest. People have been killed having that done to them. It can stop your heart and, without immediate medical attention, you will die. It's happened, for example, in baseball games when a ball hits an unprotected chest. And the fact is that Tan would have hit Young-do with the chair after threatening to kill him outside the door, if not for Eun-sang's timely intervention. What would have happened if he actually had?

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@ Lindy12

"If Tan were really serious about ending the bullying culture he’s admitted to starting and he is truly reformed, why isn’t he doing something real to stop it? Why be so ambiguous about it?"

Change takes time and doesn't always happen overnight. However, I think gradually Tan is trying to change the bullying culture (subtlety many times he tried warning & failed at getting Eun-Sang to listen to him which led to some of the bullying by Young-Do, when he apologized to Moon Joon Young and hit Young-Do in the hallway, the cafeteria scene with the Rachel/Bo-Na/ Y-Sol/curry & Young-Do and at the party of Bo-Na & Chan-Young, etc.)

By the way, please note that I am not saying that Kim Tan is perfect as the male lead nor that his actions should not be criticized or scrutinized.

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For me, the scene was pivotal.
It was the last straw for Tan.
It's not so much of what YD was doing but what by locking the door, he was terrorizing Tan.
Didn't he say that himself.
Everything he has done was just to push tan to the limit
He was punishing tan because he couldn't forgive himself
He said " don't act like an adult, it's disgusting"
So BFF saw that Tan came back different
He started pushing All the buttons to get a reaction from him
And by locking tan out and threatening ES (doesn't matter whether he did or not, from Tan's view all he saw was YD pushing ES against the wall and locking the door, if that's your Bf wouldn't he be mad enough )
So this plus all the other times, tan was pushed over the edge
I thought that was a good emote from LMH
He was literally shaking with anger when he took the chair up
And YD look to want to accept that blow
Because that was what he looking for
At the crux of it all, it's not ES between them but that he cannot forgive himself that it was him who was more in the wrong than Tan, it was his stubbornness that made him lose a last meal with his mom and lose a friend
Their conversation highlighted it
Tan said: why hasn't you change when you hurt people around you and end up hurting yourself (prob not same wording but gist of it"
And the part of : have you fought a blind
Fight. So what if I end up kneeling? I will kneel and get up and one day I will not kneel. That's better than where u are now. Stay there, I am no longer there.didn't anyone see YD eyes flicker. I believe YD deep now never hated Tan, he never wanted to release that secret he knew,
He was pushing himself to do it but he's a
Softie at heart. Even if ES didn't barge into the room he wouldn't have done it. He was beating around the bush before that. His is a case of bark being worse than his bite
I can't be the only one who sees this

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@ August

Your opinions are as valid as mine given that we are now only 14 episodes into a 20 (or 22?) episode drama. Nobody really knows where this is all going to end up. I even suspect, given the reported short turnaround time between script and shooting in typical Korean dramas, that the writer herself is making changes on the fly.

The reason I am posting so much about Heirs, which I have never done before with any drama, Korean or otherwise, is that it is hitting certain buttons with me given my educational background and the type of work I used to do. I find Kim Tan quite horrifying as a character. He's scary, controlling, lacks impulse control, is prone to violence and, at the very least, a narcissist. I shudder to think of any young woman thinking what he is doing is somehow romantic. He's like a character out of a horror movie so Eun-sang's love of this genre is quite telling. To me, he appears like a monster dressed in a very pleasing Lee Min-ho package. I know that seems to be a minority opinion though. And I am familiar with conventions and stereotypes of the rom-com genre.

I really wanted to like Tan in the beginning. I thought he might be a nice boy but, as the episodes piled up, I just couldn't. Like I said, he's like several case studies from one of my university Abnormal Psychology texts wrapped up in 18 year old's body.

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@ Lindy12

I appreciate and enjoy reading your postings on the Heirs recap threads. Your perspectives definitely contribute to livening the discussion topics.

People have remarked that Heirs is boring, check your brain at the door, or that it doesn't have a plot. However, I have come to the conclusion that Heirs - mainly the writer Kim Eun-Sook - is daring us (particularly our conscience) as viewers to turn a blind eye to/and remain silent about some of the things we have witnessed during the past 14 episodes.

-Bullying
-Child Abuse
-Violence against girls/women
-Parental Abandonment
-Parental Pressure
-Arranged Marriage
-Pursuit of money/greed triumphing over parenting
-Ignoring or Denying the Suicidial Tendencies/Depression of a Child
-Hierarchical structures of class and status in society
-Social stratification (caste systems)
-Adultery
-Teenage Clichés
-Teenage Angst
-Advancing in Life based upon a "Lie" or Speaking "Truth" regardless of the consequences/fallout
-Wealth & Inheritance
-Family Legacy
-Poverty
-Charity
-Discrimination
-Snobbery
-In a relationship - What is Love?
-In a relationship - What is Pain?
-Stalking
-Obsession
-Feminism
-Male chauvinism and misogyny

**Not an all-inclusive list.**

The postings/comments on the "Heirs" threads bare witness that it is a constant struggle for many of us to just watch and blatantly accept what comes across the screen without reacting or questioning what we as viewers are witnessing, willing to tolerate, justify, deny, or overlook as we appease our kdrama appetite for eye-candy/beauty, Hallyu fever, or KPoP fanfare/idols.

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Man! Quite the list! And it really is all there in the show. I am so impressed by the writing on Heirs. I originally began watching it precisely because of the writer. I normally avoid teenaged romance based dramas. Just me but I find them boring.

Heirs is a drama about these issues without being an issues drama, if you get what I mean. There's a plot, there are characters, things are happening to these characters but there are no "talking heads" to tell what we are supposed to think about these things. I'm pleasantly surprised I'm enjoying it so much because I never expected this.

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@ Lindy12

"...Heirs is a drama about these issues without being an issues drama, if you get what I mean. There’s a plot, there are characters, things are happening to these characters but there are no “talking heads” to tell what we are supposed to think about these things."

Exactly. For better or worse writer Kim Eun-Sook has succeeded at making Heirs (AKA The Inheritors) a polarizing drama for so many people.

As fans of kdramas, it was a mistake to gloss over and underestimate the mantra/true meaning behind the full title of the show:

The One Trying to Wear the Crown, Bears the Crown – The Heirs
He Who Wishes To Wear the Crown, Endure Its Weight – The Heirs
One Who Wants to Wear the Crown Bear the Crown – The Heirs
Those Who Want the Crown, Withstand the Weight of it – The Heirs

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I understand the need to punch Young Do, but hit him with a chair? Seriously? Is that justified? What's he smoking?

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@cocoa, luzie...

Agree with you. This drama sucks. The plot is lame. The pace is boring. The characters are annoying of stupidity. People should call a cat a cat unless they are 13yo girls who become hysterical when they see LMH and PSH in a commercial.

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And those are the GOOD points :)

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:-)

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For this drama, I think CHOI YOUNG DO is deserve to be loved by cha eun sang..come on eun sang,can't you see that he loves you so much!
and I think that scene between eun sang and kim tan is getting boring, and i loves to see the scene between young do and eun sang more!!

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THIS.

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I thought that it was quite telling that CYD pushed ES to his back when KT was going to punch him. He was protecting her after causing all the trouble in the first place, so, so bizzare... and twisted...

I also feel that KT treats ES like a pet dog or an irritating little sister, "get out of here, I want to have a private conversation!" He's always yelling at her to leave that he wants to talk to these people alone. Is she a halfwit and cannot stay to watch conversations that are clearly about her? If I were her, I would tell KT to get a grip and that I'm not going anywhere. I'm glad she's finally taken my advice and grown a spine. LOL.

We just need to see more of it!

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Though I stopped watching the drama when I saw ES keeps weeping from the beginning of the eps 13, I wish there were a hope for DYD and ES together,,, then I might start watching the boring show again. The drama is insipid,,, I do not know the writer but if this show can get this high rating because it assembled hot guys and cute girls, then aspiring writers have some hope,,, you see, the key is to assemble the hottest guys and cute girls in the industry and write a story with cliche all over!!

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It's kind of funny how people are cheering for ES slapping Rachel lol Round of applause for those who are able to sit thorough this mess of a drama up until now XD

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I believe this is the first time Park Shin Hye slapped some b*tch in a awesomely cool way! Way to go! I love PSH to death but the roles she play tends to be passive and just don't stand up for herself...I'm glad Eunsang is standing up for herself (and her mom)!

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Rumoured Ending - Lee Min Ho will "undress" Park Shin Hye - really undress. Can't wait. I'm sure the viewership will hit 60%.

The undressing of the apron and hair string is just a snapshot of what the ending will be.

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In your dreams! This is a high school drama. There can be no actual "undressing", and no sex. Nuh-uh. Not happening.

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It eventually happened.In order to paint the hero/heroin??? better, the secon lead girl became an irrational revenge driven bitch, and everyone can feel happy when people belittle her, sneer at her, want to beat her and laugh at her, while the two golden boy are full of simpathies.

ABout the question that why is YD and Rachels action revolve around KT. That is because of the writers boner for him, she made everything revolve around him, and she tries to pretend he is better than he actually is. Like KT said numerous times that he is Rachels friend and she shouldn't have wanted more or YD saying KT didn't do anything wrong towards Rachel (I think it was the wrier saying that KT is oh so perfect, he is played by super LMH!...., don't judge him for the cheating, it is Rachel who is cheating?????, that is one superb logic).

Actually a friend is someone who completely ignores you and your calls, ditches you and doesn't even come to greet you at the airport in a forign land. Someone should tell me does the world "friend" means something like you are so insifigant to me that I will avoid no matter what in Korean? Anyway the fact that KTs shitty behavior is less called out really bugs me.
Like in this episode when he grabbed the chair or when he kicked over the table where the drinks were (what the hell was that, seriously, the only one who he hurt with that is ES, who has to pay if anything gets broken, and who is paying for the spilled drinks? KT doesn't have that much money right now...). Yet he is the perfec prince charming, and girls will swoon if there is a little music, lights etc for them....

Teem Study Hard and Ditch KT. For all the characters: ES, YD, Rachel. All of their lives will be better.

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KT. Ugh. I'm so glad that someone shares my feelings. KT is thinks of himself before anyone else. He's horribly selfish, controlling, and is an enormous hypocrite. At first I hoped the writer was being clever, and kind of trying to subvert our expectations of who the hero should be, and that YD was going to prove that he was the one worthy of ES's affections. But no. I'm SO disappointed in this drama.

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We still have a few episodes to go so I remain hopeful. I don't think Eun-sang should end up with Young-do either. The characters are 18 years old and have got a lot of growing to to before they end up with anyone. Tan is, as you say, horribly selfish, controlling, and an enormous hypocrite. He's written as a text book narcissist among other things. Everything is about me, me, me. It's Eun-sang who is giving the compliments to Tan. She's like the guy in the relationship and she's also spending her hard earned money on him.

It seems like in recent episodes Tan keeps upping the ante. He humiliates his father, both his moms, the young girl he's agreed to marry and her mother and it's because, boo-boo, he's tired of living a lie? He commits every sin in the bad boyfriend handbook and somehow it's cute to see Eun-sang finally agree to a relationship with him? He picks up a chair to brain a guy who isn't fighting back and somehow that guy deserves it?

Tan's character has gone well beyond the usual jerky romantic lead who gets the girl in standard Korean dramas in his behaviour. It has to be a deliberate choice on the part of the writer. Just how far does she have to go before viewers stop rooting for a guy who is clearly dangerous to end up with the heroine. I feel scared for Eun-sang.

Full disclosure: I assisted in battered women's group therapy sessions as a student. I heard some awful, awful stories. Yet I still watch, and like, some Korean rom-coms, jerky male leads and annoyingly passive female leads not withstanding. I tend to excuse some of the more egregious behaviour as due to culture differences. "Do you want to die" is said so much between people it seems like almost an expression of affection. And I don't speak Korean so I do suspect I am missing a lot of subtle cues as to what is really happening by not doing so. Sometimes it gets a bit much though, like with Boys Over Flowers, and these I stop watching because it's clear the hero, no matter how awful he is to the woman in question, is going to end up being The One. But some like The City Hall and the currently running Mi-rae's Choice are really delightful.

The character of Kim Tan goes well beyond that of the conventional asshole who gets the girl however. He's very realistically written as the kind of man a woman should NOT get involved with under any circumstances. He's like a train wreck. I want to see what happens and think Lee Min-ho is doing a wonderful job of portraying such an unsympathetic character.

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It's nice that someone actually roots for RH in here. IN all honesty, I find KT and ES character just plain flat. The writers spends so much time repeating this "push and pull" between them but I just see no spark. And that kiss right there at the end, man was it awkward.

Also spot on with the KT criticism. Man, why should RH deserve a slap? Okay, she might have disrespected ES' mom, fine. But man, this whole time she was supposed to be his fiance. That's more than just being a GF there, it's freaking marriage. Sure, KT expressed that he doesn't have feelings for her fine, but is RH not allowed to like him back even though it's a pre-arranged relationship? Maybe, she doesn't genuinely like him but still, this whole time KT was purposely ignoring and avoiding her, and even chase another woman right in FRONT of her, and this goes way back to LA too. She's not supposed to feel pissed about that at all? KT was one royal jerk to her even though she was being nice to him. But I guess since she slapped ES and she slapped her this time back, then it should be even.

As far as I'm concerned though, I would really prefer that YD and RH have their own separate love line. KT and ES just makes me cringe every time I see them. In fact, I'm only watching Heirs till the end just to find out what will happen to them. I don't even care about the main couple anymore.

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I like Rachel as well. She's spoiled, immature, behaves like a two year old who has lost a toy and thinks that because she's old money rich, she's better than everyone even slightly beneath her. She's like a little girl who has dressed up in her mother's clothing and thinks that makes her a big lady now. And Tan behaves miserably toward her. He's says they are friends but he has a pretty skewed understanding of friendship because it doesn't involve treating Rachel the way he's treated her.

I get why Eun-sang slaps her too. She's levelling the playing field. Eun-sang is now capable of defending herself and Rachel better conduct herself with this in mind from now on. Rachel has fallen for Tan and she's not used to losing. She wants romance and to be in love with her fiancee. The slap is a reality check.

Young-do tells her that what's happening is not Tan's fault because Rachel is the one who has broken the rules. He is telling her that, by becoming emotionally invested, she's lost sight of what their engagement really is; a political and financial arrangement concocted by adults with no place for emotions. He's telling her that she shouldn't care about Tan's relationship with Eun-sang because, according to the rules of their world, it's meaningless. I don't think she's exactly fulfilling the role of the standard 2nd female lead here.

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Yes, yes.

At least we are seeing YD change for the better little by little but what gets me is that KT is written as if he has already become this better person while YD was left behind being crazy and he now needs to emulate KT and move on from his evil ways.

KT is far from a knight in shining armor and I sadly don't think his personality is seen as something that needs to change further in the context of this drama.

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"...when he kicked over the table where the drinks were (what the hell was that, seriously,..."

Maybe this was another meta reference by writer Kim Eun-Sook to one of Lee Min-Ho’s past Kdrama characters – General Choi Young from “Faith.” It was one of the suspenseful action scenes in the finale Episode 24.

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For me this was the best episode so far.The last scene tugged my heart maybe because i never expected that's how the episode is gonna end.And as much as i'm happy for Tan and Eun-sang,i feel really sad for Young-do only because his look,the emotion,at that moment was the most human he has ever been, the most sincere,the most real.

Thanks for the recap,Girlfriday!Have a good weekend beanies!

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Hi there,just want to say. I'm a little bit disappointed at dramabeans for being not fair. I kinda get it that maybe you're one of Lee Minho's fan. But please don't make your words in this recap about YoungDo trying to do the good and right thing for EunSang as a joke. Like he's going to save Eunsang by letting himself die. It's a romantic line coming out of a jerk like YoungDo. You seem to being too subjective here, aren't you? I'm just saying, no offense i hope ?

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Sometimes I wonder if dramabeans and I are watching the same drama. I'd say it's much easier to be critical of KT than ED, but for some reason ED is always being derided as a jerk. KT was going to hit YD with a chair...I'm fairly certain that that is just as bad, if not worse, than anything YD has done so far in this drama. If ES wasn't there to stop him, he would have. Even if someone wants to claim that YD was violent in earlier episodes, he has grown and changed since. KT is suggested as someone who has 'matured' as a person by the writer of the show, but his behaviour honestly hasn't changed very much.

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YD said that he would have saved ES,so that she will feel guilty after that,and will end things with Tan.that was actually a selfish line,not a romantic one.he didn't said that he would save her because he loves her,he would do it for her to feel guilty.

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Omg last pic too cute!!!

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Enjoyed this ep tremendously!! But I wish ES would use some of that sass on KT whenever he barks orders at her. I swear I cringe every time he literally tells her to piss off. Perhaps she should tell him to "walk straight" the next time she's in a tough spot - see how he likes it then! And whilst I like some of their character moments, I wouldn't consider KT as being one of my favourite Kdrama heroes.

Having said that, I did like their conversations this ep, it was less repetitive and more meaningful in that there was a point to a lot of it. It helped to understand their characters better too and showed some progressiveness with regards to their relationship.

I still really like YD's character too - I honestly do think he's one of the better written characters. He played the rude boy so well and is doing well in these subtle moments too where you can see he's clearly lost.

Still don't know what to make of Rachel apart from that fact that she's a cow, but that's because the writers have turned her into one. Lol I see no other reason for her character other than being antagonising, which is a shame, because I'm sure there could be a lot more to her persona had they developed it.

And I really want to see more of Won, damn, he's one talent wasted that's for sure. It wasn't the most perfectly of balanced eps, but it was definitely a good one in terms of character development and stuff happening!! Hallelujah!

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Omomo, Bona and Chan Young have to be the most adorable couple ever! I ship them so much!
I'm starting to like Young Do too, it already started in the last 2 episodes maybe, but that was more on a hormonal level... and by the laws of kdramas, a change of hairstyle means a change of personality, so it means that Good Young Do is emerging. I'm anticipating it, though it's pretty clear he'll end up alone...

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That moment when Young Do recalled when he started to like Eun Sang. My heart.. waver..

I was not fan of Woo Bin, and I thought he had this scary and weird face. But..

He really shows what he really has. And I don't think if Young Do was played by some other actor which I believe would tend to act it stereotypically, Young Do character wouldn't work at all. But Kim Woo Bin has do Young Do more than what Young Do itself worth

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Haha..."scary and weird face". That's hilarious.

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Really, I'm following the episode postings just by looking at the pictures, and even I would have cheered if Eun Sang had "gone Nebraska" on Rachel. Even a good, hard fist to the gut would have served.

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Can you explain what you mean by Eun Sang had "gone Nebraska" on Rachel? Just curious about the expression.

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It's a line from 'The Big Bang Theory.' The boys are robbed, and Penny (Kaley Cuoco), who we already know to be tougher than any of them, a country girl, and a crack shot, wishes the guy had tried her apartment. Leonard says something to the effect that she would probably be in danger, but Penny proclaims, "No I just wanted to go Nebraska on him!" . . . while holding up an aluminum softball bat and taking a test swing.

If Eun Sang were real, I'd take up a collection to mail her a taser. There are so many people in that school who need their education furthered.

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Omg I loved it but I sadly cant see hyo shin alive throug it ! Why show whyyy !!

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Poor Young Do! You’ll be alright. Let KT have ES. One year from now, 5 years from now, heck 10 years from now, when someone mentions The Heirs, majority of the fans of this show and naysayers will remember this very poignant and illustrious character first before the remaining cast, at least for me anyway. Kim Woo Bin has made quite the impression on all of us, whether we’ve enjoyed or hated the character Young Do. I see big things for Kim Woo Bin, from here on…his star is going straight to the top. I can’t wait for his next project

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I agree with this. Young Do will be a memorable and interesting character we can talk about for years after the show ends, while Kim Tan and Eun Sang will be just another main couple of a teen drama.

Thanks to Woo Bin's talents to pull off the charisma and depth of personality out of the it. I have had a great time watching this boring, slow paced and overhyped drama because of you.

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Bona and chan young sooo cute. Cant wait to watch this episode. I have a lot more episodes to catch up.

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Still, the best thing of this show is Chan Young - Bo Na.

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By the way, I don't know why... but lately I couldn't help myself wondering that while we're all concerned for Hyo Shin suicidal tendencies and with the possibility for his suicide being a valuable but tragic lesson for the characters' parents; I can't help thinking that the tragic big twist will be Young Do jumping off the building. Calm down! I say this because of the way Kim Eun Sook has been writing the character lately. It's just a feeling. And I worry about him, because of his loneliness. I highly doubt this will happen, because we need him to reunite with his mother. I swear it's harsh and dark enough to even consider doing this to the Hyo Shin character, let alone Young Do. I would be pissed if she were to take that route...she will probably be virtually tasered, egged and stoned to death by Young Do fans and those who are indifferent towards the character LOL. Hoping for a 'not so sad ending' for YD and Hyo Shin!

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Additionally, I just wanted to make a point towards Girlfriday’s quote: ‘It’s strange that Rachel and Young-do’s lives both revolve entirely around Tan—whether they get to have him or not, whether they come first in his life or not—and they basically spend all their energy fighting for the right to be relevant to Tan.’ In all fairness, the only reason Rachel and Young Do’s live revolves around Kim Tan, is because the writer made it so; in fact every character’s arc is pretty much design to accommodate the Kim Tan character. And while you insist on the point that “they’d rather be Tan’s enemy than become irrelevant to him”, I think you’re being a little unfair to Young Do here. While I do believe that there is some truth to your point, Kim Tan also wants to rekindle his friendship with his ex BFF, just as much as YD does. If it weren’t for the fact that Tan has ES by his side right now, there would have been an even stronger need for him to reconnect with YD. Mind you, amongst the list of things Kim Tan often points out about his hard existence, is the loss of his friend.

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why worry it's hyo shin or even YD. Maybe for all we know it's Rachel. Rejoice when that day come. That bitch. Social status stinking in her head. Look down on poor, those with no status in society. Rachel enjoy that she has endless cash to treat people however she want, if they cross her, trash them, bash them, belittle them. At such young age, she's already capable of such thots & actions, when she's given full fledged power and position in her company in future, God knows what she'll do then.

Why such mean girl entitle to so much riches? Rachel just make the world a worst place with people like her. Worst still people support such behaviour that she's right behaving this way. What happen to society this day...*sigh*

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I thought this was a much improved episode. I like KT's emotional growth (however small) here but just wish he'd stop yanking CES around, it so deflates potential sexy times. Aigooooo.

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I m not sure whether it s part of Korean culture to differentiate people according to level of wealth to that extreme. And its very sad that their inheritors are acting so arrogantly as if it was so wrong for the poor to be born poor that they humiliated people openly. I believe it was how they have been brought up. What i ve seen in this drama is so extreme. And to make it worst its not only in one drama. Script writers will normally write according to the norms of certain society, aren't they? . They are portraying a very uncivilised society they are living in despite being one of the world economic giant due to an advancement in technological invention. A successful businessman would normally be a humble man and breed smart kids. How can any of them able to take over their entire corporations in future if they behave like that. Apart from Yoon Chan young the rest are business craps. While now is the era of business development to make your business grow, how can they still depends on marriage to grow business while you can always get financing from lisenced financial institutions to finance new project if you maintain good financial performance ? As long as their companies are listed in exchanged market there is no way the banks will reject their application unless its proven insolvent which is none shown in this drama. And how much does hotel and fashion marriage synergy can do???And one more thing, most business is about serving the customers/ client ,and how can they retain their customers if they don't have inter personal skill?

I just hope that this story is just misleading about the real behaviour of successful people in Korea as third Asian economic power. I thought by naming this drama inheritors i could see the smart kids grown up to take over their companies coming with so brilliant idea on how to expand business and all that. ( i like the character of inheritor in passionate love a lot.) In my opinion, this story is more appropriate if it was aired some 10 to 15 years ago.It is more chewable then.

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The story is EXTREMELY misleading about actual business practices, yet that same trope shows up often in k-dramas, not just this one. I came to the conclusion long ago that most drama writers are totally ignorant about actual businesses and anything to do with legal issues.

And yes, the status thing about wealth is also way exaggerated - of course it exists, in Korea more than most countries, but not nearly to the extent it is portrayed here.

The Cinderella story is very common in k-dramas, though in real life the chances of it happening are pretty close to zero. Just like in any society, people tend to marry within their own circles (because that is who they interact with the most) - so the chances of some Candy street vendor actually meeting up with some chaebol prince on the streets is less than zero.

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Really? And here I thought being a Candy street vendor was a sure fire way of meeting a rich chaebol heir. Isn't it one of the options in Korean High School Careers Day? Less than zero you say? Well, colour me disillusioned.

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I am really sorry for bursting your bubble :(

But you still have the option of becoming a handbag designer and meeting the prince that way.

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I don't get the handbag designer as a Kdrama career option for meeting a chaebol prince thing at all. Although professional one-night stand artists of the female variety often seem to get one from their partners so I guess it's a growth industry. I don't get that either unless the handbags are also stuffed with huge whacks of cash.

Maybe I'll just deliver chicken or Jajangmyeon instead. Even chaebols have to eat sometime.

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@ Windsun33
"But you still have the option of becoming a handbag designer and meeting the prince that way."

Most likely a reference to the 2013 Kdrama "Her Legend" starring Kim Jeong-Hoon (as Do Jin-Hoo) and Choi Jung-Won (as Eun Jung-Soo).

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Don't look to kdramas for realistic portrayals. They do use real incidents or situations for inspiration though (for instance, the CEO of Samsung was in fact sued by his siblings about 10 years ago, and the case still isn't settled) Actually, I think 90% of kdrama chaebol storylines are inspired by the numerous antics of the Samsung clan. Exaggerated for dramatic effect.
Though, I will say that even if things are exaggerated, this whole Chaebol thing is pretty unique to South Korea. I remember watching that documentary from awhile back, "Born Rich" (really interesting by the way) and I remember that the guy who made it, an heir to Johnson & Johnson, said that no one from the Johnson family actually worked for the company because his grandfather didn't want them to. He wanted to keep family drama out of the family business. Compare that to Samsung, that basically created all of these divisions that could be run by family members.

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There was also the case of an illegitimate son of a wealthy Korean family (can't remember which one) who was sent to California by his older half siblings to be adopted at the age of 5 or 6 when their father died. When he grew up, he sued in California, alleging that the siblings did it to remove him from his inheritance. Also that the whole thing was illegal and bribes were paid to get him out of the country quickly.

I don't know what ultimately happened but the siblings wanted the case to be heard in Korea instead of California. Probably it was quietly settled out of court as he wasn't asking for a lot of money to such a family. Like 5 million or something. I read about this in a California newspaper when I was on vacation a few years ago and can't remember if I have all the details correct. Now there is a plot line!

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That wealthy Korean family was Samsung, and as of 2012 it is still going on. Last I heard, in 2012 a sister had also joined the suit, but that might be a different lawsuit against Samsung family. In 2012 Chosun Ilbo said there were "over a dozen" inter-family lawsuits in progress within the Samsung heirs.

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Like I said, it's always the Samsung heirs!
That can be Samsung's new advertising tagline

Samsung: providing kdrama plots and the tv's to watch them on since 1938.

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This remind me of the Dickens novel, Bleak House, about an intra-family lawsuit which goes on for years and ruins almost everyone involved. A lot of Kdrama has a very Victorian novel-ish feel to me anyway. When Young-do tells Myung-soo that he "might have to die" a la Titanic for Eun-sang to keep her away from Tan, I thought of Sydney Carton going to the guillotine in the place of Charles Darney because he loves Darney's wife, Minette. "It is a far, far better thing I do, than I have ever done." Dear god! I hope Heirs doesn't end this way!!

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And the wife's name is Lucie Manette, not Minette, in A Tale of Two Cities. She is one of the prototypical Candies of literature. Did the Samsung family manage to keep the illegitimate son's case out of California court? Because such shenanigans are very frowned upon in North American courts.

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to Kikidee:

You made my day! I laughed at the tagline so hard.

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@ kikidee

Samsung: providing kdrama plots and the tv’s to watch them on since 1938.

So funny!!! Are you in advertising? Get that under copyright asap. Than you too might have a Samsung inspired lawsuit Kdrama of your very own.

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It's no wonder that Samsung has supplied so many plots for dramas when you see news reports like this (from Jan 2013): It all ends up at Samsung Life insurance and Samsung Everland, which is on paper a zoo and amusement park operator, but in fact owns a large chunk of shares in Samsung Group

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I think Samsung has been one of the most egregious in that regard, but others - like Hyundai - are not that far behind. But you are correct in saying that the chaebol factor is one of the main keys to understanding a lot of Korean dramas.

Chaebol are unique to Korea, and many were essentially "force-created" by the government after the Korean War to jump start the economy. That part worked, but now chaebols in Korea are probably just about as popular with the average citizen as the US congress is here - not withstanding the fact that one of the main goals of many of those "haters" is to get a job there :/

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Forgot to mention that Samsung has been the target of many lawsuits, and family fights have been going on for decades (and getting worse). Someone mentioned that a lot of the chaebol scenarios you see in dramas is based directly on Samsung, and that is correct. While many viewers are only interested in the romance, the real drama is in the scandals and business - for example: "Due to Samsung’s convoluted ownership, whoever controls the insurance unit effectively controls Samsung Electronics"

That fact was actually used in a recent drama where the rival siblings were trying to take over the insurance division of a company to get control.

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Who knew? So basically "Empire of Gold" (EOG) was a parody/retelling of the behind the scenes shenanigans of the Samsung & Hyundai Chaebol families?

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Everyone denies it, but the parallels are pretty convincing. While a lot of k-dramas go over the top on some subjects, given some of the things that chaebols have done in the past, it would be hard to exaggerate :D

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Ok, I'm still having problems with the ages of the characters. The entire story is for not because they still have at least one more year in high school. This means that they are still at home and essentially under their parents' control. Any resolution that is reached carries little significance because they are minors. Theoretically, the only real change that may come is at the school level but not for the individual lives of the characters. For me, this is sad and makes the show a bit challenging to watch because there's no real resolution. It's hard to think that I watched a show where a girl gets rag-dolled the entire series only to know at the end she returns to same hell she existed in for 20 episodes. But I guess the caveat is at least she'll have a handsome rich guy on her arm? All this is to say, I am waiting on baited breath for the conclusion and for me it needs to carry real weight. Eun-Sang and Kim Tan, with their mothers, moving away or something.

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I have to roll my eyes at almost every cliffhanger for this show -.- What you said before was right. This writer needed a context like this to release all her childish tendencies. Her characters are kids trying to do their best at what they feel is right.

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I was kinda impressed that Won stopped at the hotel lobby to talk to Tan even though Tan didn't see him at first. It was quite telling to my mind. He could have just walked past - but stopped to ask him what he was doing there and if he had a key to the room. It tells me that Won doesn't hate Tan as much as he pretends to and makes me question if there was another ulterior motive for sending him to the States.

I mean a brother who hates you, wouldn't warn you to be careful of a father who put a PI on your case. I just wish they would delve a little into the back story of Won and Tan and give us some more info.

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Won is protecting his lil bro so that the other money hungry, power hungry relatives don't come bashing his lil bro who's a illegitimate son if they find out. Won want to keep this secret as long as possible so that lil bro won't be hurt. Lil bro just enter into Kim family, Won won't want him to be scare away. Send him far away so that no one can touch him or contact him.

Firing those staff on KT side is actually not KT side. Won know those are not truly KT ally but it'll be dad side forever. Won won't want KT continue to be under their dad control anymore. Won know KT don't know how to fight yet. Won will start it, once and for all, for both of them, for their future, aja aja fighting Won. It's now or never. Since both bros already living together out of dad control and surveillance.

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At the end, did Kim Tan outed himself to his fellow classmates, or did he say it only to ES's ears?

I hope ES doesn't back peddle into her wishy washy self. I'm glad she gave Rachel a good smack. If I were her after taking all that crap from Rachel, I'd kick the bejeezus out of her around the block!

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