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Healer: Episode 17

We’ve got fun and thrills in store for us today, with the central Scooby gang united in purpose and out to pull off a caper. I love caper plots. It’s a dangerous game they’re playing, but our team goes all-out and heightens the already high stakes, sending the message to their opponents that not only are they not backing down, they’re willing to go on the offense. Bring it.

SONG OF THE DAY

Ji Chang-wook – “지켜줄게” (I’ll protect you) from the Healer OST [ Download ]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

 
EPISODE 17 RECAP

Jung-hoo runs from the scene of the crime—never mind the fact that it’s not his crime—and the image of him looming over the ex-cop’s body is foremost on his and Young-shin’s minds. It looks pretty damning, although we should all be grateful that the police don’t appear to have seen him.

At the scene, Moon-ho answers questions for the police officer and says that he and Young-shin were just passing by. The officer readily accepts their explanation.

Still reeling from shock, Young-shin sounds like she’s trying to convince herself more than anyone as she tells Moon-ho, “There would have been other people. There were, but I didn’t see them.”

Moon-ho ushers her into the car, but moments later she dashes out to retch in the street.

Jung-ho makes it home, where Min-ja informs him that the ex-cop, Park Dong-chul, died on the scene. He’s sure that Park was telling the truth about the tape of his father’s police statement, and tells ajumma about Park’s strange last words. In flashback, we see Park gasping out to Jung-hoo: “Three… nine… one.” It’s clearly important, but what the heck does it mean?

Adding to his problems, Jung-hoo has to deal with the fact that Young-shin was there. He throws his beer can at the wall in frustration.

At the cafe, Young-shin’s father and Pickpocket Ajusshi bicker about how to deal with the issue of their little girl dating. Ajusshi wants to bring Bong-sookie in for a sit-down chat, but Dad’s in favor of waiting until she’s ready to share.

Young-shin arrives with Moon-ho, whom she introduces as her boss. The men all bow to each other, and there’s a cute moment when Dad rises from his bow, but sees that Moon-ho’s still bent over and pops down for another one. Aw, Moon-ho’s being particularly respectful to the man who raised Ji-an all these years, and he asks Young-shin if they can’t share the full story now, “So I can pay my respects properly.”

HAHA, that sounds like he means bridegroom respects, and Dad struggles mentally to get the picture in order, wondering where Bong-sookie fits into all this. But before that gets too out of hand, Young-shin states without further preamble, “I found my birth mother.”

She tells him the facts as calmly as she can, about her birth mother being ill and her birth father having died, and gets increasingly teary-eyed as she apologizes to her father for not telling him sooner. But since Dad is the best dad ever, he just opens up his arms, and she steps into them as she cries.

Ajumma runs through all the possible meanings of 391, but they’ve got no leads. She notices that Jung-hoo’s not paying attention and guesses that he’s preoccupied with Young-shin and provides a common-sense and simple solution: Tell her what happened. Call her! She even logs off to give him some privacy.

Jung-hoo calls, and Young-shin nervously prepares a greeting before answering. But she answers just as he gives up, and they miss the connection.

His entry in her phone has gone from Park Bong-soo to Seo Jung-hoo, and now she edits it once again to read “That Person.” She doesn’t want to get him in trouble by revealing his name, and wonders, “What else should I hide for him?”

They both lay back in their respective rooms, having one-sided conversations to each other. She waits for his call, wondering if he’s okay. He, on the other hand, implores her to ask him everything she wants to know, so that he can tell her: “If you don’t ask, I can’t answer.”

Secretary Oh is let out of police custody, to his smug satisfaction and Detective Yoon’s aggravation. Thanks to his connections, he’s got lots of people vouching for his (false) alibi, and the police are denied a warrant. The police mole who’d poisoned Teacher is observing his right to remain silent, leaving Detective Yoon stymied for now.

So Detective Yoon goes to Moon-ho for more help, asking for an introduction to the very nice fellow who collected all that evidence and made the mole so easy to arrest. Moon-ho replies that officially, he has no idea what the cop’s talking about.

But Detective Yoon isn’t buying the act, and adds that there were quite a lot of people out and about looking for the dead guy last night—in particular a twentysomething young man wearing glasses and a hat with extraordinary fighting skills.

Jung-hoo makes his way to the dead cop’s room at a boardinghouse, which has already been ransacked, confirming that the baddies are in the hunt for the tape. He reasons that if Park kept the tape for twenty years but lived a semi-transient life, he wouldn’t have stored it here.

When Jung-hoo pulls out a bottle of soju from his pocket, Min-ja realizes he didn’t come here for the tape—he’s here to pay his respects to the dead. “This man turned out this way because of me,” he explains. Ajumma provides him with the etiquette for offering the dead a drink, and he follows along: sprinkle some, drink some, say something.

As Jung-hoo heads out of the building, he notices that he’s picked up a tail. He clocks the two men and the van that follow as he changes direction, and Jung-hoo asks Min-ja for suggestions on how to handle this.

But ajumma has some unsettling news to break, and leads with the warning to take a few deep breaths. First, Secretary Oh has been released. Furthermore, the tracker she planted on Young-shin’s phone is being used by an unknown source. Also, Young-shin appears to be heading for Moon-shik’s house, and Secretary Oh is there.

Okay, yeah that’s a lot of bad news to drop all at once. Jung-hoo grabs a cab immediately, and the stalkers’ van squeals out after him.

Young-shin arrives at the house to see Myung-hee, who is busily preparing a grand birthday spread for Ji-an, the sight of which makes Young-shin’s eyes fill with tears. She has to hold it together when Myung-hee smiles in welcome and takes the flowers from her, holding out a hand. She compliments Young-shin and calls herself a fan, and the tears spill over as Young-shin takes her hand.

To cover up her emotional response, Young-shin makes the excuse that she’s had a rough time lately and tends to cry easily. Myung-hee confides that she does too.

Of course, Secretary Oh’s around the corner to spy. He reports the scene to the Elder directly.

Young-shin shifts to interview mode as Myung-hee leads her to her room, and asks about her old pirate-broadcasting friends. Myung-hee sits her down in front of her photos and points out Teacher, and is surprised to hear that her husband already showed Young-shin this photo.

Myung-hee points out her first husband, and Young-shin hesitantly asks about him, concerned that talking about it will make Myung-hee ill. In reply, Myung-hee just hands over a call box and tells her to press the button if she gets ill, ready to talk anyway. Eager, even.

Young-shin asks if she can talk about the two friends who died in 1992. Myung-hee smiles up at her almost defiantly and says, “After more than twenty years, finally somebody asks.”

Secretary Oh has guessed that Young-shin came knowing the truth of her parentage, and warns the Elder that this is a volatile situation. The Elder reasons that Myung-hee will leave her husband once she knows the truth—and that would destroy Moon-shik. Since they’ll look ridiculous if they swap out their mayoral candidate again, they’ll have to protect Moon-shik.

And just as Secretary Oh is asking how to do this, he turns around and sees Healer standing right behind him. Ooh, chills. Great reveal.

Jung-hoo takes the phone out of his hand and says, “Hello, Elder. You’re the bad person giving orders to Mr. Oh in front of me, and Kim Moon-shiik ajusshi, aren’t you?” The Elder is so startled he can only gape, and Jung-hoo asks where he can come see the Elder to ask some questions.

In response, Elder just disconnects the call. Secretary Oh tries to inch away but Jung-hoo looms over him menacingly. Secretary Oh actually looks scared (not that I feel sorry for him) as Jung-hoo outlines his offenses, including killing his teacher and intimidating his mother. “If I let you live, you’ll keep doing this,” Jung-hoo says. “Killing people, hurting people, scaring people.”

Jung-hoo knows that police custody means nothing, and looks rather threatening as he tightens Secretary Oh’s necktie and muses, “If I kill you, I’d be doing a good deed, wouldn’t I?”

Upstairs, Myung-hee holds Young-shin’s hand and asks her to broadcast “our story,” promising to tell her everything she knows about that day in 1992. Young-shin readily agrees, but Myung-hee warns that it’ll be dangerous, because “the people who killed us that day are still alive.”

Young-shin wonders whom she means by “us,” and Myung-hee clarifies: “My husband Oh Gil-han, my friend Seo Joon-seok, my daughter Oh Ji-an, and me.”

Downstairs in the study, Jung-hoo sends books crashing to the ground, and Secretary Oh is practically beside himself trying to set the mess to rights. It’s actually funny in a pathetic way, and it prompts Jung-hoo to thank ajumma for preventing him from killing him—what a waste to become a murderer over such a sorry being.

Min-ja sends him the police sketch for the ex-cop’s murderer, and it bears enough resemblance to the Healer to know that they’re really going after him. Thankfully the sketch doesn’t actually look much like him aside from the telltale hat and glasses. Jung-hoo should really go for another look.

Jung-hoo finds paperwork on Moon-shik’s desk related to Teacher’s burial arrangements, which he first tosses away… until the three-digit number triggers a thought. He asks Min-ja what his father’s vault number is.

Myung-hee continues her recounting to Young-shin about that day in 1992: She was at home with her daughter, waiting for her husband to come home. Moon-shik called to warn her to run away immediately, because “they” were coming. So Myung-hee grabbed Ji-an and left home.

In the present, Myung-hee explains that “they” call themselves Farmers, because they believe themselves to be cultivating this nation through their efforts—planting crops, eliminating weeds, building their country. What an innocuous thing to call someone so pernicious.

Back to flashback: Young Myung-hee runs down the alley of their neighborhood carrying Ji-an, chased by men in suits. Myung-hee hides Ji-an amidst a pile of trash, under a covering. Frantically, she tells Ji-an to be silent and promises to come back for her. So Ji-an forces herself to be quiet while her mother runs in the other direction.

But these memories spark another episode and Myung-hee starts to convulse. Young-shin calls for the nurse and grabs Myung-hee in a hug, and even when the nurse takes over, Myung-hee makes sure to keep holding her hand.

While her mother is being treated, Young-shin makes her way down to the kitchen, looking at the birthday spread. She picks up one of the cookies and holds it close, full of emotion.

As she leaves the house later, Jung-hoo approaches cautiously, having waited by the road. The air is still strained as Young-shin explains that she just met her birth mother, and heard the story of how she was lost instead of thrown away. Myung-hee had been in an accident after hiding Ji-an, and when she woke up days later she was paralyzed. The last words she’d told Ji-an were not to make a sound, which must be why Young-shin didn’t speak as a child.

“I thought I was abandoned,” she says. “I must have been scared. That if I don’t smile prettily, if I ask questions they don’t want to answer, they might get sick of me. They might throw me away.”

“I won’t,” he promises her. So she asks, “Then can I ask?” He nods, “Of course.”

Young-shin asks, “Have you ever killed a person?” Jung-hoo answers no, and she says with a smile, “I knew it.”

With that, they fall in step comfortably, and now he shares his plan with her. Since he’s a murder suspect, he intends to find his father’s tape first, then the guy who framed him. Young-shin readily offers to help with that, although when he says he should see her Dad, that thought makes them both a little timid. LOL.

Then she sidles close to him and slides her hand into his pocket.

Moon-shik is called before the Elder, who informs him that missing persons cases are closed after five years—after that point, they’re essentially presumed dead. Moon-shik is startled when the Elder insinuates that he’ll make Moon-ho disappear without much fuss—despite his fame, people forget very quickly—and assures him that he’ll take care of his brother.

The Elder reminds Moon-shik that they’re about to kick off the next plan, and an ancient case can’t ruin their plans. Moon-shik understands, and repeats that he’ll handle his brother. At least this suggests he isn’t about to kill him, if the idea of Moon-ho actually disappearing upsets him.

Moon-shik is informed of the day’s events (and visitors) when he returns home, and is even aware that Myung-hee has been ordering listening bugs and calling Moon-ho behind his back. Far from being angry, however, he’s more worried that Myung-hee is upsetting herself and tells his secretary to leave things alone. He says things will return in due time, as though this is just a temporary blip.

Min-ja confirms that the number 391 corresponds to Jung-hoo’s father’s memorial vault, and how much do I love that the whole Scooby gang is in on the call? Moreover, they even seem to be enjoying the teamwork.

For instance, Young-shin pouts when Moon-ho suggests that she sit out this operation—she’d hold Jung-hoo back—but perks right back up when Min-ja counters. Aw for sister solidarity.

Jung-hoo cleans up Young-shin’s phone, then gives her instructions on how to act if he’s in danger of being apprehended (pretend not to know him). The show of concern is too cute for Min-ja, who chucks her headphones in disgust, though Moon-ho chuckles in amusement. I’m with him.

As they arrive at their destination and spot their pursuers’ van nearby, Jung-hoo makes sure she’s got the protocol for a fight: Close her eyes and wait while Jung-hoo takes care of it.

Jung-hoo and Young-shin walk by pretending not to notice the goons just sittin’ there in their car, staking people out, as you do. Young-shin pretends to primp using their window as a mirror, and while they avert their faces nervously, Jung-hoo sneaks around to spill tacks in front of their tires. Heh, so lo-tech but effective.

Jung-hoo instructs Young-shin to run, and she does. Then he knocks on the van door, opens it, and quickly snaps each of the goons’ faces using his glasses. Then he runs for it.

Dae-yong pulls up in a car and hands it off to Jung-hoo and Young-shin, who jump in and drive off. Back at the van, a poor goon crouches in front of his tires slowly picking up tacks, not wanting to risk a flat.

With the photos, Min-ja gets to work identifying the goons—and more importantly, whom they work for. She warns that it’ll take time, but the show is kind enough to let us know right away, taking us to a hi-tech situation room directed by Manager Ahn—the guy leading the Healer hunt for Jeil Newspaper. And all roads lead to the Elder.

Moon-ho receives a surprise visit from Min-jae, and her arrival has the office placing bets on her relationship to the boss. Most of those go to girlfriend.

Min-jae is in charge of ABS’s upcoming broadcast featuring Moon-shik, and has heard that Moon-ho is preparing his own corresponding broadcast. They both know that a certain Omega Holdings is Moon-shik’s financial backer, but she reminds him that he ought to know Omega is not to be trifled with.

Moon-ho recognizes the difficulty, but he isn’t cowed, and vows to turn Omega’s every obstacle into broadcast material. Seeing his stubbornness, Min-jae revises her earlier comment about Moon-ho only fighting when he won’t get hurt, saying that that’s the good method—it’s how you stay in the fight longer.

Moon-ho just replies with relish that these days he finds life quite interesting. In the past, he would wake up in the morning and sigh, “Must I get through another day?” These days, on the other hand, spur him on: “I think, ‘Great, what should I do today? What’ll the kids be doing?'”

Min-jae just looks more worried, saying that “those people” will always be above them, because regular people operate on common sense, but those in power are not thus bound. “You can’t win,” she says.

What’s scarier, the idea that she may be right, or the idea that he knows this? “But if I quit just because I can’t win,” Moon-ho returns lightly, “I’ll be embarrassed in front of the kids.”

Jung-hoo drives them to his father’s charnel house, while Dae-yong arrives at the Someday building and charges in to see Moon-ho without so much as a hello. The staff guesses that she’s another girlfriend, haha.

Jung-hoo and Young-shin make their way to the vault, and when Jung-hoo waves at the CCTV camera, knowing ajumma’s watching, Young-shin adorably sends her a hearty wave too. Despite seeing the goons arrive right behind them, Jung-hoo looks unconcerned and tells Young-shin not to look at them.

Jung-hoo reminisces about coming here with Teacher once, years ago. Affecting Teacher’s distinctive voice, he recounts his words: “Your father isn’t here. We don’t know where he is. But still, you should know which direction to direct your greeting. So let’s do it here, the greeting.”

And there it is: No. 391. Jung-hoo looks at the photo of his father’s smiling face and introduces Dad to Young-shin.

Dae-yong leaves the Someday office as abruptly as she came in, and Moon-ho announces to his team that they’ll launch their third broadcast shortly, based on the new information that just came in. They’ve gotta release it before anybody stops them, and the subject will be: The Truth About the Puppetmaster Pulling Kim Moon-shik’s Strings.

He already has one video prepared, and instructs his team to pull together a few more supplementary materials. Asked how long to prepare the broadcast for, Moon-ho replies that he doesn’t know how far they’ll be able to go. Hm, what does that mean?

Jung-hoo picks the lock to his father’s vault and feels around inside. Tucked behind the photo is a cassette tape, which he surreptitiously hands off to Young-shin, out of sight of the goons who keep a close eye from a short distance. She tucks it into her jacket and assures Jung-hoo that she’ll be fine.

Upon their exit, the pursuers close in on the pair. Min-ja gets on the phone and affects a hilarious girlish voice to send in a tip to the police: She heard gangsters planning to kidnap a girl with her own ears.

Interestingly, Jung-hoo adopts a Bong-soo-like meekness as he stammers to the gangsters, asking what they want. The guys demand the tape, and he asks naively, “If I give it to you, can we go?”

Seeing the patrol car pulling up nearby, Jung-hoo tells Young-shin to close her eyes, and she obeys. Quick as a flash, he knocks down as many henchmen as he can, then grabs Young-shin. He gets her safely to the police car, has her toss him the tape, and goes on the run. The gangsters chase.

Moon-ho begins his third live broadcast—so soon!—with the news of “one more lonely death.” He outlines the case of ex-cop Park Dong-chul, who heard the statement given by a murder suspect back in 1992, and links this broadcast to their previous one about Teacher, since the two key players were friends and pirate broadcasters. And curiously, Seo Joon-seok died while under police investigation, just as Teacher did.

Jung-hoo runs for a while, but finds himself (allows himself to be?) cornered and takes a punch to the face. Still in his Bong-soo-like facade, he chooses not to fight back, whimpering in fright instead. Promising to cooperate if they don’t use violence, he hands them the cassette case, which happens to be empty.

That earns him another punch, and now he cowers and begs to meet the Elder, offering this tape and also the “LA video” (featuring the Elder) in exchange. He also has a message: The Healer wants to join the Elder.

Moon-ho’s broadcast continues: At the time of Seo Joon-seok’s death, the newspapers called it a suicide, one prompted by guilt over killing his friend. But Park Dong-chul revealed a different story, and we hear it with our own ears as a recording plays.

It’s from Jung-hoo’s conversation with him at the church, and it looks like Min-ja is manning this part of the broadcast from her hacker station. Park explains the discrepancy in statements and the way he was stripped of his badge for reporting the breach of ethics within the police department.

Jung-hoo is dragged to the Elder’s home, his glasses taking note of each face standing guard outside. He gets shoved into a room to await the Elder.

Moon-shik is alerted to the broadcast and tunes in just as Moon-ho reveals that Park Dong-chul safeguarded Seo Joon-seok’s true statement. It’s awfully suspicious that Park died after talking about it, like somebody did it to silence him.

And then, Moon-ho pulls out a tape. Omo omo! How’d you get that, you sneaky magician.

But before proceeding, Moon-ho pauses, like he’s waiting for a signal. Min-ja also pauses with her finger over the keyboard, awaiting the cue. Then Jung-hoo looks toward the door and says, “It’s coming,” and she hits the key.

At that, Moon-ho resumes, saying that one of his Someday reporters has made his way to a particular home, belonging to a man called the Elder. Holy shit, are you going to broadcast Jung-hoo’s wiretap? That is ballsy, dude.

Oh, even better: There’s video feed, coming from Jung-hoo’s glasses. The broadcast captures the door opening, and Jung-hoo rises to his feet to greet the Elder. A guard darts in front of the old man to cover his face and whispers a warning. But it’s too late, the money shot has been had, and Jung-hoo smiles.

 
COMMENTS

Yes, but how are you going to get out of there alive, Jung-hoo, tell me that! You impressed me with your tricksy maneuver, but please tell me an exit plan is part of the master scheme? Because I can’t see how the Elder is going to hear about this broadcast and not kill him, either to silence him or just because he’s pissed off.

But yes, it’s a clever plan, and one whose parts are hidden while you’re watching the show, only to come together at the last minute like a mechanism locking into place. At first I thought Jung-hoo’s plan was merely to get to the Elder, but upon looking back at the episode it becomes clear that the Scooby gang sprang quite the elaborate trap, and that every bit of it was choreographed. I’m assuming that Dae-yong must have gotten the real tape first, before she handed off the car, and what Jung-hoo took out of the vault was a decoy. You wonder why she couldn’t have just gotten it in the first place, except that getting the tape isn’t their only goal—it’s a twofer, and Jung-hoo needs to take down the Elder too. The tape on its own isn’t enough, and this is the only way he can get both.

The writing is quite tight in this episode, and even more so when you go back hunting for clues to how the pieces fit together. There are little comments strewn throughout that hint at the endgame, but only become apparent in retrospect, which I enjoy. If a twist truly comes out of nowhere, it’s not satisfying because we need to feel that it was a natural part of the story, not just some random left-field occurrence—you need to lay groundwork in order for a twist to pay off, but that always runs the risk of giving away the goal too early and ruining the climactic reveal. So I appreciate having clues built in that reinforce but don’t spoil the payoff, like Moon-ho’s fixation with the need to attack with a live broadcast. I thought, in the moment, that he was a bit obsessed with the live aspect of the broadcast—what’s the big deal with a live broadcast when you prepare the parts in advance? And then I saw that he meant holy-shit-live, I-mean-catch-you-with-your-pants-down-live, with the video feed coming in as it occurred, and suddenly his comment about not knowing how long the broadcast will take made a lot more sense.

I’m relieved that the murderer misunderstanding was resolved with relatively little angst, because honestly this couple has already weathered more meaningful angst. To subject them to this kind of misunderstanding would have felt overly simplistic given the lovely developments they’ve experienced thus far, and it’s therefore gratifying to have the situation cleared up with a simple exchange: Did you do it? No? Okay we’re cool. It’s instances like this that make me think that this couple will be fine as long as they communicate; the trust is there, but there’s only so much you can do when one side won’t talk.

Seeing Young-shin drawing Jung-hoo out of his shell and getting him to communicate with the world again is really one of the most satisfying growth trajectories for me. It isn’t that she’s teaching him to be a wholly different person, but more that he’s always been a caring, affectionate, thoughtful person, and his circumstances have forced him to shut that part of him down. So it’s an awakening of sorts, as the true Jung-hoo wakes up from hibernation and rejoins the land of the living.

A throwaway line (or is it?) line that felt sweetly meaningful was the way Young-shin changed her cell phone log to “That Person,” which is the vaguest of her myriad ways of referring to Jung-hoo. In this instance it’s specifically done to hide his identity, but I like to think it’s because it’s not so much his literal name that matters to her, but his place in her life as that person.

I find myself looking forward even more to Myung-hee’s eventual reunion with her daughter, because her attitude when speaking to Young-shin bespeaks a stronger woman than she is credited with being. I don’t blame Moon-ho for being afraid of sending her over the edge because her seizures are frightening, but I love how matter-of-fact she was about her illness and how little it stopped her from talking anyway. And it did seem that she reacted less violently with Young-shin around, which is promising.

The mother-daughter reunion brings to light another interesting point for me, and made me revisit the idea of Moon-shik’s culpability. We know he’s committed a number of crimes (and very willingly so), but Myung-hee’s latest flashback made me reconsider the possibility that he wasn’t perhaps as selfish or guilty in the moment as we have been led to believe. When we were told previously that Moon-shik made his deal to save Myung-hee, I assumed that he in joining the Elder, he got money and doctors and access to the best treatment, saving her life in a sort of roundabout way. But if “they” had gone after Myung-hee immediately after killing her husband, it sounds like she’d been marked for death—in which case Moon-shik literally saved her life. And in that case, it’s kind of like he sacrificed his soul for her life, which is a lot harder to condemn.

None of that is meant to absolve him of the crimes he’s committed since, which include having his former best friend killed, but it’s an interesting surprise to find reason to reevaluate a character at this late stage. It adds a shade of complexity to his motivations, and comes at a moment when I’d been ready to write him off as a plain villain. And that makes me happy.

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Ahem ahem, * clears throat*, we need 300 volunteers to make one comment each, or a couple of beanies to make a lot of comments to bump up this poor thread for episode 17. So who is with me? :D

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I am reporting in ^^

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Here captain

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aye aye captain! ready for the mission

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Hiii! *waves enthusiastically*

I can't say this amount of comments is poor, but yeah Healer can always do better.

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HI TurkishRose! :D

Reporting for duty here :)

I'd say this amount of comments is pretty good for any drama, but I guess for Healer it can be better - hence this is where us Beanies who have been lurking but busy come to join in to support :D

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@to the great volunteers, muchas gracias senioritas ;) let's do this :)

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Yippee! Let's do this girls!! *serious face* :P

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and flexing my fingers ready to type :)

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@late watch thank you, it never gets tiring to read other opinions and analysis on this episode. Beautiful from start to finish :)

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yep, i've been like googlingfrenzy when ever an ep of healer finish airing. I really curious about other's take about the thing, would they also share the same sentiment as me or not.

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Yes it's so much much to read everybody's take on the same situation !

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Thanks @latewatch! :D

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Yeah, enjoy these commentary! :)

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I wanted to remind everyone to please vote for JCW on http://100479.net/ranking/?code=vote2
A new week just started and if everyone votes everyday we may be able to get him #1 for this week. A parting gift for the end of Healer (I cant believe it is ending this week T_T)

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For those with weibo accounts, please help with this
http://ji-chang-wook-for-you.tumblr.com/post/109682903513/if-you-have-a-weibo-account-you-can-use-it-to-log

JCW is actually only 1k votes away from first place

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Dont forget to participate in the Healer survey Fan Project which will be send to the Healer's writer and production staff ^^
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1neuHB0Unak4t2mgHmvoWxqprmlNIPSqkrwfuFDv-qXs/viewform

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Done he's on second place

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Done just voted. He's in second place now with 41k+ votes whole Park Shi Hoo is leading with 118k+ votes. Wow korean audiences must like Park Shi Hoo a lot...

#whotheheckisParkShiHoo

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@meniscus he was the actor in prosecutor princess and I just read a year Back he was charged with sexual assault .. Say what ?

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@meniscus @sumee I can't for the life of me understand why he is leading the votes, unless no one else knows about the poll except his fans lol :) but I wish jcw to lead all polls, he simply deserves it

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More shockingly is that his last drama Alice In cheongdamdong is currently ranked first in the dramas poll. Who's voting on this. Healer is third behind Pinocchio. *shakes head*

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I know right, it is shocking! Whats up with korean audiences? Alice in Cheongdamdong is not that highly rated amongst international audiences. I wonder who actually votes in this poll...only PSH fans?

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@meniscus
yeah i think they are really trying to support him bc of his scandal. So they try very hard to vote and he was pretty popular

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ah thanks for explaining @nutella, that made a lot more sense now. That's nice, at least he's got supportive fans out there still supporting him even after his scandal :)

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Tsk Tsk, how the hell is Park Shi Hoo leading? Now I don't think I can take this poll seriously...

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@nutella a greattt way to show our support thank you for the links, you should also repost them in ep.18, just in case no body else sees it here beside us humble volunteers lol.

The only one I couldn't do is the bouquets one. I simply can't see where I would click to sign in with my weibo account. Can't understand anything there lol. So please help :)

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You can also vote for the drama! It's at the bottom with Youn-shin on it. 힐러(KBS2) http://100479.net/ranking/?code=vote8

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Just voted, Healer is ranked 3rd place just after Pinocchio. !st place is that Park ShiHoo drama. Seriously are there only PSH fans voting here? I mean I looked up Cheongdamdong Alice on mydramalist and the ratings there aren't even that good...?

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do not watch Cheongdamdong Alice, it was one of the worse dramas ever (imo -_- i just didnt like the female character and other stuff)

He was in the Princess' Man or something like that which did really good. I have only heard good things about it but it looks too melo for me

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Ah thanks @nutella - I was wondering whether it was worth watching but after reading it on mydramalist I wasn't too sure. I may watch princess man though. thanks again :)

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Loved the scenes with Myung-hee and Young-shin together.

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yep @helenya, i really love the mother and daugther too! there's a comfort there, even MH still in the dark that this beautiful young lady before her is actually her ji-an.

I couldn't wait for her to find out, man, i must be gonna cry a bucket

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The scenes were so touching and heart felt ..great acting too

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I love them too, those scenes made me cry a lot - so touching :')

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Can't wait to see Myung-Hee's reaction whe she discovers that YS is her daughter.

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I hope she won't die as others have put it. I think she will be very happy to find out that all these years YS have been alive. What may trigger her seizure is knowing that YS was physically abused when she lost her daughter, but I'm hoping that with YS being there with her when she discovers the truth, YS can reassure her that she grew up in a good family.

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Me too! I can just picture her being slightly in shock but soon transform into the happiest mum and in tears. But I hope she'll discover it through KMH or YS herself...I do not want one of the bad guys break her this news. *shudders*

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@fab awww I can picture this scene too :)

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Just i case nurse needs to be there during the great reveal, but I really believe that Myung-Hee will be alright as soon as JS hugs her. :)

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I think you're talking about Young-shin/Ji-an. :D
And yeah, MH will be fine as long as her daughter is by her side during the revealation.

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@hwaiting

My take on that is YS and MHee are very alike. Where YS finds comfort in JH and calms down from her panic attack, it looks like MHee finds comfort in YS. So her hugs subconsciously calms down her seizure. Which is pretty amazing, since she must find some kind of connection with YS without knowing who YS is.

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No more nurse needed (hopefully) for MHee and no more pills needed for YS. Would that not be great for the ending?

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I hope so,given how,serious Myung Hee condition is.

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Just read the recap again to avoid writing any spoilers. Very important LOL.

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Yeh DB says it's a spoiler free zone ! It's better if we don't mess with her !

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I know! She kinda told us off...rofl. :P

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Lol she kinda did hey in the odds and ends but in a nice way :)

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@fab

I often get mixed up when writing comments in previous recaps if I had watched all recent episodes lol....so yes I'm being careful too!

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There's one thing that's been bugging me about this episode. The dead police officer who took Seo Joon-seok's testimony. I can not believe he actually blamed him for getting fired from his job while SJS is obviously a victim as well. He saw evidence that he is innocent and he himself complained about his superiors who forged the statement and as a result got him fired. So all in all it's really puzzling how he held a grudge against Jung-ho's dad, and still trusted those same people that ruined his life in the past. He was honourable so I feel sorry for him; going from one day being a respected policeman to a jobless lonely man who lost everything and was never able to get back on his feet again. So sad.

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Haha @fab good observation! it's like these two have switched mothers figures between their dramas. So funny how PMY/KMK and JCW/DJW ended up in the same drama!

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Nice! I didn't even noticed, thanks for pointing that out :)

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@latewatch thank you! I downloaded this song yesterday. JCW's voice is so mesmerising ♥ I feel so enchanted listening to this all day :)

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Couch Kimchi's review for the week.mI think he got confused:

http://couch-kimchi.com/2015/02/05/healer-week-9-its-better-without-subtitles/

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Lol thanks for sharing this @latewatch :D

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i guess i understand where they are coming from but I think from JH and YS they just wanted to prove to themselves that his dad was not involve in killing YS's dad more than anything else.

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@latewatch omg thank you that was brilliant :)

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I love how well they had written in YS getting lost as child.
We know she did not talk for long time, she did not talk even when MS found her for first time.

It would have been easy to write it as a result of trauma of being abused as a kid, but SJN went one step further and linked it psycologically to what her mom told to her as the very last thing!

And I liked when adult YS finally came to terms with that!

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And also I totally get how upset Myung Hee actually is with losing Ji An, I always thought it was a result of something else, but here I can see why she feels so guilty. When stuff like this happens, even though its no fault of their own, we imagine all the ways we could have done differently.

Poor MH, she has been living with that guilt for all these years!

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@Divyrus

Agree...MHee lived all this time feeling guilty of losing her daughter. She did it to protect her daughter so that the bad guys will not get their hands on her daughter but what breaks her more is I think due to her promise to come back to her daughter. She got badly injured and Ji An must've been through so much that she shuts off her childhood memories.

It's true that SJN could've went the easy route and wrote off JiAn not being able to speak due to trauma but it was a promise to her mother that JiAn does not talk. JiAn must've kept her promise and MHee couldn't hence all the guilt. Plus as a mother, it's really hard to go through MHee went through her. So I'm not surprised that she's having seizures every time she thinks of her daughter. SJN is truly talented in bringing us such a thought out story from beginning to end. Let's hope the ending/final episode holds true to this and will not disappoint us. I don't want to see any open-ended endings but a complete happy ending - all these characters deserve it!

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@@Divyrus @meniscus, I actually loved that, how well accepting young shin was in accepting her mother's story of what really happened. It was so incredible hope they linked the psychological aspect of the story to the reason behind her not talking. Incredible story telling :)

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I'm trying to convert my sister to Healerism, but I believe she might think I'm a psycho lol. So hard to not squee in real life when I'm going crazy here over this amazing show :)

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BAM 1000 comments now! YAY :D

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Woohooooo we did it, well you did it majorly ;) the award definitely goes to you guys :)

Now we can finally go back and join the other party in room episode 18 ;)

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haha same here I'm trying to convert my sister into watching Healer but unfortunately not working so great. She's not that convinced LOL

No worries :) was fun commenting I guess! Will join you guys over at 18 later, I'm gonna take a break from all the typing. I've been typing for the entire day (damn you thesis!!) :)

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@meniscus oh well I guess we can't have the good of both worlds lol, we shall be stuck by ourselves enjoying this show then ;)

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Good job Healer sisters! I had to go the sleep, I was beat... *hangs head*

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Question: I participated in that Healer survey on the google docs (twice) where you type in your country but I have no idea what it is for LOL can someone explain the point of it to me?

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@ dramapenchant and helkwo

It was for SJN. Her agent? manager? set it up to garner info on how far and wide international fans are spread and the number in each country. So that poll was to get a feel of us. :)

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@GB Thanks for the response! Hmmm I don't really see how that would truly gauge the amount of love and support that Healer is getting among international fans.

It looks like there have been about ~3000 responses but I'm confident that more people than that are absolutely loving Healer.

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I participated in it as well but I have no idea what it was for.

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Wow you gals are awsomeeeeee..you all crossed 1015 comments ... Bows to your dedication all of you !
JB would be thinking these gals have so totally lost it !
I just can't imagine what she is thinking about all this ! Lol ;-)

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@Sumee

Hehehe I don't think Javabeans would be surprised anymore since this has been happening since episode 8 of Healer. Mind you her inbox has definitely been flooded today with us Healerites :D

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I'm so proud of beanies!!last time i check this thread this morning (i'm in gmt+7) it was still arounnd 800ish, and when i got back here to pay my deed, and boom, it's 1000ish already!healer really do something to us ^^

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@helkwo, @sumee, @@redsun yes good job to all those who participated lol, I think meniscus takes the crown though ;)

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@TurkishRose thanks :) as Javabeans once said in her Odds and Ends, it's "the power of the squee". It's not necessarily an increase in readership (although DB is gaining more readers for Healer lately), it's more on the fact that existing readers (like me) who usually lurks feels compelled to comment, and we're just overly excited that a great show like this has come to unleash our commenting powers ;)

You gotta give praise to a show that's able to de-lurk a lot of readers like me out there. We're all just happy to sit and read, never bothered to comment. Kudos to Healer and its production team. They are one awesome bunch to bring us such an incredible story ♥

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@meniscus, true sweety. Like you said it's the power of Healer to delurk many of us. I was also a long time lurker here in db, and it's fascinating that it has become this abode where I'm able to connect with such great people like you.❤ ❥ ♡ ♥ ღ

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+1

Yep very true @TR :)

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I'm glad that I'm able to connect and meet with great people like you too dear :) It's been a pleasure meeting all of you lovely bunch ♥♥

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:)

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Thanks @latewatch! :)

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Wow this is amazing, last time I left this thread there was only 697 comments (and it stayed like that for a while). Now I came back to 1000+ comments?? Thanks to all those who commented - it comes to show how great and supportive Healer fandom is for this show. This episode was one of my favourites so it weird that there wasn't much comments. Now I'm glad to see I'm wrong :)

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I dont understand one part, when Secretary was caught, the TV showed a scene of him and Moon-shik entering some builidng. What building is that?

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Ok, this is a totally random comment, but does anybody else kind of feel like Secretary Oh would make an awesome drag queen? Why are his lips so red? Hate him tho.

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This show is forever love for me ?❤️

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I am here Healer, always ready to cheer !!! for you <3

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Love HEALER the best

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