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Warm and Cozy: Episode 11

At long last, after weeks of backpedaling and denial, there are true moments of growth and revelation. It’s not even my birthday, but we get a two-for-one deal as both brothers kick things up on the swoony scale, and even take some steps toward maturity. Well, mature is a relative term in this family, but let’s not nitpick when we’re subsisting on breadcrumbs here.

 
SONG OF THE DAY

Sonnet Son – “널 위한거야” (It’s For You) for the Warm and Cozy OST [ Download ]

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EPISODE 11 RECAP

After the kiss to prove that he’s still got the upper hand, Gun-woo smirks to see Jung-joo’s eyes closed and says that she lost. URG. *stompity feet*

He tells her to throw his rose away in the trashcan properly, and leaves her reeling. He goes upstairs and seems to regret his actions, not that I actually give him credit for understanding what an assy thing he just did.

Jung-joo picks up the pink rose that Gun-woo left behind and snaps it in half with determination. And then when Gun-woo comes downstairs a little while later, he finds her eerily sharpening a knife, set to a horror soundtrack and looking like she’s ready to butcher the first thing that moves. I hope this is his conscience talking.

He tries to scurry away, but she calls him over for a drink. At first it’s unclear what she’s doing, but then she slides over a glass of red wine seductively, and warns him that she doesn’t do things half-assed—she goes all the way: “Let’s go all the way tonight.” Lol, is she propositioning him or threatening him?

He laughs nervously and asks if that’s really necessary, and Jung-joo leans in close: “Then you shouldn’t have touched me when I said I was enduring.” She then proceeds to do everything in her version of sultry, which for some reason involves perching on the counter and posing so stiffly that Gun-woo has to help her out. He chuckles, finding her antics cute. How could you not, really? She’s hilarious and adorable.

She declares that they’ll see an end to things tonight: Either she’ll eat him alive, or he can run away forever. Okay, and then I die laughing, because she needs his help in order clear enough counter space to lie down across the bar, and can’t figure out what to do with her legs once she’s on it. I’m gonna have to watch that again.

She didn’t throw away the rose after all, and sticks it between her teeth to give Gun-woo her best come-hither look. And she actually motions for him to come hither, in case he’s not getting it. I don’t know what’s funnier—that she thinks this is seductive, or how bad she is at it.

She breaks her seductress character to tell Gun-woo that she’s not going to let him think of her so lightly anymore, and that she plans to make him all kinds of uncomfortable, with winks and kisses and finger guns thrown his way without warning.

He smiles and tells her to do whatever she wants but at least get off the counter while doing it, and her voice gets shaky as she threatens to take this upstairs. Gun-woo tells her that she needn’t sharpen her knives (metaphorically, though of course in a Hong sisters drama, she was literally sharpening knives), because he’s the one who lost earlier.

He admits that he was angry to see the person he treasures and looks out for going on a date with another man, and confesses that he crossed the line. Jung-joo says that she can handle him not returning her feelings, but can’t handle being thought of lightly, and Gun-woo swears that he doesn’t, and has always cherished her.

He throws his hands up in surrender and says that he’ll forfeit tonight’s battle and go sleep elsewhere tonight, and Jung-joo tells him that she won’t jump his bones so he can go upstairs and sleep.

He whirls around and leans in close: “Do you think I can just go to sleep right now?” He taps her on the forehead with the rose and walks off with a knowing smile. What, how is she supposed to get over you when you do stuff like this? Bah.

Jung-joo tries to decipher Gun-woo’s words and wonders if that means he was jealous, but then her thoughts float back to Ji-won’s declaration that she’s going to accept Gun-woo now. She takes out her contract for Warm & Cozy and sighs that this needs to go away in order for that to happen.

Gun-woo runs into Ji-won at the hotel that night, and he’s taken aback by her sudden sweetness. She asks after his injured hand and asks whether Jung-joo told him what she said.

Gun-woo has no idea, so Ji-won spells it out: She’s going to accept his feelings, so she wants him to change for her and sell the restaurant so they can go to Seoul. Ugh, I was gonna skip the ughs this time around, but: UGH.

Gun-woo ponders the sudden change in Ji-won and asks noona if she said something to prompt it, and noona admits to telling her about his inheritance from their uncle. She wonders why he didn’t mention it earlier when he knows what kind of girl Ji-won is (and here I am wondering why they even still speak to her if they know this), and she pushes him to sell the restaurant and move on: “You’re not going to do that for the rest of your life, are you?”

Jung-joo crunches numbers in her savings account and meets with Mayor Wook the next day, and Poong-san overhears them discussing a different restaurant. It’s the other neighborhood place that’s looking for someone to run it in the owner’s absence, and Wook tells her she just needs to decide by the end of the month. Jung-joo asks for some time to figure out how she’ll wrap things up here and end things with Gun-woo.

Gun-woo gets dressed up with hyung and noona to go meet their uncle, and noona sighs that she can’t leave Jeju with Jung-geun being such a sad sack over his relationship and Gun-woo refusing to sell his restaurant. Gun-woo is surprised to hear that even hyung gets dumped by women. Uh, if you saw how he behaves around them, you wouldn’t be so shocked.

Gun-woo tells them about visiting Mom’s grave recently and finding a bouquet of flowers there, and says that they might be from his father. He worries that it’ll cause them trouble if Dad comes around, but assures them that he’ll handle it on his own. Hyung and noona worry for Gun-woo, and hope that his father doesn’t come around. Jung-geun sighs that accepting a con man who killed someone isn’t going to be easy for Gun-woo, and noona mentions that she heard that the wife of the man who died still lives in Jeju. Jung-geun guesses that she must’ve had a hard life.

Hae-shil is sick but refuses to go to the hospital, figuring that she’ll just work through the pain. She sighs that she’s being punished for plucking something out of the ocean that wasn’t hers, and that she just has to get her head on right.

A woman walks into Warm & Cozy with tear-filled eyes and beelines right for Jung-joo, claiming to be her mother. When Gun-woo comes home, he asks if that woman is really her mother, and Jung-joo shows him the picture of her as a baby with her parents. It seems to be true. Poong-san tells him that Jung-joo’s mother just returned to the country and is wealthy and wants to make up for lost time. Jung-joo goes to meet her mother for a meal, and when she exchanges numbers with Mom, she sees that the last numbers are her birthday. Mom says that all of her passwords are Jung-joo’s birthday because she didn’t want to forget.

Back at Warm & Cozy, Poong-san muses that Jung-joo’s life has totally changed—now she has a rich mother, things are going well with the mayor, and she even has a new restaurant to run. That’s news to Gun-woo, who frowns to hear about the mayor setting her up with a new job.

Mom seems disappointed to learn that Warm & Cozy isn’t Jung-joo’s restaurant (red flag!), and suggests that she take her deposit out so that Mom can set her up with a new restaurant of her own. When Mom runs out to take a phone call, Jung-joo accidentally spills her water and opens Mom’s wallet to wipe it down, and is touched to find their family picture tucked inside. But Mom’s phone call seems shady and urgent—she tells someone that she’s meeting her right now and to wait just a little longer.

Gun-woo is lost in thought over Jung-joo possibly leaving, and Ji-won has to snap him out of his reverie with tickets to a musical and plane tickets to get there. He tells her that he can’t just leave Jung-joo and Poong-san in the lurch, and Ji-won asks why it matters if he’s just going to sell the restaurant.

Gun-woo points out that he never made that decision, and Ji-won asks if he didn’t meet with his uncle in order to change for her like she asked. He tells her honestly that he has no plan to inherit his uncle’s business, nor does he have the talent or inclination to do so. He tells her in no uncertain terms that there’s no chance of him changing the way she wants him to.

Ji-won is taken aback and blusters that she’s not asking him to change right this instant, and asks if he’s at least going to sell the restaurant. He says that that’s up to Jung-joo, since they have a contract. Ji-won whines that Jung-joo isn’t dying, so she could keep the place for life, and Gun-woo says she can but doesn’t know what she’ll choose to do.

Jung-joo tells Wook that she could argue that the contract for Warm & Cozy holds for the rest of her life, because Gun-woo would tell her to keep it. Wook grumbles to hear just how rich Gun-woo is, but Jung-joo says that now her circumstances have changed, and Gun-woo doesn’t need to feel sorry for her anymore.

She comes home that night, arms full of bags from a shopping spree with Mom, and asks Gun-woo return her deposit so that she can buy a place of her own. He wonders why she’s in such a rush, but she says that she has a place picked out and Mom is going to help her buy it.

Naturally Gun-woo does the dumb thing and says it’s such a relief that she’s found someone else to take care of her so that he doesn’t have to feel bad for her anymore. But then he starts reaching for excuses, wondering if she doesn’t need more time to sort out her feelings for him: “What about the balloons?”

She says that there are only a few left and she can just keep those as memories, and shoots down his suggestion that she’s got a few stray balloons hidden away somewhere.

Hae-shil has to attend a committee meeting at Jung-geun’s hotel for the diving festival, and waves off Wook’s worry about her health. She runs into Jung-geun on her way in, and he’s predictably petty about her never coming here again; he even threatens to pull his support for the diving school’s functions if she doesn’t start sending someone else.

He points out that this is what he’s really like, and that he planned to give her the black pearl just to take it away from her all along. She just replies that she made the right choice then, which seems to deflate him even more. But then he notices her coughing, and suddenly anger turns to worry. He hovers around the conference room and peers inside to see how Hae-shil is doing, and orders his secretary to turn off the air conditioning and send in herbal tea. Aw, you can be so sweet when you stop being such a child.

Speaking of children, Gun-woo stomps off to Seoul today and tells Poong-san to just cancel all the dinner reservations. Poong-san wonders what’s gotten into him and says that it’s weird to see Gun-woo revert to his old ways.

But on his drive to the airport, Gun-woo happens to see Jung-joo’s mom on the street. She’s talking on her phone and insisting that she’ll have “it” soon, and then he sees her walk into a cheap motel, even though Poong-san said she was staying at his family’s resort. So Gun-woo goes to hyung’s hotel and asks his secretary if Jung-joo’s mother is on the guest list, but she isn’t. Ji-won thinks he’s there to go to Seoul with her, but Gun-woo says that he’s busy with something else and runs off.

Jung-joo’s mom checks out her dilapidated shack and sighs that it won’t amount to much, and is surprised when the real estate agent who comes by is Mr. Gong. They recognize each other from way back, and they reminisce about the old days. Mom says that she had a daughter with the man she was with back then, and sighs that if it weren’t for that accident, she’d be living happily here.

Nosy the Novelist tells Gun-woo’s noona that she found out more about Gun-woo’s father, and at the same time we hear Jung-joo’s mother confirm it: The man in the old picture with Gun-woo’s mom is Jung-joo’s father… and Gun-woo’s father is the man behind the camera, taking the picture. So we finally squash the twin theory once and for all, not that anyone actually believed it would be true. Mr. Gong remembers that the two couples toured Jeju together, taking pictures everywhere they went. Jung-joo’s mother says that what happened to Gun-woo’s father was all because of his mother.

Gun-woo comes home to find Jung-joo in the kitchen, and he eyes her warily when she says she cooked for him. She waits expectantly for him to taste her porridge, and he makes a face and says it’s bad, but keeps eating since she made it for him. He tells her not to cook for anyone else though, because she’s bad at it, and she says she’s only cooking because it’s for him: “Because I like you.”

She points out that she’d never have fallen for him if not for the terminal illness misunderstanding, because he doesn’t care about anyone else and lives however he wants. Gun-woo: “Did you just now figure that out? I’m bad!”

But Jung-joo says that it’s a good thing she did get that terminal illness: “Because of it, I got to see what a warm, good person you really are.” She assures him that he’ll still be a good person even if she doesn’t like him, and from now on he’s going to have the love of the person he loves, and will keep changing for the better.

Gun-woo asks how Jung-joo would like for him to change, and she says that she’d like to see him doing work that makes him happy, and becoming a good person. He decides that his first good deed will be to eat her terrible porridge. Heh. That night, Gun-woo sees Jung-joo looking at her family photo wistfully, and lets out a sigh. Clearly he knows that something shady is going on there.

The next morning, he stops Jung-joo’s mother on the street as she’s having another hurried conversation about the money that she’ll have soon. Then he goes to see hyung, who’s a little impressed to find that Gun-woo is looking out for a friend and isn’t just idling his life away. Gun-woo says he can’t stand to see her cry or get hurt, so Jung-geun readily agrees to help.

Ji-won is annoyed to be snubbed by Gun-woo again when she runs into him on his way out, and pries information out of the secretary. She guesses that he asked Jung-geun for money to take care of Jung-joo’s mother, but the secretary surprises her by saying that the money will be coming from Gun-woo’s account.

Jung-joo’s mom suddenly announces that she’s leaving town (presumably because Gun-woo gave her the money that she needed), and apologizes for not delivering on her promises. Jung-joo tries not to look disappointed, and assures Mom that it was nice just to hear someone say those things to her even if they didn’t come to pass. She quietly calls her “Mom” just once, and they say goodbye.

Hae-shil is still not feeling well but insists that she’s okay to go diving today, and then gets a worrisome dizzy spell just before boarding the boat. Jung-geun is driving by just as an ambulance passes him on the road, and he answers a call from Hae-shil.

But it’s her friend instead, crying into the phone for him to come help, and when he rushes to the scene, he finds the whole town gathering a search party because Hae-shil went into the water and never came back out. Jung-geun picks up her helmet in a daze, their last argument ringing in his ears.

Nosy the Novelist tells noona that she wasn’t able to interview the wife of the man that Gun-woo’s father killed, but she heard that she’s a diver on the island. She’s hoping that her colleague can get an interview today, and even a picture.

Jung-geun is sick with worry as he sits on the shore clutching Hae-shil’s helmet, and then the whole crowd sighs in relief when the rescue boat returns with Hae-shil, looking weak but alive.

She sees Jung-geun and asks what he’s doing here holding her helmet, and he says with tears in his eyes that he was scared she’d really disappear forever, and he was holding on so she wouldn’t.

He just pulls her into his arms and hugs her tight, and they’re both so overwhelmed with emotion that they cry.

Gun-woo runs out without explanation again, and Poong-san assumes that he’s running off to see Ji-won with a lunch that he packed for her. But he’s gone to see Jung-joo’s mother instead, and hands her the money she needs along with the porridge that Jung-joo made. Aw.

Mom is ashamed, but Gun-woo asks her not to say anything to Jung-joo about money, and to remain a mother to her—one that lived well and will continue to do so. Argh, there you go, doing swoony stuff again. How am I supposed to stay mad at you?

Jung-joo just assumes he’s back from a date with Ji-won and asks to finalize their contract so that she can get her deposit back and leave, and Gun-woo tells her to stay. She tells him that he doesn’t need to feel sorry for her anymore because she has people to help her, a mother to lean on, a place to go now, and a new restaurant all picked out.

She says that he’s with someone now who doesn’t like her being here, and Gun-woo argues that she doesn’t like Ji-won either so she can just ignore her. Dude, if it were possible to ignore her, don’t you think I’d be doing it already?

Jung-joo says he’s treating her feelings lightly when she asked him not to, and Gun-woo shouts back that she can think whatever she wants, but he likes things the way they are now and has no intention of breaking that contract.

Jung-joo huffs over to Jung-geun’s hotel to talk to him about the contract directly, muttering to herself that they’re classmates and she’ll just go right over Gun-woo’s head. But Jung-geun isn’t there, and the bad luck continues as she runs into Ji-won.

Ji-won says that Gun-woo will be giving her the deposit back so she can go away now, and when Jung-joo says she came here because Gun-woo wouldn’t hand it over, Ji-won guesses that he gave it to her mother. Ugh, you gnat.

At least now Jung-joo has an inkling of what Gun-woo’s been up to. She starts realizing that maybe her mother came to her looking for money, and races to the airport to catch her before she leaves, and sees the lunch thermos that Gun-woo walked out with earlier that day.

Jung-joo confronts her mother, who turns out not to be a con artist, but just a desperate mom who needed money for her other daughter’s surgery. She introduces Jung-joo to her half-sister who’s ill, and asks her to thank Gun-woo again, for his help and for giving her Jung-joo’s porridge.

Mom says that she’s sorry, and Jung-joo sees them off at the gate with a little wave at her sister, and turns around when she can’t contain her tears.

She gets drunk at a pojangmacha that night, and Wook comes by and sees her crying. She rips up the contract and sighs, “Baek Gun-woo, stop being good to me. You can stop it now.”

Jung-geun insists on having Hae-shil stay with him, more for his own benefit because he refuses to let her leave his sight. He tells her to rest, and promises to just sit by her bed quietly.

Gun-woo gets a text from Jung-joo’s mom saying that she came and found everything out, and Gun-woo worries knowing that she’s crying somewhere right now. Of course Ji-won chooses now to come by with tickets to the musical. Gah, if bad-timing radar were a marketable skill, you wouldn’t have to chase rich men to live well. But Gun-woo tells her that he’s in no mood to go to Seoul with her, because he has to find Jung-joo.

Ji-won asks what’s wrong with him—she’s finally decided to accept him, so why is he worrying about another woman right now? Gun-woo says she’s right, because he’s not at all happy to see her now that she’s coming to him. All he can think about is Jung-joo crying somewhere.

Ji-won argues that it’s a worry that began in a misunderstanding, and asks why he can’t clean that up. Gun-woo: “I can’t! I just… want to be with her all the time.” Ji-won: “The thing you gave her for life is the restaurant, not you!”

Gun-woo: “But things have changed. I only gave her this place at first… but I must’ve gone with it and given her me too.” YEAH NO DUH. Where were you two weeks ago? Omg, I cannot believe it took him this long to figure it out, but hell, I’ll take now over never.

Ji-won can’t believe what she’s hearing, but Gun-woo says that he’d already changed—he was just in denial about it and kept hurting Jung-joo. Ji-won cries that he’s wrong: “You haven’t changed! You’re going to go with me!” He stands and says it once and for all: “Ji-won-ah, I’m not going anywhere with you from now on. I have to go to Jung-joo.”

YESSSSSSSS. &%@##^!!! FINALLY! WAS THAT SO HARD, REALLY?

Mayor Wook stands at a distance and watches Jung-joo for a while, and then sits down when she orders her third bottle of soju. He jokes that he got a report that a girl from his village was drinking here alone, and tells her to marry him if she doesn’t want to drink alone.

She takes him up on the idea, and he chokes on his drink. Jung-joo offers to give him until the end of this bottle to seduce her, and if he succeeds, she’ll marry him. But then the mood grows heavier when she begs him to please worm his way into her heart, to chase the other guy out.

She starts to cry as she blubbers that she likes him so much that she can’t live, and she passes out on the table. Wook asks the owner to look after her while he runs to get her some medicine, and in the time he’s gone, Gun-woo sits down in his seat.

Jung-joo doesn’t realize it and just continues the earlier conversation, saying that she won’t be seduced easily because she’s fallen so deep for the other guy that she can’t swim out. She opens her eyes to see Gun-woo smiling back at her, just as Wook runs back and sees them together.

Jung-joo tries to focus her drunken eyes and laughs: “Mayor, have you transformed into Baek Gun-woo? Okay, I’ll marry you then!” Ha. Gun-woo gets grumpy at her declaration that she’d marry another guy, and pets her sweetly as she nods off.

The pojangmacha owner comes over and glares at him suspiciously, and he realizes what she’s accusing him of and says, “She’s my girlfriend!” The ajumma isn’t buying it, so he scoots over to Jung-joo so that she’s leaning on him, and insists, “It’s true! She just said she’d marry me. She’s mine!” So. Cute.

Jung-joo wakes up long enough to mumble that she’s going to marry him, and the ajumma finally buys his story. Wook’s heart breaks as he watches them, and he shuffles off sadly. Aw, poor sweet Wookie.

Meanwhile, a car pulls up to Warm & Cozy, and a man lingers there staring at a picture of Gun-woo’s mother. Ruh-roh, this must be Dad.

At the same, the novelist confers with her partner, who tells her that things would become really complicated if Gun-woo’s father ever showed up again because Hae-shil is the wife of the man he killed, and Jung-geun is now in love with her. The novelist shares what Gun-woo’s noona told her—that if the people around him were to see misfortune because of his father in any way, Gun-woo would leave.

Jung-joo is fast asleep by the time Gun-woo gets her home, and he tucks her into bed and takes out the contract that he taped back together. He puts it on her vanity and reaches for the sora shell to put on top of it, when the necklace he gave her falls out. He chides, “Where do you think you’re going when you hid this in here?”

He puts the necklace in his pocket and sits by her bed. He tells her that he put the contract back together: “I’ll give you Warm & Cozy back. And this is a freebie.” He sticks out his pinky finger and pulls her hand into a pinky-swear: “You keep it.”

He stamps their thumbs together and adds a thumb-kiss to seal the deal: “Promise.”

 
COMMENTS

Oh phewww, I was really bracing myself for another rant fest after the kiss that ended the last episode, but Gun-woo finally came around. It’s about time, and at this point I’m so relieved that we don’t have to deal with Denial Gun-woo that I won’t even question why the hell it took him this long to figure out what he was feeling all this time. I mean, how many times do you have to stop a girl from leaving you to realize, oh I dunno, that you don’t want her to go?

I can’t in all honesty say it was worth the wait—because OMG that took forever—but it was damn satisfying for Gun-woo to finally tell Ji-won off, and the timing made me happy because she had finally come around to Gun-woo (for all the wrong reasons of course), only to have him reject her flat-out. It only goes to show how much Gun-woo only wanted the idea of her because she was unattainable, and how little it had to do with Ji-won as a person. Because seriously, who could actually like that girl? It almost seems like Gun-woo found it easier to believe he was bad by association. Both brothers have been on my shit list for at least two weeks straight, and I was beginning to dread their next infuriating acts of stupidity. So I was pleasantly surprised today when they each turned a new corner.

Putting Hae-shil in danger was a bit of an easy way to gloss over all the myriad issues she and Jung-geun have, but the actors really sold the moment for me when they embraced. Suddenly it seemed petty to argue about what an ass he’s been, even though I don’t think he should be let off the hook. It’s just that in the moment, you see that they really love each other, and that’s all that matters. Obviously they’re in for some twists up ahead, if Gun-woo’s father is back in town and looking to stir up trouble. I just hope the dad storyline is as swift as Jung-joo’s mom’s little visit, because I’m mostly annoyed that the parents are popping in to create last-minute complications. I was just relieved that Mom’s story was wrapped up so quickly, and that she didn’t turn out to be a con artist. If her only function was to push Gun-woo to do the heroic thing, then that’s fine with me. I just don’t think Dad’s presence will work quite the same way, if he’s really as bad as they all say.

It’s kind of cute that it’s Gun-woo who needs to be loved just as he is, but it’s likely that he never considered himself lovable before, and when all Jung-joo asks of him is to do what makes him happy and be a good person, it seems to change how he sees himself. Mostly these changes have been happening all this time—he’s just the last to know about them. And hey, it’s saying something that She Who Shall Not Be Named served an actual function today, in pushing and prodding Gun-woo enough to help him realize that even when he had her, all he really wanted was to be with Jung-joo. It needed to happen eons ago, but I’ll give Gun-woo points for his directness in rejecting her, and his adorable about-face with Jung-joo. Even though she’s drunk and asleep and probably won’t remember any of it. Bah. Maybe he can make it up to her with a bar-top seduction of his own. Seriously, it’s the least he could do.

 
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O_O ... -_-U ... No comments.

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Sorry, didn't like the supposedly cute episode beginning, the mother glossed nor the Mayor heartbreak. On the other hand the "not to take people for granted" theme was nicely put. I still carry a flame for Hyung and Hae-Shil. And loved to see Ugh-Yeo get her hopes broken on Warm & Cozy's walls.

I was smiling like a lunatic at today's recipe guests. :)

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yeeeeeeeeeeeeesh! it's up, thank you so much for the recaps!

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Best episode so far! I loved the bar scene with Gun Woo, poor mayor though... The story just keeps getting better and better! Can't wait for the next episode!

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Disagree - too many stupid makjang elements.

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I thought I was the only one! For god sake, this was TOTALLY makjang. What's going on with the Hong sisters? It was even worst that the final episode of Big. Was it necessary to show the half-sister in that horrid beanie? If she is really sick, she shouldn't travel! And the mother all well dressed...I give up on all of them except the mayor ლ(´﹏`ლ)

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That scene really bothered me too. How painful it would be to have a mom who basically abandoned you but then seeks you out so she can rip you off for the sake of her second child?

And then the sister acting pitiful and distant when they were talking, but suddenly becoming cheerful and energetic when she and mom were leaving JJ behind. Made the sick part seem more like it was attention seeking.

Two peas in a pod, those two.

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A parent or parents conning and ripping off a child...To this day, I still remember John Locke's backstory in Lost.

***SPOILER***
The revelation that Locke's father (who had abandoned him in life) only reconnected and bonded with him because he needed a kidney transplant from him.

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Likewise, I couldn't help but take notice of the contrast between the two characters who were sick and coughing in this episode. Afterall, South Korea is currently dealing with a recent outbreak of MERS in the country and a rising death toll as more cases are confirmed.

Jung-joo’s half sister Soo-Yeon certainly didn't practice proper hygiene and etiquette for coughing in a public space/area. On the other hand, Hae-shil DID cover her cough! Proper coughing and sneezing etiquette goes a long ways toward preventing/stopping the transmission of germs and helping to keep people healthy.

http://www.cdc.gov/flu/protect/covercough.htm

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I've long given up on this show, but these recaps are the best. so entertaining to read, thank you

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Exactly!

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GunWoo's hair changed! His stupid-looking straight bangs are no more and the (slight) side part has appeared! By all hair rules of K-drama, may that new hair and this much much better change in personality stay.

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Indeed - must be a rule of K-dramaland.

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Warm and cozy just got Hot and bothered :D

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I want that seduction scene BTS reallly :)

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Ha ha even me !!! They must have had fun doing that scene !!!

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Haha yes would love to see that. MBC please!

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Me too!!!

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Oh Yes ! BTS please sss....

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So... I think we actually got a fairly straightforward confession out of Gun Woo this episode. He openly confessed to having fallen for Jung Joo from the start of the episode. I was afraid some of what he said was lost in translation but I guess not. That's half a thumbs up for progress.

On the flip side, I'm not anticipating the angst we're about to enter into. We've finally got the couple together but foreshadowing from Gun Woo's noona told us he's going to make a break for it when Killer Pappy makes an appearance. My hope is that with only 5 episodes left we won't have to endure too much self-inflicted punishment for long.

Question: Gun Woo keep saying he's bad because he's actually done something that we don't know about or is it just because he's his father's son?

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It's just because he's his father's son.

Boy has some major parental issues.

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But then there's this:
"Jung-joo’s mother says that what happened to Gun-woo’s father was all because of his mother."

I suspect this is where the original Gatsby title comes from. If so, the main conflict will be between Oppa and HS. ?

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Whoa that's fast. I haven't even watched it subbed been watching it raw.

By the way the trying to be cool tabletop scene had me in stiches.

Didn't care either way for GW, there were too many warnings that he would run away anyway when his dad turns up.

However didn't expect the HS swept away scene though. Do I really want to google about the undertow or rips on Jeju island? Or is it just another drama ploy?

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Actually it seems there have been haenyeo drowning accidents in real life, so this plot point is not entirely baseless...

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But at the same time, that was so cliche (too easy and lazy).

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I was thinking during the show that it seems kind of 'paint by numbers.' Its been more like watching a stage production expanded into a drama using lots of filler.

In fact the sole purpose of the blogger seems to be to be as a narrator to keep the parental history plot like going. I'm not sure why anyone - the audience or characters - should care about that back-story at this point. So we can see that mom was the (accidental) killer and GWs father took the rap for it? And that it somehow affected JJ's father? So what. *Honestly, I'm more interested in them telling me why JJ's practical business orientation isn't leading her to redevelop that waterfront house/lot she bought when it's clear that there are condos under construction on the hill behind it and a nice house next door.* Anyway...

All in all, this drama just feels 'off'.

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"Dude, if it were possible to ignore her, don’t you think I’d be doing it already?"LOL

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i was starting to write off this drama despite how muc I am loving YYS and KSR in this drama because of the sheer infuriating stupidity of Geunwoo, but his declaration came at the buzzer beater. thank goodness...

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Agree ! love the chemistry between YYs and KSR , they are good enough as for a romantic comedy !!!

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Is it odd that, while I am truly relieved that GW seems to have turned the corner, I am also a smidgen... Skeptical? I've seen GW do many swoon worthy things, after all, & those wonderful things are usually followed up by denials and rejections and false fronts... Not to mention pain for our lovable heroine.

I mean, story wise it seems that this is going to be a real change for GW-he's not going to pull a 180 & leave us all cursing. And If our couple doesn't start being a couple soon, there won't be time later-there's only 5 episodes left. Sooooo.... I'm gonna trust in GW one more time and pray that the upcoming bout of Noble Idiocy I smell on the air is of as short a duration as the screen time of our heroine's mother. Please, please, PLEASE, Hong Sisters-hear my prayers!

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I'm waiting for the coffee bean arc. You know, when the cousin and her boyfriend who left for other dramas after episode 1 return and demand Jung Joo build a coffee shop!!

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I could have sworn that funny and awkward seduction scene was gonna be a dream sequence. I kept waiting for someone to wake up but no one did. That was such a weird and funny scene.

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Man, I *never* get second-lead syndrome, but I have it SO BAD. Please please please drama, stop letting Mayor Wook and Jung Joo have those cute moments that *just* about go somewhere, only to stomp on his heart again! I was tearing up, and I haven't cried at a drama in months.

(this is the only reason I think it might not be all smooth sailing for Gun-woo & Jung-joo yet, because the Mayor is still clearly invested. There's time for one more big upheaval, and her potentially going to the Mayor, before he has to be noble and such. *sigh* Dangit, drama.)

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I have the opposite problem. I ALWAYS get second lead syndrome (I actually cried over Yoon Ji-hoo/Kim Hyun Joong's heartbreak in Boys Over Flowers), but for some reason I am not feeling it with Wookie. I feel kinda bad for him, but I really just wish they would introduce a nice lady diver for him to call his own.

It may be because every time I look at Wookie I think of his goofy turn as Secretary Kim in Secret Garden and just can't take him seriously as a love interest.

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I feel like Gun Woo finally turned the corner and isn't a complete turd bucket anymore. But with the parentals showing up I can only assume that there is something in the coming episodes to ruin our couple and separate them once again. Not really looking forward to it...

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Thank you girlfriday for recapping so quickly !!! Out of a few dramas that I'm reading on dramabeans this one comes out the fastest !!!

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I wonder what the writers are smoking. About that long lost mother who shows up to con her poor lonely daughter out of her deposit on the cafe and the decrepit building next door: I don't believe for a minute that a mother who abandoned her baby daughter to remarry would do such a thing, even if it is for surgery money to save her other daughter. I find that writing deplorable.

The way the mother is made to dress and act makes No sense whatsoever. She dresses up nicely just to have JJ believe she is rich; The way she yells into that she'll get that money soon makes her look like a professional con woman. I was incensed w the writing, the directing and the acting while watching it. What kind of human being does that make the mom?

Doesn't she have plenty to be apologetic for towards JJ? And her way of saving the younger daughter is to ruin her older one and crush her emotionally at the same time?

I never bothered to remember which pair of Hong Sisters wrote which dramas. Now I have to, just to avoid the dramas written by this pair!

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Dear Ms. Kaddict, I have seen some families having a ranking for their kids. It is not well written in this Drama but not unheard of in actual life.

Cheers!.

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Agreed. The con artist mom got off too easily with GW's money and a drive-by intro of a half-sister. Poor jung joo! Why would GW think giving the mom money under false pretenses protect JJ from being hurt?

This felt like the hong sisters just threw some plot points at us for no reason. Bleh.

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Because Gun-woo didn't want Jung-joo to find out her mother conned her. And neither did he want her to leave the restaurant. So the best solution was to help her out, make it look like she was a good mother and keep Jung-joo from being hurt. If she doesn't know her mom lied, she wouldn't feel betrayed. That was perfectly logical to me.

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I thought it was gonna be a con job too and that the woman wasn't really her mother but I guess she was after all which is worse. I did feel pity for her though since she is doing it to save a life. I think they messed up on how the woman was needed to be portrayed. She looked, sounded and acted like a con artist instead of a desperate woman trying to save her daughter. Bad portrayal!

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My point exactly! Also that the plot pt was poorly conceived to begin with.

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JJ's mother was a con-artist as she was going to con her other daughter out of $$ for the surgery (hence the angle about buying JJ a restaurant as a ploy to get the deposit).

The whole thing was stupid and poorly done.

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... and seemingly useless so far.

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Oh! I was so confused about why she'd still offer to buy Jung-joo a new restaurant after knowing the girl is broke. I finally understand, thanks! But ugh that's such a stupid side plot.

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Agreed. Also this seemed like such a random development thrown in simply to make Jung Joo realize what a sweet guy Gun Woo is and that she cannot give up on him. Shoddy writing from the Hong sisters no doubt.

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I don't know... I guess from the moment So Ji Sub stepped out of that screen, it became clear to me that the writers are doing this for the trolling so I think I went along with it expecting nothing but light, even lazy, stuff. I went ahead watching the drama definitely not expecting something of a literature prize caliber. I sort of had an inkling from the first episode that this was going to be a light and easy ride, hardly brainy. Because of the trolling, recycling, and circular pattern, I've stopped pinning the drama on the originality of the plot, and more on the motivations of the characters. In that context, everything became cohesive to me. Even the makjang cracked me up. LOL. I think they're doing a good job at keeping the light (but to most, bland) consistency of the plot. Though from another lense, I'm actually enjoying everything. I love the dynamics between the characters, particularly between BGW and LJJ. They speak different emotional languages and I like the psychological banter and I like the way the words are constructed and the way the lines are thrown. This is not to say that I enjoy the directing, because I so feel that it is flawed but for the writing, I'm okay with it. Even delighted.

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I always love to read your comments. I couldn't said it better. The whole thing with the mother was the most infuriating on the episode. I was able to forgive/forget the final episode of Big, but this....this is too much!

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"And her way of saving the younger daughter is to ruin her older one and crush her emotionally at the same time?".

Well said. This captures the heart of it.

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Thank you for the recap.
Love episode 11.
Finally BGW admitted to MJW his heart is now with LJJ.
What an adorable couple, Yoo Yeon Seok & Kang Sora!

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Are the Hong sisters really going to make GW's father be a con artist and the murderer of HaeSil's former husband? What crazy makjang do we have to endure now? Couldn't the father be a good person who was falsely suspected of being responsible for Hae Sil's former husbands death?

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Dear YSS over Flowers, usually with the Great Turnaround begins the Weeping Stretch in the Hong Sister's other Dramas... and yes we are heading to Makjang-infested waters if earlier Dramas are to be accounted.

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As Charlie Brown would say, "Good grief"!

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My guess is that they'll initially lead us in that direction, but they're going to track with the Gatsby plot. Mom was guilty of manslaughter, but dad took the rap and covered up her crime. That means that the lead of drama land will dictate that Oppa and HS's relationship will be endangered. But since they also hinted that the death also impacted JJ's father, there'll be conflict pointlessly manufactured there too.

(And if they REALLY stay true to the Gatsby theme, there will be even more joys in store. That story is seriously depressing.)

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lead = laws

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Thank you GW, thank you for FINALLY opening up your eyes. Better late than never. And I agree: It was immensely satisfying to see GW outright reject JW. I think I'll rewatch that scene a second time. You could see how he changed over the course of the drama when it came to her. Just think, before, he used to brighten up like the sun whenever he laid eyes on JW. But lately, he's been dismissing her so readily. And you could see how she didn't like that (haha!) but yeah, I'm not ready for the angst and I hope this parent drama thing just goes by quickly, but I have a bad feeling (Please Hong Sisters, prove me wrong!)

But poor Mayor. Sorry he has to get his heart broken, but you know what they say: the heart wants what it wants buddy. We all love you though!

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Poor wookie. BUT! YAYY GEON WOO! Finally!! now we get the cutesy scenes! RIGHT?! RIGHT?! :))

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YYS oppa is awesome

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Hong sisters need to realize that their brand of drama has passed its time. Things have changed in dramaland. Lots changed. I started this drama from episode 9 just cuz I was bored and every scene is predictable and taken from their old dramas.
They are in different decade now! They need to change to times!

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I think you are right. These writers are resting on their laurels.
Rom-coms are cute no matter what. So they just recycle some old plots and plot pots, cast lovely actors, and hope that ppl would tune in. It works to an extent. Comments show that viewers do swoon when the rich idiot starts to come around. Yet, the rest of the story leaves so very much to be desired. Crappy writing is evident.

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Maybe I'm a sucker for conventional, familiar, and even historical things... but I actually like this one. It's a clean break from a lot of other astounding concepts. Maybe it's lazy but I just like that it's comfy and relaxed.

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"Conventional and familiar things" can be employed in quality writing. Just as "astounding concepts" can end up in shoddy writing.
It is not whether the concepts are old or new that determines the quality of the writing.

Enjoy away.

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Totally agree. Forget familiar rom com tropes, even daily life on Jejudo has been done a lot better with more talented writers and PDs--Kim Soo-hyun's Life Is Beautiful, for one example, or Yoon Sang-ho's work in the first half of Tamra, for another. I'd even mention Lee Kyung-hee's Thank You, which may not take place on Jeju, but is still a far more intimate (and convincing) portrayal of rural island life.

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They have always been known to be weak on the back-story, secondary characters and wildly inconsistent in terms of writing good, fun/witty scenes/dialogue.

While they have their moments, they have been known to do the same as the typical bad K-drama writer - too much ridiculous makjang elements, poorly thought of mini-story arcs which don't make sense or are dropped w/o any explanation, etc.

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"Maybe he can make it up to her with a bar-top seduction of his own. Seriously, it’s the least he could do." I want this, too!

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Well, I knew I had a reason for loving Gun-woo. He can be infuriating, frustrating and a huge jerk, but he does have a pure heart. I'm so glad he's finally getting out of the witch's shadow and allowing himself to accept the idea that he really doesn't love her as he thinks he does.

I thought today's noble act was so swoony and heroic without being showy. YAY for Gun-woo slamming the bitch without roundabout words. Now I hope she persists only so I can see him do it in front of Jung-joo. Now that would be extremely satisfying!

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I was having my breakfast as I scrolled through the recap..mug in one hand then Jiwon came on screen..I shut the whole thing, had my breakfast leisurely before starting to read again..thats how much I hate Jiwon

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Well, if it helps you: I am a man, the actress that acts as Ji Won is a beautiful lady, and when she appears on screen I have to pause the player and prepare myself. I can't stand her even with Mute.

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OMG a bar top seduction from Gun-woo is a must!!!

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My heart is breaking for the mayor. He's adorable why why why

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... Because he is not rich.

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Baek Gun woo on a counter in full seduction mode PLEASE!!!

i still don't get the parents story...but i'm curious to what really happened...

that was really satisfying the way GW finally turned down Ji won...HA. please leave now...

oh! and Mr. Black Pearl and Lady Diver!!! finally!!!

a lot FINALLY's in this episode

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"He smiles and tells her to do whatever she wants but at least get off the counter while doing it..." the other translation engine said... because she'll get muscle pain if she keeps doing it. HAHAHAHA. For the life of me, I laughed so craaaazy hard. It's one thing to have a cute sexy moment, it's really another thing to have it failing and backfiring like a ton of bricks. LOL. But I loved that he was all oogly and smitten and warm about it. So loving. Those eyes. Gah.

and that low, manly, seductive voice... okay let's stop. LOL

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W&C would be so much better w/o the makjang elements (the whole "mystery" of the father and Hae-shil's dead husband isn't much of a mystery and frankly, never had much of an interest in it since it's so stupid) or for that matter, the stereotypical, one-note 2nd female lead/villainess or the accident/near accident (which we saw coming a mile away) which brought a couple back together (thank goodness the actors are good enough to make it somewhat credible and not a laughing point).

The former (makjang elements) is just stupid while the latter is just lazy writing.

Speaking of which, so was the whole con-artist mini-plot arc w/ Jung-joo's mother (ok - let's make the mother not look like a total b!tch by having her do it for the sake of another daughter who is need of surgery, except - it still is a low thing to do to a daughter and having the other ill daughter is a convenient crutch, notwithstanding that Korea has national healthcare) - was stupid and the mother was a con-artist (but I guess a con-artist w/ a "heart" - at least for her ill daughter).

But the resolution of that whole mess should put to rest the notion that Gun-woo isn't a nice guy, esp. since JJ has repeated numerous times that GW being nice is one of the major reasons she has fallen for him (GW was always nice - he just had a tendency to brain-fart when it came to Ji-won.

And yes, it sure took long enough for GW's head to realize what his heart had known for a good time already (that he was in love w/ JJ and that pining over JW was just a bad habit).

The fact that GW never told JW about his wealthy uncle and potential inheritance was interesting since he could have gotten JW's "affections" earlier if he had just told that gold-digger, but the reason why he probably didn't was that deep down, he really wanted JW to change and like him for who he was.

Feel bad for poor Mayor Wook.

Jung-geun and Hae-shil are still the more interesting couple, but older bro shares the same denial of feelings that GW had, albeit in a slightly different manner.

The character if JG reminds me a lot of Dokko Jin (just not as funny, altho funny in his own right) - having a huge ego about one's self/position so needing the "other" to be the "needy" one, when the truth is that both JG and DJ were the needy ones who were desperate for a real/emotional relationship.

Like it that HS was the one more concerned about the disparity in their social positions/wealth than JG.

As for the annoying nosy, novelist couple - if they are writing a "novel", why do they need to do all that investigatory work and find out everything?

But I guess the "truth" here is more "mind-blowing" than what they can come up with themselves.

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This is getting goooood!!

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The chemistry between YYS and KSR keeps this drama together!! And they haven't even done anything but a peck.. We need a bed scene..

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Agree!!

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Sorry, I feel no chemistry between them at all. Not a single spark.

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Hahahaha, JJ's seduction scene is the funniest and cutest seduction I have ever seen that it made me laugh out loud and watched it thrice! :D

Finally, GW knows how he feels about JJ! So happy for him!! He is doing all kinds of sweet things for JJ and it's no wonder JJ will fall so hard for him. Seriously, he is like her hope whenever things are hard for JJ. It's true that he did hurt her a lot but he is always there for her no matter good or bad days. <3

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Kang Sora has me in stitches. She really can be funny too.

Yoo Yeon Seok is back being sweet guy which he is so capable of stealing all the girls' hearts haha.

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I'm sorry - I'm still stuck on the ridiculous scene of SH being "lost" at sea because she was swept away by a wave. AIGOO!!!! I was yelling at my computer because I really hate it when dramas do something really stupid and expect us to accept it.
What "WAVE" in the calm harbor???? An experienced diver? And why were the rescuers diving into the water to look for her? If they were doing that, she's be drowned already. As a former lifeguard I was really laughing and annoyed at how stupid that scene was. Thankfully, it was saved by the sweet love scene and embrace at the end. This drama is flawed - no doubt about it - but I am loving the story, so I forgive it. However, the real gem these days is "Mask". Wow - SO good!

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poor Mayor Wook -- the guy just can't catch a break. i hope that before this series ends, the writers will find a way to pair him up with some gorgeous girl who will rock his world in the way he deserves :)

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The role of Mayor is quite outstanding here actually !

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Thanks for the recap, girlfriday. I have to say reading the recaps here and watching Warm and Cozy is like having coffee with the best donut- gotta have one with the other!! ;) I am enjoying all the scenes with LJJ and BGW! The scene with BGW and JW -- I enjoyed that too - finally!
I cannot wait for all the mysteries to unfold.
KSR is the best actress to play LJJ -- she's becoming my new fave kActress.. Love her! And Chilbong/ YYS - super cute!!

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Gosh, for a mother who abandoned her since she was little, and then comes back just to filch money off her daughter, Jung joo's reaction was a tad unrealistic. So, what makes the younger daughter more important than Jung joo? The fact that she's sick and needs surgery? What if Jung joo had been legitimately terminally ill with no one to lean on? I hate that the drama just glossed over these painful aspects as a plot device to move the romance forward. It speaks of shoddy writing.

And poor Wook can't catch a break! Another case of the nice guy finishing last. Smh

Love that hyung and Hae Sil finally got together, as for GW and JJ, now that the couples have found each other, let the angst begin!

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Well, if we try to put it in a logical context, we can have many questions:

1.- Is the Con Mother really her mother?... let me elaborate through some questions:

1.1.- How is it possible to recognize someone with just her name after being abandoned her as a baby or as a toddler for JJ not having a memory of her mother?.

1.1.1.- Is it usual for adoptive parents to keep both names and last names of the children they adopt?. If she kept BOTH her names and last name there is a possibility that she was raised by someone related. If that is so, how is it possible for JJ not to have seen a photo of their parents her whole life?.

2.- Why she was abandoned in the first place?. We haven't seen an explanation about that. We guess her mother remarried later and she had the small sister.

2.1.- Did the "mother" abandon Jung-Joo just to be remarried?.

2.2.- What happened to her father?.

All in all, her "mother" having a bend towards her sister is nothing strange, since the "mother" (if she is so) is just a gene provider and not an actual mother (personally I think rising and providing support/warmth/education/everything a family provides is far more important in forging the identity than the actual genetic pool which only gives inclinations). Basically Jung-Joo is a stranger.

I don't know if we viewers will get some of these explanations ever, or if we get them I doubt they will be convincing.

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The star of this episode was Ji Won. In all of her evil ways, she yet again couldn't wait to tattletale to JJ about her mom, and in the end, it made GW look like the knight in shining armor that he was being to her, and brought them even closer together. I just love how counter-productive her meddling is.

I teared up with the scene between Hyung and Hae Shil. You can really tell that they are in love with one another.

I actually like the pacing of this drama. I always laugh when people criticize when someone realizes they like someone. If it happens to soon, then you can't go anywhere with the drama (Fall In Love With Me). Pace is important. There was a build up to GW realizing his feelings for JJ. I love how KSR is portraying JJ. That moment you want to get over someone, but realize it is much harder than you realized. I felt her pain when she was at the food tent.

As much as I love the mayor, I don't ship him with JJ. She has been brutally honest with him since day 1. He is well aware of her feelings for GW. I just hope the parents mess doesn't mess things up for them. Clearly, their parents were all friends. We'll see what happens.

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Ain't that the Chilbongie hair? I lurve the Chilbongie hair. Glad you changed hairstyle, Yeo Yoon-suk.

Plotwise, show's kinda slow and doesn't have much "oompf" in it (as you guys said in Podcast 28 haha). But I guess I'm in for this ride because I needed a breather out of all the complicated drama stories I'm watching this season. So yay for this episode :-)

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In the romance, the heart wants what the heart wants department...Poor Mr. Mayor.

Will it be 3/3 this week for the 2nd Leads with their one-sided loves? And sadly for them, so far, always being on the receiving end of unrequited affection.

Gong Tae-Kwang & Lee Eun-Bi (Who Are You - School 2015)

Mayor Hwang Wook & Lee Jung-Joo (Warm & Cozy)

Cindy & Baek Seung-Chan (The Producers)

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Initially during episode 11 of Warm & Cozy, I had pause several times and ask myself WHAT and WHY am I watching this?????

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LOL.
The answer is of course YYS and KSR, and the scenery of Jejudo.

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How CUTE was that pinky promise? Geon-woo's facial expressions looking at Jung-joo absolutely kill me.

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Oh Yes !

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I usually love the Hong Sisters' work but this drama is so bad I've almost stopped watching a few times. Ep 11 is ridiculous--JJ had no reaction to this stranger just showing up and saying "I'm your mother"??? it's like JJ is a zombie, bouncing from person to person and just accepting whatever they tell her. Either Kang So Ra's acting is bad or the script and director are just bad. I can't see any merits it the OTP. It's the president and Hae Sil that are making this drama survivable.

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Finished the eps 11 finally.

From the very begining , I had already found the writing got problem. However, it is a romantic comedy, don't be so serious, take it easy ! The point to watch this drama because of the 5 actors, and mainly YYS & KSR .

Anyway, eps 11 there were so many melting point when 1/. GW said he was the one got lost not JJ,
2/. he reject JW,
3/. he worried about JJ was crying somewhere,
4/. he found JJ and said that JJ is girl friend to him 5/. he gave JJ and seal the promise

Still something missed ?

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Is it just me that find the tumb kiss promise so hot and romantic?seriously yoon did a great job to make that so believable and hot and ramoantic! God i love him and kang sora ! Thanks for recap

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well, me too !

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