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Warm and Cozy: Episode 8

Yessss, finally. As recently as yesterday, I was all set to give up on this show being anything other than a Hong sisters pastiche—still cute and fun to watch, mostly because of the leads, but all paint by numbers and predictable. It felt like they’d taken a coloring book and merely filled in the white space with crayons, rather than drawing new pictures from scratch. And while it’s not like Episode 8 reinvents the wheel or drops us off a cliff of narrative possibility, it is the first episode to surprise me with anything at all, and added a much-appreciated jolt of energy I hadn’t felt before. Just because it’s a relaxed drama doesn’t mean it should lack any sort of conflict, after all.

SONG OF THE DAY

Acourve – “고백” (Confession)Download ]

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EPISODE 8 RECAP

As Gun-woo catches Jung-joo before she rolls off her chair in her sleep, he realizes it makes him feel uncomfortable. He looks perturbed as Jung-joo snuggles closer, then sets her back on the chairs and tucks her in with a blanket.

He’s about to leave, but she starts fidgeting in her sleep and grimacing in pain, which he mistakes for cancer pain. Worried, he feeds her a couple of her not-cancer pills and asks if it’s very bad, tears in his eyes. She’s only half-awake and her mumbled response just adds to the misconception. When he rises to get her some water, she grabs his wrist and pleads in her sleep, “Don’t go.”

Her grip goes from wrist-grab to handhold, and he crouches there at her side, watching her sleep fitfully.

In the morning, Jung-joo wonders why he’s back, and Gun-woo just tells her cheerily that he got kicked out of the resort by his brother. It’s something that confuses everyone, since at the resort, his brother and sister are wondering similar things. Why would Gun-woo voluntarily out himself and return to the restaurant when he had a perfectly good excuse to stay at the resort?

Poong-san tells Jung-joo conspiratorially that it was because of her—that Gun-woo was so worried that he couldn’t leave her here on her own. He looks so proud of his Cupid meddling, though I wonder, do you really think you’re helping by giving Jung-joo the wrong idea? Or are you just really, really sure that the wrong idea will turn out to be true?

Jung-joo’s pleased at the thought, and it makes her extra stammery when Gun-woo gets inadvertently close while looking for ingredients over her shoulder. Flustered, she moves away to keep looking, and Gun-woo follows close behind, totally oblivious.

He chides her about the broccoli going bad in his absence, and she scoffs that he’s acting like he came back for her sake rather than being kicked out. He retorts that she’s acting like she didn’t want to take him back when she was the one to cling. Jung-joo barks, “Who clung?” And then remembers her words last night, to her mortification, though she pretends she can’t.

Gun-woo says he kept his promise to be with her when she’s sick, telling her he was worried, while she just replies that it was because she drank last night. She sees that he saved the conch shells from last night, and cheers up when he says he couldn’t throw them away since they came from her very first catch, and that she should save the edibles for him next time.

Gun-woo decides that it’s time to talk to Jung-joo about her illness and assess how serious things are. It’s a promising sign of maturity, though inconveniently timed—it has Poong-san gulping nervously and trying, to no avail, to hold him off for a bit longer.

The diver ajummas wonder why Jung-geun applied for the diving school but doesn’t come out to learn how to dive. But they recognize that Hae-shil feels a certain responsibility for helping him when she saved his life, and urge her to take a little extra care.

Hae-shil heads to the resort to try to track him down, and Jung-geun spots her first and whirls around to avoid being seen. His confused entourage just follows when he hurriedly walks in the opposite direction, and he mutters at his secretary to talk to her when she starts to follow. She explains that she’s looking for Song Jung-geun, who’s prone to bragging and says he owns an inn.

The secretary dutifully reports back to Jung-geun, who puffs up with extra pride to hear that Hae-shil came asking for inn-owner Jung-geun, not the fancy resort president. He takes it as yet more proof that she’s been thinking of him and decides he’ll deign to meet with her—only to hear that the secretary took it upon himself to send her away saying that there’s no such person here, in case she would cause trouble for Jung-geun. HA. Now she ‘ll just think he was spinning more lies about his very important status.

Jung-geun goes racing out of his office, shaking off all the important businessmen who try to have a word, and just misses Hae-shil as she drives by on her bike. He starts running down the road after her, calling her phone. He catches up to her when she pulls over to answer, though he has to lean against her while gasping for air. Though from the way she reacts to the touch, it doesn’t seem she’s without feeling.

She does lie about not coming to the resort to see him, saying that she was there to see the president instead, but he knows right away that she’s making that up. Furthermore, when she asks why he hasn’t been coming to the diving lessons. Jung-geun replies that he was doing that to see her, not to learn how to dive, but she’d told him she didn’t want to see him. So which is it—did she miss him, or not? Should he come out for lessons, or not?

Hae-shil just tells him to make it to diving class, and that’s enough to make him light up.

Ji-won (ugh, her) meets with Gun-woo’s noona, and when she hears that Jung-geun may be seeing someone, her eyes practically cross in jealousy. She emphasizes that Gun-woo’s just a friend, since she’s angling for big bro instead, though noona calls her out for keeping Gun-woo dangling on the hook while knowing he likes her. She warns Ji-won not to take for granted that she’ll always have him around, because he could change his mind and leave, as Gun-woo’s father did. Ji-won wonders if that’s what happened with Gun-woo’s mother, and noona realizes she’s again said more than she meant to.

Mr. Gong hears that Mayor Wook scheduled his office dinner at Warm & Cozy instead of his restaurant as usual, but he’s not in the least miffed about it. He’s caught on to Wook’s interest in Jung-joo and gets the employees to all agree to help set that romance in motion. It’s adorable how everyone wants to marry off the mayor, and they all work on a plan for the dinner.

This entails enlisting Gun-woo’s help too, though he says crankily that Jung-joo’s not the least bit interested in the mayor. Mr. Gong explains that they’ve decided to swap out the usual games with an arm-wrestling match, where everyone will purposely lose to Wook so he can impress Jung-joo. They’ll award him the prize, a pretty necklace, which he’ll then give to Jung-joo, at which point the employees will discreetly exit to allow them privacy. Then it’ll be Gun-woo’s turn to make sure nobody else comes by, so the couple can do anything and everything they want. Rawr.

Gun-woo imagines this scenario playing out in his mind, then scoffs that she wouldn’t just take a necklace so easily. But when he sees Jung-joo happily wearing a visor given for free by a local business, he gets a little uneasy. Especially when she declares that she likes all free things, and would accept anything given to her.

At the dinner, Wook’s staff encourages Jung-joo to take a seat and drink with them, while Gun-woo watches jealously from the kitchen. The arm-wrestling tournament begins, and an employee shows off the prize necklace before the final round kicks off. The other finalist asks Wook what he’ll do with the necklace, and he replies that he’ll give it to whoever cheers loudest for him. Ha, and then everyone moves over to the challenger’s side, leaving Jung-joo as the only lady on his side. That’s not obvious at all!

But it’s okay, because Wook is happy to promise Jung-joo the necklace if he wins, and she checks that the others don’t mind. She gives him an adorable “Fighting!” and he responds in kind.

Gun-woo sidles up just then, and Jung-joo tells him excitedly that the necklace is hers if the mayor wins. Gun-woo nods and says, “Of course he’ll win, since that’s how the game is rigged.” Oh, you’re so petty! He points out that the challenger didn’t disclose the handicap that he’s left-handed, which is proof that he has no desire to win.

The mood completely dies, but Gun-woo goes on about how it’s an unfair deal, and that these employees have a duty to be honorable in their public service jobs. And Wook isn’t about to proceed in a stacked game, so he suggests that Gun-woo step in and try to beat him, then.

Gun-woo rolls up his sleeve and promises to win the necklace for Jung-joo, and then the men sit down and get ready, their arms practically seizing in tense anticipation. The battle begins, and as Jung-joo watches the fight unfold, she realizes that the two men are fighting over her and admits that part of her feels really good about that. Hee, for once a heroine admits it!

This launches her into a fantasy sequence where she imagines she’s a princess with two suitors fencing it out over her. Poong-san the Pageboy asks who she’s rooting for in her heart, and she looks back and forth between them, conflicted.

By now both guys’ faces are beet-red and their arms are swinging from one side to the other. Jung-joo asks herself where her heart is, and finally concludes, “Mayor… I’m sorry!” Apologetic, she strikes a pose—elbow up, head down, just like Wook’s underwear ad. Pwahaha. He’s so shocked that his concentration breaks, and Gun-woo seizes the moment to slam his hand down to victory.

Jung-joo opens her eyes to see the results, and for a split-second is excited to see that Gun-woo won. Then she sees Wook’s wide-eyed look of hurt and bows in apology. Aww, poor slack-jawed mayor! If it weren’t so sad it would be hilarious. Well no, it’s hilarious anyway, but poor mayor nonetheless.

Gun-woo crows that the necklace is his, then presents it to Jung-joo, per his promise. She asks why he intervened when she could have won the necklace anyway, and he replies that he didn’t win it for her—he just didn’t like the mayor. So he offers it to her casually like some random freebie, and now that her hopes have been disappointed, Jung-joo rejects the offer. She tells him to give it to the girl he likes, and he just stews in exasperation at how this conversation skewed in the wrong direction.

At the resort, Jung-geun and noona have drinks with Ji-won, and talk of the upcoming party where noona urges Jung-geun to make peace with little bro. Jung-geun tells her to bring her boyfriend, and noona teases that it’s time for him to bring a partner too. Ji-won offers herself for the job, only to have him decline the offer, and when noona points out that she should be Gun-woo’s partner, she’s hasty to insist that they’re just friends. Noona clarifies that Gun-woo likes Ji-won, and Ji-won looks pissy to have that outed.

She finds Jung-geun afterward to clarify that she and Gun-woo aren’t together, and that she wasn’t just joking about wanting to be Jung-geun’s partner. Gah, are you still talking? I wish she came with subtitles, so I wouldn’t have to listen to her petulant voice. Jung-geun understands that she’s making a confession, and very clearly draws the line—he doesn’t think of her that way.

Gun-wo gets a message on his phone and heads out, and Poong-san speculates that Ji-wan called him out, which Jung-joo hears with some disappointment. So when she sees that the necklace box is empty, it makes her upset, which Wook notices as he settles his bill. He lingers after his party leaves and asks what happened to it, and she admits that she doesn’t have it because she told Gun-woo to give it to the woman he likes.

Wook is affronted to hear that Gun-woo took that necklace to another woman and calls her a dummy for losing the necklace just like that: “So why’d you go and root for the person you like, when you should have rooted for the one who likes you?” Awwww. At her confusion, he asks how she could miss what he’s saying, and she lets that sink in. And then: “Did you… know that I like Gun-woo?”

Wook just gapes at her missing the point so completely. Then she complains about him insulting her for liking Gun-woo one-sidedly, and exclaims in frustration that she really is a dummy if all she took from his comment was that he was insulting her. Which… she then takes issue with as another insult. Sigh, this could go around for days.

Wook grabs her arm and instructs her to look him in the face, ready to clear up the misunderstanding for good. Which is when Ji-won pulls up to the restaurant and ruins everything for everyone. Well, by everyone I mean mostly us, who have to watch her now.

On the upside, seeing Ji-won arrive and ask after Gun-woo cheers Jung-joo up considerably, as she realizes that he didn’t go off to give her that necklace.

As it turns out, Gun-woo meets the doctor he’d contacted previously, asking for advice on what to do to help his sick friend. He really is being so sweet about the illness that I fear for the fallout when he realizes what the truth is…

Jung-geun takes to haunting Hae-shil’s home again, and when he calls, she wonders if he’s got surveillance on her and looks around her front yard. He ducks out of sight and broaches the topic of parties, and whether she’s been to any. She informs him that she’s on her way to one right now, and heads over to meet a group of her diver friends for a makgulli party.

One diver ajumma comments on how happy she looks these days, suggesting that it’s time she forget about her bygone husband now—it’s been thirty years. Mr. Gong notices Jung-geun lurking and tells him the rest of the story, about Hea-shil moving down to Jeju from Seoul at the young age of 19, freshly married, and losing her husband within a year. She’s worked hard and lived diligently on her own, so he’d better not disrespect her. In fact, Jung-geun is really best off just leaving her alone.

Watching her drinking makgulli with villagers, Jung-geun sees now that this is her “level”—the words are terribly snooty, though I suppose the point is valid about her not fitting in with his world. So he wishes her well at her party, thinking to himself that he can’t invite Hae-shil to his, and starts to leave.

But she starts to sing a song just then, stopping him in his tracks with her mournful verse about bidding a love goodbye. Perhaps against his will, Jung-geun finds himself following her home, quietly, and seeing her gaze off wistfully with tears in her eyes. Now he recollects her first words to him upon rescuing him from the water, about life being precious and worth living. Perhaps words she’s lived by.

The town’s sly blogger-novelist plies Gun-woo’s noona with liquor, fishing for more details to incorporate into the novel she’s writing. So that fisherman who died had a 19-year-old diver wife, did he? Noona tells the blogger to stop pumping her for information about her mother and Gun-woo’s father, all while drinking up.

Gun-woo arrives at the restaurant with heavy heart, wondering how to broach the topic of Jung-joo’s illness with her. From the medication she’s supposedly taking, the doctor had deduced that Jung-joo must be in a lot of pain and wondered whether she’d given up hope on treatment. The best thing, he’d advised, would be for Gun-woo to persuade her to go to Seoul for treatments.

As he and Jung-joo clean up inside, she hesitantly mentions that Ji-won was by, which he already knows. They bicker mildly about her being in a hurry to kick him out and him staying put, which ends with him offering to stay here at Warm & Cozy with her “until the day she dies.” That gives her a thrill, while Gun-woo encourages her to speak up about something she might want to tell him, which she’s been holding back on for fear it would burden him.

She’s embarrassed and deflects, which he takes for reluctance to talk about her condition. So Gun-woo asks if there’s anywhere she wants to visit and offers to take her there, after he first takes her to his brother’s party at the resort. She figures it’ll be fun, going to a free party and getting a free trip—but her wording makes him feel bad, and he asks if his feelings are just like a freebie to her.

Her reply is teasing, asking what they’re worth if they’re not free, but his are uncharacteristically serious. He replies that he doesn’t know, then hands her the conch shell from her first catch, saying that he’s put a catch of his own inside. She lights up to find the necklace in the shell, and he says that he put a ton of effort to win the necklace he didn’t want to see the mayor giving her: “I don’t know how much my feelings are worth, but it’s not a freebie that gets given easily to just anyone.”

Jung-joo admits that she was rooting for him to win, and thanks him for the necklace. He smiles to himself, and she heads up to bed feeling giddy, staring at her necklace. The free visor that gets handed out to just anybody gets tossed aside as a random freebie, while the pendant she calls the real thing.

In the morning, Wook drops by the restaurant and notes that it’s closed for the day. Jung-joo tells him about the party she’s going to and asks for suggestions on scenic places to visit in Jeju. Wook notes the necklace around her neck and gets cutely pissy, saying that he knows tonnnnns of great places, but he’ll only share them with the woman he likes. She wheedles for a tip, and he barks that she should like him or marry him if she wants to know, but that his info ain’t free. In a huffy, he bikes away… and then rounds back in a circle to grudgingly mumble a location at her.

At the resort, Ji-won receives word that the folk performance group they’d hired can’t make the day engagement, and suggests getting real Jeju divers to fill in. Hae-shil and her diver ajummas end up receiving the last-minute request and arrive at the resort with their gear in tow, just as Jung-geun sends his driver to collect her at home to be his date at the party after all. He instructs the driver to wait there until she arrives.

Jung-joo gets dressed up for the party, and Gun-woo compliments her freely, though behind her back he allows himself to worry for her condition. He tells Poong-san he’ll talk to her when they go to the beach afterward, so Poong-san realizes he’d better come clean before then.

Ji-won meets with the same doctor Gun-woo had met (I’m recalling that her family is affiliated with a hospital), who wonders if she knows Gun-woo’s sick friend here in Jeju. She mulls over that curious bit of information, wondering who it could be. Then she sees Gun-woo arriving at the resort with Jung-joo, and her mouth drops open in outrage to see his date. Clearly a case of I don’t want you, but I don’t want anyone else to have you either. Brat.

The diver ajummas are briefed on the reason for being called here, which is to take photos with the guests at the party. Oh, like Mickey Mouse at Disneyland? Ouuuch, that’s insulting. The ajummas are indignant, and the hotel employee makes things worse by insinuating that they’d better comply since their president is a sponsor for their festival. One ajumma gets particularly worked up, and in the chaos Hae-shil gets knocked into the pool.

Jung-geun arrives and hears of the situation, just in time to see Hae-shil getting out of the pool. He’s apologetic, but the damage is done and Hae-shil heads off angry at him for the event and for lying about his identity.

Gun-woo splits from his group to meet his hyung and noona before the party, and Poong-san takes the moment to warn Jung-joo cryptically about what’s going to happen tonight. He tells her to enjoy everything to its fullest, because things may change drastically before the night is over, when “the door to the truth is opened.” Ha, it’s cute how poetic he gets about his part in the lie.

Gun-woo goes up to his noona full of purpose and tells her not to sell Warm & Cozy. She asks if he means to just let Jung-joo keep borrowing it, and he nods yes. She asks for how long, and he replies, “Even just one day more.”

Ji-won finds Poong-san and asks him about the sick friend, and he’s surprised enough to use Jung-joo’s name, confirming the doctor’s story. She plays along like she knew all this already, though she perks up when he mutters about the whole thing being a misunderstanding. Off she goes to confront Jung-joo, all full of smug attitude. Ugh, you. Just… leave already. Go poof.

Ji-won finds Jung-joo, full of self-satisfied condescension as she asks if it was nice having Gun-woo being so nice to her all the time. But she’d better not confuse that for actual feeling, Ji-won says, gleefully announcing that he’s under the misconception that Jung-joo’s deathly ill. Everything he’s done was out of pity. You are the worst and I hate you with the burning of a thousand venereal diseases.

Gun-woo can’t get a hold of Jung-joo or find her anywhere at the resort, and Ji-won stops him to tell him point-blank about his misunderstanding. She says that Jung-joo lied to him about being sick to get him to do all those things for her, and informs him that he was being used. Of course she’d put together the facts that way, since that’s what she’d do. But Gun-woo just shakes off her arm and continues on, surprising her.

Jung-joo heads to the lighthouse alone thinking back to all those times Gun-woo was so sweet to her, now seeing them through the lens of her new information. Every act of concern, his constant helping hand, the promise to stay with her until she died… all driven by pity.

Gun-woo drives up to the lighthouse and makes his way to her, his eyes burning with this… look… that I just know is going to end well. It is, it is! Those eyes!

Jung-joo takes the lead, asking if the thing he meant to ask her was about her sickness. She tries to act nonchalant, but her voice breaks on her tears as she asks if he only stayed with her because he felt pity for her, thinking she was dying?

But she’s not dying, she informs him, and he’s a dummy for believing that. In between sobs, she says, “You said you were mine till I died. But now what?”

Still staring at her intently, Gun-woo closes the gap between them and pulls her close to his chest.

“I’ll keep being yours,” he says, and as soon as the words are out, his conflicted expression eases and he smiles. “Until [I] die, I’m yours.”

(Translation note: The Korean language constantly drops subjects and objects, frustratingly, and this conversation can be interpreted ambiguously — even though it’s totally clear to me that they’re talking about feelings and not objects — so that’s worth keeping in mind. I don’t think it’s wrong to wonder if they’re talking about the restaurant, though they’re totally not talkin’ about the restaurant, if you know what I mean.)

 
COMMENTS

Now that is a way to do a confession. I love it I love it I love it. I take back everything I said about you behind your back, Gun-woo, maybe while throwing darts at you in effigy and chanting hexes. Not that I didn’t love him before; it’s just… he inspires an urge to throttle that’s almost as potent as the urge to attack with kisses.

Now, though, he’s all in and I’m just all aflutter at what comes next. I know we’re only halfway through and there’s no getting around an inevitable slew of conflicts to trip up the budding romance, but here’s to also hoping that leaving eight episodes open after the confession means we get eight episodes of skinship and kisses. You guys can fight in between all the making up!

One thing I really give Gun-woo credit for is acting on what he knows—the problem is always that he doesn’t know a whole lot, ha. When he recognizes how he feels, he doesn’t go through a whole lot of mental gymnastics to rationalize or deny it (unlike, say, his emotionally regressed older brother). Granted, that could be because his brainpower isn’t up for the exercise, but in any case, he’s a simpleminded and -hearted kind of guy, in a good way, and there’s a really lovely straightforward appeal to that.

I’m glad to see the return of the extended metaphor and the way this episode played with multiple meanings on the same spoken thing. We had Jung-joo’s love of all things free, which translated later to a valuation of feelings—not a literal dollar-for-dollar conversion, but a tip of the hat to the idea of freebies lacking emotional value. Which is doubly interesting because love is, of course, freely given—in one case, handing out samples indiscriminately devalues the item, but in the other case, feelings are given with thought and intent and therefore, as Jung-joo noted, “the real deal.”

It nicely recalls an earlier episode when Jung-joo accused Gun-woo of being too careless in his temptations (ddukkboki in that case, though she really meant his affections), because his thoughtless and intention-less gestures were still giving her fluttery feelings, and she wanted to protect herself from the misinterpretations. Whereas here, she dismisses the win as thoughtless and he counters that it meant something real.

We also had the recurring usage of the phrase “until I die” peppered throughout the show, building to a nice surprise here as the crux of his confession. The drama has been rather thin on the usual Hong sisters energy, which often employs fast jokes and a stream of puns and zippy pacing. I don’t miss those things for their own sake, but as tools in adding texture to otherwise familiar stories—stories of rich men and poor women, or bickering housemates developing romantic tension, or pouty manchildren being infuriating and adorable in equal measure.

Rather, I appreciate that those devices build extra layers of meaning on top of the basic plot, because that’s what makes their dramas feel like their dramas, like things only they could (or would) write. It’s a relief to see they haven’t entirely lost that touch, not just because I miss it but because Warm and Cozy is a better drama for it, and the actors are so winsome that they deserve to have material that makes use of the depth they’re capable of showing.

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I have a thought. Would it be possible if either jj or gw have a terminal disease by the end of the series? Nyahaha. With all these "til death i will be with you.." lines i think its a big possibility hahaha!

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Cant' believe I will say this but that person (i can't write her name) did something good. Although it didn't work the way she hoped it would. Haha take that.
But now that the cat is out of the bag, we can continue with the romance.
Must say I was hoping for a kiss at the end, but i will satisfy with those eyes and "I'm yours" ( i will believe he meant himself and not restaurant, please don't burst my bubble)
It would be nice if Mayor can get his own happy ending, he is co cute.
And please Hyung ( or Hong sisters) can you transfer that person somewhere far far away. She can be PR or what her job is at some other place.

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Maybe she'll get to marry some big fish for money and out herself completely as a vapid gold digger. Then shortly after the wedding, she'll find out that he's actually close to bankruptcy and wanted HER MONEY, so she'll suffer. mwahahaha

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I think GW talking about the reataurant. It's too soon for a man with two brain cells to figure his concern could equal love. Now what we'll have is GW still chasing ugh face and still wanting to be besties with JJ and expecting them all to be a happy group. It's was so sweet, his relief. I just know he's going to ruin it. Facepalm

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Wednesday come pali pali...

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How to wait for episode 9 nowwww!!!! Is so impatient and all I do imagine all the kinds of after scenes which I want and now I prolly sound crazy

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I'm elated that they'e together by episode 8. Now I'm just worried that they'll really be twins.... or that at least it'll resurface as a plot twist. :(

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I feel like I missed the transition from care and concern to full-on backhugging confession.

I know where the story is going, we all do, but (for me) it seemed like the jump to declarations of FOREVER did not have enough revelations of awareness to substantiate and uphold FOREVER.

Okay, perhaps I did not put enough weight into OUR LEAD being "uncomfortable" with holding HER in his arms, or the arm wrestling to win HER favor and defeat the 2nd lead.

I am not hating the story. I look forward to it all week. I was just a bit surprised at the confession. The OTP is cute and Hyung and Lady Diver are cute.

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Oh, and I hope She Who Must Not Be Named gets her ass fired for her offensive behavior with the Lady Divers.

Also, did anyone else notice that the hotel employees where physically holding the Lady Divers so they could not leave? Way not cool. Surprised they did not get body-checked into the pool. (Those divers have some mass on their side.)

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I hate Ji-Won, too, but the whole lady diver's fiasco wasn't directly her fault.

Maybe partly because they failed to confirm the original performers, but the whole photograph thing was the concept from the start and they failed to think of the reaction of the real lady divers to it.

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Hello Kuromitsu, in every long standing tradition that still has its upholders usually the pride of being part of a living tradition is very high. Some of these people are very skilled and could make lots of money in another areas.

Those upholders are a living link in something that is historical, and have pride and interest in transmitting it for further generations to enjoy. Mocking that work is perceived as an insult on that tradition an all the culture it involves.

That was devastatingly humilliating for the diver ladies. I even expect them to make Hyung do a big kneeling apology (and to have some resistance in accepting it). And since they aren't people attached to money, any attempt of shoving money on the issue only will make things worse.

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We all swooned at GW's confession :D But it was a bit of wordplay. They were talking about the restaurant but they meant more. For now, I think that he is just incredibly happy that she is not sick and he has started to realize what that means. So I am looking forward to see the romance blooming in next episode. Will he try to flirt with her?? Please Hong Sisters give us that!! I cannot wait to see Gun-woo trying to be sexy or cute, this might be the death of me, btw...

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I just finished the episode and now I'm smiling and laughing like a literal fool. That was the best ending, the best confession ever. I just loved it to bits. I'm sure I don't need to elaborate, but honestly. Geun Woo's reaction. Was. Gold. The way he didn't get all angry with her ... I was actually surprised at that, I thought that the writers would use this as a possible plot conflict, and I'm so glad that Geun Woo found out about his feelings so fast. The happiness in his face was adorable.

And Ji Won ... I LOL at her because she's so infuriating yet nobody is interested in her, ha ha. I just cannot wait for Hae Shil to turn up, and for the president to show Ji Won right in front of her eyes how much he's interested in Hae Shil ... that she has NOBODY. If possible, I need for both brothers and Hae Shil and Jung Joo to be in front of her, and I want her to plainly see just how she HAS NOBODY, HAHA.

I liked how it shows that Geun Woo's relationship with Jung Joo is a healthy one versus the one he has with Ji Won (well obviously, I don't think she's capable of sustaining a good one at all). The way he said that his feelings weren't just for the taking when it came to Jung Joo, is so different when compared to what he showed with Ji Won. With her he was the one doing all the giving and didn't care if his feelings weren't appreciated, and here he likes Jung Joo so much that he actually wants her to reciprocate back. Love that.

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I can't believe that Mr Gong and Wook's staff are all like, "yeah, we've decided it's okay for Wook to marry Warm & Cosy girl". It's creepy, technically, but I'm throwing that out to bask in the heartwarming moments of the village people rooting for Wook. Man, I super love his nerdy no-it's-not-like-that face! Heh. I love how he's gotten all bravado after the drinking rounds at the team dinner. I super love his pettiness too. The way the marriage joke/fear is now thrown as a thinly veiled 'choose me'.

But this episode is priceless for stupid Ji-won to get rejected flat, with nary a consolatory word, by hyung. Good thing he's sensible in every thing else except his love life. And again a second rejection to her short-lived gloat about driving Jung-joo away. THAT'S THE WAY!!

I wanna kill blogger woman too. Ugh. I started with optimism that she'll be good for making Warm & Cosy interesting to the public, but now she just seems like a selfish leech, leeching off others' unhappy stories. >_<

Show's music is sooooo fun! Ooh and recaps are super fast. Thanks, Javabeans! (=

I'm glad that there hasn't been much of a noble idiot moment so far (I wouldn't count Jung-joo's pushing him to Ji-won, considering she's also made it clear that she doesn't like Blank Face), and that we didn't spend episodes hurting each other over the misunderstanding. I'm so proud of Geun-woo's right attitude over this thing. He didn't fuss over how the misunderstanding came about and zoomed in how Jung-joo would have been hurt by Ji-won. I guess this does show how well he knows about Ji-won's evil side.

But with 8 more episodes... I'm so worried. I mean, Jung-joo and Geun-woo do share the same birthday. And his mom sorta recognised the photo that Jung-joo brought. So what could that possibly mean? With the Hong sisters, seems like that could be some awful plot twist.

PS. Hae-shil is supposed to be 50 (19+1 when husband died, and 30 years since) now, but Kim Hee Jung wo plays her is just 44. No wonder she looks so much younger (but I'd pin her as about 38 actually). But with this age, I guess hyung is justified in calling her ahjumma but it's super unromantic!

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I gotta think that they miscalculated Hae-Shil's timeline, because she really doesn't look old enough to be 50 (heck, she doesn't even look like she's 40); a 20 year gap since her husband died would've been just as dramatic and would put her age closer to how she appears.

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This episode was so good!! :D

It was utterly satisfying to see how Ji-won's plan backfired :D By telling them the truth she only made them closer.
But the best part was of course Gun-woo's confession. That was incredibly sweet...as if I did not love YYS enough already **sighs**

Now that the romance is on track I hope that the Hong Sisters give us more cuteness (and some kisses :P) before they throw at us the twins misunderstanding again...

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Finally! Finallyyyyy!

Haha. I've been half-heartedly watching the show. I really like Yoo Yeon-seok and Kang Sora as actors in here so it was a semi-letdown when the script was kind of going nowhere for 6 episodes. However, the Hong sisters srsly upped the pace in the last two episodes. I like where it's at now. :3 Heehee.

I half expected this ending to be Jung-joo's daydream. I hope it isn't. I will pull out spines if it is. Lol. But really, it seemed way too surreal. Geon-woo not misunderstanding the situation? The evil but very pretty villain getting rejected twice. Wuuutttt? Is this still a Korean drama?

Haha! Anyhow, I like the mayor too. TBH, I was rooting for him from the beginning up until halfway through this episode. Maybe it's just me but Geon-woo and Jung-joo seriously, very very very seriously, gave me sibling vibes the way they care for each other. Yunno, except for when le sexy music was playing that night they ate ddukbokki. Lol.

Seeing as we will get cute skinship now, I can imagine their actual background story is going to unfold. So far, drama is giving clues that dad could be both Jung-joo's and Geon-woo's (deeming them as half-siblings). However, I have a strong gut feeling that Geon-woo's mom had an affair and Geon-woo's dad isn't the same as Jung-joo's dad. But if he was adopted...? It doesn't make sense for GW's mom (per the usual k-drama trope) to care for him unless somehow appa wanted him to be looked after. But I really hope Hae-sil isn't a part of this fiasco too though because...her w/ Geon-woo's oldest brother is weird. Lol. But it's so early and there's not enough clues and my predictions are probably off so yeah..just going to leave it there. Lol.

But yes, finally! Hong Sister's living up to their name. Haha!

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I enjoyed watching this drama but it didn't get me that excited to watch the next episodes like other Hong Sisters dramas but this episode was sooooo good!!! I loved it soooo much!!!
The best episode so far and one of the best conffesions as well!!!
Also I'm really enjoying the story line between his brother and lady diver it makes me laugh so hard!!! :D

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I love Hyorin 'Closer' OST.
Every time the song is played in YYS & KSR scenes it gives me goosebumps. Best OST so far.

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Love the song that plays when BGW comes to find JJ. Soooo romantic

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If the String - Buffer is now reused to create another 10-character string, the String - Buffer first creates a new internal 10,
000-char array to build the string with; then the new String also uses that 10,000-char array
to store the 10 characters. Hence its now it is not
only a choice but an obligation to celebrate father's day.

It will make him very happy and surprise your father.

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First, I don't know why that confession didn't land with me. Maybe because you're a bitter jaded spinstersaid the voice in my head. It feels like a misunderstanding is afoot.

Second, someone else may have said it earlier, someone needs to drown JiWon. Her only purpose going forward is to continue her robotic delivery of villaness clichés. And that doesn't make for good Drama angst.

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Love this show. Love the Hong Sisters work. My favorite is the goofy fantasy scenes so far, like when they are knights fighting. The word I would use is charming. Though I don't fully trust that GGW is cognizant of his feelings yet....such a strange person!

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Hi everybody, pls do not give up for this drama,
Warm & Cozy is not typical, its easy & light .
It makes us feel relax to watch it !             I read a comment "Rating , what exactly are you , watch Warm and Cozy made me happy "
Exactly, when I watch this drama especially from eps 3, I keep on launging. The leads YOO YEON SEOK& KARG SO RA doing so well , the rest of the cast are also doing well especially the Mayor but not the woman . YOO YEON SEOK could carry any kinds of character, I become a big fan of him, who else can play the character of Geun Woo . The ending of this eps 8 really make my tears drop " I'm still yours , until you die, I 'm yours " this expression so great than " I love you "        

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OH Its not “I’m yours” but “it’s yours”   ??

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the charm of yoo yeon seok because of the 2% not perfect !

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I've enjoyed watching this drama. It's so funny! For this ep, the mayor's indirect confession to jung joo, then jung joo not getting his confession plus the mayor's reaction and the timing of sound effects are just sooo hilarious!!!! ?

I also love geon woo's confession ?

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yes that sound effect !!!! :D
JJ: yes I like GW and

Mayor THANG !!!!! :D

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Please don't let it be a dream sequence.
Please don't let it be a dream sequence.
Please don't let it be a dream sequence!
PLEASE DON'T LET IT BE A DREAM SEQUENCE!!!

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The final scene was awesome! Best pairing of leads.
No preview of episode 9 is killing me!

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I better get lots of OTP kiss on episode 9 and 10!!!!!!

I cannot wait to see what will happen after that hug!!!!

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so the preview is out and it's hyung and hae shill that kisses!!! kyaaaaaa!!!

and ji won will do everything to have at least 1 brother! she is living up her evil character!!!!

where is my kiss???????????????

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Can anyone tell me the name of that song the diver lady was singing? I think I've heard it before on another drama but I can't remember which one.

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