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D-Day: Episode 2

We’re introduced to our characters’ narratives, giving us some context for their eventual adaptation to the forthcoming disaster. The smaller personal moments with our characters gives us an idea of how their priorities may shift and which doctors will remain devoted to their mission to save lives. Ddol-mi steps up her game, showing Hye-sung that she is indeed a doctor — a sassy one but one with the right priorities. With disaster on the horizon, our unlikely pair best believe in their priorities and prepare for the inevitable medical catastrophe.

 
EPISODE 2 RECAP

The crane comes crashing down, and Hye-sung pulls Ji-na away from the crash in time to avoid any injuries. A man stumbles out of a crashed car to record and narrate the scene, scattered with injured people.

Hye-sung approaches Ddol-mi and grabs her stethoscope. He orders her to start treating patients, since she’s in orthopedics and shouldn’t be afraid of blood. There’s still an uneasy tension between the two, but the patients come first.

The fire trucks pick up Captain Choi’s crew on the way and arrive on the scene. Hye-sung treats injuries, prioritizing emergencies for the ambulance crew. Captain Choi recognizes Hye-sung as the doctor from Mirae and hurries him to an urgent patient, who has a rod stuck in his chest. Hye-sung carefully checks the man’s condition and promises him that he will be okay.

After sending off the patient in the ambulance, he finds Ddol-mi. Their eyes meet briefly, and Hye-sung smiles at the sight of her splinting a patient’s arm.

Director Lee and Woo-jin ride away in the opposite direction of the blaring ambulance. Director Lee advises Woo-jin to be extra careful with his robot surgery procedures because he presumes that they will soon be the paragon for the world. He speaks in metaphor, saying that his ship will grow larger, since his dreams are much larger than the position he currently holds.

Captain Choi’s minion, Woo-sung (also Hye-sung’s brother), surveys the other side of the fence and finds a car deep within a massive sinkhole. Suddenly, he hears whimpering and finds a woman covered in metal rods. He rushes to her side and immediately calls Captain Choi for assistance.

The rescue team and our medical professionals arrive on the scene. Hye-sung starts to brief Ddol-mi on their plan, but she already knows exactly what to do. Ji-na decides to ride in the ambulance with the woman, and Hye-sung offers to buy her a full meal another time. He yawns in exhaustion as the ambulance takes off.

Captain Choi supports his colleague’s rescue mission into the sinkhole. The man in the car is severely injured, and the firefighters call for medical support. Ddol-mi finds Hye-sung dozing off on the firetruck and roughly kicks him awake. More than the kick, it seems that the word “patient” makes him come to his senses.

He checks the man’s vitals and assesses that his injuries are severe. Hye-sung asks for an ambulance immediately, but the closest one is too far for this patient’s state. Ddol-mi offers to use her ambulance, and her assertiveness surprises Hye-sung. She reminds him that she’s a doctor as well and doesn’t want to watch a patient die in front of her.

As she rides the ambulance, Ddol-mi calls Hye-sung with updates on the patient’s condition. She tells herself that her medical license isn’t just a piece of paper; it exists for her to save lives.

Woo-sung offers to clean up the scene and salutes to his firefighter sunbaes as they ride off. When the truck leaves, he’s faced with his brother, who he’s been ignoring all day. Though Hye-sung tries to be friendly, Woo-sung gives him the cold shoulder and eventually erupts with anger. He blames Hye-sung for their father’s death and their mother’s vegetative state. “You work at a premier hospital to save everyone else but our parents.”

Hye-sung trembles with anger and hits his brother across the face. Unable to respond, Hye-sung walks away. Woo-sung continues with his biting remarks, “You coward, begging to work at a hospital that made Mom that way. You can’t even say anything. What kind of doctor are you? Because of you… Mom became like this.”

Flashback to the fateful day, when Hye-sung arrives at the ER as a patient and watches his parents being wheeled in. Woo-jin races towards an injured Hye-sung, and it seems that Woo-jin used to work in that department. Later, Hye-sung waits by his mother’s bedside, but she doesn’t wake up. Woo-sung deduces that it must be a medical mistake that resulted in her coma and demands that Hye-sung find the reason.

Back in the present, Hye-sung tries to shake off the memory and walks away from his guilt.

At the hospital, Ddol-mi tells Intern Dae-gil to hold the Ambu bag correctly. He misinterprets her satoori and thinks that Busan must use a different medical jargon, which earns him a look of exasperation.

Woo-jin checks on his patient and walks out of the room worried about his fever. His resident tells him that there’s no way that it’s because of his surgery — it was flawless. As he walks away, he overhears his resident forcefully rejecting a request from the ER for extra beds. Woo-jin decides to address the issue himself and heads down to the ER.

He finds Ji-na and Ddol-mi with the two urgent patients, who need immediate attention at the hospital. He asks Ddol-mi who she is, and her name sparks a flashback to her as a patient planting a kiss on his cheek for a picture. But he doesn’t show any familiarity toward her.

Woo-jin seems to be the only doctor available to treat the patients, but he quickly rejects them. He suggests that the patients be transferred to the closest available hospital with the right resources. As he walks away, Ji-na catches up to him and calls him out for his cowardice. But he simply replies that his reasons for not conducting surgery are well founded. He’s doing his best in a specific field and does not want to taint his reputation for something that requires a skill beyond his comfort level.

He then turns the attention to Ji-na’s “mistake” of overstepping her role and directly saving a life. “The end doesn’t justify the means. Though you may think you were brave, you were rash. You put the patient’s life at risk.”

Ji-na and Ddol-mi are forced back on the road to look for another hospital. When Ddol-mi’s ambulance driver refuses to comply, the women set him straight and demand that he fulfill his role to save the patient’s life.

Back at Han River Mirae Hospital, Hye-sung treats the rest of the patients and talks to the man who was recording the scene earlier. He’s our reporter, and he notes Hye-sung’s dedication to treating all the injured patients despite not having an emergency facility. He replies, “As long as there’s medicine, doctor, and a nurse, it’s an emergency room.”

A new face enters the hospital, and Hye-sung greets his friend, EUN SO-YUL (Kim Jung-hwa). She’s here with gifts to congratulate his new position, and he exchanges a pair of gloves for the gifts. He tells her to start dressing wounds. She remembers from their intern days, right? She looks at him with disbelief, since it’s been over 10 years since her intern days. Plus, she’s a psychiatrist.

But Hye-sung ignores her protests as he receives a call from Ddol-mi about their patient being rejected from all the nearby hospitals. He orders her to bring the patient to Han River Mirae Hospital. They don’t have the ideal setting, but he’ll make it work.

He orders Sister (aka the only nurse at the hospital) to call the anesthesiologist and prepare the surgery room. She tells Brother that they don’t have the staff to take in a surgery patient, but he yells with urgency that he’ll do it all. As Sister calls in for the surgery essentials, Hye-sung turns to So-yul and tells her that she’ll be in the surgery. She argues that she’s just a psychiatrist, but Hye-sung insists that psychiatrists are doctors too. Touché.

Right before the ambulance arrives at the hospital, the patient undergoes cardiac arrest. Ddol-mi immediately injects epinephrine and conducts CPR as the patient enters the hospital. Busan Ambulance Driver tries to convince Ddol-mi to get off of the stretcher and return to Busan, but Hye-sung won’t allow her to leave because he needs an assistant.

They argue back and forth, and it’s amusing to see Ddol-mi conflicted all while performing CPR. She inevitably ends up with the patient (still performing CPR), and Busan Ambulance Driver decides to take his leave. When he turns around from the closed elevator, he finds the reporter, having recorded the whole scene.

Hye-sung continues CPR in the surgery room, even though the anesthesiologist insists that the heart monitor shows no hope. But just as last time, the patient’s heart starts to beat again, and the rest of the crew enters the surgery room. Before they begin, Hye-sung gives them a pep talk: “I know there are unfamiliar faces, and I know it’s been a while since your intern days. It makes no sense, but it’s embarrassing to let this patient die on the road looking for a hospital when there are doctors here. Let’s return to this man, a father and husband, back to his family.”

Assemblyman Gu Ja-hyuk reads to a sleeping young boy at home, where Chief Kang prepares glasses of wine. After tucking the boy into bed, he joins Chief Kang on the couch for wine. He talks about his desire to be a good father to Dong-ho, since he was never around for his older daughter’s upbringing and ended up divorced.

Chief Kang turns on the TV and watches the news of the crane accident. It grabs their attention, and Chief Kang receives a call from the hospital that they need her assistance because of the accident. She rushes out after a quick peck, leaving the man alone with his wine.

The reporter continues to record footage about the current situation, this time with Sister restoring the shut-down intensive care unit. She refuses to be filmed and continues talking about Hye-sung’s dedication while preparing the room. She reconsiders being on camera if she could put on some make-up, but the reporter has been long gone by the time she makes that decision.

Chief Kang arrives at the hospital but looks underwhelmed by the ER. She asks the intern why there aren’t more patients in the hospital, and he explains that Woo-jin turned away a patient earlier who needed emergency surgery. She silently accepts the situation, but the intern voices her thoughts: “If Hye-sung were here, things would be different.”

In the surgery, Hye-sung rapidly ties the rupture and orders Ddol-mi to cut. Unfocused and nervous, she ends up tearing the organ even further. Hye-sung loses his temper and yells at Ddol-mi for messing up, but So-yul breaks the reality to him. He’s trying to make an impossible situation possible, so he better be patient with his team. Realizing his fault, he apologizes and continues with the surgery. Ddol-mi vows to never go into surgery with this jerk again. Then the patient goes into cardiac arrest.

Back at the sinkhole, the firefighter rescue captain searches for any form of identification for the hospital but can’t seem to find anything other than a random wig on the dashboard.

Hye-sung persistently performs CPR on the patient, and he thankfully comes back to normal levels. Before they return to surgery, Hye-sung checks the patient’s creatinine levels to gage kidney function. They’re normal as well, so he decides to cut the ruptured kidney since you can still live with one. So-yul tries to stop him, knowing the risk of another lawsuit. But Hye-sung says he’ll go to court with gratitude if this patient lives.

Sister peeks her head out of the ICU and offers to participate in an interview. But her efforts are interrupted by Hye-sung and his surgery team wheeling the patient into the unit. The reporter and his camera crew approach Hye-sung for details on the patient.

At the fire department dorms, Captain Choi, Woo-sung, and another colleague watch the news, where they see Hye-sung’s interview. Director Lee, Woo-jin, and the Mirae ER all watch the interview as well. Hye-sung presumes that the patient was rejected from Mirae Hospital because the doctors valued their medical career over the patient’s life. Despite the lacking surgical facilities, he performed surgery anyway because he believes that no patient deserves to die on the road.

After watching the interview, Director Lee tries to explain to the Mirae president (they’re related in some way, though it’s not clear how) that he transferred Hye-sung because he caused too many problems at the hospital. The president orders him to reinstate Hye-sung because he wants to create a better hospital. It’s also hinted that the president has an ill son, and the president blames himself for his son’s illness. When Director Lee resists the order, the president threatens his position.

Ji-na and So-yul leave the hospital, commenting on how life gets a crazier with Hye-sung around. So-yul mentions how she’d forgotten after all these years but got a rude awakening today. Ji-na agrees but admits that she likes the satisfaction of saving a life.

In the ICU, Ddol-mi ignores Hye-sung’s friendly gestures and answers a call from her Chief. He yells at her for ditching her duties and says she’s been replaced for tomorrow morning’s surgery. In fact, she should just plan on taking a long break since she’s been fired.

Hye-sung overhears the unfortunate phone call and comments on how inconvenient it is to get fired as a third-year resident with one year left. That doesn’t make her feel any better, and she decides to leave right at that moment for Busan. She makes her big exit, and Hye-sung settles down by the patient for a nap.

Ddol-mi comes right back to ask for transportation money, but she’s flatly rejected by Hye-sung, who asks her to look over the patient as he sleeps. She’s not going to be un-fired anytime soon. Frustrated by her current situation, she throws a kick in the air surely intended for Hye-sung.

After treating patients, Chief Kang returns to her office to rewatch Hye-sung’s interview, which she notes is very much in his character. She receives a call from Director Lee to take responsibility for this fiasco, so she begins her detective work to identify Hye-sung’s patient.

She first approaches the woman in their hospital and recognizes her as the woman she saw embracing the Minister while waiting for Ja-hyuk. She asks for the man’s identification, but the woman refuses to tell her anything.

Chief Kang visits the fire station next, where she retrieves the items found in the sinkhole. She brings them back to the office and discovers an ID for Minister Suk Joong-won. Then, her suspicions are confirmed when she finds cellphones that correspond with each other — one labeled with a code name and the other with “Honey.”

She reports to Director Lee, who seems infuriated that Woo-jin would turn away a dignitary. When Woo-jin arrives at his office, Director Lee scolds him for not recognizing the Minister, especially since they had just met. He orders them to leave, but Chief Kang stays.

She reveals the mistress relationship she’s discovered and suggests that Director Lee manipulate the situation to his favor. He can claim to have sent the Minister to another hospital to protect the Minister’s personal life from disclosure. Director Lee brightens up at this solution and commends Chief Kang. When she leaves his office, she finds Woo-jin standing right outside, having eavesdropped on their whole conversation. He leaves in a huff.

Ddol-mi continues to let off steam by gesturing hits at a sleeping Hye-sung. She’s interrupted by an uninvited guest, Director Lee, who quickly checks the patient’s state. He asks for a private space to talk to Hye-sung, so Ddol-mi leaves and eavesdrops outside.

Director Lee shakes Hye-sung awake and orders that this patient be transferred to Mirae Hospital. Hye-sung smirks and comments that his interview must have really affected him. Director Lee tries to be civil in suggesting that the patient be transferred from this awful facility to Mirae, but he can’t go too far without being hypocritical. Hye-sung calls him out for making Han River Mirae into the state that it’s at now and tells him to send more staff his way instead of pretending this never happened.

Enraged by Hye-sung’s boldness, Director Lee stomps out of the hospital while Ddol-mi looks impressed and gives her nod of approval.

Captain Choi fights with his wife over the phone, unhappy with her grumbling and upset that she hung up before he got a chance to talk to his daughter. His audience stares blankly at him, having heard his petty argument.

The reporter consults his scientist reference about the impending earthquake, and the scientist shows him a video sent to him that morning. It shows an unusually case of fish all washed up dead. Anxious about the chances of an earthquake occurring too soon, the reporter persuades his boss to announce precautionary messages in the broadcast.

The next morning, Ddol-mi pushes Hye-sung awake and demands to get her transportation money. He agrees to do so and has Sister watch over their ICU patient. At the bank, he gives Ddol-mi her flight money, meal money, and surgery money. He felt bad about her getting fired, especially as a third year resident.

Ddol-mi sighs that her father was so excited at the prospect of her becoming a doctor. She’s doesn’t know how to reveal such disappointing news. Hye-sung sees her unnecessary dilemma and decides to break the news to her: She won’t get fired.

Hye-sung called her Chief last night and praised Ddol-mi, fabricating her excellent surgery skills into their story. He gives her a smug smile, and Ddol-mi expresses her relief by smacking Hye-sung for not telling her earlier. She continues to blame her distress on him, but Hye-sung notices strange colors of multiple rainbows in the sky.

They had outside to observe the abnormally bright and colorful sky. Suddenly, the world starts shaking — the leaves on the tree trembling, glass breaking, the hospital lights swaying. The manholes start to leak water and eventually shoot water into the air. The ground cracks. The building rumbles, and pieces start to fall. Hye-sung grabs Ddol-mi through the falling pieces and debris. The earthquake has arrived.

 
COMMENTS

It’s here! As much as I’m excited for this earthquake to finally hit, I’m glad we got a precursor to the real disaster to prepare our team to work together. I like the bit of backstory we get in this episode with both Ddol-mi and Hye-sung. The quick flashbacks piqued my curiosity on how our characters’ pasts shaped their current practice. It seems that Hye-sung is taking the blame for something out of his control. Based on the flashback, he seemed physically incapable of saving his father and mother. So why is his brother blaming him? There’s something behind Hye-sung’s intense passion to save lives and something holding him back from getting justice for his mother’s state.

While Ddol-mi’s story appears to be significantly less complex that Hye-sung’s past, I hope that we’re given more than a country bumpkin who aspires to be a doctor. Somehow Woo-jin is a part of her past, and he seemed like a different person then — much less guarded and more approachable. I’m interested to see how Woo-jin fits into the narrative, now that we’ve somewhat established that his current practice hasn’t always been his philosophy. But his philosophy now does seem practical. Too cold and logical when dealing with human lives, but very practical in the sense that he knows his limitations. I don’t think he’s sadistic or intentionally cruel; I just think he’s exceptionally selfish. And as a doctor, selfishness could lead to deaths. The fact that he’s refusing to make that connection makes him the antagonist that he is, unable to connect to patients past his robot skills.

I like that this episode depicts Hye-sung’s intense passion for saving lives as double-edged sword. He doesn’t blink an eye when he decides to treat a patient, and he’s an admirable doctor because of this drive. But he’s also reckless and unrealistic in his mission to save everyone he reaches. He becomes an irritable jerk when dealing with imperfection in surgery, unwilling to tolerate any skill or passion less than his. I appreciated the reality check he was given during surgery. Nothing is ideal, and he’s going to have to work with what he’s got. A valuable lesson to learn before you’re given even less to work with.

I think there’s something quite profound about the concept of disaster. We’re drawn to the myths of apocalypse because there’s something we want to learn about ourselves in the case of such trauma: what matters to us. Of course, I don’t expect this disaster to be the Apocalypse of Seoul, but I do expect some sort of realigning in our characters. Stripping away the hospital, the politics, and the luxuries of life, it will be interesting to see what decisions our characters make and their rationale. Who will look more absurd: the specialized hospital rejecting emergency patients or the broken hospital without an emergency room accepting all the patients? I can already see the latter option becoming reality for our scenario, in which case, Hye-sung better get his beauty sleep now. He’s not going to rest anytime soon.

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Ooh..an interesting drama.. Its different and i do hope it'll deliver the expectations..

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Thanks for recapping this one!

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The subbing for this one is going so slowly! I think it was half the first episode last night on Viki. I found the first episode on Dramafire but not the second.

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medical dramas always take longer - if there isn't any top actor/idol actor in it.

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Yah. Noticed the subbing is also slow if the dramas are from OCN or JTBC cable stations. At least the Chinese subs for D-Day is already current (till ep4).

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Nice high kick by Ddol,mi, there.

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"I don’t think he’s sadistic or intentionally cruel; I just think he’s exceptionally selfish. And as a doctor, selfishness could lead to deaths. The fact that he’s refusing to make that connection makes him the antagonist that he is, unable to connect to patients past his robot skills. "

I'll agree that Woo-jin is exceptionally selfish but you do have to be a bi t selfish, a surgeon would probably kill more people by attempting a surgery they're not skilled enough for than by turning the patient away.

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This I believe is application only if there are other doctors who can do the job better, but in an emergency, you should do whatever you can to save a life. Hippocratic oath?

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Thanks dramallama! Love this drama and all the conflicting and controversial situations it presents.

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"She tells herself that her medical license isn’t just a piece of paper; it exists for her to save lives. "

In what kind of medical system is THIS even an ISSUE?

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You obviously have not watched enough Korean dramas, or you would know that in Korea most hospitals are run for the sole purpose of creating a stage for doctor infighting, corruption, and to secretly murder your enemies.

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There is even a special class instructing (kdrama) doctors how to do these things.

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Sadly, we're still in that bizzarro world of Kdrama where the majority of the people who devote six or eight years of their lives in the grueling world of medical school then spend the next forty years trying to avoid treating the sick and injured at all if they can find any excuse.

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And where the worst doctors are those in charge.

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I watched up until the third episode and honestly, I'm pretty impressed. I like how they didn't make Haesung constantly hating on Ddolmi just because that first action for pneumothorax patient. The jokes were good too. There are so many thing haven't revealed but it's okay, we still have 16 episodes to go.

Well, this drama is worth to watch.

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I really really want to watch this, but the subs is taking like a forever :( im not blaming the subbers, since this show is on cable (jTBC) and dont have popular actors. Maybe i will just save this for later, after it has been fully subbed. Waiting for a next epi is painful enough, but waiting for subs is a real pain. I can understand a bit here n there without subs, but if it has subs, it will be really better :D

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I have watched upto ep 3 without sub and I got real Goosebumps in ep 3 of course with sub we enjoy the best but you can watch it without it specially ep 3 and I don't think there will be any problem to watch it again with subs :)

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i will try :P

I can guess the plot, just it will be more fun watching with subs :D

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thanks dramallama!

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I like the look of the show. The camera work, the special effects, the overall authenticity. The disaster scene had so much going on and many little details. I feel it would even have looked good on the big screen.

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Oh and thanks, dramallama. I feel that I can follow most of it with your great recap!

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Hi @GB!
So happy to see you here! Yes, I also like the overall look of this drama. I hope it stays good!

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Hi @ pastmidnite ?

So do I! I watched Ep 3. Really impressive and large-scale. Now we just have to be patient LOL!

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Hi @GB, @PastMidnight,
Good to see you two here. I had not heard of this drama and ran across it on a few websites but wondered why only episode 1 was subbed.

Thankfully subbing is picking up on Vicki and I also just watched episode 3. I'm impressed...did not expect the quality and yes, it's large-scale; very movie like. Seems like another gem after IRY...excited.

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Hi @ LarryMimosa, nice seeing you too!

LOL! Without understanding much, I FFD Episode 4 as well. I really need to know some of what was going on. It continued to be interesting. :)

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They are really detailed. I particularly noticed the bandages...
the bandage on Capt Choi was first white, then a yelowish patch appeared, the same way it would on a real wound. In ep 3 and 4, the patch had turned red...very realistic. Evebtually, he had a new bandage. The bandage on the nurse Hye sung calls Sister also had blood stains initially. Very good on details.

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Not bad! Not bad at all!
I was looking forward to this, being a disaster drama, pre-produced and all (rare things in kdrama land), although I'm keeping low expectations. Not a big fan of any of the actors, but so far imo they're delivering their respective roles very well! And for a drama, the special effects didn't disappoint. A drama worth looking forward to (albeit patiently lol, the subs are taking forever, but no problem, a big thank you for the subbers!)!

Thanks for the recap, dramallama!

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Look at the height difference between HS and DM in the third photo and the second last photo (all in the recap, not with the main pic nor ones in comments)

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Thanks for recapping this drama! I've been watching it unsubbed but haven't been able to understand some because of the medical language and genre. But your recaps have totally helped fill in those gaps!!!! Can't wait to read more.

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Argh, watched first two eps and now I have to let off some steam. I really really wanted to like it, but instead I ended up loathing it more and more as the minutes tick by. Now I'm in full rage mode and it's not pretty. *RANT AHEAD* Please ignore me if you're not picky about your procedurals.

idk, at this point it feels like a low rent version of Golden Time. It's pretty much a fail as a procedural, so I'm really hoping with the earthquake causes a bit of a shift genre-wise, though hopefully it won't transform into a low rent version of The End of the World. The production is okay, except there's no urgency and I tend to fault the PD over the actors for that particular problem...for instance, why are they always milling about stretchers filled with dying patients instead of running full out? Why is the ER so empty and calm the majority of the time? Why do the emergency vehicles drive so slowly (and stop to pick up nonessential personnel)? But then, why are these characters so unprofessional that they meander through personal conversations and reminisces, take random, petty potshots at each other, and sort out relationship problems, standing over a patient that has 10-30 minutes to live? Why does the head of the ER find out about a major disaster in her precinct through the evening news, hours later? Why are emergency surgeries performed in the ER, with no discussion of why that's weird without a trauma center? How was the head of the ER running a profit with the hero countermanding her orders, taking extra patients, and demanding expensive surgeries at every turn? Why was Ddol-mi chauffeured to Seoul in an ambulance while off duty? How is it the slightest bit amusing that disaster relief personnel absconded with an emergency vehicle and junior staff members for several hours to go drinking? Why does everyone flout protocol like it's just a bunch of silly rules keeping heroes from being heroic, when it is a very grey, messy issue at worst, and medical malpractice cuts both ways (yes, sometimes patients need protecting from overzealous, underqualified doctors/nurses, too)? And why do the characters seem to go through everything on autopilot, like zombies in some cases? Because that's the real issue--the actors have zero intensity and the writing has zero credibility. The writer's handling of medical ethics is so childish and black-and-white, the main character has become this loathsome combo of bully, hypocrite and zealot whose extreme irresponsibility and rampant disregard for protocol have been heroized through a flattering strawman comparison with the eeeeevil moneygrubbing hospital execs and pampered do-nothings who dare insulate themselves and their careers against lawsuits that would ruin their entire lives. You get the sense she doesn't want to discuss these issues for real, though--she's just trying to make the hero ~cool and, well, ~heroic. If this were a disaster thriller, I'd deal with it, but if she goes down the...

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...but if she goes down the procedural road as she is doing, she can't afford to BS these themes.

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Nicely put. It's as though the people who write these medical dramas have never been in a hospital and never known a doctor.

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Mirae Hospital(the main one) is a Cancer specialized hosptial,the ER for this hospital is not a vital department in the hospital according to the male director of the hospital so they do not have the ability(the no. of bed) to have streams of emergency patients arriving every single moment,they also have a tendency to reject emergency patients so the ambulances do not usually sent patients to them(they have to call for approval before sending the patients there).The cancer department is also unwilling to give the ER their empty beds as seen from episode 2. So because it is not the kind of hospital that cater to emergency patients, the doctors and nurses are not that fast and urgent on their feets(except for haesung). In real life I don't think you usually go to cancer specialized hospital for emergency treatment do you?
Ddol-mi is actually not off duty,she is transferring a patient from busan to seoul
The fire-fighters are actually off duty so they can drink
The PD and writers are showing both Haesung heroic side and weakness,emphasing he is not a perfect person
I suggest you rewatch the epsiodes because you missed many of the details

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My point of confusion is that they do have an ER (that appears to be fully operational, and apparently is one of the most profitable wings of the hospital for reasons that make no sense financially, let alone purely on a thematic level), and they are regularly accepting patients they wouldn't normally treat thanks to Haesung, who is performing surgeries and taking operating rooms (directly countermanding his boss's orders to her face), despite the fact that there is no trauma center and the other departments point blank refuse to offer up ORs. Yet we've had no real discussion of or advocacy for a trauma center--instead we have an extremist attempting emergency surgeries out of a non-operational OR with inexperienced, un-credentialed staff, and then refusing (!) to transfer the patient to a fully operational, fully funded hospital out of personal grievances and a desire to score points against his eeeevil boss. Golden Time dealt with a lot of the same themes and came to some of the same conclusions (well, some of the stuff here is clearly a rip-off of that drama, so no surprise there), but it had a struggle with ethics and nuanced thematic consciousness about what makes a good doctor, how we become one, etc, and a willingness to explore the risks as well as the rewards of traumatology, that went far, far beyond what this show is trying to do. It didn't stop at giving its main characters hero treatments and villainizing every other perspective or level of human weakness.

To use an example: I lived next to University of Chicago's hospital for four years. They were a tier 1 cancer research institution had an ER, no trauma center (on the south side...yeah). Their ER was constantly full, all the more because the hospital had such wide renown (I met many people in very bad shape who took public transport over ambulances so they could go there), but they sent gunshot victims up to Northwestern, which was equipped to perform the surgeries. Cue protests, intense discussion in the community, etc. The point is, if the hospital is well-funded, has an operational ER (as this one does), a good reputation (usually garnered by research/departments removed from the ER), emergency patients are going to flock there. But trauma surgeries are something you have to fight for in specific ways, not something you can just blindly rail against the system for without realizing there are more helpful, constructive ways to talk about this--it would be nice if the drama would realize that.

If Ddol-mi wasn't off duty, then my bad, but it's still beyond unprofessional of her to linger in the city hours after she's dispensed with her duty. Still not sure the firefighter was off-duty, though--he took a 119 call from that homeless guy and then took his underlings with him to "rescue" him--cue the hours spent drinking so he would stop clogging up their phone lines in the kind of screwy logic that only applies to Kdramas.

Also, I don't feel like the PD and writer...

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Also, I don't feel like the PD and writer are showing us Haesung's weaknesses, so much as showing "flaws" that are coded as "heroic" (let's put it this way, he's lucky he's a kdrama geeeenius or he would have been thrown in jail a long long time ago), but that's just me. He's clearly their cipher for their take on medical ethics and what constitutes a "hero" in a white coat. The way they've cut down the line of good and bad--"good" doctors take desperate measures and ignore professional protocol, while "bad" doctors are cowards hiding in their white tower--is so very obviously in service of making his character ~cool, with no depth beyond that, that it drives me bonkers.

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I really like your way of thinking, juniper! It's very logical. Do you have any dramas you'd recommend that don't gloss over the details?

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lol that's really surprising, I feel like this comment has to be sarcastic even though it seems genuine haha. I think my way of thinking is pretty neurotic haha. I'm not in any way, shape, or form a medical doctor, so obviously I'm not an expert on what the "details" are and I might be full of crap about a lot of this stuff, but if it's basic credibility you're looking for, I'm game for some recs. :) For an honest-to-god good medical procedural, I'd give Golden Time a shot. For a good medical drama that really digs into ethics and what makes a "good" doctor vs. a skilled one, I'd try White Tower. If you want a disaster thriller, I'd watch The End of the World, which is one of my very very favorites and imo one of the best dramas of all time.

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Thanks for the recs!! Noo, my comment wasn't being sarcastic in any way. I'm pretty neurotic myself, which is why it's hard for me to finish any drama haha.

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Watch it online at http://goo.gl/Nc3B78

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for the first time am watching a kdrama with a lot of disastrous action. second jung so min drama and love her mix of seriousness and cute. reminds me of determined oh ha ni. thanks for the recap!

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I know it's a drama, but the seismology stuff in the news interview was pretty silly. I know it's supposed to build tension/drama, but the nerd in me, who also happens to live in a earthquake prone area on the ring of fire, is like UGH SCIENCE.

Re the story.

Between D-Day and Yongpal, I'm beginning to think that there's some serious corruption in Seoul's hospital system. Are the plot points in which everyone who isn't wealthy gets subpar medical attention some form of valid critique? Or is it just the current thing in dramaland?

Thanks for the recap.

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I do like the unforced, nonchalant chemistry between Ddol-Mi and Hye-Sung.

Will every episode end with a literal earth-ripping cliffhanger?.

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thanks for the recap i waited for it ,not to good but nice story i want to see the next ep please don't be late.

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After watching the next episode I can already tell that I will love this show, mainly because it's about finding heroes in unexpected people. You might not think highly of a homeless person, but in an emergency situation he can have more courage than your average politician who swore to serve. It's the kind of story that always makes me cry and want to be a better person. :)

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This must be really good! I want to marathon this once (at least) 8 episodes are out!!!

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