185

She Was Pretty: Episode 2

She Was Pretty continues its strong start with a second episode that’s as good as the first, giving us a little more information about our characters and their frustrating situation. Sung-joon and Hye-jin get off on the wrong foot at work, creating a lot of frustration and misunderstanding. It doesn’t help that Sung-joon has a secret of his own, causing him to behave out of character and confusing Hye-jin even further. He’s not the sweet first love she remembers, so maybe it’s best for now that he doesn’t know who she truly is.

EPISODE 2 RECAP

Sung-joon speaks on the phone in English to a man who warns him that he only has three months, and only “three shots” at… something. We discover that he’s back in Korea for the first time in fifteen years, and he tells his cabbie vaguely that he has some things to do, and one thing he has to find — his umbrella.

We get a flashback to the elevator incident, when someone had shoved Hye-jin off in favor of a pretty girl. The pretty girl gets tapped on the shoulder, and simpers when Sung-joon asks if she’s busy, assuming he’s asking her out. Instead he invites her to go find her conscience since she’s not busy, HA. She’s pushed out, and it’s a grinning Shin-hyuk who invites Hye-jin back onto the elevator while Sung-joon melts into the background.

Sung-joon is introduced to the Most staff as the new deputy editor, and Hye-jin nearly swallows her tongue in surprise. She tries to hide under her desk, but Sung-joon’s words that he’s glad his friend turned out to be a cool person echo in her head.

All the girls in the office swoon over Sung-joon (who can blame them?) except Elevator Girl, who’s horrified to recognize him. Her name is HAN SO-RI, and she hilariously tries to hide behind her hair during introductions. Only Shin-hyuk notices Hye-jin making a run for it as she heads for the stairs to catch her breath.

She’s so shaken up she can’t even form complete sentences, and when Ha-ri calls, both girls freak out that Sung-joon would show up at Hye-jin’s work, of all places. Hye-jin worries that he’ll recognize her after all — surely there’s something about her that still looks like her old self? Somehow Ha-ri’s assurances that she was sooooo pretty back then and there’s absolutely nothing the same now, aren’t very comforting.

Of course there’s her name which will at least catch his attention, but Ha-ri reminds her that her name is pretty common… besides, he thinks he’s already met his first love as an adult, so it shouldn’t occur to him to look twice at this Hye-jin. I think they’re severely underestimating Sung-joon’s intelligence.

Hye-jin is still nervous to death, so there’s only one thing left to do — ask for her transfer to be canceled. But no matter how much she screams and begs, even laying on the floor kicking and crying, the Most editorial department has too much clout and there’s no way out of it.

As it turns out, the eccentric Chief Editor Kim is the chairman of the company’s sister. She pretty much does nothing but shop all day, but as the chairman’s sister, she gets whatever she wants. And she requested Hye-jin, so if Hye-jin wants out of the department, she has to resign.

She goes back to the Most headquarters and peeps in the door, looking for Sung-joon, and nearly scares Shin-hyuk half to death. At least he remembers her now, asking about her tooth and welcoming her to the Editing Team.

Hye-jin asks if he’s the one who requested her transfer to his department, which he confirms in his roundabout way. Hye-jin isn’t as grateful as he assumes, and starts to ask him to cancel the transfer, but she’s interrupted when the hard-nosed Reporter Cha asks to see her privately. (It’s hilarious how Shin-hyuk keeps calling Hye-jin “Michael Jackson” because of her white socks and black shoes, hee.)

Hye-jin finally gets a glimpse of Sung-joon from the editor’s office, so she’s distracted answering Reporter Cha’s questions about her near-perfect editing job. There’s a twentieth-anniversary edition of Most coming out in three months, so they’d like her to stay and work until then. Hye-jin tries to decline but she’s refused, even when she flat-out calls herself an idiot.

Hye-jin panics when Sung-joon walks right into the office, first jumping under the desk then just fleeing the area. Sung-joon barely seems to notice her, but Shin-hyuk does, wondering if she’s got stomach issues.

Hye-jin hides in the restroom and overhears the girls from Most going gaga over Sung-joon’s looks. She texts Ha-ri that begging for a transfer cancellation failed, so now she’s hiding, so Ha-ri dispenses some tough love… get out of the bathroom and stop being such a chicken.

So Hye-jin girds her loins and marches herself confidently back to the Most room — until she spots Sung-joon, and goes right back into flail-and-panic mode. She finds herself alone in the elevator with him anyway, so of course the elevator malfunctions, and Hye-jin gets so frantic that Sung-joon finally grabs her wrist to calm her down.

He does notice her name from her badge, but he doesn’t make an issue of it and only asks her not to damage the elevator door. Hye-jin twitches and gasps while they wait for help, making more of a spectacle of herself than if she just waited patiently. She’s so freaked out that she forgets how to breathe and nearly passes out, so Sung-joon assumes she’s claustrophobic.

As Hye-jin kneels gasping for air, Sung-joon silently puts an earbud in her ear and she hears “Close to You,” the same song she used to calm him down all those years ago. It works and her breathing slows, and Sung-joon softly tells her that someone taught him this trick. Is it too early to swoon? Because I’m swooning so hard right now.

For just a moment we see little Hye-jin and little Sung-joon in the elevator, looking at each other and smiling, then the doors open and Sung-joon calmly goes back to work. Hye-jin is left frozen in place.

Ha-ri is at work too, where she declines a call from “That Woman,” then looks up to see the caller standing in front of her. The woman, whom I’m assuming is Ha-ri’s mother, tells her to answer her calls from now on, and the two speak to each other in that tone that’s so chillingly polite that it circles right back around to rude.

Sung-joon meets with Chief Editor Kim, whose eccentric behavior seems to irritate him, and he insists on sticking to discussing work. She basically admits she’s gotten this job through her connections and informs him that his job is to also do her job, but he’s already well aware of this situation.

Sung-joon has his own condition for doing this job, which must be kept secret from the rest of the team. We don’t hear what it is, but I assume it’s got something to do with that mysterious phone conversation from his cab ride, where he was told he has “three shots at it.”

Later Sung-joon observes a photo shoot, thankfully unaware that Hye-jin is morosely observing him. She’s called to bring the models some water but, unfamiliar with the set rules, she accidentally makes scuffmarks on the photo set with her shoes.

Sung-joon angrily lights into Hye-jin for this breach and yanks her off the photo set, only now recognizing her from the elevator. At least Reporter Cha takes responsibility for not telling Hye-jin the rules, but when Sung-joon asks if she’s a regular team member and hears that she’s not, he says coldly that it’s a relief. Ouch.

Hye-jin is scrubbing the floor when Chief Editor Kim makes her entrance (I have a feeling she always Makes An Entrance wherever she goes) and summons her. Somehow Hye-jin’s hair is making Chief Editor Kim nauseous and her fuzzball-covered clothes are objectionable as well, and she tells Hye-jin to look “more Most” in the future. Interesting how Sung-joon perks up when Hye-jin mentions her “malicious curls.”

After a long day doing grunt work around the photo shoot, Hye-jin finds herself at the bus stop next to a huge “Most” poster, and stares at the beautiful model longingly. Ha-ri finds her there and immediately knows something is wrong, but just seeing her best friend worry about her cheers Hye-jin up a bit.

On the drive home Hye-jin despairs that the next three months are going to be like today, when she couldn’t even breathe right around Sung-joon. She hangs out the car window for fresh air and Sung-joon pulls up next to them, but a scooter carrying flowers pulls between them and neither sees the other.

Sung-joon works late into the night until it begins to rain, triggering his memory of young Hye-jin using a shirt to shelter him from the rain. The humidity had caused Hye-jin’s hair to snarl into a ball of frizz, and she’d had to go to her stylist to have it straightened. She’d told young Sung-joon that she inherited her father’s “maliciously curly” hair, which explains why adult Sung-joon looked around at that phrase earlier today.

Little Sung-joon had gotten his hair curled too but he hadn’t liked it, though Hye-jin told him it looked good. She’d asked him to keep her frizzy hair a secret, and adult Sung-joon smiles at the adorable memory.

Depressed, Hye-jin asks Ha-ri if she really should resign, but when she turns to her computer to start job-hunting she shrieks to see an email from Sung-joon. It’s a sweet little “thinking of you” message, and he asks if the frequent London rain doesn’t bother her, since she hates the rain.

Luckily, Ha-ri has been to Europe, so she sends a message back with a photo of herself in London. Now he really will think Hye-jin is in London, and even the coincidence of working with another Kim Hye-jin won’t raise any red flags. Hye-jin can go to work and relax that he won’t figure out who she really is.

She marches into work the next day confident that Sung-joon won’t recognize her, until he stops right in her path. He calls her by name and gets in her face, insulting her education from a no-account school and asking if she thought she could get away with hiding forever. He says that if she was like this (gesturing at her hair and face), she should have stayed hidden and not gotten caught. Augh, his disdainful expression is just so hurtful.

Ohthankgoodness, it was just a dream. I didn’t want to believe Sung-joon would really look at Hye-jin that way. But it’s enough to prompt Hye-jin to write a resignation letter, though Ha-ri catches her with it and gives her a stern lecture about giving up.

Hye-jin explains that her friendship with Sung-joon was something special that she’s not willing to ruin, even if it means quitting her job to avoid doing something that will fracture those memories. Ha-ri pretty much calls bullshit on that, and takes Hye-jin’s resignation letter away.

Hye-jin doesn’t expect Ha-ri to understand, but every time she sees Sung-joon she feels like her holey sock — like she’s poor and damaged and needs to hide — and she doesn’t want to feel that way anymore. Ha-ri looks hurt to hear that, but she can’t argue with Hye-jin’s feelings.

Hye-jin drops off her resignation letter the next day, then wanders over to the Most office to work her final day, where it’s Shin-hyuk’s turn to scare her to death. She blames him for this situation and snarls at him, taking offense to his using banmal with her, but he just teases her some more and gives her an expired triangle kimbap. He’s so adorably weird.

Hye-rin happens to be wearing a knockoff of the designer sweater So-ri is wearing today, and So-ri gets twisted out of shape when a coworker thinks they’re wearing the same outfit. Sung-joon calls a mandatory meeting and Hye-jin is assigned to take the minutes, so she tells herself to just endure it for today.

It’s a planning meeting to discuss articles for the twentieth anniversary edition of Most, and the team are startled when Sung-joon actually uses a timer to make sure nobody talks too long. He nixes every single team’s ideas, then calls on Hye-jin for her opinion.

She’s taken aback, unprepared to answer questions since she’s only here to take notes, but her hesitation gives Sung-joon an opening to be mean to her again. He insults her several times and says that if she’s not here to help then she should leave. Even though Shin-hyuk takes up for her, Hye-jin quietly goes.

Sung-joon continues the meeting by tearing up copies of Most, informing them that of all the countries in which Most is published, Korea is the only one where it’s not the top magazine. Tomorrow there will be another meeting, where he expects to hear their solutions for fixing the problem.

Hye-jin mopes over Sung-joon’s callous treatment of her in front of everyone, while in his office he softens when he looks at the picture of Ha-ri in London. But he turns harsh again when he catches the team playing a game to determine who buys lunch, and he slaps his credit card down and says to have lunch on him if it will cut down on the wasted time.

Chief Editor Kim shops and talks on the phone to her nephew, the company chairman’s son. who apparently also works secretly at Most. Whatever he reports to her ruins her mood, and she doesn’t realize that So-ri was nearby and heard every word.

Hye-jin takes delivery of a package in the company parking lot and runs smack into Sung-joon, who does the swoony slow-catch… then drops her. He leaves her there on the ground, which makes it even more delicious when he’s so absorbed in his tablet that he walks into a glass door. HAHAHA. You deserved that.

Hye-jin has had it with Sung-joon’s treatment of her and catches up to him to give him a piece of her mind. She apologizes for her mistake at the photo shoot, but tells him clearly that she’s newly here on Most’s request, so that meeting was a surprise to her. She tells him firmly that he has no right to insult her like he’s done without knowing her circumstances.

Too bad that was all in her head and she chickens out once she’s face-to-face with him. She tries again in the elevator but she’s so nervous she ends up making no sense, stammering so badly that he asks if she has a disability. Whoa, what a jerk.

Hye-jin is so shocked, she just asks why he hates her so much. Sung-joon lists her bad work skills, her unprofessional behavior, and most of all, “That somebody like you is named Kim Hye-jin. It’s a name that’s too good for you.” Oh wow. Wow.

Hye-jin goes to the restroom to splash water on her face, but she can’t stop his harsh words echoing through her mind. She thinks to herself that this isn’t the sweet, innocent Sung-joon she knew, and tells herself that precious memories won’t feed her or pay her bills. She renounces him as her first love — he’s now just a stranger with the same name. She’ll never give him the satisfaction of firing her!

… which is when she remembers the resignation letter she left on her boss’s desk this morning. He’s out of the office until two o’clock, and it’s nearly two now, so Hye-jin runs to his office. She sees him just picking up her letter, and screams at him to stop, rushing over and tearing it up.

So-ri is eaten up with curiosity over who on her team is the chairman of the company’s son, eyeballing each of the men suspiciously. Of the three men named Kim, she dismisses the slovenly Poong-ho right away, but thinks it’s possible it could be Joon-woo or Shin-hyuk. Whoever it is, she decides to figure it out quickly and snap him up.

Chief Editor Kim wants to have a party to welcome the new deputy editor, but Sung-joon makes it clear that he’s going to be too busy for a party, ever. He leaves for a meeting and the beauty team girls gossip at his rudeness, and Hye-jin adds that he’s got a terrible personality.

She gets on a roll and doesn’t notice when everyone starts to wave frantically that Sung-joon is right behind her, and when she does see him she can only scream and stammer. He retrieves the file he came to get (that she’s sitting on) and leaves in silence, to Hye-jin’s dismay and Shin-hyuk’s amusement.

Chief Editor Kim took Sung-joon’s rejection of a party in stride, but she’s more serious later as she thinks over his earlier revelation, the one she’d promised to keep secret: in three months, Korea’s Most will be discontinued. That is, unless they can reach the top spot in the industry in that amount of time — and he’s here to make that happen.

In his opinion it can be done with the current team, and he intends to push them to their utmost potential. He had asked her to let him have free reign to accomplish it whatever it takes, because he knows that if such a long-running magazine were to be cancelled, the team working on it when that happens would never work in the industry again. His own job is also on the line, so he’s committed to making sure that doesn’t happen.

Sung-joon goes to a meeting at a hotel, which happens to be the one where Ha-ri works, and they narrowly miss running into each other several times. But as he’s driving away he glances in the rearview mirror and sees Ha-ri, and he rushes back to the hotel. Calling out, “Kim Hye-jin!” he grabs Ha-ri’s wrist and whirls her around, and they both stand in surprise to see each other.

COMMENTS

So much fun, I’m just loving it to death. I was hoping for a sweet and happy drama with She Was Pretty, and I would have been satisfied with that… but I’m so happy that that’s not all we’re getting. It’s not just a show about a girl who grew up unattractive and her friend who grew up handsome — it’s about the value judgments that society places on people, and how it’s wrong to assume that someone’s attractiveness gives or takes away their worth as a person. It’s a beautiful message, and I’m already deeply moved and we’re only two episodes in. I can’t wait to see where this show takes us, and the messages it has to deliver.

I mostly love the characters, and their capacity to strongly care for one another. Hye-jin and Ha-ri’s friendship is a lovely thing to see in a genre that so often has women pitted against each other, vying to be The Prettiest (and therefore the one who matters most). But Hye-jin and Ha-ri have a wonderful loving relationship, where just seeing the other can brighten their day. I adore them, and I adore that their looks, on opposite ends of the attractiveness spectrum, mean absolutely nothing to their love for each other.

The thing I love most about Hye-jin is her refusal to let her looks (or rather, the way society responds to her looks, because her actual looks aren’t that bad) get her down. She knows she’s a person of value and worth, that she deserves a good job and a happy life. I went into this show expecting her character to have low self-esteem because of her looks, and it’s the thing I’m appreciating the most about her, that she grew up with her self-worth intact. A portion of it may be bravado, but hey, don’t we all cover up our insecurities with a bit of bravado sometimes? Hye-jin does too, but thankfully not to an unhealthy extent, and she seems to accept her current looks with dignity.

So it’s hard to see her self worth being broken down now with Sung-joon’s appearance as an unexpectedly-hot guy. She wasn’t scared to meet him when she thought they were on the same level looks-wise, because she approached the first man, the one who looked as she expected Sung-joon to look, with all kinds of excitement. But the real Sung-joon’s transformation threw her for a loop… in that one moment when Hye-jin saw how handsome he’d grown, then watched him walk right past her as if she didn’t exist, Hye-jin’s confidence that she deserves good things took a nosedive. I can’t really blame him for expecting her to be pretty any more than she expected him to be a big man in glasses, though — they both went into the meeting with preconcieved expectations based on the person they remembered.

But I hate that Hye-jin let her disappointment lead her to making a bad decision to have her friend pose as herself, especially since it’s so clear to us that Hye-jin and Sung-joon’s friendship means as much to Sung-joon as it does to Hye-jin, even now. We know that no matter what she looks like, Sung-joon wouldn’t care and would cherish their bond as much as he did back when he was the ugly duckling. What I want for Hye-jin, more than anything, is to have faith in that bond they shared, to feel confident that he would care for her just the same. If he was so special back when they were kids that she was able to see who he truly was, then he’ll be the same person now and won’t care what she looks like.

Of course, he’s not helping his case by showing his most hard-assed self on the job, though I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt that he isn’t that way in his personal life. Clearly he’s here to make sure the serious problems Most is having are fixed, and there’s no room for making friends when he’s got such a hard job to do. Not to mention, Hye-jin is pretty flaily and distracted around him at the office, so I can’t blame him for being annoyed with her. I can’t even get mad at him for being harsh with her (though some of his hateful comments went too far), because her actions at the magazine have been pretty ridiculous and from his point of view, she’s not contributing much to the magazine’s success. He has a limited amount of time to get this magazine to the top spot, and he can’t afford any dead weight. In his mind, not only is she dead weight on the team, but it seems more personal to him because she shares the same name as his perfect first love, and that’s causing him to turn anger on her that she doesn’t deserve.

I don’t condone it, but I can see why Sung-joon would feel that way. I can also see how Hye-jin would interpret his frustrated reaction to her at work as an indication that he would dismiss her on a personal level as well, if he knew her true identity. From her point of view, when he grew up and grew handsome, he let it go to his head. She has no way of knowing that the magazine is floundering and that he’s under pressure to get it fixed in a very short period of time. All she sees is that her old friend and first love is a jerk now, and she’s probably feeling glad that she hid her identity from him.

But I also love that Hye-jin immediately hated feeling like she had to hide herself, and decided to take action. She didn’t just accept that she should be concealed — she knows that if this situation makes her feel that way, then it’s wrong. I wish her answer to the problem wasn’t to quit, but to go in there and blow them all away with her abilities, which we know are considerable or they wouldn’t have requested her in the first place. I just want her to want Sung-joon to know that about her. But even though she didn’t come to it on her own, I’m glad that his behavior towards her at work finally caused her to get angry, and I hope that rather than give up, she decides to show him how awesome she can be. Because I want him to like her for who she is now as well as who she was then, and Hye-jin is in the perfect position to make that happen.

RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , ,

185

Required fields are marked *

Well, I watched the two first episodes and while I loved the first one, the second left a not so good impression on me to be honest.

Pilot was fun, light and pretty heartfelt introduction to a world of the drama - I mean, nothing revolutionary, but still worth watching. I loved the humour and laughed out loud a few times, which doesn't happen to me very often while watching Kdramas recently. I liked the characters and found their relationships really true, the main conflict also seemed interesting with all the switching between Hyejin and Hari.
And to my surprise, Hwang Jung Eum didn't irritate me as much as in Kill Me, Heal Me. Her signature overhyped acting really worked in favour of Hyejin, upbeat and positive, a lil bit crazy girl underestimated by a world, because of her looks (and there's no amount of things they could possibly do to HJE to make her ugly, like even standing next to Hari I found her prettier, sorry not sorry).
However, I felt like Sungjoon's character came off a little bland. I mean, I can't pinpoint any of his traits apart from obsessing over his first love. Yet I brushed it off, as I thought he'll get a little more likable and developed later. The same went for Siwon, so far he's been only used as a comical trope, thus I'll wait for some deepening of his character in later episodes.

As episode one ended, I couldn't wait to watch what happens next.

Unfortunately, I can't tell the same for episode 2. I feared that the writer would go this route and to my dismay, all I saw was cliches, cliches, cliches.
Doormat female lead unable to utter single word to male lead? Check. Arrogant and cold, but handsome male lead treating female lead as a junk? Check. Everyone keeping secrets from everyone, believing they're doing a right thing? Check. A challenge that a male lead has to complete before a certain time passes? Check. Female lead who can't focus on anything, even work, because ooh muh luv is more important? Check.
And please, can anyone tell Hwang Jung Eum not to scream? Her typical approach wasn't as apparent in episode one, so I don't know why she started doing it in a second. Sometimes I felt like I was watching Oh Rijin in a slightly different environment. Not because their personalities were the same, but because the actress acted them the same way.

I was a bit dissapointed, but I'll keep watching it for good laughs. I hope that the writer steps up his/her game though and starts writing something more original. Fighting, She Was Pretty' team.

0
15
reply

Required fields are marked *

+ million. I loved episode 1, but episode 2 provided a typical assortment of mediocre rom-com cliches. I'll see what happens next week, but if Sung Joon continues screaming and Hee Jin continues to act like a schizophreniac then I am out.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Took the words right outta my mouth

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Exactly how I felt.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Couldn't agree with you more

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Totally agree...HJE was okay in episode 1 but in 2, she was so annoying and overacting. Why she has to act every little scene in so over the top way

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

im late to the party and just watched it. im ok with the plot but the female lead annoys me to no end. i now kdrama comedy has this kind of overacting response, but what kind of employee grabs her boss' pants? and shes not even cute when doing it. so sad.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I couldn't finish ep 2, tho I tried!
I felt that sthg was being shoved down my throat. But most of all, I think:
"The Queen of Overacting", as sb dubbed her in the previous recap thread, has found her soul mates in this PD team, w a writer who creates a char that is a lunatic, and a director who wants to show her as a hyperactive loose canon.

Hwang JE has found her role of a lifetime, and can overact to her heart's content for 8-10 weeks. It gives me a headache just to watch acting w so much physical energy and voice raised so many octaves and decibels. It's more suited for viewers w steel nerves. Me, I've to meditate to calm my jangled ones.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The screaming. Oh my god, the screaming.

At least in KMHM the screaming mostly took place outside of a professional setting, in the company of a multiple personality. Here it's happening AT WORK, and that doubles up on the irritation: it's both a really annoying personal trait, and something that makes no sense in the work context.

The work storyline makes no sense. She was hired because she's not attractive by a very specific manager, and then her efficiency got her transferred. She then repeatedly has meltdowns and screaming fits at that original manager. He has absolutely no reason to keep her around given his original purpose for her has been defeated, and she's causing a ruckus in the office, and it's her SECOND DAY. She's coming off as mentally unstable. It's a competitive program, there are other applicants lined up out the door, one of them would be thrilled to get the call that they've been accepted after all.

Ugh, why did this show go off the rails so quickly?

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

"The storyline makes no sense. She was hired...."

IKR. She trying to pull the pants off her manager when begging him to take her back? Oh, really?

Plus, hasn't she been trying to get a corporate job for years w/o success? Now she gets one, and behaves this way becos of HER 1ST love? Just why is he Her 1st love? I see her being nice to him cos she is a good person, is all.

Makes no sense is right. Bye show.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

not gonna drop the show,i'm here for some clean fun,besides money can't buy you happiness ad definitely not "words".

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Omg! So truse, I got an actual h

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have to say that i disagree. Although SWP didn't up it up much from its pilot, it wasn't bad at all. It has already cemented a character with plenty of room for growth in hye-jin, as she is someone who must re-evaluate her self-worth and esteem because she thinks that her looks and resume are what defines her as a person.

I agree with you on Siwon's character, I felt like so far, his role is quite pointless. obviously he will build depth (and most likely a romance with go jun-hee's character, based on previews), but this is really the first week, so we shouldn't expect so much out of it.

and i think hye-jin's character was fine, because at least she doesn't simply accept the insults thrown at her, waiting for someone to save her, but shows that she does try to stand up for herself. again, her whole character is pretty much built on the fact that she needs to build her self-esteem, so it'll take time for a stronger female lead you want. for now you can look to her best friend's character, she's awesome.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The typical assy male lead in this episode turns me off...sure he may not be like that in his personal life, but treating others in professional life just because you have a hard job of getting this magazine successful again doesn't give you a right to be that hard assed. I can understand if the attack is on professional level, but he's attacking her on such a personal level it sickens me. Besides, since when a person reaches a full potential by constantly yelling and putting them down?

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Agreed. I was actually a bit irritated at the end of episode 2. I can only wait and see how ep 3 & 4 are to decide.

While reading Lollypips great recap and excellent comments (Thank You!) I thought of this theory - he knows he needs everyone's top work or they could be out of this business, perhaps forever. Besides Hye Jin being ineffectual she could possible be putting a bad mark on her resume if things don't work out; so perhaps he's thinking she should quit while she can AND stop being around to she irritate him.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Agreeee! I fell in love at ep 1, but while watching ep 2 I lost my laughter and started to think that Hye-Jin is overreacting. I mean, yes I get that you freaked out, but that was one episode ago.. Or maybe the timeline is too short between the 2 eps? Still, I can't wait to see how Hye-Jin make up her mind and improving at her job because as we know, she (supposed to) got it with the department transfers!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Been waiting for this recap! And i must say,I'm loving this series! Hope it keeps up! ❤️

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yaaay! The recap's here.
Thank you.
Definitely not gonna drop this one.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I wonder if she'll be forced into a make over for a feature article for the magazine.

0
7
reply

Required fields are marked *

Well, I'm sure Koreans wouldn't like it if she ended up looking like this with Sungjoon at the end so a makeover is bound to happen sooner or later. And that's a good point to be honest, I can see it happening

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hello MardyBum and Matt, if this is inspired in "Yo soy Betty la Fea" (Colombian original to Ugly Betty), then she will be Prettyfied (in fact, posters kind of gave this away).

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I bet you're right. I thought how easy it would be to make her look like the girl on the cover at the bus stop.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I did too!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Now that it's been brought up twice -- first by Fashion Director Cha ("If you're going to work for me, you need to do something about that hair."), and then in this long to–do by Chief Editor Kim while everyone on the set stared at Hye Jin like she was some zoo animal -- I'm convinced Hye Jin is getting a makeover. And naturally, Sung Joon will be floored, yada yada yada.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm really interested by the idea that Sung Joon will be floored by a make-over! Because, honestly, in most K-dramas that I've seen where the looks of the female character are actually a plot point, she doesn't usually get a make-over. Or rather, she gets a make-over some time in the middle and then goes back to her normal state almost immediately (Jandi in BOF, Eunchan in Coffee Prince). There are countless kdramas where there's a Pretty Woman scene- the guy buying clothes etc. for the girl- and rarely do they go beyond that one scene into an actual make-over, and the female characters continue wearing their loose, sloppy clothing that they started out with. I've always thought this a very distinctive kdrama trait. So my expectation in a kdrama- unlike a Western drama- would actually be that she won't get a make-over. Or if she does get one, it'll be an episodic thing. All I can see happening is that they tame her hair little by little through the episodes, so at the end, it's a little more natural looking, though not different.

On one hand, I took note of those exact same comments about the hair etc., and came to the same conclusion that this might be the rare kdrama in which the make-over actually comes through (although I hope it doesn't.) On the other hand, I think this drama is very smart, and it definitely doesn't seem smart to base your premise on a female lead who is looked down upon for being unattractive and then decide that the solution is to make her attractive, not explore her overcoming petty social prejudices re: her physicality. So I'm hoping for the best!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

it wouldn't be a k-drama unless it had at least a few cliches, so yes, i can totally see her going through a thorough makeover sometime soon.

plus it takes work to make her uglier in this show, so it would make sense to lighten up on the hair and makeup to hwang jung-eum's more natural state.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hwang Jung Eum is a good actress, but I've just started feeling like all she ever does now is scream and it's so irritating and not funny at all. She can be hilarious on her own when she doesn't scream and act all crazy. She takes her antics too far. I remember watching her in Secret Love and Incarnation of Money and I really enjoyed her in both of those (although she did cry a tad to much in Secret Love, but tbh who wouldn't? Her life had gone to shit). I hope she goes back to the actress I liked. She can do comedy well, but her acting coach/director needs to tell her to settle down.

Other than that Ep 2 was good, but also frustrating, I can understands Sung Joons POV, but I still don't think him acting disrespectful and rude is a good enough reason, even if he has limited time to bring The Most to being the #1 magazine in Korea. Regardless I think these two have undeniable chemistry, so I'm excited to keep watching, although there are flaws. I hope the good aspects of the drama outweigh the flaws by the end of the drama.

0
10
reply

Required fields are marked *

I totally agree! HJE is actually pretty talented, and come to think of it, I've watched her in many dramas now. But yes, I do think she takes things a notch too much to the point where we as the audience are like "wtf, please stop this". She only needs to do like 80% of what she's doing, right now it feels like 120%. Earlier this year in KMHM, I thought she acted well, but damn every time she screamed it was like my ears had exploded.

OH and yes I don't think Sung Joon has much right to be rude and disrespectful to anyone. Being strict is one thing, being a d*ck is another.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Re:
"HJE is a good actress" in #5, and
"HJE is actually pretty talented" in #5.1:
I imagine a scene in which Helen Mirren watches HJE's acting, and says:
"Wow, this kind of acting is....."
1. good
2. so good it hurts
3. sthg I haven't seen before
4. sthg that shows real talent
5. etc.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't agree with the recapper about Sung Joon's rudeness. There was no reason to act so disrespectful... He's a jerk..no doubt about it.

0
7
reply

Required fields are marked *

He is a BOSS and to be honest magazines stuff don't exactly look like workaholics, so when you think about it he seems ....less of a jerk.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

It's not about how he treated the staff...just look at the use of words in his insults for Hye Jin right from the start...

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

well not like it will totally justify his actions but you have to agree that he hasn't seen HJ in her best moments.
His impression on her is that she is some extra weight for team. For team which he MUST save and HJ also has the same name as his perfect childhood love....yes, SJ was extra rude/harsh but at least it's somehow understandable.

0

He went overboard with some comments. But given an ordinary work setting, if a person goes crazy at every turn, zones out at work and is totally inept and unproductive, if I was a supervisor, I would fire her. Sung Joon is not a social worker or some care giver and they do not work for a charity. It's not his job to be nice, but it's his job to replace people who are not carrying their weight. So it's normal to be annoyed at how a perceived useless person managed to end up drawing pay they do not deserve. It comes with working in a highly competitive environment.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

He did overstep his boundaries and made it personal (see: the "name" comment by him), he should simply have fired her for incompetence.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Not to mention he grabbed her rather rudely to yank her out of the photo set.

0

I feel he has prematurely judged her, think back to the first ep where she got all that work done in just one evening if he had given her a chance addressed her a little more like an actual human maybe he would see that she's could actually be quite a core member of their team. Instead he's made a snap judgement about her. The lead doesn't do herself many favours but she doesn't deserve the treatment the male lead has given her.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Gonna say this again...HJE is beautiful..btw loving this serie already :)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

No matter what this show is trying to convince us about her looks, Hye-jin is absolutely adorable! She's cute and funny and spunky. I have to suspend a LOT of disbelief to imagine that everyone else in this show sees her as ugly when she's so pretty.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have to admit, the second episode was a huge let-down for me. It took all the things I loved - its clever writing, strong characters, mistaken identity - and watered it down into the most basic of cliches. Most of which I can honestly overlook, but I have trouble looking past how cruel they're making Sung Joon.

Being hard and on-point in order to save the magazine I can understand, but I feel like his cruelty to Hye Jin goes above and beyond that. I think the moment that really cinched it for me was when he caught her in that swoon-worthy moment after she almost fell - only to let her fall anyway. That sort of jerkish behavior has nothing to do with stress or the pressures he's under with the magazine, and it transformed an amazing character I could cheer for (someone who looks beyond the surface) into a petty, superficial asshole. Not to mention his ridiculous statement about her name being too good for her made me rage.

He started so winningly, it pains me to see the writer taking him in such an obvious direction, following in the vein of the cold, handsome chaebol. I thought he was going to be so much more than that, but now I'm not so sure. And of course that's not even counting how meek and annoying Hye Jin became after finding him in the company - I thought/ had hoped she'd be stronger than that.

I'm going to keep watching because there's been a bit of a drought in dramaland lately, and I love all these actors, but I'm definitely going to approach it more warily from now on.

0
9
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree with this. His work persona--cold, unyielding, dickish--I could say is separate from who he is in reality. But then I remember the guy that let her back on the elevator and helped calm her down in the elevator. What happened to him?

And I know that his secret is a secret because this is a drama, but wouldn't it make more sense if the team knew the fate of their magazine? They'd work harder and wouldn't be so laissez-faire about it. And Sung-joon wouldn't have to be such a mean boss.

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

As someone who has seen several companies with layovers, or as they called it, when they let most of the old staff (read, above 35) become "redundant," either outright, or by selling it off to another company, I can tell you that the atmosphere is a far cry from productive, even with the promise that if you manage to sell the product your team produce, SOME might be retained by the company in the transfer.
The atmosphere at the workplace becomes really depressing, and nobody has the mood to work hard. It's especiallly harder on the senior members in the team, because their higher salaries means the company is more keen to let go of the them, and other companies less so to take them in.

In theory, it might sound like a good idea to tell them the truth, but from what I've seen in real life, where things like shutting down a whole department happens too often nowadays, people knowing invariably does not make them work harder. Instead, what happens is the whole department just mopes around, worrying about their children, mortgages, etc.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

by the way, I meant job layoffs... we dont use that term much over here, we use "redundant" instead. lol. americanising fail. oops.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for that insight. I won't wrestle with this idea while watching this show from now on!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

That thought crossed my mind too, so that's a really good point.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yeah, I think that's where I struggle. He's like a completely different person, and there's only so much you can blame on the pressures of the job. I was rooting for the sweet guy in the elevator - not the jerk who's cruelly dismissive of someone just because they happen to share the same name as their first love. Honestly, if he'd started off that way, it wouldn't have bothered me quite as much, because then at least I could look forward to his comeuppance; but now it just feels like we were swindled, and he's turning into a caricature of the typical male lead.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Comment was deleted

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I understand why it's happening too, but that doesn't mean I have to like it. :)

I guess I feel cheated because the way he was portrayed in the first episode is completely different to how he's depicted now. And though, yes, it's always refreshing to see someone eat their words, I feel like this could've been achieved without making him dislikable in the process. Even if he was only mean to her at work, he'd still regret how he treated her; as a nice guy, tricked into falling for her friend, he'd still regret not recognizing her and treating her differently. And he's still going to regret the mistaken identity when she starts falling for her coworker, whether he was nice to her or not. Either way, he's going to experience loss, regret, and disappointment - making him a jerk just makes ME care less.

And honestly, the bickering couple is my number one favorite shipping trope ever (there's a reason I've loved Ranma 1/2 for over 16 years); but I feel like in this story a different approach was necessary. Otherwise, why make him such a sweet, sensitive child, if you're going to turn him into such a petty, cruel adult? He's going to "redeem" himself in the end anyway, so other than manufactured angst, what's the point? In the end, he's going to be like every *other* cold, heartless chaebol we see in dramaland. And considering how well he began, *that's* the pity.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

to be honest, i'm kind of glad he's such a jerk while he has the whole mistaken-identity thing going on. when he finds out the truth he's gonna feel soooooooooooooooo bad. >:D

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Honestly, I think he would've felt bad whether he was a gigantic ass or not. ;)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you for the recap, Lollypip!
I'm cringing at the thought of him realizing who then real Hye Jin is... Would all these hurtful moments cause a rift between them and make their future second meeting more awkward?
Forgiveness is part of true friendship so I hope the show highlights that too :)
Also, did the show explain why hye Jin has pink cheeks? I feel like it wasn't necessary unless she has some sort of skin sensitivity.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

If I'm not mistaken, her curly hair and rosy pink cheeks came from her father. (he showed up in a short part)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you so much for the recap! <3

I love the show so far! I don't know why but there are times where I find Hwang Jung Eum's acting a little bit over the top(?). It seems to work for her character though but I'm not 100% sold on it. I hope my opinion changes throughout the course of the series haha.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Episode 2 wasn't as subtly nuanced as Episode 1, but I'm still enjoying where this story is going.

And I love Hwang Jung-Eum and loved her in the first episode. I thought her performance would set the tone for the character in the rest of the show. So I do wish for her to pull back at the hysterics a lot in the ensuing episodes. Hye-Jin doesn't seem to come off as bumbling on paper, so I think HJE should not rely so much on overexaggerated reactions and shrieking for comedy's sake. I know she has it in her to be natural.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

+100 I feel exactly the same.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Okay, taking a totally different twist on episode two, but here it is.....I think Sung-joon knows who Hye-Jin is and he's pissy because she's trying to pull one over on him. Additionally, I think he's upset that she's not the strong person she was when she was a kid, ready to stand up for herself as well as the downtrodden. Now she's a stammering door mat. Try watching episode two again with that mind set, bet you'll see his actions a different way.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

I had the same thought in mind but wondering whether the drama is deliberately trying to "play" with us and keep us guessing? In the end, I'm convinced Sung-Joon isn't aware as he was looking the at photo from London with such a sweet smile on his face and also seemed genuinely surprised to see "Hye-Jin" at the hotel. Btw thanks to Lollypip for the recap, I'm really enjoying this drama!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have been wondering if that's the eventual twist. He feels something is off with Fake Hye Jin, and knows something is off with Office Hye Jin.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm sure he doesn't know.

Meta reason: The show has been very careful with dishonest story-telling so far, even the superficially hidden agenda behind his Chef Choi Hyun-wook routine was made transparent almost immediately.

In-story reason: His behaviour so far simply doesn't allow that twist.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Nah, he's just being the stereotypical main lead jerk. But for everyone's sake, I hope you're right.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Jung-Eum ! She just rips my heart out. Love her acting that just brings tears to my eyes.
That look she put on her face in the elevator was just too much. Got the whole throat ache tear thing.
Maybe I can relate with her character so well because there are so very many like her in the USA who made good grades, went to the school they could afford, and instead of a decent career just have a lot of student debt and low pay.
The Republic of Korea and the USA are a lot alike in that way.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Lilly, I totaly agree with you. Hwang Jung um is such a great actress to emote all her emotions by just looking at her. I love everything about her character so far, and this show will definitely be about her gaining confidence and facing the world.

Lollypop, " it’s about the value judgments that society places on people, and how it’s wrong to assume that someone’s attractiveness gives or takes away their worth as a person. ""

That was such a beautiful way to summarize this show, and I'm also loving that message. It would be great if he falls in love with her, just the way she is, and not after she becomes a swan, because it would be a great message. He falls for her internal beauty and not outer appearance.

If he falls for her after she becomes beautiful, it means that his younger self had shallow and superficial love and it wasn't pure like our heroine felt. She on the other hand, fell in love with him when HE was the ugly duckling. So I'm hoping he becomes the same ☺??

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Lollypip, I am with you all the way. This show is a real heart crusher so far because of all the meanings and great acting piled into it.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

As most of the others above have said, I was really disappointed in the second episode. I don't know why they need to make the guy so cruel for ~plot movement~. Pushing people to their full potential doesn't have to involve such a personality. And the protagonist really did look like a bumbling idiot this episode, in direct contrast to Ep 1. Sure it's put her life upside down but ...... uh you are an adult. Not sure how much of it is her overacting and how much is the script :|

Sigh. I'll still watch for a couple of episodes. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that even if Hari falls for him, she won't be malicious to her best friend. And even if she does (bc reality is, it happens), she snaps out of it and apologises properly.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Episode two put a chill through me as well - an intern on her second day having a screaming tantrum multiple times? That's a no-brainer. You fire that person.

The hysterics in general are far too much. Is this some Korean cultural quirk I don't understand? Why is this actress showcased as a screaming lunatic in sequential roles?

And Sung-joon's cruelty was just badly done. It was shocking when he screamed at her on the photo shoot set, but that's understandable - she legitimately screwed up. But for him to constantly criticize her personally, in public, for things that have nothing to do with her job is just nasty and awful. Sure, they might show us some random backstory thing that "excuses" his behavior later (I'm dreading some sort of "I was trying to get you to leave Most so you wouldn't get fired if we failed" idiocy), but it's a bad and unprofessional boss who levels that sort of attack at an intern.

Siwon can stay. He's weird and I like him.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Siwon is the only good part of this show for me, not becos I'm a Siwon fan, but becos his char is fun and harmless. Unfortunately he has too little screen time to make enduring the screaming and the nonsense worthwhile.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

KDaddict?JCW ?

Love seeing you here sweety.

This is my first time watching siwon, and his character is too adorable and nice. Love him ☺

Hwang Jung um's screaming is surprisingly not hurting my ears this time lol. I love her character and outbursts. But I could potentially see how she will gain a back bone in the upcoming episodes, as we clearly saw hints of it in the ending of episode 2.

I think realistically her reaction of not wanting to meet him, because she saw how good looking he was, was too realistic. She was fine with her looks before she met him, and I think it's natural she had to go through this phase of feeling unattractive and is afraid to face him. Honestly I would probably feel the same way in the beginning, a bit of insecurity unfortunately goes too far.

But I love where the show is taking us. Having her character gain back her confidence after momentarily losing it when she met him. I want him to fall for her character now, while she looks like this and has confidence to show.

Can't wait for the upcoming episodes ☺

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

You know where you stand with the leads when Choi Siwon is the most -or the only- likeable. *waves* <3

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have to agree with those that have posted before me. Hye-Jin's almost over the top responses to matters is a little off putting, or seem off kilter. The dream sequence made more sense to me, and would add to the overall, if more of her antics were of this nature.

Sung-joon, this one, or where the writers are trying to take us I have not figured out yet, or am I suppose to? He wants to look for something 'lost,' but either has a nasty chip on his shoulder or took a wrong turn somewhere in his life?? As with any Kdrama though, hope springs eternal. It is still early in the program, and all can be forgiven and turned around, if the writers can hold us for that long???

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

“That somebody like you is named Kim Hye-jin. It’s a name that’s too good for you.”

WOW. Okay that was a low and hard blow, Ji Sung-jerk. Way to go, man. All you did was just confirm what Hye-jin is fearing all along - that her present self could not hold up to the image of her you have on the pedestal. Why not cut her open and rip her heart out while you're at it?

I understand that Sung-jerk's sternness may be just an act to improve his team and the magazine, and I dont mind him taking a jab at everyone so long as it is about their work and how they do it. But he's getting really awfully personal with Hye-jin. It's been said again and again that 1) she's new; 2) she's there only for administrative works; and 3) she has no experience whatsoever to the magazine business the lot of them have been doing for years. Surely, giving her a little adjustment time wouldn't hurt, right Jerk?

Anyway, my comments are solely based on his ass-ery here in Ep. 2, and i'm still holding out my hope for his character because I SERIOUSLY LOVED HIM IN EP. 1. He also has this intriguing (and confusing, and sometimes irritating) duality about him where he's so sweet and nice and lovely to "Hye-jin" and he would do a complete 180 to those not-"Hye-jin". I want to know what his deal is, and since it's too early to tell and I trust the Show to do good by the characters, I'll be here positively waiting.

It's a relief that Park Seo-joon is playing this character instead of another actor (that may be good but doesn't have the pull PSJ has), because I would have dismissed him already at the 1-min mark of his ass-ery. Let's face it, you just cant help but LOVE any character PSJ plays.

I'm still with you Show for the long haul, so please dont fail meeeeeee.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Totally agree with your assessment of Hye Jin. She's a newbie, so it's not her fault.. She didn't ask to work in a different department. She's hard working and efficient if they give her a chance instead of Sung Joon denigrating her in public and private at work.
He is the absolutely the worst type of cruel boss...mean mouth and arrogant. How come his personality changed so much from that sweet fattie kid to a handsome hunk? How could he mistreat anyone whom he hardly knows that way? What an ...
HJE's acting is hard to take in this episode. She acts like a screaming crazed woman and a blithering idiot. I hope she calms down because she needs to take some Valium.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This ep was actually hard to watch for me.. I loved the first ep. but then Hye-jin got super screechy and I think that wouldn't bother me so much if she just would stop making herself so damn small whenever she was around Sung-joon..it drives me crazy. So I am glad she got angry and can't wait to see what she does next. And I totally get the screeching when its over the first love when ur in the car with our bff in the first ep..that was actually adorable.. And completely relatable.aha

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Siwon totally crazy oh my God he makes me laugh so hard..
And yes sung joon words for her really hurts my heart!! Why he is that rude!?! Remember you used to be fatty and need one to look at you as a human !! Don't judge her because she is messy so her personality will be!! I love this drama much and I hope to continue to be that way...

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really, really love the kid actress they have for Hye-Jin. I see a lot of potential in her.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

She was a child actress who got her own drama at the ripe old age of 5!! Her name is Jung Da Bin. She did voice over in it. Wonderful Life. Then she went thru a period of awkward neither childhood nor adolescence. Now she's blossoming again.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

At first my reaction to episode 2 was to feel like whiplash. What happened to the soulful young man who spoke so directly about his feelings? What happened to the competent young woman who was happy with her talents even if being a leading lady wasn't in her future?
I get it that that soft guy wouldn't last a moment in this cutthroat do-or-die business situation but man, he sure went all the way to unprofessionally major dick towards our girl. It's pretty small of him to kick the lowest person on the totem pole like that.

I understand that a level headed working girl's brain can short out when faced with something like, say, an ex unexpectedly showing up as your new boss/friend's husband/professor, etc. The mind gets verrrry fuzzy (been there!) even while you tell yourself "I'm fine! I've got this under control!" But this was ridiculous and pretty much served to negate every ounce of sense we credited to our heroine in ep. 1.

Lollypip, thanks for a recap that helped my strained neck hurt less because I understood much better what went on in this episode. Now I really look forward to 3!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I spent the better part of this episode cursing Sung Joon, refusing to ever ship him with Hye Jin, and lamenting what became of this drama, so it would be an understatement to say how relieved I was the writers let us in on his secret in the same episode instead of keeping us in the dark for many. I almost had an aneurysm during their meeting when he called her mentally challenged. "SHE NEVER ASKED TO BE IN YOUR STUPID MEETING!! SHE WAS TOLD TO TAKE MINUTES! SHE ALREADY QUIT THIS STUPID JOB!!" Thank goodness their earlier exchange was just a dream, but after that godforsaken meeting, it is much closer to reality than Hye Jin had feared.

*whimpers* Why couldn't our little chubster turn out to be second-lead-nice? Jerk does not look good on Park Seo Joon. Even before the reveal, I got that Sung Joon wants to make their team better, and his harshness is only for the good of the company, but it is going to be hard for me to forget how mean he once was to her. I had been curious since yesterday what reaction he would have to her name Kim Hye Jin, but man, was it a doozy. I don't know how Ha Ri is going to explain her not-Kim Hye Jin name tag to Sung Joon. Are we playing "Who's the Chaebol?" here like Reply 1994's "Who's the Husband?" A big thanks for the recap, LollyPip!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I was so psyched up after the amazing first ep, but immediately felt let down from the get-go of ep 2. Immensely disappointed in how the awesome Sung-joon became such a cold, cruel jerk. Yeah, he doesn't know that Hye-jin is that Hye-jin--shoot, if he knew, he'd probably be worshipping her by now. Well...maybe not. But at least he wouldn't be so damn condescending and such an ass. The way he constantly berated her and put her down, insulting her as someone who's not mentally 'up to par' and couldn't possibly be worthy of her name -- I wanted to get my hands into the tv to strangle him. I know this is angling that situation where he's gonna freak when he realizes how shitty he treated his precious Hye-jin...but man, it was hard to watch.

It didn't help that Hye-jin was constantly trying to avoid him at all costs, and ending up looking a fool whenever they did--leading to the growing pile of insults and cruelly harsh words. While it was great to see Hye-jin as bubbly and confident despite her "looks" in ep 1 -- she was the total opposite in ep 2, and that's a damn shame. The typical drama tropes and cliches that were absent in ep 1 were in force in ep 2, and that made me disappointed in what I first perceived as an amazing start to this drama. Of course, we can't have awesomeness all the time...but it was a harsh blowback yesterday.

But, of course, she finally got the light switch to go off in her head and she regained some sass that was dearly missing all ep. I do look forward to him finally realizing why the hell he was unloading all this hatred and vitriol at a new employee at his new job...especially when it's the one person in the whole wide world that he seems to care about.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I cheered when she tore into him with the gossip girls. Who cares if he's standing right behind you? Keep going! I know she would never stoop so low, but she has a lot of dirt on him from being friends for 20 years.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for the recap Lollypipster!

This episode is definitely a step down from episode 1.

Things I loved:

The sismance? (woman bromance) = it's a rare thing in kdramas. I like how Ha Ri calls her wifey. They are like an old couple.

The slapstick = I like the physical comedy of this drama.

Things I can do without:

The screaming = she should tone it down. It was annoying in Kill Me Heal Me and it's annoying here.

The tropes = I was a bit disappointed when they settled into the Sung Joon/Hye Jin dynamic. The mean guy vs. the meek girl has been soooo used up already.

All in all episode 2, although not as good as episode 1, is in no way shape or form a deal-breaker. I'll still keep watching and see what develops.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

God yes, i wish they tone down all the screaming and the overacting. It was not so much of an issue for me in KMHM because the slaptick tone and nature of that drama allowed it, but this is different. Kim Hye-jin's subdued, silent, and heartfelt scenes in Ep 1 are what really made me fall in love with this show in the first place and I wish they capitalize more on that. The difference between Ep. 1 and 2 is so vast it makes me want to think that they had 2 different directors working on each episode ala American series, no?

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I just really, really hope that whatever they decide to do with Sung-joon and Ha-ri to increase tensions, that we don't lose the Ha-Ri/ Hye-Jin dynamic. if Ha-ri starts playing the manipulative evil secondary, I will want to drop the show.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Less shouting, less Jerk Face, and more Siwon.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yes to all 3. And I cant wait till Siwon falls for Hye-jin. Cuteness abound!!!

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

me too,i'm shipping them as early as the first episode.i hope they will be given a few moments coz they have chemistry.yummy.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I am cheering for Siwon because he shows he likes her for who she actually is so far and not who she once was. He sees the cute in Michael Jackson.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I second this!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I absolutely love the Chief Editor Ajumma. SHE'S HYSTERICAL. Hahaha. I also love the way she makes her entrances and how she always tosses her bag to anyone in the vicinity. Great comic relief for the Show.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

She IS hysterical!! I love that actress. Her character was funny in Secret too.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hear hear!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

That scene where she forgot how to breathe had me laughing for so long. I probably watched it way too many times but still laughed so much. Sungjoon is so getting on my nerves. He's so darn mean but I guess it's needed to totally piss Hyejin off. They needed to start over again because hey, the memories they have are all in the past. Both of them changed in so many ways that you can even say that they are not who they were before.

My only wish is for the two girls to remain friends amidst this. Hari needs to fall for Shinhyuk coz I believe they would be perfect for each other. Maybe love at first sight since Hari has never felt love before?

Anyway, this drama could go wrong in so many ways so I hope they keep it interesting til the end. Fighting!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Omg! The overacting by HJE in. This episode.... Just too much!!!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Sun joon is an ASS! And I'm so glad that hye-jin stopped thinking of him as the shy awkward boy she knew and liked.

I'm still pissed off at the horrible way he treated her and he gets no slack from me just because he a lot on his plate where the magazine is concerned. And I really wanted to slap him when he had the audacity to say hye-jin didn't deserve to have her name.

I cannot wait for him to slowly figure out who she is and then feel like the ass that he is. I also hope hye-jin is hanging out with the second male lead and that sun joon will have to work to get back in her good graces.

I also hope hari doesn't turn out to be manipulative and develop feelings for sun joon all the while knowing how hye-jin feels about him.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Episode 2 was not a good outing for this show, given it really screwed up the two main leads. Part of that was writing (an two-day intern who threw multiple tantrums would be fired and be replaced instantly, and there is really no excuse for a boss to belittle an intern repeatedly and out of the blue), but another part of it was HJE's acting. I do not know why directors encourage the screaming hysterics. It's maddening.

I'm really disappointed about the sudden downward trajectory of the show. I'll keep watching hoping they pull up fast, but it's like they shot the first draft of Episode 2's script - it's sketchy and overly reliant on cliches and has none of the nice subtlety of the first episode.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Sung-Joon's being nasty to Hye-Jin is really unprofessional and uncalled for on his part. He is going to have an uphill battle in order to win her (Hye-Jin) heart when he finally realised who the real Hye-Jin is.

Not very keen with the story line of Ha-Ri pretending to be Hye-Jin. Seriously, don't drag it on.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm still enjoying this show a lot. I agree with LollyPip's commentary.

Can't wait until Hye Jin shows Sung Joon how awesome and hard-working she is.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The only thing I'm finding funny if the Chief Editor, the rest of the comedy is too ham-handed. I love the girl's friendship too, but I'm underwhelmed by the show as a whole. It's still watchable, but it's not necessarily doing right by me, nor horribly wrong. *shrug*

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

okay, i'm trying to think of why Sung-joon is such an ass to Hye-jin this episode, well.. apart from the fact that she really wasn't her best self in front of him. is it possible that somewhere inside, he knew that she's the real Hye-jin?
I mean she kept reminding him of the young Hye-jin, like when they were caught in the elevator, or when she used the same words to describe her hair as young Hye-jin did. He probably got even more annoyed that someone as insignificant as her(?) is so alike to his perfect first love.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Park Seo Joon really resembles Yoo Ah-In in this drama -

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Really can't stand HJE hysterical laugh and screaming, I wish she could tone it down somehow, or it will be Oh Rijin all over again..

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I started this drama for Park Seo Joon, but this episode REALLY turned me off due to HJE's acting. It is so crazy I can't suspend my belief -- and I enjoyed King of High School and that was supposed to be sort of wacky too. At least Seo In Guk wasn't flailing on the ground and ripping papers out of his manager's hands and ripping it up at WORK.

I also am not happy with how mean Park Seo Joon is -- I don't think the writer had to make his character that much of an ass.

But I love PSJ and I like the two secondary leads who are a hoot -- especially the male lead! You know -- he's a hoot, but he's not all over the place like HJE is.

I think she's pretty despite not being pretty, but her crazy flailing would turn me off as a dude. I don't see it as cute. During the elevator moment, when she FINALLY calmed down I thought it was a lovely moment and I thought -- PSJ can bring the sanity into HJE OMG this is good......and then she was off flailing around and screaming again.

I'll keep watching this show (mostly for the two male leads) -- but HJE is very very annoying. She needs to have more sweet moments with PSJ to calm her the f down.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I am starting to get annoyed with the lead girl's acting...
???

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Me too! Urrgh!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

HJE is just AWESOME!!!
Can't wait for episode 3 & 4.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really hope its Shin Hyuk she falls in love with. He seems to think about her beyond her looks. Actually it doesn't even seem to register with him. He picked her to be on the team because she was awesome. He noticed her Michael Jackson-esque qualities first and foremost and not her frizzy hair or her rosy cheeks.

Sung Joon is a prick. I dont' care if he doesn't know who she is. Does that make it okay? Hell no. One thing I hate about some dramas is that they try to redeem the hero of all the bs he spat out at the heroine. She's blamed for lying and he gets away with being and asshat because "he didn't know." I call major BS on that.

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

<Sung Joon is a prick. I dont’ care if he doesn’t know who she is. Does that make it okay? Hell no.

To me, him treating her badly is like when someone who treats a rich/pretty/important/etc person well but a waiter (or similar) like scum. So if he regrets it later that he treated her badly because it was *her*, I am not going to forget his nasty behaviour because he's already given us a glimpse into his true personality.

Being strict (in a professional way) is one thing, being a nasty jerk is something completely else.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

To me, him treating her badly is like when someone who treats a rich/pretty/important/etc person well but a waiter (or similar) like scum. So if he regrets it later that he treated her badly because it was *her*, I am not going to forget his nasty behaviour because he's already given us a glimpse into his true personality.

THANK YOU!
Unfortunately, this kind of thing is milked for romantic tension a lot in Chinese and Korean shows. For some reason, treating people awful who are not your romantic interest eventually is absolutely okay (or your secret child, ...).

However, I'm not sure he treats her badly because he is a classicist. It might have to do more with the fact that, for all he can see, she is utterly incompetent.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I don't necessarily think he's classicist either.

Just that I can't look forward to him "regretting" this behaviour in the future when he realises the truth ... unless perhaps Hye-jin ends up with someone else (which is so not going to happen).

He should be regretting his behaviour regardless of who it is, because he's just being total jerk.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

>It might have to do more with the fact that, for all he can see, she is utterly incompetent.

But she isn't really, or at least, he doesn't really know all she has done. He would have never behaved like that at the meeting because she wasn't supposed to participate let alone offer suggestions, it would have been seen as unprofessional by the others, he would have just lost respect. It's just lazy writing.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think Shin Hyuk is just fascinated by her weirdness. I don't see a romantic connection between those two. He'd probably be more like someone who'd be there to provide comedic scenarios for Hye Jin and a possible love-line with Ha Ri.

The Sung Joon in episode 1 was such a good starting point for that character that it was so disappointing to see him get turn into that cookie cutter hero in episode 2. Someone needs to tell these writers that you can still have tension between the leads even if both of them are nice people. You just have to be more creative in finding obstacles that keep them apart other than hating each other in the beginning.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Still loving this drama. Thanks for the recap.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Absolutely loved the first ep..but the second left me into despair with confusion ..sung joon is basically the typical lean mean machine,a la k dramas ..I will still give it a benefit of doubt and see next week if I am going to continue watching it

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I hope Sung-joon can see the name tag with a job title on Ha-ri's uniform and find out that he has been lied to. It will be really a shame he cannot see that she is not Hye-jin and be fooled again by whatever excuses to be made.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think he really didn't see her name tag. In the preview Ha Ri hugged him for him to not see her name tag.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Well, best thing for me in the drama is Choi Shi won :) really sometimes Korean guys should go for the stubble look :)
I swear I would cling on to recap only until HJE tones it down and stops overacting. Next I dont know but do they want to tell us that "not so good looking" people do not even try to look good??? or curly haired people do not comb their hair. Somebody may not be pretty not essentially they act like a mad woman. The begging show for transfer that HJE put before her boss was complete turn off, it was NOT at all FUNNY. I wonder if HJE was a pretty or normal girl, would they make her sit on the floor and drag her boss' pants?????

I am not liking it, physically not pretty people dont necessarily act like insane , HJE's make up is enough to convince us that she is "UGLY' now proceed with the real story

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yup, the pants, the socks, the frizzy hair (who said frizzy can't be pretty?!), the crazy antics, the screaming, the wide eyed reaction, the over imagination, all are such turn-off, wtf.

Do people even do that to ask things from their boss, in real life or in comic, can't it be more subtle? Scene like Joon walk into glass door & fell is gold & comedic, not pant grab or insane screaming, arrgh.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I bet SJ out of all person should now how does it feels to be mistreated but yet he treated HJ like a crap. Omo. So not loving this.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have to disagree with some people on this site. I think Hwang Jung Eum's screaming acting isn't really showing here. I thought she actually calmed down a lot, and was pretty proud of it too, since she's one of the better actresses in her generation (and all I ever wanted was for her to STOP YELLING). But yeah, I think it came down tons, and when she is yelling, I find it appropriate and comically funny. I also think she just has a louder voice than most people, and probably didn't realize until right before this project or something, and is learning to control her projection (boy, do I sympathize with that). Anyways, I'm super loving the show, and I don't care if episode 2 was cliche, it's super cute and the acting is great, and the show and the world is sooo fun, and I think it's really well directed, so I don't care! This is the first rom-com that has made me laugh out loud in a really long time. It's so easy to watch, and is void of all the sad stuff. It's just cute, and that's awesome. Looking forward to next week!

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really died laughing in that scene where HJ resignation letter was in the hand of her boss and she shouted "stop stop stop stop" and slow motion aiming for the goal of grabbing it...it's soooo funny and cute, i start laughing just thinking about it, I think HJE kinda comedy style is that of Jim Carrey ,hysterically OTT but soo funny.I wouldn't mind ,this is "ROMANCE -COMEDY"not A HARD CORE DRAMA, so we should expect this kind of acting.Its hard to make people laugh ...seriously...and HJE does it like " a piece of cake".

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Not a fan of the screaming. I find her funniest when she does the quirky things like forgetting to breath in the elevator or trying to kill herself by holding her breath and nose while in the car with Ha Ri or just being manic, pacing back and forth. This whole screaming and ducking/running away bit is just too hammy.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I hope HJE tone down her acting a bit. It really is too over-the-top already. She needs to tone down her screaming and over acting. She is a good actress but please tone it down. It makes me dizzy and it hurts my ear especially since I'm on earphone and then she suddenly start screaming. It's annoying to be honest. In real life if some intern in her 2nd day acts like that in real life she would have been fired already. Clumsy is fine but not too much please!!

And Sun Joon really have crosses the border of just being strict to being rude here. I understand that he needed to be strict so he can push the employees to their utmost potentials. I understand when he shouted and scolded Hyejin when she made mistakes at work because it's true she is disrupting their work. And I give him excuse for that because Hyejin really is a mess at work and deserves to be scolded and reprimanded. She needs to stay professional.

But what makes him cross that 'just-being-strict-border' to just being downright rude already is when he catch her when she falls just to let her fall hard on the ground again. I mean how hard it is to just help her stand up to her feet since he already catch her anyway instead of letting her go to fall hard on the floor. And another one is when he shouted at her that she don't deserved the name 'Kim Hye Jin'. He definitely took that personal. And no matter what he do not have any right to shout at someone and tell them they do not deserve their name because it's 'too good' for them. That is being rude!!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Hye Jan's character is cute but the acting is waaaay dialed up and needs to be more natural.

I'm not all about physical appearance but seriously? What woman walks around with badly groomed hair and clothes?

Hye Jin demeans herself by not taking proper care of her outward appearance. I mean those socks. Which tells us she might not necessarily be 'unpretty' but a slob! Heh.

So I'm not really relating with her right now.

I'm loving the side characters at least. Looking forward to finding out who the chairman's son is. Episode 3 looks great from the previews.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yeah the fact that she used to dress well and take care of her hair when she was a kid but can't manage it as an adult makes no sense. They keep mentioning her dad's "Ugly Genes" that took over but it looks me like she just stopped trying.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think one of the scene in their childhood explained it,when the two of them were soaked in the rain, her hair was a total bomb so they went to the salon and she mentioned that shes been doing it every week (Straighten the hair) but that was when her family was still well off, but now she's in a pit of debt,how can she manage to go to a salon when she cannot afford to pay her own rent.Latter episodes, maybe we will see that she is also the breadwinner of the family,since her father died and they have no business to turn to.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Her hair/get up doesn't make sense to me. The only way I can buy it if she's leaving it in a mess on purpose, to hide herself behind a mask without letting anyone in on this (which some people suggested in the previous episode recap I think).

Straightening hair and salon visits may be out of her budget range, but I'll tell you a secret: you grow your hair out a bit and tie it back or into a bun. She won't look like a perfectly groomed fashion magazine model like half of female kdrama characters, but she'll be presentable. Because, honestly, all she looks like is a pretty person that didn't brush her hair when she got up in the morning.

I really hope she's purposefully using her "unkempt" self as a mask, because I just don't get her otherwise. Like when she unconvincingly said to her BFF after the interview "I wish I had your face and body" – she has an equally thin (but not quite as tall) body as Hari and a face that's just as pretty but not slathered make-up! For all the budget restrictions in the world, there's things she can perfectly well do so easily if she really doesn't like the way she looks....

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

>Because, honestly, all she looks like is a pretty person that didn’t brush her hair when she got up in the morning.

Thank you! :) In every scene I keep thinking why a person who wanted so much to look good and fit in doesn't bother using a comb or using a cheap foundation in the land of make-up!

0

1) I know this goes totally counter to the point of the show but, Ha-ri is soooooooo pretty. I love that she is sweet and has common sense, too. I love her and Hye-jin's friendship. I'll be so mad if the girls fall out over Sung- joon, even for one episode.

2) Si-won it TOTALLY winning this show. I love that he's committed to such goofballness in his character because people that pretty are often hesitant to make fools of themselves.

3) The over-reacting (or possibly over-acting?????) on Hye-jin's part may ruin this show for me. Nobody acts like that... ever.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *