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Sassy Go Go: Episode 6

This episode is really Teacher Yang’s. We already knew he was awesome, but he’s just so awesome. Struck by the worst possible allegations this hour, you certainly can’t blame him if he begins to wonder whether a quiet conscience is worth the price. But conscience offers its own consolations in the form of allies and friends. And where there’s a shining light like Yeon-doo, there’s a way.

Now that we’ve passed the halfway mark, I’m just worried sick that twelve episodes might not be satisfying enough. More Crinkles! More Grumptopus! More cheerleading! More everything!

EPISODE 6 RECAP

Yeon-doo catches up to the group of teachers. Looking only at Teacher Yang, she tells him that she thinks she’s just found that second thing — the adult who will be on her side no matter what. She bows in thanks, eyes full.

She runs straight to the departing PD, ready to spill. Yeol and Ha-joon observe from a distance. In the reporters’ van, she asks if her interview will really help Teacher Yang. He assures her that it will, and asks her if she’s being used to amass specs. She’s reluctant to agree with his wording — although it started that way, they’re working hard together now.

Yeol and Ha-joon approach as the men pack away, and ask if the interview with Yeon-doo went well. His confirmation makes them furious. He should have denied any knowledge of her to protect her identity, as per the law, Yeol points out. If he fails to protect her, Yeol threatens to sue him.

Ha-joon tries to walk past Yeon-doo that evening, and she calls out to him. She companionably invites him to share her enormous bag of gummy bears, and the Grumptopus tentatively takes a seat beside her. She tells him about doing the interview, and knowing he wanted to help Teacher Yang as well, she offers sympathy and specially selected bears.

Yeon-doo bursts into the staffroom looking for Teacher Yang — there’s no sign of her interview in the broadcast schedule. Teacher Im watches with smug satisfaction as Yang runs out, shocked. He calls up the PD to ask what’s going on. He gives him the brush-off: Orders came from above to nix the story, and he warns Yang to be careful, too. Around the corner, Yeon-doo overhears.

Teacher Im takes tea with the Lizard Queen, who commends him on catching Yang. Ever obsequious, Im says they should get rid of him. Principal Choi agrees, but they have to find a justification, since they can’t exactly fire him for whistle-blowing.

The Council of Horrible Moms also congratulate themselves for using their connections to stop the story, but Soo-ah’s mom declares that they can’t just let Teacher Yang go, when he nearly ruined everything.

Instructor Nam interrupts Teacher Yang’s brooding to remind him that the kids’ mission to select the team captain is today. She skips off in excitement, leaving Yang to lug heavy stuff.

Yeon-doo stays behind in the Baek Ho room, lost in blues. Ha-joon pauses, but Yeol goes over and pokes her, lit up by his trademark grin. Turning serious, he tells her that it was probably for the best that the broadcast was cut — she could have got hurt.

Ah, now some real cheerleading! The Real King kids put on an impressive performance under Soo-ah, although Dong-jae looks sad at being left out. Yeon-doo cheers the loudest, as Soo-ah is propelled upwards for an elevator. Yeon-doo’s performance with the Baek Ho kids isn’t flashy, but it’s fun and everyone’s included. Even Soo-ah breaks a half-smile and the kids give enthusiastic applause.

Instructor Nam praises both groups on their work. For the upcoming competition, she announces that they’ll combine Soo-ah’s complex moves and Yeon-doo’s creativity for their performance.

Nam tells Soo-ah that they should have found a way to involve Dong-jae despite his handicap: “Cheerleading is a sport that is complete only when everyone is together.” For that reason, she declares Yeon-doo winner and therefore team captain, much to the Real King kids’ delight.

Soo-ah throws up in the toilets, her mom’s criticism at her failure ringing in her head. She overhears one of her minions — HAN JAE-YOUNG — confide to other minion, NA-YEON, that Teacher Yang is the whistle-blower. It’s news to her, and she exits the stall to confront them.

In her session with Director Lee, Soo-ah is incensed about Teacher Yang’s meddling, which nearly destroyed her whole future. Lee reassures her that the adults are on it, so she needn’t worry.

On her way in, she sees Teacher Yang also head in, shoulders drooping. She stays out of sight to overhear him on the phone as he tries to find out why he can’t get his story on air. Even if he gets kicked out, he tells his friend, he’ll expose the school’s rotten doings.

At practice the next day, Jae-young has trouble doing a thigh-stand with Tae-pyung, and Instructor Nam asks Teacher Yang to fill in as their back-spotter. Manner-hands out, he catches Jae-young as she falls, and she screams that he touched her chest. Ugh, oh no. Noooo.

The room comes to a standstill and Teach is at a loss. He stammers an apology — he just wanted to catch her safely. I don’t like Soo-ah’s face.

Afterwards, Jae-young tells her friend Na-yeon that she isn’t so sure he meant to touch her, and it’s likely it was because of the way she fell. Soo-ah approaches, and suggests they use this to teach Yang a lesson.

The three of them have a conference with Teacher Im, who is aghast. Jae-young sobs, and all three testify to Yang’s misconduct. Soo-ah urges the strongest measures be taken against him.

The Meddling Moms descend on a stricken Teacher Yang to demand his immediate dismissal. He tries to explain the misunderstanding, but Principal Choi barks at him that there were witnesses — is he suggesting they conspired together against him?

Instructor Nam arrives, and says that it’s very likely the girls are telling the truth. He probably did touch the girl’s chest — and probably her butt and thighs, too. Teacher Yang gasps.

Coming to stand beside him, she tells them that as a flyer once herself, she, too, got touched a lot. Dropping the breezy tone, she informs them that cheerleading is a sport where such contact is essential. Had Yang not caught Jae-young then, she would have suffered serious injury.

Choi salvages her goal by telling Yang that she’ll be reporting on him to the Ministry of Education. Afterwards, she promises the mothers a thorough investigation, but Soo-ah’s mom fixes on the opportunity to get rid of him altogether.

Teacher Yang looks defeated at the sight of an article on his alleged misconduct, which has already gone up online. It spreads throughout the school, and in her dorm, Yeon-doo scrolls through the same article in shock.

Acutely aware of their judgement, Teacher Yang finds it hard to face his class the next day. The class’s virtual groupchat is full of rumors and gossip about him. Angry, Yeon-doo springs up — immediately followed by Yeol. Hand on her shoulder, he signals her to hold her peace, and heads to the front to address the class.

“Did you guys see it? Did you see our homeroom teacher do that to Han Jae-young?” he asks them.
He calls out the three girls by name and systematically deconstructs their “testimony,” accusing them of lying about being sexually harassed in order to remove the teacher who put their specs at risk.

Soo-ah snipes at him and Yeol turns on her with dark amusement. He asks if it discomfits her to be exposed like this. She keeps getting caught by him because her plots are so transparent, he says.

Yeon-doo chases Yeol after class, impressed. She wonders what made him go all out like that, when he didn’t even care whether Yang got fired or not. “Because if I didn’t do it, you would have,” he tells her. But she would disregard the consequences and end up hurt, “And I don’t want to see that.”

She doesn’t get it. His eyes crinkle into a smile and he tells her to figure it out. She watches him go.

Yeon-doo seeks out Teacher Yang the next day and tells him not to mind the class’s words — not all the kids are like that, plenty believe in him like she does. He lightly scolds her for getting involved.

Hesitating, she says that she has her friends and mom to talk to, but he doesn’t have anyone like that. He thanks her for her support, but admits that he’s a teeny bit embarrassed, too, and sends her off to class. Aww. She turns back one and cheers him one last time.

Yeon-doo stares at the notice of Teacher Yang’s dismissal from school. Yeol also sees it, and says — not without sympathy — that it was always going to turn out this way, but she tells him it’s not over yet.

At lunch, everyone treats Teacher Yang like a leper, and the tables around him empty at his arrival. But not for long: To his surprise, Yeon-doo sets her tray down opposite him, and Dong-jae takes her flank. Moments later, they’re joined by Yeol and Ha-joon. Bolstered by their silent support, the ensuing meal is warm.

Yeon-doo and Dong-jae fill out petitions protesting Teacher Yang’s dismissal. Yeol comes by and wordlessly drops a whole stack of them in front of her. But bad news — Principal Choi gets wind and blocks it. She puts Minion Im on finding out the culprits.

A few days later, Yeon-doo tries to check on her petition’s progress, but the Ministry has no record of it. Even Yeol is shocked by this outcome.

Officials from the Ministry of Education sit down to a meeting with Principal Choi and Teacher Yang, along with the Horrible Moms. The parents unite against him, and Jae-young enters, looking like she hasn’t slept for days. She looks at Teacher Yang, and he nods, mouthing that it’s okay. Aww, Saem.

The moms pressure Jae-young to accuse him. Principal Choi is disgustingly smug when Jae-young confirms it’s true that Yang touched her chest. She says she was angry and humiliated.

Teacher Yang looks at her in sorrow and apology. He says that it was his fault, as adult and teacher, that he couldn’t protect them from injury. Im seizes on his words as an admission of guilt. Yang resolves to take full responsibility for the matter and resigns, not wanting to cause his kids more pain. Standing up, he apologizes to Jae-young one more time.

Outside, he’s met by the worried quartet of Yeon-doo and the boys. He smiles sadly at them, wistful that he won’t get to see them become seniors.

In private, Jae-young tells her mom that Teacher Yang didn’t do it. She didn’t know things would blow up like this, and she wants to fix it. Shocked, Mom cuts her off: To all intents and purposes, her testimony now is the truth, and must remain so, lest they lose face and the school’s corruption be revealed. Jae-young’s arguing is futile.

Jae-young goes straight to Soo-ah and accuses her of engineering the situation deliberately to get him fired — she had misled them to think he would just get a salary reduction. Soo-ah snorts that they’re fools for thinking a charge of sexual harassment ends with anything less than dismissal. Gotta agree with her. Hard to imagine these two as intellectually gifted. She tells them to get their heads on straight — what they need are impeccable specs, not Teacher Yang.

Still, she doesn’t look happy about it, and retreats to the Baek Ho room. But Dong-jae’s arrival surprises her. He rolls out his mat, and she scoffs at him for practicing moves he can’t even take part in (because of the necessary contact). Increasingly worked up, she’s convinced he’s protesting at her since she got him kicked out of basketball and he hates her, hates her, hates her.

He just looks at her, and asks if she’s trying to say sorry. Lost for words, she denies it. “You’re not? Don’t be, then,” he says, returning to his stretches.

Ha-joon finds Yeol sitting on the steps outside, and tells him that he saw Yeon-doo crying earlier. Yeol replies that he told her she’d end up hurt if she put her trust in adults. But Ha-joon confides that even though it didn’t work out for Teacher Yang, he’s glad he did something to help. Getting up, he tells Yeol that he’s popping out for a bit.

Ha-joon steels himself for his errand — paying a visit to his father (a hospital director). His father derides his request to use his influence to reinstate Teacher Yang, even when he pleads on his knees and promises to study harder. Dad sneers that if he was going to do that, he wouldn’t have covered up the petition to the Ministry in the first place. Ohh. Dad barks at him to get back to school, while Ha-joon is distraught at the revelation of his father’s part in the fiasco.

At school, Yeon-doo’s mom calls out, “Hey, ugly girl!” and laughs when Yeon-doo turns around. She lights up to see her. They sit together to chat, and Mom worries about the anxieties weighing Yeon-doo down. Yeon-doo retorts that it’s because she’s just like Mom (Mom agrees), and that she maybe she should’ve taken her advice to do nothing. Mom snorts that she even has immediate regrets after taking a stand. Both of them commiserate with each other at the misfortune of their personalities.

But Mom sighs and adds that despite regret and suffering, she couldn’t not do what her heart told her. Although she told her to stay out of it before, it was as a mom. Now, she tells Yeon-doo, “When your heart tells you to do something, you have to do it, there’s no helping it. So! Don’t regret it.” Yeon-doo’s smile widens, and Mom tells her that if no one else, she has to pat herself on the head and tell herself she did well.

As she sees Mom off, they bump into Yeol. He mouths a question at her, and she mouths back that it’s her mom. He immediately greets her, all respectful and adorable, before going on his way. Mom is just enchanted by his cuteness. Aren’t we all. She wonders whose kid he is, and squees that Yeon-doo should date someone like him. She’s SO overwhelmed by his cute that she can’t stop talking about it.

From a distance, Yeol notices their closeness with a touch of sadness.

Even when Mom gets back to the café, she exclaims to Yeol’s dad that the kids are so good-looking these days, and he feigns jealousy. She asks if he isn’t going to see his son, since things are a bit difficult at school lately. Next time, he says.

At practice, Instructor Nam reprimands Yeon-doo for not focusing — it’s not that she’ll hurt herself, it’s that she’ll put others at risk. She calls her to the front, and asks her what she thinks cheerleading is about. It’s not about standing up in front of a crowd, Nam says, but sincerely cheering on someone whom you want to give strength. Understanding grows in Yeon-doo’s eyes.

She chases after departing Teacher Yang and gives him a card — a handmade invitation to their performance tomorrow, and makes him promise to come.

She spies Jae-young and Na-yeon lurking out of sight and figures they came to see Teach off, too. She asks them for a favor. Though they deny it, she knows they’re troubled by how things turned out. It’s not wholly their fault, she offers, since the adults wanted this outcome for their own purposes. They just have to set things to rights.

Jae-young yells that it’s already game over — he’s been sacked, and they’ll keep on coming to school, “Nothing will change.”

In frustration, Yeon-doo calls out to their backs that fine, they can let their troubled hearts torment them forever, while they live and eat well. Jae-young pauses.

The day of the competition is fine, and even the Lizard Queen shows enjoyment, as the students take part in various contests. The cheerleading team run final rehearsals in uniform, although Yeon-doo is absent.

Yeol (whose top says “stuck on u,” hee!) finds her, solitary and nervous. Perching next to her, he fishes out a banana milk from his pocket for her. He says that Dong-jae always gives her strawberry, so he has to distinguish himself with banana — which is more like him, being as how he’s all tall and light.

Her laugh elicits another crinkly smile, and he tells her that at first, he just found her amusing and fun. But now, he finds himself getting angry, worried, and scared, “Because of you, Kang Yeon-doo.” This is as good as a confession, isn’t it? Isn’t it?

Hilariously, she takes it all backwards and goes, “Uh…sorry…” and starts to inch away, but he turns her into a hug. “Be strong, Kang Yeon-doo,” he tells her (totally enjoying the contact, ha). Argh then Hyo-shik bloomin’ interrupts! NO GO AWAY. Yeol responds good-naturedly to the intrusion, but Yeon-doo runs away.

She’s thrilled that Teacher Yang made it, although he’s trying to go incognito among the audience. Yeol pops up right by her cheek (you just want to be close to her!), and the cheerleaders crowd to get a look.

Instructor Nam persuades Yang to sit next to her right at the front with silent threats, and she tells him that his seat is right here: “Once a teacher, always a teacher.”

Principal Choi, arriving with Ministry officials, is unsettled by his presence, but the show gets underway before she can do anything about it.

Yeon-doo exchanges nods with Jae-young and Na-yeon on each flank, and the music starts. Their performance is spirited, and they finish to raucous applause. They seal the display by holding up signs with cheer-messages.

And then, one by one, each bearer flips their sign over. It starts with, “We lied,” and goes on to retract the false charge and petition his reinstatement. A stir sweeps the hall, and Soo-ah is bewildered at the sudden turn.

“Teach! Please come back!” Yeon-doo calls out. The team raises a cheer, chanting his name, which is picked up by the students in a resounding beat. Stunned speechless, Teacher Yang’s eyes well.

COMMENTS

Aww, Saem! Such a hero. Did I mention I love this show? I do. So much. This is a great culmination of the last few episodes’ team-bonding arc, as they found a cause that held meaning for them all. They’ve finally begun to understand not only how to unite, but why they must — that’s where their strength lies, especially with the odds stacked against them. And at the center of all this is the shining sun that is Yeon-doo, whose friendship proves transformative, over and over again. Throughout this episode, she’s the link at every important juncture: with Ha-joon, with Jae-young, with Yeol, with Principal Choi, and more.

Teacher Yang for holds onto his conviction despite being poised to lose everything, but the thing I love most about him is that he uncompromisingly puts the kids first, even when it means going against the authority. It’s a contrast to Minion Im, who started off endearingly comical and essentially harmless, but the more he cozies up to the principal, the more dangerous his fervor to please her becomes. Yang is a radical because he holds himself accountable to his students, not to the establishment. The episode opened with that moment between Yeon-doo and Teacher Yang which, despite being public, was a private moment of shared understanding between them — trust. Yeon-doo takes strength from him, and his steadfast bravery gives her courage. Her respect grows the more rejected and alone he becomes.

Like LollyPip mentioned (by the way, thank her for “Crinkles and Grumptopus”!), adult power versus youthful impotence is another of this show’s central motifs. That said, I think Yeol — who firmly believes he has no power against the adults — still taps a vein of influence that derives from his wealth and position, and knows how to play the system that an ordinary teen wouldn’t. If he threatens to sue you, he really can. Nevertheless, his influence among his peers is a result of his own personal qualities, which are recognizable when he steps up (being ranked first doesn’t hurt, either), he just hasn’t really ever done it until now.

It’s surprisingly self-aware of Yeol to recognize that Yeon-doo makes him change. It’s adorable that he likes her SO much (these two crinkly eye-smiling chipmunks, omg), and that initial interest that became giddy attraction changes again, to a deeper, more personal respect tempered by mutual understanding. It’s clear that he’s come to value her with his intellect as much as his heart. But! Without losing any giddiness! And there’s no smart guy/dumb girl trope-cliché to it because of how evenly matched and emotionally grounded their characters are. All episode, he’s just telling her over and over again that he likes her (albeit indirectly), but I love that he’s totally happy just to like her (and show others he likes her). Better, he’s actively going far out of his way to support her, even if he does wear his naysaying grumpyface while he does it.

The fact that she doesn’t clue into his motivation is endearing and remains true to her character. She’s so focused on taming her attraction, she doesn’t notice it’s mutual. In the short interlude with her mom, we understand so much about their relationship. Mom totally gets her– they’re so close, they almost don’t need words. Just being with her makes Yeon-doo’s worries fall away, and you don’t even realize she’s carrying a weight until that moment. I feel like she’s a person who chooses to look on the bright side — cheerful pragmatism rather than mindless optimism. She also chooses to live in the present, unlike Soo-ah, whose obsession with the future robs her of a lived life.

Just as I was warming up to Soo-ah, she killed it with her plotting against Teacher Yang, and once again, we’re reminded how cut off she is from the ebb and flow of life and feeling around her. She’s so closed off that someone like Yeon-doo has no effect on her, but as everyone’s noted, Ha-joon and Dong-jae both affect her quite viscerally, although in different ways. Dong-jae gets under her skin, while Ha-joon gets what’s in her head. Getting reactions from her — even crazed, broken ones — actually seems to me to be a vital sign. It’s proof that there’s still a person in there.

It’s so nice to see Ha-joon paying attention to Yeon-doo. He’s like the kid who’s only ever had one friend, and his allegiance once given, is given forever. I want to see this friendship so bad, and I love that it’s not mediated through Yeol — he has nothing to do with the seedling loyalty and tentative friendship that is growing between the two of them. And augh I just LOVE that. But it’s desperately saddening how much this big, soft, puppy-hearted guy is forced to his knees, to cower and plead to petty little people like his father or Principal Choi. But watching him open up to Yeon-doo is so good. She’s like the sun — she makes people do that. It’s not a single quality about her that makes her such a catalyst, but rather, she’s real in all her interactions with others, and doesn’t go through faking it.

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Thanks for the great recaps, Lollypip and Saya!
I love this drama!! Can't wait for the next episode...

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Thanks saya for the awesome recaps for this drama! (and lollypip too!)

This is my new drama crack since I Remember You and I really can't wait for Monday to come faster. I thought I will no longer be so giddy over a drama but this show, guhhh (>_<) and to think I'm too old to be this giddy.

Theory on the low rating- It's the real life moms squad, guys. They intentionally switching to other channel so their kids won't be rebellious and refuse to study religiously after watching this show *although I bet the kids secretly watching on their mobile phone/tablet online...

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I LOVE your theory.
Luckily this girl here has finished her finals or else she wouldn't be able to watch this. But I would totally watch it, still. :)

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I wish there's a place to check out the streaming ratings. I bet they're much higher.

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Ok I have a confession to make.. I LOVE YOU SHOW..

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that's funny. I didn't even have to comment to vote! Not that I don't want to :) this episode was fantastic, I loved the last part so much!

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sorry i accidentally rated this as one star.. its supposed to be 5.. ottoke

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i need more than 12 eps !!!!

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it's my first time leaving a comment on recaps haha.. i've a silent reader, i'm sorry ^^ But this time I really need to comment since some things worry me haha
I really luuurve this show!!! It's cute how their teamwork grow bettee and better, this drama taught me how to be a loyal friend and do whatever what our heart wants without any regret. I keep going back and forth for loving the Baekho team, sometimes they're really bad and annoying then they're cute and seem all nice. It's like watching them always being steered by their parents's wants. I can't blame them though, since parents always say they want the best for their children. But it's totally wrong seeing Baekho always study without having fun. So when I watch at the end of this ep, I'm so touched that finally the Baekho kids finally break their walls. I'd really like to see Real King and Baekho working together when it comes to academic. Yeah, eventhough having fun is fun, we must not forget to keep studying haha..
I kinda hope there is loveline between SA and HJ/DJ, but for now I'd like tonsee the three of them can help each other for healing their self. It's clear enough that HJ knows her struggling because of her mom and DJ caught her off under her skin.. and for Yeol and YD, I really am worried though. I really love their budding friendship and Yeol keep giving hints (whether directly and indirectly) to YD that he likes her more and more. But how about their parents? What if Yeol knows about that when YD starts to open up her feelings for Yeol? What if their parents know about Yeol and YD having that kind of relationship (let's just say when they finally become a couple)? I need to know what's the reason of YD's mom for rejecting Yeol's dad's proposal too. Aaaa, Monday please come faster :'( My mind is completely blown for some what-ifs idea..

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You will see it in the next episode :)

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How do I give the rating? I already commented but I did'nt get the pop-up that asks to rate the episode.

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@Pearl3101

It's quite random. Just keep reading and commenting. :D

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let me just be shallow for a moment but OMGGGGG HIS EYE SMILE <3

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Thank you for the recaps, saya !!! I wish this drama was for 16 episodes !!! But with the ratings I don't think there'll b an extension !!!
Fighting sassy go go !!!

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I'm not able to vote !!! It's only showing that my comment has been posted

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I was on mobile and I couldn't vote nor see the total ratings. But it became okay when I switched to desktop version.

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???

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I do love that episodes 5 and 6 were all about Teacher Yang, who's been the best adult in this drama so far barring Yeon-doo's mother and Teacher Nam. The poor man really got put through the wringer, but it was gratifying to see Yeon-doo & Co. stick up for him, even as he was willing to take responsibility for a crime he didn't commit, just to spare his students the heartache.
And I actually thought the show handled the situation fairly well, all things considered - this is the first time we've got to see Jae-young as a real person, internal conflicts and all. (and I was thisclose to crying at the ending scene, where we finally get Baek-ho and Real King united AND vindication for Teacher Yang)

But I liked what the situation brought out in the other students too - particularly Yeol and Ha-joon. Whether it's Yeol laying out the reasons (1, 2, 3- style) why Soo-ah and her minions brought false charges against Teacher Yang because he doesn't want Yeon-doo to get hurt doing it and he can lay things out far more logically and concisely, or Ha-joon sticking his neck out and actually going to his dad to plead for his teacher's reinstatement. Which is why it breaks my heart even harder when he has to learn that his a#%@&* father is the one who had their petition suppressed.

(and on the couples front, this episode may not have been heavy on Yeol/Yeon-doo moments, but I loved that he's going a step beyond teasing now, the boy is actually serious about showing her he likes her. He's made his attraction to her clear in multiple ways before, but while Yeon-doo registers it, she doesn't quite realise what it - and her own feelings - all add up to, and in fact seems to be a combination of puzzled and

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[..oop, comment got cut off]

...Yeon-doo seems to be equal puzzled and not quite realising (and at least partially ignoring) that Yeol's falling for her even harder as she keeps being herself around him - probably because she didn't quite know what to make of his earlier flirtiness and initial trolling. But the overheard conversation with her mother, where she openly writes him off as a romantic prospect, does spur him on to more direct action to try and get her to see him in a different light (which has actually been happening, but so gradually that neither of them quite noticed, and to some agree Yeon-soo consciously ignored - hence the need for more direct verbal declaration, which she STILL doesn't quite get lol). And I love that he continues to make zero efforts to disguise his interest in her, even when Hyo-shik interrupts their hug.

(banana milk <333333)

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Teacher Yang was so sincere in his apology to Jae Young. He truly felt that it was his fault that she was put into this difficult position due to his whistleblowing. He felt it along with her while her mom just ran away from it. I would love a teacher like that!

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yeah, he genuinely meant it when he said he felt bad about Jae-young suffering because of what he did (the whistleblowing). Sadly, teachers like him - the type who genuinely care for their students irrespective of class rank or family background - are very rare.

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Teacher Yang is such a dignified character it's almost unreal. Who would want to admit to such a heinous accusation that would undoubtedly destroy his reputation and career. It's from the goodness of his heart that he took upon himself to spare her feelings. It was heartbreaking, the ending couldn't have come sooner!

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yeah, this is a drama so he's taken the high road....in real life, no one would be this forgiving. We'd have a few lawsuits, to say the least.

It looks like now Yang-saem's troubles might have run their course, but the next target is Yeol!

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@pogo

You're right. The next target is Yeol, and this time Yeol might as well learn about conscience that doing what's right is a goal of loyalty too. Because at this point since the first episode up to this episode, he's not completely changed quite yet, he only stands up for Teacher Yang because of Yeon Doo and his loyalty to his friends, not because it's the right thing to do, which he hasn't understand that aspect yet. So once he's finally become Soo Ah's next target (which he originally has been her target), he will finally learn about the rights and wrongs. Can't wait to see him stepping up for doing the right thing :)

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Show. Why happened to you? Is still do love you but I want more of cheerleading. And why do you have so many unnecessary plots? With all the fuss created with the TV network and KYD giving an interview and possibility of her getting expelled. And then that becomes inconspicuous. I wonder how the current track will be handled. Don't disappoint us show. Hwaiting!!!!!

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Crinkles, Grumptopus, Principal Lizard, Horrible Moms... lol! I love the nicknames you and Lollypip have come up with!

What can I even say about this show except that I love love love it? The cafeteria and the ending left me a little bit more than teary-eyed. Teacher Yang, U THE MAN. *salutes* Major props to Yeon Doo and the gang for their support. She's such an awesome girl. Who can blame Yeol?

Our Crinkles is so head over heels for Yeon Doo and it's like the girl is none the wiser. Geez, girl! What will it take for you to understand that he ~luuuuurves~ you? This chipmunk-banana-milk-eyesmile couple is slaying me. You know, Yeol, you should just grab 'er and kiss 'er, yeah? We know you've been dying to do it since episode 1.

Ha Joon is so precious I just wanna steal him from his ass of a parent and give him cookies and a warm glass of milk and tuck him into bed. Who wouldn't crumble when he pleaded so desperately the way he did?

And I think I have a girl crush on Instructor Bombshell, I mean, Instructor Nam. The woman is absolutely fab! That little "come hither" gesture she did at Saem was so sassy, hah!

Another scene that made me laugh was the "ugly girl" part. When YD said that "she couldn't help" but turn around - that was so me.

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I just can't with how adorable Yeol and Yeon-doo are, and how naturally their relationship seems to have progressed. Like people in the OT pointed out, it's built on a foundation of understanding and respect (and flat-out adoration on Yeol's part), and that is what elevates it above the standard high school romance - or even the standard kdrama romance - in a way that the skinship alone wouldn't have done. And I love that Lee Won-geun and Jung Eun-ji play both the attraction and the getting each other, so naturally. This crinkly-chipmunk-smile couple is really getting to me!

And poor Ha-joon :( He might be a rich kid this time but he's still suffering because his parent figure is an asshole, just like Bok-dongie. It really breaks my heart every time I see his heart break just a little more.

(YES to Instructor Bombshell too. I love how she sticks up for Teacher Yang, both with the moms and in front of the school at the performance. That last scene was worth all the pain before!)

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Yes! :D I've been reading your discussions about SASSY in the OT. I love the points that you and the others raised about how even though Yeol and Yeon Doo often get stuck in classic k-drama tropes/cliche situations, with them, it's just so natural and non-forced. And we just have to admit it. They're just too flipping cute that we'll probably be flailing around in glee no matter what they do.

Aside from the obvious crackling chemistry, it probably has something to do with how refreshing both of them are written. It's one thing when you like one-half of a pair, while the other: hmmm okay but not so much. But when you LOVE both of them? I think it amplifies the couple's appeal even more.

I'm all for subverting tropes, so really, Yeol being so forward and direct with his feelings is a breath of fresh air. Unlike the typical k-drama male lead who's all "Oh neener-neener, I'm too swag to let anyone know that I'm interested in someone like you" and "Oh noes I can't be falling for this dork I'm too cool for that" and "You? Who'd find a creature like you attractive?" Sure, this was cute back in the day when we're all still fairly new into k-dramaland but it's gotten really old over the years. Now whenever the guy acts like such a humongous tsundere jerk to the female lead, I really just wanna facepalm.

Yeol [1] registers the fact that yes, he has feelings for this girl, [2] no, he's not gonna deny it to himself and to other people, and [3] he'll actually do something to get the girl. And the result is - adorable crinkly smiles and the cutest not-so-subtle confessions of love ever. I remember someone mentioning before in the earlier recap threads that Yeol is written more like a second lead and that is absolutely right. Who knew second lead characteristics injected into a male lead would work so well?

And then we Yeon Doo... who is charming, endearing, clever, sassy, inspiring, is not a wet blanket, fights for what's right, and #TeamGirlPower all at the same time. Heck, ~I~ would fall for her in a heartbeat if I were Yeol too.

Of course we have to give credit to where credit is due: both LWG and JEJ are just killing it with their roles! Like you mentioned, please please please at least let them get Best Couple award/nomination in the year-end KBS awards. They're too precious not to!

(Sorry that turned out to be a little long-winded, I just have too much love for this couple hehehe. I will mourn if writer-nim won't make use of their full potential. Six episodes left! Pls make it good, for the love of banana milk!)

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I have to say, I've loved almost every drama in which the male lead has been written more like a traditional second lead - i.e. not being a jerk to his girl and generally being a nice person/not being a jerk to the whole world because he feels wronged.

It worked beautifully in Misaeng (no traditional love lines there, but the hero was an underdog in almost every way and a nice boy to boot), and more traditionally, in Pinocchio, Kill Me Heal Me (a chaebol who's NOT an asshole!), I Hear Your Voice, Heard It Through the Grapevine, and even Producer. Not to mention Lee Won-geun himself in Wild Chives & Soybean Soup, where he played a hero whose charm was how sweet he was to the heroine.

and while I love that Yeol knows he likes Yeon-doo and has done everything short of use the actual words to confess, Yeon-doo hasn't quite managed to figure out what her own feelings mean. It's SO like Answer Me 1997 in some ways, but instead of a long-standing childhood friendship, it's a newly-forming one. And given that Yeon-doo has now managed to ignore/not quite understand an actual confession, I imagine Yeol will have to be even more direct next time, to make sure she fully understands what he's saying to her. I can't wait!

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Idk if Yeon Doo is just THAT dense or she can't seem to register the idea that Yeol might actually like her ~that way~ and he's not just trolling her? (Maybe she can't differentiate teasing from genuine affection?) It does give me serious R1997 feels! Poor Yoon Jae practically had to spell it out for her before Shi Won even got a clue.

*grins deviously* I too can't wait how DIRECT Yeol will be next time. Hee hee. C'mon boy use your man charms!

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I've only watched IHYV out of all those shows but yeah, Soo Ha was one of a kind as well! :) Oh and I better get myself a dose of LWG in Wild Chives! Mooooarrr crinkles!

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@Omomo - Lee Won-geun is adorable as the teenage version of the hero in Wild Chives, but the drama ends the teens' part in a bad way and I didn't care for the older versions of the protagonists at all. So yeah, consider that a heads-up if you're about to head into that drama. But he and Yoon So-hee are really adorable together.

I believe we'll be getting more of Mr Crinkles in 2016, he's doing a movie with Kim Ha-neul where he plays a student who has a forbidden love with his teacher.

and yes, I cannot wait to see just what form Yeol's directness will have to take, to get it across to Yeon-doo that he likes her. (I just hope it ends better than 1997, though - poor Shi-won there genuinely wasn't ready to see her friend as her love, even if at least part of her denseness was thanks to good old denial!)

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She's especially very hesitant and doesn't dare to go there. They might be in the same cheerleading team, but they're still from totally different worlds where he is privileged and number one of the school and she is at the bottom 5% and a hiphop dancer. Speaking of 1997, it won't hurt if they copied a thing or two from it...I mean Yoong-jae stole a kiss in the very first episode. :D:D

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@Fab - I don't think Yeon-doo has that mindset at all - she wasn't afraid to go up against him when the conflict between the clubs was on, and even though she admits internalising the 'if you don't get good grades, live like you're dead' school of thought to some extent, that's never restricted her interactions with Yeol.

I think it's more her inability to process that ANY boy has THOSE feelings for her - up until now she's had her hands full just trying to stay sane in that environment, keep her friends and save her club. Romance was way down on the list of priorities! She's well aware that there's something there, as shown by her reaction to Yeol declaring he had a girl he wanted to kiss (she knew it was her). But she isn't quite clear about it all.

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@pogo - I see! Thanks for letting me know! Well at least I'll know where to stop once I get my fill of Mr.
Crinkles. :) (Uhh that kind of came out wrong but yeah you get what I mean lol!)

Re: the movie - Oh, so it must be a noona romance then? I'm glad he's hitting the big screens. And with Kim Ha Neul and Yoo In Young! Way to go, LWG!

The only film I've seen from the director (Kim Tae Yong) was Late Autumn (which starred Hyun Bin) and the thing I remember it for the most was the insanely long kissing scene it had... so... uh, that is to say, I'm nervously excited for our Crinkles.

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When I promoted this drama to my friend (because really, this drama deserves more love), I said the leading male in SGG is rare in school type of k-dramas. He's top in everything at school but not a jerk, instead he's cheeky and lovable which just makes me fall head over heels for him from day 1.

I was kinda biased towards Eun-ji because I just love her in everything yet she's still able to make me love her even more. But Lee Won-geun, I went into this drama not knowing about his previous projects and he's stolen my heart already.

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*nods and smiles*

I love your comment!

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thank u for the recap i am really excited how zis drama is gonna end.hope yeol and yeondoo end up together.

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Don't you just love it that Yeon Doo now has 3 boys?

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And mom is so awesome. I love her! Yeon Doo is one lucky kid.

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yeah, I love that both Yeol and Ha-joon went after the reporter to threaten dire consequences if she suffered because of the interview, and that Ha-joon didn't just follow along out of loyalty to Yeol, but also because he wants to stick up for his new friend <3333

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Exactly Pogo! See my comment below. Ha Joon didn’t warm up to Yeon Doo because she is his buddy’s girl. He genuinely respects her as a person now. Like Yeol or Dong Jae he would drop everything and run to her aid now if she needed it. I love to watch friendships like that. I love Bromances and Sismances or whatever they are called but true friendships between opposite sexes are even more rare in Dramaland. Writers usually take the easy way out and make everything into a love triangle. I know many Kdrama viewers like a good love triangle but there has not been a single such story I liked yet (in Kdrama or otherwise). Last week there was some anxiety over such a possibility but I loved it that in this episode Ha Joon came to Yeol all “I saw your girl crying”. They are such a great pairing, too.

I also read that you have been converting people to Sassy on Open Thread. Thank you! This show is so good, more people have to watch it. Open Thread is where I go to see if a show I don’t watch is good. There are always people raving about any show in its recap but if people go out of their way to post on Open Thread or can’t stop talking about it it is usually worth checking out.

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hi, may I know where is the open thread?

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The last one is here:
http://www.dramabeans.com/2015/10/open-thread-418/

You can find the rest from the links at the bottom of it. It's posted every Friday.

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hi, may I know where is the open thread?

Update:
thanks Moonbean, just visit the thread and I like all of the comments there on Sassy Go Go!

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Thanks for the recap Saya and I couldn't agree more. It's unusual to ask for more of a series, usually I want the opposite. I'm thinking D Day should have been 16 episodes - so sick of the Director and hospital politics despite the cute - as well as many other shows (unhappy with She Was Pretty at the moment as well) but I do want MORE Crinkles, more Grumpy, more cheerful cheerleader Yeon Doo and her awesome mom. I even like Mom's boyfriend - setting aside he may be Yeol's dad - they are so cute together.

This is the first time I'm writing about Sassy but this is the show I can't wait to see at the moment. I hate to see how underappreciated it is in the ratings because it is so awesome.

I was among the group who complained about Ji Soo not being the lead. Why did they make that guy who wasn't even the second lead in Hyde, Jekyll and Me the lead? Well, obviously Hyeri's acting (!) obscured my eyes and prevented me from seeıng such a gem. I thank the producers for discoverıng him right in time. I lub lub lub him and his crinkles. I can see why Mom can't stop talking about him.

I also love teacher Yang and sassy Instructor Nam. Such a great secondary couple they make!

And going back to my first comment: It's so great to see all three boys having different and independent friendships with Yeon Doo. It is possible to tell a great story without love triangles, quadrangles and such.

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mwahahaha, I knew I wouldn't regret sticking up for Lee Won-geun when there was all that shuffle-around with the casting initially. Of course Ji-soo is beloved, but poor LWG deserved better than to be besmirched for that horrible drama and the waste of time it was.

It's indeed really nice to see all three boys forming different relationships with Yeon-doo, and that none of them is threatened by the others. Yeol may register that Yeon-doo's alone with Ha-joon or goes more easily to Dong-jae for comfort, but we don't even get an inkling of actual jealous behaviour off him.

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I did not think negatively for one second about Lee Won Geun because of the mess he happened to act in or the unfortunate partner he was stuck with. He wasn't bad at all, he was quite cute but with that horrible screenplay he did not stand out at all. Nothing like Ji Soo did in Angry Mom. And that being the only thing I ever watched him in I did not have another reference. I'm usually quite good at noticing actors before they hit big but that drama was too bad for even that!

You are right about Yeol and jealousy. Even his bestie wondered why he is not bothered by her being that close to another man. If there would have been jealousy, this would have been the perfect time, before confessions are made and their relationship is defined. But no, he knows how he feels and he is confident in himself. That is so attractive in a guy.

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oh, I didn't mean to imply that you did! But there were quite a few comments questioning Lee Won-geun's ability to be a lead and why wasn't it Ji-soo instead, and frankly the only conclusion I could draw was that those people had never seen him in anything but Hyde Jekyll (which was indeed terrible, so terrible that I find myself slightly inclined to even cut Hyeri some slack - NO ONE could work well with that awful script, not even the leads who are about a decade older and more experienced than LWG).

I love Yeol's lack of jealous asshole behaviour. So many dramas would have had some boy or other acting up out of jealousy at a far earlier stage than Yeol and Yeon-doo have reached in their not-a-relationship-yet, but Yeol? He treats Yeon-doo as a person, not his territory to be marked. And thank god we have no jealous second leads of either gender to spoil the fun either - just putting Yeol and Yeon-doo in close proximity is enough to generate squee for days!

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yeon-doo is so amazing and badass that i'm kind of like "she must have ALL THE BOYS, ALL OF THEEEMMM".

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Well, she has the best of the bunch already! These three plus the Real King guys. The hottest, the coolest, the richest, the smartest, the cutest, the most loyal... You name it and she has it. And rightly so!

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well, she already has all the boys and now it looks like she'll have all the girls too! (minus Soo-ah)

Yeon-doo for President <3333

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Speechless!
Damn SASSY, how in the world did you turn out so explosively good?? Who should I send a fruit basket to? Writer, PD, and every staf- thank you very kamsaaaaa!

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I know!

I really don't know what I'll do with my Mondays when this drama ends, I love it too much :(

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Oh Soo-ah, you crossed the line so bad, in fact...you're so far past the line, you can't even see the line! The line is a dot to you! Despicable, entitled, evil child, I hope you won't graduate.

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omg the HUG was SO PRECIOUS

they need to KISS ALREADY

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i laughed and cried and squealed throughout this entire episode. just when i thought i couldn't get excited about kdramas anymore, another drama like sassy go go always manages to come along in the nick of time and pull me back in. i feel like this has been the giddiest i've ever felt about a drama, and i honestly thought that was impossible after healer LOL.

i love the way yeol and yeon-doo's relationship has progressed. it feels so natural, in that their relationship growth has been founded on mutual understanding and respect rather than immediate attraction and far-fetched coincidences and whatnot. this is why i didn't want them to kiss in episode 4 (although, of course, i do want them to kiss at some point :D :D). i feel like drama kisses are all about the build-up, and if you rush it (ahem, yong-pal), you ruin the entire dynamic of the relationship and the romance ends up feeling forced and unnatural instead. but in sassy go go's case, yeol and yeon-doo's relationship is exactly how yeol described it - it began with amused interest, turned into understanding and attraction, and now has become something serious enough for yeol to voice and actively pursue. I JUST WANT THEM ON MY SCREEN FOREVAAAA PLS KBS.

i also love how every character gets to shine. i don't really talk about the other characters a lot because the two mains occupy my feels so much, but i love that we can appreciate every character's story at some point. soo-ah especially makes me swing between intense compassion and pure fury, and i was actually tearing up from anger at what she'd done in this episode. ha-joon breaks my heart as always, dong-jae's endearing as usual, and i'm glad we got to see another side of jae-young, who was too weak and sheltered to realise the consequences of her actions until she was too late, but still pulled through in the end, thanks to yeon-doo.

and o m g, how refreshing is it to have a heroine like yeon-doo, who feels so real and yet so likeable that you don't even need to try to understand why yeol is so head over heels in love with her, and why people gravitate towards her so much. too many kdramas have the type of heroine that makes you wonder why everyone's chasing after her, but yeon-doo is so great that i'm wondering why yeol doesn't have more competition instead.

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Quote"but yeon-doo is so great that i’m wondering why yeol doesn’t have more competition instead."

LMAO......the BEST of the day!

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Because the rest of the guys are idiots!

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seems like Yeol has to thanks to the other idiots who make his life easy to get Yeon (laugh)

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yeah, I really enjoy how this drama's been making use of its cast, not just the main two but everyone.

too many kdramas have the type of heroine that makes you wonder why everyone’s chasing after her

I know what you mean, and I'm often left scratching my head for an answer that doesn't involve 'she's pretty?' and 'maybe he feels sorry for her?'. Yeon-doo is a cutie, of course, but it's her personality that makes her so instantly appealing without feeling contrived at all.

And yeah, I would wonder why Yeol doesn't have more competition either, but it's quite evident that Dong-jae, Yeol and Ha-joon (and even loyal, adorable Hyo-shik) appreciate her in different ways.

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Can't believe we're onto the second half of the show! I need more of this!!!

The ending really made me cry. So much ~feels~ for this drama. ;A;

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I'm already *sadface* about the fact there are only six episodes left, why does all the good stuff feel like it never lasts long enough? While the bad dramas drag on forever and you can't wait for them to be over in order to get to the next one.

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Tell me about it! I can't help but console myself with the idea that Sassy is good because it's short. Perhaps the makers had a clear vision of the drama from the get-go so any unnecessary fillers that'd be needed to drag the story for 16 or 20 hours are left out. Most dramas would be more watchable with just 12 episode. One is ongoing.>>>

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Unpopular opinion: I don't mind the parents' relationship. It's true that it could complicate things for Yeon-doo and Yeol, but I have utter faith in Mom. True, there would be the requisite angst (and quite possibly noble idiocy, UGH), when either Yeon-doo or Yeol find out about their parents, but I repeat, once the very awesome Mom knows that (a) there is a budding relationship which is (b) stopped by her and Yeol's Dad, I'm sure she would give way. She has already refused an engagement, citing Yeon-doo as her reason, so I think ultimately it will be okay. (Although the road towards 'okay' could prove frustrating. I only hope that that story line would not take up more than an episode.)

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yeah, Mom is actually quite sensible in her relationship and so far we have no cause for alarm BUT this is kdrama and we've been burned by way too many dramas where unrelated OTPs angst over how their relationship becomes ~forbidden~ if their parents are married. Blame kdrama fauxcest templates for this one! Because Sassy Go Go shows no signs of heading in that direction, but Yeol clearly isn't fond of his dad and I don't know how he'd actually take the announcement that he's dating, forget dating the mother of the girl he likes.

(and seriously, what kind of father doesn't so much as tell his son he's in a serious relationship and intending to make someone his son's new stepmom?)

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It makes much more sense that this relationship may put more stress on Yeol's nonexistent relationship with his dad than create a problem for him and Yeon Doo. We still don't know what caused the rift between them but from the small clues I got from Mom's references to it I'm guessing something like he blames his Dad for the divorce or whatever happened to his mom but it will turn out that she was at fault and he suffered a lot.

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You're right. The parents relationship can provide angst for our beloved couple, and could add another layer for the drama. I also know its still to early to be alarmed but somehow I dont trust kdrama's writers. While I understand why the writer wanted to use the angst (assuming the father is Kim Yeols), I cant help but feel this plot is unnecessary since theres too much going on in the drama with the kids and school already. And of course this opinion is strictly personal because I just dont want to see my beloved OTP to be heartbroken over this kind of hurdle in their relationship...

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I think they make a cute couple, they seem really grounded and committed adults. Mum is more worried about what Yeon would think, but knowing Yeon I actually think she'd give in way easier. Yeon&Yeol might like each other now, but they are young and still in school, so I don't see how the adults should stall their marriage just to give the kids a chance.

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Even more unpopular opinion: I see no reason why either should give way! They are both cute couples in their own way and deserve each other and happiness. Why in the world should one give up? I guess I have to be Korean to understand.

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Mmm...at first I was totally opposing Mom's romance but then she was so cute with Yeondoo and her star-struck look at Yeol, that I just want everyone to be happy.

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Squeeeee
Cuteness overload, that crinkles kill me over and over again.

I absolutely agree that Yeon Doo is such a sun to everyone, one character I ever wished were me, she is like the center for all and to have someone like her around is gifted itself.

I knew Yang Saem is wonderful, and I would totally love him but this is more. To find myself cry for him is pleasantly surprised. He deserves all the love and respect, go Saem.

The kids totally get me, well Soo Ah still the exception at least for now, Her twisted mind gave me chills and I like (a lot) when Dong Jae and Ha Joon are around her, because she is more open to them, more crazy.

And of all, Yeol-Yeon Doo is always the winning, they really really adorable, gah i love seeing how much Yeol likes her and her being a bit nervous, aaah can't wait for more.

Well, like others, my biggest worries also about their Dad and Mom, I don't know anything but just please... don't be another Love Rain, it's so heartbreaking.

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I, especially, feel really bad for Teacher Yang. I think his problem is the most tragic out of all characters, although all of the students' problems are all tragic in their own ways. But if we look at it, Teacher Yang, one-man, one adult doing everything for his students to earn the respects and trusts from them, like keeping their secrets and their little wrong-doings (like Yeol and Yeon Doo ditched school), sticking by their sides even when his students (Yeon Doo) doesn't think about consequences (ex. Yeon Doo post up the posters about her club being disbanded), etc. He even quietly playing rebel behind the Principal's back to save his students and report all the injustices and the corruptions of the school to the Ministry of Education by being the whistleblower. So, I'm really glad that Yeon Doo sees through all the doings from her teacher first, and willing to stick by his side for everything he deserved to earn from his students, even if it was a bit late for their realization of how trustworthy this teacher is.

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In Love with this show... and like real love, it has its flaws but you don't care because the good is better than the bad.

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This is my first comment ever here in Dramabeans, after almost a year of silent reading and, for this show in particular, squeeing with all of you.
I just wanted to say I'm very glad at the way this show is progressing. Also based on the preview it seems next week the focus will turn to Yeol, which makes me glad because frankly, there's still so much we don't know about him. We assume he has a bad relationship with his father based on the missed call among other things, but we don't know why he's so mad at him or why he's become so unwilling to trust any adult in his life. I think shifting the focus on him will be great to have our OTP truly get to know each other and come full circle.

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yeah, compared to pretty much all our other leads, Yeol is the biggest mystery - we have an idea of why Yeon-doo, Ha-joon, Soo-ah and even Dong-jae are the way they are, but we have hardly only bare-bones info on Yeol and that needs to change.

(also: link to the preview, please?? I want to see it!)

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Oh, you haven't! Then by all means, here you go: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWuTWJZnI0Y
Enjoy!

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Thank you!

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I can't wait to see more of his back-story! Off to watch the preview, thanks!

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I'm gutted when these episode recaps come around because I end up having a lot more to talk about than necessary... on one hand, yes, finally, there's a place to say things! On the other hand there's so much to talk about... 3000 characters are not enough :( Let's (sassy) go! (incoming!!!!)

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Kang Yeon Doo and cheering: Instructor Nam's little spiel about how cheering is a support role would normally grind my gears. I hate when a spunky girl is told to step back and let others take the fore. However, the story is so intertwined its underlying theme (of cheering, of support, of happiness) that the speech fit perfectly into the beat of the story. YD isn't fading into the background, she is taking command! She knows what her strengths are in life and, more importantly, she isn't the type to let others trample on her... she'd much rather "elevator" them up and she knows it (and I think Instructor Nam sees that in her, in spite of the speech (and hence the speech.))

I love how she never hesitates when she knows what she wants, that she can't help but support someone else in their time of need, but above all I love how she respects herself and her boundaries as a person and pushes past them only when she knows she needs to, and only because she knows she's stronger than anyone else around her. She doesn't sacrifice everything for her friends, but neither does she keep herself safe; she's struck a tightrope walk between caring for herself and others and all she needed was a pole and an umbrella to create perfect balance. Of course, she's still growing and she needs more time and information to polish the skill. She's not perfect. But honestly... a character with her kind of verve, caring, and self-awareness is rare, especially when self-sacrificial traits are so often praised without reservation for self-esteem. Cheer bubbles from deep inside of her; she's the type who emanates love and respect for everyone, including herself, and it makes her shine... It's really no wonder Yeol's fallen so hard. :)

speaking of whom...

Yeol and Ha Joon get to be equals: While I love their interdependence and the sweet moments that spring from Yeol having been Ha Joon's safety belt for so long, I also love that they're growing and changing at difference paces and in different ways. In fact, I think Ha Joon might be picking up speed and Yeol is starting to trail a little.

I love Ha Joon poking a little fun at Yeol's poor-Yeon-Doo spiel; it's a good segue into the fact that Ha Joon does notice shit and is starting to take things into his own hands, confronting his conflicts head on (and falling on his face when it comes to controlling his temper - but, hey, actually, he DID end up trashing the bathroom and... nothing else, including himself. Yeol didn't even have to pull him back!) Meanwhile, Yeol seems to have widened his mother hen cordon to include Yeon Doo, so all of his fretting is now for two... but to what end? Yeon Doo, as adorable and lovable as she is, can stand on her own two feet quite well. Yes, she probably did need to be saved from her own bravado back when the kids were talking shit about Teacher Yang, and Yeol doting over her is adorable, but I hope he realizes that she doesn't need as much attention as Ha...

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... Joon does. HJ is a special case, a bundle of hurt that needs a watchful eye to function properly. Y has gone above and beyond to care for him, especially at his age. But YD doesn't need any of that, she's stable. I think he's drawn to the fact that they click so well, but it's taking him a bit to come to terms with the idea that she doesn't need to be protected quite as often as HJ. I feel like that's the basis of all of their quarrels, but I need to rewatch the show just to make sure. In that sense, HJ is starting to outgrow his role in the relationship, and Y may or may not be keeping pace with him. Will he get stuck in trying to care for people who may not need his care in the same way anymore? I feel like that'd be interesting to explore.

As a side note, I think I know what the role of the parents are now. Hello, nature vs nuture! If all of the parents and adults in the story were like Principal Lizard, the Mom Coven, and HJ's fucking dad, the only counterpoint to their adult machinations would be Teacher Yang, Instructor Nam, and the board of education, who are a neutral to lawful presence at best. Not all adults, and specifically, not all parents are evil. I think a good balance needs to be struck in the narrative to support that or else you get a picture of adulthood that is different from reality... And actual teens are watching! The last thing this show should be doing is scaring them off from their own parents when their parents have good intentions. Hopefully!

I like YD's mom and Y's dad for who they represent, and I sort of see why DJ's parents haven't been introduced. Out of our main cast, the behavior of the children spring logically from the nature of their parents. This is obvious with HJ and SA's fucking parents, and YD's mom is a gift, but we've all seen Y's dad several times by now and he seems... Normal. Kind. Socially intelligent and gentle. Hell, let's throw in witty and charming, there's a reason Mom has fallen hard for the guy. And... This is exactly where Y is getting it. The rift in their relationship is causing them both grief, but I'm starting to suspect that something later in life caused the rift. I think they might have been at least as close as YD and her mom. The way Y looks at YD arm and arm with Mom as they stroll off looks softer than bitterness, doesn't it?

Take responsibility for your kids, Sassy says. And kids, this is what good parenting looks like... Just so you know. :) (and if we're going to introduce two kind parents, how do we put them together. We need the extra time to introduce them separately to do other things - oh, wait, they're dating, okay good. It's inelegant but it's also better than them falling in love over the course of the show, I appreciate this a lot.)

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(I have no clue how they're going to introduce DJ's parents, if at all. Do they care? Do they talk to him? Does he talk back? Is it just a plot element they're trimming for time or is it irrelevant? It feels important. I'm so CONFUSED.)

Speaking of Dong Jae...

Soo Ah and the importance of extracurriculars besides getting into an Ivy League: Soo Ah, Soo Ah. I really like her, I do. I think everyone's covered the Ha Joon-Dong Jae double pull at her exterior, and the way Ha Joon can pull her back from her self-destructive tendencies (did anyone else see the vomiting episode as stress-induced bulimia? That might have just been me.) I want to focus on something that struck me while she and DJ were talking in the empty practice room and emphasize why it had to be DJ saying the things he did.

Not only is she trying to fist fight a cloud when it comes to him, she's also fighting someone who is so opposite to her that he may as well be from another planet... someone who, in contrast, understands her perfectly, which baffles her even more. Not only does she not get how he doesn't see her as an imposing, negative force in his life (she's really not; she's irrelevant, and she's not used to being acknowledged without being An Enigma And A Force To Be Reckoned With, which is hilarious and sad), she also doesn't understand anything he does. She sees the club as a spec, something that she needs to excel at as a club member to be worth the effort. Dong Jae is incapable of participating in the club to the same capacity. He hasn't told her about Yeon Doo, of course - he hasn't told Yeon Doo about Yeon Doo, lol - so to SA, looks like he's joined because he got kicked out of basketball and needs something else to fill out his college application. Even though this could not be farther from the truth, he says nothing to argue this because her opinion of him doesn't matter to him. Hilariously, she's left with this huge blank spot with regards to him. Why do the cheerleading club? Why do something you can't do? Why do anything if it's not for the future? Dong Jae's only answer is that it's because he's a part of the club, and it's something he's trying to do. And I love her going batshit at that idea. How dare he! How dare he take on a challenge that he can't overcome, how dare he waste his time with something he can't do, how dare he be so talented and yet so useless out of his specialty, how dare he not lash out with hatred, how dare he not hate her for taking him out of his element, how dare he not hate himself for not being able to overcome a staggering handicap that she would absolutely despise herself for! How dare he. (Dear Soo Ah: the emotion you are feeling is envy.)

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did anyone else see the vomiting episode as stress-induced bulimia?

Totally! It doesn't excuse any of what she's doing, but there's a clear link between her mother pressuring her more and more (so now she doesn't have to just participate in cheerleading, she also has to be declared leader of the joint team when she's never done this before - otherwise she's worthless? wtf!) and her being driven to extremes of behaviour to cope. We already know she tried smoking after her friend's death earlier, now it's this.

It's a weird thing to note, but I did love how the shot of Soo-ah coming back up once she was done puking, was framed - there's something really immediate about how she fills the shot.

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in general this show is remarkably well shot - i mean, i don't think it's revolutionary, but it's well blocked and filmed, the composition is always very solid! the only example i can think of off the top of my head is the panning sequence where yeon doo's mom tries to get herself to go up to her room and talk to her in the first episode. the scene where ha joon and soo ah at the edge of the water was very nicely composed as well. there seems to be a bit of thought behind where the characters are standing and how they're interacting with each other with relation to the camera and the narrative and i've always appreciated a team that can do that, especially on a time frame as tight as a live shoot. sassy go go just feels so good!!!

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She doesn't understand the concept of enjoying something for the sole purpose of doing it, for the companionship it brings. She doesn't understand the concept of just doing shit because it's there and it's fun and it brings personal joy and satisfaction. As much as she's yearning for that *impact* her application needs, this scene with Dong Jae puts the reason why she can't achieve it on the table - she never does anything just for the sheer joy of it, for the sheer joy of sharing her life with others. And she's wrecked up about it, and she's not really sure why. It's hard for me to feel like she's completely unsalvageable; she's so smart and talented and she has a conscience in there, somewhere, and it's not as though she's immune to the negative effects of not having a supportive relationship. She's not a lizard. She just hasn't taken the first step. She sees a chasm of pointlessness where Dong Jae sees everything important to him, and that scares her. Soo Ah needs justification, Dong Jae doesn't. It had to be him, a no one and a nothing in Soo Ah's eyes, asking if she wanted to apologize, to cut into the heart of her tantrum and find her conscience. The reality check wouldn't have been stronger from anyone else.

AND FINALLY...

THANK YOU GOD FOR ACTUAL CHEERLEADING IN A SHOW ABOUT CHEERLEADING. I actually wasn't expecting that much, I'm not really certain why. I love it when a show commits, though. Cheerleading is essential to the narrative; this show would have been very different if it were about, uh, pie-making or crafts or something. I like when a motif is that important to the story. Makes me feel happy.

please more yeol and dong jae. still waiting for pal times between everyone who hasn't buddied up yet. chop chop, chop chop.

AND LASTLY: I MISS TEAM REAL KING. I like how we cut to characterization and depth for Team Baek Ho, but I miss our rag-tag bottom 5%. I know their drama was mostly in the beginning to establish the elements of the plot but like... I love them?? I miss them?? I know it's not their story but aaaagh. My left hand for four more episodes for Team Real King.

THAT'S IT woohoo can't wait for tuesday how are there only three weeks left of sass :(!!!

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Whaaat? Only 12 eps??? Dang it, but I hope that means good things for the pacing and story-line. Eunji is killing it!

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ygktFFMgclI Ep 7 preview for those who asked.

They will only air 1 episode on November 4 because November 3 is baseball game. This sucks. At least air 2 episodes on November 4 please show.

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But SGG is Mon-Tue drama (Nov 4 is Wed) except they will be aired only on Nov 2?

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My bad -_- I got the date wrong. Yeah they only air 1 episode on November 2

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OMG NOOOOO... T^T (thanks for the info btw)

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NOOO WHYYYY yo no fair I've been so addicted to this drama it's like taking candy from a baby

at first I thought you were talking about this week and I freaked cuz I've been looking forward to two eps...I know I'll hate it next week but for now I'm relieved

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OMG noooooooooooo!! This drama is the reason I can start my week with smile on my face knowing I can see the sunshine that is Yeol & Yeon-doo again T^T

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NOOOOOOO WHY BASEBALL AGAIN???

First She Was Pretty, now this :(

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Why...oh why...

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don't they have a sport channel or something??? geez, how am I supposed to survive on one episode?

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ANDWEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

Couldn't they air it on the other KBS channels. UGH. Just checked the games' schedule, there's also a match on Monday 2d, at least we're getting one episode that week. But damn, how unnecessary is this. There's one way KBS can make up for it, make an additional episode to even it up in the final week...

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@rachelle did u just happened to be in their filiming location?or did u go there to watch them?either way,u're soooo luckyyy!!!

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Ugh damnit Soo Ah. I want to like you since you're so gorgeous that I can't even but you're really pushing it. Being pressured to do well does not excuse you from your actions. I'm gonna go watch Blue Bird's House so I can see a (hopefully) nice and gentle side that goes well with her looks.

I'm really shipping Soo Ah and Dong Jae. He always seems to have the perfect response to her lashing out.

That scene when Yeol gets caught hugging Yeon Doo. That was awkward but hilarious.

That ending tho. Seriously it was a lot of feels especially when you see Teacher Yang start to cry. That was the best place to make a public apology and petition for Teacher Yang. I can't wait to see Soo Ah's reaction on this though. I'm also shipping Teacher Yang and Teacher Nam.

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omg! I love this drama and the two lead stars.
Love, love love.

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I come late but who would have thought? Just when I was having a withdrawal symptom over IRY, Sassy Go Go came and lifted me up. Yay!

What caught me first is the lines. For a light teenage drama, it unexpectedly has great lines. Such lines like, "Once you're their teacher, you're forever their teacher," hit me deep. I'm impressed. Yeon Do might looks never-a-serious-girl but when she talks, she talks serious thing about friendship, ethics, moral, and live values. I love it.

What caught me second is of course, none other but our smiling prince, Yeol. He.is.so.charming. Does teenage boy supposed to be this magnetic? Def he's not our knight with shining armor screaming for justice all the time. Actually, imo, he tends to be manipulative and opportunistic. I mean, he can see through on what happens on his surroundings then he'll make calculation before taking any actions that benefits him. He could be a perfect cunning villain with this trait, but instead, he falls for Yeon Do. The sweetest thing in this drama, ohhh.

When he was caught hugging Yeon Do, any teenage boy would be embarrassed, but he just shrugged it off and didn't even try to cover it up. If that's not enough, he said to the boy caught them in the act, "You must learn, man." No, teenage boy is not supposed to be this self aware and attractive. Haha Oh boy, I think I fall for Yeol.

Indeed, he might be the most mature adult in this crazy school. That smile! Dang it! Where can I buy vanilla milk with that smile as the bonus? I would buy thousands!

On another note, is this like a bad coincidence that KBS kinda mislead us in promoting IRY and Sassy Go Go. Look at the teasers for both drama and look at what we get/got. Still better tho than getting a great teaser and then a bad execution hehe.

Thanks DB for recapping this.

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I love this drama ♥♥♥♥♥

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good news: SGG is on tomorrow! yay!
bad news: SGG is probably out next tuesday due to a baseball match. boo...

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Did anyone notice the spotter for Soo-ah during the real performance? Isn't he from the professional cheerleading team?

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hello nice drama recaps they are really daebak!!! ❤ ❤... and am the newbie in the building i hope we all get along squeeling and swooning together

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It cracks me up that the Council of Horrible Moms always storms towards the school building all together, on foot! Aren't they the rich and famous? where are the fancy cars???

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keke Crinkles and crumptopus XD
I have found a new couple name for Yeon do and Kim Yeol!
Eyesmile couple they both are good in eyesmile XD hahahaha
I think my replay button broke for replaying the drama over and over again XD

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I began to think that Yeon Doo has always been striving to help others was because she also understands how it feels being left behind, the loneliness, unfairness, and tempted of self-harming from her own experience at school and what she had been through since childhood.

According to her own experience, she and the Real King kids has always been titled as misfits kids, troublemakers, and that was made them feeling like they were being outcasts of the school, and made them felt small as well as probably felt lonely within them, even though they never show it, and they only fight alone together for over 1 year (excluding Da Mi and Kyung Eun, who were only joined to the club when the rest are now in their 2nd year). All of those feelings were only being swept away after they were merging with the Baek Ho kids. Being merged together in this Cheerleading club, even though it was through Soo Ah's specs, but it finally made all 6 of the Real King kids feel whole and found new group of friends in this hell high school.

Also, another of Yeon Doo's own experience in her childhood, was another thing that made her understand Ha Joon's (and Yeol's) feelings. Through both of her own experiences, was made her strive to help Ha Joon to make him feel included and loved again. If she didn't have those experiences, she wouldn't be able to or know how to help Ha Joon either, even if she cares and is selfless. Even if Yeon Doo has a parental support from her mom and friends, but the school somehow affected her as well, just like when she revealed to Yeol that she has always feeling small after coming to Sevit High. Having your own experience makes you learn those lessons, and it makes you want to reach out for the others that needs help the same as you because it stemmed from personal lessons.

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