
My normal schedule of posting a new
review every Thursday has been upset by a series of busy weekends and
a foolish, long-regretted belief that I could power through a 58
episode show in a few weeks. (Ha!) Being stuck mid-drama leaves me without anything to post about, so I’ve been filling in with movie reviews lately. It’s just not the same, though: I really do prefer dramas for their extended running time and meatier storytelling. In light of this problem, I give you some random notes in place of your regularly scheduled programming.
• I’m still slowly working my way through Ojakgyo Brothers. This drama may be super long, but it hasn’t lost my attention—almost all of its leads have compelling storylines, and their plots are moving quickly enough to keep everything interesting while still allowing the characters time to breathe. (I could live without Dad, I must admit. The guy who plays him seems to have confused “acting” with “exaggerated blinking,” and the script isn’t helping matters. The show has no idea what to do with him, so he’s just bitching at the female lead for not helping his wife on the farm...even though he’s also not helping his wife on the farm, in spite of having no job of his own.)
• I
watched the first few episodes of Coffee Prince with
an old friend last week. The thing that shocked her the most?
How often the guys were shirtless. I told her that CP is amateur hour when it comes to beefcake, and I’m hoping we have a new convert. On the other hand, by episode 12 she’s demanding that I fast forward through all the second lead parts...so maybe not. In honor of this possibly momentous occasion, I give you the above image. (No need for thanks.) I think this is Gong Yoo at his most handsome—nowadays he’s so skinny and muscular it makes him look kind of drawn.
• I haven’t watched many dramas as they were airing, and the jury is out on how much I like doing so. It’s great when I fall in love with the show, ala Flower Boy Next Door, but Jang Ok Jung is really killing me: The plot isn’t particularly interesting and the characters aren’t compelling enough to keep me coming back. Every time a new episode appears on Drama Fever’s main page, my first response is something along the lines of “Ugh. I actually have to watch that now.” If I were marathoning the show, I think the momentum would be enough to keep me relatively happy, but seeing it in dribs and drabs gives me enough time between episodes to realize just how meh everything about it is. I’m thinking of jumping ship, at least until Jang Ok Jung finishes airing. The ending has a lot of potential—I suspect it will be tragic, like the actual historical events it’s ever-so-slightly related to—and I’m interested to see how the writers maneuver their characters to where the big finale needs them to be.
• I’ve been reading blogs forever,
but I only just discovered the existence of sites like
Bloglovin and
Feedly. (I’m well aware that this makes me something of an
idiot—it’s like living somewhere for a decade before you figure
out where your mailbox is.) Both sites make it incredibly easy to
keep track of posts at blogs you like, turning the whole of the
Internet into a Tumblr-esque dashboard. Check out my profile page for
the list of Blogs that I follow on
Bloglovin, or start following
Outside Seoul
here.
• I usually watch dramas through my
Google TV, which is truly the drama lover’s best friend: it has a
full browser, so you can go pretty much anywhere on the Internet
right on your TV. What it doesn’t have is the ability to play
videos on the websites of most networks, so you can’t watch some
things that are available on regular computers. That’s annoying,
but the
Apple TV set-top box I got for Christmas solved the problem
completely. Now I can stream from my MacBook directly to the TV and
watch everything from downloaded dramas to current episodes of
The
Vampire Diaries, the one
American TV show I’m keeping up with even in the depths of my
Kdrama obsession. Technology is truly my boyfriend.
• I finally broke down and joined
Twitter. I like it for the people who use it, but as a service it’s not my
favorite. After the deliciously madcap world of
Tumblr, it feels like
some kind of sensory deprivation pit. Where are the pictures of Kdrama
abs? The naughty gifsets from random Asian movies I’ve never heard
of? The giant, footnoted rants about Eurovision and the song snippets that have been
reblogged 150 thousand times? Not on Twitter, that’s for sure.