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  • You Don’t Have to Like K-Dramas to Love These 12 Korean Films

    There are two types of people in the world, people who like Korean TV shows, aka K-Drama, and people like me who could care less. No, I haven’t seen Alchemy of Souls or Crash Landing on You, but that won’t stop me from admitting that Korean films are the best inventions since the first caveman decided to fry plantain. 

    Korean cinema has been delivering insane content long before and after 2019’s Parasite became a cultural phenomenon. If you’ve seen Parasite, and you’re looking for more Korean content to satisfy your craving, this list is for you. But if you’ve not seen any Korean films at all, then omo, I curated this list especially for you. 

    Burning, 2018

    If there’s one film that captures the term slow burn to a “T”, it’s Burning. Featuring Steve Yeun, who you might recognise from Jordan Peele’s Nope or the Netflix road rage series, Beef, this unpredictable thriller starts simple but descends into chaos as it spirals towards its end. After all, what could go wrong in a story about a man, his childhood friend who asks him to look after her cat while she’s away, and the mysterious man she comes back with? Basic, right? 

    Mother, 2009

    Few films have been able to stress me out the way Mother did. Mother is one of those films that stays with you long after the end credits hit the screen. The murder mystery places a single mother at the centre of its story as she embarks on a mission to clear her mentally ill son’s name after he’s accused of killing a young schoolgirl. Let me say that nothing, I repeat, nothing will prepare you for the final scene. Good luck, though. 

    The Handmaiden, 2016

    The Handmaiden is a masterclass in delivering twist after twist and turning a story on its head countless times. When you think you know where the film is going, this iconic queer thriller throws another wrench that leaves your jaw on the floor. The Handmaiden follows the relationship between a wealthy-ass Japanese heiress, the handmaiden hired to look after her, the con man who hired the handmaiden to help scam the heiress and lots of steamy sex. The Handmaiden is one Korean film I wouldn’t advise you to watch with your family, dear. 

    Memories of Murder, 2003

    Not to sound biased, but Memories of Murder is the greatest Korean murder mystery of all time, up there with David Fincher’s Se7en as one of the GOATs, period. Memories of Murder tells the story of a pair of local police officers whose lives are changed by a serial killer who targets young women and the big city investigator who comes to their village to help solve the case. Disturbing, hilarious and heartbreaking all at the same time, the film is allegedly based on a true story, making it even more unsettling. 

    Train to Busan, 2016

    Zombie apocalypse films have been done so many times (Resident Evil one to 100) that they don’t slap anymore. The characters don’t feel human, so just like the zombies, we start viewing them as disposable slabs of meat. Train to Busan, however, makes its audience connect and root for the humans as we follow a divorced dad, his daughter and several other colourful characters who try to survive a zombie attack on a moving train. It didn’t help that I watched this movie in 2020, right before the coronavirus gist started spreading. 

    Parasite, 2019

    Parasite is the most popular Korean film from the last decade, and for good reason. The first non-English film to win Best Picture at the Oscars in 2020, Parasite is a dark comedy that explores class differences through the eyes of two families, one rich and the other poor. A major achievement in filmmaking, Parasite will leave you all up in your feelings as you watch that “eat the rich” saying come to life right before you. 

    RECOMMENDATIONS: Everybody Likes Lee Min Ho, but in 2022? Come On

    The Wailing, 2016

    Let me start by saying The Wailing is long and confusing AF. I’ve seen it twice, and honestly, I’m not sure I get the whole gist. This is not to say that The Wailing is bad; it’s just hard to grasp fully, but best believe you’ll feel like you’ve seen a masterpiece when you’re done. The horror film follows a police officer who embarks on a race against time to save his daughter and his village from a mysterious sickness that turns its victims into unhinged demons. You know a horror film means business when a child is involved. 

    Old Boy, 2003

    Before Parasite became an international hit, Old Boy was arguably the biggest Korean film to hit the market in the early 2000s, inspiring a bland American remake with Elizabeth Olsen (of WandaVision). This intelligent and super violent thriller follows a man who, when freed from 15 years of confinement, is given five days to find and exact revenge on the people who stole over a decade of his life. 

    The Host, 2006

    Monster films like Godzilla, Jurassic Park and co, tend to be major blockbusters people love more for the grand scale of production and CGI than the actual story (if there’s any, to be honest). However, with The Host, we see a monster movie whose social commentary isn’t drowned out by green screen visuals or cool tricks. The horror film follows a man who must save his daughter after she’s snatched up by an S-shaped monster created from chemicals dumped into the Han River. 

    Decision to Leave, 2022

    If there’s one thing you’ll learn after watching Decision to Leave, it’s that sometimes, it’s good to mind the business that pays you and avoid trouble. This 2022 romantic thriller follows an insomniac detective who becomes infatuated with a widow suspected of killing her husband. Like, he heard she might be a murderer and still said, “Yes, baby. Off my pant.” In this life, fear men. 

    Silenced, 2011

    Based on the novel The Crucible by Gong Ji-young, and real-life events in a school in Korea, Silenced follows an art teacher who arrives at a school for hard-of-hearing children, only to discover that their teachers sexually and physically abuse the students. Silenced might be a hard watch, but it’s also a necessary one, as differently-abled people rarely get to have their stories told with such care and nuance. 

    I Saw the Devil, 2010

    In this bloody Korean thriller, an intelligence agent’s pregnant fianceé is brutally murdered by a psychopathic serial killer, forcing the agent to go rogue in a bid to ensure that the killer ends up suffering for an extended period of time, and not in prison. While I support letting the law take charge when it comes to crime, I also support the protagonist here. Like the popular Stanley Okorie song goes, “In this life, you reap what you sow.” 

    You can find these films on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video or any streaming service you use.

    ALSO READ: The Ultimate K-Pop Beginner Playlist From One K-Pop Newbie to Another

  • 2023 K-Dramas Worth Watching So Far 

    If you’re like me, you’ve been in a K-drama slump since 2022 K-dramas decided to break our collective hearts. So we had to do some digging, and we discovered nine 2023 K-dramas worth watching that’ll fix that slump. If they don’t, come and fight us. 

    “Agency”

    A woman who loves money works her way up to becoming the first female executive in a major advertising agency. Agency is perfect for fans of movies with strong and ambitious female leads, like Search WWW.

    “Poong, the Joseon Psychiatrist” Season 2

    It’s a  lighthearted series about medical practitioners in the Joseon era. This is the second season, and they’re finally focusing on the blossoming romance between Se-poong and Eun-woo. Watch this for a good laugh. 

    “Crash Course in Romance” 

    Secret Sunshine’s Jeon Do-yeon and Hospital Playlist’s Jung Kyung-ho star in this drama about two people who are like oil and water. She’s a cheerful former pro athlete who now runs a small store selling side dishes. He’s a celebrity maths teacher who’s always grumpy. Somehow, their lives get tangled up. Their love story will have you hooked.

    “Can We Be Strangers?”

    A legal drama that marks Kang So-ra’s comeback from Warm and Cozy as a legendary divorce lawyer who happens to be a divorcee herself. She meets her lawyer ex-husband again when they become colleagues at the same law firm. What could go wrong? Everything. 

    “Kokdu: Season of Deity”

    Kim Jung-hyun and Im Soo-hyang team up for a fantasy romance about a man who was turned into a grim reaper as punishment for his sins. Now, he possesses a human who looks just like him every 99 years. It’s sweet, it’s fantasy, and it’s romantic. 

    “Love to Hate You”

    A comedy about two people who don’t believe in love. One’s an entertainment lawyer, and the other is an A-list actor. Add a dating contract agreement and the chaotic celebrity life, and it’s every romcom lover’s dream series.

    “The Heavenly Idol”

    A fantastical tale that involves body swapping and devil fighting. Kim Min-kyu plays a high priest with divine powers who wakes up in the body of an unpopular idol from the band, Wild Animals. 

    “Taxi Driver 2”

    For fans of action-packed drama, Taxi Driver 2 is about a former special force captain who acts as an ace for a secret vigilante service. Who doesn’t love a good vigilante drama?

     


  • 27 Phrases Only K-Drama Fans Will Understand

    Until I started writing this article, I didn’t realise just how much Korean K-drama has taught me. This is your cue to watch your next K-drama without subtitles. Your brain secretly understands what they’re saying, we promise. This mini-dictionary is for non-fans. 

    Saguek  

    A Korean historical drama, usually set in the Joseon era.

    Oppa 

    Younger women use this word as a cute way to refer to their older brothers or boyfriends.

    Chaebol  

    Dirty, “will buy your family’s silence”, stinky rich businessmen who are also always the bad guys or the ones paying the bad guys. 

    Second lead syndrome  

    When the second male lead has more chemistry with the female lead than the main male lead, so you start rooting for him instead. It always ends in tears.

    Makjang 

    You know those dramas with unnecessarily exaggerated or weird plot twists? This is how we describe them. *Coughs The Penthouse: War In Life series.

    Hallyu 

    Nollywood is Nigeria what Hallyu is to Koreans. Or better still, popular Korean culture. 

    Kimchi slap

    Back in the good old K-drama days, you couldn’t watch a K-drama without someone getting slapped with a kimchi covered hand.

    Noona 

    Term of endearment for older sisters. Or a younger man can use it to refer to his older girlfriend.

    Ahjumma 

    It means “older woman”, but is mostly used to describe those nosey-ass older female characters in K-drama.

    OST 

    Everyone knows OST means the “original soundtrack” of a drama. But it’s particularly popular in K-drama because it usually features popular K-pop artists.  

    Saranghae

    This means “I love you” in Korean. It’s usually followed by a finger heart or those big full-body ones.

    Soju 

    The principality and powers in alcohol form Koreans drink like water in K-drama.  

    PPL  

    Product placement in a drama. If you’re a K-drama fan who uses a Samsung, I’m not saying it’s years of conditioning, but hmm. PPL is basically that shameless but craftily hidden brand promo in a K-drama.

    Jjimjilbang 

    This is a Korean bathhouse. Characters go there to relax, wearing matching sets provided by the establishment. Fights or love at first sight usually start here. 

    Ajusshi 

    This is how Koreans refer to older men. These characters are usually ill-tempered or very nice and wise. No inbetween.

    Yeobo  

    This is the Korean version of “Honey”, the popular married couple endearment.

    Hanbok 

    This is the traditional Korean clothing often seen in historical K-dramas.

    Geunyang

    This means “Just because”. Sometimes, things happen just because, and you don’t want to have to explain it, so you say, “Geunyang”. Mostly used by K-drama mums when their pissed with their kids.

    Aigoo 

    Characters use this to express regret, disappointment or annoyance. It translates to “Oh my goodness”.

    Pabo

    You know how we call foolish people “Ode”? Well this is the Korean equivalent.

    Daebak 

    This is basically the Korean version of “Ehen”. Depending on your tone, it can be an exclamation of excitement, amazement or disbelief. 

    PaliPali  

    This just means “hurry up”. Especially when the character in question is being rushed so all their books can fall out of their bag just so they can meet the love of their life.

    Melo  

    Short for “melodrama”. When K-drama fans watch a really emotional drama, they refer to it as a melo.

    Umbrella scene 

    It’s not a romantic K-drama without the scene where the male lead protects the female lead from the rain by giving her his umbrella. Bonus point if it’s yellow.

    Healing drama

    A drama that brings you so much comfort you just know you’ll end up rewatching it for years to come. A lot of 2022 dramas had that energy.

    “Fighting!” 

    Usually pronounced “Hwiting!” This is how characters encourage each other. It can mean “I believe in you” or “You can do this”. It’s always so emotional to hear them say this.  


  • Important K-World Kims You Should Know by Now 

    I’ll be first to admit I underestimated just how many Kims exist in the K-pop world. Not to be mistaken for relatives of Kim Jong-un, the supreme leader of North Korea, here are all the Kims any true K-stan knows and loves.

    Kim Yujin

    If you’re a big fan of fantasy movies and saw the American TV show, Lost, growing up, then you’ve seen this actress before. She’s most popular for her role in Money Heist though.

    Kim Bum

    Probably one of the most underrated South Korean actors, he’s also a singer, dancer and model. You may know him from Boys Over Flower, Tale of the Nine-Tailed, Ghost Doctor or 18 Again.

    Kim Taeri 

    Our baby-faced fave is the actress who had a breakout role in the award-winning movie, The Handmaiden, and the heart-breaking 2022 high school drama, Twenty-five Twenty-one.

    Kim Go Eun

    The queen of tears. Are you even a K-drama fan if you don’t know Go Eun from Cheese in the Trap, Goblin, and, more recently, Little Women?

    Kim Seokjin

    He’s the oldest member and lead vocalist of BTS, currently serving in the South Korean army.

    Kim Jongin

    Probably one of the best dancers in K-pop, EXO-Ls will never forget him in his iconic red suit from that Love Shot fam cam. The rapper and model is a member of the 3rd-gen group, EXO.

    Kim Jisoo

    She’s the lead vocalist of the global girl group, BLACKPINK, who made her debut as an actress in the romantic K-drama, Snowdrop. She’s also the group’s “visual”; BLINKs call her “Miss Korea” for perfectly meeting the Korean beauty standard.

    Kim Namjoon 

    If you don’t know who this is, we should actually fight you. Popularly known as RM (Rap Monster), Namjoon is the leader and main rapper of BTS.

    Kim Min Kyu

    Everyone’s current fave, the South Korean actor, went viral for his role as the second male lead in Business Proposal. Rumour has it that he was a former trainee set to debut with SEVENTEEN, but we still get to see his idol side in his new drama, The Heavenly Idol. 

    Kim Jennie

    The other piece of the BLACKPINK Kim duo, Jennie is the main rapper of the global girl group. But like most K-pop idols, her acting career is brewing as she’s set to star in The Weeknd’s drama series, The Idol.

    Kim Doyoung

    The main vocalist of NCT 127 who sang the OSTs for popular dramas like Soundtrack#1, Tale of Nokdu, Yumi’s Cells and School 2017. He also starred as the lead in To X Who Doesn’t Love Me

    Kim Taehyung

    Popularly known as V, Kim Taehyung is a member of BTS. With his unique baritone voice and pretty face, he’s managed to steal all our hearts. He also starred in the popular K-drama, Hwarang.

    Kim Mingyu

    One of the good K-pop rappers, he’s also a model (best in taking boyfriend pictures) and can cook pretty well. This SEVENTEEN member is multitalented.

    Kim Chaewon

    She’s the leader of the viral 4th-gen girl group, LE SSERAFIM, but OG K-pop stans know her from her days in IZ*ONE and the talent survival show, Produce 48.

    Kim Seungmin 

    You know him as the lead vocalist of the boy group, Stray Kids, but Stays know he’s secretly the lead rapper. You’ve probably seen him in some of your favourite K-dramas too. 

  • K-Drama High School Parents Make Nigerian Parents Look Like Saints

    I’ve been watching Crash Course in Romance, and it shows the extreme lengths Korean parents go to when it comes to their kid’s academics. This comes up in every K-drama that focuses on high schoolers. 

    Like Koreans, Nigerians value education and often have high expectations for their children’s academic achievements, but here’s how Nigerian parents enforce it differently.

    They’ll never stalk your lesson teacher

    Sorry to Korean parents, but Nigerian parents aren’t jobless. They won’t even remember your lesson teacher’s name unless you fail after they’ve wasted their money. Why would they waste their fuel or transport like that? The mum in Crash Course In Romance stalked her daughter’s after-school teacher, with her child in the car, like it’s normal. And she later hired a detective to do the same thing.  

    RELATED: The Horrible Practices in High School K-drama that Nigerians Can Relate To


    What’s their business with what you do after school?

    In K-drama, the parents are always pressed about what their kids do with their time after school. But if Nigerian parents think for a second that you’re playing too much, they’ll just lock you in boarding school. Someone will give them your gist without them making effort anyway.

    How you pass is up to you. Just pass

    Nigerian parents expect you to pass by divine understanding and a few low-budget lesson teachers. Korean parents enrol their children in private academies called “hagwons“, after school or on weekends, to supplement their regular education. Korean mums stand in long queues to make sure their kids get the best seats in front of the board, pay an arm and a leg to get their kids into top tutorial centres and might even kill if need be.

    They won’t bully the person who does better than you

    In Crash Course in Romance, a mum made sure a child got kicked out of a program just because she did better than her daughter. Nigerian parents will be proud of your competition and ask you if they have two heads. Your beef is not their beef.

    Limiting your social activities

    As a Nigerian kid, what even is a social life? If you want one, wait till you’re a doctor with three children. This is probably the one thing both parents have in common. But Korean parents go the extra mile by tracking their kids’ phones or picking you up from school themselves. 

    They won’t move just to be close to better schools

    No, no. Nigerian parents don’t inconvenience themselves for you. You better get used to that four-hour-a-day commute because they’ll send you to that good school, but move closer to it? Never.

    Or relocate to a different country 

    My brother in Christ, your best bet as a Nigerian kid is to learn how to take care of yourself because you’ll relocate alright, but alone. In Our Blues, a dad who was struggling to provide for his family moved abroad for his child’s golfing career and education. And the child still wanted to quit after everything. Imagine trying that with a Nigerian dad.

    You must take responsibility for your bad test scores

    Nigerian parents only intervene with prayer, shouting, flogging, and when they’re sure your head is actually just a basket, they get a lesson teacher. In high school K-drama, parents will blame themselves for not waking their kids up or taking them to school on time, or having enough money to pay for tutorials. Culture shock for real. 

    I can’t even tell which is worse, the ones who stress you out and make you forget you’re a kid or the ones who don’t stress you out but still keep you from enjoying your childhood. Sha, we move. 

    READ ALSO: Korean Parents Are Nigerian Parents in Disguise, Here’s Why

  • 8 Korean Actors Who Are More Versatile Than Rice

    Most Korean actors are versatile. They try their best to switch it up from time to time. But some have taken it to such great lengths that it’s like they have a split personality on screen. Here are some actors who’ve played both Patience Ozokwor and Chioma Chukwuka-like roles. 

    Ok Taec-yeon

    His role as the naive intern who turned out to be the evil mastermind in Vincenzo still has me shook nearly two years after, mostly because I’d never seen him play a role like that. He’s usually the charming male lead who acts gruff but has a soft heart, like in Dream High, Bring It On Ghost or his super cheerful character in Secret Royal Inspector Joy. All I know is I’ll be looking extra hard at whatever character he chooses to play next. 

    korean actors versatile

    RELATED: 10 Actors Only Real K-Drama Fans Know


    Kim Da Mi

    If she’s not one of your favourite Korean actresses right now, you don’t like good things. Kim Da Mi knows how to switch things up. She can be a super feisty genius sociopath, like in Itaewon Class, or a fearless evil spirit (or whatever that was) in The Witch: Part 1. The Subversion, who murders her rival, Choi Woo-shik (her romantic love interest in Our Beloved Summer). Whew, can’t she do it all?

    korean actors versatile

    Park Bo Geum

    Based on his cute face alone, there are some roles you won’t expect to see Bo Geum play, but I laugh in “original ekun egbere”. If you’re like me, you fell in love with him after watching him play Taek, an internationally renowned genius Baduk player, in Reply 1988. He was the quietest of all his friends and the baby of the group. Then I watched him play the cunning and emotionless serial killer who was also a lawyer in Hello Monster. I couldn’t believe my eyes, but he’ll always be cute Taek to me sha. 

    korean actors versatile

    Lee Dong Wook

    When he plays evil Patience Ozokwor characters, I expect it; he looks evil. But when he’s nice, my chest starts to pain me. For a grim reaper in Goblin, he was super adorable, and I was even rooting for him. Then I saw him in Strangers From Hell, where he plays a dentist who was a little too friendly. He turned out to be a psychopathic murderer, and my heart actually rested because it made sense. Have you ever met a nice dentist? Don’t watch Strangers From Hell if you have a weak heart o.

    korean actors versatile

    Uhm Ki Joon

    When this man plays a villain, you’ll find yourself praying to God for all the people who find his trouble. But when he’s the victim, he’s so cute and sweet. One of his sweeter roles was as Kang Oh-Hyuk, a teacher who believed in all his students, in Dream High. He fought for them even though they nearly gave him a heart attack and made him lose his job. So when you meet his character in Penthouse — a super convincing psychopathic businessman who’ll stop at nothing to get what he wants — you’ll wonder if it’s the same person. 

    korean actors versatile

    Lee Seung-gi

    I wouldn’t usually list Lee Seung-gi as someone with range because most of his characters feel the same. He’s usually funny, light-hearted and doesn’t take things too seriously, even when he’s on the brink of death — watch My Girlfriend Is a Gumiho, King 2 Hearts Gu Family Book and A Korean Odyssey. That changed in Mouse, where he played a police officer who turned out to be a psychopathic serial killer. It doesn’t help that it was based on a true story (I still have shivers thinking about it). 

    korean actors versatile

    Ji Sung

    Ji Sung is the king of versatility. In Kill Me Heal Me, he played Cha Do Hyun, a character with seven alter egos, including a teenage girl. He has the funniest facial expressions that keep you laughing even in serious scenes, but he can also switch it up. In Devil Judge, he was so unsympathetic, I wanted to slap him through my screen. That’s how you know an actor is good at his job. 

    korean actors versatile

    Jo Jung Suk

    If you were introduced to Jo Jung Suk in Hospital Playlist, you’ll assume he’s the sweetest and funniest actor. He was a great, super-friendly dad who made silly jokes. But in Hit-And-Run Squad, he played a stinky rich and arrogant race car driver. Like a rich Nigerian, his character assumes he’s above the law. I’ve since chosen to unsee that character, but I’m proud of his range still. 

    korean actors versatile

    Kim Go Eun

    When you see Kim Go Eun in a movie, you expect tears. But in Monster, she played an aggressive and weird character who wanted nothing more than revenge for her sister’s death. And she deserved a standing ovation for her role in Pretty Women because, wow. What a deceit. I can’t wait to see her play a proper villain though.

    korean actors versatile

    Kim Hyun Joo

    My queen, the original IT girl, Kim Hyun Joo, has spent years showing us what versatility looks like. She makes you forget any character she’s played before the one on your screen. In I Have A Lover, she played twin sisters separated at birth. One was a super cold and apathetic lawyer, and the other, a sweet and funny pregnant woman. In the Watcher, she’s a ruthless and manipulative lawyer who doesn’t understand team spirit at all. If she’s not winning, what’s the point? Then you see her play a terminally ill woman in Fantastic and wonder if she’s Chioma Chukuwka’s twin because, why are you crying buckets of tears every second?

    korean actors versatile

    READ ALSO: Korean Actresses That Made Us Obsessed With K-drama

  • If You’re Single on Valentine’s Day, Rewatch These Iconic K-Drama Episodes

    We’re confident about two things, according to the Zikoko Bureau of Statistics. The first is Valentine’s Day can be hard when you’re single. The second? Rewatching these iconic K-drama episodes will soften it. Just trust us.

    The King: Eternal Monarch: Ep. 11/12

    I mean, it’s a movie starring Lee Min-ho as Emperor Lee Gon. Every scene is romantic, but especially that one scene where he gathers all his guards, police, helicopters and citizens of his fictional country, Corea, to save his queen. That might not be your current reality, but watching it will keep your heart racing like it’s happening to you. 


    READ ALSO: QUIZ: Can You Guess the K-drama From Its Iconic Line?


    Our Beloved Summer: Ep. 16

    From the first episode to the last, this show will have you cheesing, especially if you keep thinking about your ex. But the final episode is one of the very best. Ung returns to Korea to surprise Yeon-su and finally tells her he loves her. You also get to see how all the other sub plots end,what more could you want?

    Hospital Playlist 2: Ep. 12

    Everyone and their dads can see how badly Ik-jun wanted to be with Chae Song-Hwa in Hospital Playlist 2. He’d already confessed his feelings to her in the first season, and if you have all day, you can rewatch the whole thing from the first season. Or you could go to episode 12 in season 2 and experience how it felt to hear Song-hwa finally confess to him while having coffee in the car in the pouring rain — like they always do. Infact, I’m going to rewatch too. 

    Vincenzo: Ep. 20

    Vincenzo isn’t romance-focused, no one can deny the chemistry between Vincenzo and Hong Cha-young. After all the back-and-forth finally paid off in the finale, when they meet again, he says the iconic line, “See you in Malta”, revealing his location to her. Go and watch it ASAP. What do you need love for when you have K-drama?

    Crash Landing on You: Ep. 16 

    This whole show is like candy for your aching heart. But you see that scene where Se-ri and Captain Ri finally reunite in South Korea? It’s the least heartbreaking. You’ll enjoy the slow motion and soft smiles.

    Hometown Cha Cha Cha: Ep. 12

    The bucket list episode where Hye-in and Du-sik try to experience everything she’d ever wanted with a romantic partner. It’s cute and silly and so heartwarming, you’ll forget all your problems.

    Vagabond: Ep. 13

    More thriller than romance, but I live for that one hospital scene where Dal-gun and Hae-ri start to fall in love. He carries her up, and she puts her feet on top of him, almost like they’re dancing. God, when? 

    Hotel Del Luna: Ep. 16

    Who doesn’t love a good “star crossed lovers” drama? Chan-sung and Man-wol went through a lot for a love that could never happen, but at least, they got to share that kiss under the stars in episode 13.


    RELATED: How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series

  • K-Dramas to Watch When You’re In Love

    You’re in love and in a happy relationship? How does it feel to be God’s favourite? As if you didn’t already have the gift of someone who’ll listen to you talk about how you want to deck your manager, we’ve decided to give you a list of K-dramas you should watch when you remember just how much you love your significant other.

    Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha 

    Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha

    Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha is one of those cute love stories that has the main characters falling in love in like the first two episodes, so you know it’s real. It’s 16 episodes short, and every time Hye in and Du Sik smile at each other, you can turn it into a game and kiss your partner. 

    RELATED: You Can’t Miss These 6 Recurring K-Drama Tropes

    It’s Okay to Not Be Okay 

    romantic k-drama series

    I won’t lie this is a heavy watch, but at least, you won’t have to watch it alone. It’s Okay to Not Be Okay goes deep into what dating with mental illnesses is like and how love doesn’t work without trust and connection. Starring Kim Soo-hyun, Seo Ye-ji and Oh Jung-se, this drama follows the life of an antisocial writer and a psych ward caretaker whose lives intertwine. It’s also 16 episodes too short. 

    What’s Wrong With Secretary Kim 

    romantic k-drama series

    In this movie, a capable personal assistant decides to quit her job. But instead of her self-centred and childish boss to let her go, he falls in love with her. Add the rich boy trope, a cute backstory of them meeting as kids and some extremely cliche love scenes, and this is a recipe for the perfect movie night with your SO. 

    Twenty-Five Twenty-One

    Love is love, even if it’s from the point of view of teenagers who didn’t even end up together. This series beautifully depicts the life of Baek Yi-jin and Na Hee Do, a fencer and a reporter who fall in love at 18 and 21. It’ll help you reminisce young love and you might cry a lot because of how wholesome both characters are, but it’ll be worth it. 

    Love in the Moonlight

    Personally, I watched this series for Park Bo-gum’s smile, but don’t be like me. It follows a troublemaking prince and his eunuch/political counsellor, who unknown to him, is a woman dressed as a man. Of course, they fell in love, and it’s too cute, so have your tissues on standby. 

    Business Proposal

    At least once in your lifetime, a friend must’ve set you up with a rich romantic interest. No? Well, we can’t all be Meghan Markle. Ha-ri’s friend did it differently though; she used her to trick her prospective groom into ending their engagement, but the man fell in love. Then he turned out to be her CEO of the company. Expect cliche scenes en masse but stay for the humour. 

    Our Beloved Summer

    You can just tell when a woman wrote a romantic drama for women. Our Beloved Summer meets and exceeds all expectations. Sometimes, you love someone, but love is not enough, so you must take a step back and grow as an individual before reconnecting again; Choi Woo-sik and Kim Da-Mi’s characters understood that. They  filmed a documentary together in high school, which was how they fell in love, but they had to wait ten years for the love to take off. It’s cute, the characters are adorably awkward, and all the longing might make you faint. 

    Crash Landing on You

    No romantic K-drama list can be complete without this series. It revolves around a South Korean heiress who accidentally lands in North Korea and is rescued by a North Korean soldier. Naturally, they fell in love, then the actors fell in love off-screen, and then, we fell in love with them.

    READ ALSO:2022 K-Drama Stunts I Do NOT Want to See This Year   

  • Starting an Ongoing K-Drama? Here Are 7 Struggles You’ll Face

    People who choose to watch an ongoing K-drama instead of a finished one are God’s strongest soldiers. We know you’re one of them and will relate to these avoidable struggles. 

    Insane cliffhangers

    When you binge-watch a completed drama, and an episode ends on a cliffhanger, you can just click on the next one, and your chest will stop being tight. But with ongoing ones, you get to sit with all your anxiety for a whole week, only to meet another cliffhanger at the end of the new episode. Fun stuff. 


    RELATED: How I Made My Typical Nigerian Dad Love K-Drama


    Delayed episode

    As if the weekly anxiety isn’t enough, the producers can decide to delay a new episode release for numerous reasons. Completed shows would never do that to you. 

    Online spoilers

    If you don’t watch an episode as soon as it’s released, or after the day of grace some people try to give, just forget it. Spoilers at every turn, and there’s nothing you can do about it. 

    You might forget about the show

    Especially if it’s not a weekend drama. You may lose interest or forget about the show because you started watching something else to fill your time. 

    Getting scammed by a false leaked episode

    When you see all the fake sites saying they’ve leaked the new episode, against your better judgment, you’ll open it. Only to be met with the worst edit in the history of edits. 

    The withdrawals

    Imagine going through all the above struggles only for the drama to have the audacity to end. Now, you don’t know what to do with yourself after ten weeks of watching the same show.

    Restarting the cycle

    Do you think people who put themselves through weeks of emotional turmoil would just stop? No nau. You’ll still find a new show, watch it weekly and wonder why you lowkey don’t have a life.  


    READ ALSO:2022 K-Drama Stunts I Do NOT Want to See This Year 

    Starting tomorrow (January 31st, 2023)
  • 2022 K-Drama Stunts I Do NOT Want to See This Year 

    The part of me that loved and was stressed out by 2022 K-dramas keeps fighting for dominance. But really, why did they do all that to me? If they weren’t telling me a fencer can’t get together with a reporter, they were stressing my favourite main character with the evilest antagonist ever. Here are seven things I don’t want to see in K-drama this year.

    Stretching into two seasons

    I beg all the pardons of all the God’s they believe in but K-dramas should be wrapped up in one season. I can’t deal with any more cliffhangers in this life. Not every drama needs a second season, for goodness’ sake. Just give all of them happy endings.


    RELATED: You Can’t Miss These 6 Recurring K-Drama Tropes


    Anything that’ll make me cry

    I don’t want to cry too much, please. Why am I crying real heartbreak tears for a drama? Last year, Korean drama writers gave us back-to-back tears, and no, please, it have do. Any drama that’ll end in tears, let the cup pass over all of us.

    Rushed endings 

    They made dramas with two seasons, I took it. The drama made me cry, I took it. After doing all that, the ending will now still be rushed? That one, I won’t take. If I see any more K-dramas with the climax in the final episode, I’ll riot.  

    Wicked-ass antagonist 

    We really suffered with these antagonists last year. Good God. From Jin Mu to Won Sang-ah, just back-to-back wickedness with no character development. Please, it have do. 

    Plot holes

    I won’t mention names, but again, why does your show have two seasons that just keep widening the plot holes? Allow me to recommend shows to people with my chest.

    Too much slice-of-life

    Please, we’ve had too many slices. I didn’t even know slice-of-life movies could make you cry until I started watching K-drama. Give me more action and romance where they actually end up together. Don’t slice any more lives.

    Second lead syndrome on steroids

    Usually, we’d feel bad for these guys;, sometimes, we’d even hate them. But the brand of second lead characters in 2022 K-drama made me sympathetic to their plight. None of them had happy endings, just yearning and sadness. There’s wickedness, and there’s that. Let it end in 2022. 

    RELATED: How I Made My Typical Nigerian Dad Love K-Drama

  • We Spoke to 6 Nigerians About Their Fave Enemies-to-Lovers K-Drama Stories

    Who doesn’t love that tension between the characters who are always fighting yet on the verge of realising they love each other? Nothing screams romance like a good enemies-to-lovers story, especially in K-dramas. We asked Nigerians what their favourite ones are, and here’s what they had to say.

    Praise Edrah

    I love Wang So and Hae Soo from Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo. They had such a wonderful love story, and I loved witnessing their growth. I particularly enjoyed  how they helped each other become the best version of themselves. 


    RELATED: 2022 Has Been a Great Year for Female Friendship’s in K-drama


    Coltan 

    I don’t think I’ve watched a lot of K-dramas with the enemies-to-lovers trope.  Maybe I’m just too focused on the part where they fall in love to remember. But, my favourite would be Hometown Cha Cha Cha, which also happens to be my favourite K-drama of all time. Hye-jin and Du-sik weren’t exactly enemies at the beginning, but they didn’t really get along because they had very different outlooks on life. But as they spent more time with each other, they became genuine friends. There was so much depth in their conversations, all the tiny gestures of love were present. both Kim Seon Ho and Shin Min Ah did a stellar job with their roles. And it wasn’t just focused on them as the main leads, it was a story about everyone in the town, the side characters gave the series so much depth. Really, I could talk about why Hometown Cha Cha Cha is the best k-drama ever made, all day.

    Also Gaus Electronics, which I just finished watching. It’s a workplace drama and these characters were actually proper enemies oh. I started watching it because I saw a tweet that said it was really funny, and truly it is. I’m yet to watch the last two episodes, but it’s already one of my favourite k-dramas. I love Kwak Dong Yeon. If you saw him in Vincenzo, you do too. It’s very typical enemies-to-lovers stuff — fake girlfriend, fake relationship, and before you know, it all becomes real. The part where Baek Ma Tan got up from his father’s house just to go and experience poverty is something else.

    Rane 

    My favourites are Hometown Cha Cha Cha,  Her Private Life, Scarlet Heart Ryeo and Touch Your Heart. Hometown leads went from always fighting to “I’ve lived 34 years without you, but each day seems to last forever since I’ve met you”. Every single character had depth, and they all loved each other, weirdly. I liked Her Private Life because it was giving office romance. She fell in love with the boss she hated, and everything else was just funny and lightweight. Scarlet Heart was great. Historical dramas always have umph. 

    Kokai  

    In no particular order: Alchemy of Souls — Mu Deok-i and Jang Uk were using each other when they fell in love; Shooting Stars — the superstar male lead picked on the female lead who accidentally sent a PR letter about his dick size. I love a great “funny with a nice ending” enemies-to-lovers story. 

    Zaynab 

    My favourite enemies-to-lovers K-drama is Our Beloved Summer. In most K-dramas the male lead always bullies the female lead until they end up liking each other, but that’s not the case here. Choi Ung was kind and gentle to Yeon Su even after she broke up with him in a horrible manner. The cinematography was beautiful, and the female lead was a strong character.

    Athena 

    I’m a sucker for comedy and rom-coms, but good ones only occur when the actors have chemistry. I want to see the hate, jealousy, sadness or misunderstanding in your eyes, and I want to see it slowly change to love. My favourite of them all is Semantic Error. Chu Sangwoo and Jang Jaeyoung’s height difference? It was too cute. They made me wish I was one of the characters.

    They were so sweet and fluffy that I almost had diabetes. 


    READ ALSO:  7 Nigerians Say These Are Their Comfort K-Drama

  • How I Made My Typical Nigerian Dad Love K-Drama

    My dad is a typical Nigerian dad; he loves being in control and seeing things go his way. When he walks into the living room, we all walk out because we’ve already read the news on Citizen? It’s a habit my siblings and I formed as kids, not out of fear, but because we generally hated his taste in movies. 

    He’s a tough guy, but underneath the hard demeanour is a heart of marshmallows. Younger me would be surprised because this guy flogged me endlessly, and I truly thought he was besties with the devil. The older I get, the more I sort of excuse all the messed up shit my parents did to me as a kid — even though it’s not enough to forgive them. 

    But he must not be much of a hard guy these day’s seeing as I turned my dad into a K-drama lover. I’m claiming this as proof that with enough manipulation skills, you can get even the toughest people to change. This does not mean I successfully have him wrapped around my fingers, but it’s something.

    A cautionary tale of who will bell the cat

    When I was eight years old — and Indomie was still ₦30 — my dad told me a story about a cat eating all the mice in a little mouse village. Like all stories with a moral lesson, one day, a bold mouse looped a bell around the cat’s neck while it was asleep. Why? So that its fellow mice would be warned when the cat was coming to the village. 

    I took that story to heart; whenever I wanted to do anything risky, it felt like I was belling a cat. Making my father fall in love with K-drama the way I did was one of those situations that took a lot of risks but I love a challenge. It took nearly eight years. If there was an award for best in patience, I would win it, to be honest, but let me explain how it happened. 

    I fell in love with K-drama in 2013 when I was in SS1. I spent all my hard-earned pocket money buying CDs from the friend who introduced me to the addiction. I was in boarding school, so that meant I had to start eating food from the dining hall or my provisions, instead of food from the tuckshop. 

    After the first few series I watched, enjoying K-drama alone wasn’t enough, I wanted to share it with the closest people to me, my family members. For as long as I’ve been alive, my biggest love language has been sharing the media I love. If I care about you, I will “You should try this movie/song/series” you to death. I started with my two siblings, and they were sold. Next was my mum; it was hard shifting her attention from Indian and Mexican series, but I succeeded. 

    With my dad, there was a lot of push back. I couldn’t understand how he could sit through anime, cartoons, superhero and adventure movies and the occasional romantic drama, but he could not stand us watching K-drama. The language annoyed him. This man is from Akwa-Ibom; he knows first hand how annoying it is to hear that. It especially hurt that he was unwilling to try because a big part of my family bonding for as long as I’ve been alive happened while we sat around a television. 

    I eventually got out of boarding school in 2015 and realised my dad and I barely spoke anymore, so I tried once again to share K-drama with him. He resisted again. I’d make him sit through two or three episodes of an action K-drama, or adventure type like Jumong, The Fugitives Plan B, and he would complain but jump with excitement when they had those badass fight scenes. That was about it. 

    I learnt how to be a fanboy from my dad because he is a big DC comic fan, so I could tell he wasn’t enjoying it. I gave up… for a while because I moved out and lived in school for five years. 

    I must admit everything about slowly turning him into a fan was selfish. I actually didn’t care if he liked the show I liked anymore; that was a 12 to 16-year-old me’s problem. Now, I just wanted to know that if I needed to see my K-drama on a bigger screen, everyone would be willing to watch it with me. I wanted everybody to watch what I wanted just because I was there first. 

    Yes, it’s me. I’m the problem. 

    He was playing chess. I bought the company

    I moved back home in February [2022] and noticed no one used the TV in the living room anymore. I liked staying in the living room since everyone avoided it. It was great, except when he wanted to watch the news or play church sermons in the middle of the night unprovoked.

    I had to fix that and the solution was introducing him to Netflix. 

    He’d ask to watch action movies, but it was my wi-fi and account, so I’d tell him those movies weren’t available. 

    I made him sit through dramas like All of Us Are Dead, Juvenile Justice, Tomorrow, PachinKo, Our Blues, Cafe Minnamdang, Extraordinary Attorney Woo and Alchemy of Souls to get to him. Alchemy of Souls should’ve been the icing on the cake because he loves fantasy movies, but then one day, my mum wanted to see an older drama titled Vincenzo, and that was it. He was hooked. 

    This man disturbed me whenever he was back from work to play him episode after episode. He’s an architect, so besides the fantastic storyline, he loved seeing the inside of their houses, criticising and admiring it. 

    If you have an architect for a father, there’s a lot about his job you learn. I’m constantly criticising buildings too, even though I don’t have the degree for that. Who will check me?

    He especially loved how the Korean society reflected all the morals of our sometimes complex society. And as a part-time assistant pastor, he loved that all the bad guys were brought to justice. I’ve been watching K-dramas for years, and not once did the series product placement for Kopiko make me consider buying it.  But as soon as he was done with Vincenzo, he bought two packs. 

    Sometimes, I’d sit beside him, and he’d just randomly say “Vincenzo Cassano” like the other characters did in the drama. 

    He’s currently watching Crash Landing on You because I mentioned I wanted to rewatch it after the announcement that the actors were having a baby together.

    His opinion on how that drama will end is killing me because, sir, your heart is about to be broken. I can’t wait to tell him the main characters are now married in real life. For now, let him find out the way the rest of us did, shedding tears months after the drama ended. 

    I’ve successfully broken him, but at what cost?


    RELATED: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack


    The cost of turning my dad into a K-drama lover 

    Everything. No, seriously, this man has been after my peace of mind. 

    He wants to watch all the old dramas, and I don’t know how he keeps finding them. He sends me screenshots and would be like, “Find this one for me”. Maybe he thinks I work closely with Netflix or something because half of them aren’t even on the app. 

    Not only do I have to find these old series for him, I have to listen to him talk about something interesting from them I already heard about four times because he forgot he’d already told me. He constantly attacks me when I can’t run away, like when I’m eating or cleaning. He’d appear like a ghost and be like, “Yesterday, this character did this”, and I have to reply, “You don’t mean it? Tell me more”, because as parents get older, they’re suddenly the ones looking for your attention. 

    I should add I spend an amusing amount of time shooing him out of the living room or begging him to go to bed. Sir, you are in your late 50s, I’m not ready to be a breadwinner, please. 

    I also fund his Kopiko habit. The Kopiko company should sign him as a brand ambassador at this point. If I see that sweet wrapper one more time, I might actually lose it. 

    I love that he likes my second love — K-drama, and sometimes, I even enjoy talking about theories with him, even if it’s about an old drama I’ve already seen. Do what I did at your own risk. Maybe we can form a support group for kids with parents who love K-drama soon.  


    READ ALSO: Fantasy Movies Saved Me as a Child

  • 2022 Has Been a Great Year for Female Friendship’s in K-drama

    For some of these shows, female friendships may not have been their primary themes, but they completely stole the spotlights. Here are my favourite female friendships for the 2022 K-dramas.

    Twenty-Five Twenty-One

    Besides the fact that Twenty-Five Twenty-One broke all our hearts when the leads didn’t end up together, Na Hee-Doo, Ko Yu-rim and Ji Seung-wan’s friendship completely stole the show. These girls selflessly supported one another even though they had a rocky start. The scene where He-doo and Yu-rim were tired after practising in the gym for a long time and kept turning the fan towards the other person will always be cute because how can you not think of yourself first? 


    RELATED: The K-drama Friend Groups We Wish We Were Part Of


    20th Century Girl

    Imagine loving a friend enough to help her stalk a boy she likes, falling in love with him and still being willing to give him up for your friend’s happiness? Not going to lie, it could never be me, but that’s the kind of love Bo-ra and Yeon-do  have for each other is too precious. The way they cried when they saw each other again after Yeon-do’s surgery will forever be etched in my mind. 

    Extraordinary Attorney Woo

    The titular character struggled a lot navigating courtrooms as an autistic person, but her amazing friends are always there by her side. She has the best friends for real: Dong Geurami with their cute special greeting and “Spring Sunshine” Choi Soo-yeon, her work bestie who doesn’t let anyone bully her.

    39

    39 managed to handle a complex subject like death through the lens of the beautiful friendship between three women. This show explored dealing with love, work, and loss and struggles with close friends by your side. I especially enjoy the friendship dynamics between older women and I loved seeing them banter and tease each other so much I forgave the show for all the tears it made me shed.

    Business Proposal

    Ha-ri and Young-seo’s friendship shouldn’t work because of how different their backgrounds are, but it does. They argued like sisters and made bad decisions together. They were always there for each other. In that one scene where Young-Seo has a stalker and felt unsafe, Ha-ri came to be with her. I lived for every shared moment with them on screen. 

    Our Blues

    I loved how this show handled jealousy in friendships. Eun-hui and Mi-ran may not have had a picture-perfect friendship, but they cared for each other, even after hurting each other multiple times. All that mattered was the effort to fix their relationship and work through that pain. Then there was Yeong-ok, a fiercely independent girl trying to make money for her disabled sister, who found friendship with the Haenyeons, ocean divers, who’d initially given her a hard time.  

    Little Women 

    While the characters in Little Women are sisters, it took a special type of bond to be friends. In Joo, In Kyung, and In Hye may have disagreed a number of times, but ultimately all they wanted for each other was a life of happiness. I’m so glad they each got the break they deserved. 

    READ ALSO:  Wholesome K-Dramas You Should Watch With Your Parents

  • These 7 K-dramas Will Make You Need Deliverance

    Korean writers are very popular for their romantic movies, but their horror dramas are so criminally underrated — and to be honest, I get why. The writers wrap them up like nice, funny, bright films And until you find yourself paralysed on your seat, your brain won’t register that you’ve been watching horror. Watch all seven of these at your own risk oh. 

    All of Us Are Dead (2022) 

    All of Us Are Dead is not a conventional zombie movie. It is unusually bright for a show with that many gory scenes and multiple jumpscares. It follows a group of secondary school students stuck in school which becomes ground zero for a violent  zombie apocalypse.  

    Every time these kids fight for their lives against the super strong and constantly mutating zombies, your heart will be stuck in your mouth. But that’s what you like, right? Enjoy. 

    RELATED: These 7 Characters Deserved Better in All of Us Are Dead

    The Cursed (2020) 

    The Cursed revolves around a successful IT company called Forest. Usually, rich companies like these in K-drama just means someone is killing all the owners’ enemies like ants. But the chairman of Forest, Jin Jong-Hyun decided to take it up a notch by using diabolical means. Since it’s one day for the thief and another for the owner, naturally, Forest gets involved in a huge case and a reporter,  Im Jin-Hee risks her life to unravel the mystery behind the case. 

    Goedam (2020) 

    Goedam is a Netflix horror anthology series comprising a collection of short dramas, with eight episodes in total.

    Each episode follows a new plot with different characters, and they’ll all make you do the sign the cross if you watch them late at night. Careful though, episodes one, two and six may give you heart attacks. 

    Sweet Home (2020) 

    Sweet Home is a sublime balance of horror and thriller. It’s also one of the most popular Korean horror dramas on Netflix. The main character Cha Hyun-soo is a secondary school student who becomes an orphan overnight after his family dies in a car accident. Naturally, he wants to commit suicide and moves to an odd building where he can do that undisturbed, but then strange things start happening among the residents. He somehow finds himself fighting for his life amongst other residents battling humans who have been turned into monsters. It’s survival of the fittest in these streets and a gripping take on the monster genre. 

    Strangers From Hell (2019) 

    The moment a TV series starts in a cheap-ass residential area, you know to expect the worst. 

    Desperate for a job, Yoon Jong-woo moves to Seoul from the comfort of his home in the countryside. He soon realises that he can’t afford to live in Seoul, so he moves to Goshiwon. The amenities and living conditions of the building he chooses are horrible, but he tries to endure till he gets a job.  

    Even worse than the building are his neighbours, each with their own secrets and eccentric behaviours. Across the 10 episodes, we learn exactly what those secrets are. Strangers From Hell isn’t scary, but the psychological thriller will leave you on the edge of your seat. Stay alert while watching this; nothing will prepare you for the end. 

    Kingdom (2019) 

    For fans of dramas set in the Joseon era, you’d be amused to see how Kingdom weaves historical drama elements with a zombie apocalypse.

    This drama follows Lee Chang, the crown prince, who discovers the outbreak of a mysterious disease. He goes on a mission to find the royal physician who might know something about the outbreak. But instead, he finds someone who worked alongside the royal physician. 

    The tension in this drama comes from watching people fight for their lives in an era with medieval weaponry. 

    Nightmare High (2016) 

    Set in a private high school in Korea, Nightmare High revolves around several unexplained incidents that occur after Han Bong-goo, the new homeroom teacher, shows up.

    Usually, a teacher is a nightmare because they’re giving too many assignments, but this man chooses a different way to terrorise his students, bringing all their nightmares to life, and kids begin to go missing. But no one notices until the class president points it out. The most unsettling experience for me was seeing a group of high school students obediently listen to a teacher. In what world is it possible to have such control over teenagers? 

    READ ALSO: Wholesome K-Dramas You Should Watch With Your Parents

  • Everybody Likes Lee Min Ho, but in 2022? Come On

    Lee Min Ho is a world-famous A-list Korean actor who rose to stardom for his role as Gu Jun Pyo in Boys over Flowers. He’s also incredibly handsome, funny and down-to-earth (based on his interviews). But here’s the thing. He’s not a great actor. He actually kind of sucks. There, I said it.

    Everyone and their mums had a crush on Lee Min Ho that year. You know, when Boys over Flowers was the most incredible love story and The Heirs was like a richer sequel? When the side swoop of his hair in City Hunter acted more than him the entire show? Yeah, that year, because we watched them all at once, even though these series had been out years before, but welcome to pre-Netflix Nigeria. 

    Lee Min Ho is a pretty big deal In the Nigerian K-drama scene. It’s impossible not to know this man even if you live under a rock. And now, you’re wondering, so what’s the problem? Why shouldn’t I be watching him, then?

    Here’s the thing. To be an actor, you need to be able to ACT. Lee Min Ho is not very famous for his acting. Over half of the awards he’s received throughout his career are popularity or fan-voted awards, not acting awards. 

    For as long as I’ve watched K-dramas, this man has played the rich, stylish and charming boy perfectly, and before you say, “But what about Gangnam Blues? He was poor there,” I’m sorry, he looked like he was just cosplaying poverty. It’s like Patience Ozokwor playing a nice person in a movie. It’s suspicious. 

    This man looked like he hadn’t eaten in years , but I could still see the “rich” in his eyes. Sometimes, when you’re big, you’re big, and there’s nothing you can do about that. 

    Unfortunately for him, you can’t have range as an actor when you constantly look like you’re playing the same role. If I take a screenshot of every drama he’s been in side by side, he has only three expressions: 

    Too rich for peasants

    More handsomely annoyed than humanly possible

    In love but the “hard guy” version

    Funny enough, all these things you think I’m complaining about are precisely why I love him. Do you know how powerful you have to be for people not to know what you look like yet still know your name? Lord knows how many relationships he’s scattered just because one babe posted him more than her man. 

    You too, look at the material. How do you compete with this?

    Back then, if your babe only watched K-dramas he starred in, sorry to inform you, but you were in that relationship alone. 

    Now it’s 2022, and there’s no reason anyone should watch K-dramas because of this man. Don’t get me wrong, he has his moments; in a drama with 20 episodes, there’s always that one episode he gives his all. But he’s like if RMD doesn’t physically age and has no acting skill. He’s so much older now and deserves more mature roles.

    I’m not saying he doesn’t have good older works. He starred in some of my favourite comfort dramas: City Hunter, which also solidified Park Min Young’s role as the romance drama IT girl for me; Mackerel Run, which is old but pure high school drama gold; The Heirs because, come on, he acted for his last 2k with that series; and The Legend of the Blue Sea because a funny, stupid, rich Lee Min Ho character? Inject it.

    All I’m saying is when you leave grapes for a while, you get fantastic wine. Just look at what he did with Pachinko after taking a break from acting for a while. It might not be the best 2022 drama, but it was something. Something different. 

    Now, I’m not the type to take away your drug of choice without offering sustainable solutions, so here are five actors you can replace him with until his next great drama.


    QUIZ: Can You Unscramble These Anime Titles in 1 Minute?


    Son Suk Ku

    This man has the whole “sad, rich boy that melts your heart” look going for him. He recently had his first lead role as an alcoholic who falls in love with a woman and tries to change in My Liberation Notes. You don’t want to be late to his stan train, so take my word on this. 

     Nam Joo Hyuk

    If you saw Twenty Five, Twenty One, do I even need to defend this? All that crying, longing and that smile, and you’re still not sold? Something about the way he delivers his lines makes you wonder if he knows he’s supposed to be acting. That’s a little too real for me, and now, I have to plan our wedding.

    Kim Young Dae

    It’s one thing to be funny and another to look good while being funny. Kim Young Dae has mastered both. Especially in his role as a hotshot actor in Shooting. There aren’t that many movies in which he wasn’t playing himself or a guest actor, but after this role, the only way is up, please.  


    QUIZ: Can You Match the Light Stick to the K-Pop Group?


    Rowoon

    Before we talk about how his suit was a paid actor in the fantasy series “Tomorrow,” seeing him try to save people others thought were irredeemable was emotional, and no one else could’ve done it. Why? Because I said so. Plus, the man can sing. It doesn’t get more charming than this.  

    Lee Jong Suk

    If you’ve watched K-dramas long enough, you should know him from Romance Is a Bonus Book, While You Were Sleeping, I Hear Your Voice and Pinocchio. All he does is pick good roles and execute them flawlessly, so if you like your actors a little old but still young, watch Big Mouth to see why he made the list. 

    I picked these five because they each have qualities I like in Lee Min Ho, on and off screen. They’re charming but not rude, look good in a suit, and have range, unlike Lee Min Ho.

    At this point, he’s a K-drama deity who’s done a great job of pushing the K-drama agenda. What’s a popular K-drama list without at least two of his movies? His audience is growing and changing, and so many younger and stronger actors are coming up every day. I’d hate to see him left behind. 

    I want to see him be a bad guy, the type who makes you want to drag your hair out. I want to see him play a dad too. I’m not even asking for too much. I just want to be able to have arguments other than “All he plays is a rich boy”. What do you think? 

    In the end, this is a twisted love letter to an actor who’ll forever be one of my favourites and the dramas that made me fall in love with K-dramas.


    QUIZ: Only K-Pop Fans Know Who Sang These Iconic Lyrics


    READ ALSO: The 7 K-drama Shows That Should Be on Your Watchlist This September

  • The 7 K-drama Shows That Should Be on Your Watchlist This September

    Are you in a K-drama slump because Alchemy of Souls ended, and you don’t know what to watch next? Well, here are seven K-drama shows you should catch up on this September. 

    The Law Cafe

    First of all, it’s a Lee Seung-gi drama. Come on; it’s going to be good. The story follows Jeong Ho, a former genius prosecutor and current owner of the building where Yu Ri, a lawyer who recently quit her job, now runs a cafe. Of course, she just had to be a former friend of his. I’m expecting meddlesome behavior and plenty romanz. 


    RELATED: Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”


    Little Women

    Forget every other story you know about the famous Little Women story This show is already shaping up to be the next best thing with a storyline completely different from the original Little Women. It’s about three sisters who have formed a close bond while growing up in poverty. No, because these girls from the trenchiest trenches stumble into an incident involving the wealthiest family in the country. Expect drama overdose. 

    little women kdrama 12

     

    Once Upon a Small Town

    I just know this K-drama will give an Our Blues vibe but happier abeg. It’s a simple story about a man who moves from Seoul to Heedong Village and meets a countryside policewoman. The show will depict the happiness and sorrows of the people of the Village. If you’re a K-pop fan, you might enjoy seeing Joy from Red Velvet in leading roles.

    once upon a small town Kdrama 11

    Blind 

    After seeing Ok Taec-yeon in Vincenzo act as a highly psychopathic wealthy heir to a pharmaceutical company, I know it’ll be nice to see him play a good detective this time. Taec-Yeon plays detective Ryu Sung Joon. With his judge brother Ryu Sung Hoon and Jo Eun Ki, a social worker, he becomes involved in a serial murder case involving jury members as the victims. The three work hard to uncover the truth behind the deaths when it seems like the world is willing to turn a blind eye. Set your reminder cause Blind drops on September 16th.

    blind kdrama 11

    Love in Contract

    Where are all my romance lovers? This one is for you. Our rom-com queen Park Min Young has done it again. Love in Contract is set to release on September 21st and follows the life of Choi Sang-eun, who helps people by pretending to be their fake wives at social events. What could possibly go wrong?

    Love in Contract kdrama 11 1

    One Dollar Lawyer

    Don’t overthink which show you’ll have to drop to watch this one, just look at the title. K-dramas keep giving us back-to-back legal dramas, and I can’t even complain. Cheon Ji Hun is a lawyer who charges only 1,000 won ( approximately $1) — for his services which involve helping people fight against rich and powerful people and their expensive lawyers. It can’t get more badass than this. 

    one Dollar Lawyer Kdrama 11

    The Golden Spoon

    If you were born poor and found a magic golden spoon which could exchange your wretched background with a friend born into a wealthy family, would you use it? That’s what happened to Seung Cheon, a child born into a low-income family. He switches lives with his rich friend and gets a taste of wealth. But will he go back? You’ll have to wait till September 23rd to find out. 

    the golden spoon kdrama 11

    READ ALSO: 7 Nigerians Say These Are Their Comfort K-Drama

  • Now That Alchemy of Souls Is Over, Here’s Everything We’ll Miss

    Now that Alchemy of Souls is over, I’m terrified of what I’ll do with myself during the weekend. I also want to fight the Hong sisters for whatever that ending was. How could they have done this to us? In the spirit of choosing peace and hoping for a better finish to season two, here’s everything I’m going to miss from the show. 

    Mu-deok and Jang Uk’s banter

    I’ll miss all their stupid fights and arguments where Jang Uk almost always wins. I’ll miss them pretending that Jang Uk is the boss when we all know Mu-deok has more power in the relationship. I’ll miss Mu-deok talking about how she wants to kill everybody but ends up saving their lives. I’ll also miss watching Jang Uk and Mu-deok win every single time! My ultimate faves, I believe so much in their love that I choose not to remember the ending because what was that?


    RELATED: How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series


    Maidservant Kim and Park Jin’s relationship

    Something I didn’t expect was to enjoy seeing older people fall in love. You’d think since I watch a lot of K-drama, I’d be used to things like this by now. But I loved seeing them flirt, even though it was painful to witness. Maidservant Kim confessed her feelings, and Park Jin was still oblivious somehow. It was adorable. 

    Watching the crown prince be a weirdo

    This man was just unintentionally funny. He’s usually a character people would hate, but in Alchemy of Souls, there’s absolutely no reason to hate him. He cheated on a test for Mu-deok, was willing to find out the truth about the queen being a soul shifter at all costs and saved Mu-deok’s life on multiple occasions. Sad for him, he fell in love with the one person not even all his money could buy. I was still rooting for him, though. 

    Lady Jin’s eye makeup

    Half the time I watched this show, whenever she came up, I’d just whisper “bad bitch” under my breath because, wow. Using a graphic liner in the age of magic and keeping that makeup flawless is a trick only she could body. I mean, I saw this woman crying about her daughter, and all I could think about was how her makeup didn’t get smudged. A queen.  

    look at her!

    Master Lee musing

    Let’s not even talk about how he’s the most unserious character in this show low-key. This man always figures out everything before other people do. Maybe because he’s always thinking? Or maybe it’s because he is over 200 years old? He’s sha my fave because every supporter of Mu-deok’s antics is my fave. 

    Jin Mu breathing like he swallowed hot eba

    When you’re too busy doing evil things, of course your breathing would be laboured. Okay, that’s not a thing, but I’m glad it was Jin Mu’s thing. Wherever a new scene comes up and Jin Mu huffs and puffs, I always expected the worst. The way this man manipulated every single person around him is just legendary. 

    Dang-gu’s earrings 

    The way I hated his guts in All of Us Are Dead. They dressed everybody like they were in the Joseon era, but not quite, and Dang-gu came from nowhere with his K-pop idol earrings. I’m going to miss Yoo In-soo playing the role of Dang-gu. Do you know how good an actor you must be to get so many people to like you after killing their faves in an earlier movie?

    Hearing Jipsu, Ryusu, and Chisu

    Now that Alchemy of Souls has ended, where else will I hear people mention this? What if I also want to open up my gate of energy and master all three? While that might never happen, let’s just sit with that beautiful memory of Jang Uk using Chisu and Mu-deok’s blood to fight as we wait for season two. 


    READ ALSO: Wholesome K-Dramas You Should Watch With Your Parents

  • K-Dramas With the Best Dads

    Most K-drama characters have good relationships with their mums, and while that’s cute, I find that the dramas with present dads hit harder. 

    If you don’t have a great relationship with your dad, let’s gather together and cry at how nice these girls have it. 

    Sung Dong-il from Reply 1988 

    In the Reply 1988 series, Sung Dong-il might have been the poorest dad who couldn’t buy his girls nice things, but he loved Bo-ra and Dek-Sun. This man cheered for and encouraged his girls, and was proud of them for their small and big wins. He wasn’t perfect; he drank a lot and his kindness got his family into debt, but there’s no better mix of gruff and sweet like him. I will never get over the scene where he wears an oversized shoe his daughter bought him — painful as it was — just because she gifted it to him. 


    RELATED: The K-drama Friend Groups We Wish We Were Part Of


    Kim Chang-gul from Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok-Joo

    As a former weightlifter, Kim bok joo’s dad made it his personal mission to ensure his daughter was well fed. Her mum died as a child, and her father did his best to care for her. Whether it was getting her lipstick to tell her that even though she’s not the conventional size for women her age or personally bringing food to her sports university to help her bulk up, he’d be there. A stand-up guy, we stan. 

    Woo Gwang-Oh from Extraordinary Attorney Woo

    This show came from nowhere and stole everyone’s heart. The most beautiful thing about it was Woo-Young-We’s easy relationship with her dad. He understood how much more she had to struggle to get people to see her for her brilliance, and 100 per cent believed in her. He loved her even before she was born, and his affection never waned. He just wanted her to live a fulfilled and happy life. Where do people even find dads like this?

    The dads from Our Blues

    This drama will break you with how honest the relationship these men had with their daughters was. Cho Han-Soo was fighting hard and getting in debt to ensure his daughter kept playing golf abroad because it was her dream. Then, there’s Ho-sik dealing with his teenage daughter getting pregnant in high school and choosing to keep the baby. Her decision killed his dreams of becoming a fisherman as soon as she graduates. These men aren’t the best because they are perfect. They’re the best because they always prioritised their kids’ happiness. 

    Gang Hwa in Hi Bye, Mama!

    There’s no sweeter girl dad story like that of a young dad and his toddler. Gang Hwa struggled like anyone would, juggling a medical career and taking care of a newborn after losing his wife. But, every decision he made — including trying to remarry — was to give his girl a happy home. The sweetest of them all. 


    READ ALSO: Feel-Good K-Dramas like “Extraordinary Attorney Woo”

  • Wholesome K-Dramas You Should Watch With Your Parents

    Honestly, what’s more wholesome than a good K-drama? Exactly, nothing. Instead of fretting about how old your parents are or complaining about which one was absent, take some time to make good memories with them by sharing the joy of a good family movie. Here are my top recommendations.

    The Handmaiden

    You don’t want to over-excite them as they grow older, so start on an easy note with the Handmaiden. It’s a simple movie about a wealthy heiress, Lady Hideko, who reads books to old, totally not-insane men, her fiance, Count Fujiwara, who is totally not a con artist and her trusty maid who may or may not be working with the con artists. I mean, what could go wrong?  The Handmaiden is the perfect parent-child bonding movie. But if any sex scene magically appears, you can pretend to look away while your parent(s) pick up calls from nowhere. 

    RELATED: 7 Korean Movies on Netflix Everyone Needs to See


    Nevertheless

    Watch this one, especially with your mum, so that when she prays for you to find love, she can come correct with reference. Nevertheless is about sweetheart Park Jae-Eon, an art major who usually doesn’t do relationships but falls for the female lead Yoo Na-Bi in seconds. Everyone loves romance, and when you sigh during all the 100 cuddling scenes, your mum will find it cute and not start a whole lecture about how you need to find your partner.  

    Eve

    Your parents will eat this one up with all the Nollywood movies about badass female characters. Who doesn’t like to see a powerful woman fight the men who destroyed her family,has a side-fling with a married man, is cold-hearted for fun and an all-around badass? Nigerian parents love these types of movies. 

    The World of the Married

    A drama about unearthing family secrets? That’s every Nigerian parent’s favourite genre. You get to have a great bonding experience with your parents. Your parents also get to talk about how not all perfect-looking families are perfect inside, just like the main character Ji Seon-u’s family. And how you should be grateful that you have an ideal family inside and outside. Wow, who wouldn’t love this?

    Her Private Life

    This drama is about Sung Deok-Mi, a good girl with a job as a curator with a dark secret. She’s a huge fan of Shi-An, a K-pop idol, a secret that almost leaks until her boss pities her and pretends to date her, and they eventually fall in love. You can use this drama to explain to your parents that your obsession with K-drama and K-pop will‌ also help you find love like it did with Sung Deok-Mi. You’re welcome.

    Love and Leashes

    You can tell from the title that this will be a fun watch. Nigerian parents love keeping their kids on a leash, so watching it happen on TV should be fun. So what if the male lead likes to bark to please his Dom? If your dad asks you why they are tying someone’s child with rope, yet he doesn’t cry when they beat him. Tell him that the character is possessed, that’s why. 

    Warning: if they remove you from their will, please don’t disturb us. Plus, they traumatised you first, so think of this as payback.  


    ALSO READ: Korean Parents Are Nigerian Parents in Disguise, Here’s Why

  • 7 Nigerians Say These Are Their Comfort K-Drama

    K-drama fans will never admit it, but sometimes these dramas are too long. So, imagine loving one enough to watch it more than once, just because it makes you feel good? We spoke to six Nigerian K-drama fans about their comfort K-dramas and here’s what they had to say. 

    Jazz (21) — Reply 1988

    Reply 1988 is a really beautiful show about five different families living on the same street, that mainly focuses on the relationship between the children from each of the families. 

    As someone who’s always found solace in friendship more than family, It’s so comforting watching their friendship blossom from childhood to adulthood. It reassures me that friendship can be enough. It touches on so much: loneliness, love, friends from different social classes and how they support each other. Also, the OST is so good, I listen to it all the time. Everyone needs to watch it. Even though the episodes are long AF — each episode is about 90mins — they’re totally worth it.

    I’ve watched it about four =times and I can’t count how many times I’ve rewatched some of the episodes. It’s soft and emotional, so keep your tissue nearby ‘cause you’ll definitely cry a lot.

    RELATED: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

    Moyomade (21) — Jang Bo Ri, Dali and Cocky prince

    I have different comfort Kdramas for different phases of my life. My comfort K-drama as a teen was Jang Bo Ri. I must have watched it like 400 times. 

    Currently, it’s Dali and Cocky prince. It’s my comfort K-drama because it has all the elements I love. It’s romantic with a strong female lead who stands up for herself and everything she loves. Also, it’s a love story between an artsy girl and an abrasive guy from the food industry beating their enemies together. It was just very refreshing, had a lot of surprises, and had a cuteness overload. 

    I fall in love with Dali every time I see her cute face and those two curly strands she always leaves out when she styles her hair. Not to mention, it’s also funny. It’s one of the most enjoyable K-drama series I’ve seen in a while and this is me picking it over Alchemy of Souls and Extraordinary Attorney Woo.

    Milola (25) — Goblin and Tale of the Nine Tailed 

    Goblin is a tragic story, but there’s something very warm and comforting about it. 

    Tale of the Nine-Tailed, on the other hand, is hilarious and has two of my favourite Korean actors. I’m guaranteed a laugh every time I rewatch it. 

    If I had to recommend them to someone, I’d describe Goblin as one of the most satisfying takes on a story that has been told over and over again. It’s an emotional rollercoaster everyone should experience at least twice in their lives.

    Seki (20) — The Heirs

    The Heirs is from a simpler time when popular K-dramas were all about rich guy-poor girl relationships. Except it’s different because both main characters had really complex feelings. And even though both characters were  young they articulated them well. All the side characters were also well developed. I’ve seen this series about five times now.  Who wouldn’t enjoy a romantic drama about a boy finding himself and trying to fix and maintain relationships with everyone around him?

    Nnenna (22) — Search WWW, Be Melodramatic, Age of Youth and Thirty Nine

    All four of them are girls’ type of K-drama. The genre is female relationships and figuring out life, both personal and professional, with other women. I like it because it shows how very different women can love each other through everything. They also show how all  women don’t have to be friends without villainising the characters. 

    In these series, there’s no “evil woman out for your life” trope, just women with other interests figuring themselves out. Sometimes you don’t click but you can still respect each other. They also show women navigating misogyny and rape culture. But even beyond that, they show joy and strong friendships because sometimes you just need your babes in your corner. 

    I’ve seen all four shows multiple times. And if I had to describe them to someone, I would say, imagine a video edit of Jonathan and David from the bible with Best Friend by Saweetie and Doja Cat as the background music.

    Vicky (53) — Vincenzo

    I’ve seen a lot of K-dramas because of my kids, so picking one is difficult. I used to love The King’s Heart but that’s old now. The most comforting drama I’ve seen in a while is Vincenzo. The situations these characters found themselves in felt real. The show was equal parts hilarious and intense when necessary. I loved that it emphasized the need for community with how all the tenants bonded and fought for what they believed in. Vincenzo is also a handsome guy, he looked harmless but could be capable of great evil, but that’s what makes him who he is. 

    He never pretended to be anything other than he was. I loved all the twists and was happy to see the good people win in the end. I usually prefer romantic K-dramas but I’m going to be watching Vincenzo for a long time. 

    ALSO READ: QUIZ: Can You Guess the K-drama From Its Iconic Line?

  • Our 8 Favourite Couples From Popular K-Dramas

    I love K-dramas because they usually have the most wholesome love stories, maybe it’s because Koreans really do get love. They build up tension that fills us fans with enough longing for two characters to be together even though we may not have enough romance in our lives. Here are my top eight favourite couples of all time from popular K-dramas. 

    Lee Ik Jun and Chae Song Hwa in Hospital Playlist

    I love an excellent friend-to-lovers movie, and Hospital Playlist did not disappoint this couple. They’d been in love with each other since they were in college and it took him almost dying for her to tell him she loved him back. Their relationship was slow-paced, but I can’t even complain because their chemistry was insane. 

    RELATED: These 7 Medical K-Dramas Will Wreck You Emotionally 

    Yoon Sae Bom and Jung Yi Hyun in Happiness

    The last thing I’d do in an apocalypse is fall in love, but these two made it work. Watching Yi Hyun risk his life to protect  Sae Bom  on several occasions shouldn’t be as cute as it was but it was. Of all the couples on this list, they deserve the best. 

    Yoon Hye Jin and Hong Doo Shik in Hometown Cha-Cha-Cha

    Enemies to lovers trope? Inject it, please. Whenever they did anything romantic, my cheeks burned because, God, when? They were so tender with each other and willing to make hard decisions to make each other happy. Knowing that they are not a real couple breaks my heart every day. 

    Vincenzo and Hong Cha Young in Vincenzo

    Forget that they didn’t end up together and focus on their chemistry. I’ve never seen a romantic pair as capable of so much chaos, as the both of them. They found a way to make us laugh with all their antics in a show that could easily have been too sad to watch. 

    Myul Mang and Tak Dong Kyung in Doom at Your Service 

    Imagine being the most negative and pessimistic person on earth, and the guy you like who is a god takes you back to your happiest memory just for fun. What a flex! How can we not stan? Their relationship was intense and heavy, but it was all worth rooting for them. 

    Kim Joo-won and Gil Ra-im in Secret Garden

    This show is old but gold because, in the late 2000’s, female leads were constantly chasing after men that were mean to them. Kim Joo-won was pursuing Gil Ra-im. In the series, this man flew in a director to watch her perform just cause he wanted her to get a role she missed. He even tried to give up his inheritance to be with her. Their relationship is a 20/10 for me. 

    Ri Jeong-Hyeok and Yoon Se-Ri in Crash Landing On You

    Do you know how insane you have to be as a North Korean soldier to hide and protect a South Korean who illegally enters your country? That, there, is romance. You know when your chemistry is so good, you fall in love and get married in real life? Exactly, there’s no need to talk too much. 

    Choi Ung and Kook Yeon-su in Our Beloved Summer 

    They started as lovers, became exes and then lovers again. They were both unwilling to open up to each other. Of course, they broke up. Years later,  they realised they were still in love and decided to do everything right this time. Choi Ung and Kook yeon-su made my heart ache in the sweetest way possible, and everything about their relationship felt so real, if only they weren’t acting. 

    READ ALSO: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

  • 7 Korean Movies on Netflix Everyone Needs to See

    We get it, sometimes Korean series are just too long for you to watch, but that doesn’t mean you should miss out on the greatness that is Korean entertainment. Here are seven of the best Korean movies you can watch on Netflix. 

    Love and Leashes

    Some of the best romantic K-dramas started with an office romance, and I’m glad this movie did not fail me. What happens when two coworkers find themselves in a contract-based BDSM relationship and try their hardest not to fall in love? Chaos. This movie accurately represented how kinks play out and still managed to be sweet and wholesome. The lead actors had great chemistry; the best part was that the dominant was a woman. Hard not to root for them. 

    RELATED: QUIZ: Can We Guess Your Sexual Kink?

    Alive

    Koreans realized that they could put multiple spins on zombie movies and haven’t stopped making them ever since. If you enjoy films like Train to Busan, this zombie thriller will hit the spot. The movie follows the life of a loner millennial video gamer who has to fight to survive after the world turns into an apocalyptic zombie nightmare. But it’s more than horror; it’s the struggle to keep hope alive even while the world burns before your eyes which is fitting since it was released in 2020. 

    Wish You

    For people that enjoy K-pop, Wish You is an LGBTQ romance set in the K-pop music industry that stars two actual singers in the lead roles. In Wish You, Sang Lee is a Keyboardist who falls in love with the work of a street musician played by Kang Ye Na. They spend some time working on music together, and of course, they fall in love. This cute romance will hit the spot if you enjoy movies where characters fall in love at first sight.

    https://youtu.be/yoSOUb1gwmM

    The Bros

    The Bros is a hilarious movie about two brothers who haven’t spoken since their mother died, forced to work together to carry out traditions at their father’s funeral. Add a mix of classic sibling rivalry, a mysterious woman, family secrets and meddlesome siblings and be ready for premium entertainment. The movie is funny and heartfelt as we watch the two brothers try to fix their relationship amid the crazy situations they find themselves in.

    Okja

    If you’re a Bong Joon Ho fan or loved Parasite, you’ve either already seen or will enjoy this movie. It follows the life of a young girl called Mija who tries to rescue her genetically modified pig “Okja.” This gut-wrenching movie spoke about the horrors of capitalism and the brutal treatment of animals in the food industry. After seeing Okja, you might become a bit obsessive about how the food industry works, pele. 

    Space Sweepers

    Koreans have range, and they showed it with this sci-fi movie. Space Sweepers is set in 2092 after Earth has become nearly unlivable, and a corporation called UTS starts to build homes on mars for people that can afford it. It’s a hilarious movie about a crew of “space sweepers” who collect debris from space and sell it for money. Their lives are a mess, but it gets worse when Dorothy, a robot which belongs to UTS, stows away on their ship. At first, they try selling Dorothy to the highest bidder, but the crew falls in love with her and make it their mission to protect her. 

    The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure

    For people that love adventure, The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure fit’s the bill when you don’t want to watch something too serious. A group of thieves and their eccentric leader Wu Mu-chi are stuck in the middle of the ocean but are rescued by pirates. Both groups are after a lost royal treasure and form an unlikely alliance to find it. It’s a movie about thieves and pirates, so expect lots of deceit, hilarious scenes and romance. 


    READ ALSO: Feel-Good K-Dramas like “Extraordinary Attorney Woo”

  • Feel-Good K-Dramas like “Extraordinary Attorney Woo”

    If you’re impatient like me, waiting weekly for new episodes of Extraordinary Attorney Woo must be frustrating. Here are seven feel-good K-dramas you can watch while you wait. 

    Racket Boys

    I once thought sports dramas were boring, but K-dramas changed that for me. Racket Boys is the story of a boys’ badminton team going from worst to best. It’s a sweet drama about finding yourself and your community. Watching the kids tackle challenging situations and triumph will surely keep your serotonin levels high. 


    RELATED: 10 Best Feel-good Anime for Beginners


    Welcome to Waikiki

    This drama follows three different men — an actor, a director and a writer — a combination that works if you’re making a movie. But imagine theose three people running a guest house without prior knowledge? A disaster. This drama is funny, and if you love movies about friendship, Welcome to Waikiki does the job. Try it when you need to de-stress, and you won’t regret it.

    Hometown Cha-Cha

    What is more feel-good than a romantic comedy? Hometown Cha-Cha focuses on a dentist from the city, Yoon Hye Jun, who moves to a village by the seaside to start her dental practice. She meets the small town chief and jack–of-all-trades, Hong Du Sik, and we get our never-ending fill of the enemies-to-lovers trope. Their chemistry will make you desperate for love, but be ready to laugh when the nosy village people are on screen. On a scale of one to ten,  this drama is an 11. 

    Our Beloved Summer

    Choi Ung and Kook Yeon-Su filmed a documentary together about the worst and best students while they were in high school. Five years have passed, and they’d put it behind them, including the relationship they ended up having. Except, it’s suddenly famous, and now, they need to shoot a rerun. And these two are still in love; they just don’t know it yet. The gentle friendship each character has with the other makes this show a must-watch. 

    Hi Bye, Mama!

    Imagine dying but having the chance to become human again if you do different tasks for 49 days? Well, that’s Cha Yu-Ri’s story. She died five years ago, has silently watched her daughter grow and has decided her grieving husband and his new wife aren’t up to the task of raising her. This drama will have you calling the important people in your life to say I love you; it’s just that heartwarming.

    Business Proposal

    Business Proposal follows the life of Shin Ha-ri, who pretends to be her best friend, Young-seo, to make sure the latter’s rejected on an arranged date. Things go to shit when Ha-ri realises the man is her boss and is determined to marry her at all costs. Ha-ri ends up in several difficult situations in this drama full of cliches that’ll keep you laughing. It’s very rare for you to fall in love with both the first and second lead, but this drama makes it work. 

    Mystic Pop-up Bar

    Any K-drama with a balance of comedy, fantasy, and romance gets an A+ in my books. Mystic Pop-up Bar is about an ill-tempered ghost who runs an outdoor bar where the living and dead can come to find answers to their problems. If you also enjoyed Hotel Del-Luna, you’d enjoy this show.  


    READ ALSO: The K-drama Friend Groups We Wish We Were Part Of

  • You Can’t Miss These 6 Recurring K-Drama Tropes

    K-drama writers are brilliant as fuck. They add these tropes on purpose, so die-hard fans like me can keep coming up with theories based on familiar tropes. They might be annoying at times, but they add spice to the plot, so we stick around. 

    Here are the six most recurring tropes you can’t miss in K-drama

    The main characters must have met as kids

    I’m not even going to lie; this trope slaps, and all the best dramas use this. It always works best when they don’t remember each other and hate each other’s guts. Like in Hometown Cha-cha-cha. Every time I see this trope, I want to fight my brain for forgetting all my kindergarten friends.  

    RELATED:  QUIZ: Where Are You Going to Find Love?

    Sudden illness or amnesia

    You thought Mexican series had this trope on lock, but them no do reach Koreans. When you’re watching a K-drama and things are going too well, just prepare for an accident that’ll give the main character amnesia or a sudden terminal illness. Have your tissues ready. You’re about to cry hot tears. 

    Episode 12 breakup

    I want Koreans to know that art doesn’t always have to imitate life. I didn’t come to watch a K-drama for them to break up. But what do they care about my feelings? It’s on schedule at this point. Isn’t 12 supposed to be a holy number signifying new things? Anyway, if your relationship is 12 seconds, days, weeks, months, or years old, my dear, good luck. Break-up na national cake, after all. 

    The best friend who’s in love with his best friend, who likes someone else

    This trope is annoying because if your best friend ever confesses that they like you because someone else is showing interest in you, you better run. These characters need to stop doing this nonsense sha. I like that K-dramas never lets him get the girl sh because that’s dirty behaviour. A closed mouth is a closed destiny. 

    The suspicious man dressed in all black with a black cap and mask

    There aren’t many things in life that upset me, but in what world  would anyone see a man dressed like this and follow him? What do these characters have against staying alive? I know it’s just to move the plot, but girl? Is everything okay at home? 

    Korean idols as main characters 

    And they always show out. When Bae Suzy, IU, Park Seo-Joon, or Choi Si-won are in a K-drama, I always expect perfection. This is one trope I can never complain about because we know they are great at singing, but watching them act is a whole other experience. I’m a simple person —  I see an idol in a K-drama and watch it. Life’s not complicated. 

    READ ALSO: How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series

  • June Gave Us These 6 Amazing K-Dramas

    Every month, new K-drama series get released, and if you’re like me, you’d watch them weekly because what is patience? These ongoing dramas released in June might have a long way to go, but so far, here are our favourite six. 

    Yumi’s Cells season 2

    Season 2 explores Yumi’s relationship with her new love interest Bobby, GOT7’s Jinyoung. This drama tells the story of the ordinary life of Yumi from the perspective of the animated brain cells in her head that control her every thought, feeling and action. Last season we saw the struggle Goo Woon faced trying to wake up Yumi’s love cell after it fell into a coma after she got heartbroken. So, good luck to Jinyoung’s character. He’s going to need it. We ‌will be on the other end of our phones, laughing our asses off. 

    RELATED: How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series

     Jinxed At First 

    Imagine having so much bad luck in your life that people avoid you, so they don’t get it? Well, that’s what the main character, Gong Soo-Gwang, had to deal with daily. Until he meets Lee Seul-bi again, a woman with the unique ability to see people’s future whenever she touches them. Except, the last time he met Lee Seul-bi, his life changed, and every time he dreams of her, he has terrible luck. 

    Alchemy of Souls 

    If you like your K-dramas with a bit of magic, deception and foolish main characters, watch Alchemy of Souls. Set in the fictional country of Daeho, the series follows the lives of young mages and how they overcome their twisted fates because of a magic spell known as the “alchemy of souls”, which allows souls to switch bodies and how they find love. Five episodes in, and the show’s as chaotic as expected. Love it. 

    Money Heist: Korea – Joint Economic Area 

    First, this K-drama started with Tokyo dancing to BTS’s song DNA, and I was sold. It’s a Korean remake of the original Spanish hit drama, following the same characters with a more Korean storyline. The actor’s list is impressive, and they actuated for their daily 2k. It has just six episodes so far, so you can watch them in six days. 

    Café Minamdang

    Nam Han-Jun, a former criminal profiler, now works as a shaman who defrauds people as a fortune teller for money in his shop, Minamdang. It’s easy for people to fall for his lies because he’s good-looking and has smooth-talking skills. Somehow, he gets entangled with Han Jae-Hui, a police inspector who wants nothing more than to arrest him. 

    Extraordinary Attorney Woo

    This series follows Woo Young, a lawyer who graduated top of the class from Seoul National University. Everything should be perfect for her, except she struggles with everyday interactions because she is autistic. While they’ve released only two episodes, the series shows lots of promise for that funny, heartwarming content we love. 

    ALSO READ: Korean Actresses That Made Us Obsessed With K-drama

  • Korean Actresses That Made Us Obsessed With K-drama

    My favourite trope about K-drama is the funny-as-hell actresses that drive the plot forward. While the male lead has to be some emotionless rich guy, these babes put in performances like their rent is due. And it pays off because here’s how these ten Korean actresses made us obsessed with K-drama

    Park Shin Hye

    Were you even alive if you didn’t watch The Heirs that year? Almost everyone’s love for K-drama started with this series. Park Shin Hye always chooses the most complicated love stories, and one of her family members must die. OG stans know her from You are Beautiful, but if you also saw Heartstrings, Pinocchio, and Flower Boy Next Door, let’s be friends.

    RELATED: How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series

    Bae Donna 

    They don’t make K-=drama actresses like Bae Donna anymore. Think of any popular action K-drama; she was probably in it. She’s not limited to the K-world because she starred in Western movies like Jupiter Ascending, Cloud Atlas and Sense 8. She makes you feel like you can fight if you copy her moves but Egungun, be careful. 

    Lee Sung-kyung

    She was always the second love interest that sabotaged the main girl for the longest time, but we still loved her. Forgiving her for her past sins as the wicked babe was always easy. We can thank her roles in Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok Jun, Dr Romantic 2, and About Time for that. I’m convinced this woman is a shapeshifter, though, because she never quite looks the same in any two movies. 

    Jung So-min

    I fell in love with her after watching Playful Kiss, and I’ve never looked back. If you’re like me, you probably love her dramas because they’re always funny. She’s the babe that consistently falls in love with a guy that doesn’t like her back. She did prove that she’s more than a funny girl in Because This Is My First Life and The Smile Has Left Your Eyes. If you enjoy silly antics and cheesiness, you should watch Alchemy of Souls for a good time. 

    Park Min-young

    Overraw  best in romanzzz. In all her performances, she’ll say she doesn’t need a man and end up with the same man she claimed not to need — an indecisive queen, I stan. No one does the “getting drunk and making stupid decisions” cliché as well as she does. She even took it up several notches in her most recent movie, Forecasting Love and Weather, so watch it if you haven’t. And prepare to die of laughter because why would you date your coworker

    Gong Hyo-jin

    Maybe it’s the way she smiles, but she has a way of making you feel warm, and that’s what got me obsessed. This babe can be in love with a guy for ten years and not tell him. It’s a good thing it always somehow works for her, though. If she made you cry in It’s Alright, This is Love, don’t worry; she has The Producers and Pasta to make you laugh. She usually takes roles where she’s the funny main lead obsessed with her job—seeing her play the part of a mum in  When the Camellia Blooms shocked me. 

    RELATED: Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”

    IU

    IU doesn’t have 24 hours like us mortals do because how does she manage such a big music career with acting? I heard her sing in Dream High and was instantly obsessed. While the rest of the cast was busy fighting and sabotaging each other, she was there giving me good music and an unproblematic love story. How could I not stan? 

    Ha Ji-won

    This list won’t be complete without her. She is the original girl boss, girl slay. If she’s not killing it in her historical dramas like Empress Ki and Hwang Jin Yi, she’s taking on badass roles in crime-fighting movies. Of course, she makes time for romantic dramas too, or we wouldn’t have Secret Garden and Kings Heart

    Bae Suzy

    Was she annoying in every movie? Yes, but you still can’t help but love her. If you’re like me, you probably first saw her in Dream High, fell in love, and now you’ve watched every movie she’s ever been in. She did a fantastic job in Vagabond, but take me back to that Gu Family Book era that had all of us by our throats. If you also couldn’t get enough of her and had to listen to her former K-pop girl band Miss A, a show of hands? 

    Jun Ji-Hyun

    Never in my life have I seen a more unserious actress. Every time a director needs someone to act in a movie where the female lead is a mythical creature, Jun Ji-Hyun is the one they call. I’m not even complaining because she kills it every time. She’s only been in six K-dramas, but it seems like more because all six dramas are super popular. She’s funny, a blockbuster queen — and if you think of any iconic K-drama line, she probably said it. We have to stan, please. 

    ALSO READ: 10 Actors Only Real K-Drama Fans Know

  • QUIZ: Can You Guess the K-drama From Its Iconic Line?

    If you read these iconic K-drama lines and don’t immediately know where they’re from, I’m sorry, but you can’t call yourself a K-drama fan.

    Hint: try singing some of them.

    RELATED: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

  • The K-drama Friend Groups We Wish We Were Part Of

    I live for romantic K-dramas even though all they do is make me moan, “God when?” Nothing comes close to their found family/best friend trope, though. 

    Warning: Watching any of the movies with our favourite K-drama friend groups will have you calling all your friends at 3 a.m. to tell them how much you love and miss them. 

    The gang from Reply 1988

    I wasn’t even born in 1988, nor do I live in South Korea. Still, this series made me nostalgic for the age when kids used walkmans, rocked denim on denim and used dial phones. 

    In Reply 1988, the gang of four guys and one girl all lived and grew up in the same neighbourhood watching movies together, listening to songs and looking after each other. Even though they sometimes argue, their quarrels never got in the way of their love for each other. 

    The Reply series is goated and deserves all the love it gets. If you need a good laugh or cry and want to learn what it means to be a good friend, watch this series because these guys understand friendship. 

    RELATED: If You Have Any of These 8 Habits, You’re a K-drama Addict

    Our favourite five from Twenty Five, Twenty One

    One thing K-drama will do is give you a new interest in sports that you never bothered with before. Twenty Five, Twenty One follows the life of Na Hee Doo, who wants to be the world’s best fencer. She meets Baek Yi Jin, a former rich kid whose family went bankrupt, forcing the family to live apart. Hee Doo and Yi Jun become friends and find joy in making the other happy. 

    How the rest of the squad comes together is messy. But still, things take up shape so beautifully as these kids struggle with their chaotic personalities, financial backgrounds, school and relationship drama, and still find time to show up for each other. The five have such an excellent on-screen connection you’ll find yourself tearing up more often than you’d like. 

    The doctor squad from Hospital Playlist

    If hospital dramas are not your thing, these guys are about to change that. The series follows a group of doctors who have been friends since medical school and somehow end up working in the same hospital. The series follows their friendship, relationship with their patients, romantic lives and, of course, the fact that they’re in a band. Best in time management, innit? 

    These guys will make you laugh with their easy banter. They always make time out of their busy days to check on each other, also making sure to hang out often enough to have us all in our feels. If there’s any friend group I’m most jealous of, It’s this one. 

    RELATED: These 7 Medical K-Dramas Will Wreck You Emotionally

    The Swag Squad from Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok Joo

    You know a friend group is real when they bond over food. This trio are weightlifters in their university, and while their love for food is the only thing they have in common, the friendship still works. Every time they do something they find cool, they say, “swegg!” simultaneously. They fight for each other and always take each other’s side, whether wrong or right. 

    The girls from Hello, My Twenties

    At first, these girls don’t seem like they’ll be good friends because of their different personalities. But,  you can’t have six university girls living in a house without butting heads on their road to friendship. 

    This series did a good job showing what female friendships look like: the stupid dating advice they give each other, their struggles being in school while working part-time jobs, living with slobs and dealing with a stalker, etc. These girls went through it, and all you’ll want to do is give them hugs, but at least they had each other, so you know they can face anything together. 

    The plaza crew from Vincenzo

    This bunch of weirdos are still the most heartwarming found family/ friend groups I’ve seen in K-drama. The plaza crew consists of13  clowns who bonded over their disdain for anyone that tried to buy them out of the plaza that housed all their very different businesses. Until they met Vincenzo Cassano, a Korean-born Italian lawyer and Mafia consigliere who, unknown to them, was the actual owner of the plaza. 

    At first, they didn’t trust him when he said he didn’t want to break down the plaza because so many people had tried to deceive them. Unknown to them, baba had gold under the building, and that’s all he came for. 

    This chaotic gang of misfits sha ended up loving Vincenzo and would do anything for him, including acting as zombies to mess with the mind of a witness just to help Vicenzo with his case. The best part is that they get a happy ending and remain friends even after Vincenzo left.

    ALSO READ: How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series

  • These 7 Medical K-Dramas Will Wreck You Emotionally

    As a Nigerian, I believe we should watch more medical dramas. Maybe then, we’d understand how stressful their job is and why they go on strike when they don’t get paid.  These seven medical K-dramas will entertain you if you appreciate doctors’ romance, watching people being sewn up, and hospital politics. 

    Dr Romantic

    Dr Romantic follows the life of Boo Yong-Joo, a famous surgeon nicknamed “Hand of God”, who disappeared one day and randomly came back to a small hospital called Doldam. Now he’s now known as teacher Kim but calls himself the romantic doctor. As Boo Yong-Joo is the best surgeon in Korea, he teaches Dong Jo and Seo Jung, two new doctors sent to the hospital, everything he knows. 

    Although his unconventional approach to medicine leaves his proteges conflicted about everything they learned in medical school, he’s mostly right in the end. This K-drama has its soft, funny and comforting moments.  But there’s also all that blood, the rushing to the ER, the almost-too=real-looking surgery. Fall in love with Dr Romantic in 36 emotionally wrecking episodes.

    RELATED: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

    Doctor John

    Doctor John is a medical drama about doctors that specialise in pain management. As a person with chronic back pain in my twenties, there’s a relief from watching doctors search for the cause of their patient’s seemingly mysterious pain and trying to cure them. 

    Like in every medical drama, there’s a young genius doctor(anesthesiologist) Cha Yo Han whose nickname is “Ten Seconds” because he has this weird ability of diagnosing any patient’s illness in ten seconds. Years later, another genius, Kang Shi Young meets our ten seconds guy who changes her life. This drama has all the feels and is a good watch — with a box of tissue papers beside you. 

    Hospital Playlist

    There’s no medical K-drama as soft as Hospital Playlist. Five doctors entered the same medical university in 1999 and are now friends working in the same hospital. They’re also in a band together. This K-drama is a relaxing slice of life take on the medical drama sub-genre that shows the bond the five doctor friends have with their patients, co-workers, and one another. Get ready to fall in love with every patient, laugh at the banter and be jealous of the friendships. There are many easter eggs of characters from different shows for K-drama lovers.

    Doctor Stranger

    If watching all the conflict that happens in a hospital where the doctors are more focused on hospital politics than the patients is your cup of tea, you’ll enjoy this one. The main lead, Park Hoon and his father were kidnapped by North Korea when he was a child. In North Korea, he becomes a surgeon and somehow manages to escape back to South Korea after his father was killed, where he takes on many odd jobs until he is employed South Korea’s top hospital Myungwoo University Hospital. All the doctors mistreat him, but his primary concern is finding a way to bring the girl he loved from North Korea, only for him to meet a doctor in the hospital who looks exactly like her.  

    The Doctors

    Hye Jung is a reckless and troubled student that lives with her grandmother after her parents abandoned her. She meets Ji Hong, a doctor who decided to become a secondary school teacher. He also happens to be the new tenant her grandmother adopts. They form a deep bond. He helps her study for school, and they quickly get too close. After Hye Jung’s grandmother dies, a jealous student accuses Ji Hong of being in a romantic student-teacher relationship with Hye Jung and breaks her spirit. 13 years later, Hye Jung and Ji Hon  bump into each other under neurosurgery in the same hospital. Hye Jung’s main goal for becoming a doctor was to have the power to avenge her grandmother’s death due to medical malpractice. Insert romance, hospital politics, doctors rivalry and annoying patients, and you have the perfect binge-watch for the weekend.

    Blood

    What’s better than a doctor that has to deal with blood? One that’s also a vampire! In this K-drama, Park Ji Sang is a doctor specialising in hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery in Korea’s best cancer research hospital. He’s portrayed as cold and unfeeling, but we later realise that he wants to form bonds with people but hides it. He manages to be a doctor who deals with blood while being a vampire by suppressing his thirst for it. Of course, he meets a female colleague Yoo Ri Ta, a physician who is also the niece of the chaebol group chairman who owns the hospital. This babe is arrogant and annoying, yet he falls for her. Medical dramas can already be a handful. But when you add fantasy, you get a recipe for tears and heartbreak. Inject it, literally. 

    Ghost doctor

    In Ghost Doctor Cha Young Min is an arrogant and selfish, yet gifted surgeon. He lives in isolation and only cares about his career. His polar opposite is a resident surgeon named Go Seun,g who isn’t great at his job, but at least people like him. 

    The day Cha Young Min has an accident and slips into a coma ,his spirit somehow possesses Go Seung’s body — suddenly gifting the latter with all his medical skills. If you like humour, I highly recommend Ghost Doctor. 

    READ ALSO: Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”

  • How to Accessorise Like a K-Pop Idol in Nigeria

    K-pop idols have the best style. Watch their interviews and music videos to see for yourself. As a K-pop fan, it makes sense to want to copy them. To pull off the gorgeous aesthetic, you have to note a few things like wearing many silver accessories and owning lots of rings. Here are all the other awesome ways to look like your favourite K-pop idol.

    Lots of soft coloured dye

    Hair dye is obviously not an accessory, but with the way K-pop idols do it, it might as well be. Will you get disowned by your Nigerian parents? Probably. But at least you’ll maintain beauty.

    RELATED: Beginner Tips to Know Before Dyeing Your Hair

    Wear long earrings

    And I mean long ones. If it’s not the type that’ll make amebo people take another look when you pass by them, then you’ve not even started. Bonus points if you have multiple piercings.

    Buy leather accessories

    So what if the searing Nigerian sun peels off the leather and people look at you funny? What do they know? In fact, make it afro-fusion, leather belt and native wear, or leather vest and agbada. Go wild with it.

    Own boots

    You won’t even look too far off from most Nigerians these days because everyone owns boots. Boots will elevate your outfit and give you that K-pop “look”, but don’t go for the basic ones. Think spikes and platforms that’ll increase your height by seven. 

    RELATED: QUIZ: Only Kpop Stans Can Make it to the End of This Quiz

    Fight the heat with heat

    Always wear leg warmers and hand warmers. You get to look like your favourite K-pop idol while manifesting a life in a country where you can’t wear those without fainting. 

    Chains

    At your discretion, layer the fuck out of your chains until your neck is heavy. It doesn’t even have to match or anything. Your neck is your oyster; go ham. 

    Fake tattoos

    Whether you want to believe it or not, your favourite idol probably uses fake tattoos. You too can do it, and the best part? It’s not permanent enough for you to get disowned!

    Rings

    Come on, if you didn’t know to stock up on rings, do you even like K-pop? With rings, the chunkier, the better. Think giant skulls or recent decorations.

    ALSO READ: These 10 K-Pop Bands Should Be on Your Next Playlist

  • How to Write the Perfect Romantic K-drama Series

    Writing a romantic K-drama is easier than you think. Don’t worry about budgets or how you’ll even produce it, just pick your characters. 

    For this project, we’ll give them authentic Korean names. Our leading protagonist’s name will be  Cheon Sun-Hi, a simple girl from a poor home working as a secretary to her love interest, the suave playboy heir to a conglomerate, named Bin Jin-Ho.  Now that it’s settled, you can start creating the perfect romantic k-drama. Let’s go.

    Pick a theme

    It’s important because anyone you choose drastically changes the plot. Is it a fantasy, contemporary, high school, slice-of-life or romantic-detective drama? Choose the gbese you want them to carry for twenty episodes and stick to it. For this series, Sun Hi and Jin-Ho are in a contemporary romance.

    RELATED: 10 Actors Only Real K-Drama Fans Know

    Choose a trope

    Think of the trope as the biggest obstacle to their romance. Will one of them have sudden amnesia? Would they have met as kids but magically forgotten? Will one of them have parents who disapprove of their love? Will there be a love triangle, and will it be a Cinderella story? Go crazy with it. Choose two or three tropes and go ham.

    In our story, Sun Hi is dirt poor and unattractive, while Jin-Ho is rich and has fallen in love with a girl his parents will not approve of, even though he’s almost always mean to her. 

    Choose the antagonist

    One thing about K-drama, you don’t have to pick one antagonist. They can either be Jin-Ho’s wealthy mother or the girl betrothed to him at birth or Sun-HI’s best friend, who has loved her since they were kids. If you want to do too much, you can introduce a man from their past lives in the Joseon era that wanted to kill them and keeps reincarnating for that one purpose. Go crazy with it. 

    Make sure they have a meet-cute

    Now that you’ve done all that, the movie will write itself. Like this; 

    Sun-Hi and Jin-Ho have to meet in the most awkward but memorable way. Have her go to buy coffee, and then he cuts the line. She shouts at him and wins, goes to the office and who does she see? The man she shouted at for cutting the line. Or he can just hit her with his car. That works too.

    Build tension 

    Give people a reason to come back week after week even though their love life doesn’t exist. Make sure Sun-Hi and Jin-Ho keep meeting everywhere, and they now lowkey have a love-hate relationship. Make them argue all the time but also, have those moments when they look like they want to swallow each other. For this, you have to make sure someone interrupts them every time.

    RELATED: 6 Male Behaviours That Are Only Romantic in K-dramas

    Make them become friends

    If Sun-Hi and Jin-ho fight forever, how will they fall in love? Create a common enemy like the man from their past they keep dreaming about or put them in a situation that makes them more friendly to each other. By now, Sun-Hi should be in love with Jin-Ho.  

    Stage the kiss

    Now that they’re friends, they’ll have to go drinking so that Jin-Ho can spill all his childhood trauma from growing up rich, and Sun-Hi will try to make him feel better by confessing her love, and then they’ll kiss. At first, they’ll try to pretend like it didn’t happen, but then it’ll happen ten more times, and they’ll finally start dating.

    Romance galore

    Go all out: make them go on dates and cook together. Make Jin-Ho fulfil all her childhood dreams her family could not afford. You must put that one scene where he takes her shopping and buys her a whole closet and transforms her look so she becomes suddenly more beautiful than the babe his mum wants him to marry. 

    Give them one final problem

    After all, what’s love without its ups and downs? Multiply the problems by six, though. Suddenly, Sun-Hi’s male best friend must confess his love for her. While she is dealing with that, make sure Jin-Ho’s mum forbids him from marrying her. While all this is happening, remember the serial killer man from their past life? he’ll use this opportunity to attempt to kill Sun-HI and almost succeed? but the police will catch him just in time after Jin-Ho has beaten him properly of course. 

    Perfect happy ending

    Make sure that Sun-Hi’s best friend somehow falls in love with Ji-Ho’s betrothed instead. The evil man from the past either dies or goes to jail. Ji-Ho stands up to his mum and chooses to marry Sun-Hi anyway, damning the consequences. Bonus points if he confesses to falling in love with Sun-Hi from the first day they met. Make sure you do the flashback thing. If people do not cry or say, “God when?” one billion times, message us to refund your money.

    ALSO READ:  Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”

  • If You Have Any of These 8 Habits, You’re a K-drama Addict

    If you notice that you’ve been making any of the gestures mentioned in this article for a while, you’re not alone. But remember not to do some of them in public sha. 

    Covering your mouth when you laugh

    Koreans cover their mouth when they laugh as a sign of respect. If you’ve watched a lot of K-drama, you may have copied this habit subconsciously. Sha don’t do it in front of older Nigerians before they tell you that you think their mouth is smelling. 

    RELATED: Every K-Drama Fan Should Know These Basic Korean Phrases

    Slapping your head

    In K-drama, the main characters slap their heads a lot. As a Nigerian, adopting this would probably come easy because older people have randomly hit your head since you were a child to date, what difference does it make if you now do it on your own? Make sure you say, “Aish,” after slapping your head for added effect. 

    Flicking peoples heads 

    Flicking people’s heads is the Korean version of knocking someone’s head in a friendly manner in Nigeria. Does it hurt? Yes, but it’s not your fault you learned bad thing. Everybody go dey alright. 

    Clapping when you laugh 

    As a k-drama fan, it’s not strange to find yourself clapping while you laugh. No, you haven’t been possessed. You’re just copying what you’ve been watching. As a Nigerian sha, be careful how you do it outside before they think you’ve lost your mind. 

    Throwing the peace sign

    One day you saw your favourite character in a drama series throw the peace sign, and now you can’t pose for a single picture without doing the same. Don’t worry. You’re not alone. Plus, it’s super cute.

    Making a heart with your whole body

    The transition from doing this as a K-drama fan to a K-pop fan is insane. All your friends are sick of you posing this way in every picture. Not us, though. We’d take pictures with you any day.

    Making two fists and shouting, “Fighting!”

    You can’t imagine yourself cheering someone on without making a fist and shouting, “Fighting!” as loud as you can. How else will your friends know that you believe in them? 

    Bowing your head before receiving things from people 

    People probably think you’re the most respectful person they’ve ever met, especially if you live in a Yoruba-dominated city. But don’t overdo it sha, because some people deserve to be disrespected. Don’t let your head stop you from giving it to them hot-hot.

    ALSO READ: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

  • How to Successfully Date a K-Drama Fan

    Dating a k-drama fan is not as easy as you think. They’re obsessed with some of the most gorgeous people in the world, and you want to compete? Here are some cheat codes to help your case, don’t thank us too much.

    Learn how to speak Korean 

    Hear me out. I’m not saying you should learn it all because that will take a while. Just remember some cute phrases here, a couple of popular expressions there, and you’re good to go. If you say, “sarangae,” to someone who watches k-drama and then do the finger heart, they will marry you.

    RELATED: Every K-Drama Fan Should Know These Basic Korean Phrases

    Look like their idol

    Beg those babalawos in your Instagram DMs to change your looks. If they can’t help, perm your hair, comb it out, and pray to your ancestors. If everything else fails, maybe the thought will count. 

    Get into K-drama.

    How do you think you’ll be able to have a conversation with them if you’ve never seen any k-drama? Even if you want to cheat in an exam, you will read small na. Also, don’t just watch the popular ones. Try watching the not-so-popular ones for extra points. 

    Always have an umbrella

    You have to own an umbrella, and it has to be yellow. I promise it’s a thing. You never know when it’ll rain out of the blue, and you can hand your umbrella to them while you walk away, soaking wet. A for alaye; you’ll win Best in Romanzz. Buy your umbrella today.

    Upgrade your fashion sense

    I know Nigeria is hot, but you need to buy lots of coats, suits and white shirts. If you can’t look like their K-drama idol, you can at least dress the part. Plus, what’s the harm in having a good sense of style? It’s a good side attraction.

    RELATED: How to Dress Like a K-Drama Character While Living in Nigeria

    Invest in cartons of noodles

    Suppose you have lots of cash to spare, you can even buy fancy Korean noodles and invite them over to try different noodle recipes. To seal the deal, take your person to a mai shai and eat the noodles in his shop.

    Learn how to cook at least 10 side dishes

    Now that you’ve mastered all these, you have reached the ultimate boss. Korean side dishes are easy to make, and the money you’ll spend on the ingredients will be worth it because it’s marriage straight once you hack it. 

    ALSO READ: Every K-Drama Fan Wants to Try These 7 Dishes

    READ ALSO: Sunken Ships: Our Friendship Ended Because of My Childishness

  • 6 Male Behaviours That Are Only Romantic in K-dramas

    There are some weird behaviours K-drama has normalised that are borderline creepy but somehow look cute when Korean actors do it. Nigerian men can’t try it sha because it will end in tears. Here are seven of those things.

    1. Piggyback rides

    Sorry oh, but if a Nigerian man randomly carries me on his back, I’m just going to think he wants to kidnap me. What kind of yeye romance is that one please abeg?

    RELATED: Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”

    2. Pulling you close inside the bus

    Why’re you rubbing your sweat on my body in the name of romance? Why’re we even inside danfo in the first place? The buses in Korea are cute and romance friendly, but the ones in Nigeria will only bring insult and suffering. 

    3. Acting like an asshole for no reason

    That nonsense thing men in K-drama do where they act mean to you even though they like you. If any Nigerian man does that and his babe finds out that he’s bullying her just because he likes her, e don be. 

    RELATED: 10 Actors Only Real K-Drama Fans Know

    4. Holding you tighter when you say no

    When it’s not like you used jazz. What would make you escape the beating of your life? If a Naija babe tells you she wants to break up and you hold on to her while she screams no like they do in K-dramas, omo whatever you see, take it like that. 

    5. Stalking her

    There’s nothing remotely cute or romantic about stalking a woman, especially when you’re already dating her. But in K-dramas, the male love interest will follow the babe around when he’s supposed to be at work just because he can’t concentrate. Try that one with your Nigerian babe first. They’ll just block you since you want to be creepy.

    6. Kissing a woman to clean her mouth

    In K-drama, the quirky female lead will have a streak of stew on her lips. And instead of her male love interest wiping it away with a napkin like a normal person, he’ll go and kiss the stain away. Please don’t try it with a Nigerian woman. Imagine kissing egusi or okra soup from someone’s mouth. Eww.

    READ ALSO: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

  • The Horrible Practices in High School K-drama that Nigerians Can Relate To

    I strongly believe that Koreans are Nigerians In a different font because a lot of our struggles look the same. They have a mandatory military service year, we’ve got NYSC. Their parents are strict, and so are Nigerian parents. But their secondary schools? Might as well be owned by a Nigerian. Here’s why. 

    1. Teachers be beating kids almost to death

    Every Nigerian child that went to a Nigerian school probably heard a story or witnessed someone almost get beaten to death. In Korea, corporal punishment is technically prohibited. But K-dramas normalise it. 

    2. Intense bullying

    In secondary school, you’re either ‌the bullied, the bully or the protector of the bully. And Korean and Nigerian kids could win an award for being overall bests in bullying. Almost every high school K-drama protagonist has to deal with a terrible bully. In All of Us Are Dead for example, imagine your bully becoming a zombie.

    RELATED: 7 Nigerians Talk About Being Bullied in Secondary School

    3. Dumb class rivalries. 

    In Nigeria, if the SS3 girls didn’t fight with SS2 girls in your school or JSS3 A AND JSS3 C didn’t hate each other’s guts, did you even school here? In Korea, the students in the best and worst classes always have beef with each other, but that’s just part of secondary school, I guess. 

    4. Seniors have way too much power over junior students 

    In Nigerian high schools, seniors low key have more power than teachers. It’s insane. In Korea, you dare not disrespect your sunbae if you don’t want to die because they’ll make your entire time in school a living hell.

    5. Long-ass school days 

    The average Nigerian high school student spends eight hours in school as a day student, not counting after-school lessons. People in boarding school, counting afternoon and night prep, spend about 13-14 hours. Korean schoolers spend 12-16 hours in a classroom every day. This is why secondary school kids are scary. They wake up every day running on vibes. 

    RELATED: Ridiculous Things That Shouldn’t Have Happened to Us as Kids

    6. Saturday classes  

    After stressing kids out all week, some teachers would still have the audacity to drag them to school on Saturday for classes. Is that not wickedness? Nigerian and Korean kids need to band together and fight this nonsense! 

    7. Weird student ranking systems

    Thankfully, Nigerian schools don’t have the weird type of ranking system Koreans have, where you’d know who’s number one in the entire school and who’s the last. But Nigerian kids can relate to the stigma of taking the last position or the fake friendships that come with being first. 

    READ ALSO: Korean Parents Are Nigerian Parents in Disguise, Here’s Why

  • Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”

    Let’s not lie. As much as we all claim to love all the other K-drama genres, the romantic ones are our faves because they help reinforce our unrealistic expectations for love. Not these dramas though, because the situations these characters find themselves in hit too close to home and will have you shouting, “God when?” 

    1. Descendants of the Sun

    One thing about romantic K-dramas is if the lead actors have insane chemistry, they will end up married in real life— nevermind that they’ve split up.

    Descendants of the Sun  is about Yoo Si-jin, a captain of the special forces, and a doctor, Kang Mo-yeon, who fell in love despite their conflicting occupations — one having to load a gun to kill enemy forces, the other wielding a scalpel  to save lives, but they overcome it and that’s what matters. 

    2. Weightlifting Fairy Kim Bok-joo

     Kim Bok-joo, a college swimmer, and Jung Joon-hyung, a weight lifter, used to be childhood friends, but neither of them recognised each other when they met again at Haneul Sport University. The series did a whole U-turn from friends to enemies to lovers.

    It’s a pretty unconventional cast that doesn’t follow the usual K-drama beauty standards, which makes them even more relatable. Watch WFKB for the sappy  romance and every single one of Joon-hyung’s cute sweaters.  

    RELATED: How to Dress Like a K-drama Character While Living in Nigeria

    3. Forecasting Love and weather 

    This is an ongoing romantic drama about two employees at the Korea national weather service, Jin Ha-Kyung and Lee Shi-Wo, who fall in love after finding out that each other’s former partners cheated on them. It’s a really soft love story about navigating the complicated drama of dating and breaking up with a co-worker and how it can affect your work life. If you enjoyed Healer, City Hunter and What’s Wrong With Secretary Kim?  You’ll enjoy this series because Park Min Young absolutely killed the role. 

    RELATED: How To Date Your Coworker And Get Away With it

    4. Crash Landing On You

    CLOY follows the story of Yoon Se-ri, the heiress of one of South Korea’s largest chaebols  who lands in North Korea after her paragliding trip went wrong, and meets Ri Jeong-hyeok – a North Korean military man. This series will have you rooting for a love that really shouldn’t work, but love is foolish like that. The best part? The characters are now married in real life. It doesn’t get any more “God when” than that. 

    5. When the Camellia Blooms

    A story about a single mum navigating life in a small town where people gossip about her because she runs a restaurant called Camellia, where most of the men in town frequent.  Despite all the gossip, a local police officer, Dong Baek, falls in love with her, which is convenient because there’s a serial killer after her life. The cutest thing about the series is her young son Pil-Gu. He did such an amazing job for his age. If you end up liking him — and you will — you should see him in Racket Boys

    6. Hotel Del Luna

    IU did a madness with this drama. From the cinematography to the cast, and then the sound track.. In Hotel Del Luna, Jang Man-wol kills an innocent person and gets cursed with immortality to manage Hotel Del Luna, a rest stop for the dead, until her curse is lifted. 

    While ghost staff run the hotel, it needs a human manager to help with taxes and administrative work, which is where our male lead Ku Chan-song  comes in. Get ready to laugh at all Man-wol’s antics and cry too — because come on, it’s a K-drama.  

    7. Mr Queen

    In the present, Jang Bong-Hwan works as a chef at the president’s Blue House. He is a flirt with a big ego and a a great sense of humour He gets framed for poisoning the president and goes on the run. While fleeing the police,  he falls from the top of a building into a pool, and his spirit finds its way into the body of Queen Kim So-Yong who was drowning in a pond in the Joseon period in 1849. A man in a woman’s body, what could go wrong? 

    CONTINUE READING: Historical K-dramas Are Just Nollywood Epics With Bigger Budgets; Here’s Why

  • How to Dress Like a K-drama Character While Living in Nigeria

    If you’re already a K-drama fan, you know that a big part of their movies is the fashion. You may not eat their food or know how to speak Korean, but you can at least dress like them. Here are ten clothing items that will help with that.  

    1. Expensive-ass suits

    Pantsuit o, skirt suit o, sha buy the one that will make you look like you come from money. Spice it up: sew an Aso-Oke or adire suit; who knows you may start a trend. See fashunz.

    2. Long coats

    There’s no reason why you should wear this in a hot country, but if it’s your cup of tea, you need a long coat to look like your favourite K-drama character. Add those chunky boots and it’s a lewk. If you want to enter public transport, sha hold a small vial of perfume, abeg. 

    3. A square neckline summer dress

    You can find this one anywhere. Tap into your inner romantic K-drama fan and buy as many as you can afford. Last last you can buy them for 1k in bend-down-select, or if you’re feeling rich, buy from Instagram “thrift” vendors.  

    4. Oversized cotton sweaters 

    Not the one that you stole from your partner. Use your own money to buy a nice oversized round-neck sweater in a bright colour of your choice. To nail the look, try to slack the hands. You are trying to look cute here. 

    5. Overalls

    Will you look like a child? Maybe, but aren’t we all trying to manifestheal our inner child? Overalls are cute and easy to find these days anyway. Pair them with nice t-shirts or blouses and there you go. 

    6. White shirts

    How else can you look like the K-drama CEO? Bonus point if you fold the sleeves unprovoked when no one sent you message. I don’t know why anyone would wear white in this country sha, especially when someone’s child can decide to wipe their hand on your shirt inside danfo.

    7. Fitted straight denim

    Fitted, not skinny, please. It’s more like boyfriend jeans but fitted. The point is to look like someone from the 90s, which is everyone these days anyway. 

    8. Tote bag

    Tap into your inner artsiness  and buy as many white tote bags as you can. It makes you look like  secondary school students in a K-drama.

    RELATED: 11 Reasons Why You Should Never Date A Creative

    9. Oversized blazer

    You don’t even need to buy this one. Just steal it. Your mum or dad probably have a lot of old blazers they don’t want anymore. If theirs are  too old-fashioned for you, you can buy something more modern, just be ready to cry hot tears for your account balance. 

    10. Denim shirts

    You should have this one in your wardrobe already. Pair it with a nice t-shirt and your oversized blazer and look at you goo: a Nigerian K-drama character with street fashunz. 

    CONTUINUE READING: Nigerian Men, Here’s What Your Shirt Says About You

  • Historical K-dramas Are Just Nollywood Epics With Bigger Budgets; Here’s Why

    Historical K-dramas and Nollywood Epics use the same script with minor tweaks from time to time. You can’t tell me otherwise, especially not when I have this much proof. 

    1.  Misunderstandings always start because the Prince talked to a girl that isn’t betrothed to him.  

    When they write these characters, they don’t write the ability to communicate like human beings into their lines. For some reason, this only always happens but is necessary to move the plot. 

    2. Flashbacks

    Nollywood epics and Historical K-dramas loooove flashbacks, even for the stupidest things, too. Their flashbacks are the movie equivalent of “this could have just been an email”. 

    3. Romantic interlude

    Not the way they do in Indian movies, but there’s always that interlude where the prince and his love interest finally get to enjoy being in love, but that’s also how you know one of them is about to be kidnapped or killed. Can’t win with these guys. 

    4. Wicked queen mother/auntie

    I mean, this character has to exist. Who else will poison the king and get all the maids to make the prince’s love interest’s life hell? Someone has to take one of the team and it has to be her. 

    5. An uncle plotting to steal the throne

    There are two ways to write this character: he either has to be the younger brother of the dead king or the older brother of the queen with a son that somehow isn’t as wicked as him. His only goal is to get the throne at any cost, no character development, please. 

    6. A character willing to do anything for the prince’s affection

    See, if I’d been told that I was going to marry some rich prince when I was five and he falls in love with a peasant because she smiled at him once, I too would try to kill her. 

    7. A big fight scene in the place or forest 

    Come on, it’s not a historical drama if they don’t fight in the palace or the forest. Bonus point if the prince is trying to protect his love interest and gets injured or short term amnesia. Historical K-dramas can give you hypertension.

    8. A court maid that makes life easy for the Prince’s love interest

    This character can be young or old, but the only reason she’s there is to be the Prince’s love interest’s ride-or-die. She always knows all the gist and uses it to keep her lady safe.  The best character for real.

    9. The clown

    This one is always oblivious to all the bad things happening in the palace because all he does is drink and womanise.  And also, he has to take that sword to the stomach for the prince. 


  • Korean Parents Are Nigerian Parents in Disguise, Here’s Why

    After consuming an unhealthy amount of content from the Korean entertainment industry (Hallyuwood) and binge-watching Reply 1988, I have concluded that Korean parents are just Nigerian parents wey dey disguise.  With the following points, I hope I will be able to convince and not confuse you.

    1. Amebo is their part-time job

    In a battle for the amebo championship cup, Nigerian and Korean parents will probably end up in a draw. Everyone and their daddies will always be in your business whether you like it or not. If you disgrace your family on social media, one aunty Bisi will surely make sure it gets to your mum, and so will the Ahjumma that lives on your block in Korea. As a GenZ though, I should add that if people are reporting you and your parents are complaining, you are doing something right. 

    2. They will try to set you up

    When it comes to setting up their kids, I don’t even know who is worse between Korean and Nigerian parents. One thing is sure: neither of them will give you any warning and they have no regard for whatever plans you have for your life. But while Korean parents set their kids up with families richer than theirs. Nigerian mothers will want you to marry a woman from the village. This life no balance sha. 

    3. They will break your head if you fail your exams

    When it comes to schoolwork, they don’t play. They will go to any length to provide the best education for you. From borrowing to taking on more jobs than they can handle, they’d really do anything for their kids. Imagine failing after all that? They will raise hell and push you either to do better or to end up with crippling anxiety. Kids raised by these two sets of parents sha deserve the world because their parents expect too much from them and it can be a lot of pressure. 

    4. They are big on respect

    As a Nigerian kid, if you were not shocked to find out that your parents actually had names besides “Mummy” and “Daddy”, return your passport. In K-dramas, they always call their parents Appa and Eomma, and just like Nigerian parents, they always make such a big deal about respect. Talk back to these parents and be ready for a slap that will reset your brain.

    5. None of them know how to apologise

    Korean and Nigerian parents will rather chew glass and wet jeans than apologise to you when they do something wrong. If they apologise, run away, it’s a set-up. They apologise to you by buying something you like or giving you fewer chores. 

    6. They will always compare you to others

    The only difference is that while Nigerian parents do it at home, Korean parents will do this in public. Nigerian parents are always serious about it, but Korean parents use a tone that makes it sound like they’re joking. Either way, these two sets of parents would get along well if they were ever stuck together. 

    7. They always pamper their male children

    They give them fewer chores, get them anything they want and baby them, and will have the audacity to act brand new when they grow up to be irresponsible and unreliable. It’s why a central plot of K-dramas is about a wayward chaebol that is a disappointment, his illegitimate brother that wants to inherit the company by any means, a dad that is never there and a doting mom. Sounds like most Nollywood Movies to me. 

    8. They threaten to take you to the village if you fail in school

    Are you even a child raised by these two parents if they don’t threaten to take you to the village because you failed your exams? Nigerian parents will go on to threaten to make you sell agege bread, which is pretty much everyone’s villain origin story tbh.

    9. They are always loudly proud of their kids

    No one is more excited to see their kids excel like these two parents. They will act tough when you try to study a course that isn’t law or medicine. But as soon as you make a lot of money or you end up in a magazine, no one will hear word. The moms will boast everywhere — church, at burials, at work — they don’t even send. They are the cutest for real, just that their heads do usually knock sometimes. 


  • Every K-Drama Fan Wants to Try These 7 Dishes

    A huge amount of every K-Drama is scenes where they eat. If you enjoy watching K-dramas, there are some meals they eat so often that you crave them. Here are seven dishes that live rent-free in every K-Drama fan’s head. 

    1. Tteokbokki 

    First of all, how is this food rice cake when it looks like spicy ponmo? They eat it with a toothpick and do that little dance that makes you feel you’re missing out on something good.

    2. Korean fried chicken 

    Maybe it’s the way they get excited about eating chicken, but they make it look so good. Like it’s the best meal ever created. When the kids in All of Us Are Dead were facing a zombie apocalypse, all they could think about was chicken. We should all just agree that fried chicken to them is what Jollof is to us. 

    3. Kimchi 

    Koreans have a way of appealing to the Nigerian urge to eat spicy things because this kimchi looks like meat stripes soaked in hot pepper sauce. But it’s really just cabbages. Do we still want to try it? Yes  

    4. Cup ramen

    It doesn’t matter if the character is late for work, sad after a breakup, or depressed after rejecting one rich woman’s money to leave her son alone, they will still eat ramen. Bonus points if they eat it in a convenience store. There’s just something about it that instantly lifts their spirits and we’d like to order a lifetime’s worth, please. 

    5. Korean barbecue 

    There is always that one scene in every K-Drama where some characters go to a barbeque shop and eat the most amazing looking meat cuts with soju. You’re not a genuine fan if you’ve never wanted to try it before.  

    6. Kimbap 

    With this snack, I think it’s the wrapping. Sometimes it’s so pretty to look at, you almost don’t want the characters to eat it. Even though it’s just rice wrapped in a triangular shape, it looks delicious as hell. 

    7. Soju 

    So technically, this is not food, but it deserves a spot on this list. Koreans make alcoholism look cute. They drink so much at once, you’d think it’s water. Anyway, we want sha.