314

The Producers: Episode 12 (Final)

Well, it’s been a fun run, but it’s time to say goodbye to The Producers, which ends on a lesson about what it’s like to secure longevity, whether that’s with a program, a career, or relationships. And as the show has managed to do all series long, it’s really the relationships we care about, using the programs and careers mostly as examples and metaphors to illustrate lessons for life. It’s what makes this show-about-showbiz not really about showbiz at all—for better and for worse—but about the people who work in it. Who turn out to be, for the most part, just like the people who work outside of it, too.

SONG OF THE DAY

Haell – “정말로 사랑했다면” (If we really loved) from The Producers’ OST [ Download ]

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

 
EPISODE 12: “Understanding a Long-Running Program”

Joon-mo makes his decision to keep Cindy on his show, and the senior executives clearly disagree but don’t refuse, since the show is about to be cancelled anyway. CP Kim shakes his head in an interview, saying that you don’t realize what love is (as in, ratings) until you lose it.

In the bathroom, 1N2D’s three writers complain resentfully about Joon-mo’s decision, taking on added risk when they’re already in danger. Ye-jin hears from inside a stall as they gripe that Joon-mo has no sense of responsibility.

They shut up nervously when Ye-jin emerges and addresses the head writer, who’s worked with Joon-mo for the past five years. Ye-jin agrees that nothing has gone well for Joon-mo’s shows, but asks, “Do you think there were never orders from above to swap out the writer?” On, snap. In fact, Joon-mo went to the mat to keep her on staff, calling her part of his family. Pointedly, Ye-jin sighs that she doesn’t know what the writer’s idea of responsibility is, and the writers hang their heads in shame.

Seung-chan asks to see Ye-jin on the roof, and this time there’s a huge distance between them as they stand apart. He musters up the nerve to tell her how he walked home last night (which took him hours) thinking everything over, and thought that if his life were a show, he wished he could reshoot scenes of it. He’s not sure which parts but lists a few key moments that he would redo—or refrain from doing, so that it wouldn’t result in rejection.

Ye-jin asks if it’s because he’d be better off if he didn’t like her, but he replies instead, “No. Because I want to like you more earnestly.” He was too awkward and in a rush and young, he says, and if he’d just found a more grown-up, dashing way to be close to her… maybe…

Augh, his earnest pain is just so raw. He wishes he could call cut, edit that all out, and start over—is that impossible?

Walking home at night, Ye-jin is pleasantly surprised when the lampposts light up, interviewing that she thought Seung-chan might be responsible. He’s been so thoughtful recently, doing things she wouldn’t even think to expect from Joon-mo.

The 1N2D team pulls up in the wee hours of the night to surprise Cindy, and through the blurry faces she realizes that they haven’t abandoned her and bursts into tears.

Later as Manager Oppa drives her to the shoot, she’s back to her usual gruff self, though her words have no bite when she chides Oppa for not warning her about the surprise, since she probably came off really strangely. But Oppa says she was the prettiest she’s ever been. When she worries that CEO Byun will punish him for this, he says she doesn’t scare him—not like Cindy.

Cindy’s surprised, but he explains that being raged at by people he dislikes is no big deal… but when people he likes get upset, that’s a scary thing. Aw, we love you too Oppa.

CEO Byun is shocked to hear Cindy is still part of 1N2D, and we pan over to rookie Jini, who’s practicing the signature 1N2D chant, thinking she’s on the show now. Muahaha.

At KBS, the other five idols wonder if it’s true Cindy’s really joining them, and as usual, Sandara is all petty jealousy. (Gotta admire her for going for such an annoying character instead of worrying about her own image.) The boys say that Cindy’s not so bad once you get to know her, but Sandara snipes about how fake Cindy is, all different behind your back than to your face. And then Cindy arrives and Sandara is all sweetness, totally missing the irony.

Sandara feigns concern and asks if the stories are all a misunderstanding. Cindy does the one thing that gets under Sandara’s skin the most, which is to smile sweetly and pointedly call her unni (that is to say, pointing out her age).

The cast is taken to a rural village where they’ll spend this trip at a grandma’s house. Cindy and Seung-chan follow their grandma home, and the woman asks, “Which of you is the celebrity?” Pwaha. Cindy says she’s been on TV a lot, but the grandma just finds her name weird and shrugs. Cindy interviews that it was unexpected given how long she’s been active, but adds that she didn’t dislike the feeling. It felt comfortable and free.

Cindy asks her grandma if they’re making dinner the old-fashioned way, only to have grandma retort, “Do you think we’re still in the war?” Everything’s electric here, though Cindy’s challenge is dealing with the mess—everything’s piled haphazardly and the blankets left unwashed since the 2002 World Cup.

So she ends up washing them herself in a tub, tossing a few hints for help at Seung-chan that he misses completely. She has to ask plainly, and he joins her in wringing the blanket of water. But when she snaps the blanket taut, he jerks forward, almost falling on top of her.

To make conversation, she asks where he watched the World Cup and gets excited to hear that they were at the same park to watch one of the matches. It’s not an amazing connection, but still a little one, which reminds Seung-chan of his own words to Ye-jin (about their playground encounter years ago).

Seung-chan tells Cindy he knows she didn’t lie about her background, and she responds, “Of course!” (in Dangyunhaji game mode). She asks him to hang up the blanket, and he responds in kind.

Seung-chan interviews that he’d worried about Cindy but is glad to see her holding up well. But he’s concerned about her airtime, because the other idols are doing activities with their grandmas and Cindy’s just doing housework. Then he pauses to geek out about how very PD-like he just sounded.

CEO Byun drops in on the station director to have her say about Cindy’s continued presence on 1N2D, then offers Jini for Star Wars instead. She heard it’ll replace 1N2D, smug that she’ll still come out on top.

But to everyone’s shock (including mine!), the director has had enough of CEO Byun ordering him around and says that whatever happens to their shows, they’ll decide. Wow. That was unexpected. (Of course, he isn’t any more inclined to save 1N2D; he just got pissed off at her high-handedness. Still, it’s an improvement.)

Over at Music Bank, Ye-jin’s co-workers comment on Cindy’s scandal. Ye-jin says she doesn’t think Cindy lied, and one of the cameramen adds that years ago, he heard Cindy give an interview saying she was an orphan. It didn’t air because CEO Byun shut the interview down while Cindy was crying, but he distinctly remembers the footage…

Ye-jin asks when and where the footage was from. Please do what we all want you to do!

CEO Byun and Jini arrive at their dressing room, appalled when the apathetic writer Da-jung doesn’t leap up to treat them like stars. Da-jung says in her infuriatingly bored way that she thought Jini was a stylist, not a celebrity, looking unimpressed as she gives her the once-over. Jini stews, but they can’t say anything when Da-jung gets up and her own sleek appearance casts Jini in the shade. Muahaha.

Joon-mo drops in to check with Seung-chan, who’s not sure how well his shoot is going. Cindy’s busily cleaning everything in the kitchen, but he’s not sure how usable her footage is. (Then he asks Joon-mo eagerly if he sounded like a PD just now, haha.)

Seung-chan hopes they won’t be cancelled, and Joon-mo tells him that no variety program ends on applause. Unlike dramas that get to end on a high, in variety, people’s applause means you keep going. But nothing lasts forever and people get tired, so there’s always a trace of bitterness when a program ends. The longer the program runs, the worse he feels that he’s the one to see its end.

Ye-jin visits the tape archive looking for all the potential appearances from seven to eight years ago that could have contained that interview with Cindy, and ends up with stacks of old footage. Thus begins a loooooong night for her, reviewing each one.

Cindy sits outside her grandma’s house with Seung-chan and Joon-mo, and a comment about being scared to use the outhouse at night prompts Joon-mo to say there are ghosts afoot, which makes Seung-chan visibly nervous. He covers his ears and tries to block out Joon-mo’s story of doing an overnight trip where he saw a woman in white with long hair (the traditional Korean ghost image), and jumps in fright when Joon-mo yells suddenly.

The mood dims when Cindy asks if the cancellation rumors are because of her, and says she knows Joon-mo stuck with her out of responsibility, even though it would hurt him. Joon-mo advises Cindy that fame is like a tax, requiring you to endure unfair and painful things, and that it’s easier the more readily you can accept your tax.

He mentions seeing Yuna recently, and Cindy waits with bated breath to hear how she’s doing. She sighs in relief to hear that Yuna’s good, running a flower shop, and wonders if she should try that later. No, she’ll run a moving service since she’s so good at tidying homes.

Seung-chan falls asleep on Joon-mo’s shoulder, and Joon-mo tsk-tsks while shoving him the other direction—landing his head on Cindy’s shoulder instead. Joon-mo tells Cindy to go inside and sleep, but she says she’ll stay out just a while longer.

Joon-mo leaves at some point and they remain like that for a while. When Seung-chan eventually stirs awake, he stammers an apology, and she says she didn’t want to wake him. She says she knows who he likes and can’t celebrate it, nor does she want to interfere, “But I don’t want to lie about my feelings to you, either.”

He says that one-sided love is like building and tearing down a house all by yourself, intending it to be a consoling statement. She picks at his wording as he stumbles to explain himself in a way that isn’t insulting, missing that she’s just messing with him in amusement.

Cindy tells him just to remember that she, the beloved star, and despite him not having “one bag of hot cakes’ worth of interest” in her, really likes him. She’ll just be off in the distance building and tearing down her home, and if he ever becomes curious as to what kind of house that is, well, he can turn around and see.

She mentions how he’d felt bad about turning her into Beggar Cindy, and how he was going to make it up to her. When she gets back to Seoul, she’s anticipating a difficult road ahead where nobody will take her hand. Holding out a hand to Seung-chan, she asks, “Will you hold my hand just once? Because your hands are warm.”

He does, and they sit there a long time quietly, holding hands.

Ye-jin spends all night reviewing tapes, cursing herself for listening to that cameraman. But finally she finds the footage, and sees Cindy breaking down on camera just as described.

Writer Da-jung sees her wearing the same outfit from last night and assumes her romantic dilemma resolved herself happily. Ye-jin clarifies that she was working all night, and Da-jung tells her not to change, because wearing last night’s clothes makes her look hot. Ye-jin totally doesn’t understand, but is left feeling flattered anyway.

The 1N2D trip wraps, and Cindy gives her grandma a warm hug goodbye, which Seung-chan smiles to see. He’s editing the footage when Joon-mo and the other PDs drop by and send him on an errand to get a video message from grandma’s favorite celebrity (Song Hae, who’s emceed Korea Sings since 1980) to insert into the episode, chuckling to themselves that he’s about to get his initiation as a rookie PD.

Song Hae records his message, then invites Seung-chan for “just one drink,” which turns into bottles, until Seung-chan is lolling drunkenly and calling the old man “Hae hyung!” Seung-chan bemoans his seven-year program coming to an end, only to have Song Hae say his has been 35 years.

Song Hae interviews (while Seung-chan is passed out beside him) that people think he can do his program in his sleep now, but he says that it still makes his heart pound, and he does it because he loves it.

CEO Byun sails into Cindy’s house with Jini in tow, and turns on the TV to Entertainment Weekly in time to hear the agency’s official apology on Cindy’s behalf. The MC introduces the story, saying that even if Cindy’s lies were created by her management, she went along with the story and never refuted it, making her party to the deception. But just before they were about to air, fresh information came in to show otherwise.

CEO Byun bolts upright to recognize footage form that old interview, wherein Cindy breaks down as she talks about her parents’ death. The camera captures CEO Byun berating Cindy for not sticking to the story, insulting her intelligence, and asking for a reshoot. Ahhh, that’s the taste of sweet, sweet satisfaction you’re feeling.

Cindy remains surprisingly emotionless through CEO Byun’s tantrum, but a flashback shows us that she knew about it in advance. Ye-jin had explained how she found the footage (assuring her that it didn’t take long to locate it) and saying she wanted to ease her spirits a few hours earlier by giving her the heads-up.

To Joon-mo, Ye-jin lets her fatigue show. She says that while he never told her about the reasons, she knew he was bothered by CEO Byun and sensitive to Cindy’s situation. He thanks her for saving them all, since their show would’ve been under even more fire if not for her intervention.

The team worries about Seung-chan being out of touch, just as he arrives at the station—totally hammered, mind you, and spouting off in banmal at all his superiors. The others tell him to go ahead and do as he wishes, and he beelines for Ye-jin with arms outstretched… so Joon-mo trips him and sends him crashing down. Glaring, Seung-chan tells the others that he’ll reveal Joon-mo’s secret, which sends Joon-mo and Ye-jin leaping to drag him out of there.

As the three of them walk home, Seung-chan zigzags drunkenly and chides them to walk straight. Then he adopts Ye-jin’s drunken aegyo, dancing madly and wheedling them to go eat live octopus, and Ye-jin is amazed and horrified to encounter what she’s like from the observer’s perspective. And then he gets a determined look in his eye and plants a kiss right on Joon-mo’s mouth.

In the morning, Seung-chan wakes up on Joon-mo’s couch. He’s back to his respectful self as he says good morning to Joon-mo, who just glares and sighs. Ye-jin asks if Seung-chan remembers last night, then advises him not to try, since that’ll be easier on him.

CEO Byun sees that the tide has turned against her, with netizens moved by Cindy’s story and more stars speaking out about her ways. Her agency has been defaced with graffiti, and Cindy arrives to offer the name of a cleaner that does well against such slurs. They sit down to lunch and CEO Byun hands over paperwork to dissolve Cindy’s contract, which Cindy moves to stamp immediately. CEO Byun stops her, though—to advise her gently to read the contents of any contract before signing.

Maybe she has a heart (tiny and shriveled though it may be) or maybe she’s just taking the strategic route, but CEO Byun takes a mellow tone and says that Cindy was her joy for the past ten years: “Until you started to turn your back to me, I truly thought of you as my daughter.”

Cindy says, “I know,” which surprises her. “Your methods were wrong, but I know you loved me. It’s not because I don’t know that but because I do, that I’m leaving you. Don’t feel afraid that people will leave you. There’s a limit to how much you can keep people next to you with unfair contracts and weaknesses.” She advises CEO Byun to think carefully about what made people leave her despite all her devotion to them. “I’m leaving because I don’t want to live like you,” Cindy says.

Seung-chan gets into an elevator at the office with CP Kim, who teases him about his behavior last night, calling him by his first name and patting his head. Seung-chan vows to quit drinking, but CP Kim says that’s not possible—what he has to do is learn how to ask for forgiveness each time. Then he adds that the teaser Seung-chan put together, despite being awkward, was funny—even his daughter laughed at it.

This totally makes Seung-chan’s day, and he interviews that he’s never been able to make anybody laugh. He would try, but his friends would call him corny and tell him to stop. To hear that someone he doesn’t even know laughed at his work gives him an electrifying feeling.

The exposition FD explains that Seung-chan has just gotten hooked to that feeling—it’s like drug addiction, and he’ll go crazy trying to chase that feeling of entertaining people. He congratulates him, but warns that it’s not great for your health—it’ll end when it sucks out all your energy. He points out all the things around them in the prop room, filled with things that used to cause such a stir, now just sitting idly. Popularity always ends.

Seung-chan wonders why the FD never goes to team meetings, and the FD just smiles bashfully. That’s when a sunbae PD enters the room and asks what he’s doing—and Seung-chan sees that nobody’s there.

He tells his team about it, and they laugh that either Seung-chan needs to stop drinking, or it was an impostor who slipped inside the building. Orrrrr, on PD suggests, it could be a ghost. Seung-chan gets increasingly nervous as Joon-mo asks questions, then bursts to clasp his hand in congratulations—he met the famous broadcast station ghost. The team laughs, but Seung-chan can’t shake his unease, rifling through all the notes he took in his FD chats.

He interviews that he’s very scientific, and that no matter what people say, he’s sure he didn’t see a ghost. His docu PD asks, “Then what was it?” Seung-chan thinks. “A broadcast station fairy? That has a better connotation, doesn’t it? A fairy. Tinkerbell.”

Hong-soon continues to pine after Office Nazi, who continues to ignore his texts. CP Kim comes up to give him good news: The station president is dining with the director, he’s recommended Hong-soon to come along.

At the dinner, Hong-soon pulls out all the brownnosing stops, showing off his muscles (which goes awry when the president wonders if the variety department has too much free time if they can work out so much), grilling beef, and mixing up specialty drinks. The mood is flying and Hong-soon has the president fully impressed… until he gets a text message from Office Nazi. She gives him thirty minutes to make it to their ddukbokki rendezvous spot or cut ties forever, and he freezes in indecision.

The president offers him a glass, and he calls himself crazy as he apologizes and runs out. He arrives well beyond the deadline, but sits himself down and says she’d be crazy sorry if she knew what he gave up to be here. Then he takes over cooking duties with flair, offering her a heart-shaped mound of rice and melting her iciness.

He interviews that he already regrets his choice since now the director is refusing his calls, though I’m sure his tears will dry soon enough.

Ye-jin hears from the maintenance office that they fixed the street lights sooner than scheduled because of that broadcast PD who made a pest of himself calling about it, threatening to put it on air if they didn’t fix them right away. She calls Seung-chan out to ask why he did it, chiding him for doing the worst thing as a PD, throwing around his profession to get something done, even if it was for good purposes.

Seung-chan is hopelessly confused for a while, then starts to slowly put the pieces together. He says it wasn’t him, and watches with a long face as Ye-jin wonders who it could have been.

Joon-mo has good news for him, though, starting with their program being out of the danger zone—ratings have gone up a tiny bit, and Cindy’s name is helping them now, and even Seung-chan’s trailer had some effect. Seung-chan lights up at that, and Joon-mo puts him in charge of the upcoming one, too.

As he starts to go, Seung-chan stops Joon-mo from leaving and asks how he’s managed to be friends with Ye-jin for so long.

An interview with Song Hae cuts in, where he answers the question of whether he knew Korea Sings would be a long-running program from the start. Of course he didn’t, and to do one, you have to go in not thinking that, thinking you’ll give it a shot and if it doesn’t do well, you’ll bow out. His program figured they’d have enough counties to visit to last them two years, but kept finding new places to go: “People’s relationships are just like that—you don’t know it when you make the first connection, but they end up going a long time.”

Seung-chan reflects back to his first days as a PD, when he’d stood in the rain with Yoon Yeo-jung’s tea, thinking that everything he learned in school was useless and that he’d made a mistake coming here. And how, through all the uneasy, nerve-filled days to follow, he’d think to himself every night: “Let’s just try today, and if it’s not right, let’s quit. Let’s just do tomorrow, and if it’s not it, run away.”

And in the process of living out a day at a time, spring passed equally for everyone. As Joon-mo sits alone where he’d once sat with Ye-jin, Seung-chan narrates how some people were given the chance to reconsider someone they’d thought of as a given. And Cindy leaves her empty place behind as he says, “And someone else, in order to be born anew, gave up many things they’d enjoyed.”

Hong-soon and Office Nazi hold hands as examples of people whose hate turned to love in “an unusual miracle,” while Song Hae works at his latest show to protect something that’s old and precious. Chapter 12’s lesson: “Understanding Long-running Programs: Don’t forget the beginning.”

Seung-chan looks back on his early experiences as a PD and vows not to forget his beginnings, when he felt useless and told himself to hang on just through the day. As he comes upon the empty swing set where he’d often talked with Ye-jin, he thinks, “And the connection that began without me knowing what it would become—through that person, this spring was happy. I won’t forget it.”

Ye-jin smiles as she walks along the now-lit path, and calls Joon-mo late that night while he’s already asleep. She complains of the huge mosquito that’s taken two bites out of her and insists he come catch it for her, and he tells her to get bit since he’s not coming. But two seconds later he’s up, grumbling as he gets up to make the long drive out to her new place.

He finds her waiting by the well-lit street, and she tells him about the maintenance requests made by the PD who threw around his career like a threat. Joon-mo insists he didn’t—all he did was answer the question about what his job was, and she smiles at the confirmation that it was his doing. She asks why he did it, and why he came all the way out at her phone call tonight, and turns to leave when he doesn’t answer.

Joon-mo speaks up (finally!) and explains that he struggled in high school because she got such good grades—because he had to follow along if he wanted to go to the same university. The same when she said she wanted to be a PD, because he’d have to prepare for exams.

“But even when I spent over half my life following you around, I didn’t know. That me following you wasn’t a habit, but love.” He says that he hesitated a lot because he didn’t want to burden her with these words, or make things uncomfortable between them. “But you didn’t go anywhere, and stuck next to me like gum—thank you.” He draws her into a hug, and they stand there holding each other.

The next day, Seung-chan drives into the station just as Cindy’s there unloading her makeup and gear. She explains being a standalone agency now, and has to get used to these tasks, though she’s clearly angling for him to help her. Instead, he just gives her a “Fighting!” and starts to move on.

So she proposes a round of rock-scissors-paper to carry her stuff, and just like before, he instinctively throws a winning hand. Heh. She accepts her defeat and starts unloading her things, but this time Seung-chan smiles as he pretends to leave, then takes over the duty. Aw, baby PD’s not quite so clueless anymore.

 
EPILOGUE

Joon-mo interviews that they’ve bought themselves three more months, and the response to the show is on an upswing, with people saying that it’s changed for the better. To his staff, he shouts at them to come up with ideas, while to the docu camera, he says confidently that trust in his team is up, and they’re going all-in. “I have a really good feeling about this!”

Then he’s asked about Ye-jin, and he starts to answer cheerfully that all is well, then changes his tone and gets more serious. He laughs that he doesn’t want to leave these statements behind when nobody knows what’ll happen in the future.

Ye-jin, on the other hand, interviews about how she understands now how owning a home changes how you feel about it. (Cut to: Ye-jin stuck in traffic, cursing the commute.) She says that she’s turned a good friend into a boyfriend and feels freer now—she doesn’t have to fight tooth and nail anymore, but can go with the flow. A phone call interrupts the interview, and in a flash she’s back to tough Ye-jin, fighting with the director’s orders on some decision.

Cindy interviews that nothing is different, and that a rookie might feel nervous running an agency: “But I’m Cindy.” Then she snaps at Oppa for idling the car during her interview, wasting gas. Sheepishly, she admits to the camera that the world isn’t an easy place: “Though the toughest thing is… Baek Seung-chan.”

Seung-chan proudly shows the search engine rankings, where his latest trailer sits in eighth place, the last one hitting sixth. It’s not that he’s asking for popularity, but to have people like his teasers, “To hear praise that I’m the variety department’s Bong Joon-ho or Park Chan-wook…”

Then Joon-mo cuts in to yell at him for mishandling the receipts: “You call yourself a PD?!”

 
COMMENTS

A pretty solid finale, especially when you factor in that the production shot the last episode in a day and a half—the drama was so pressed for time in the past couple weeks that they called it “super live shoot” and mobilized a C team, since A and B weren’t enough. (You could argue that one better fix would have been to cut back the onerous 80-minute episodes, but hey, I don’t run the show.)

I find The Producers difficult to sum up with a single score or judgment, because it had the notable factor of changing its approach mid-show. And to be quite honest, I liked both approaches, so I can’t even find fault with one over the other on an intrinsic level. It’s just, even if the heartfelt rom-com and coming-of-age story that it turned out to be in its latter half was engaging and satisfying, it isn’t what got me excited about the show, so there’s unavoidable disappointment mixed in.

The first two episodes in particular were cutting and witty in a really refreshing way, and although even that version of the show didn’t quite nail the mockumentary device, I was pleased with the direction. The show had launched under the description “variety drama,” and filming the show as a show-within-a-show was such a cute, novel ideal (for Korean dramas) that when they gave up right away, it made me disappointed with the public for not embracing the idea and angry with the producers for caving to the initial responses.

The Producers was a strange experience where I feel like the comments from the international fanbase (like the ones here on Dramabeans) were diametrically opposite to the ones in Korea, where fans hated the docu-cam, found the awkwardness of the interviews boring instead of hilariously sardonic, and clamored for more romance. I suppose if the response at home was so overwhelmingly in one direction it doesn’t make sense for producers to ignore them—domestic viewers are, to use Joon-mo’s metaphor, the regular customer base that you don’t want to alienate by trying to get too wild and crazy. I just wish they were a little more willing to stick out their necks for the sake of opening a new door for a slightly less familiar style of storytelling. Being different takes time to be appreciated!

Then the show changed directions, and at that point I wish they’d have gotten rid of the mockumentary camera entirely rather than feature them as random interviews. The whole point of a mockumentary is to show us the funny dissonance between what is said and what is captured, to give us access to the unauthorized moments of truth in between people’s bluster.

But format aside, looking at a purely story point of view, I was entertained and moved, and thought the lessons were smartly drawn to use the industry as a metaphor for the issues the characters were facing. And at the end of the day, the characters saved the day, drawing us into their daily struggles. I like that The Producers didn’t overblow their conflicts—a cancellation is a blow, but hardly the end of the world—and let us connect to the emotions in between.

I found Cindy by far the most relatable and engaging narrative of the show, which is unexpected given how she started. It was satisfying to have her be something of the emotional climax of the show, and that the three other characters all played a part in backing her when everyone else wanted to ditch her. (I almost wanted more drama out of it, though I suppose that could have been too pat.) I liked that Cindy’s predicament wasn’t only about helping her overcome a hurdle, but that she became symbolic of things in their lives too, like Joon-mo confronting that weakness in himself and being the better person this time around—and really, for his own sake. He was my least favorite character and deeply frustrating, and I literally shouted at my screen multiple times, “BE A HEROOOOO!” But he did finally step up, and for that I’m relieved. Mostly since I want to like Cha Tae-hyun again.

I find Ye-jin interesting in that I don’t think she underwent as much of an arc as the others, but she was pretty crucial to the show—if anything, Gong Hyo-jin’s trademark sweetness and natural delivery carry her through everything, finding genuineness in places you might not get with other actresses. I like that she recognized her tendency to be too prickly as a self-defense mechanism, even if she’ll never be cured of it. Not that it’s entirely a bad thing, since her refusal to be pushed around by bullies (say, CEO Byun) is one of her best traits. Just, we’re left with the hope that she’ll channel that bulldoggishness in productive quarters and soften the edges for the rest.

But I suppose it really was Seung-chan’s story in the end, and it was gratifying to see him growing sharper and savvier—but not losing the essence of himself, like the dorky bookishness or his boyish excitement over being given praise. His ending voiceover was poignant and bittersweet, and at the very least draws a little of the sting out of his disappointed romantic hopes. I was never a huge fan of the romance-o-go-round, mostly because the extended device stretched on too long and started feeling like a silly game rather than an earnest storyline.

Whenever you feel like a story is being told to trick you or jerk you around more than to show and reveal, you violate the viewership’s trust. It reminds me of the tiresome runaround of Answer Me 1994—fun at first, but increasingly wearying. It’s a gimmick you really can’t get away with more than once (which is why 1994 remains a disappointment despite being so good otherwise) and while I applaud The Producers for deciding not to make the lovelines obvious from Day 1, there’s also a limit to how long you can drag that out.

In Seung-chan’s case, he frames his experience of heartbreak as part of a learning process, as part of the time he spent putting one foot in front of the other, figuring things out from the ground up. He describes relationships as the result of a bunch of little incidences rather than meaning something specific from the start, and that’s a lovely sentiment to end on. Turned around, it becomes an empowering thought, really: that you find the meaning in things, rather than meaning being prescribed to you from the start, weighing on your shoulders like a burden you’re fated to carry. Life gains meaning through living it—nothing means everything, but everything can mean something.

RELATED POSTS

Tags: , , , , ,

314

Required fields are marked *

I love this drama!!! The ending was satisfying for me. Loved KSH's portrayal of BSC. His chemistry with IU is electrifying. I think the ending did imply that they are going to be together❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm glad that the show gave us BSC-Cindy slow-mos until the end.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The execution wasn't perfect, but I am 100% down for any show trying to:

- Avoided makjang elements
- Tell the story of the everyman
- Break as many tired drama tropes as possible

The show did all of the above and that alone gives it a solid rating in my book.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Awww.. im happy^sad that my ji daehan is not 'real'... thanks baek seung chan for calling him a fairy..

Im fond of this show.. it reminds me of the time i worked in a tv station. seeing the celebrities, working with them on shows on regular basis will cure you off being starstrucked in no time..

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

What a wonderful ending :D :D Very satisfying but not too neat, the resolution was rewarding but not unrealistic. Nice life lessons too XD

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I am contended with the finale, as i have always been a SC - Cindy and JM-YJ shipper. I don't see any outcome between SC and YJ, although many netizens out there seem to be ship them heavily and seem disappointed with the ending.

I am however, more disappointed by the fact that YJ's struggle as a female producer in the TV industry was not given much attention - it was only briefed through in ep 11. It will be really interesting as the TV industry is heavily dominated by males for the PD side, somehow reminds me of kang so ra's character in Misaeng.

Also, am i the only one here who is disappointed that Jun Ji Hyun didn't cameo in this drama? In the press conference, some media did questioned if she was going to cameo, since her big 2 ex flames are in this drama as main leads. There are people who discussed it at first, then it toned down as the discussion switched to the love lines.

Now to think of it, cameo appearances decreased significantly as the drama passed its mid range, with LSG and Go Ah Ra playing important roles with relative high amount of screen time as the latest cameos. Perhaps, there isn't sufficient time for a big (?) cameo? But i would rather they extend another episode to fit her in, and also, to dedicate more time to JM and YJ's new relationship and SC and cindy budding relationship.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

+1

Most of the scenes that I was touched from this drama were those of YJ coming to Cindy's defense and those of YJ with Dajung. Too bad we only got a few of those.

And, yeah! I'm disappointed that I didn't get to see JJH with her Gyeon-woo and Do Min Jon.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah, you got a lot of people criticising Ye-jin for being cranky and always ready for a fight and calling her a bad person without considering why she was that way......it's too bad she had to actually come out and say that the male dominated nature of her workplace was part of why she was like that. I thought it should be understood from the environment, she's the only female PD we see after all, every other woman in the KBS office is a writer or admin.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

It would be a dream for JJH to do a cameo, but she is probably not that easy to invite.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love the show overall. I didn't care much about the format being mockumentary at first and somehow abandoning it. I was not invested on the love lines of this drama but I'm glad YJ ended with JM. I like that it made me laugh so hard and let me cry as well...
The quartet is just awesome! Thanks for the recap!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for the recaps!

They are what got me to start and made me finish. Actually, it was just 2 episodes at the beginning and 2 at the end but I was saving it to drama-thon but then caved and watched the ending.

I really enjoyed how it finished as I was really happy with the storyline-well, what I saw and read about and was happy to see some of my favourite actors in something in which I thought they really shined.

They made their characters believable and lovable.

However, I know it's a team effort so a big shout out to the whole The Producers crew and the DB Dream Team for bringing it to my lounge. :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

All I've got to say for right now is that the scene where CEO Byun, Jini and Secretary Kim enter the dressing room and come face to face (well, face to side) w/ a stone-faced, immotive and condescending Da-jung is one of the funniest scenes ever in a K-drama (up there w/ Dokko Jin's "My panties..." scene).

The writer did a really adept job of using Da-jung's persona and attributes to stick it to CEO Byun and Jini.

Absolutely love CEO Byun's and Sec. Kim's reactions when Da-jung raised herself from the seat.

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

me too! at first I was annoyed at her but hey acting a stone-faced all through out is difficult. Even when she was pitching her face is the same.. haha!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

That girl was such a pro at throwing shade at people. lol

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

Her rising out of that chair in front of CEO Byun and Jini was a piece of masterful shade in the truest sense.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yeah, I liked the part where she was eyeing Ji Ni up and down. I could almost hear her inner monologue. "This ugly thing is your celebrity? Here, lemme show you how a celebrity should look." lol

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

imo she wouldn't even waste that many words on Jini in her thoughts.

I pictured her mental reaction to being told Jini was the celebrity, to be literally one word: "Huh."

0

So... did seung chan begin to have crush in cindy in the end? Or Just built a friendship closer ?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

When do the special episode of producer will air?

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

next friday, 26 june.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I didn't know there was a special. Thanks for the info!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh man I really liked RJM and TYJ's scene confession that ended in a hug because it seems so like them between 25 year long friends to go with the hug instead of the romantic route- although I have to raise eyes because both of the PDs just became that job for a girl, so like what is it that they really wanted to do??? Because Joonmo, I mean it would be a weird coincidence that they did either way but he seems really invested into his job at least. I'm really happy for Cindy's arc because she grew so much and you really feel for her.

And oh my god I don't know where the FD being a ghost came from because literally that came out of nowhere- and it doesn't make any sense because there were no hints to it, in the beginning of the show in its mockumentary style they gave him a name and his age, and later when the pilot Star Wars shows he was also put in charge of helping it so other people have interacted with him I'm just that's my biggest disappointment

And I'm a little sad we didn't get to see as much of Yejin's being the cool noona PD of Music Bank either, Seungchan really got the best of the drama, it practically revolved around him when I thought it could have been better done in Joonmo's POV since the focus was on his show

The supporting characters were pretty good (as a KJK fan I'm a little miffed at his rushed storylineish) I loved the manager oppa, he got a lot of fleshing out and Im sad that the same couldn't be said for the maknae writer for Music Bank but she had her moments of redemption in helping Ye Jin with her love triangle and complimenting her- personally among the writers the middle writer that fought with Yang Mi earlier was awesome. And Yang Mi!! I thought she could have been handled better but she was so funny along with Hongsoon

I did like the overall life lessons here and there though but I weep for the other things it could have been touched on and its flaws a decent drama worth a fun filled week-sitting perhaps
Thank you for the recap!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

So the drama was not a flop after all. Instead it was a big hit! When the first episode came out and drew negative reactions, many were quick to jump on saying this is going to be the first flop of KSH’s career *shakes head* 17.7% is no joke these days! I’ll miss seeing GHJ and TYJ! She was my fav.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Absolutely. 17.7% is the highest rate after MFTS in single episode at the mini drama in Korea, and 12.5 average rating is also a record right after MFTS. Thus two records are hold by KSH

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I knew KSH had it in him to be great at comedy (he has in him the ability to do anything). But I didn't expect him to be this good! The other day he had me drenched in tears because of how terrible I felt for Seung Chan. Yesterday he had me crying in laughter. That drunk scene where he imitated Ye Jin was too much. I had to pause the video several times because I just can’t understand anything from my own laughter. It was a great finale and keeps things open for a possible second season. I don’t think that is happening but who knows what goes on behind the scenes. If it actually pushes through and they get the original actors on again, I will be so excited to see Seung Chan and Cindy! With all the build up and slow burn, they'll surely be engaging. But if its not happening, I have my imagination to fill in for me.

Great job to the cast and crew of Producers, it was a thrilling ride!

0
5
reply

Required fields are marked *

KSH is such a talented actor that I would love to see him do a hero-villain type of character. I hope he stays away from romcoms for a while.

0
3
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree. While Cindy's arc is most engaging among the 4 leads, it is KSH that saved the show... honestly, if it had not been him, I would have given up on the show a while ago... before Cindy had a chance to show her growth.

KSH simply has extraordinary on-screen presence.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yes, like Secretly Greatly.

But I read in his next movie, REAL in which he will play a gangster/debt collector of some sort, there will be a love line as his character will fall for a woman who will turn him to the right path.

Well, at least, that's the original story line...

I wish to see him acting with Han Hyo-joo (the heroin of Shining Inheritance). Two great actors, both young and charismatic)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Despite HHJ's current image, I would really love that pairing. I think they would have a truck load of intense chemistry. I might want KSH to pair up with PSH too. They both always just gel so naturally with their costars, I can really see them being quite the on screen couple. But maybe I'll leave that desire for dramas lol

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

OMG, me too, me too! Than drunk scene was a masterpiece! I paised it several times because I was laughing and crying so hard that I couldn't see the subs ^_^

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Finally it's over. I don't know how I can handle another 100-minute-episode.
I don't know how to say this..... it's good when it's good, funny when it's funny, and it has quirks not just any writer can create. But it would be such a great ride if only they focus more on individual problem. Like TYJ and the challenge being a female PD, RJM and his ruined program, BSC being placed in a ruined program, Cindy and CEO Byun. Romance can be secondary, like TYJ-RJM's bickering relationship, and Cindy's adoration to BSC. Let's be real. If I were a newbie PD in a company as big as KBS, I'd worry more about my program being cut than being rejected by my senior. So that's why when BSC narrates at the end, I didn't feel touched because his development is not that touching.
Regarding the ending, well, I love happy ending so it's satisfying at least.
About i-nets & k-nets difference, I actually have mixed feelings. I do like the mockumentary format, but I don't like the directing in the first two episodes. It was..... awkward and unstable. So I'd like them to keep the mockumentary but change the director.
All in all, it was good, but not that special with such top star casts.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah, Seung-chan did at least stay involved and concerned with his job, but it did seem to take second place to his love life in some ways.

Not that that's surprising, since he only took the job for a girl in the first place lol.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Same goes for Joon Mo. No wonder that dude has never had a hit show. Being a PD was not his calling.. he just followed a girl too. lol

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I loved the ending and Daebak the finale got HIGH RATINGS 18.2%.
The PD's loved each other and finally confessed. (I was shipping Joon-Mo and Ye-Jin. :D )
Cindy and BSC starting a new chapter together, which is good because it's not rushed.
I will miss the variety drama.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

This was a very good drama. It would have been a great drama if they had not used the "Reply 1994" gimmick. The biggest problem with this gimmick is that you pretty much guarantee that a good portion of your audience will hate your ending since their favored pairing did not come to fruition. Personally, I was not rooting for any love-lines because I was more engrossed in knowing what will happen to Cindy and her CEO which made the end for this drama a very happy one for me.

My only gripe about this episode was them making Sandara Park a mini villain. lol

That scene where drunk Baek Seung Chan was imitating Ye Jin's drunken aegyo.. You can tell that Gong Hyo Jin was trying real hard not to bust out laughing. lol

Break out performance by IU. I take back every comment I've made in the past about her being a so so idol-actress. Kim Soo Hyun's character may have been the soul of this drama but it was IU's character Cindy that gave it it's heart.

Thanks JB and GF for the always insightful and speedy recaps!

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ye-jin's drunken aegyo was pretty killer to begin with, but Seung-chan's imitation went one up on that (you can't top drunkenly smooching your boss lol).

The cast were all fantastic, from the four leads down to the supporting characters like ice queen Da-jung. Maybe the actress was just perfectly cast, but I so enjoyed her stone face.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm very happy with the ending. JM and YJ got together and they gave us a realistic open ending between BSC and Cindy.

I'm really in love with Cindy's character and I enjoyed watching IU portray her. Writer Park really did a good job in conceptualizing this character, from Cindy's back story, her development, up to her adorable quirks. I love that Cindy's still an Ice Princess to the very end. Great to see her still having a crush on BSC despite it being one-sided. (Cindy-BSC scenes are always beautifully shot and IU does "teenage girl in love" so well, with her eyes and other non-verbal expressions.) Cindy was the main reason why I continued watching The Producers even if I was getting frustrated with the love lines being dragged on and with how CTH's talent was being wasted. I laughed, cried, and rooted so hard for Cindy during her entire journey. It would have been great though if she was given a scene with Yuna, especially before her contract termination scene with CEO Byun.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

I couldn't have said it better myself!! You took the words right out of my mouth.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I really like the handling of Cindy's storyline - her crush wasn't the only change for her, but a sort of catalyst for the changes there needed to be in her life. And some parts of it were so relatable - the head rush of every single time he's physically close to her, her knowing it isn't going to go anywhere because he likes someone else, and finally cleanly confessing her feelings.

She was astonishingly mature about it too - in any other drama, the top star with a crush on someone who likes someone else would have thrown a few tantrums and been a total witch to her crush's crush, but she actually likes Ye-jin and doesn't behave like a typical kdrama rejected second lead. I loved it.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love all the parts where Cindy pretend scolds/messes with Seung Chan. Her facial expressions were so much fun to watch. She seems to find him most adorable whenever she has him rattled.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

They are so cute together. I wished the love lines would just focus on the two couples separately rather than the stupid love square. I was so hoping for a duet by Cindy and BSC. Like she was singing on stage and he unexpectantly comes on stage to join her. A little cliche , but they both have amazing voices so I can deal with it.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

so the FD that BSC has been talking to is a ghost? hmm

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

"Whenever you feel like a story is being told to trick you or jerk you around more than to show and reveal, you violate the viewership’s trust."

I kept stepping into these traps though. RM97, Mirae's choice, and now The Lover (Takuya x Joonjae)... *sigh* Better just avoid all incomplete dramas in general from now on to save myself all the stress and hair loss

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love this drama 100%. That's all I have to say :)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Rather than a ghost, perhaps, the FD who has been giving SC advices may be an imagination of SC (Think, 'It's ok it's love). It may be a part of his growing process and just a 'tool' used by SC to figure things out alone in the store room, after he was given a major task (being put in charge to produce a trailer to pull ratings up, and JM aired it as it was LOL) or when he was told off. Since this drama's sub plotline is his growth as a PD and as a character, i am really not surprised.

Hence, the FD disappeared in the last episode as it signifies that SC is all grown up and is a fully qualified PD now who has much clearer thoughts in handling relationship matters and work, and no need for clearing his mind up by 'talking to himself (?)' in the store room.

I have been following comments on Weibo (Chinese social media platform) regarding this, it seems that this is a more plausible and logical reason in this show's context. Some netizens even pointed out that the writer may be linking back to 'Its ok its love' and 'Masters Sun' which are GHY's works in a different kind of metro reference!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I may sound rude but I feel sorry for the ones sticking for one character or just giving up the drama because of the lovelines. Of course, everyone has different tastes and opinions but gosh', the finale was amazing and so was the drama.
Like, I just finished it and I have so many feelings right now XD.

Everything was just so perfect. For me, it wasn't just an entertaining or fun drama but it was really one of those kind who touches you deep in the heart. I can't help but to relate so much with the characters' journey. Be it the main leads', the side characters' or even the cameos', haha. Y'know, it feels just perfectly right.

From the get go, it was about Tae Jin and Joon Mo's love and Cindy and Seung Chan's journey. I don't feel cheated because they way they found solution in their lives is so much satisfying (and it is an open ending so heck yes, they will end up together XD). More than that, I liked how we got to understand and find out more about the entertainment and variety world. Sometimes, I would feel so much for the manager. Sometimes, it would be for the CP. And even the writers, the other PDs ... etc. And that's how I know how much I love a drama and how it is good because it just makes you feel for everyone and everything. So yeap', big props to Park Ji Eun. She is truly my favorite scriptwriter. Unexpected You and Man From Another Star were already great but gosh', Producers is like the consecration, haha. What I like about her so much is that she doesn't take viewers for fouls, she knows how to touch them and end things perfectly with so much feelings. Of course, she has her flaws too but everything is just so damn great that they are so little in your eyes ;)

Gah, I liked so many things, it's craaaazy ! I am so happy that the show did really well ! More than 17% for the finale and the drama stayed in double digit ratings for all its run and in a fairly new timeslot at that ! Damn, Kim Soo Hyun really has the Midas touch. He is really amazing. All the cast and staff members are though. The acting was great all through. I was a little bit worried for IU at the beginning but when I think about it, nobody could have been Cindy other than her. She just added something to the character. She was just Cindy <3. Nothing to say about Gong Hyo Jin and Cha Tae Hyun because they rock so hard at every performance. I felt that CTH was a little bit underused in the midway but those latest episodes got it right XD. But really, the performance I most loved is definitely Kim Soo Hyun. He was already a great actor but seriously, he killed it. His imitation of Ye Jin ? DAE TO THE BAK. You feel so much for his character. Gosh', he gotta have some awards or I am going to flip tables.

(and yeah', I am copying and pasting my comment because I am lazy !)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I thought it was a perfect finale, too - I was annoyed with the drama for dragging out its love lines earlier, but at least the end did right by all the characters.

I've seen a lot of people unfairly diss Cha Tae-hyun but he and Gong Hyo-jin, like I said in my comment below, were the backbone of the show. You wouldn't have had the kind of atmosphere you got in Producer, without their performances as individual PDs AND as longtime bffs-with-feelings, if it wasn't for them - they really anchored it in a big way, even if IU and Kim Soo-hyun had the more dramatic storylines.

(and it's not just Kim Soo-hyun who has the Midas touch, Gong Hyo-jin has an even longer record of hit dramas, every single drama she's done since 2007 has been a critical and ratings success - Thank You, Pasta, Greatest Love, Master's Sun, It's OK It's Love, and now Producer. And before the Great Ratings Slump of 2014, she had four dramas in a row clocking ratings of over 20 percent. She's got just as good an eye for a drama as he does, it's fantastic)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

So many miss the fact that the lovelines were not the point of the show. They say it was dragged out... but it became obvious that they were not dragged out for unnatural suspense, they were just messy one-sided and unfulfilled crushes which did not all perfectly work out in the end, like real life. The two PDs loveline.. maybe it will work out, but it wouldn't have been natural for them to kiss and express unending love in this episode. It felt realer and more satisfying to see them come to grips with having feelings for eachother that they have to confront.

And Cindy and BSC, it was obvious from the start that she was in love with him, and a cliched drama handling would have them end up in love after 'tricking' us with his crush on sunbaenim. But no, he was in love with his sunbae, not Cindy, and even if he realized that wouldn't work out, he didn't dramatically fall in the arms of Cindy. They're friends, nothing more, and that's actually most important for her as well- She's gained friends, allies, people who care for her as she is.

I think it's a shame Korean audience backlashed against the interesting format of the show, because god knows we need experimentaiton and new ideas in K-drama. But I still think the show was brave for how it handled the story, skipped the big love story moments and focused on friendship and subtler emotions. Good job on that.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

<they were just messy one-sided and unfulfilled crushes which did not all perfectly work out in the end, like real life

Absolutely agree with that. I never felt the love lines were "dragging" precisely for that reason – they were playing out slowly and messily, like in real life. The drama took a very slice-of-life approach in that sense, which is why there were various events that never led to anything, which otherwise would have been used for some grand dramatic effect (e.g. Seung-chan's Mom loving Cindy which people tried to connect to the love lines, especially with Mom's opposite reaction to Ye-jin initially).

Someone also previously commented that Seung-chan didn't really change. While this is true (and while Cindy certainly had the biggest character arch in terms of growth), it suits slice-of-life approach: there are no great changes in Seung-chan like you'd get in other, more traditional dramas, he learns a little as a producer but he's probably not that different as a person. And yet there is some change: although he's experienced yet another unrequited, quite superficial crush, we do know that it's been different from before (if only because Ye-jin actually saw and appreciated him as a person) and that his next relationship will most certainly play out differently. Which, I'm certain, will not be Cindy – no matter how much people were/are hoping for that.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

season 2 with BSC?

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

what was joon mo's secret that drunk BSC was talking about??

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

The fact that Ye-jin was living with him, lol.

(not any more by then, but even saying she used to would have caused a scandal at work)

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

lmao I DIED at the Joon-mo/Seung-chan kiss. It's so cute but at the same time, absolutely hilarious. (and now Kim Soo-hyun has kissed all three leads of this drama, gender no bar)

I'm glad he did this, though - it's the first drama since Dream High where it's felt like he isn't just coasting - he made the character of Baek Seung-chan real, and restored my faith in him as an actor. I loved his journey throughout the show, going from wet behind the ears young puppy to still a puppy, but one who's learning. Full credit to IU, too - she got criticised plenty in the first two eps, but honestly she did really, really well. Yes, Cindy was a sympathetic character with a great arc, but instead of the role being tailored to accommodate deficient acting skills, IU was the one who had to rise to the challenge of playing her - and she did. She did so well. If BSC was the puppy, she was the closest thing we had to a kitten - full of pride but still vulnerable, and most lovable when she started connecting with people. I liked how their storylines closed out - with her navigating her new, less cushy but less unfair agency and him getting on with work and learning.

(and I love, love, LOVED that Ye-jin was the one who worked her butt off to clear Cindy's name and even tried to play it down. They're such adorable reluctant friends, but the clearing of Cindy's name was my sweetest takeaway from the finale, even more than the love line resolutions. The look on Byun CEO's face when she realises just what is on air in that interview....priceless)

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

And if Cindy and Seung-chan were the heart and soul of this drama, then its backbone was Joon-mo and Ye-jin, both alone and together. Though it does suck that CTH got less screen time at some points, he and Gong Hyo-jin are the ones who anchor the show - their characters are real and have everyday-person flaws like indecisiveness or overt defensiveness, but those flaws just make them more real. And I did find it pretty cool that Ye-jin could be in equal measures childish (with Joon-mo) and very adult and in charge at the same time. She and Cindy both had that defensive front, but it was nice to see them put it aside and become friends for real.

Leaving aside all the annoyance over love lines, I did enjoy how natural they were around each other. It's one thing that really elevated Producer above your average romcom - showing a couple whose obstacles to getting together weren't external factors like a serial murderer or a maybe-dead twin sister, but just plain old fear of change/an assumption of indifference. And that realness is a pretty essential background and contrast to Seung-chan's naivete and extreme sincerity, as well as the more dramatic circumstances of Cindy's life and character arc.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Oh I really love your words. It could do so much better, but I'm glad it didn't involve any of murders, family drama, chaebols, doppelganger, etc etc. It's still relatable and they cast the right actors.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I agree. IU did so well as Cindy. What I love most about her is that she always had her priorities in check. It's like, so what if BSC likes someone else? She will not stoop so low as to sabotage YJ. She's going to fight for her career instead of entangling herself in a love triangle/quadrangle. So CEO Byun found herself a Cindy 2.0? She will still be a pro and not appear bitter towards Ji Ni, her heir apparent, in public.

I also love the confidence that Cindy has in herself that it reminds me so much of Cheon Song-yi's. It's not misplaced because she definitely worked hard to get to where she is. But it's hilarious that having this one-sided crush on a dorky and totally clueless rookie PD is the one that makes her fall back down to earth. I LOLed so hard during her interview wherein she was saying that being a one-woman agency is tough, but she's "Cindy" so she'll do just fine, but BSC is a tougher one to crack. It makes her all the more adorable and relatable.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yes I do like Cindy's last interview. It indicates that she will never give up. Ha ha!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I love this show, but man, I missed the King himself, Anthony. That had more production bts than this show.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah, it's a minor quibble but Producer doesn't mention PPL, not even once. That would have been an awesome bit of meta considering how obvious the PPL was in this drama, at one point.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

true! but the sponsors probably wouldn't have allowed it. and i think the PPL has been obvious throughout, especially LINE. they used that messaging app all the time, and had the characters of that app as stuffed toys or cushions in the background. i wish they used it more realistically, though, because none of them had profile pictures and previous messages loaded on the screen when they were writing a new one.

also, yes, a bit more king of dramas style commentary on the behind the scenes would have been interesting, i fully agree. i think maybe that was what they were going for in the first two eps, because the humor was a lot more biting and really great. but as javabeans wrote in her commentary, i did like how the "rules" and lessons in the variety world were applied to the lives of the producers as well, lives that were actually quite relatable regardless of profession.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thank you for the recap Javabeans! Loved the last few lines so much. I desperately need someone to write Seung-chan/Cindy fanfiction. They were just so adorable together!!

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

I have only found one fic for Producer till now on Soompi! Thankfully it was Seung-chan&Cindy!!

http://archiveofourown.org/works/4174584

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Sorry, I accidentally posted the wrong link, that was School 2015 fanfiction. This is the Producers fic link: http://archiveofourown.org/works/4140678

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I'm happy because Ye-jin is happy (even though I personally would have very much preferred a BSC and TYJ ending). Something about the finale that just frustrates me a little is that for the past 11 episodes, the writer spend so much time building the BSC and TYJ relationship and then at the end just rushes to having Ye-jin and Joon-Moo together. It's just annoying how so much of the drama evolved around BSC and TYJ and then they don't end up together.

Anyway... it's over. Kim Soo-Hyun and Gong Hyo-jin definitely nailed their characters. Love them.. and IU as well.

0
4
reply

Required fields are marked *

Ye-jin has never at any point actually seen Seung-chan as a possible romantic interest, just as the cute puppy hoobae. She's never expressed that kind of interest in anyone but Joon-mo during the show, so while his sunbae crush is a learning experience for Seung-chan, she just doesn't feel the same way and makes it pretty clear, even if she does feel enough pity or goodwill to hear out his confession.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Agree!!

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

i thought that joon-mo and ye-jin would definitely be endgame, since no drama would ever throw away 25 years of friendship and history together for a new love interest. but even so, i really liked seung chan and ye-jin together and felt cautiously hopeful when she said things like "you're a man" and moments like when he flung his arm over her in the car. i don't think she felt absolutely nothing for him- otherwise she wouldn't have asked the bratty writer for advice in the first place. a bit flustered maybe, moved, imagining briefly what it'd be like with him. but of course, she could never choose him over her best friend and first love.
i don't think seung-chan's feelings for ye-jin was just a "crush," no matter how puppy-like he was in his interactions with her. but i'm mostly satisfied with how things ended up, although i do agree that joon-mo's confession felt rushed and strangely out of place. i think his hesitation throughout the drama, sarcasm, tendency to not verbalize, etc. was explained and understandable, and i actually liked his character and found the relationship between him and ye-jin believable, and yet, i wish it had been given more time, been more fleshed out. this goes for all dramas really- i don't like when romantic relationships are finally established in the last episode, with no room for seeing how it develops from there, a little bit of fanservice, etc.- it's just not as satisfying.
i loved ep 11, but the finale was a bit underwhelming. some complaints: a4 couple bored me, the confession felt rushed, the ceo given a sympathetic side that was not really compelling or believable by this point. or maybe i'm just sad that it's over.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

I think every woman will be touched when a man confess to herself so many times even though she has no love feeling on him.

Just like SC, I can also feel he is being touched when Cindy confess to him saying that she will be waiting at the countryman's house.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Somebody please tell me, what is the title of IU's song which played in the ending scene where BSC took all of Cindys luggage? Thank you..

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

You and I - Taru

(From the new OST album released)

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Woah, I really thought that was IU's. Thankyou ?

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

uri ippeun cindy nim is happy so its a happy ending for me!

i just realized that BSC was a lot like chilbong in r1994. and i was rooting for chilbong like crazy but instead was a little annoyed with BSC. i dont know why the differing opinions. but its all good cus im in love with both yys and ksh now. their longing face is bezzzt.

my love for cth just escalated so much. hes not even good looking nor he is innovative in his acting but he just carries so much charisma and he breathes life into his character that even someone as passive as ra joon mo could look loveable in my eyes.

i usually dont mind long episodes, i mean my top dramas include misaeng and r1997, they both have crazy long episodes but i must admit i ff-ed a lot from ep 8-11, mostly bc i sort of knew yj was gonna end up with jm and its painful to see KSH acting all puppy and getting rejected so many times, with the same plot.

but in the end i'd like to thank the production team of this drama for shining a new light on IU and KSH in my eyes. they were just okay for me but now i feel the need to follow their future projects because A+ acting on KSH and brilliant revelation on IU's part.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah, CTH and GHJ are gold standards of reliable and excellent acting but Producer really did wonders for the younger leads in my eyes. IU especially, I love how she went from complaints about miscasting to people taking her performance so much to heart that her manager had to issue a clarification that she wasn't actually like Cindy(despite previously having an image that was the total opposite of Cindy).

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

who knows that FD guy is actually a ghost! *mind blown*

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I like this drama and the ending very much especially the review section of SC's PD journey. I cry when JM confess his love to YJ, YJ has waited for this so long!!! I got excited when Cindy talks to SC at the countryma's house, how lovely she is when she said "i know whom you love with, I cannot bless you, but I will not do anything to interfere ...., then just ask him to remember her" , from their conversation, I can feel SC that he already has feeling on her at that time. Love the last scene of SC & Cindy, SC is man enough when he is with Cindy, so charming!!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Haha they recreated the scene from the Countryside Diary episode of 1N2D last year when the grandmas were fascinated by the helicam. That's one of my favorite episodes of Season 3.

I long gave up on the plot of this drama and only stayed for the 1N2D backdrop and, of course, Cha Tae-hyun. I oftentimes wonder how much of Joon-mo's dialogue about the impending end of 1N2D hit home for Tae-hyun. I wouldn't be surprised if he said those things himself when Season 2 was in crisis. Perhaps the actor having gone through the same thing as the character he portrays just made the scenes even more heartfelt than if it came from another actor. Tae-hyun could have done much more for this drama if only the writers/producers didn't shortchange him.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I had no idea that Producers was set for only 12 episodes. I was shocked to see "(Final)" in the title of this recap. I only watched the episode after I saw the title. I felt so sad I feel like the show could have went longer. It has so much more to tell.

Nevertheless I loved the final episode. It was storytelling at its best. In Dramabeans words,"all ends were tied". I almost cried at Cha Tae Hyun's confession to Tak Ye Jin. I fell for him. I love the whole cast (Gong Hyo Jin, Kim Soo Hyun, and IU) and the show. This is an unforgettable, despite being so short.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I rewatched drunk BSC so many times!
hahahaha.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

my GREATEST disappointment of 2015.
thank god i didnt waste time watching this but read recaps.

all i can remember is
1) smiling face of KSH, he really has a beautiful teeth and smile
2) GHJ's drunken habit is interesting

3) IU has improved her acting

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

The fact that the show was airing without any drama competitors, got 17% ratings in the very last episode isn't that great especially when the other weekend dramas airing in the prime time 10.00-11.00 pm with 3 dramas compete each other could reach 16% in average (MBC drama) and 10% average for KBS1 saeguk drama.

from the very beginning, I think KBS tried to break at least 20% average by putting this drama at the non-prime time slot.

Being objective, this drama has no solid conflicts so the viewers didn't really understand what actually this drama's main topic. It's like they grabbing here and there randomly. The only clear thing in this drama is Cindy. The writer should optimize the senior actors like Cha Tae Hyun and Gong Hyo Jin. And as much as I like Kim So Hyun, I don't think his actings is challenging at all. Not blame him, but the writer. After all, I could say, this is just average drama.

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

Firstly, you can't get more prime time than 9:15pm. That IS prime time. Secondly, it's a new slot, and viewers are not used to watching tv at that hour on Fridays and Saturdays. It takes a whole lot of effort and research to establish a slot that would get people to tune in at a regular basis. You make it sound like its so easy. If that were the case, networks would just slot in dramas at random times to get ratings. Why bother with regular times specially now that ratings are tanking?

But more importantly, Producers not only competed with the MBC and SBS variety shows on Fridays and regular drama on Saturdays at 10pm, they also competed with a very established TMAD Friday night. Because the drama aired for 80 min or more, it overlapped with the usual slots that are more known and popular to people. Considering that, it beat Queen Flower and Lawyers in Love consistently after the initial episodes. To say there is no competition is such an untrue claim. Queen Flower might have a 16% average (I have no idea if that's accurate) but it obviously includes Sunday airing which has nothing to do with Producers. Achieving 17% is a huge feat that almost no miniseries managed in more than a year, I think the cast and crew of Producers have every right to feel proud because the success is earned.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yes it is. It is difficult to gain over 17% within a short period of time, just 12 episodes. Those dramas air at the same time with Producers are not mini drama, most of them have been aired for over 3 months, like Queen Flower , it has its the 30th episode aired last week. From the news, we know that 17.7% is the highest record for mini and medium drama within this 2 years and it is also the 1st runner up after YMFTS (thus both record are hold by KSH).

It is the same result as its average rating through the drama, you may be aware, the length of this drama is higher than a normal drama, it is 80 mins, thus to keep a good result in average rating in each episode is difficult, however producer did it.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Thanks for the recap, JB!

I wanted to watch this series because of KSH. And I was really excited to see who rounded out the main cast, knowing that we would have solid acting. So, I was really surprised at the initial response to the drama. I've never watched one where the reactions were so extreme--you either love it or hate it. In any case, I enjoyed it from the get-go, and despite the switch in direction, I wanted to keep watching.

KSH did an amazing job with BSC, making his character and experiences realistic, memorable, and relatable. I totally LOLed in this ep. in so many scenes, especially during his drunken stupor with his banmal (Ra Joon Pal, you punk! XD), imitating YJ's aegyo antics, and kiss with JM!! Haha... Not to mention, getting freaked out by ghosts and his convos with the FP. Overall, it was good to look back at how he's grown and what he's learned.

Cindy's story was wonderful as well. I love how she finally left CEO Byun's claws and have all these people around her who have her back. I liked what Manager Oppa said about being afraid only because he likes her and not CEO Byun. It was really satisfying when that old video clip aired and CEO Byun was outed as the mastermind behind the lies. Really happy YJ went to those efforts to locate the tape. I also liked Cindy's scenes with SC with the blanket washing and the ending as well.

Glad to see JM finally stepping it up to confess his feelings even though it took YJ to push him at the end by calling him over to kill the mosquito.

Dajung rookie writer with her attitude towards CEO Byun and Jinie was great.

Anyway, I liked this drama and the characters. I'm happy with the way the story ended.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

What I really appreciate about this drama is the faith that the writer seems to have put in IU, and that it was beautifully delivered on both sides (the writer and the actor) to the extent that Cindy became a fan-favorite. It would've been extremely easy to sideline her, since this drama already boasted of three of the most high profile actors in the industry, and especially considering the amount of vicious criticism IU's casting received. I still remember the initial articles where the most upvoted comments were basically telling her how dare she be greedy and steal role from better actors, or how dare she think she was at a "level" where she could reasonably stand with the other three. And when the criticism carried over to the first two/four episodes, when she barely had any screen-time, since she hadn't started properly interacting with the main cast then, I was fairly convinced that she'd be turned into a glorified second lead, instead of an equal part of that 4-lead-drama that we'd been promised. So, despite all the fan-pandering, I really appreciate that Cindy is where the writer and producer seem not to have compromised, either in terms of screen-time or in terms of their expectations of their actor, that they demanded so much nuance of IU. And that the central conflict even in the finale was Cindy's, which would have been unthinkable a few episodes back, and unthinkable even outside the world of the show, in terms of IU's position in the industry, as compared to the other three. To have given IU her due, when she rose to the occasion to really make her character resonate, is indeed creditable.

I love that Cindy's arc is so beautifully organic, that all those elements that received such severe criticism initially- like she was too sleepy/bored throughout, she didn't have the ~diva factor etc., just all sorted themselves out through the narrative. So we could tell later that it wasn't IU who was sleepy/bored playing Cindy, but rather, Cindy herself, because of her insomnia, her lifestyle and her disinterest in the world around her, which is something her arc significantly addressed when she became interested in Seung-chan and decided to step out of her safe, limited world. I'm sure IU must have felt aggrieved because her good/valid interpretation of the character got her so much criticism, but watching her development was honestly quite an experience. Cindy is one of my favorite dramaland heroines in recent times; she's privileged, but she's willing to fight and give up that privilege when it comes from a life she doesn't believe in. She falls in love and makes her feelings known, and doesn't project her rejection as the result of some third party, in that she was always aware that everyone is responsible for their own feelings, and never made her rejection an issue that was contingent on Ye-jin rather than Seung-chan himself (as is almost staple in kdramas). She struggled to be "real" even in real life...

0
2
reply

Required fields are marked *

...initially, and then learned to be sincere even on-screen (like in her MuBank speech).

And the best part for me was that she didn't have to fundamentally "change" for her arc to be successful. I've seen it often suggested that she's so different from when we started out, but I think it's more that we know more about those things that were already a part of her, and thus the way we feel about her has changed. She's changed, in some ways, sure, but it's not drastic enough for her to be a completely different person. She's still awkward, still gruff, still mean/rude sometimes, she's still not winning any communication awards, she's still tired and bored on occasion. But I think it's like the show mentioned before; knowing the intention may not change the end result, but it changes how you feel about a particular thing. Watching Cindy's arc, learning about her background story to becoming familiar with her quirks, it changed how we saw her actions, and I adore that. I would've felt disappointed if Cindy at the end was a completely different person from the Cindy I'd come to love right at the beginning.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Honestly, considering some of the substandard performances put in by some of IU's idol peers in their attempts at an acting career (most notably Suzy), I'm not surprised that the poor girl ended up tainted by association considering her age and image are much like theirs.

And like you said, it would have been incredibly easy to sideline Cindy, and IU with her. She was the rookie of the main four leads both in terms of age and experience, and even a supporting role in a Park Ji-eun drama would have been a huge step up for her considering her lack of any hugely successful projects as an actor. But the writer gave her a fantastic arc, and she justified that faith by nailing her part.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Superb drama, superb cast, superb delivery and execution! I've enjoyed the show very much!
And the drunken BSC with adopted Ye-jin’s drunken aegyo just made my day! I was dying with laughter ^_^ This show is worth watching just for this scene alone! ^_^ No doubt, KSH is a very talented actor! KSH, jang! ^_^

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

Great acting, relatable characters, and - dare I say it - great writing, solid ending, and a tight, believable script. One of the better dramas I've watched. Haven't laughed at anything on TV (whether in English, Korean or Mandarin) as much I laughed at today's episode, for a long time. Also teared when Cindy burst into tears in Episodes 11 & 12, and RJM and YJ's hug. A good drama if you're looking for something different and light-hearted.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

yeah! go cindy!
from the beginning i like cindy's stoic frozen face because i know that face is meant to be cracked and thats what i enjoy follow. and its end up happy end for her. yaaaay!!! :D

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

It was like watching live KBS Producers at work with all the quirky people and territorial stuff going on. Loved how the president stood up for his decision makers against evil Byun, which summed up the company's long run with the ups and downs of the business. Really, the main characters seemed so natural in the interview portions as well as daily life (business, personal, and sometimes both).

IU was gold, and exposed some very real issues I'm sure (Cindy would have starved for three days if I asked her to lose weight) stuff like that, painfully true, I'm sure. The lies and anti-fans, sad, too.

I would have liked the broadcast fairy more if he really was a person, sort of random .

Just enough romance, laughs, and poignant moments to make a good 12 episode show, not to mention top stars.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I just rewatched the "so, you like me? "so, you don't like me? "so, you like anyone liking you?" scene again, and LMAO, Cindy messing with Seung-chan is now one of my favorite things ever, why don't we have more of this!! The finale was so great for them, Seung-chan constantly smiling at Cindy's antics like she's the most adorable thing he's ever seen, and Cindy basically twisting all his words around till he's totally flustered and lost. LOVE IT, haha.

0
1
reply

Required fields are marked *

Yes me too, I rewind this scene several times and pause to see SC's reaction and facial expression, feeling that SC try to tell her he does not welcome anyone crush in him, that means something.

0
reply

Required fields are marked *

In the end seung chan got all the action. Kisses from all characters way to go brother! Hahahaha

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

I might be the only one who does not care for a possible season 2. what we have here is perfect, leaving the rest to our imagination...

I did not know about CTH before this drama, but he showed his acting chops even in his limited screen time... look forward to his future work.

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

yay! Manager Oppa stuck with Cindy!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

@Javabeans - this is a shout-out to you! For the past year, since I started tuning in to DramaBeans, I've been super impressed with your analysis and your writing ability. (Love the podcasts too). But I must say that your recap of The Producers takes the cake, along with your funny tweets about suffering through the process.
This recap of the final episode had me thinking not about the drama, the characters, or the episode itself but of your masterful skill as a writer. I'm a published author myself and I rejoice when I read someone with the masterful skill you have. You string words together exactly the way I want to read them - and I know I can trust you and GirlFriday to give me the intelligent internet jollies I want while I indulge my closet drama addiction. With you at the helm, I feel there's great company in this lifeboat. If we decry the sinking of the ship at least I know we'll all go down together laughing! Wish I could journey from SF to LA to see you two at KCON, but I'll definitely be hanging on every published and YouTubed word after the fact. Thanks so much for your great work!

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *

There are so many great things about Producers, the finale is perfect too.

1) We got JM-YJ lovely ending. The last confession was very sweet and sincere. 25 years of friendship turns into couple is not a joke. They are seriously one of my fave couple of all times.
2) Love the open ending given to SC and Cindy. It's more realistic that he doesn't fall for her immediately just bcos he's rejected by YJ, but there's a hint of budding romance and for sure, they'll become closer and better friends.

Overall, Producers maintains its heart and humour. There's life lesson in every episode too. I really don't mind the format and I don't mind the episode length too.
If you think 100 mins is too long, you can always break it into 2 parts when you watch it, don't need to complain about it. I personally don't really want it to end.

The casts are so great that I don't need to say further. All in all, I really really enjoyed the show ;)

0
0
reply

Required fields are marked *