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Warm and Cozy: Episode 10

Good news: Things get better! Not-as-good news: Better is a relative term. At least there’s more cuteness sprinkled into today’s episode, along with more decision-making, which keeps the frustration levels down, and our hero inches closer toward being able to express his feelings in a functional adult way. I suppose it’s a good sign that after living his whole life in a state of arrested development he’s starting to make strides, and feeling the sting of the consequences when you take things for granted, and those things decide they’ve had enough of that nonsense.

SONG OF THE DAY

Welldone Potato, Solji – “잘해주지 말걸 그랬어” (Shouldn’t have treated you well) [ Download ]

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EPISODE 10 RECAP

Town folk crowd into Warm & Cozy, giving Jung-joo the ol’ wink-and-nudge about her marrying the mayor. She tries to correct the misconception, but those ajummas are still keen on pushing the two together.

Poong-san marvels at the crowd and says it’s all because they think Jung-joo’s going to be the mayor’s wife, which makes Gun-woo snappish. Dude, you had your chance, buddy. You deserve to stew!

The sight of all that cash in the register makes Jung-joo happy, and Poong-san asks if she’s okay with the rumors. She figures she can’t do anything about them, while Poong-san plays the imp by telling her that Gun-woo doesn’t like it. Maaaaybe it’s because he dislikes being busy, or maybe it’s that he doesn’t want her being the mayor’s wife…

Jung-joo thinks back to Gun-woo’s emphatic declaration the other night, where he told her he was going to treat her even better now, and wonders what he meant by it. She goes to ask him that directly, and he replies honestly, “I don’t want you becoming the mayor’s wife. I have to treat you well for you to be my woman.” Wait… this is a fantasy, isn’t it? There’s no way real Gun-woo would be this mature.

Yuuuuup, Jung-joo snaps out of it and returns to earth. She marshals her nerves to ask the question, but she’s overcome with emotion and rushes at Gun-woo in a sudden back-hug. She asks if his words meant he was going to like her back, and he half-laughs, “Did you figure it out now? I’ll like you—don’t become the mayor’s wife.” She thrills at the words, beaming and hugging him tight, and promises not to marry the mayor…

…annnnnnd then she wakes up again, clutching a lamp instead of Gun-woo.
#$%^&*()*#@$%#

Gun-woo breaks the reverie and asks if she’s mindless with happiness over liking [him/it/unspecified object]. She gets defensive before he clarifies that he meant liking that they’re doing so much business. Then he realizes where her mind went and gets cheeky, saying it’ll take a while for her to recover from her “sickness” since she’s got it so bad.

Then Gun-woo reminds her of his “I’ll be good to you” speech, which makes Jung-joo perk up—until he says he secured three restaurant reservations. He promises to keep being good to her, and she slaps on a disappointed smile.

He gives her a box to carry outside, then stoops to tie her shoelace, patting himself on the back for being good to her again. She asks why he’s treating her well, and he replies, “If you trip, you’ll get hurt.” THAT’S NOT WHAT SHE MEANT AND YOU KNOW IT.

She looks him in the eye and asks for an honest answer: What’ll do if she keeps liking him? Gun-woo replies that it’s not bad having her like him, as it makes him feel nice to be worthy of her feelings, and that he ought to continue being a good person. And so, he doesn’t feel motivation to help her get over him.

Jung-joo balks at his reasoning and snaps that she’s going to stop liking him. We know it’ll never happen, but I applaud the effort.

Mayor Wook hears that a Jeju restaurant owner is planning to move to the States for a few years to help raise her granddaughter. She doesn’t want to sell her restaurant but can’t leave it empty either, so Wook offers to put her in contact with someone who could run it in her absence.

He heads over to Warm & Cozy with wildflowers picked from near that restaurant and suggests taking Jung-joo to see them in person. She’s hesitant at the implied meaning, and he says gruffly that he didn’t mean right this minute, but promises to pick more flowers for her, and more, and more—so that she’ll grow attached and want to go with him one day. Awww.

Jung-joo puts the flowers in a vase, telling herself when all her balloons are popped (for Gun-woo), she’ll be able to go see the flowers.

Gun-woo doesn’t need to be told where the flowers came from, and in a roundabout way mentions going to buy flowers of his own. He makes it a point to say that they’re for another woman, whom he’ll be seeing this weekend.

He means his mother, whose death anniversary is approaching. According to his siblings, Gun-woo has a tradition of visiting his mother on the eve of her memorial day, to avoid seeing their gossipy relatives who still wonder who his father is. You know, drama, you keep telling me I should care who that is, but I don’t. I really don’t.

Noona wonders how Jung-geun’s love life is going these days, since he didn’t bring anyone to that party. She offers to set him up with a gallery director, only to have him one-up her, saying that the woman he’s seeing is a chairwoman.

Meaning, of course, chairwoman of the divers association. Jung-geun heads over there with his determined face on, clutching the black pearl necklace Hae-shil refused. He misses hearing an older ajumma asking her for a ride home, so when he sees a diver sitting in Hae-shil’s bike, he slaps his helmet on her head and ushers her onto his motorcycle instead. Away they go.

Jung-geun pulls over at a scenic spot overlooking the sea, all proud of himself at how cool he’s being. He dangles that pearl pendant and tells her to take it, then lifts the helmet visor and realizes he got the wrong lady. He immediately apologizes and offers to take her home, only to have Ajumma offer to help him.

A short while later, Ajumma returns with Hae-shil, who reluctantly stays to hear him out. Jung-geun finally introduces himself properly and asks for a date, which is really all it takes (was that so hard?), and Hae-shil agrees with a smiling “Why not?”

Mr. Gong is busy setting up a date too, thinking Wook’s courtship needs a push. He enlists Gun-woo’s aid in tricking the two into a movie date, calling it a “secret seduction” (the name of Yoo Yeon-seok’s new movie, which opened last week), where each would bring one-half of the couple, then ditch them in the theater. Gun-woo flatly rejects, so Mr. Gong just asks Poong-san next, putting Gun-woo in a pissy mood.

Gun-woo glares at Wook’s flowers and makes a move to chuck them, though he gets caught by Jung-joo and pretends he was just checking on them. Bringing up his weekend plans, he offhandedly offers to buy her flowers too, though before he has a chance to explain what it’s for, Poong-san interrupts to ask Jung-joo to the movies this weekend. She lights up at the free tickets and agrees.

Ji-won (blerg) hears from a friend that Gun-woo’s interference the other day was to save her from humiliation, and feels bad for the hand injury he sustained in the process. Should I be glad you have a conscience? But what good is it if you ignore it all the time?

Jung-geun brings Hae-shil in for a makeover, though he adds that it’s not because she’s poor, but that he wants to see her looking more beautiful. He admits to riding the motorcycle to look cool for her, and asks if she doesn’t want to look pretty for him. Hae-shil teases that he fell for her wearing a diving suit—could he handle it? I’m thinking no, but he agrees to try.

She emerges looking lovely and sophisticated and asks what he thinks, and Jung-geun looks at her critically. She’s missing something, he says, and holds out that pearl necklace, which he places around her neck, saying that she looks with black pearls (hint hint). Next on the date course: a fancy dinner on a yacht.

The weekend rolls around, and Gun-woo readies to head out to visit his mother’s grave. He hangs back to ask about Jung-joo’s movie plans, then proposes a game of rock-scissors-paper, where if he wins, she’ll accompany him instead. He tells her in advance what hand he’ll play (meant to give your opponent the choice to voluntarily lose to you), only to have Jung-joo instinctively play the winning hand against his paper.

Miffed, he tells her to enjoy the movie and heads out, while Jung-joo reasons, “If you just said you wanted me to go with you, I’d go with you.” So easily said, and yet, apparently not so easily done.

Poong-san and Jung-joo go to the movie theater, where he excuses himself strategically as Mr. Gong does the same. He sends Wook in first, making an excuse about buying snacks…

but at the same time, Gun-woo arrives and takes the empty seat next to Jung-joo. He asks for a rematch of rock-scissors-paper, informing her that he intends to play paper again—and this time, Jung-joo purposely loses to him.

Brightening, Gun-woo takes her hand and leads her out of the theater, just as Wook arrives at his seat and sees them leaving. Awwww. He sits alone, looking glumly at all the couples surrounding him.

Gun-woo says his errand isn’t pressing and asks Jung-joo if there’s anything she’d like to do today first. She rattles off a list of restaurant tasks, but he suggests they not do any of those and offers his hand, which she takes. Instead, they enjoy the afternoon doing date-like things like window-shopping, eating street snacks, and taking photographs. And when she falls asleep at a cafe, he just watches her with a smile.

Hae-shil thinks back to the end of her date with Jung-geun, when she’d said it had felt like a dream, that she wasn’t quite herself. He’d replied that she’s Hae-shil either way, just as he’s the same guy as that Mr. Song who’d followed her to the diving school. How can he say such mature things and then act like a five-year-old throwing a tantrum? It’s a mystery.

When she tries to return the pearl necklace, Jung-geun says he’d like her to keep it, just as he’d like to keep having her. He tells her to return it if she means to reject him, or to go to see him wearing it if she doesn’t. So for now, she looks at the pearl in its box, mulling over the decision.

In a cafe, Jung-joo eats a shaved ice bingsoo, saying it’s just as pretty as a flower. He says this can count as the flowers he’d offered to buy her, and that leads to a bickering round where she says it’s not the same as real flowers, and he says she could have stayed with Real Flowers (Wook) at the theater rather than losing on purpose.

She digs into her bingsoo angrily and says the cold will make her come to her senses, and Gun-woo supposes that she wouldn’t go with him if that happened. She snaps at him to go alone, and so they end up splitting up—he to his mother’s grave, and Jung-joo to the movie theater.

She runs into Wook there, and he says he saw her leaving earlier with Gun-woo. Jung-joo explains leaving him to return here, though she sighs that she doesn’t know why she’d gone when he didn’t force her. But she’s smarting at his petty meanness, like laughing that she’d voluntarily lost at rock-scissors-paper.

Wook notes that they turned a simple game into a psychological battle, to which she says, blinking back tears, that it’s not even a fight because she’ll always lose to Gun-woo. It upsets her, but she can’t help it because those are her feelings.

Wook suggests running away to eat at a restaurant near the wildflower patch, because with him she’d at least be even in a draw. He points out that running away is one recognized strategem of war when you keep losing in a fight.

Jung-joo is about to go with him, but when she steps aside and runs into Poong-san, she learns that Gun-woo must have really hated the idea of seeing his mother’s grave alone. That changes her mind, and she tells Wook apologetically that Gun-woo’s just played the winning hand again, and she’ll be losing again—she can’t help losing to him, because she likes him that much.

Gun-woo, for what it’s worth, wasn’t making fun of her for fun’s sake; he just seems perpetually incapable of saying the honest thing and hides behind wordplay. So as he heads to see Mom, he sighs glumly that he should have gone with Jung-joo when he’d taken her hand earlier. He’s especially concerned that a certain someone will have come by again this year, and in a flashback we see that last year, Gun-woo had found someone else’s flowers and food offerings at Mom’s grave.

Ji-won drops by Warm & Cozy to see Gun-woo, but sees that the restaurant is closed for the day and visits noona next. That’s when she hears that Gun-woo has a childless businessman uncle who wants to lure Gun-woo into working for him, and perks up at the thought that Gun-woo will inherit that company. UGHHHHHH. Go find a fire, and die in it. It will be fueled by the hatred of your viewers and thus burn eternally.

At the cemetery, Jung-joo reminisces about once thinking they might be twins. They don’t know why her father was in that photograph with Gun-woo’s mother, and as both parents are dead, they suppose they may never know. Gun-woo asks if she ever located her mother, and Jung-joo shakes her head—until Mom comes looking for her, she doesn’t think she’ll be able to find her.

And wouldn’t you know, just then Poong-san fields a call asking after Jung-joo, asking if she runs that restaurant. The middle-aged woman asks for directions to Warm & Cozy, then looks down at a photograph labeled as Jung-joo’s dol birthday.

Gun-woo leads Jung-joo to his mother’s grave, and his face darkens to see the same offering as last year already there. He has a guess as to their source: “My father.” He’s never met the man, but he knows that his relationship to his mother didn’t end well.

The townspeople don’t like the nosy novelist couple poking their noses into the story of Hae-shil’s dead husband, but they ignore the warnings and persist in coming back, like a cockroach that won’t die, or herpes. The novelist wife asks Mr. Gong to confirm whether the man in a photograph is that husband, and his reaction seems to support that it is—and it’s that same photograph with Gun-woo’s mother. Does that make Hae-shil’s husband Jung-joo’s father? What fresh makjang is this?

Noona tries to set Jung-geun up with her well-to-do acquaintance, only to have him say he’s waiting on his chairwoman’s decision. Hae-shil arrives at the resort wearing the necklace and is asked to wait while Jung-geun wraps up a meeting. Noona mistakes her for the maid and gives her cleaning instructions (ouch) while inviting in the blind date, although she does tell the woman that her brother’s seeing somebody else. Both ladies wonder at what kind of impressive woman she must be, and Hae-shil’s heart sinks to see what kind of expectations he comes with.

She excuses herself to leave, and noona talks down to her like she’s the maid again—and then recognizes the pearl she’s wearing and actually accuses her of stealing it from her brother. It’s only when Hae-shil says she’s here to return it that the thought crosses noona’s mind that she might be the woman her brother’s seeing, though she’s aghast at the idea.

Hae-shil hands the necklace back to Jung-geun’s secretary, who delivers it to him apologetically. Jung-geun catches a glimpse of her leaving the resort from his window, heavy-hearted as she walks away. Hae-shil keeps her head up, though she can’t help from crying as she goes.

Gun-woo tells Jung-joo what it was like growing up not knowing who his father was, wondering if he resembled him. It’s why he played soccer when he heard Dad might be a soccer coach, and took up painting when he heard it might be an painter. Yet according to his mother, Dad was a really awful person—and he wonders if he’s like him.

Jung-joo hastens to say that no, he’s a good person, reminding him of how well he treated her. He says that her liking him makes him feel like he is a good person, though he recognizes that if he were one, he ought to let Jung-joo go and not encourage her to keep liking him. But he’s bad, he says, because he doesn’t want to do that—he wants her to keep liking him.

Hurt, she says, “You really are a bad jerk.” She gets up and leaves, and he heaves a sigh.

Noona vents to Ji-won about her older brother’s taste in women, and Ji-won urges her to worry about her little brother too—they can’t just leave Jung-joo dangling around him. United as one front of meddling evil, noona calls Gun-woo while Ji-won heads to the restaurant to confront Jung-joo.

She tells Jung-joo that she means to accept Gun-woo now (…that she knows he’s going to inherit), and that makes it silly for him to hang onto this restaurant for Jung-joo’s sake when really, he only ever started it to wait for Ji-won to return. Which she has. So Jung-joo should leave now.

To enable Gun-woo to cut her loose, noona gives him a check for double Jung-joo’s deposit, to pay her off and get rid of the restaurant. She instructs him to return to Seoul immediately, where he can figure out what to do next with his life.

Gun-woo hugs the envelope close and sighs in contentment, saying how exciting it is to see such big numbers again. Then he slaps the envelope on the table and thanks his sister for the thrill, no intention of actually keeping it. Aww. That’s sweet. Noona shouts after him to take the money, but Gun-woo’s more fixated on the flower vase nearby, plucking a rose to take with him.

Jung-joo’s mulling over Ji-won’s snide words when Mr. Gong arrives at the restaurant with a grandma in tow—Wook’s grandmother, in fact, who insisted on meeting the wife she saw on television. Wook arrives in time to intervene, apologizing for the inconvenience and wondering if more relatives are going to show up unannounced.

Then he notices that she’s alone again, and suggests going to pick more flowers. He urges her to try that running away tactic and offers to hold her hand if it’s difficult, and Jung-joo considers.

Gun-woo arrives just in time to see Wook waiting for Jung-joo, hiding the flower behind his back as he asks what they’re doing. Wook steps aside to let them talk, and he looks (unreasonably!) betrayed to hear that they’re going out to eat dinner. He even offers to make dinner for them here, but Jung-joo says they’re not only going to eat dinner (take that!) and also plan to look at the flowers.

Gun-woo tells her he’ll show her a really expensive flower right here, but she cuts in just as he starts to take out the flower, saying she’s done losing to him. She holds up a hand for another round of rock-scissors-paper, but he sees he’s lost and declines.

Jung-joo leaves decisively, though once she’s outside she can’t help looking backward, fighting with herself. Recalling Wook’s words about leaving with him to at least result in a draw, she tells him she’ll go, and gets in the car.

So Gun-woo sits in the empty restaurant all evening, waiting for her to return, having replaced Wook’s flowers with his own.

Jung-joo returns that night with a fresh armful of wildflowers, and stops short when she finds Gun-woo’s rose in that vase. She tells him to put his rose in his room and pulls it from the vase, replacing it with Wook’s wildflowers.

Undaunted, he asks where she’ll be putting the rose, only to have her reply that it’ll go in the trash can.

She tosses it in the sink, and Gun-woo exclaims that she has no idea how expensive it was—it was worth at least 100 million won. She thinks he’s just blowing steam and says she won’t lose to him anymore. He asks, “Will you be able to do that?”

Jung-joo retorts that because he kept treating her well and doing nice things, she started to lean on him and therefore lost to him. But now, she won’t depend on him for anything, and she won’t lose either.

“Try it if you can,” he challenges. And while she’s working that out, he swwops in and surprises her with a kiss. She stares wide-eyed for a few moments before her eyes flutter closed.

Gun-woo pulls back, asking, “You lost, didn’t you?”

 
COMMENTS

I have the nagging feeling I’m supposed to find that ending scene swoon and romantic—just a hunch! maybe?—but for the life of me, I just can’t see it through that happy-giddy-sweetness lens that I want to see it through. What does it say about this one-step-forward-one-step-sideways-and-around-the-block plot that I have no actual expectation that Gun-woo’s kiss is forward movement? That I’m gun-shy about him doing it, setting Jung-joo all awhirl, and then retreating behind a jokey facade? That’s nothing more than an emotional drive-by, and it’s sort of become his modus operandi at this point.

Yes, there’s still hope that the ending scene is meant to herald in positive developments, and that he’s being pushed toward declaring his feelings rather than hiding behind all the wordplay and doublespeak, which has been his crutch till this point. It drives me dingbatty, the way he says something actually meaning one thing, and then steps back and pretends he only meant the face-value interpretation. That the loaded meaning was just Jung-joo’s wishful thinking, thereby making her think she was imagining all sorts of things when he’s in total control over her interpretation the whole time!

So fine, let’s leave open the possibility that Gun-woo’s kiss is earnest, ignoring that unsettlingly smug smile at the end. But if I believed for a second that he was kissing her because he likes her or is overcome with love or because he plain just wants to kiss her, I’d be the first one jumping up and down with giddiness, making enough high-pitched noises to set a neighborhood of dogs off on a barking fit.

I don’t doubt that Gun-woo cares, and that much of what he’s doing for Jung-joo in the name of “treating you well” is sincere—if I didn’t believe that we’d have no drama. And I do think his fatal flaw is that he is so protective of his feelings that he just won’t put himself out there—he won’t be vulnerable, so instead he pretends everything’s lighter than it is. Trouble is, when you make everything shallow, everything you get back remains shallow.

Jung-joo’s his opposite, allowing herself to be open and sincere, and while this approach gets her hurt over and over, it makes her much more admirable. But you can’t have a relationship when only one side is willing to be serious, and as a result it feels like Gun-woo’s playing a childish word game while Jung-joo’s trying to have an adult conversation. And there’s no hope of communication then!

It’s interesting, then, this drama’s repeated use of the phrase “treating you well”/”being good to you,” which in Korean is used to mean being nice above and beyond a standard level of politeness. It doesn’t necessarily mean romantic interest, but it can certainly lead to crossed signals and confusion, as Jung-joo experiences. He’s acting in all sorts of pseudo-boyfriendy ways, but always retreats behind the “treating you well’ excuse to keep things safe and platonic.

It’s an unintended side effect that in English, the phrase sounds extra ironic because in “treating her well” he’s actually treating her badly. (It may be a little ironic in Korean too, but the phrase is common enough in Korean to describe this kind of attention that it doesn’t feel as contradictory.) It’s something that comes out in his comment to Jung-joo about wanting to be a good person but feeling he might be bad, because his selfishness to want to keep feeling like he’s good (because Jung-joo’s feelings make him feel worthy), it actually encourages him to be bad (in wanting to keep fanning her like for him).

It’s funny that Gun-woo’s selfishness is one of the things that endears him to me, because he seems more like a real person that way and not so much an unrealistic paragon of virtues. Those people are such bores! But… there’s a fine line between selfish and charming and selfishly infuriating—actually, scratch that. It’s not such a fine line. It’s a big, wide line and it shouldn’t be that hard for Gun-woo to stay on the good side of it, and I want the writing to bring him back around before I spew rage-marbles at Yoo Yeon-seok, the unwitting victim of aggravating character development. (Though to be fair, the fact that Yoo Yeon-seok is playing Gun-woo is probably the biggest reason I’m still attached to Gun-woo at all, because he plays him with a cuteness and innocence that mitigates the assy factor.) I want to root for you, Gun-woo! Help me help you! If you don’t, I’ll just have to pout into my popcorn and cry.

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Thanks for your recap and thoughts.

I still like the show. I try to live in the moment, pretending it is the first time I have heard the people say the same things. Then I forget immediately. That way, when the people say the same things again, it doesn't irk me so much.

To be fair, we have ALL been in JJ's shoes. If anyone has figured out how to stop liking someone quickly, please share it with me. GW doesn't deserve her love, of course. At this point, she either needs to try to seduce him away from TypicalFemaleLeadFromEveryDramaEver or get out. His niceness would keep me there, as frustrating as it is, because those seconds of joy - that he may possibly like her - are thrilling and addicting. And yes, enough to keep her by his side for the possibility of more despite the crashing moments when he acts like a dick.

I advise her to get out and see what Wook is cooking up at the ahjumma's restaurant.She would enjoy the work surrounded by a family of locals eager to adopt her into their fold. Make GW fish or cut bait with Baitface. Make him come to her.
Or, and I hope she slaps him so hard his sister's head will spin.

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There is no doubt that 100% the problem of the writer !

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I agree Anna I think this knowledge will be a spoiler for next episode but sure you have pretty good thinking ;-)

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Rather than obssessing on GW's inability to grow up, can we just discuss theories on JJ's mom, GW's dad, HS's dead husband and the one who hit him by accident?

Someone said that HS's dead husband could be JJ's dad. How is that possible?

And what is the relationship between JJ's dad and GW's mom for them to be photographed together?

What kind of 'bad' person can GW's dad possibly be for hyung and noona to keep it a secret?

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From the scenes with the writers doing research I understood that JJ's father is the main character in the novel and would have sth to do with the accident where Hae Shil's husband died. Also, we already know that GW's father is still alive, so they are already three guys, hehe! it is very confusing...

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Here's a twist: the uncle briefly mentioned by Hee-Ra to Ji-Won in this episode is really the father of Gun-Woo.

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I had such high hopes with this drama... and I actually was one of the few who enjoyed it when very few did.

I still adore both YYS and KSR
BUT WHAT IS WRONG WITH GEON WOO'S CHARACTER?!?!?!?! It's almost heartbreaking to see what they do with YYS.

He was a manchild all right but this ep he turned into a total jerk it's almost unforgivable!

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I am also one of the few [ the 2nd ? ] still love this drama!

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There wouldn't be a "plot" with regard to relationship dynamics w/o that - and plus, it's not like JJ is doing something similar to poor Mayor Wook on a lesser level (leaving poor Wook at the drop of the hat when she thinks GW needs her).

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Yes, you are right, that is the point !

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Firtsly, thanks for recaping the drama and eventhough Warm and Cozy is quite frustrating at times, I still enjoy it (mainly for YYS's presence I must admit *shame on me*)

I know many of us are riled up by the bratty behaviour of our main lead and that his jerky attitude give us murderous thoughts but take a breath and let's put ourselves in our hero's shoes for once (I know it's hard but let's try it anyway)

We can all agree that there's a tiny improvement in GW's attitude since the beginning...albeit a small one but still. Yeah he's acting like a grade schooler, yeah he confuses the hell out of our main heroine (mainly because he's confused himself), yeah he's a greedy brat whose insensitivity towards her feelings is revolting at times but despite all these flaws, he has a nice nice/kind side to him :
1/He could have kicked her out when he found out that her illness was a misunderstanding, he did not. Yeah, there's a contract but both were drunk when they established it thus making it void imo.
2/He's complying/giving in to her requests most of the times.
3/When his sister actually gave him the opportunity to sell the restaurant and start anew in Seoul, he refused. The old GW would have gleefully accepted the money and spend every penny on the leech just to please her.

ETC...(it would be too long)

We have a boy (yeah it's the right word to describe him) experiencing budding feelings towards a girl after pining over another girl he has had a one-sided crush for 10 years. You can't get over a 10 years love overnight. GW undeniably like JJ but he has a hard time to come to terms with this new found feeling, he can't handle it, he's conflicted about it, that's why he acts like a jerk to the girl he likes because he wants her to notice him (grade schooler I tell you), to hold onto him while he's sorting out his conflicted feelings. Granted it's quite a childish way for a grown-up man to handle love but GW having being brought up in a dysfunctional family might have a very skewed view of this feeling if you ask me. The leech's hold on our hero is weakening day by day nowadays, he doesn't care much about her -doesn't pick up her calls, rush to JJ's side even when the leech ask him to stay, call her out on her evil ways...no, we definitely improved big time there. That's why, we should cut him some slack.

Concerning the second lead (the mayor), I might be in the minority, I'm quite indifferent to him and I definitely don't have second lead syndrome with him (Seo In Guk in MS or YYS in Reply, I was torn though I still rooted for the mains in MS). I certainly don't ship her with him, he's sure a nice guy but there's zero chemistry between them imo.

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I completely agree with you on the mayor...I just don't get it. I think as friends they are adorable, but I don't really see him as competition to GW (despite his childish behavior). I only get excited to see Wook on screen when I think his actions are going to push our two leads closer together otherwise he's a big no for me.

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Agree with everything here. Last week seemed like such progression, and this week was a merry go round.

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Although I have been reading your hilarious recaps for a while, this is my first time commenting :-) And it's all thanks to that last scene. I just had to say something!

I made an audible grunt in my living room while watching it last night. I completely agree with you that they have made it so hard to just fall into the supposed romance between the two. It's infuriating! That being said, I can't get behind the Mayor either, there is just something about him that I don't like. I really love the overall look and feel of the drama but the plot and character development is a tad disappointing.

P.S. Your recaps have become a must read for me post drama!

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Unless there is some amazing twist ending, we all KNOW Jung-joo and Geun-woo will end up together. But we just finished 10 of 16 episodes and the male lead is giving us so many questions. What can they possibly do to his character to make him more likeable build a believable relationship in 6 episodes.

I get an uncomfortable vibe now any time JJ and GW are together. It's really almost an abusive relationship. If JJ was your sister or friend, you would be screaming and begging her to get away from this guy. Women love their "bad boys", but this is really bad for a drama. Honestly, I think if he beat her she'd still stick around. Maybe that comes next week?

Poor Wook. I guess it just proves once again how many seemingly intelligent women will pass by the "nice guy" for someone who simply makes their heart flutter. I just feel for this guy!

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I think it should have been 24 episodes cos so much needs to develop. For 16 episodes in will be a mad rush in the end.

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Adding more episodes will certainly not help this drama. The reason that it has become such a mess is because there is already not enough conflict to fill up 16 episodes.

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I totally get what your saying about Geon Woo being abusive, but I think Jung Joo just turning around and choosing the nice guy wouldn't be helping any one. If she has no feelings for him then she shouldn't be with him either. It's such a shame that the lack of conflict in this drama is turning Geon Woo into such an ass, though, when he is one of the few kdrama male leads that started off as a carefree and genuinely nice person.

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Right ! Exactly ! Why !!!

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GW is not really a "bad boy" (he's too eager to please and goes out of his way to help, etc.) - he's just confused about his feelings and who he truly loves (even JJ admits part of the reason why she likes GW is b/c he is nice to her - well, most of the time).

And it's not like JJ hasn't left poor Mayor Wook hanging a few times.

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I so agree that I'm only watching this drama because Yoo Yeun Sook is so beautiful on my laptop screen. But Kang Sora's gorgeous face makes the pairing even as well. It's been really aggravating watching the story line/love line get to wherever it is. It's like trying to find an excuse to NOT watch an undesirable. But giving in because it's beautiful. I feel for the mayor and JJ. I played a JJ part most of my life. It just sucks when there are more GWs in this world than the mayor. A girl can dream lol!

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One thing that can be said for Hyung and GeonWoo is that they are not snobs but their sister certainly is. Ugh. She drives me insane.

I wish she and Ji won would just fly away to a place where they can't cause any more trouble.

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when Noona should be the last person to Judge since she is dating an vacant pretty boy who only sees her as a walking piggy bank...oink...

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The drama should be named "Wary & Crazy" instead! Come on Hong Sisters, where is your usual good writing? Let us see the love not the annoyance!

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LOL! Love the name!

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Not so nice drama but I love to read recaps than watching it so far not that much bad i will be satisfy if Jung joo slap gun woo on next episode for his idiocy!! Why he's going for ji won I just don't understand!!!!! Idiotttttt:-(

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So Frustrating! I enjoyed thd progress of the relationship for the 2 leads from epi 7&8.... But the dragging seems to be like forever. Does he or doesn't he? There are still 6 more episodes to go....praying hard for a breakthrough next week.

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Hey! Viewer awesome title like it "wary&crazy" ;-)

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... What do you think about "Mad & Boring"? :)

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Yoo yeon seok looks like song daehan. He's so adorable.

Ok..i really can't make up a theory about the parents because i think it will only give me headaches...i'll just wait for the show to reveal it..and be amazed.

I root for GW. Because i just want my otp to be cannon. And because YYS is playing him. But he needs to grow up...i was so glad when he refused the cash noona gave him. Plus he's soooo petty.

And mok ji won....i get really annoyed when she shows up on screen...can she just go away already?

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You don't like me, but you still kiss me knowing that I like you. OOoo..Bad..Bad Gun Woo.. That would make me cry and run away (if I was a drama heroine..would never happen to me in real life anyway). When in the world is he going to fall sincerely in love with her? That adorably frustrating man-child..

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Your writing was especially florid today!

like a cockroach that won’t die, or herpes

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More and more, I'm rooting for Mayor boy. His first impression was that of a goody-two-shoes, and the villagers' glowing impression of him doesn't do much favours on that respect. But I'm loving more and more how he's pretty street smart (knows how to win over the grudgy ajumma etc) with a bit of a devillish streak (the way he impishly made Jung-jo work for her favours), and goes into things with his eyes wide open (he knows her feelings for Geun-woo, talks to her openly about it but still sticks around). And did I mention his deadpan expressions?

No matter how cute Geun-woo is, they're beginning to lose hold on me. He's sincere, but this blatant toying with her feelings is just too much. Some might say that to some extent, JJ is stringing Wook along too. But she's made clear that she likes GW and doesn't try to reel Wook back whenever she needs cheering up. He just happens to be around to shrewedly promote himself as the smarter choice. GW on the other hand knows that JJ is trying to get over him but he deliberately makes it hard for her to let go even though he knows he has nothing to offer.

That said, I fnd the general openness of this drama refreshing. No hidden agendas, and no noble idiots. I mean, with the exception of the slightly naive noona and Jung-geun (who aren't even rooting for her), everyone else knows Ji-won is a gold digger. Even GW himself, since she pretty much told him. And as much as I hate GW's selfishness, at least he openly admits to his destructive obsession with Ji-won. JJ for the most part tries to tell Wook that she's not ready to consider him. And while JG is a bumbling fool with Hae-shil, he has admitted his conflicting emotions to her. I don't consider Hae-shil's giving up as being a noble idiot too. God knows how JG has already proven himself to be quite unreliable, with his arrogant chaebol attitude to life. There is very little indication that this will amount to anything beyond a temporary infatuation. It's not a "I think it's better for you" attitude, but "I don't think we'll make it" and "I'll be happier in my own world without your society's snobbery".

PS. Jung-geun's words when he took Hae-shil to dress up. For once the guy bothers to say, "I don't mean you look shabby. I just wanted to see you differently". Cuz I hate it when the female lead gets a makeover that feels like it's a way to change them. And wowzer, her reply was the zing!

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Wow this is now turning into the portrayal of a dysfunctional relationship. It reminds me of 'Itazura na Kiss' in which the male lead treated the female lead exactly the same way. Yanking her chain, driving her crazy, disrespecting her, and occasionally throwing her a surprise kiss or a hug or a random act of 'kindness' to prevent her from losing interest.

I liked Itazura na Kiss when it first aired (the anime, and the K drama) but understood much later how hateful this concept is. Just because a guy is hot and rich or hot and intelligent does not mean they get to treat women like doormats.

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Also I find it a bit disheartening that Gun Woo is the source of all suspense this drama generates. The viewer's attention is focused entirely on him while Jung Joo has been relegated to a near second lead status, a lovestruck female lead aka a nonentity whose opinions and actions are totally guessable. This is really shoddy writing from the Hong sisters.

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Not true, I like her as much as him and find her just as interesting :) maybe others feel the same too? Most people talk more about him just because they don't understand him while she seems to be much easier to predict. I find her more complex, blunt and confident than 99% of all other regular female leads plus she has a sense of humor, like usually all Hong Sisters leads do, and like almost none of other kdrama female leads have.

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as my mother always says "they don't call it being a Lucky bastard for nothing" because it would seem that only the bastards and horrible people seem to win in life and gain all the advantages, usually at the expense of the nice people. Once...just once..do i want to see a leading lady (or man) actually end a show turning down the bratty , mentally abusive (yes! that's what it is) first lead and go for the second nice person lead, live a happy ever after while the first lead wallows in his misery...sigh...

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I will throw a revolutionary idea...could it be that we are supposed to hate GW? Will JJ dump him and end up going back to Seoul where she meets a nice guy? That certainly would be an unexpected turn...

This kiss is a thing that she should not forgive. She should send him out to sleep in the street,...or just leave herself. It is really hard to imagine that the writers can change the main lead enough for an acceptable happy ending together with JJ.
At the beginning I was expecting to see how love would make our main lead to grow from the child he is to a man that could be paired with JJ. Now, not sure of what we can expect, 6 episodes left and nothing clear.

I'm a bit sad, I was expecting not great writing but at least good romantic development...I always rooted for the pairings in Hong Sister's dramas and loved their main leads. I was looking forward to fall (harder) for YYS, but they are making it difficult... :'(

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Hi @Applesin!

I like that idea! Kinda like how 500 Days of Summer ended. Sad but nice in a way... I mean, sometimes a broken heart is what will lead us to our One True Love.

So maybe out OTP is still waiting at the very end of the show! (but since this is dramaland, i doubt we'll get this ending... Hehe...)

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Hu Hu Hu.......How poor the writer make Gun Woo like this way .
Anyhow, sorry , I still love this drama very much because of ...........

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This show...I still can't actually decide if I like it or not. It's pretty (in Jeju, that's pretty easy to do), and I really like some of the characters, and then some of the scenes are either so beautifully poignant or hilarious....but in between I just want to kill half of the characters and some of the scenes just make me want to scream at the screen.

I definitely understand now why Yoo Yeon Seok is playing Gun Woo. He is the only actor who could so smoothly pull off playing a ridiculously cute, antagonistic protagonist. He's proven that he's fantastic at playing villains and has also shown he can play the nice guy. He is truly the only person that could be playing this character and still make me like him. Gun Woo as a character is just an immature jerk who has moments of goodness, but they're few and far between. I really really dislike him half the time, but Yoo Yeon Seok reels me back in...barely.
A big part of me wants Jung Joo to end up with the Mayor (I know this won't happen lol) purely because they share a fantastic relationship. They get along really well, have similar values, they both have sincerity and are capable of being adults. Regardless of who she ends up with, I just want Jung Joo to stand up and not let herself get pushed around. We've watched her just follow and lose to Gun Woo and all of the evils for too many episodes now. I want strong Jung Joo back! You do you girl! hahaha
And Jiwon should just disappear. I would like the drama so much more if I never had to see her face again. I don't care what happens to her, I just want her to never show up again.

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So glad that mysterious woman who called for directions and was holding the baby picture of Jungjoo appeared. I haven't been able to shake the feeling that they have the same mother since ep1 when it was presented as a possibility and was never refuted. Now the show is implying that that woman is Junjoo's mother. Right?

Of course they could still have the same father, but now that there's been a kiss, they writers couldn't make them siblings. Could they??

I mean, why start the show planting this idea of them being siblings? Was there no other way to have the two leads meet?

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In their squabble over "flowers", Jung-joo meant Poong-san and not Mayor Wook since at the time, she still thought she had abandoned PS at the theater.

JJ's and Gun-woo's fights/squabbles and make-ups are pleasant enough, but it's missing that witty/fun dialogue/scenarios which has been present in other romcoms like "My Princess", INR2012, "Discovery of Love" and other Hong sisters romcoms like "The Greatest Love", ""Master's Sun", MGIAG and "The Greatest Love."

Thank goodness the cast (except for you know who - and even then, willing to give the actress some benefit of the doubt due to the horrible, one-note writing for her character) is so likeable and makes the best of what they have to work with.

Frankly, find the relationship btwn the older couple more interesting, as JJ and GW have been circling around and around on the same exact issues.

It took a while for Jung-geun to get over his pride (that HE would be the one falling for/chasing after someone) where he has finally started to let go of his insistence that he's the "black pearl" (prize) that Hae-shil should cherish, and now we see the same thing really arise on the other end, where HS's pride prevents her from going forward with the relationship (HS's pride, self-reliance, etc. is exactly what draws JG to HS).

Middle sib/sister, of course, with her big mouth has to ruin things (seems like that's the only role that Hong sister have for Noona - being the loose lips).

Feel bad for Mayor Wook - as JJ is doing to him what GW had done to JJ (leaving at the drop of the hat for another); the "hate" that GW got for that was so unreasonable as that was his "flaw" and set up the dynamics btwn the relationships.

Doubt that JJ will get the same "hate" for doing the same thing, altho not every time it was known to her that she was standing up Mayor Wook (also, JJ like GW b/c he is nice, altho he tries to hide his feeling behind word play and usually does the dumb, emotional thing when he gets upset/jealous).

So, how did that ajumma (who was "kidnapped" by JG) and offers to help him get back to where HS was? (This is like those 5 hour car rides in Seoul where the characters in a drama start off driving in the middle of the day and then all of a sudden, it's dark out).

Not that I really care, but suspect that my suspicions about JJ's mother and GW's father will come to fore.

While hardly great, W&C has improved dramatically from the beginning where it is worth watching; a couple of other dramas started better, but lost steam.

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This is heirs like in its wafer thin plot, except it comes from the hong sisters which i am genuinely befuddled by

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Hey, Guy, GW had made decission, he did not keep the check but pick the flower back to the restaurant gave it to JJ !

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I don't have a good feeling about the kiss too :( he's so nasty and I hope this will wake JJ up to harden up in the next episode. The scissors, paper stone game is so much like the game that JW plays, where she leaves her phone with GW's sister at the cafe as an invitation for GW to look for her and return it. Yet never takes responsibility for her actions cos she's able to say that GW went willingly, just as how GW has been doing to JJ.

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Hi, is there anyone notice that GW had made decision that he gave up the check just only pick a rose back toJJ. At the beginning, he is kind to JJ because he found JJ was a best friend to him and now JJ is not a friend, his feeling and attiude change and not found a way to express, only a bit foolish lo......... I mean the writing .......

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i wished she had pushed him away during the kiss..
i'm so angry right now.

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Yeah i was waiting for her to slap him.

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*flips table*

Ok admittedly i actually liked BIG, it was just the ending that ruined it for me (it was a fun ride!) - but this is definitely the worst Hong sisters drama i have watched... i recognise their flaws in their dramas but there is a way that they include humour, fun and romance that i can't resist and i just can't see it in this drama!

Not even my love the two lead actors can save this. I know its only halfway but how infuriating are these characters. Gun woo is really the biggest man child and he is toying with her the way that Ji won toys with him (and we all know that no one likes her) - so why do i even like him? The actor dur. I'm really saddened that i can't connect to this drama and i may end up dropping it and just skim through the recaps instead. Disappoint...

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Pseudo-boyfriendy: adj, a boy friend that acts extra nice like a knight and feels as much in love as Lancelot but never ever verifies the he feels anything more because of his issues

Case in point: Offering to tell the whole world that you're live-in partners because he made the mistake of making the whole world think that you married the mayor is a verified pseudo-boyfriendy act.

(Come on. Other than pseudo-boyfriends, who else does that sort of mental chivalry???)

This drama is running as my most favorite drama ever, simply because stuff like this happen all the time these days but the world never writes about it because it's difficult to write about.

I love the Hong sisters for this.

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Amen to that!

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hv review the ep 10 and found that why GW like JW because she not hate GW's mother and similar to his mother. But it not worth for GW to do that, poor GW . From ep 9 , still found some sweet shot just like what means sleep together , GW was so repected JJ ........... so worry about GW , JJ will get away !

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You nailed it JB. Gun-Woo sure is aggravating and selfishly infuriating. Needless to say the lack of character development for his character doesn't help things either.

If I was supposed to find the ending kiss between GW & JJ swoonworthy and romantic - well I didn't. Far from it. It was anything but! The Hong Sisters have yet to convince me to drink the Kool-Aid when it comes to the character Gun-Woo.

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I guess I'm in the minority but I actually enjoy what the Hong Sisters have done here. All of the premises are truly cliche, but somehow I'm receiving it as comedic references rather than just unoriginal plot twists. I'm even expecting the makjang because they fully intend to write in a makjang. It feels like the entire drama is a whole quilt of usual drama plots all put together to make a big joke out of the business. Almost like an inside joke, I really find it funny and stress-free. Exactly warm and cozy.

One bit I'm fond of is how the writers somehow delegated all the first lead drama land cliches to the second couple (JG and HS). I think it's quite amusing that they're delivering all the common first lead makjang and frustrating plots with the second couple. The second couple storyline is sooooo painstakingly obvious and unoriginal but funny for me, because as opposed to watching all that happening to the first couple, I'm watching it on the second couple and it makes for lesser impact. Moreso, I find it apt since all those cliches must have been trendy years ago at right about the same time that the second couple must have been at the peak of their youth.

And then we've got our first lead couple as a parallel who are trapped in extremely complex (and yet unnecessary) misunderstandings but are adorably enough really true in this day and age when couples commonly traverse in and out of relationships with half a foot in deep. Maybe it's just me but I do believe that people are hardly vulnerable these days. Most people in relationships play such complex mind games and I appreciate that the drama has captured one of it.

The Hong sisters have added some few twists here and there that make me find the drama refreshing. Yes, the changes are so delicate and are even sometimes accountable to acting skills.

For example, BGW and LJJ are easily my most favorite characters not simply because they're the leads but because they add layers to the inner conflicts that their characters are experiencing. I do highly disagree with the perception that BGW is a typical chaebol. Although, yes that is the obvious and common premise, YYS plays the character with such layers of complexities that make me empathize with BGW. He is also written off with such unconventional backgrounds. For example, he's rich but he's not really the sole heir. He's an ass but not really.

I also particularly liked how the writing has kept us more confused and clouded about BGW's affections for LJJ enough to make us hate him at this point. We're not given scenes of him pondering his feelings with the usual noble idiocy but instead we're watching a guy who acts like he's in love but doesn't say it, probably doesn't even seem to know it. If we were given a clearer perspective of what he was thinking or of what he was completely about then I would have felt less frustrated with him and more understanding of him. Yet, we're given his exchanges with his...

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cont'd

...Noona, JiWon and even his obvious gargantuan effort to expose his vulnerability to JJ via the rock, paper, and scissors game, which all seem to give a peek that he's in, but maybe not. That he's in love, except that he's just completely obtuse. He's decided to be in but he fails miserably at letting her know that he's in. Hence our deeper frustration.

KSR as LJJ is on the complete opposite end of the character spectrum as the vulnerable and transparent end. She's in. That's it. This stated so clearly and it makes us understand her character more and this also adds inches to the frustration that we feel against BGW.

Where these two characters meet is where there is bound to be a tornado of misunderstandings and conflict and as viewers, we're right in the middle of that conflict being tossed around like laundry in a washing machine. I love that we completely understand that the first lead couple is running around in circles. Yes, their antics are dizzying possibly not to the likings of some viewers but I think it's good writing that we're feeling exactly what the couple feels. I like how the plot started with a small circle of misunderstanding, which got solved each time but then became bigger and more complex. It's like writing a small circular scribble at first that goes on and grows bigger and bigger and more tangled with every complete cycle. At this point, we're looking at so many circle-plots wrapped around the first couple so complicatedly that it now has pushed them (and me/viewers) to the end. We feel just as frustrated as they both do. We're just as exhausted and exasperated as they are. I think it takes some serious writing skills for the Hong Sisters to have taken us with the couple in their frustrating fights. Yes, the circles are dizzying and infuriating and that's exactly what the writers want us to feel.

So all in all, I like where the Hong Sisters have gone with this. The whole allusion to recipes and the title being warm & cozy is a complete circle for me because I'm receiving this drama exactly like I'd receive comfort food, say a vat of brownies, which is also frustratingly very delicious but also very frustratingly fattening and bad for my health. Yet I love it.

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I with you. Hong sisters have done an amazing job here. Their writing is on a level different from typical k-drama. I think interational viewers will appreciate it better than her fellow country viewers. Like the layers in the main characters of the drama here. not the typical rom-com. Very much character centred than plot driven.

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I'm so pissed by Geun Woo's smug response after the kiss. I wanna slap him for treating Jung Joo that way. He better mature up by next week's episode and notice his own feelings or ELSE!

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Like most of the commenters here, I also agree that GW is a bad jerk who keeps hurting JJ's heart. Despite this, I'm still rooting for the OTP.

In this episode, GW knows and admits that he is a bad person who holds onto JJ and does not wish to let her go. He still doesn't really know what his heart is feeling for JJ. But he is definitely aware that she is a special person to him. Or else, there is no reason why he wants JJ to accompany him to his mother's grave when he usually goes there alone. Watching JJ sleep with a smile on his face and rejecting the money that his sister gave him are also signs of GW treating JJ as a special person to him.

I earnestly hope that GW will realise his true feelings for JJ after the kiss (I'm disappointed with the kiss though) and establish a sweet relationship with her! Fighting, GW!!

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Fighting ! Everybody ! so long to wait for next ep but very anxious about what will be happen...

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gunwoo is a shit-head..hope he ends up alone but since that wont happen and he'll end grovelling and begging her to forgive him in the end and she'll accept his apology and they'll live happily ever after..I'm simply not interested in this show anymore since that is how it's going to end..I'm also irritated with jung-joo she needs to stop letting gunwoo use her and stop trying to get with that jack-ass..He's treated her like shit over and over and she still has hope he'll like her back and it's pathetic..It's sad reflection of how many women in real-life will chase after a gunwoo, immature and incapable treating their woman properly,whilst ignoring a sweet guy who actually likes her and treats her well..I'm honestly done with seeing female leads constantly getting used and treated like garbage and still wanting to get with the egotistical douches who in reality will never change..

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My comment on his drama: I want to slap the male lead.

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Although GW does make me really angry sometimes. I still love the main couple! And maybe it would be good for JJ to make GW lose a couple of times so he can be sure of his feelings and have him chasing her for real. I cheered for her when she actually went out with the mayor because GW needs to be on the losing side sometimes. Love you GW, but you need to learn a little. I'd like that because while I do enjoy our main couple, I'm as frustrated as JJ is. What's the point if she's the only one wanting a serious commitment and you're treating it like a game? I saw the kiss coming and I was just praying that he wouldn't do it, but of course he did. Come on GW, unless you're going to start reciprocating some feelings, don't do things like that!! It's simply infuriating. Even with the explanation from why GW is so infatuated with JW, I just don't think it's good enough! I thought there would be more to it considering the lengths that he goes to for her. The part when she found out that GW could be inheriting that business made me so sick. Talk about gold digger. GW, dump her!! She's not worth it!! I don't know what it's going to take for GW to realize this. JJ marrying the Mayor???

Speaking of him, I feel so bad for him (although I still want our main couple together). He deserves some kind of happiness and hopefully he'll find it one day.

I just want one episode where we don't take one step forward and then 3 steps back with our main couple. Is that so hard? Pleeease let GW get some sense in the next two episodes. And have JJ push GW back or something because that is not the kiss I wanted. Although like you said in the review, let's look at that kiss from and optimistic point of view(ignoring the smug look on his face) and maybe this could be the real turning point for GW? He can't screw up any worse can he? Right? *laughs nervously*

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Missed the recipe at the end of this as well as 14 and 15... at least there wasn't any on dramafever.com

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"Go find a fire, and die in it. It will be fueled by the hatred of your viewers and thus burn eternally" -I died laughing 😂

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