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9 votes
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Crying in H Mart: Sobbing near the dry goods, I ask myself, “Am I even Korean anymore if there’s no one left in my life to call and ask which brand of seaweed we used to buy?"
11 votes -
Korean fusion project sets the new world record of twenty second long operation at 100 million degrees
14 votes -
A deep dive into K-pop
11 votes -
More than 200 schools in South Korea have been forced to close just days after they re-opened, due to a new spike in virus cases
13 votes -
South Korea re-imposes some coronavirus restrictions after spike in new cases
8 votes -
Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention releases results of investigation showing that recovered cases that re-test positive later are not infectious
9 votes -
A South Korean soccer team has apologized for putting sex dolls in the stands to make things feel less lonely
7 votes -
The big lesson from South Korea's coronavirus response: Testing and tracing were the key to slowing the spread of coronavirus
5 votes -
The economy of South Korea
4 votes -
South Korea is composting its way to sustainability with automated bins, rooftop farms, and underground mushroom-growing
5 votes -
'Parasite' wins Best Picture
23 votes -
OOHYO - Butter Chicken (2019)
3 votes -
How big and diversified is the Samsung group of companies?
5 votes -
Korean education: A view from the trenches
13 votes -
Olympic destroyer - The untold story of the 2018 Olympics cyberattack
6 votes -
Tears of joy as South Korea's water polo team score – but concede ninety-four
7 votes -
It's meow or never: Seoul's street cats fight for love
7 votes -
How greed and corruption blew up South Korea’s nuclear industry
6 votes -
South Korea's government will switch to Linux over cost concerns
9 votes -
Yukika (유키카) - Neon (네온) (2019)
5 votes -
South Korean women 'escape the corset' and reject their country's beauty ideals
11 votes -
Widow, 81, sole resident of remote island disputed by South Korea and Japan
3 votes -
Netflix series recommendation: Mr. Sunshine
8 votes -
South Korean law to punish "boosters" passes in the National Assembly
6 votes -
Guns and guards to be removed from Korean 'truce village' of Panmunjom
5 votes -
Flowerboys and the appeal of 'soft masculinity' in South Korea
24 votes -
Korean McDonald's VS. Burger King in Seoul, South Korea
5 votes -
Life as a North Korean living in the South
10 votes -
Kim hosts South Korea's Moon for summit talks in Pyongyang
6 votes -
BTS (방탄소년단) 'IDOL' (2018)
4 votes -
South Korean court raises ex-president Park's jail term to 25 years
5 votes -
Axes of evil. Four days, two murders, and one poplar tree that almost ignited World War III.
4 votes -
The Genius (2013-2015): The best reality TV show ever made
The premise is like Survivor: don't get eliminated. The thirteen contestants vie for immunity and each week's loser gets axed. The games are mostly board game-style gambling -- from...
The premise is like Survivor: don't get eliminated. The thirteen contestants vie for immunity and each week's loser gets axed. The games are mostly board game-style gambling -- from straightforward poker derivatives to deckbuilding.
The show is completely unscripted and the cast is a mixture of minor celebrities, professional game players, and -- in seasons three and four -- ordinary folks from the general public.
The show's marketing material describes the show as an investigation of what genius is. There's a case to be made for this -- the games are diverse, well-designed, and the gameplay onscreen is always interesting. You'll be constantly saying to yourself "I didn't think of that," even the second or third time you watch the show. There's often more than one way to win each game.
What the show does well is presenting mundane reality TV dilemmas psychologically. The show takes place in a kind of liminal space where it isn't clear who's going to become the monster and how. There's lighter stuff and camaderie -- on-camera shtick like hugging and bowing and begging, eating delicious food. Sometimes, there's a little bit of sexism.
It ends in something continually getting worse, and nobody's ever sure exactly what. It usually takes more than one episode for someone to pinpoint what it is. A lot of the tension comes from how the first time something strange happens, it's OK or you excuse it as a coincidence -- and the second or third time it happens, your fear of confirmation bias makes it so you're still not entirely sure if it's a pattern. The show spends a lot of time on this precipice.
The people on The Genius are abnormal. Some of them play the games weird and some are weird themselves -- some of them have learned to hide their biggest character flaws and some of them haven't. At the most extreme it's like sitting next to someone on the bus who snores loud, but not loud enough to make you give up your seat, and then he shoves his hand down your throat.
You can view the first season here, subtitled in English: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpwIgWPfNvc . Most of the fans consider Episode 2 a very strong episode, so you should watch at least until that, or skip to it if you're impatient.
If all the psychodrama stuff I mentioned sounds appealing to you, skip to season 2, the darkest season. Unfortunately, the later seasons aren't on YouTube, but you can find them in a lot of places: https://www.reddit.com/r/TheGenius/comments/5s7eh9/the_genius_s2_s3_and_society_game_file_links/
I've been rabidly evangelizing this show to all my real life friends for years. Please ask any questions that will lead to you watching it! (PS: To those who've seen it, please don't post spoilers in this thread!)
10 votes -
'Spycam porn' sparks record protests in South Korea
6 votes -
Axes of evil - Four days, two murders, and one poplar tree that almost ignited World War III
8 votes -
Memories of Murder (2003) - Ensemble staging
5 votes -
France's freeclimbing 'Spiderman' arrested while climbing Seoul skyscraper
7 votes -
BTS - FAKE LOVE (2018)
3 votes -
North Korea's Kim Jong-un crosses into South Korea
5 votes