not to be a forever-alone amount of in love with Flower Boy Ramyun Shop or anything, but...
YOU GUYS
The latest episode was SO good. SO GOOD.

It's the end of the third week, right? We're finally getting into the part where the heroine is facing up to her inadequacies and how she's been stifling her true self into something else, and this then brings the hero into confrontation with the true her--that he's been minorly attracted to all this time. BLAM.
There are two different scenes where she's trying to give him a clean break, and...we get to see Jung Il-Woo's excellence.
The positive reviews of his talent didn't really mean much while he was playing the fun spoiled-rich-boy bits, but in this one you get to see his heart breaking while he doesn't even really know WHY. Or what, even.

Of course, there was also boy-bickering and the set-up of the three rivals and the heroine all deciding to go in together to make the Ramen Shop a success, and the band-of-misfits dynamic is already slaying me.
The frenemy-boys are shaping up to be particularly hard on me, since there's no straight-up nice guy, straight-up clingy guy... This reminds me of the intersecting-triangles of Sunkyunkwan. Where you know from a certain point that you're going to break your heart over every single character, because you love them all, and they have conflicting goals.
Anyway, it was an excellent palliative against confronting the fact that there is no way to put all the awesome of Letters to My Nemesis into the query. Apparently, I actually wrote subplots...
YOU GUYS
The latest episode was SO good. SO GOOD.

It's the end of the third week, right? We're finally getting into the part where the heroine is facing up to her inadequacies and how she's been stifling her true self into something else, and this then brings the hero into confrontation with the true her--that he's been minorly attracted to all this time. BLAM.
There are two different scenes where she's trying to give him a clean break, and...we get to see Jung Il-Woo's excellence.
The positive reviews of his talent didn't really mean much while he was playing the fun spoiled-rich-boy bits, but in this one you get to see his heart breaking while he doesn't even really know WHY. Or what, even.

Of course, there was also boy-bickering and the set-up of the three rivals and the heroine all deciding to go in together to make the Ramen Shop a success, and the band-of-misfits dynamic is already slaying me.
The frenemy-boys are shaping up to be particularly hard on me, since there's no straight-up nice guy, straight-up clingy guy... This reminds me of the intersecting-triangles of Sunkyunkwan. Where you know from a certain point that you're going to break your heart over every single character, because you love them all, and they have conflicting goals.
Anyway, it was an excellent palliative against confronting the fact that there is no way to put all the awesome of Letters to My Nemesis into the query. Apparently, I actually wrote subplots...