Shin Min A & Kim Seon Ho: Team Dimples!
How much do you know about Team Dimples (aka Shin Min A and Kim Seon Ho)?!
Journalist, Author & Syndicated Columnist
How much do you know about Team Dimples (aka Shin Min A and Kim Seon Ho)?!
NPR asked me to share my thoughts about the Korean series, “Squid Game,” for their Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast. We discussed the controversy about the subtitles, whether the Western actors in Episodes 7 lended anything to the series and whether a Season 2 would be a good thing or not.
Can’t get enough of the “Squid Game” stars? Then you’ll be happy to know that Ho Yeon (who played No. 067), Anupam Tripathi (No. 199) and Oh Young Su (No. 001) are set to appear on three Korean variety series!
“Hospital Playlist” is a good series, where the core friendship is warm and engaging. The five doctors have the kind of relationship with each other that makes me envious … even though I don’t particularly feel a need for that many close friends in my real life. (haha)
Get to know “Squid Game” stars Jung Ho Yeon (who played North Korean defector Sae Byeok) and Wi Ha Joon (who portrayed the police officer Jun Ho).
“Squid Game” is not this year’s “Parasite,” so much as it is a satire in the vein of “A Modest Proposal.” Just as Jonathan Swift pointed out the abject brutality of telling the poor to satiate their hunger by eating healthy, plump babies, Hwang depicts the cruelty of lording a huge sum of money – literally – over desperate people’s heads, knowing that most will die as they lived: penniless.
Want to see more K-dramas that share some of the elements that made “Squid Game” so engaging? KOCOWA has some suggestions for you!
The popular actor Park Seo Jun is making his Marvel debut as one of the cast members of “The Marvels,” currently filming in England!
If you’re not watching “The Veil” yet, you should! Why? The plot, the cast, and the blockbuster feel (thanks to a whopping $13 million budget!) are just some of the reasons.
The series parable seems to be that if you have hate in your heart, you are susceptible to being influenced to hurt others, just because you can. “Bring It On, Ghost” started off as an uneven series. But once you get past the first couple episodes, it becomes a must-see K-drama that’s filled with action and a lot of heart.