Saturday, December 31, 2016

Best Korean Drama of 2016

Here's the top korean drama for the year 2016 so far in my very best version:

1. Descendant of The Sun 

Rating: 9.8/10
Descendant of The Sun marks Song Joong Ki's comeback drama after military and the show gets the highest rating in Korea. I love how this drama does not use a very mainstream storyline, instead a plot which many people neglected many times. It's all about a soldier and a doctor who meet at the war zone area and learn how to love each other. I just love Dr. Kang Mo Yeon (played by Song Hye Kyo) so much, because she's an independent woman and knows what she truly wants. She is understandable and I just love her attitude towards love. She needs it, but she is not desperately wanting to hold onto it. Though we all know what would happen in the love story between two people who has to serve for the country with their life, the writer puts the ending story in such a good way, a very realistic one, though I still hope we can get a happy ending scene.

2. Moonlight Drawn By Clouds

Rating: 9/10
Speaking of historical drama, this is one of the best historical drama I've ever seen. You should check this out because this show would never get you bored during the first half of the story. I love the cheekiness of Park Bo Gum, his expression, his voice, his gaze and all of that! Even the innocence of Kim Yoo Jung. The story tells about a young girl who end up as a Eunuch and falls in love with the Crown Prince. Without knowing her real identity, our Crown Prince also falls for her. That's so much bromance and comedic scene involved. One thing I am quite disappointed is that how the story goes on towards the end, because I feel a little bit quite long for Ra On and Crown Prince to get back together. They are forced to avoid each other and I just don't like that!

3. Uncontrollably Fond

Rating: 7/10
Many people have complained that this drama is the worst of all time. Well, that's not wrong since I just don't like how the story goes on towards the end. There is no happiness at all for our main lead. Only had sufferings all the way right from the beginning. We all know what would be the ending right from episode 1. But I just love how the characters' growth each episodes, specially Kim Woo Bin's character. He's a type of bad boy, but he happened to smile and care a lot for Noh Eul (played by Suzy). If you like melodrama, this one should be on your list to check out. You would cry a river!

4. Doctors

Rating: 8.5/10
In terms of story line and personal growth, I just love how Park Shin Hye could grow up amazingly, proving to the world that even though she may not have a good background, but she could achieve something everyone would never expect she could do it. However, regarding the romance story line, well, I don't quite like it since nothing you can peek. It's so obvious that Park Shin Hye and Kim Rae Won would end up together and that's all. My curiousity disappeared once they both confirmed to be together.


5. W - Two World

Rating: 7/10
The OST by Park Bo Ram is amazingly good. I love this drama and every twist they made up to episode 7, where our writer put all the idea and twist in it. But regarding the context, the story line and the background how things could happen, well... that's a lot of questions. Actually I was waiting about this drama back then, but when the story started to get confusing and non-sense, I lost my interest, though I still watch it till the end. But the chemistry between Lee Jong Suk and Han Hyo Joo is unbeatable. I have written about the review on my previous post, go and check it out. I think if you are the type of think out-of-the-box person, you would like this drama.

6. Scarlet Heart:Ryeo


Rating: 5/10
Sadly, the original one of Scarlet Heart, Bu Bu Jing Xin is far better in explaining how things happened in such a strange way and how the effect of messing with the past history could affect the future, and that's how history couldn't be changed. I had expect that this drama would be better since the drama was pre-produced, meaning that they did more for editing and arranging, yet the quality was so lacking and I was very disappointed with the result. What a waste of Lee Jun Ki

Friday, December 30, 2016

Why did Park Bo Gum give Kim Sook a back hug?

Comedian Kim Sook revealed that she got a back hug from Park Bo Gum!

During the 'Cultwo Show' on December 31, Kim Sook revealed, "I've done everything I wanted to do this year," adding that she also met all the celebrities she wanted to see.

Kim Sook continued, "I saw Park Bo Gum. I heard a lot of good things about Park Bo Gum. At the 'Baeksang Arts Awards', I asked Park Bo Gum to give me a back hug, but he couldn't and he left. I told Ra Mi Ran that, and she said that Park Bo Gum remembers. Then I met him at a waiting room during the 'Entertainment Awards', and he suddenly gave me a hug and said, 'Noona, here is the hug that I couldn't give you last time.'"

SO LUCKY! That's why no wonder everyone is loving Park Bo Gum so so much XD

Legend of The Blue Sea - Episode 13 Summary

Afraid that Chung’s thoughts will keep him up all night again, Joon Jae (played by Lee Min Ho) quiets her thoughts with a kiss. Naturally this does nothing to help her sleep, but when she peeks down into Joon Jae’s room, he’s sleeping like a baby. Joon Jae has another dream that night: In Joseon, Lord Yang lights lanterns above the sea knowing that the mermaid will surface, and sets out to hunt her down. Joon Jae sees the mermaid swimming towards the light and wakes up crying, “No, Sae Wa!”
He opens his eyes to see Chung (played by Jun Ji Hyun) and hugs her in relief, and she asks if he had a scary dream. He says, “I was scared. I never used to be afraid of anything—because I had nothing to lose. But now, I’m scared… that I might lose [it].”
Chung: “Who, Sae Wa?” She says she heard everything, and Joon Jae suddenly doesn’t know how to respond. She grows increasingly jealous, wanting to know if Sae Wa is another fish he’s keeping on the hook in his pond, and whether she’s pretty. Suddenly smiling, Joon Jae takes a good look at her and says, “Yes, she’s very pretty.” LOL. She gets pissy at that and demands that he choose: Is it her, or Sae Wa?
Joon Jae laughs, especially when she starts using slang she learned on the internet to indicate how serious she is right now. He does this adorable lean-in so that he’s looking up at her and says, “Of course it’s… you.” He hears her thinking, Is he just saying that to maintain his fish pond? What about Sae Wa? Is he telling the truth? What if he’s conning me? Am I really prettier?

He says it again to reassure her, and she beams. Satisfied, she gets up to go back upstairs, but he pulls her back down on the bed and tells her not to go. She asks if he’s been drinking, since “don’t go” is his anthem when he’s drunk, so he says, “Let’s say I’m drunk. So don’t go.” He pulls her under the blanket and wraps his arms around her, and she snuggles in like it’s her favorite place on Earth.
They’re like that for barely a minute before Chung turns to face him and stares at his lips, asking, “You know that thing earlier… that thing…?” He doesn’t even need to hear her thoughts to know the answer, and kisses her. “That?” he asks. 
She asks if she’s supposed to forget the kiss this time too, but he tells her not to forget this one, making her smile. He snuggles closer and says he’ll have to sleep just like this to prevent his nightmares, and she thinks, I hope you have scary dreams every night! I love scary dreams! Sometime later after Joon Jae is asleep, Chung extracts herself from his arms and runs out to the terrace to scream in her head, Heo Joon Jae likes meeeeee! The whole city lights up as if in response, and she leaps up and down and wonders if her heart is going to beat right out of her chest.
Joon Jae’s mom drinks soju by herself that night, and Jin Joo comes to ask her for a hangover cure and nearly tosses her cookies at the sight of more liquor. Jin Joo asks her what’s wrong, and housekeeper Mom is grateful for the question, since it’s been a very long time since anyone’s asked her that. Mom says she ran into her ex-husband earlier today by chance, and he pretended not to know her. She doesn’t know he’s very nearly blind, of course, and says that he looked at her as if they were strangers. She muses that there are some aches that time just doesn’t cure.
Jin Joo hears that and says they need wine, and pours two glasses. Aw, that’s sweet. She says she had a rough day too, and tells Mom about her drunken outburst at Stepmom and how she even groveled on her knees, to no avail. Jin Joo calls Stepmom a nasty woman who stole her friend’s husband and got the first wife kicked out, and Mom’s face goes pale at the familiar tale. Jin Joo laments the effort she’s put in to send side dishes to that house just to be included in their new development project, and Mom asks with trembling hands what family Jin Joo is talking about. Jin Joo names Chairman Heo, and Mom can’t believe that her ex-husband and his new wife have been eating her food for weeks now. She keeps her reaction under wraps, and murmurs in disbelief that it’s a small world.
Meanwhile, Stepmom makes sure that Chairman Heo’s new will leaves everything to her and Chi Hyun. The lawyer worries that a small amount should be left to Joon Jae in order to prevent a lawsuit, but she assures him that Joon Jae won’t be putting up a fight. As ordered, the shady lawyer and two lying witnesses who have been paid off present Chairman Heo with his new will. He can’t read it or even see where to sign, but they lie that everything’s been left to Joon Jae, and he stamps it with his seal. Chi Hyun watches silently from the doorway.
Nam Doo is confused when he wakes up to a rearranged living room, and finds Chung picking up couches by herself like she’s the Hulk. She says it’s not heavy at all and that she just couldn’t sleep, still bouncing with energy as she sing-songs in her head, Heo Joon Jae likes me~! Joon Jae chuckles to himself to hear her singing it over and over, and thinks that it’s a good thing only he can hear her. She bounds up to him to ask where they’ll be moving once their lease is up, because she has so much energy that she wants to start moving the furniture there now.
Joon Jae ignores Nam Doo’s cries for rice and offers to make pasta for breakfast at Chung’s request, and she volunteers to go buy noodles. She’s overflowing with strength as she skips to the store, and stops to help a grandma pull a cart up a hill, throws out trash for a pregnant lady, and even pushes a car out of the way so that a fire truck can pass in a narrow street. The boys grow tired of waiting for her, but Joon Jae hears her singing the Heo-Joon Jae-likes-me song and says she’s almost here, and Chung bounces in on cue. Nam Doo gapes and jokes that they must share a telepathic connection now.
Over breakfast, Nam Doo tells them that Jin Joo’s con has set them back a considerable amount, and he’s set up a new job. Chung glares at Nam Doo and gives Joon Jae the hairy eyeball, and Joon Jae quickly says he won’t be joining them. Chung beams and thinks to herself that Joon Jae really does like her, but Nam Doo’s face grows dark as he looks back and forth between the lovebirds.
Nam Doo calls Joon Jae aside for a chat and argues that he’s only known Chung for a few months, but they go back ten years. Joon Jae says he’s just trying to keep his promises, and Nam Doo argues that Joon Jae promised to work with him until he found his mother, and that he fed him and sent him to school all those years.
Joon Jae points out that Nam Doo is the one living off of him right now, and Nam Doo gets pissy at that, whining that he’s going to move out because Joon Jae doesn’t seem to care that the heater is broken in his room, and he’s tired of being ignored. Nam Doo quotes an old adage about not abandoning the friends you made when you were poor, and then he points to the swimming pool and asks, “Chung and I have fallen in the water. Who are you going to save first?” Joon Jae says he’d save Nam Doo, and you can practically see Nam Doo’s heart melting. But then Joon Jae adds that if he didn’t, Chung would save Nam Doo herself and he doesn’t want that. Nam Doo deflates, and Joon Jae gets a call from Detective Hong and runs out.
The forensics team is going over the taxi that Ma Dae Young used to kidnap Chung, and Joon Jae joins Detective Hong and his partner at the scene. Joon Jae is hilariously bossy as ever, giving orders to the examiners, who assume that he’s a prosecutor. All they can find in the taxi is the stuffed pink octopus that Joon Jae dropped while being arrested, and they come up empty-handed on evidence that Dae Young was there. Joon Jae asks them to check nearby trashcans and then remembers that Dae Young ran away from the hospital in a hurry, and didn’t have time to wipe down his fingerprints there. He tells them to check the tub of water in the operating room, which looked like it’d been filled recently. That leads Detective Hong to wonder why Dae Young would fill a tub with water out of the blue. Joon Jae has a sudden flash of Lord Yang hunting the mermaid down in Joseon, and grows alarmed.
Housekeeper Mom announces that she’s quitting her job, and Jin Joo is upset, arguing that she’d just gotten used to Mom’s weird personality, and she’ll never find anyone as good as her. Mom assures her that it’s not because of Jin Joo, and that she just wants to rest. Shi Ah comes home and accuses Mom of angling for more pay, and tells Jin Joo not to hold her back.
Jin Joo convinces Mom to stay on just long enough for her to find someone new, sorely disappointed that she’ll be leaving. Shi Ah doesn’t seem disappointed at all, and demands that Mom meet her somewhere later tonight.
Mom carries a load of groceries somewhere, when suddenly a man on a motorcycle zooms by and nabs her purse, making her fall in the process. But the real shocker is when Chung speeds by on foot to chase after the thief. They both disappear offscreen and we hear a loud crash, and then Chung skips back toward Mom to return her purse and help her retrieve her groceries. Mom is grateful and startled, and offers a reward for Chung’s help. But Chung refuses and just skips off with a friendly “Bye!” She leaves the thief tied up to a lamppost.
Shi Ah is annoyed to wait all of ten minutes in her car for Mom to arrive with the groceries, and omo, they ring the doorbell at Joon Jae’s house. Shi Ah says this is her future boyfriend’s house and asks Mom to make dinner for them tonight.
Mom walks in and gapes… at Chung, who’s at home by herself. Mom is happy to meet the nice girl who retrieved her purse, and Chung helps her with the groceries sweetly, while Shi Ah just walks off like a spoiled brat. Just keep digging that grave.

The Lonely Shining Goblin - Episode 8 Summary

Shin (played by Gong Yoo) flings Eun Tak (played by Kim Go Eun) away before she can pull out the sword, then catches her before she rams into a truck. He’s hit by the realization that he’s hesitating to end his immortal life because of Eun Tak, a weighty moment set against a comically inappropriate fireball as traffic turns into wreckage behind them.
Eun Tak is badly shaken by the experience, and goes limp in his arms. Shin takes her back to the house, and it isn’t till she’s back in her bed that she comes back to herself and asks if he’s okay. He says that’s a question that ought to be reversed, but she shrugs it off and says he didn’t know either how much it would hurt, thinking he threw her aside because the act of pulling out the sword was so excruciating. She’s happy to have proof that the sword is movable, though, and that she’s the true bride. His reaction is more muted, so she asks if that’s not a good thing. Shin manages a smile and tells her that it is.
While Deok Hwa (played by Yook Sung Jae) waits for Shin to come home so he can hand-deliver the old scroll (of the Queen), he idly looks up the news and sees footage of that multi-vehicle massacre in the street. When Shin joins him in the living room, Deok Hwa asks if that was his doing. Shin just tells him to clean it up, and that he’s too tired to explain. Deok Hwa gets on the phone to his grandfather and Secretary Kim to alert them to the mess needing cleanup, and has to insist repeatedly that it’s Shin’s doing, not his. 

Secretary Kim assembles a team to take down every video on the internet related to the accident. Deok Hwa goes to the scene directly to deal with the witnesses, armed with a huge suitcase and one reluctant Reaper (played by Lee Dong Wook). He directs people with damaged vehicles to line up next to him, and directs those with damaged psyches (from witnessing the scene) over to Reaper, heh.
Reaper wipes each witness’s memory and replaces them with the idea that the cars were wrecked in a “gust of wind” and the money was merely “a windfall dropped from the skies.” Hilariously, his recitation gets faster and more halfhearted the more times he has to repeat it. Deok Hwa, meanwhile, hands out literal stacks of cash. The last phase of cleanup requires wiping video files from the system, which turns out to be rather easy when you have a walking, talking, memory-wiping aide right on hand.
Back at home, Deok Hwa informs Shin of how much work they had to do because of him. Shin wearily thanks them, which Reaper wearily declines, saying that he doesn’t have the energy right now to fight with him. Shin tells him he’s even more tired, and it looks like they’re about to start another pissing contest, but Shin ends up abandoning the conversation. Lying in bed, Eun Tak replays the moment of being flung into the air and saved by Shin. She cradles her goblin plushy toy (named Mr. Buckwheat) and says happily, “We don’t have to move out now. I’m confirmed as the real bride.” She belatedly realizes she’s sore all over and sticks medicated patches all over, just as a crash sounds outside. She finds Shin slumped on the ground and Reaper cleaning up broken dishes, and worries that he’s dead.
Reaper says that he’s just medicated and leaves him there to sleep it off. Eun Tak suggests he might help carry Shin, but Reaper just tells her good luck with that. Eun Tak crouches next to Shin and asks why he’s taking medication: “Are you still in pain?” 
Reaper glimpses Shin’s door ajar, and can’t resist going back for another look at the painting of the queen, wondering who she is to stir such deep feelings. Dramatic-irony cut takes us to Sunny (played by Yoo In Na), who drinks alone in her empty shop, watching people pass by, telling herself she’ll go home when she counts fifty of them.
Eun Tak ends up sitting with Shin on the ground, lighting a whole display of candles around him. She catches herself before blowing out the match, shaking it out instead, and tucks a blanket around him. She carefully places a pillow under his head and checks their respective temperatures, noting no fever, then lies down to watch him sleep.
She wryly comments on him falling unconscious so randomly, and then Shin replies, eyes still closed, “Because I’m sick.” He admits he was lying earlier when he said he was fine, and she reaches out to pat his hair, telling him to get better.
He tells her that she doesn’t know what’s paining him, and when she asks what it is, he replies, “First love hurts a lot.” Thinking he means someone from his past, Eun Tak gets pettish, saying she must have been really pretty. Shin says, “Very much… every day… it hurts.” Annoyed, Eun Tak tells him to rest up, patting his arm extra hard, telling him that’s not something you say to your bride. “If you look hard, you can see where she’s pretty,” Shin says. “So don’t go.”
We return to Subway, because Deok Hwa’s price for a bribe is apparently a five-dollar footlong. Eun Tak presents him with her notebook of hanja copied from Shin’s journal, asking him to make sense of it. Eun Tak suspects that it’s to do with Shin’s first love, and Deok Hwa confirms that it’s a love letter, confessing a sad love. He starts to read, but Eun Tak grabs the book away, stung, not needing any further confirmation. She mutters that of course it’s possible for him to have one unforgettable person in his nine hundred years, though she doesn’t quite sound as gracious as the words.
Deok Hwa is startled to hear that Shin’s name is Kim Shin (he’s using a different one now) and that he has a sword stuck in him, and pesters her to explain. He gains her interest by mentioning a secret that only he knows.
Deok Hwa tattles to Shin about Reaper crying at the queen’s portrait, and urges him to confront Reaper about it… and then cowers behind Shin’s back when he does just that. Reaper admits that he had an extremely emotional reaction but doesn’t understand why, and asks who the woman is, feeling like he’s seen her before.
Shin replies that she’s his sister. He asks where Reaper saw her, and Reaper guesses that she may be one of his reaped souls. Shin asks if she’s been reincarnated, but Reaper has taken away too many souls to remember everyone, and says that it just feels like he’s seen her before: “I don’t have memories, only feelings. I was just incredibly sad. My heart hurt.” Deok Hwa lights up with an idea, and suggests that Reaper is Shin’s reincarnated sister and urges Reaper to call Shin “oraboni” (brother). Ha, that gets him a swift synchronized shut-down. (But later in his room, Reaper tries to say the word, though he bails before making it all the way through.)
While out on duty, Reaper’s hoobae informs him of a scandal within their ranks: Another reaper found himself tasked with reaping his wife from a past life, so he filed her as a missing soul and they ran off together. Reaper is suddenly very interested and asks how the reaper recalled his past life. Hoobae says that nobody knows but that everybody’s envious, then sighs that the thought of what his past-life crime could be has driven him to drink lately. He wonders how severe that crime was, and whether it’s god’s consideration to have them atone by working in this way. Reaper says that whether one recalls anything, it just all be god’s will—but what he’s curious to know is god’s intention in returning a lost memory. Reaper heads off to usher his newest charges, a mother-daughter pair, to his teahouse. Mom tells her daughter she ordered “heaven” for her, and Reaper presents the teacup to the little girl, calling it heaven.
Eun Tak spots Shin walking down the street, and surprises him just as he’s knocking on a stranger’s door. A tired-looking man steps out, and Shin just orders him to step aside and, with a motion of the hand, sets on fire the noose hanging inside. In wish-god mode, Shin instructs the man to air out his home and hands him a sandwich, telling him he’ll need it.
He stalks off all cool-like, and Eun Tak hastens to match his swagger as the rescued man looks after them in wonder. Then he’s surprised at the sudden arrival of his (estranged, it seems) young daughter, who found her way here on her own, taking a taxi driven by Samshin Grandma. The little girl is hungry, so it’s Subway to the rescue..
Eun Tak peers back to see the man embracing his daughter, and tells Shin he was a little cool today. He says that he just gave the man a sandwich: “What saved that man was not me, but his daughter.”
Then she wonders why the sword moved when it wouldn’t before, and Shin thinks back to Reaper’s comment about it requiring something stronger than the curse—perhaps true love? Going with that theory, Shin prods Eun Tak to say whatever she’s been meaning to say, wanting to hear her love declaration.
He leans in expectantly, and she says, “I know you have a lot of money, but is it okay for you to just stay home?” He insists that he’s worked before, and we see a montage of all the retail sales positions he’s held, using the same tagline each time: “It may not be immortal, but [this product] lasts a very long time!” He’s comically bad at it. Eun Tak figures he didn’t last at the jobs because he was inadequate in some way, which has Shin huffing and puffing in denial, insisting that he’s never been called that before. Eun Tak snipes that his first love must not have told him, and he accuses her of jealousy.

Eun Tak denies it loudly, then asks if she’s from Goryeo or Joseon, and then reminds him of the old saying that first loves never come true. She storms off, telling him not to wait up for her. Shin sighs to himself that he doesn’t want that to be true about first loves not coming true.
Eun Tak runs into a familiar face at the library, who notices that the birthmark on her neck has lightened considerably. Eun Tak isn’t concerned, but the girl looks curiously bothered by it. Ah, she’s a ghost, and Eun Tak is in the habit of buying her coffee even though she can’t drink it. Passing by a mirror reveals her true appearance, bloody and ragged. Eun Tak asks why this ghost doesn’t ask her for help the way all the others do. So the girl asks her to come to see her once in her hometown, bringing flowers, and explains how she died in a traffic accident on her way to her graduation ceremony.
That night, Reaper drops by Sunny’s cafe, and he and Eun Tak gape at each other in surprise. She’s suspicions that he’s sneaking up on her, but he says he’s just here to order chicken. Just then, Eun Tak gets agitated to see Tae Hee oppa walking toward the shop with his baseball team. Reaper asks shrewdly if he’s interrupted their planned date, and Eun Tak stuffs his invisibility hat on Reaper’s head and orders him to wait quietly while she packs his order.
Reaper watches her greet Tae Hee oppa with narrowed eyes, then proceeds to bring home fried chicken every night for days on end. Finally, Eun Tak pulls him aside to ask why he keeps coming to the shop, and if he’s there for her boss. Reaper says he’s just going to look, and tells her that everything will be fine if Eun Tak just keeps her mouth shut about him. She retorts the same, telling him to keep his mouth shut about Tae Hee’s visits and how she’s been sneaking extra chicken in his order.

From alllll the way down the hall, Shin comes charging in to confront her, insisting that he was Tae Hee’s savior back in the day and that his baseball career is all his doing. (Reaper, meanwhile, preoccupies himself trying to figure out just how much extra chicken Tae Hee got, feeling huffy about not getting the same coupons.) Eun Tak argues that Shin didn’t make Tae Hee successful; that was through “my first love Tae Hee oppa’s own will.” Shin tries to bribe Reaper to help with the promise of chicken coupons, but Reaper declines, saying he has his own ways. Shin is left stewing in jealousy, and makes the sky thunder with a sudden storm. That night when Tae Hee gets home, he’s puzzled to find his old piano back in his living room.

After school, Eun Tak is approached by another student, who asks how her college entrance exam went and where she’s applied. They’re both good students, and the girl worries that Eun Tak will be in direct competition. Then she asks if the ghosts say Eun Tak will get in to her schools, and Eun Tak replies that she may see them, but they don’t tell her things. The classmate points out that they’ve been in the same class for three years and are only talking now, then wishes her well on her university interviews. Eun Tak says the same.
As she makes her way to her interview, Eun Tak is reminded of Shin running with her to the entrance exam and smiles. She’s bristly again when she finds Shin waiting for her, until she realizes he’s brought her red scarf to her before her interview. He wraps it around her neck and gives some last-minute advice not to be nervous. He asks if she’s still mad at him, and she says his scarf move has made that hard. He points out that she’s jealous (of his first love), and readily admits to liking it.
Cheer restored, Eun Tak heads off grinning and waves goodbye. As she boards her bus, a scream sounds—a woman has just been mugged by a perp who’s cycling madly away. As he bikes past, he locks eyes with Shin, and now we’re in his mind’s eye, seeing the man’s future: A short while later, the thief crashes into a vendor’s table and falls into the road, right into oncoming traffic.
A taxi plows into the cyclist and skids in the road, causing multiple cars to crash into it. A bus swerves madly to avoid it, and ends up crashing into another car instead. And then, in case that weren’t enough, the bus comes directly in the line of a Truck of Doom, and gets T-boned. The bus is a particularly dire scene, with bloody bodies thrown on top of each other, everybody fatally wounded. 
We return to the present moment, about fifteen minutes before the accident, and Shin wonders why Eun Tak is in the bus when she isn’t in his premonition.
On the bus, a boy says that if he messes up this interview, his mother will kill him, and wishes for a car accident instead. His friend tells him to cut out the morbid talk, while nearby, Eun Tak smiles down at a baby in her mother’s arms.
Nearby, an army of reapers stands by, waiting to do their duty. Reaper’s mustachioed hoobae complains when the upstanding hoobae brings Reaper a coffee. Reaper states that he specifically ordered Hoobae not to get Mustache coffee, still peevish about being stuck with that dinner bill the other night. There are so many scheduled deaths that they’ve called in other departments, and Reaper is assigned multiple souls. He flips through his stack of death cards, noting the mother and daughter pair, and figures he’ll have to prepare more heaven for them.
But Shin swings into action, using his door-portal ability to shortcut himself to the street vendor and advise him to quit early today. The man protests, but Shin offers to buy all his merchandise (piles and piles of socks), trying to hurry him along—he’s only got a few minutes until the accident. Then as the thief bikes toward him, Shin kicks him over early, sending him falling onto the sidewalk rather than in the street.
The thief recognizes Shin from the bus stop and accuses him of following him, while Shin just sends the man’s bike floating into the air and crashing down before his eyes.
Shin holds up a stack of wallets the man has stolen, tossing them to him one by one as he lists the cash amounts. He adds that the man nearly took multiple lives just for that cash, and cites the series of unfortunate events that will befall the latest victim, including breaking a bone and going to work anyway because she can’t afford the lost pay. The thief brandishes a switchblade at Shin, demanding to know who he is. Shin says it’s a pity to let him live, but that he’ll consider it a side effect. He warns the man not to consider himself off the hook for his crimes, saying that he’ll have to suffer the punishment even after death.

“Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth—that is my way,” Shin says grimly. “It will hurt a bit. Deal with it.”