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Part 1: https://dai.ly/x7o4o3z

Part 2: https://dai.ly/x7o4o41

Part 3: https://dai.ly/x7o4o40

Part 4: https://dai.ly/x7o4o42

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Angie

you said jinyoung would play a good scary bounty hunter but he literally plays something similar in the drama 'He Is Psychometric' where he has supernatural powers that he uses to take down bad people lol. I haven't seen it, but he comes off as crazy and insane there from the clips i've seen, so i totally thought of that when you said it haha. Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zh6QjKzhxa0

Gigi Lai

Yeah he was in an explosion/ accident of an apartment that killed his parents and he uses the powers he acquired from it to find the real culprit that started the explosion. He also meets a girl that is also involved with the explosion. It starts out light at first, but it gets kinda dark towards the end but it is so good and I would definitely recommend the drama if you guys ever get a chance!

Gigi Lai

Also later when you guys get a chance there is a series where GOT7 go to Jeju Island and they work but also have a quick little holiday and I think you guys would really enjoy it. You have seen some clips like where the boys are in the hot tub and the other boys push their heads and the videos of Yugyeom is dancing and singing in a living room from the Yugyeom birthday video on Youtube yesterday. Here is the link for it. https://www.vlive.tv/video/60019

Anonymous (edited)

Comment edits

2022-01-17 20:59:55 When they're talking about "talking down" to each other its more about informality than the way you guys saw it. I wanted to try to explain bc I think this is one of those things that when you sort of get it, it makes watching Korean media funnier, because they play around with it a lot. So this is an incredibly simplified way to explain it but a major part of Korean language is something called speech levels, which are dictated by the formality, politeness and the relationship between the speaker and the audience. Polite casual form is most common in public. Close friends & family use lower levels depending on their age (you always talk upward to elders, downward to younger people, same-age friends speak plainly to each other). Not using polite speech for elders/seniors is considered quite rude. This is why (almost) everyone in GOT7 calls JB "hyung*" and speaks in polite casual to him, while he will call the other members by their first name (adding -ah, eg: Jinyoung-ah). Except for Mark, everyone is younger than him, and he's also the leader, making everyone "lower" by social standards.** This makes the whole Yugyeom & Jinyoung as Chairman & CEO/ Jaebeom as "part-timer" funny because under normal circumstances, they would both be required to show him respect by using polite formal or polite casual speech and calling him by respectful terms. This is also why in situations like this, and that one episode of Weekly Idol where JB dances to "Me Gustas Tu" and everyone calls out "Jaebeom-ah" (instead of hyung or Jaebeom-hyung), he gets flustered/angry, because it means the younger members are calling him informally. (video referenced: https://youtu.be/IYE7E8F--E4) *This is sort of common knowledge to most fans of K-Pop but for clarification, hyung means older brother (of a man) and its also used to refer to close older male friends. **Should be noted that I'm fairly sure most of GOT7 speaks informally to each other off-camera/in private, because they've known each other so long and are so comfortable with each other, but for the sake of this show and most other broadcasts, it still applies.
2019-11-20 04:23:34 When they're talking about "talking down" to each other its more about informality than the way you guys saw it. I wanted to try to explain bc I think this is one of those things that when you sort of get it, it makes watching Korean media funnier, because they play around with it a lot. So this is an incredibly simplified way to explain it but a major part of Korean language is something called speech levels, which are dictated by the formality, politeness and the relationship between the speaker and the audience. Polite casual form is most common in public. Close friends & family use lower levels depending on their age (you always talk upward to elders, downward to younger people, same-age friends speak plainly to each other). Not using polite speech for elders/seniors is considered quite rude. This is why (almost) everyone in GOT7 calls JB "hyung*" and speaks in polite casual to him, while he will call the other members by their first name (adding -ah, eg: Jinyoung-ah). Except for Mark, everyone is younger than him, and he's also the leader, making everyone "lower" by social standards.** This makes the whole Yugyeom & Jinyoung as Chairman & CEO/ Jaebeom as "part-timer" funny because under normal circumstances, they would both be required to show him respect by using polite formal or polite casual speech and calling him by respectful terms. This is also why in situations like this, and that one episode of Weekly Idol where JB dances to "Me Gustas Tu" and everyone calls out "Jaebeom-ah" (instead of hyung or Jaebeom-hyung), he gets flustered/angry, because it means the younger members are calling him informally. (video referenced: https://youtu.be/IYE7E8F--E4) *This is sort of common knowledge to most fans of K-Pop but for clarification, hyung means older brother (of a man) and its also used to refer to close older male friends. **Should be noted that I'm fairly sure most of GOT7 speaks informally to each other off-camera/in private, because they've known each other so long and are so comfortable with each other, but for the sake of this show and most other broadcasts, it still applies.

When they're talking about "talking down" to each other its more about informality than the way you guys saw it. I wanted to try to explain bc I think this is one of those things that when you sort of get it, it makes watching Korean media funnier, because they play around with it a lot. So this is an incredibly simplified way to explain it but a major part of Korean language is something called speech levels, which are dictated by the formality, politeness and the relationship between the speaker and the audience. Polite casual form is most common in public. Close friends & family use lower levels depending on their age (you always talk upward to elders, downward to younger people, same-age friends speak plainly to each other). Not using polite speech for elders/seniors is considered quite rude. This is why (almost) everyone in GOT7 calls JB "hyung*" and speaks in polite casual to him, while he will call the other members by their first name (adding -ah, eg: Jinyoung-ah). Except for Mark, everyone is younger than him, and he's also the leader, making everyone "lower" by social standards.** This makes the whole Yugyeom & Jinyoung as Chairman & CEO/ Jaebeom as "part-timer" funny because under normal circumstances, they would both be required to show him respect by using polite formal or polite casual speech and calling him by respectful terms. This is also why in situations like this, and that one episode of Weekly Idol where JB dances to "Me Gustas Tu" and everyone calls out "Jaebeom-ah" (instead of hyung or Jaebeom-hyung), he gets flustered/angry, because it means the younger members are calling him informally. (video referenced: https://youtu.be/IYE7E8F--E4) *This is sort of common knowledge to most fans of K-Pop but for clarification, hyung means older brother (of a man) and its also used to refer to close older male friends. **Should be noted that I'm fairly sure most of GOT7 speaks informally to each other off-camera/in private, because they've known each other so long and are so comfortable with each other, but for the sake of this show and most other broadcasts, it still applies.