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Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Her Private Life (2019)/True to Love (Bora! Deborah) (2023)

 


Her Private Life 


Fandom is one of the most puzzling aspects of humankind – we dedicate so much time, money, and effort towards things (sports, movies, music) that, in the grand scheme of things, are unimportant. Sure, these things help enrich our existence, but the amount of dedication we give to these things is insane. I am not exempt myself from this madness – I will often irrationally scream at the television during a Packers game. Do I expect the Packers will hear my criticisms and make the proper adjustments? No, but it doesn’t stop me from making an ass of myself. Her Private Life is an interesting look at K-pop fandom and all its many quirks and unwritten rules. Well, at least the first half is – the second half is more of your standard K-drama romance (albeit an extremely well-done K-drama romance). 

The always likable Park Min-young stars as Sung Deok-mi, who works as a curator at an art gallery, but spends all of her free time fangirling over a K-pop idol, Sian. She is an extremely devoted fan: her apartment is cluttered with Sian memorabilia; she runs a blog, The Road to Sian, that is devoted entirely to her bias; and she follows him around, takes pictures of him, photoshops them, and then uploads them to her blog. A word that constantly gets thrown around in Her Private Life is “otaku” – it is a Japanese word that essentially means someone who is obsessed with a specific subject.  Deok-mi is a self-described “otaku” and when she is at work she cosplays as a normal person. She has kept her fandom a secret from her co-workers – out of fear that they might ostracize her if they find out. Plus, the former director, Uhm So-hye, absolutely detested K-pop idols and Deok-mi lied just so she could get the job. When Deok-mi goes out to take pictures of Sian, she wears a face mask and baseball cap to hide her identity.  I was initially going to write a snarky comment about how, at age 33, Deok-mi is a bit too old to be fangirling over boy a decade younger than her, but then I remembered walking into the houses of grown men whose homes were cluttered with Green Bay Packers memorabilia. 



When the old director, Uhm So-hye, is forced to resign after an investigation of embezzlement and slush funds – she avoids jail, but her husband ends up doing time. Even though she has resigned as art director, Uhm So-hye still runs things behind the scenes – she is the head director of TK Cultural Foundation, which funds the museum. The gallery needs a new art director and Deok-mi initially believes that she will be given the job because of her five years of devoted service. She is disappointed when she finds out that job has been given to Ryan Gold, a New York artist/critic whose opinion can either make or break an aspiring artist. Ryan Gold wants to turn around the gallery’s fortunes and to spark the public’s interest, he decides to do an exhibit that features the art collection of various celebrities, one of whom just happens to be Sian. This requires him to cancel an exhibition of a local artist that gallery had been working on. Deok-mi is appalled by Ryan’s callous treatment towards the artist and when he asks her to schedule an appointment with the old man, she spills the beans (even though Ryan told her to keep it a secret). The old man writes Ryan a letter to say that they should cancel exhibit and this makes Ryan furious – he confronts Deok-mi about this and when she admits she told the old man about his cancelled exhibition, he fires her. It turns out that Ryan was going to compensate the old artist by arranging for an exhibit of his work in New York.



Deok-mi gets a part-time job working at her friend’s, Lee Seon-joo, coffee house. It also turns out that Ryan is a regular there and always orders the same thing – steamed condensed milk. However, it turns out that Ryan took Deok-mi for granted and the gallery falls into complete chaos with her absence. Ryan approaches Deok-mi at the coffee house, admits his mistake, and apologizes. Despite his apology, she is still reluctant to return to work. After a few choice words, Ryan orders a drink and Deok-mi decides to play a prank on him by putting a touch of coffee in it. It turns out that Ryan is allergic to caffeine and is rushed to the hospital after he passes out. Deok-mi, naturally, feels terrible and when he wakes up, she apologizes and agrees to take back her old job. The more interesting aspect of Her Private Life is that Ryan and Deok-mi settle their differences early on – by the third episode that have a pretty good working relationship. Normally, it isn’t until the halfway point of the series that the two romantic leads finally bury the hatchet. 

With their squabbling out of the way, the series can move onto to the next subplot – Deok-mi being mistaken for Sian’s girlfriend and the shockwaves it creates among the fandom. Ryan has arranged to meet Sian and brings Deok-mi along – it turns out that Ryan and Sian are both fans of the same artist, Lee Sol, a mysterious artist who has only nine paintings to her name and nearly half of them have gone missing. Ryan owns two pieces, and Lee Sol owns three.  The nine paintings are all just part of one big painting – they are of bubbles floating in the air. In an interesting twist, the distant Ryan and the warm Sian actually hit it off. It also turns out that they live in the same apartment building and Sian constantly visits Ryan. You would expect an art snob like Ryan to look down on an idol like Sian, but he accepts Sian for who he is. There is never a sense that Ryan views Sian’s music as “inferior.” 



It is while they are at this meeting that a couple of things happen – while Deok-mi is using the bathroom, she begins to fangirl big time and can’t believe she is sitting in the shower that Sian uses, then she accidentally turns out the shower and gets all wet. Ryan notices that she is drenched and that her dress has become transparent, so he gives her his jacket to cover herself. It also turns out that Sian owns the exact same jacket. This becomes important because a superfan of Sian, a girl who goes by the name of Sindy, is taking pictures of the meeting and manages to capture Deok-mi’s reflection in the window. When Deok-mi exits the apartment building, still wearing Ryan’s jacket, Sindy snaps a few more pictures and uploads them – the fans mistakenly believe she is wearing Sian’s jacket and are outraged. Shit hits the fan when it is rumored that Deok-mi is Sian’s girlfriend. This is one of the unwritten rules of fans: it is okay for a fan to fantasize about being with their favorite idol, but they are forbidden to realize that fantasy. Dating an idol is off limits – the idea being that he/she belongs to all the fans and no fan should be given preferential treatment.  

The fans even turn violent and even assault Deok-mi outside of the art gallery.  Sian’s management tries to diffuse the situation by claiming that it is just a rumor, but they fail to acknowledge that the jacket belongs to Ryan (even after he insisted that they make that point clear). Because of their inability to clarify this one point, the fans still believe that Sian and Deok-mi are dating. Ryan is genuinely concerned about Deok-mi’s safety and even offers to pretend to be her boyfriend to help put these rumors to bed. Deok-mi, at first, rejects his offer but once she realizes that this rumor is not going away any time soon, she agrees to be his pretend girlfriend. They even have Deok-mi’s best friend, Lee Seon-joo, take “paparazzi” pictures of them on a date, and then Deok-mi uploads them to her blog.  It is also around this time that Ryan has figured that Deok-mi is really "The Road to Sian" but keeps it a secret from her. He becomes of a member of the blog by using the pseudonym "Latte." He even chats with Deok-mi a few times while using his alter-ego. 

There is also another reason why Ryan pretends to Deok-mi’s boyfriend, he is worried about her being “outed.” Ryan mistakenly believes that Deok-mi and Seon-joo are lesbian lovers. This is a based off a misunderstanding that happened before Deok-mi and Ryan were co-workers – Deok-mi and Seon-joo took a pilgrimage to a hotel that Sian had spent the night at. They desperately want to spend the night in the same hotel room that Sian stayed in, but the problem is that Ryan had already been assigned that room. Seon-joo approaches Ryan and asks if they can switch rooms– she tells him a vague story about be with the person she loves. Ryan initially scoffs at her suggestion but later sees Deok-mi and Seon-joo in the lounge, laughing with and hugging each other – he fails to see that they are watching a video of Sian on Deok-mi’s phone. Based off the visual evidence, he assumes the two of them are lesbian lovers. He also feels bad about being so dismissive towards Seon-joo and agrees to switch rooms with her.  He is worried that, with all the dirt the fans are digging up on Deok-mi, she will be outed as a lesbian and be further ostracized. This actually gives us a good look at Ryan’s character – he may come off as a cold prick, but he is actually a very considerate person.  At this point in the narrative, he barely knows Deok-mi and Seon-joo yet is willing to oblige both of them. While taking the “paparazzi” photos Seon-joo coos about how great Deok-mi and Ryan look together, this naturally confuses Ryan. When he later finds out that Seon-joo has a six-year-old son, he is even more confused. Whne the truth finally comes out (Deok-mi and Seun-joo are straight and just good friends) he feels like a total jackass.



Just when it seems the rumors have died down, and the two of them can drop the act, the gallery hires Kim Hyo-jin, the daughter of the former director, heiress to the TK Cultural Foundation, and, more importantly, she is Sindy, the superfan who started the rumors in the first place. She specifically took this job to keep an eye on Deok-mi and Ryan to see if their relationship is genuine. She spies on them and writes down all of her observations in a blog, so they have no choice but to keep up the act until Sindy is satisfied.  Of course, in true K-drama fashion, the two of them eventually fall in love with one another.

The supporting characters are likable enough – especially Nam Eun-gi, who is essentially Deok-mi’s adopted brother. Her parents took him after his mother abandoned and raised him as one of their own. He grew up with Deok-mi and now finds that he is beginning to have feelings for her (this is relatable – it would be incredibly easy to fall in love with Park Min-young). He is also a judo instructor (he won a silver medal in judo) and even teaches Seon-joo’s son, Geon-woo. When Deok-mi falls in love with Ryan, this makes Eun-gi jealous. I always like it when TV shows present both points of views- it easy to believe Eun-gi would fall for Deok-mi but it is also understandable as why she doesn’t reciprocate his feelings – he is like a brother to her. She later admits that she has taken him for granted and she does cherish him, but as a brother.  In my past blogs, I have always advised anyone suffering from unrequited love to run away and move with their lives, but in Eun-gi’s case this easier said than done – Deok-mi and him share a long history, were raised in the same household, and have a close relationship with her parents. Plus, he is also like an uncle to Geon-woo, who is the son of Deok-mi best friend, Seon-joo. However, at the end of day, Eun-gi just wants Deok-mi to be happy and when he finally realizes that Ryan is a perfect match for her, he is able to move on. It also turns out that Deok-mi and Eun-gi had met Ryan before (when he went by his Korean name, Heo Yoon-je) but will touch on that later.



Seon-joo has marital problems of her own – her husband, Kang Seung-min, is a TV producer and he is working on a documentary that paints K-pop fans in an unflattering light. However, he keeps that last part secret from Seon-joo and, in his lowest moment, he logs onto her laptop and uploads pictures from her computer (including the “paparazzi” shots she took of Deok-mi and Ryan) and includes them in his documentary. He reluctantly agrees to do this documentary – he was told by the higher ups that if he did this hit piece on K-pop fans he would be promoted to variety shows (something that Seon-joo desperately wants him to do). He swallows his pride and does the documentary and nearly ends his marriage in the process. When he was just working on the documentary, it is easy to rationalize his actions – he’s doing it for the promotion. But once he goes behind his wife’s back and upload photos from her laptop, it is nearly impossible to rationalize such actions. In fact, it can be argued that Seon-joo goes easy on him – she does give him a good scolding and the silent treatment, but that’s about it. He also tends to use their son to rationalize his behavior (“Think of Geon-woo”).


The character of Kim Hyo-jin/Sindy is also given a nice character arc. Like Deok-mi, she devotes all of her spare time obsessing of Sian - she also follows him around, takes pictures of him, and uploads them onto her blog. The difference between the two is that Sindy uses her blog to spread gossip about Sian and is the one responsible for the rumor that Deok-mi and Sian are dating. She uses her connections to get a job at the art gallery so that she can keep an eye on Ryan and Deok-mi - whenever she notices anything unusual about their relationship, she writes about it on a blog. She is a spoiled brat - her mother Uhm So-hye has given her everything she has always wanted. However, her mother also greatly disapproves of K-pop idols and when she learns that Sian is going to displaying his art collection at the gallery, she throws a huge hissy fit and demands that daughter quit. Hyo-jin refuses, and this leads to a falling out between the two of them - Hyo-jin moves out of her parent's house and So-hye takes away her car and credit card (she is hoping that Hyo-jin will come crawling back to her).  Deok-mi's mother takes in Hyo-jin (at Deok-mi's request) and while she is separated from her mother, and with the support of Deok-mi and Ryan, Hyo-jin is able to find her own. Ryan gives her the job of coming up with merchandise for the upcoming exhibit, and after throwing out a few rotten eggs, she comes up with an idea that the Ryan genuinely likes - she wants to hand out miniature art galleries to children (that also comes with miniature paintings they can hang on the walls).  She shifts her passion away from Sian and onto her job - initially she was greeted with apprehension by the staff but, by the show's end, she has become a member of the family. It is also implied that Eun-gi and her will become a couple. 



It also wouldn’t be a K-drama if you didn’t have Kim Mi-kyung as the lead female’s doddering mother. In The Heirs, Kim Mi-kyung gave a rather touching performance as the mute mother of the lead female protagonist (played expertly by Park Shin-hye). She perfectly embodies the working-class mother – she can be a bit standoffish at times but will also do anything to make her children happy, including sacrificing her own health. She doesn’t approve of her daughter being an “otaku” and really wishes she would find a husband. When she meets Ryan, she is delighted that her daughter has found such a handsome and successful man. Ryan also further wins her over with his polite manners – he accepts that ungodly amount of food she has made for him, even after Deok-mi gives her mother a scolding for making so much food. Her father is even impressed by his manners – Deok-mi’s father collects rock, polishes them, and puts them up for display. When he shows off his rock collection to Ryan, he takes a genuine interest in what Deok-mi’s father has to say. This also reveals another side to Ryan – he is willing to accept people’s eccentricities. He could have easily deemed Deok-mi’s father as “insane” but he patiently listens to what her father has to say, and, more importantly, doesn’t make any disparaging remarks about his hobby.



The most surprising aspect of Her Private Life is the intimate nature of Deok-mi/Ryan’s relationship. This might seem minor but, when compared to other K-dramas, the relationship between Deok-mi and Ryan is pretty steamy – after the two of them have finally confirmed their feelings for each, they share a long, passionate kiss. Your average K-drama is pretty chaste (when compared American dramas) and physical contact between the romantic leads is minimal – a K-drama’s idea of characters “consummating” the relationship is often a kiss on the lips. In Her Private Life, Deok-mi and Ryan not only share a passionate kiss, but they are constantly pawing at one another and even spend the night together. In contrast, I recently watched a Korean romantic comedy, Fortune Salon, and that movie ends with the two romantic leads embracing each other.

I also breathed a sigh of relief that after Deok-mi and Ryan became a couple, they manage to stay a couple – the writers resisted the temptation to contrive a way to break them up. There is no “noble sacrifice” nonsense nor a misunderstanding that threatens to tear them apart. It’s like the writers and director realized that Park Min-young and Kim Jae-wook have amazing chemistry and it would be really dumb to separate them. I already touched in a previous entry, how irritating I find the “noble sacrifice,” because it often requires the lead male character to behave in a frustrating and irrational manner. The female lead drops all sorts of hints that she loves the male lead and the only conclusion he can come to is, “She is better off without me!” UGH!!!!  Deok-mi and Ryan do have a misunderstanding but that is before they are officially a couple. Deok-mi hears from Ryan’s female friend, Choi Da-in, that he wants to put an end to their pretend romance. This is only half-true – he does want to stop pretending to be her boyfriend because he wants to be in a genuine romance with her. However, when Ryan is about to announce this to Deok-mi, he makes the mistake of letting her speak first, and she insists they call off the pretend romance. He misinterprets this as her wanting to cut off all ties to him and gives her the cold treatment. However, the writers don’t linger on this subplot for too long, and by the end of the following episode they both reveal their true feelings for each other and then share that long passionate kiss (that lasts all the way until the next episode).  There is also a nice bit of subtle writing when we are shown Deok-mi’s affections shifting from Sian to Ryan – Sian is doing a fan “meet and greet” at a mall and Deok-mi (or more accurately, the Road to Sian) has been selected to have her picture taken when Sian. While sitting in the chair, she notices that Ryan is watching the event from the second floor of the mall and begins to take photos (even though her bias is standing in front of them).  She doesn’t end up uploading photos from the event onto her blog, because she has spent the entire evening photoshopping a picture of Ryan.



The other nice touch is that Ryan accepts Deok-mi being a fan girl of Sian. He figures out early on that she is The Road to Sian and even joins the chat group on her website (under the name “Latte”).  Deok-mi is so worried that Ryan will have a negative opinion of her that when he first visits her apartment, she forces him to wear a blindfold and tells him that she doesn’t want him to see her apartment because it is a mess.  Granted, he finds her “fangirling” to be a bit silly but also realizes that she isn’t doing any harm. Plus, she eventually moves on from being an “otaku” and devotes her time and energy to more productive things. Again, as much as I’d like to thumb my nose at fan girls, I can’t do so without being a hypocrite. Deok-mi may go overboard with her fandom, but it’s nowhere near as bad sports fans who engage in fisticuffs with other sports fans (YOUR TEAM SUCKS!!!).

By avoiding the whole “Let’s separate them main characters because reasons,” this allows the writers to focus on more interesting subplots, like Deok-mi and Ryan coming to terms with the traumatic childhoods and moving on from them. They both have repressed memories from childhood – the earliest memory Ryan has is being abandoned at the orphanage his supposed mother at the age of seven. He occasionally has flashes of an earlier memory – his mother working on a painting. He concludes that his mother must be Lee Sol – the painter he bonded with Sian over – because the woman in his flashback is working on the same piece of Lee Sol artwork that he owns. It is also likely the reason he was attracted to Lee Sol’s paintings in the first place. It also revealed that Ryan had to quit painting because he suffers from Stendahl’s syndrome, and it was this painting that brought on this condition.

Deok-mi wasn’t abandoned at an orphanage, but she senses that there is something that she has forgotten something important. She has flashes of a childhood memory but doesn’t understand the context. It turns out that Ryan also has the same childhood memory – a group of children playing together in a playground. Eun-gi also has the memory, but his memory is much clearer and deliberately keeps it a secret from Deok-mi. When he learns Ryan’s Korean name, Heo Yoon-je, it immediately rings a bell. This when it Her Private Life becomes a bit contrived by wrapping up all its plot points in a convenient bow – turns out that Lee Sol is not only Ryan’s mother but Sian’s, as well. She no longer goes by the name Lee Sol, but Gong Eun-young. She didn’t abandon Ryan at the orphanage, in fact, she didn’t abandon him at all. She dropped him off at the playground to attend a business meeting and on the way back she was hit by a car, which put her in a coma. By the time she woke up, Ryan had been adopted and was living in the United States – she spent years trying to find her son, but to no avail. She eventually remarried and gave birth to Sian. In my review for Skate Into Love, I talked about how one of that show’s central themes was forgiveness, this also applies to Her Private Life.  When Ryan first comes face to face with the woman that he believed abandoned him, he is, naturally, very emotional and angry. However, after he has been giving time to cool down, he is willing to hear her side of the story. Once he learns everything his mother has been through, he accepts her apology and embraces her. 



It isn’t just his biological mother who he forgives – it turns out that the woman he abandoned him at the orphanage was none other than Deok-mi’s mother.  After his mother was in the car accident, and he was left alone at the playground, Deok-mi’s mother found him playing with her children and took him in for a month. Shortly after, Deok-mi and her younger brother, Deok-soo, were in a car accident, which claimed his life and resulted in Deok-mi suffering from amnesia – she completely forgot that she had a younger brother.  After this accident, Deok-mi’s family took a huge financial hit and they simply couldn’t afford to feed three mouths, so her mother dropped Ryan off at the orphanage. She later regretted her decision and went back for Ryan, but by then he had been adopted. Her mother has lived with this shame her entire life, but after Ryan finds out, he doesn’t hold any grudge against her and even tells her that he is grateful she took him in for a short period of time.

I always joked that the world in K-dramas is an incredibly small place, but that takes that idea to the next level. Not only is Ryan the half-brother of the same K-pop idol that Deok-mi fangirls over, but he also briefly lived with her family when he was seven. It often feels like a Korean version of Oliver Twist – with all the revelations that are made at the end. It’s not enough to undermine the entire series – the actors sell the hell out of the material – but it requires a huge suspension of disbelief from the audience. It is unbelievable that Deok-mi’s parents and Eun-gi would hide the memory of Deok-soo from her, out of fear that it might confuse her. Every year they visited his grave; they did it behind Deok-mi's back. Granted, it does give us a touching scene where Deok-mi mourns her late brother. Some of this can be written off a destiny – the fact that Deok-mi and Ryan met when they are little and later reunited as adults can be explained as fate playing a hand in their lives. The writer also goes a good job of setting up the reveal that Ryan and Sian are long lost half-brothers – on multiple occasions Sian senses that there is a bond between Ryan and him and even refers to Ryan as his “brother.” It’s when you take all these things together that it becomes a bit too much.

True to Love



True to Love has a few similarities as Her Private Life – two incredibly likable leads (Yoo In-na and Yoon Hyun-min), interesting supporting characters, and an underlying theme of moving on from the past.  It hits the usual K-drama plot beats – the two romantic leads initially dislike one another; the supporting characters have their own relationship problems they must overcome; and the male protagonist comes to the false conclusion that the heroine would be better off with him and decides the make the “noble sacrifice” (or “noble idiocy” as coined by K-drama blogger, Dramabeans) and tries to push the lead female away by putting up a cold front.  It is an entertaining show for the most, but there were times where I found myself shouting at the television by the overall stupidity of the male lead.

Yoo In-na stars as Yeon Bo-ra, a dating expert who has written three bestselling books and has her own popular radio show, where she gives advice to listeners to who write in. By every metric, she is very successful woman, but she is now entering into middle age (the show doesn’t give you specific, but Yoon In-na was forty years-old when the show was filmed) and is looking to take that next step in her life – marriage. She has dated Noh Joo-wan (the heir to a fried chicken franchise, Mom’s Chicken) for the last three years and he seems to be dropping hints that he is going to pop the question. At one point he asks Bo-ra out to dinner because he has an important announcement to make – Bo-ra is expecting a proposal instead he enthusiastically tells that her that Mom’s Chicken is going to be merging with a pizza chain, so their customers can now enjoy fried chicken and pizza together. Her world comes tumbling down when she catches Joo-wan cheating on her with a younger woman (who he introduces as “his cousin”).  



Her male counterpart is Lee Soo-hyuk, a publishing planner at the publishing house, Jinri. His best friend (and business partner) is Han Sang-jin, who is the representative of Jinri and is determined to sign Bo-ra to a contract. She is a hot commodity and Jinri wants a piece of the pie. Soo-hyuk dislikes Bo-ra because she presents herself as a “know-it-all” and believe she is a grifter. In the love department, Soo-hyuk isn’t faring any better than Bo-ra – his girlfriend of four years, Yu-ri, recently broke up him because of his inability to define their relationship. He never verbally confirmed his love for her, he just assumed she knew how he felt. She reveals that she has been seeing another man who is much more open with his feelings and then she verbally assaults him with insults. The irony is that Soo-hyuk actually bought an engagement ring and was going to propose to her, but he made the classic mistake of allowing her to speak first. Of course, he could have silenced her by taking out the ring and proposing to her and, given what we learn later on, she probably would have accepted. Soo-hyuk is a likable guy but he is not the brightest bulb at times.



 Soo-hyuk initially blames Bo-ra for the breakup – Yu-ri wrote into Bo-ra’s radio program and asked for advice on what to do about her noncommittal boyfriend. Bo-ra advised her to break up with him. Soo-hyuk was listening to Bo-ra’s radio show in the car and was able to put two and two together. When Yu-ri breaks up with Soo-hyuk, she paraphrases Bo-ra’s comments. However, he begins to sympathize with Bo-ra when he also witnesses Joo-wan cheating on her – this was entirely unintentional, the two of them shared a cab and they accidentally grab each other’s cellphone. Soo-hyuk was returning her cellphone, when he also spotted Joo-wan kissing another woman in his car.

Bo-ra’s lowest point occurs when she is the guest of honor at the Golden Night Party (which is being hosted by an influential lifestyle magazine, La Bella, where her friend Yoo-jeong works at) – she takes the stage completely shitfaced and proceeds to go an anti-man and anti-woman rant (she says women are only “after the diamond ring” and that all men are “bastards”), and then she slips on her heels and falls on her back, accidentally exposing her panties to the outraged audience. Soo-hyuk happens to be attending this event and goes onstage, covers Bo-ra up with his jacket, and then carries her off the stage. The public turns on Bo-ra and her social media accounts get flooded with negative comments. She was originally supposed to be featured on the cover of La Bella magazine, but they replaced her photo with one of the girl group, BLACKPINK (in your area). The guest column that she wrote for the magazine was pushed towards the back. However, once the public finds out the reason for her drunken rant (her boyfriend cheating on her) she begins to receive an outpour of sympathy.

This perfectly depicts the fickle nature of human nature – when Bo-ra is on the top of the world, everyone wants to work with her. After the scandal, everyone turns their back on her. When she, once again, receives support from the public (mostly single women), everyone wants to work with her again – Jinri publishing is not an exception to the rule. After her drunken rant, Sang-jin is no longer interested in signing a book deal with her. Soo-hyuk, to his credit, defends her.  When she, once again, becomes a hot commodity, Sang-jin is eager to sign her to a book deal. Lucky, for Sang-jin, Bo-ra is in desperate need of money (her younger sister was scammed out of three million won) and she is willing to take whatever offer Sang-jin is willing to give her (her only demand is that she was an advance on her payment). The subject of her book is how to deal with a breakup and how to win back your ex-boyfriend. Her plan is to make her ex-boyfriend jealous to the point that he will be begging her for forgiveness.  Soo-hyuk offers to be a willing pawn in her psychological war against Joo-wan – therefore it is only a matter of time before the two of them fall in love. 



True to Love also benefits from a rather strong supporting cast of characters, all of whom have their own relationship problems that need to be resolved.  Bo-ra’s best friend is Lee Yoo-jeong, who is a writer at La Bella magazine (and played by Girl’s Day member, Park So-jin) and is married to Yang Jin-woo, the owner of a café. Their relationship has devolved into one devoid of passion – they haven’t had sex in ages and barely see one another. Jin-woo, unbeknownst to Yoo-jeong, has his own man cave hidden in the basement of his café. Whenever he wants to blow off steam, he goes to his safe space and plays video games. This comes at the expense of his relationship with Yoo-jeong, who often spends many nights alone. As a couple they go through the motions – they make public appearances together and put on a happy face when they are hanging out with friends, but privately there is nothing there. They even put off having children, so they could establish themselves in their career path, but now that they have both found success, they only care about their own needs and lack the desire to have kids.  The writers don’t assign blame to either of them, it is just an unfortunate reality that has snuck up on them. 



Bo-ra’s younger sister gets romantically involved with the awkward but sweet natured Yang Jin-ho. The two of them first meet a night club – Jin-ho has just got out of the army and wants to meet women – when he first sees Do-mi on the dance floor, it is love at first sight. However, when it comes to women, he is inexperienced and just can’t work up the courage to approach Do-mi (she is his ideal woman, after all). However, it seems that fate has dealt him a favorable hand when Do-mi walks up to the bar and stands right next him. He realizes it is now or never and manages to break the ice with her. They have an awkward conversation that it is often interrupted by long pauses as Jin-ho figures out what he wants to say to her, but he does manage to get her phone number. He is convinced that Do-mi is his destiny – the fact that the two of them keep bumping into one another seems to prove his point. He even gets a part time job at Jin-woo’s café as a server (Jin-woo and him served in the same army unit) – a place where Do-mi and her sister regularly hang out at.  Do-mi is initially apprehensive towards Jin-ho, but once she realizes that he is a good-natured guy, who is looking for a long-term relationship, she can’t help but to fall for him charm.



Sang-jin’s ex-wife is Seo Su-jin, the editor of La Bella magazine (and Lee Yoo-jeong’s boss) and she still holds a grudge against her ex-husband. He never figured out why she asked for a divorce and on a few occasions tries to bury the hatchet with her, but she is just not interested. He is also oblivious that the youngest employee at his company, Bang Woo-ri, has a crush on him. Woo-ri is an agreeable girl, with an upbeat personality, and doesn’t have a single mean bone in her body. However, she also becomes a subject of gossip among her co-workers who are convinced she is having an affair with Sang-jin. They begin to grill her big time but Soo-hyuk comes to her defense and scolds them for giving her such a hard time over something that isn’t really their business. They do apologize to Woo-ri and, since she is not one to bear a grudge, she accepts their apology. Sang-jin is interested in Woo-ri but he is hesitant to get involved with her, because of their significant age difference (he is in his forties while she is in her early twenties) and the fact that he is a divorcee and still hasn’t gotten over his ex-wife.



His absent mindedness often makes things awkward for Woo-ri – she asks him if he wants to see a movie and he says yes, but he also then invites the rest of the staff to come with them, because he assumed that Woo-ri wanted to do a group building exercise. When he does figure out that Woo-ri likes him, he is noncommittal towards her – she even tells him that she wishes he would just reject her so she could get over him.  This is an important lesson for young people – never dick around with a person’s emotions. If you are not interested in them, tell them straight up (even if it hurts), because the sooner you tell them, the sooner they can get over it. And for the love of God, don’t do the “just friends” thing.  Sang-ji even overhears the staff bombarding Woo-ri with nonstop questions about their relationship but stays hidden in his office – Soo-hyuk is disgusted by his best friend’s cowardice in the moment. Sang-ji should be coming to Woo-ri’s defense, but it is Soo-hyuk comes to her aid.

It takes a long time for Bo-ra and Soo-hyuk to admit that they have feelings for each other. They two of them share a kiss at a karaoke bar, but then both agree that it was a “mistake.” They were both caught up in the emotions of the moment and weren’t thinking clearly.  As Bo-ra gets her confidence back, her ex-boyfriend, Joo-wan comes back into her life, and wants to get back together with her. Soo-hyuk is convinced that this is what Bo-ra wants and begins to distance himself from her (the “noble sacrifice” on full display) even though it is obvious to anyone with one good eye that Bo-ra is no longer interested in Joo-wan. She drops multiple hints throughout the series that she is no longer interested in Soo-hyuk, but Soo-hyuk is too dense to pick up on them.  She finally spells it out for him (“I LIKE YOU”) and he is still noncommittal (“I don’t know.”) In the last two episodes, Soo-hyuk behavior becomes increasingly more frustrating – I got so annoyed with his dumb decisions that I found myself yelling at the screen (“WHAT ARE YOU DOING, YOU MORON? SHE LIKES YOU! CONFESS YOUR FEELINGS!”).  Bo-ra tells him that she wants to hear him verbally confirm their relationship, he just has to utter three words (“I love you”) and she is his. But inexplicably, he still decides the “noble sacrifice” is the correct route – even though Bo-ra has no desire to get back together with Joo-wan. After over complicating things, he finally comes to his senses and confesses his love for Bo-ra.  The main flaw with True to Love is that it is two episodes too long – the plot could have easily been resolved in twelve episodes, but the writers were determined to drag it out to fourteen episodes, which explains that late introduction of the “noble sacrifice” subplot.

The main theme of True to Love is moving on from your past: Bo-ra moves on from her ex-boyfriend; Soo-hyuk moves on from his painful breakup from his ex-girlfriend; and Do-mi moves on from adolescence and embraces adulthood.  It is not easy moving on, and the characters all go through a “trial by fire” – but they come out of the mess as stronger individuals. Bo-ra’s ego takes a massive blow when she catches Joo-wan cheating on her – she is, after all, a self-professed dating expert, but couldn’t figure out that her boyfriend was two-timing her. This results in an identity crisis – who is the real Bo-ra? She used her relationship with Joo-wan to define herself – the two of them had seemingly healthy relationship and she was convinced that it was only a matter of time before she would be showing off an engagement ring to all of her friends and acquaintances. Bo-ra likes the idea of marriage, but she fails to realize that marriage takes a lot of work and isn’t always peachy keen. Her breakup with Joo-wan and Soo-hyuk’s noncommitment helps her refine herself – she would love to be in a relationship with Soo-hyuk but she also not going to lose sleep with if he rejects her. She doesn’t want to be with a man who can’t verbally confirm his feelings for her – she doesn’t want a guy who speaks in riddles and metaphors, she wants someone who can straight up tell her how he feels. This was also the same reason that Soo-hyuk lost Yu-ri. 

Soo-hyuk’s relationship with Yu-ri is a mirror image of Bo-ra’s and Joo-wan’s – Yu-ri breaks up with Soo-hyuk and gets engaged to another man, but just when it looks like Soo-hyuk has forgotten about her, she comes back into his life. Yu-ri even confesses to Bo-ra that one of the reasons she said yes to her fiancé was to hurt Soo-hyuk – she sends him an invite to her wedding and there is a part of her that hopes he makes a scene.  She doesn’t feel good about such vindictive thoughts, but she can’t help herself. She is human, after all. With her wedding around the corner, she begins to have second thoughts, calls up Soo-hyuk, and asks him to meet her at a restaurant. Her call also coincides while Bo-ra and Soo-hyuk are on their way to a wedding rehearsal of a mutual friend of Bo-ra and Joo-wan – Bo-ra knows that Joo-wan will be there and, with Soo-hyuk’s permission, wants to flaunt Soo-hyuk in front of Joo-wan to make him jealous. Bo-ra begs Soo-hyuk to ignore Yu-ri and stay with her, but he is compelled to go to his ex-girlfriend and tells Bo-ra that he will meet her at the rehearsal. Soo-hyuk doesn’t want to getback together with Yu-ri, he has gotten over her, but he does want to bring closure to their relationship. Yu-ri pours out all of her insecurities and doubts to Soo-hyuk, and even suggests they should start over, but he assures that she is engaged to the right guy. He owns up to his past mistakes and apologizes to Yu-ri for not defining their relationship. When Yu-ri’s worried fiancé shows up, Soo-hyuk tells him that he is a high school friend of Yu-ri and that he was the only friend who showed up to their get together. This meeting is not only good for Soo-hyuk, but Yu-ri, as well – it alleviates all the doubts she is having about her upcoming marriage. All bitterness has disappeared, and when Yu-ri marches down the wedding aisle, Soo-hyuk is genuinely happy for her.



Soo-hyuk also keeps his promise to Bo-ra and meets her at the wedding rehearsal – he immediately becomes the talk of the party. All of Bo-ra’s friends are curious about him, while Joo-wan jealously looks on. While Soo-hyuk has moved on from Yu-ri, Joo-wan begins to have second thoughts about breaking up with Bo-ra and asks her to give him a second chance. He tries to convince her that he is a different but manages to turn her off with his controlling behavior – Bo-ra and Soo-hyuk are having a business meeting at Jin-woo’s café and Joo-wan interrupts it by insisting that Bo-ra have dinner with him. Soo-hyuk, inexplicably, believes that this is what Bo-ra wants and ends their meeting. This is when Soo-hyuk’s behavior becomes increasingly frustrating – it is obvious to everyone, except Soo-hyuk, that Bo-ra wants to be with him and considers Joo-wan a total pain in the ass. But Soo-hyuk cannot take a hint to save his life and even after Bo-ra declares her feelings for him, he is still unsure. UGH!!!! He finally comes to his senses and proclaims his love for Bo-ra, but this honestly should have happened two episodes earlier.



The character who has the biggest arc is Bo-mi. She begins the series without a care in the world – she lives with her older sister and shirks all responsibilities. She is significantly younger than Bo-ra and like many girls (hell most people) in their early twenties – she is not ready to settle down and just wants to hang out at the night clubs with her friends. Her relationship with Bo-ra is combative at times – Bo-ra wants her younger sister to grow up, while Bo-mi views her older sister as a bore. When Bo-ra’s world falls apart, Bo-mi realizes that she can’t always depend on her older sister to bail her out and begins to make more sensible decisions in her life – she gets a waitressing job at Jin-woo’s café. She also falls in love with Jin-ho – the two of them complement each other rather well. They both accept each other’s eccentricities and, rather than trying to change each other, work on solutions that will benefit both of them. When Bo-mi gets pregnant, Jin-ho steps up the challenge and supports her every step of the way. She decides to have the baby and Jin-ho couldn’t be happier – his main goal in life was to find a woman to love and have children with. Bo-ra isn’t initially happy about their relationship, but Jin-ho eventually grows on her – once she realizes is a well-meaning individual.



True to Love is not one of the better K-dramas I have watched – but it is still a fairly entertaining show, thanks to in large part to its lively cast.  In fact, I’m rather impressed with Yoon Hyun-min (who plays Soo-hyuk) – this is the third drama I have seen in him in the last month, and he managed to give a distinct performance all three TV series – in Beating Again, he effectively plays one of the most detestable villains I have ever seen (he is a backstabber who wears a mask of empathy); in Tunnel, he plays a humorless homicide detective with a troubled past (his mother was murdered by a serial killer); and in True to Love, he plays a well-meaning but dense planner at a publishing house – a guy who is knowledgeable in many things except love. It’s worth watching for his performance alone (though, he is ably assisted by Yoo In-na, who is her usual charming self).  


Her Private Life
Cast: Park Min-young (Sung Deok-mi), Kim Jae-wook (Ryan Gold/ Heo Yoon-je), Ahn Bo-hyun (Nam Eun-gi), Park Jin-joo (Lee Seon-joo), Jung Jae-won (Cha Si-an/Sian), Kim Bo-ra (Kim Hyo-jin/Sindy), Kim Mi-kyung (Go Young-sook), Maeng Sang-hoon (Sung Geun-ho), Kim Sun-young (Uhm So-hye), Park Myung-shin (Nam Se-yeon), Hong Seo-young (Choi Da-in), Lee Il-hwa (Gong Eun-young/Lee Sol), Im Ji-kyu (Kang Seung-min), Jung Si-yul (Kang Geon-woo), Yoo Yong-min (Joo-hyuk), Kim Chang-hoi (Secretary Kim).

Director: Hong Jang-chan
Writer: Kim Hye-young
16 episodes ~ 60 minutes

True to Love (Bora! Deborah)
Cast: Yoo In-na (Yeon Bo-ra), Yoon Hyun-min (Lee Soo-hyuk), Joo Sang-wook (Han Sang-jin), Hwang Chan-sung (Noh Joo-wan), Park  So-jin (Lee Yoo-jeong), Kim Ye-ji (Yeon Bo-mi), Koo Jun-hoe (Yang Jin-ho), Lee Sang-woon (Yang Jin-woo), Song Min-ji (Seo Su-jin), Hong Hwa-yeon (Bang Woo-ri), Kim Ji-an (Lim Yu-ri), Park  Ri-won (Da-mi).

Directors: Lee Tae-gon, Seo Min-jeong.
Writer: Ah Kyung
14 episodes ~ 60 minutes. 

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Skate Into Love (2020)



I decided to take a break from K-dramas and check out a few offerings that come from our friends in China. I know what you’re saying, “But China is our mortal enemy!” That may be true, but I also think it is important to separate the people from their government. I am not especially fond of the United States government, but I don’t hate my country. I also know from experience that people have way more in common than they might think, and it wasn’t for social media and blind allegiances to political parties, we might be able to set aside our differences and find genuine solutions. I apologize for the lecture, but I would rather be an idealist than a cynic.

Skate Into Love is an interesting blend of romantic comedy, sports show, and propaganda. Its unfortunate title belies its overall quality – it is fairly realistic look at college athletes and the pressures they have to deal with.  The three central characters all take part in ice sports – Tang Xue competes in women’s short track speed skating; Li Yu Bing is the star player on the university’s ice hockey team, the X Dragons; and Yu Yan is a promising figure skater. They all have their own insecurities they must overcome, and their path to glory is often met with failure. 

Skate Into Love follows the formula of most romantic comedies – the two main protagonists, Tang Xue and Li Yu Bing, are initially antagonistic towards one another. There is however an interesting twist to the formula – the two of them were desk mates in elementary school and Li Yu Bing still holds a grudge against Tang Xue – he was a small, timid boy in elementary school and viewed Tang Xue as a bully. When it came time to attend middle school, Li Yu Bing chose to attend a different middle school than Tang Xue, so he could get away from her. Flash forward to six years later and Tang Xue just happens to transfer to the very same university (Lin Da University) that Yu Bing is attending.  Her initially major is veterinary science – she quit short track speed skating after being injured in a tournament. However, she is still drawn to the ice and applies to be an assistant to “The God of Ice,” unaware it is Yu Bing. When the two of them finally meet, she immediately recognizes him and expects a warm reunion – but Yu Bing is filled with such resentment that he makes her life a living hell. However, he also begins to develop feelings with her, and he is torn between his desire for revenge and giving Tang Xue a second chance. The inner child in him wants revenge but his current self wants to forgive her. The latter wins out and the two of them bury the hatchet (Yu Bing realizes he has gone too far in his revenge). Xang Tue can’t focus on her studies because she wants to get back on the ice and compete. Yu Bing uses his influence into convincing coach of Girl’s Short Track Speed Skating to give Tang Xue a chance – he also pays for her training fee and buys her new ice skates – he also urges the coach to keep this a secret from Tang Xue. When she receives the ice skates, she assumes they are standard issued.



The coach is skeptical of Tang Xue’s abilities – she hasn’t competed in two years, lost a lot of leg muscle, and is slow compared to other members of the team.  The coach gives her a challenge – in a month’s time, if Tang Xue can overtake the slowest member on the team, she will be allowed to stay on the team.  After a month of grueling training (with Yu Bing) she does overtake the slowest member and becomes a permanent member of the team. She also finds herself developing feelings for Yu Bing. 

The two of them have very different memories of their childhood – Tang Xue confesses to Yu Bing their time together in high school was the happiest time of her life. She considered Yu Bing her best friend and was heartbroken when he attended a different middle school than her. It took her nearly two years to get over the loss of Yu Bing before she was able to adapt to her new environment.  Yu Bing, on the other hand, viewed Tang Xue as a bully and was scared of her. However, in hindsight, he realizes that Tang Xue wasn’t a bully - she was a tom boy, with an assertive personality, who always bossed him around.  Yu Bing was a late bloomer and Tang Xue towered above him for the entirety of elementary school. This pain could have easy been avoided if they had been more honest with each other – Tang Xue should have made clear her feelings for Yu Bing, and Yu Bing should have pushed back on Tang Xue’s various schemes. He only focused on her negative traits while ignoring all her positive ones. In Yu Bing’s case, he was a timid boy, who just couldn’t deal with Tang Xue’s rough housing.  This is an accurate representation of childhood – sensitive children will often interpret another child’s teasing as “bullying.” There was no ill intent on Tang Xue’s part; she was just oblivious to Yu Bing’s true feelings. 

Yu Bing not only has to let go of his past, but he also has two contend with two other suitors who are looking to win over Tang Xue’s hand - Yu Yan, a figure skater, and Bian Cheng, a journalism major, who covers sports and attends another college. However, Yu Yan is never a serious threat to Yu Bing – he is immediately placed in the friend zone by Tang Xue.  Yu Yan has lived a sheltered life – his mother is stern taskmaster and won’t discourages him from making friends because they would get in the way of his training. He is an introverted individual and a man of few words. Tang Xue is impressed by his talents, but also senses that he a timid individual and treats him with kid gloves – she views him as a younger brother who she needs to protect. She is able to get him out of his shell – she takes him to an aquarium and later persuades him (and Yu Bing) to help her out in a singing contest.



However, as is normally the case with unrequited love, Yu Yan becomes increasingly bitter that Tang Xue “chooses” Yu Bing over him. In his mind, Yu Bing stole Tang Xue away from him (even though she has never his to begin with). This bitterness gets further amplified when his mother sends him to Canada for training. He has been sidelined and feels helpless when he reads online about the blooming romance between Yu Bing and Tang Xue. He begins to lose sleep, and this eventually effects his performance on ice – he fails multiple competitions and then loses all interest in figure skating. Note to young males out there – if you are interested in woman but she does not return your feelings, DO NOT fall into the “just friends” trap, instead cut your losses and WALK AWAY. It might hurt, but it will benefit you in the long term. If Yu Yan had followed this simple advice, he would have avoided falling into depression. You can not be “just friends” with a woman you are interested in.

 When Yu Yan returns to China, he locks himself in his room and refuses to come out. This forces his mother to turn to Tang Xue – she asks Tang Xue to guide Yu Yan out of his depression. Tang Xue visits Yu Yan and gradually gets him to cheer up. However, this also comes at the expense of her relationship with Yu Bing. She stands up Yu Bing multiple times and then lies to him about her whereabouts – she tells Yu Bing that her friends, Xie Meng Huan and Ye Liu Ying, were blindsided by an emergency and they needed her support. It didn’t occur to her than Yu Bing might actually run into her friends and ask them about said emergency – when they give him a different story, he naturally becomes suspicious. When she spots Tang Xue walking into Yu Yan’s house, he believes that the two of them are having an affair. He lets his emotions get the better of him and suggests that they break up. While Yu Bing’s suspicions are understandable, he never gives Tang Xue the opportunity to explain herself. The reason she lied to him about Yu Yan is because his mother asked her to keep his condition a secret (even from Yu Bing).

It wouldn’t be a drama if the writers did not figure out some way to separate our two romantic leads, but at least in this instance it is believable. It is also an example of neither of them being at fault and, simultaneously, both being at fault – Tang Xue’s intentions were good, but she shouldn’t have lied to Yu Bing, and Yu Bing should have given Tang Xue the benefit of the doubt and allowed her to explain herself. What makes it even worse is that the two of them are separated for a month – Tang Xue and her teammate/Yu Bing’s best friend, Yuiwei, are given an opportunity to compete for a spot on the national women’s short distance speed skating team and will be in Beijing for a month. They also decided to turn off their cellphones to avoid outside distractions. When Yu Bing learns the truth from Yu Yan, he feels like an ass, and tries to call Tang Xue to apologize. When he can’t get hold of her, leave her a text and begs her to get back together. However, the only thing he can do is wait for her to see the text message. 

This also allows me a smooth transition into the character of Bian Cheng. In high school, Tang Xue had a crush on Bian Cheng and even wrote him a letter that expressed her feelings, but he shot her down.  It is through sheer happenstance that he bumps into her – he is doing a story about LU’s hockey team and just happens to see Tang Xue at the ice rink. He is determined to win her back (even though, like Yu Yan, he never had her in the first place). He even forms with an alliance with Tang Xue’s cousin, Zhou Ran – he will help her hook up with Yu Bing and she will help him with Tang Xue. The problem is that Bian Cheng’s window of opportunity with Tang Xue has been slammed shut and, despite his best efforts, she rejects his advances – he even makes a public fool out of his self when he holds up a banner expressing his love for Tang Xue. When displays of public affection fail, he tries to win her hand by sucking up to her father, who is an editor of a local newspaper. This kind of works – Tang Xue’s father is impressed with Bian Cheng and believes he would be a great son-in-law. Also working in Bian Cheng’s favor is the fact that Tang Xue’s father dislikes Yu Bing. He doesn’t approve of Yu Bing playing ice hockey and he also holds a grudge against Yu Bing for lying to his daughter (when Yu Bing was TWELVE YEARS OLD).  Unfortunately, while Tang Xue’s father is over the moon about Bian Cheng, she is just not interested in him. She has found her soulmate in Yu Bing and, at best, sees Bian Cheng as “just friends” material. Again, if Bian Cheng had just taken my advice and WALKED AWAY, he could have easily avoided all the misery that comes his way.  Unfortunately, Bian Cheng does not handle Tang Xue’s rejection well and decides to go all scorched Earth – If he can’t be with Tang Xue, then no one can. He is determined to destroy Yu Bing’s reputation. Zhou Ran can see where this is headed and bows out – she realizes that she will never be a couple with Yu Bing and doesn’t want to devote all her free time to breaking up Tang Xue and Yu Bing (on the slim chance he might get together with her).  She opts to bury the hatchet with her estranged cousin and focus on her studies, but Bian Cheng is so filled with resentment that he can’t let it go so easily.  



Bian Cheng writes an article about the country’s lack of interest in ice hockey and then doctors a photo to make it seem like the X Dragons are playing to an empty arena. Tang Xue’s father looking to kill to two birds with one stone – help out his protégé Bian Cheng and embarrass Yu Bing – publishes Bian Cheng’s article in his newspaper. Bian Chang even got a nomination for a journalism award. However, Yu Bing notices the forgery and has another photo from the same game that shows a packed house, and files a complaint against the newspaper. Tang Xue’s father is embarrassed that he feels for the forgery and apologizes for allowing his bias to get in the way of journalism.  Bian Cheng’s credibility has taken a massive and gets the award stripped away from him. This would be an ideal time for Bian Cheng to self-reflect but he blames Yu Bing for all of his misfortunes. Tang Xue’s father, for his part, realizes he misjudged Yu Bing and gives the ice hockey star his blessing to date his daughter.

The next step in Bian Cheng’s quest for revenge is to post a smear piece about Yu Bing on the campus forums.  It has the desired effect as many of the fanbase begin to turn on Yu Bing. When Bian Cheng is interviewing the owner of a rival ice hockey team, the Black Scorpions, the owner asks Bian Cheng for information about Yu Bing, and he happily obliges. Bian Chang accidentally leaves his recorder in the owner’s office and manages to capture a conversion the owner is having with his assistant about hiring goons to beat up Yu Bing the day before the match. Bian Cheng sits on this information and allows the beating to happen – the goons are able to lure out Yu Bing by calling his phone and telling him a lie that Tang Xue was hit by a car.  Yu Bing tries to call Tang Xue’s phone, but she has turned it off. He fears the worst and rushes out to find her – he then is ambushed in the stairwell by a bunch of goons, who beat him senseless.  Yu Bing still plays in the game and his last-minute heroics win the game for the X Dragons, but it comes at a price – he is giving quite a beating by the rival team. While his teammates are celebrating their improbable victory, Yu Bing starts to bleed profusely from the forehead and passes out. He is taken to the hospital and insists that he is fine, but weeks after the beating, he still gets dizzy spells.  The assistant doctor, and Tang Xue’s friend, Lia Zhenyu, insists that Yu Bing go in for a checkup, but Yu Bing tells him he will wait until the season is over to get a checkup. However, before the final game of the season, Yu Bing passes out and is rushed to the hospital. It turns out that he suffers from chronic subdural hematoma and needs to have surgery to drain the hematoma.

It’s also while Yu Bing is in the hospital that he is finally reunited with Tang Xue and the two of them clear the air and reaffirm their commitment to one another. Tang Xue has been selected to the national team, but she initially decides not to go because she doesn’t want to leave Yu Bing’s side. While Yu Bing goes through a rough patch, especially when the owner decides to kick him off the team and even brings in his replacement. The sponsors have pulled their funding from the team due to the controversy surrounding Yu Bing, and the only way the owner will even consider keeping Yu Bing on the team is if he can pay back the sponsors and he is only given five days to do so. This is also when the Skate Into Love enters into Saved By the Bell territory – the team’s brilliant plan to raise money is by making a beefcake calendar of themselves. It ends up selling like hot cakes and the sponsors change their mind and pour money back into the team. Yu Bing is touched by the support from his teammates and friends, and insists Tang Xue join the national team. Bian Cheng is consumed with guilt by and eventually turns in the recording to the police. He doesn’t walk away completely unscathed – the owner learns about this and has his goons beat up Bian Cheng. 

There are two prominent themes in Skate Into Love:

1.     Bitterness can lead to truly dark places. Yu Bing, Bian Cheng, Zhou Ran, and Yu Yan all become consumed with bitterness. Yu Bing is still bitter over the way Tang Xue treated him in elementary school and this result him mistreating her in the early going. It takes him a while to realize that she is a different person from when she was a child and is, in fact, a genuinely decent human being. The inner child in him just can’t believe it and wants to go through with the revenge, but common sense eventually prevails. 
Bian Cheng is an intelligent individual with a promising future, but he nearly ruins it all because he can’t get over the fact that Tang Xue prefers Yu Bing over him. It gets to the point where he forgets his initial goal – to win back Tang Xue – and becomes obsessed with wanting to ruin Yu Bing. 
Zhou Ran’s grudge against her cousin stems from the fact that her academic success was overshadowed by Tang Xue’s speed skating success. She also has a crush on Yu Bing and wants to be with, so it naturally grinds her gears when she learns that Yu Bing is in love with Tang Xue. She initially teams up with Bian Cheng to derail their relationship, but realizes how petty, and pathetic, the whole thing is and buries the hatchet with her cousin.
Yu Yan falls into a depression after he learns that Yu Bing and Tang Xue are dating. He just can’t understand why Tang Xue would choose Yu Bing over him. This results in him losing interest in figure skating and locking himself in his room. 

2.     The second prominent theme in Skate Into Love is forgiveness. This is a word that has disappeared from the English language – especially in the age of cancel culture. There are many positives to the internet but also can bring out people’s worst traits – one of which is to assume bad intentions where none actually exists. People are so quick to judge and cancel people over past comments that they never want to consider that a person is capable of changing. Of course, they also are very selective over which comments they find offensive and over who they want to cancel. The refreshing aspect of Skate Into Love is the characters ability to let go of grudges and forgive. Hell, even Bian Cheng is given a second chance. Tang Xue’s father doesn’t bear any ill well to Bian Cheng and wishes him the best of luck. After, Bian Cheng turns the recording of the Black Scorpions’ owner to the police, he apologizes to Yu Bing, who accepts the apology and offers his hand in friendship. Yu Bing realizes that his grudge against Tang Xue is ridiculous, moves on from the past, and eventually falls in love with her. 

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I haven’t even talked about the secondary couples – Xia Meng Huan/Lia Zhenyu and Zhang Yuewei/Jiang Shi Jia. These two couples are mirror images of one another – Xia Meng Huan and Lia Zhenyu are Tang Xue’s two best friends while Zhang Yuewei and Jiang Shi Jia are Yu Bing’s two best friends.

       A song that aptly describes Jiang Shi Jia’s relationship with Zhang Yuewei is The J.Geil’s Band classic, Love Stinks. The song opens with, “You love her/ But she loves him/ And he loves somebody else/ You just can’t win.”  Jiang Shi Jia loves Zhang Yuewei, but she loves Yu Bing, and he loves Tang Xue. Yu Bing, Jiang Shi Jia, and Zhang Yuewei are an inseparable trio – Yu Bing and Jiang Shi Jia are teammates on the male ice hockey team and Zhang Yuewei is the captain of the women’s Short Track Speeding Racing team. Zhang Yuewei’s ego takes quite a beating – if it wasn’t bad enough that Yu Bing loves Tang Xue (her potential rival on the woman’s ice-skating team), it is made worse by the fact that Yu Bing doesn’t even think of her as a woman – he constantly calls her “brother.” Yuewei comes across as masculine – she has a short haircut, has a cold personality, likes to rough house, and is extremely competitive (though, even with her short hair cut, the actress, Han Juinuo, is still incredibly cute and it is easy to believe a guy like Jiang Shi Jia falling for her). Despite her tough exterior, she also wants to be loved. Jiang Shi Jia has been in love with Zhang Yuewei for some time but has never said anything for two reasons: he is aware of her feelings for Yu Bing, and he doesn’t want to destroy their friendship. If he confesses his feelings to her and she rejects him, it will make things awkward between the two of them. This is also the reason why Yuewei never confessed her feelings to Yu Bing. At the end of day, Yuewei realizes a potential romance with Yu Bing is a pipe dream and is content with being his friend. However, she does achieve her dream of making the national team (and competing in the Olympics) and she realizes that she also has feelings for Jiang Shi Jia – it is a happy ending for everyone.



      The relationship between Xia Meng Huan and Lia Zhenyu isn’t as dramatic as the Zhang Yuewei/Jiang Shi Jia storyline. When Lia Zhenyu meets Xia Meng Huan it is love at first sight – he is determined to win her over. She is also interested in him but is hesitant to get in a relationship with a friend of a friend – in the early going, they both are lackeys to Tang Xue and always refer to her as “master.” Xia Meng Huan eventually realizes that Lia Zhenyu is a kind soul and falls in love with him. Xia Meng Huan is majoring veterinarian science and has an affinity for animals – when she wants to open a shelter for stray animals, Lia Zhenyu is all in and even builds small houses for the animals to sleep in. He also raises money for the animal shelter creating a collage of stray animals, displaying it on the college campus, and using a bullhorn to get the students’ attention. Lia Zhenyu is devoted to Xia Meng Huan – in fact, he is too devoted – to the point where it begins to affect his studies. He devotes so much time to Xia Meng Huan that his grades begin to slip. While Xia Meng Huan likes the attention, she also feels guilty about Lia Zhenyu’s piss poor grades and tells him that they need to pump the brakes on their relationship. She wants Lia Zhenyu to achieve his dream and would feel terrible if she was the reason he failed to pursue it. At first Lia Zhenyu is hurt by her honesty but realizes that she is correct and gets back on track with his studies. He eventually becomes the assistant doctor for the X Dragons. 



      The most refreshing thing about the characters is how supportive they are each other – there is never a scene where a main character issues an ultimatum, “It is either ice skating or me!” Yu Bing is unblinking with his support for Tang Xue – he uses his pull to give her a spot on the short track speed skating and even pays for her training. When he is in the hospital, he insists that she joins the national team. He doesn’t want her to pass up a once in a lifetime opportunity. She also is supportive of his ice hockey career, even though she knows it could possibly end in injury. She knows it would be far worse for Yu Bing if he gave up ice hockey, because he would live with regret for the rest of his life. Xia Meng Huan and Lia Zhenya support each other’s careers – when Xia Meng Huan, for her major, takes a class trip to South America, Lia Zhenya is genuinely happy for her. Even Zhang Yuewei and Jiang Shi Jia are very supportive of one another.  They are also very devoted to one another – Tang Xue is already thinking of her post-speed skating career, while Yu Bing is unconscious at the hospital, she tells him that she wants to settle down and have two children (a boy and a girl), and then they can teach their offspring speed skating and ice hockey.



      While Skate Into Love is an entertaining romantic comedy, it also makes for a fascinating piece of propaganda. It often plays like a long commercial for the 2022 Winter Olympics (which were held in Beijing).  Also, propaganda isn't always a bad thing - especially when it is used to unite a country. I am curious by the writing process for this series – it feels like it was commissioned by the Chinese government as a way to drum up support for Ice Hockey (which, at the time, wasn’t popular in China). The Chinese government wanted to field a competitive team ice hockey team in the Winter Olympics and emphasized the need for improvement. The show even ends with a montage of Chinese gold medalists from the previous Winter Olympics. There is even a cameo appearance by Olympic gold medalist Wu Daijing - he won the gold medal in the Men's 500 Metres at the 2018 Winter Olympics. 



\     I suspect the reason the main characters can forgive one another so easily is to emphasize unity among the masses – the main characters are able to overcome their petty differences for the greater good and the rest of the country should follow their example. The Chinese government is also trying to reverse the effects of their “One Child” policy, so it makes sense that there is a scene where the lead female openly discusses having two children with her partner. There is even a scene where Yu Bing’s parents talk about how the government is encouraging couples to have more children. However, despite (or because of) this, Skate Into Love is an entertaining show. It can be redundant at times (this is not surprising given that it is 40 episodes long) but its appealing cast makes it worthwhile – Janice Wu and Steven Zhang have incredible chemistry (to the point where I got annoyed when their two characters were separated for a few episodes).

Cast: Janice Wu (Tang Xue), Steven Zhang (Li Yu Bing), Zhou Li Jie (Yu Yan), Han Jiunuo (Zhang Yuewei), He Zuan Lin (Xia Meng Huan), Cao Bo (Jiang Shi Jia), Qin Tianyu (Liao Zhenyu), Vincent Wei (Bian Cheng), Lu Junyao (Ye Liu Ying), Chuyue Chen (Zhou Ran), Zhang Lei (Coach Xu, Ice hockey coach), Ding Zi Ling (Coach Chu, Short track speed skating, coach), Xia Minghao (Coach Jin, figure skating coach), Jin Zi He (Deng Jian Guo), Tian Miao (Tang Xue’s mother), Miao Hao Jun (Tang Xue’s father), Wang Shuo (Li Yu Bing’s father), Opheila Yang (Ms. Liang, Yu Yan’s mother), Yang Ping (Li Yu Bing’s mother), Xiao Yu (Song An Jie), Luo Hao (Coach Wang), Zhang Shang Ming Zhu (Young Tang Xue), Li Chao Ping (Young Li Yu Bing), Deng Lun (Xu Feng “Ice God”), Wu Dajing (Himself).

Director: Zhu Ruibin
Writer: Ma Jia
40 episodes ~ 45 minutes

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