Thursday, April 9, 2009

꽃보다 남자


Ah, where do I begin.  The title, of course.  꽂보다납자.  Pronounced "Kgoat bo-da nahm-jah", The best English equivalent is "Boys Over Flowers" or "Boys Before Flowers".  It's a Korean teen TV drama that took the nation of Korea like a plague in January, February, March, and April.  It ran for 2 short seasons (25 episodes total), and finished last week, but has still not let the public out of its clutches.  And I am one of its most affected victims.

I started watching it online with English subtitles about two weeks ago, after I read the synopsis and thought, "Hmm.  That sounds kinda fun.  Watching it might be a good way to relate to my students."  Little did I know.  Here's the official synopsis:

Jan Di is an average girl whose family owns a dry cleaning store located near the luxurious and well-known Shinhwa High School.  Jan Di meets the four richest and most spoiled boys known as the F4.  After saving a boy from jumping off the roof of Shinhwa High School, she is admitted into the school on a swimming scholarship.  Jan Di tries to avoid confrontation with F4 at all cost because she knows what happens to those that stand against them.  However, when Jan Di's friend, Oh Min Ji, accidentally gets ice cream on the leader of F4's shoes, she's forced to declare war on the leader of F4, Goo Jun Pyo.

Okay so first of all, Gu Jun Pyo actually declares war on HER because she stood up for her friend and wounded his pride.  Secondly, all that stuff happens in the first two episodes.  It's not that much of a spoiler to say that what of course ends up happening is that stubborn, quick-tempered Gu Jun Pyo falls in love with caring, spunky Jan Di, as does his best friend, quiet and musical Yoon Ji Hoo, who her friend and rescuer from the beginning.  Jan Di unearths Jun Pyo's tender side, and Jun Pyo, Ji Hoo and the other two members of F4, Song Woo Bin and So Yi Jung, become her best friends, and they have all kinds of adventures and love triangles and drama together.  :D

The show is admittedly cheesy, and the acting is kind of weak, especially at the beginning (but it gets better!), but the characters make the show completely addicting.  And not only middle school girls love it.  I meet adult women and even some guys who watch it.  It made the show's actors the most recognized and sought-after pop culture stars in Korea.  And even though the show is over, the actors are still appearing in commercials, on posters promoting everything from cell phones to donuts, and on the covers of fan magazines.

As for me, it was fun to go nuts over this show.  Not only is it packed with Korean culture and words that I can pick up as I watch, I have been able to relate to Koreans on a whole nother level, simply because we can start a conversation when they notice my F4 cell phone charms.  I can instantly engage my students in class by using the characters' names in example sentences.  And the obsession is cheap!  My cell phone charms, postcards and socks were less than a dollar each, my fan magazines were 35 cents apiece, and I got my posters for free from some guys I made friends with who work at a cell phone store.  :P  Have you gotten the picture yet?  I am in love with F4.

For a quick little video introduction to my boys, please click here.







Ahhh my sad little blog--sorely neglected once again!  I think it's time for a facelift.  Starting with this post, in which I'll update on my activities of the past couple months.

So the new school year is well underway.  It began in March.  I am enjoying teaching this year more than last year as I feel more experienced, full of ideas, comfortable in my environment, and I have some really great co-teachers this year.  There is also another foreign teacher in my Girls' School this year--Kholo (see picture).  She is from South Africa, and she and I have quickly become friends.

In other news, I moved out of the KNU dorm and into an apartment off campus almost 3 weeks ago now.  All the foreign teachers will be moving into apartments within the next few months; my friend Karissa and I were just the first to go.  She lives above me.  We have studio apartments about a 15 minute walk from KNU.  I really love the independence and the bus ride downtown is actually quicker.  Plus, with the weather warming up (finally!) the extra walking is pleasant and good exercise.  And!  I bought a bicycle.  I found a used one at a shop near my school and rode it all the way home (40 min.).  This is a huge accomplishment for me because it means that I FINALLY know my way around this city.  It was really hard to get my bearings because I was always being driven everywhere (bus, taxi, car) rather than going there on my own!  I'll post pictures of the apartment as soon as I get it put together; I've been waiting on KNU to get me some furniture but that arrived yesterday so finally I can stop sleeping on the floor and pulling my wrinkled clothes out of garbage bags!

Something else I've done recently is to take up Salsa dancing as a hobby.  Some friends and I discovered a little place where a group of Koreans meet to dance to Latin music every Friday night (who would've thought Koreans could be good at Salsa!), so we go there every Friday night we can, meet once during the week to practice, and also we have a once-a-week private lesson from one of the Korean dancers we met.  It's something I've always wanted to do, and it's a fun challenge to learn all the steps, and good exercise on top of that!

I think that the weather is the thing I'm most happy about at the moment.  Highs in the 70's this week.  Yesterday one of my coworkers and I walked to a coffee shop downtown on lunch break, then came back and talked to girl students while we watched the boys play sports on the field.  (Amazing how even though Buk Middle school has 2 out of the 3 grades integrated now, the students still sex-segregate themselves for the most part.  Even in class.  Getting a boy to talk to a girl during an educational activity and vice versa requires almost a direct command.)

Okay well that's most of what I've been up to lately, with one major exception: 
꽂보다납자.  And that gets a separate post.  :P