PrettyC:"Though I think if a strong sense of loyalty and obligation weren't mixed up in there ... if he could choose without betraying anyone ... I think he'd've chosen Seo Yoon. TJ being ambitious as he is, SY is more his type. "

You know when I first started watching this series I wanted so much for TJ and SY to hook up; however as it progressed there was no development of 'romance' between the two, and what I first thought was sexual tension between them, I saw later as merely genuine dislike. There was no secret longing glances, or romantic reflexions, or lingering touches, secret kind acts, retreating from tough positions to give way out of love, nothing to even indicate there is a 'hidden' love or longing between these two. I therefore accepted that it was not intended for there to be any kind of love relationship and I was really just 'reaching' as they say. A romantic interest can exist between couples and remain dormant but we will get a clear indication that it exists from may cues some of which I have listed; for me that did not occur with TJ and SY. What was interesting to me was, there were many instances where the writers could have subtly shown attraction but they chose not to do so, and I believe that was because it was not intended. Romantics like me love when romance blossoms between antagonists especially attractive ones; it's a natural fit and therein is the trap for us as viewers. I think that even if Seul Hee was not in this drama, TJ would not have loved SY because the drama was meant to focus on the dynamics of the duel between the Chois and TJ, and in that the writer excelled.
NinaJade82 wrote: Hahahahaha... go ahead and trash my lady while Im down!! :p
I agree Seo Joo was a snob and she also was kind of naive in her thinking that she could get loyalty out of certain people. However, like Tae Joo was NO ANGEL, Seo Joo in my eyes is allowed to have flaws. I love her.

I have to say that what made me realized that Tae Joo was not in love with Sul Hee was that while Sul Hee was away in prison, Tae Joo forgot about revenge, forgot about greed. He was living stale, true, but he had forgotten about the things that aren't necessarily good in his life. Like revenge and greed, those two things combined are like a magnet for destruction.
When he goes to his father's memorial with Seo Yoo I see in Tae Joo a potential of becoming a good man like he initially was (because my chingu I never said he was born evil lol) The Tae Joo that goes to see his dad at the building, and the one that even tries to safe him is the good man. The Tae Joo that came to Sul Hee for money is the start of the bad Tae Joo.
I saw Sul Hee as someone who reminded Tae Joo that he didnt have time to play good guy anymore, that he needed to focus in what he wanted and what he wanted was to be the devil to the Choi.
Do they deserve a devil? Yes, but that doesn't mean I agree that would make Tae Joo the hero. Not as long as he uses the same tools as the Choi family.

Now that I look back, Im really glad he did what he did at the end. Because like my chingu here says, he redeemed himself and not only that, he STOPPED himself from being that guy anymore. He didn't think living would allow him to do that, so he died. Beautiful.


Well, I've touched upon TJ's dance with good and bad in the previous post.
When TJ met Seul Hee it was the start of him grabbing a hold of his own fate. He didn't have a choice. Either he did it or remained the dregs of society like his father did. Moreover, he needed the money to save his dad. Remember he tried all legitimate means first (remember that man who told him to pray to the Almighty 'He will save your father' ... #smh). People who he thought he could depend on turned their backs on him in his hour of need. So he did what he had to do to save his dad.

A mother would have done the same for her child too. Would that automatically make her bad? Life is not so easy so that we can live by virtues and principles all the time. Sometimes we're forced to get our hands dirty even though that's not what we want to do.

There's a saying in Jamaica, where my mom is from: If you want good, your nose has run. Which basically meets if you want something you have to fight for it. And a lot of time the fight ain't pretty.

Like so many poor kids in ghettos worldwide, Tæ-joo didn't have anyone to give him a break. So he went out there and created one for himself with Seul Hee's help.

Dare I say, chingu, that you're perhaps looking at this a tad too black and white. There's so much nuance, so much shades of grey that can not be overlooked.

As for any romantic possibilities, I do think he developed feelings for Seo Yoon ... if only for the mere fact that you can't live in such close proximity to someone AND not feel anything toward them. Doesn't necessarily have to be love, per se (although I think there's a strong likelihood there was on both sides). But friendship, loyalty, support ... all of which TJ & SY clearly felt for each other even though we didn't get to see it on full display. I think the undercurrents of these emotions were there. TJ looked out for SY when he lived in that house & she had his back when the dragons went after him.

There's also a scene in which SY explains her concept of love to her brother. I can't remember exactly what she said, but it was something along the lines of 'love chooses you even if you don't choose it' ... then they cut to a picture of TJ as if to imply she's talking about love she developed for him.

Having said that I can also accept Coffee's interpretation of his feelings where Seul Hee is concerned as another viable possibility. It's not impossible that he could grow to love her at all, given that they've been through so much together. And a lot of time you end up loving those who love you ... even though your heart didn't initiate these feelings first.
TJ is one of my hero, he wanted to succeed, and rebuilt an empire that been built with blood, in the end he was obliged to bath in the some blood if you want to succeed you must be a monster, that have no conscience other that money and positive turnover golden empire is more realistic that you think, and more philosophic
NinaJade82 wrote: <-- just paying some respect.

I posted in my MDL page while the drama was airing this: When I first heard of this drama and when I started watching it I would have wanted another actor as the lead because Go Soo was no on my list of great actors. However, when some time passed (very little time) I had to bite my tongue; Go Soo played Tae Joo like a BOSS. He earned every right to be not only deserving of the character, but the ONLY ONE deserving of the character. I don't think I wanted anyone else to play Tae Joo at that point.


Couldn't have put it better myself. He is a BOSS and I hope he'll continue to pick such meaty, brilliant roles.
Honestly for a long time I did just like this guy for his looks. When I started GE I have to admit that I only paid attention to him for his looks. I didn't really take his character seriously. But man, as the series progressed I forgot all about looks and got totally swept away in his character and the journey. He totally killed it!
P.S. Nina, my chingu, wasn't bashing your girl! Just sayin' ... she dissed my boy so yeah she deserved a slap! But no overall disrespect meant! :)
Mssankacoffee wrote: PrettyC:"Though I think if a strong sense of loyalty and obligation weren't mixed up in there ... if he could choose without betraying anyone ... I think he'd've chosen Seo Yoon. TJ being ambitious as he is, SY is more his type. "

You know when I first started watching this series I wanted so much for TJ and SY to hook up; however as it progressed there was no development of 'romance' between the two, and what I first thought was sexual tension between them, I saw later as merely genuine dislike. There was no secret longing glances, or romantic reflexions, or lingering touches, secret kind acts, retreating from tough positions to give way out of love, nothing to even indicate there is a 'hidden' love or longing between these two. I therefore accepted that it was not intended for there to be any kind of love relationship and I was really just 'reaching' as they say. A romantic interest can exist between couples and remain dormant but we will get a clear indication that it exists from may cues some of which I have listed; for me that did not occur with TJ and SY. What was interesting to me was, there were many instances where the writers could have subtly shown attraction but they chose not to do so, and I believe that was because it was not intended. Romantics like me love when romance blossoms between antagonists especially attractive ones; it's a natural fit and therein is the trap for us as viewers. I think that even if Seul Hee was not in this drama, TJ would not have loved SY because the drama was meant to focus on the dynamics of the duel between the Chois and TJ, and in that the writer excelled.



Coffee, just cutting and pasting in case you missed this from my post above:

As for any romantic possibilities, I do think he developed feelings for Seo Yoon ... if only for the mere fact that you can't live in such close proximity to someone AND not feel anything toward them. Doesn't necessarily have to be love, per se (although I think there's a strong likelihood there was on both sides). But friendship, loyalty, support ... all of which TJ & SY clearly felt for each other even though we didn't get to see it on full display. I think the undercurrents of these emotions were there. TJ looked out for SY when he lived in that house & she had his back when the dragons went after him.

There's also a scene in which SY explains her concept of love to her brother. I can't remember exactly what she said, but it was something along the lines of 'love chooses you even if you don't choose it' ... then they cut to a picture of TJ as if to imply she's talking about love she developed for him.

Having said that I can also accept Coffee's interpretation of his feelings where Seul Hee is concerned as another viable possibility. It's not impossible that he could grow to love her at all, given that they've been through so much together. And a lot of time you end up loving those who love you ... even though your heart didn't initiate these feelings first.
PrettyCarEye wrote: P.S. Nina, my chingu, wasn't bashing your girl! Just sayin' ... she dissed my boy so yeah she deserved a slap! But no overall disrespect meant! :)


He dissed her first.
By the way, the reason why I said earlier that I had a love hate relationship with Tae Joo, was because I do love the guy while I still think he became a bad person in the end to ultimately take recognition of that and end it. I hold my grown where that is concerned. I don't think I see it black and white, I think my understanding of a bad person is far less severe of your understanding of it.
Yes Tae Joo was good at first
Yes Tae Joo helped lots of people
Yes Tae Joo wanted to be a good person at one point
BUT...
Yes Tae Joo became selfish as HELL (not about money, but about his feelings) like when he said he alone would decide his life and did not care to listen to good advice because he didnt want to hear how selfish he was or how bad his decision were.
Yes Tae Joo was also a snob where Seo Yoon is concerned. He looked down on her from the very start just because she was the daughter of the man that indirectly killed his father. He didn't care to think, nor did he wanted to think, that she might have NOT had anything to do with that. Yet he judged her from the start.
Yes Tae Joo killed a man in self-defense, but initially the intention was to perhaps murder him??? He grabbed the knife from the table before the congress man tried to kill him, he grabbed the knife and was almost killing him when Sul Hee made him stop, then, only then did the whole thing became a "self-defense" But just because it was self-defense" does not mean his intentions weren't to actually kill the guy as he did grab the knife from the table from the beginning of their interaction. True, the congressman is a really bad bad guy and deserves to die, so I didn't really care and I don't dislike Tae Joo for killing him. In fact I don't dislike Tae Joo at all.
Yes Tae Joo send his partner to jail to pay for his own crime. The way Tae Joo send Sul Hee to jail was NASTY. He kissed her when she was trying to say NO I WONT DO THIS, he kissed her coldly, just to manipulate her. If you do that I don't care how many "good things" you have done, but you are a bad person. How can he manipulate someone he trusts and trusts him so much? How can he be such a nasty man to this person? Because its the only way to win the fight? So he is saying: hold on, let me be this ultimate bad guy to you Sul Hee and then when I win I can go back to being a good guy.
NOPE. Good Guys are good always, yes they do have bad in them because there are shades of grey but for the most part they don't manipulate with a cold mind the people who love them and trust them just so they can get their goal.

So in the end, Tae Joo is a man who can do good and be good only when good comes his way, that is not the definition of a real good man that I have in mind. You are good selflessly, not when life throws good thing your way. And he was somewhat like this at first, but the more money he got the more corrupted he became. This is the whole point of the story, that Tae Joo does not remain the "good guy" he actually becomes like the Choi, better than Min Jae, better than the stepmother, better than the eldest brother, but not better than the person who pushes the red bottom and orders a demolition, not better than the overall picture of the person sitting on the thrown that rules everything and everyone without mercy for those he ONLY HE think don't deserve it. He wants to be GOD. He said it, and it was not in a moment of desperation when he said this, he said he wanted to RULE ALL! That is the makings of a dictator. Sorry chingu, but the fact that Hitler was his ideal leader speaks a lot about what Tae Joo is envisioning, what he is feeling is write or wrong. It doesn't say he is the same, because like I said he was not evil, never, and Hitler, well... that's a common understanding thanked God. But it does say that the fact that he looks up to Hitler means Tae Joo's perspective of what should be done in certain situations are kinda twisted.

And to answer your cute post on my page :3
I'm loving this discussion. It is a healthy exchange of different views from two people that love this drama, love Tae Joo - although we see him with different eyes, and ain't that the whole point to this? I love it.

He killed it. I went to watch Will It Snow At Christmas just because of his impressing work here and although he is very good, very, very good, the drama is impossible to watch (no offense to the fans of this drama) but I couldn't stand watching passed episode 4 or 5.
I think I might go back to watching his early dramas, Im thinking of Green Rose. ^^
soumatra2 wrote: TJ is one of my hero, he wanted to succeed, and rebuilt an empire that been built with blood, in the end he was obliged to bath in the some blood
if you want to succeed you must be a monster, that have no conscience other that money and positive turnover

golden empire is more realistic that you think, and more philosophic


This is the same way I see the story of this drama. That Tae Joo in order to be on top of the Empire like he wanted had to become the very same people he hated most. He pulled the trigger just like they did.

Yes it is one of the best dramas I have ever watched. By far, the best written.
By the way guys here the poll that is going around from KoreanDrama.org about the best Korean drama of 2013.
The winning dramas so far only show how biased viewers are, I mean, Heirs is winning and it hasnt even finished airing, plus I have read how it isn't as good. Nway... here is the link, I hope everyone here votes for GE but I might be wishing for too much LOL.

http://www.koreandrama.org/?p=30509
The Heirs (SBS) 21.78% (40,550 votes)

where you can find this number of dumbs ?
soumatra2 wrote: the heirs (sbs) 21.78% (40,550 votes)

where you can find this number of dumbs ?


lmbo.
Tæ-joo & his fascination with Hitler

Pfft, you took TJ and his hyperbole about being Hitler way too seriously. TJ was nothing like Hitler. Not even close so that isn’t even worth us arguing about, in my opinion -- though I did comment in detail about this earlier.

He had the business acumen and the sheer willpower to succeed at anything he wanted to do, but he lacked the connections and the life experience to make the best choices. He lost sight of his own good intentions & allowed his emotions - where the Chois are concerned - to overwhelm his good sense. It was just inconceivable to him to lose to them, and all along he thought he was winning, only to realize that he was facing possible defeat and it literally drove him insane.

Aside from authorizing actions that cost a life & hurt others, I agree with Soumatra2 above who said TJ is a reflection of reality far more so than we know. He is a true depiction of most people in the world. Most people want more than what they have. This isn’t always a ‘bad’ form of greed. If you grow up poor, you wish you had a little more. If you’re disabled, you wish you were able-bodied. If you live in a small one bedroom house, you aspire to a bigger abode with more space and so on and so on.

The difference between TJ and most people, though, is that he was willing to work his ass off for what he wanted and therein lies the beauty of the character. He was willing to get down to the nitty gritty, get his hands dirty because more times than not that’s what it takes to acquire any form of wealth. Most people are not willing to put in the work. They just sit around and complain about their circumstances, but do nothing to try and change it. Sometimes this also includes me, that's why after I completed this show I had a tremendous burst of energy to work even harder to accomplish my professional goals.

But like I have said many times before I don’t condone his hand in the demolition. In a similar situation I sure hope I wouldn’t press the trigger. Most people probably wouldn’t press the trigger. TJ crossed that line which kind of turned him into a villain in those last few moments, but not one without the possibility of redemption.

This thing with the Congressman

You really can’t argue ‘intent’ in a court of law. At least not up to the point where he thought his own life was in danger.

Yes, prior to the incident he picked up the knife, maybe he even went at the Congressman in the heat of the moment but he did NOT kill him then, did he? He only killed him when the Congressman threatened his life which was the appropriate thing to do under those circumstances.

We can speculate as much as we want as to his intentions toward the congressman on his way to the mansion. In the context of story leading up to that point, my interpretation of his behaviour was that he was in a rage at being betrayed yet again by people he thought he could trust, especially Seul Hee. She knew TJ would NEVER want her to do such a thing & yet she went ahead and did it anyway. The Congressman screwed him over, just when he’s under severe pressure from the Chois, causing him to lose almost everything.

He was MAD and maybe he did have murderous thoughts, but the fact remains that he was walking away when the Congressman swung at him with a deadly weapon that could have caused him great bodily harm or even death. That is a FACT. So even though the writers implied that it might be murder because of the blood which remained on his hand I find it interesting that they allowed the incident to occur in such a grey area where it can’t totally be construed as murder given that his life was in imminent danger. They could have just let him murder him without much fanfare. He could have found some way to get Seul Hee out of the room, murder the Congressman & then claim self-defense. But that didn't happen.

I dismissed the killing for what I believe it was, self-defense. While I watched I didn’t understand the need for anyone to go to prison. If the police investigated and ruled it self-defense, then all charges should be dropped and the defendant released. But based on this and other dramas I’ve seen it doesn’t look like self-defense is a viable defense in the Korean justice system. Even if it IS self-defense it looks like you’re still expected to serve some time for the taking of a human life, which amounts to a charge of manslaughter as far as I see it. I don’t know if this is how it goes down in reality or if it’s done in dramas merely for dramatic effect.

Seul Hee in prison

As for him sending Seul Hee to jail, you don’t need to convince me further. I already conceded that it was a shitty move. Nevertheless, we also both know Seul Hee would have done it of her own accord anyway. And even if she didn’t want to she still could have backed out, either right then and there or when they got to the station. Even later on when TJ was arrested he faced Seul Hee in the interrogation room fully expecting her to sing. But AGAIN she chose not to because Seul Hee loved Tæ-joo and would never sell him out like that. So there you have it again … people can not be absolved of their personal responsibility. Just like the people who got hurt in the demolition. It was horrible and WRONG of TJ to authorize it, no doubt about that … but at the same time would you stay in a building you know is about to collapse?

Seo Yoon

As for this business with him SY, come on, chingu! Until you get to know a person one and one (& probably not even then) NOBODY would think highly of the people who had a hand in the killing of their loved one! It is VERY unlikely! So why does that make TJ a cad and snob? :)

I think his reaction to her was normal and very human.

Closing arguments

I get your interpretation of the morale of the story. I would even go as far as to say your version is what the writers probably wanted to us believe at the end as well. Where I’m concerned they succeeded in reminding me of the corrupting nature of money & power (the Chois). They succeeded in reminding me that vengeance belongs only to Jesus (if he exists) because it will consume us humans to the point of madness (Tæ-joo). They did not succeed in convincing me that Tæ-joo was this inherently bad guy with only a little good in him. Not even at the end after he had pulled the trigger & essentially became what he hated it. I saw him as tragic hero who made of a lot of bad choices, but wasn’t given the chance to make amends.

Given the fact that Tæ-joo, also by your own admission, was NOT like the worst of the Choi clan, this made me believe he could change for the better and learn from his mistakes. Yes, by the end of drama he had teetered off onto the dark side, but he recognized it.

He chose to kill himself like Hitler did, but I think that’s where the similarities to Hitler ended. He recognized himself he was no Hitler. Hitler had no qualms about wiping out over a million people. Tæ-joo recognized he couldn’t pull the trigger and have the blood of innocent people on his hands & live with a clear conscience. Where the story is concerned it’s more than a guy like Min-jæ & probably even the late Chairman recognized, yet they were allowed to live until one of them died from natural causes.

TJ could have been redeemed. TJ WAS, in the context of the story we were shown, very redeemable. So to use him as the poster child of evil incarnate with a little good in him was a misfire, in my opinion, because the morale of the story to me would then be that human beings can’t make mistakes. Once you make a mistake you automatically deserve to go to hell. I can’t live with that.

I was disappointed with TJ when he pulled the trigger. I wanted to kill him when he did that. I was like ‘No, no, no, back out, back out! Do NOT do it!’. But he did it and my heart sank. I did NOT want him to do that. And while I’m not absolving him of responsibility, I continue to maintain that he wouldn’t have done it if he was dealing with anyone else but the Chois. He simply could NOT tolerate losing to those people.

No matter how you look at it you can not tell me the guy who had that major meltdown in his office in those last episodes was in his right mind. The guy who willingly put EVERYTHING he owned on the line just to bring these people down. This was not the rational behaviour of the man the story told us TJ was. A shrew businessman, a guy who hates being poor.

He was not in his right mind. He totally lost it!

I rest my case here, chingu. I hear your position on TJ, and while we'll probably never agree on his true nature, I understand where you’re coming from.

I hate his crime, but I could never hate him (I know you don’t either). He made a dreadful mistake that under the right circumstances any human can make. So I forgave him. In the ending that I’ve rewritten in my head, he loses everything - his business, his family, all his business associates, whatever friends he had, even Seul Hee finally turned her back on him and he goes to prison where he’s able to reflect on his misdeeds for a very long time. Several years later he’s released, older and significantly wiser. He has nothing to his name, only the clothes on his back. He has no one to turn to since his family has disowned him. He goes back to Chillengdong and rents a rat infested room with no heating. He survives on air, coffee and ramen. We certainly see that he now understands the corrupting nature of money & that you constantly have to check yourself against its negative influence. Finally we see him selling fruits in the market, he’s still as charismatic & driven as ever so he soon develops a loyal customer base. The credits roll with the suggestion that he’ll somehow turn his fruit selling business (or some other business) into his very own golden empire.

In my heart, that’s the ending Tæ-joo deserves.
wrote: The difference between TJ and most people, though, is that he was willing to work his ass off for what he wanted and therein lies the beauty of the character. He was willing to get down to the nitty gritty, get his hands dirty because more times than not that’s what it takes to acquire any form of wealth. Most people are not willing to put in the work. They just sit around and complain about their circumstances, but do nothing to try and change it. Sometimes this also includes me, that's why after I completed this show I had a tremendous burst of energy to work even harder to accomplish my professional goals.

But like I have said many times before I don’t condone his hand in the demolition. In a similar situation I sure hope I wouldn’t press the trigger. Most people probably wouldn’t press the trigger. TJ crossed that line which kind of turned him into a villain in those last few moments, but not one without the possibility of redemption.


Actually there is a difference between "work" and "doing the wrong thing" TJ did worked his ass off, but he also did things he didn't need to do to acquire wealth, if that was the case then all rich people in this world have killed innocents to get what they want and I don't think that's a reality. People work their ass off by working hard in what they do or getting three jobs, or studying hard to be lawyers or doctors, etc... they don't work their ass off while killing innocent people. Granted he didn't do that until the end when he went a bit insane there for a sec, but that is also a very blurry line. He knew what he was doing when he did it, he just didn't realize that he had become this person. Again: when he did realize that he became this person he committed suicide. That is how I saw this.

My chingu you said it right, most people wouldn't press the trigger. Which is why TJ is one of a kind. And one we can't stop discussing... LOL.


Now that you say it, it is weird that they had to go to jail for self-defense, but it could be a matter of bureaucracy and rules stipulates and lack of evidence... the drama wasnt going to get into those detail. I invite you to watch The Chaser which I mazes me how you haven't yet given one of our favorite actors is in it. This movie speaks of the reality of Korea's bureaucracy in the police while still being thriller. Watch it, you will love it. Im sure of it.

wrote: As for him sending Seul Hee to jail, you don’t need to convince me further. I already conceded that it was a shitty move. Nevertheless, we also both know Seul Hee would have done it of her own accord anyway. And even if she didn’t want to she still could have backed out, either right then and there or when they got to the station. Even later on when TJ was arrested he faced Seul Hee in the interrogation room fully expecting her to sing. But AGAIN she chose not to because Seul Hee loved Tæ-joo and would never sell him out like that. So there you have it again … people can not be absolved of their personal responsibility. Just like the people who got hurt in the demolition. It was horrible and WRONG of TJ to authorize it, no doubt about that … but at the same time would you stay in a building you know is about to collapse?


My chingu you have some really strong arguments, but this one is not one of them. First, whether SH wants to go to jail for him or not doesn't take less responsibility from TJ. Although this isn't a religious debate, and the subject of God is hard to bring into conversations because of what everyone believes and so on, the movie Kingdom of Heaven taught me that when you stand in the final judgement, you cannot say "this person made me do it" or "this person wanted to do this for me" you have to speak for yourself. And whether you believe in God or not, this is true.

TJ send her to prison, and then LET HER go to prison when she willingly admit it to the crime. This is utterly SHITTY of him and I don't care if a building is collapsing and my best friend is in it, Ill go get her out. Or we will die together. I could not live with the thought that I let my best friend in the world (what SH was to him) die in the collapsing building when there is a possibility that I could have saved her. That makes me a good person overall. Yeah sure I have my flaws lol. But what I mean is, this is the very argument of good vs bad. When you do something like this to people you love (and not just romantically) this makes you a bad person.

wrote: I get your interpretation of the morale of the story. I would even go as far as to say your version is what the writers probably wanted to us believe at the end as well. Where I’m concerned they succeeded in reminding me of the corrupting nature of money & power (the Chois). They succeeded in reminding me that vengeance belongs only to Jesus (if he exists) because it will consume us humans to the point of madness (Tæ-joo). They did not succeed in convincing me that Tæ-joo was this inherently bad guy with only a little good in him. Not even at the end after he had pulled the trigger & essentially became what he hated it. I saw him as tragic hero who made of a lot of bad choices, but wasn’t given the chance to make amends.


AND this

wrote: TJ could have been redeemed. TJ WAS, in the context of the story we were shown, very redeemable. So to use him as the poster child of evil incarnate with a little good in him was a misfire, in my opinion, because the morale of the story to me would then be that human beings can’t make mistakes.


My Chingu again I tell you that you are reading me wrong. I never said TJ was evil with little good in him. Nor did I say that was the moral of the story. I said TJ started off as a good guy with the wrong intentions, that is different. He intended to take revenge on those who did him wrong, but revenge is NEVER THE ANSWER. Then he became the same people he hated, still not "EVIL" just a bad guy that can be argued to be a good guy in many situations... there are tons of people like that in the world. Gangsters, (which you love so much) kill people and do very bad things, but they love their families and friends, and have regrets, and feel guilt, and also stay loyal to many. Still they are considered to be bad people to most of the world. This is what I mean TJ BECAME, and that the moral of the story is to tell us how POWER CORRUPTS even the innocent. No that TJ was evil with little good in him.

TJ deserves that ending. I agree with you. But the writers chose to give us a cruel reality for TJ. That either; he couldn't take the fact that he had become a monster in those few seconds you claim were insanity, I have doubts about it, but never mind. ORRRRR, he chose to die because knowing he had become a monster he also knew he would NEVER STOP, which is also one of the things I think happened. Although I think we can unite the two and say he knew he would never stop and yet he felt he couldn't keep on with being that monster because deep down inside he saw the good in him.
GAH! Oori chingus! You are making me want to watch this drama now. I can't quit glancing at y'all discussing/analyzing it. I've been lucky that I've avoided spoilers by hard-core skimming. :p

Clearly this is a gold mine for we who like to analyze. I guess I better finish my drama challenge lickety-split so that I can join in the fun. *sigh*
NinaJade82 wrote: Actually there is a difference between "work" and "doing the wrong thing" TJ did worked his ass off, but he also did things he didn't need to do to acquire wealth, if that was the case then all rich people in this world have killed innocents to get what they want and I don't think that's a reality. People work their ass off by working hard in what they do or getting three jobs, or studying hard to be lawyers or doctors, etc... they don't work their ass off while killing innocent people. Granted he didn't do that until the end when he went a bit insane there for a sec, but that is also a very blurry line. He knew what he was doing when he did it, he just didn't realize that he had become this person. Again: when he did realize that he became this person he committed suicide. That is how I saw this.

My chingu you said it right, most people wouldn't press the trigger. Which is why TJ is one of a kind. And one we can't stop discussing... LOL.


I don't see it that way. And I've already explained why. I'm looking at his behaviour within the parameters of the story as shown to us by the writers, but also in the context of what I know about business.

TJ played the game that he had to play to get ahead. That's the environment he had to work in to get the type of success he wanted. Right at the cusp of the Korean economic boom, it was every man for himself. Dog eat dog. And sure many people may have gotten rich without bribery, money laundering and the like, but the many people who do DO those things are more common than you think.

I'm not saying it's right, I just don't judge him for it. It's certainly NOT something I could do, but that's why I'll never be the president of some big conglomerate (and why Seo Yoon is not cut out for the job either ... unless she accepts the fact that she's gonna have to get her hands dirty whether she likes it or not). I think she realized this at the end & that’s why she bawled.

As for the demolition, you define TJ by this incident. I don't. I see it as a one off thing.
I know you’re shaking your head no, but it’s okay. We don’t have to agree! :)
Like I've said in an earlier post let's say for argument's sake TJ did take over the empire and go on to become as money & power grubbing as Min-jæ and the late chairman (I concede he was probably heading in that direction, but as far as we saw he wasn’t quite there yet) ... the fact that he demolished one building & indirectly killed a man once before would prevent him from doing it again. Why? Because most likely he'd've gone to prison the first time (if he didn't kill himself) and a second time would certainly land him with a life sentence or the death penalty. You can't be such a public figure and get away with committing murder twice (even Min-jæ didn't get away, eventually). This was a one off incident triggered by an emotional breakdown & a temporary lapse in sanity. The way the whole thing was presented by the writers led me to that conclusion. We can agree to disagree. :D

Seul Hee

I said it in an earlier post, I believe he handled the situation the way he did out of anger, but MOSTLY because he desperately wanted to continue his crusade against the Chois. He felt like he was a saviour, who if he's in prison, the satanic Chois will surely corrupt the whole earth. Hey, I’m not saying I agree with this rationale of his (as I've interpreted it) for allowing her to serve his sentence, but from his POV I understood it. I still maintain that Seul Hee, as a grown, intelligent, rational woman, must be held accountable for her own actions. TJ didn't hold a gun to her head nor would he have hurt her if she refused. She made the decision to take the fall for him for her own very personal reasons: love & devotion. She had more than one opportunity to bail. She chose not to.

Nina on TJ

And finally no, my chingu, I think YOU are reading me wrong ... I don't think I ever said you said TJ was evil. I get that you don't think he's evil. But I do construe your opinion of him as excessively negative while I see both sides to him, both the negative AND the positive. I even happen to think his positive traits outweigh the negative, esp when compared to Min-jæ.

But I also understand your position, even if I don't agree with it. The Times published an opinion piece by Castro where he postulates that Oswald could not have murdered President Kennedy of his own accord. The article led me to reacquaint myself with Castro’s legacy & I developed a deeper appreciation of why you saw him in TJ & TJ in him. Now I want to tread lightly here because I'm not fully read on my Cuban history (studied ancient & contemporary Caribbean history in HS, but that was donkey years so I don't remember much). With that said, I am also able to understand Castro for his dream ... which wasn't an intrinsically evil dream like Hitler's who thought the so-called Aryan race was superior to all other races & should rule the world. Castro aspired to be a servant of the poor & the disabled. Now somewhere along the line that plan went awry & he started doing a lot of questionable deeds over long periods of time. THAT is why I see the comparison of TJ to Castro (and by extension Hitler & serial killers) as problematic because TJ never went to the extent Castro, Hitler or a serial killer did. It's completely out of context, as far as I can see.

Now you've brought up this about TJ offing himself because he knew he couldn't stop several times. I disagree with this. Strongly. :) Here’s why: there was every indication that he COULD stop because while he was a hardass TJ was NOT without conscience OR empathy. I believe this ending was more an indication of suicide being an intrinsic fiber of Korean morality (country with the most per annum suicides in the world). An alternative always existed in the context of the story the writers showed us AND the character of TJ. He was not a man who would give up so easily. He was a fighter. Once he relived the pain of losing his father thru his victim’s family, he would have want to make amends. I also believe the positive influence of his family, his father esp, AND his LOVE for his family ... would have made him choose life rather than death. THAT is the character I perceived from what the writers showed me. That's why I find the ending incredible & unsatisfying because it was not consistent with the rest of the show.

There's a popular rule of thumb (of sorts) in psychology that every serial killer is a psychopath, but not every psychopath is a serial killer.
Now just for repetition because I've said it before also, TJ in spite of all the illegalities he's dabbled in & him authorizing the demolition ... he does not meet the psychological profile of a psychopath. He may have some psychopathic traits (in fact we all do from time to time & if you're a CEO that's when you need these traits most), but his ability to maintain human connections, to empathize and to feel guilt & remorse all make him not a psychopath.

Have look at this article:
http://theweek.com/article/index/251957/which-professions-have-the-most-psychopaths