Tag: ChoiHyun-Wook

  • What This Subscriber Said About Choi Hyun-wook Made Me Realize Something

    What This Subscriber Said About Choi Hyun-wook Made Me Realize Something


    When Words Feel Like Rain on a Dry Heart

    One comment in particular felt like rain falling on my dry heart, moistening it beautifully. This subscriber, who’s become such a treasured voice in my comment section, watched my 17-minute video twice, calling it “long but featuring such a cutie.”

    They mentioned having major projects this month and next, badly missing the freedom to rewatch Weak Hero, their “fevered dream.”

    At work, I’m essentially a working machine, so my head and heart are getting drier. Still, this show and these in-depth discussions with subscribers, sharing our inner thoughts – the channel is evolving in this direction, and I want to maintain it for as long as possible.


    When Natural Talent Meets Industry Reality

    What really struck me was their perspective as someone working in the arts. They wrote about how Hyun-wook has “realised and unlocked a deep talent for acting,” acknowledging that good looks, height and charisma play a part, but pointing out how they’ve seen idol ‘actors’ whoseโ€ฆ

    Charm and confidence evaporate the moment they start acting; all that finely honed stage experience flies out of the window while they do their best impression of mahogany wardrobes.

    They’d been forced by seniors to act before, describing how, while it didn’t go horribly, “it was absolutely nowhere at the level of what Hyunwook displays. The things I feel just won’t broadcast from my face.”

    Then they talked about watching the micro-expressions of Ji-hoon and Hong Kyung, not to mention international titans like Meryl Streep, feeling relief they never pursued acting seriously.

    There was this brutal honesty:

    Talent is a very real thing. I have (very quietly) chuckled backstage at studied actors who simply can’t match Hyunwook’s raw abilities.

    Reading their words, I suddenly thought there must’ve been a lot of noise from people envying his natural talent.

    Reading Hyun-wook’s interviews, I learned that when he switched to acting due to his injury, he transferred to an arts high school and got cast in a web drama after just three months. Like they said, he has good looks and those compelling eyes that directors mentioned – calling it charisma fits perfectly.

    The Hidden Stories Behind the Scenes

    While going through interviews, I thought about how many people around him must’ve envied his smooth transition to acting, becoming a rising star.

    Nobody can really know how much worry and struggle he had inside.

    Without knowing much about him, he might look like an Instagram star with a trendy style, but that iconic fighting scene from episode 7 that had me hugging my pillow, eating ice cream and crying – behind the camera, it was shot over ten hours while he was getting dehydrated.

    People only see what’s visible.

    Through my college connections, I have people working in the Korean entertainment industry, and through them, I’ve heard many times that talent is essential to rise as a star. That would be the “real thing” they mentioned. Countless flash-in-the-pan stars were gifted with such talent but just consumed it and disappeared like smoke. So I’m excited to see what path this young man with natural talent and charisma will take.

    Though when I see the public being so envious of his talent that they nitpick even his smallest mistakes, I wonder if he gets hurt inside despite having that “gut.” The jealousy of crowds manifests as countless mean comments, which is miserable.

    Others won’t see the effort of a rookie who collapsed spread-eagled on the ring from dehydration during filming. So I could relate more to his story about being moved when Kyung noticed and appreciated that his ad-libs were actually planned at home and shown after lots of practice.


    When Different Acting Methods Collide

    They painted this vivid picture of Hyun-wook wondering,

    “Am I doing this right?” while filming, responding with “Baby, if not you, then who?” ๐Ÿ˜‚

    The comment captured something I’d been trying to articulate – how a nineteen-year-old with braces could nervously munch fried chicken among adults in a business setting, yet have the nerve to suggest script changes.

    I couldn’t help but put that image in the video because it was too cute. That photo of him smiling with braces and pink blush on his face is my favourite.

    They imagined that Ji-hoon and Hyun-wook probably had professional arguments about the artistic process, “as is expected when you put perfectionists together, but all tension dissolves with their healthy amount of hugging.”

    They noticed how Hyun-wook’s iconic improvisations breathed Su-ho to life, elevating him beyond the script, making Su-ho his own. But Park Ji-hoon would jokingly complain that these improvs often left him flummoxed, unable to continue his lines, having to resort to glowering or doing a classic Si-eun blank-face to power through scenes.

    I also expect Ji-hoon and Hyun-wook had healthy arguments on set. How could there be no such arguments in real life at work? If they always held hands and agreed on everything, that would be even more unbelievable.

    But we know the intense emotions of these young actors that pierce through the actual show, and through various interviews, how much this trio matured through this work.

    They wrote about Ji-hoon saying the two really bonded over drinks while talking about acting:

    Lord knows I’d have given half my life savings to sit at that table, though I would have just watched their moving lips and Adam’s apples, and missed all the insights they offered.


    The Deeper Art of Connection

    Of course, through their comments, I could naturally feel their exceptional artistic sensibility.

    We might be breathing on opposite sides of the earth, our bridge just this text, but reading their thoughtful letters, I can literally feel what kind of artistic lake they carry inside them. Even if their acting experience didn’t make them shine right away, as they live on, there will definitely come a moment when it makes them brilliantly shine at an unexpected point, as if it had been waiting.

    I can’t talk deeply either – my colleagues wouldn’t believe that when I’m alone at home, I watch teen shows, eat ice cream while crying and laughing, and even started a YouTube channel from that ๐Ÿ˜‚

    Before I accidentally stumbled upon Weak Hero Class 1, I was completely burnt out at work. A friend who works as a teen psychology counselor recommended it, but I forgot about it until it popped up on Netflix. If it weren’t for fan creation promo videos on YouTube when season 2 was coming out, I probably never would’ve encountered it.

    First Conversation: Differences in Acting Methodologies

    @asukalonginus3335:

    Thanks for the post Jennie! It’s longโ€ฆbut I watched it twice. And why not, since it features such a cutie hahaha I’m shallow that way.

    Sighโ€ฆ that Hyunwook wondered “am I doing this right?” while filmingโ€ฆ

    Baby, if not you, then who?

    I don’t think Park Jihoon would have it any other way either. Hyunwook embodied Suho perfectly.

    I’m wondering if the two of them have very different acting methodologies. Hyunwook’s iconic improvisations breathed Suho to life, elevating Suho beyond the script. He made Suho his (and ours โค๏ธ).

    However, Park Jihoon jokingly complained that these improvs would often leave him flummoxed and unable to continue his lines (‘that’s not in the script!’), and he had to just resort to glowering or doing a classic Sieun blank-face to power through the scene.

    If Hyunwook got cast as Korean David Mills, I think I would have thrown my tv out the window the moment he suffers his eventual horrible fate.

    But I’d watch it again because in this fantasyland, Park Jihoon would have been cast as John Doe. Ahโ€ฆwhat I would pay to see these two boys together again, even at each other’s throats hahaha

    I just watched DP again after two years. It’s so lovely to see Weak Hero cast members popping up throughout the show. I was counting them one by one. ‘Collect the whole set!’ hahaha

    2/3rds of the sinking canoe trio were there. Hong Kyung looks dramatically different, remarkable actor. Hyunwook made my insides shift, and yea, he’s ‘damned good at acting.’ Missed Jihoon, aiyaโ€ฆ

    And oh my god, Mantis has both Hyunwook and the redoubtable Im Siwan inside? Sign me right up!

    One last thing, when you say Hyunwook was just turning 20, are you using East Asian ‘+1’ age counting here? (So he would have been 19 to the West?)


    Jennie’s Reply:

    Hey friend! How’s it going? I’m off today, so I’ve been glued to my computer, archiving precious subscriber comments on my Twitter and having the best time โ™ฅ๏ธ Re-reading all these WHC fans’ thoughts really hit me again with how much we all love this showโ€ฆ having such a happy afternoonโ€ฆ ๐Ÿช

    Really enjoyed reading your comment! I was so surprised bc you totally nailed the point I was trying to make!! โ™ฅ๏ธ I deliberately sprinkled some mentions of my previous Jihoonie vid throughout this one (sorry the video got so long btw, got completely distracted looking at Hyunuki photos and ended up making a 17 mins monster lolol my video skills are getting better though so expect more frequent uploads!!)

    Everything from here on is just my take and impression from reading through all those Jihoonie and Hyunuki interviews (but I think you explained it perfectly in your comment already)โ€ฆ ๐Ÿ˜‰ Like you said, diving into all the behind-the-scenes stuff made me think these two have pretty different acting styles, and I wonder if there was some healthy “argue” between their approaches on set.

    Jihoonie and Kyungi learned acting the traditional way through institutes and formal training, while Hyunuki switched from baseball after an injury and honestly didn’t get that same foundational training.. Not saying he lacks skill at all (of course) just that he probably learned more through experience on set rather than in classrooms..

    What I really wanted to explore in the video was my fundamental curiosity, how does this complete rookie with minimal acting experience manage to improvise and change scripts in front of veteran actors and seniors with way more experience?

    After reading his interviews and behind-the-scenes content, I think it comes down to this thing he built through baseball, “Ghang” in Korean, which is probably closest to “gut” in English. That Ghang from pushing himself to his limits gave him the confidence to speak up when he felt something was right.

    Korea has this intense seniority culture in every field (entertainment especially.. as far as I know), so it’s not easy for juniors to freely voice opinions to seniors. I wanted to talk about why Hyunuki could pull this off and why his ad-libs and improv worked out so well.. and you totally caught that, so thank you thank you โ™ฅ๏ธ

    Oh and I have no idea what role Hyunuki will play in Mantis, but I’m guessing assassin? That’s my imagination anyway. I really like Mantis’s creative director too, they seem to have a thing for kitschy stuffโ€ฆ When Mantis drops I’ll definitely do another long Hyunuki analysis vid!

    I’ve also decided to post weekly about Korean cultural subtext that you can’t catch in subtitles, so if that’s your thing, come check it out!

    Wait, almost missed this!! Yeah, yeah, the Korean age counting system is completely insane but we’re switching to international age now, too. I think when Director Yoo met with Hyunuki, he was probably 19 in international age.


    Second Conversation: Deep Insights on Talent and Hard Work

    @asukalonginus3335:

    Hi Jennie, I have major projects this month and the next, so I am very badly missing the freedom to rewatch Weak Hero, my fevered dream. Your posts are a much-needed balm to soothe my frayed nerves. Short of them, I subsist on Weak Hero memories locked in my heart while my bosses drone on.

    I think Hyunwook has realized and unlocked a deep talent for acting. Good looks, height and charisma play a part yes, but I think we’ve all seen idol ‘actors’ whose charm and confidence evaporate the moment they start acting; all that finely honed stage experience flies out of the window while they do their best impression of mahogany wardrobes.

    I can’t say much, but I work in the arts. I’ve been forced by seniors to act before, because they didn’t want to, and while it didn’t go horribly, it was absolutely nowhere at the level of what Hyunwook displays. The things I feel just won’t broadcast from my face. When I see the micro expressions of Jihoon and Hong Kyung, not to mention those of international titans like Meryl Streep, I’m just very relieved I never bothered to nurture my acting non-talent. Talent is a very real thing. I have (very quietly) chuckled backstage at studied actors who simply can’t match Hyunwook’s raw abilities.

    I imagine Jihoon and Hyunwook probably did have professional arguments about the artistic process, as is expected when you put perfectionists together, but all tension dissolves with their healthy amount of hugging. Witnessing these from behind-the-scenes takes, and Hong Kyung’s prescient photography, has benefited my blood circulation. Different methodologies notwithstanding, Hyunwook and Jihoon clearly adore each other, to the extent that they have absently fathered not-insignificant shipdoms. I admit visiting these worlds on occasion to restock my subsistence fantasies.

    Jihoon says the two of them really bonded when they were talking over drinks about acting. Lord knows I’d have given half my life savings to sit at that table, though I would have just watched their moving lips and Adam’s apples, and missed all the insights they offered.

    Together, talent, hard-work, connections, and luck make stardom. I wish these boys the very best, I will support all their projects, they’ve really brought me so much happiness.

    Ah, if Hyunuki was internationally 19 at that time, was he still in his braces-phase? A smiling, braced-up boy nervously munching on fried chickenโ€ฆ this image is going to last me the entire day.

    Oh yes, I was also wondering if this ‘๊นก’ bears any relation with the character ‘้‹ผ’, used in Japanese and older forms of Mandarin Chinese? It literally means ‘steel’.


    Jennie’s Reply:

    Friend, you have no idea how much I was smiling while reading your comment ๐Ÿ˜ I’m actually sitting in a cafe right now and I’ve been grinning for so long that this old man at the next table keeps glancing over at me lol (he probably thinks I’m texting with my boyfriend lol)

    I remember rambling about this briefly in previous audiosโ€ฆ before I accidentally stumbled upon WHC, I was completely burnt out at work. A friend (she works as a teen psychology counsellor) recommended WHC when S1 came out, but I just forgot about it until it popped up on Netflix. Honestlyโ€ฆ if it weren’t for all those fan creation promo videos on YouTube when S2 was coming out, I probably never would’ve encountered WHC.

    So I think as long as fans don’t damage the original work, creating analysis videos under fair use actually has a positive effect on promoting the original. In this sense, I hope my channel contributes even a tiny bit to promoting the original work.

    Your expressions are so poetic ๐Ÿฅน reading them felt like rain falling on my dry heart lol, moistening it beautifully.

    At work, I’m basically a working machine, so my head and heart keep getting drier, but this show and now these deep-layered discussions with subscribers, sharing our inner thoughts โ€ฆ the channel is gettingโ€ฆ this way, and I want to maintain it as long as possibleโ€ฆ I just hope there won’t be any copyright issues.

    Reading Hyunuki’s interviews, I learned that when he switched to acting due to his injury, he transferred to an arts high school and got cast in a web drama after just 3 monthsโ€ฆ? Like you said, he has good looks and, as the directors mentioned, those compelling eyes. Those good eyes, which are key for actors, calling it charisma, fit perfectly. So I thought while going through interviewsโ€ฆ how many people around him must’ve envied his smooth transition to acting, becoming a rising starโ€ฆ

    Nobody can really know how much worry and struggle he had inside. Without knowing much about him, he might look like an Instagram star with trendy style, but as I started researching him, that iconic fighting scene from ep7 that had me hugging my pillow, eating ice cream and crying lolโ€ฆ behind the camera, it was shot over 10 hours while he was getting dehydratedโ€ฆ

    People only see what’s visible.

    Reading your comment, I suddenly thought there must’ve been a lot of noise from people envying his natural talentโ€ฆ Anyway, others won’t see the effort of a rookie who collapsed spread-eagled on the ring from dehydration during filming. So I could relate more to his story about being moved when Kyung noticed and appreciated that his ad-libs were actually planned at home and shown after lots of practice.

    Of course, through your comments so far, I could naturally feel your exceptional artistic sensibility. We might be breathing on opposite sides of the earth, and our bridge is just this text, but reading your comments and long letters from subscribers, I can literally just feel what kind of artistic lake you carry inside youโ€ฆ

    Even if your acting experience didn’t make you shine right away, as you live on, there will definitely come a moment when it makes you brilliantly shine at an unexpected point, as if it had been waiting, and your experience will say,

    “Why did you come only now? I’ve been waiting all along”.

    I can’t talk deeply either (my colleagues wouldn’t believe that when I’m alone at home, I watch teen shows lol eat ice cream while crying and laughing, and even started a YouTube channel from that lol), but through college connections I have some working in the Korean entertainment industry, and through them I’ve heard many times that talent is essential to rise as a star in this industryโ€ฆ That would be the “real thing” you mentioned.

    And countless flash-in-the-pan stars were gifted with such talent but just consumed it and disappeared like smokeโ€ฆ So I’m excited to see what path this young man with natural talent and charisma that draws people’s attention will take.

    Though when I see the public being so envious of his talent that they nitpick even this young man’s smallest mistakes, I wonder if he gets hurt inside despite having that “gut” I think the jealousy of crowds envious of such rising stars’ talent manifests as countless mean commentsโ€ฆ which is miserableโ€ฆ

    Yeah, I also expect Jihoonie and Hyunuki had healthy arguments on set. How could there be no such arguments in real life at work? If they always held hands and agreed on everything and everything went smoothly, that would be even more unbelievable.

    But we know well the intense emotions of these young actors that pierce through the actual show, and through various interviews, how much this trio (plus Youngi and Seokdae tooโ€ฆ) matured through this work. I just want S3 to come out so we can glimpse these youths’ passion one more time.

    Yes, imagining him with braces, awkwardly just munching chicken among adults (in a business setting), I couldn’t help but put it in the video lol it was too cute. That photo of him smiling with braces and pink blush on his face is my fav lol And now that I think about it, my second thought is that “ghang” probably does come from that Chinese character you mentioned!!! “ghang” is really such everyday slang in Korea that it’s almost on par with “daebak”!


    Third Conversation: Hopes and Concerns for the Future

    @asukalonginus3335:

    Aww, thanks, Jennie, I’m moved. Bless your kind heart for sheltering the broken little embers of my acting passions. ๐Ÿฅน

    I am still actively involved on stage, though I am not acting; work can be tough, but not insurmountable. And if it gets overwhelming, I can dip into a past Jennie-post to destress.

    Speaking of which, I do hope the WH kids have healthy ways to destress. Jihoon seems to stay with his family and his dog Max, while Hyunwook lives alone. These two seem like such different people, it is adorable that they have this close ‘union of opposites’ friendship. I hope they hang out more (and feed the shipper-worlds that feed me.)

    I share your concern with the public nitpicking Hyunwook’s mistakes. Are they expecting this young man to be a saint? While emanating sex appeal? It’s sick.

    Jihoon is probably more wary of skulking eyes, ever since he was forced to write a public apology along with his WannaOne friend Woojin for playing on a plane; I believe they were then 18.

    I don’t think the weight of expectations they bear is normal.

    I’ve seen grim statistics on the K-entertainment industry concerning idol burnout and much worse.

    This creates some conflict for me: though I wish to see their projects long into the future, part of me hopes for them to retire early to protect themselves. Kind of like how Bae Yong Jun retired at the height of his fame at 35, put his cash into clever investments, got married, had kids and is reaping his returns to the tune of more than 50 mil USD. No more projects from him, but I’d say this sounds pretty successful for any celebrity, no? I’d like to think his true fans would also be happy that their idol is happy and healthy.

    I believe your channel promotes Weak Hero in the best way possible. I have rarely been so engaged by viewer analysis as yours. The things you have pulled together, including insights from other subscribers and all, have been of startling depth. I wish you the brightest of golden blessings I can think of: that Hyunwook and Jihoon read your Korean posts and leave you likes.

    And for all of us, your subscribers: May Weak Hero 3 dawn upon us soon.


    Final Thoughts

    Their message ended with supporting all these actors’ projects because “they’ve really brought me so much happiness.” Sometimes that’s what good art does – it creates connections between strangers, sparks discussions that make both people think deeper. I just want season 3 to come out so we can glimpse these youths’ passion one more time.

    Thank you so much for such deep and meaningful conversations. Being able to have such significant exchanges with fans around the world through the work that is Weak Hero really makes me realise how precious this is.

    While hoping that Hyunwook, Jihoon, and all young actors walk their paths healthily, we will continue to love and support their work. And I truly hope that Weak Hero Season 3 comes out as soon as possible, so we can meet this beautiful story and characters once again.

    I’m just grateful for moments like these – when a day off becomes something special because someone took the time to share their thoughts with such care and poetry.


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