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Danielle goes for round two in her recap of the 2013 Korean drama I Hear Your Voice. We start where we left off: A girl fresh out of a coma is testifying before the world’s worst lawyer and her psychic teenage friend. When the testimony doesn’t go as planned, Hye Seong and co-worker Kwon Woo dress up as high-schoolers to do the detective work the police apparently never did, even though it’s gone to court. Evidence is unnecessary, apparently. If that sounds interesting, too bad, because we quickly move on to another case where twins are being tried for the same murder that only one of them committed. This almost breaks Sam as he begins to realize that Danielle had tried to warn him about how he’d question his very sanity trying to unravel the (fictional, we hope) Korean justice system and he was not prepared. Meanwhile, more importantly (probably), the murderer of Soo Ha’s dad is fresh out of jail. He’s reformed and it’s totally fine, everyone; he definitely won’t stalk or attempt to kill them. The police said so, and they’d know. And finally, in case you wondering if there was more, we get to the real plot of the story, as the basketball players you thought didn’t matter become startlingly relevant as Sam realizes the actual plot of this show: Petty grievances and how to revenge them.
Theme: Earning Happiness by John Bartmann.
For more delightful weirdness, follow us on Bluesky or YouTube.
If you like our content and want more of it, please consider supporting us on Patreon.
By Book Retorts5
88 ratings
Danielle goes for round two in her recap of the 2013 Korean drama I Hear Your Voice. We start where we left off: A girl fresh out of a coma is testifying before the world’s worst lawyer and her psychic teenage friend. When the testimony doesn’t go as planned, Hye Seong and co-worker Kwon Woo dress up as high-schoolers to do the detective work the police apparently never did, even though it’s gone to court. Evidence is unnecessary, apparently. If that sounds interesting, too bad, because we quickly move on to another case where twins are being tried for the same murder that only one of them committed. This almost breaks Sam as he begins to realize that Danielle had tried to warn him about how he’d question his very sanity trying to unravel the (fictional, we hope) Korean justice system and he was not prepared. Meanwhile, more importantly (probably), the murderer of Soo Ha’s dad is fresh out of jail. He’s reformed and it’s totally fine, everyone; he definitely won’t stalk or attempt to kill them. The police said so, and they’d know. And finally, in case you wondering if there was more, we get to the real plot of the story, as the basketball players you thought didn’t matter become startlingly relevant as Sam realizes the actual plot of this show: Petty grievances and how to revenge them.
Theme: Earning Happiness by John Bartmann.
For more delightful weirdness, follow us on Bluesky or YouTube.
If you like our content and want more of it, please consider supporting us on Patreon.

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