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Gong Hyo Jin 공효진


melusine

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A fan asked Soop if Gong Hyo Jin will attend Seoul Fashion Week, and I think Soop replied that GHJ will come. Link to board HERE.
(The google translator didn't really help much with the korean.. but more understandable with the Eng-Chinese trans)
Here's the Chinese trans..
SOOP官网留言板[Q.孔布利出席这次的时装周吗?很好奇请告诉我吧。树布利:yeap!出席.好奇我就告诉你!][鼓掌]心头大石落地没!撒花撒花~喜大普奔~#孔晓振# #孔孝真#
Credit to AmyWing Weibo

Also Pushbutton is having an after party on Oct 20, 8:30PM at Seoul Ping Pong Pub Instagram pic here
According to @Yumenas,
In SFW 2014 (F/W) she attended the after party for Steve J and Yoni P. In SFW 2014 (S/S), she attended the after party for Pushbutton at Seoul Ping Pong Pub.

So maybe she'll attend this one too?

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Guest marikolah

http://www.pri.org/stories/2014-10-17/tv-drama-shatters-taboos-around-mental-health-south-korea

A TV drama shatters taboos around mental health in South Korea

New America Media

Reporter YeoJin Kim


South Korea is notorious for having one of the world’s highest suicide rates. The country has consistently fallen near the bottom of global happiness indices for years. Yet despite these glaring statistics, few, if any, South Koreans talk openly about mental health.

But that may be changing now thanks to a recent television drama that takes place in the mental health ward of a hospital.

The TV show, titled “It’s OK, That’s Love,” stars Gong Hyo-jin as psychiatrist Ji Hae-soo, who works at the hospital in Seoul. She meets a successful novelist struggling with obsessive-compulsive disorder and schizophrenia. What begins as a series of comedic encounters soon transforms into a budding romance between two people coming to grips with their own inner turmoil.

The program is already beginning to lift the veil — if only slightly — on long-held taboos around mental health.

Hong-gyun Yoon, a practicing psychiatrist in Seoul, says he’s seen an uptick in the number of visitors to his office seeking treatment since the show aired this summer. “Many of them want to know whether they suffer from OCD, like the main character in the show,” he explained. Most of these new patients are young people.

Data from the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that some 13 percent of adults in South Korea reported feeling depressed for up to two consecutive weeks in 2012. The number of cases involving depression or other mental-health related conditions spiked 77 percent in the last decade, with more than half of those cases admitting to having thoughts of suicide.

“Before I watched this drama, I thought seeking help for things like depression was bad,"wrote an anonymous Seoul resident on Naver, a huge Korean website. The user explained that he lost his job because of depression and asked for suggestions of hospitals that offer counseling.

Cultural taboos around mental illness also extend to Koreans living abroad, including in the United States.

Jonathan Kang, a clinical psychologist working with mostly Korean immigrants in Los Angeles, says many Korean Americans tend to delay treatment until well after first noticing signs of distress. That makes treatment more complicated. "It’s important they come in as soon as they detect warning signs," he says.

But while Korean TV dramas are also popular within Korean American immigrant communities, whether or not they can actually change behavior remains a question. 

Eunice Kim, a Korean immigrant who works as medical interpreter in San Francisco, is an avid consumer of Korean dramas. She says these shows might have an impact on younger, more tech-savvy Korean Americans, but thinks older first-generation immigrants tend to be even “more conservative” than their peers in South Korea. That’s because many arrived prior to the explosion of the Internet and tend to be more isolated from public discussions around social issues. 

Kim points to a popular 2010 Korean TV drama that featured a romantic relationship between two men. The show aired 10 years after Korean TV personality Seokcheon Hong came out publicly as gay. Initially met with derision and open hostility, he later landed a spot on a cable series where sex and sexual orientation are openly discussed.

But Kim says that while it sparked conversation in Korea, she saw “little change” in attitudes among first-generation Korean immigrants here.

When it comes to getting treated for mental health, South Koreans have more to worry about than public shame. A New York Times article from 2011 pointed out that those people who seek counseling often pay in cash so no records show when they seek employment.

Perhaps more trouble are people's fears of being hospitalized against their will. Korean law makes involuntary confinement relatively easy: The approval of one or both parental figures, along with a clinician’s diagnosis, is enough.

In one scene from the TV show, the lead male character is forcibly institutionalized at the urging of his mother, who fears that he is suicidal. It's the kind of scene that Yoon, the Seoul psychiatrist, says is a typical media portrayal of people with mental health issues, reinforcing the notion that such people need to be isolated from mainstream society.

“The way media portray people with mental health problems must change,” he says, adding that often such individuals are depicted as being the butt of jokes. Yoon says such stereotypes “make people want to hide their problems.” Mental health advocates in the country are now working to change the law on involuntary confinement.

But for Ji-eun Yang, a 22-year-old living in Ulsan, an industrial port city in the country’s southeast, the TV show made the thought of seeking treatment less intimidating when “my mind is hurt or wounded.”

Yang says the show also made her realize just how common mental health disorders can be, noting that one of the characters, a psychiatrist named Dong-min Cho, seeks help for emotional trauma after a bitter divorce. When his friend, a surgeon, laughingly points out the irony of a psychiatrist needing therapy, Cho replies, “Would it be OK to laugh at you for getting cancer, even if you’re a surgeon?”

The scene, Yang says, “showed me that people facing mental health struggles are not as far from me as I thought.”

Additional reporting by Peter Schurmann. This story was produced as part of New America Media's ongoing coverage of mental health issues among youth and immigrant communities. For more information, visit #FeelBetter.

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Guest marikolah

This is in Vietnamese and also contains photos of her at the boontheshop opening. Maybe someone who understands Vietnamese can translate this. I think google seems to give a satisfying gist of it though. :)
http://www.xaluan.com/modules.php?name=News&file=marticle&sid=996548

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marikolah said: http://www.pri.org/stories/2014-10-17/tv-drama-shatters-taboos-around-mental-health-south-korea

A TV drama shatters taboos around mental health in South Korea

New America Media

Reporter YeoJin Kim


............

Hong-gyun Yoon, a practicing psychiatrist in Seoul, says he’s seen an uptick in the number of visitors to his office seeking treatment since the show aired this summer. “Many of them want to know whether they suffer from OCD, like the main character in the show,” he explained. Most of these new patients are young people.


...................

“Before I watched this drama, I thought seeking help for things like depression was bad,"wrote an anonymous Seoul resident on Naver, .............

................

But for Ji-eun Yang, a 22-year-old living in Ulsan, an industrial port city in the country’s southeast, the TV show made the thought of seeking treatment less intimidating when “my mind is hurt or wounded.”

Yang says the show also made her realize just how common mental health disorders can be, noting that one of the characters, a psychiatrist named Dong-min Cho, seeks help for emotional trauma after a bitter divorce. When his friend, a surgeon, laughingly points out the irony of a psychiatrist needing therapy, Cho replies, “Would it be OK to laugh at you for getting cancer, even if you’re a surgeon?”

The scene, Yang says, “showed me that people facing mental health struggles are not as far from me as I thought.”

Additional reporting by Peter Schurmann. This story was produced as part of New America Media's ongoing coverage of mental health issues among youth and immigrant communities. For more information, visit #FeelBetter.

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opsss, I think I just missed some english article about IOIL getting appreciation before :P

class="content-title" “It’s Okay, It’s Love” Receives Plaque of Appreciation From Schizophrenia Association

lovelymorning October 13, 2014


2014.08.06_its-okay-its-love-poster2.jpg

SBS’s drama “It’s Okay, It’s Love” recently received a plaque of appreciation from the Korean Society for Schizophrenia Research. Representing the team were director Kim Kyu Tae, writer Noh Hee Kyung, and production companies GT Entertainment and CJ E&M.

“It’s Okay, It’s Love” gathered much popularity as much as public interest due to its story that surrounded mental illnesses such as Schizophrenia, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), and Tourette Syndrome among others. The drama received much praise for depicting mental illnesses in an honest but beautiful perspective, especially since the topic itself is very sensitive and difficult to explain. :x :x :x

A lot of interest was especially placed upon schizophrenia, which occurred to the male lead character, Jang Jae Yeol (played by Jo In Sung). Although he had been diagnosed with this mental disorder, he was able to overcome it through the help of his peers and active treatment. The character was able to shape the public view of schizophrenic patients into one that was more positive and empathetic.

2013 it's okay it's love appreciation plaque

The director of the Korean Society for Szhizophrenia Research, Lee Joong Seo, stated, “I always felt unease because of the prejudice placed upon schizophrenic patients, who, along with their family members, became hesitant in receiving treatment as a result of this negative light placed on the disorder as well as the patients themselves. We came to give a plaque of appreciation because the drama gave a new hope to schizophrenic patients as well as help with getting rid of some of that prejudice in society.”

Upon receiving the plaque of appreciation, director Kim Kyu Tae commented, “As a representative of the entire production team, I would like to thank the Society for Schizophrenia Research for their interest in the drama, as well as the plaque of appreciation. I hope that our drama becomes an opportunity for more people to view mental disorder patients in a more positive and empathetic way.”

Just when we thought it was over, “It’s Okay, It’s Love” gives us a pleasant surprise. Way to go!

Anyone a fan of the drama?

cr. Soompi


so so proud!!! \m/ \m/ \m/ :D

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Guest clalenny

#Kong Hyo Jin  [FanArt]... lovea_thumb.giflovea_thumb.giflovea_thumb.gif
696cd1c8jw1elg07io96cj20k00zkdhh.jpg

696cd1c8jw1elg07jalfvj20eq0lkwfc.jpg


Cr : 潶-Pork尐丶***************************************************************************
b5c576abjw1elfwixulovj21kw23u1kx.jpg

Cr : 孔布利家的WEN文子

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Quote of the day!

1184754_721395774607887_1612456534329414





How's my edited smoothie king CF photo turned to a Quote of Hae Soo in Its okay, Its Love?? Hiihihiihi! Its so hard to remove the "straw" on her drink LOL .
I'm not really good when it comes to that photoshop. Mianhae. :) I hope i did a good job... Today! Hahhahaha!
:\">

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just because I miss her so much specially her almost-all-fantastic-post,
which most of time, makes me laughed so hard even until I got stomachache,
I checked some of her awesome post a while ago...
she is @popcherrypop, the one that made this thread became the most fun thread few months ago... my bumblebee coat exactly :P
okay, here one my favorite of her post!

popcherrypop said: I wasn't actually planning on participating for Tues' color round since I have (and still have) a gazillion things to do, but the moment I set eyes on the TGL GHJIFs just about an hour or so ago, I immediately thought of this. Anyhoo, my contribution for white:

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