#Korean sitcom
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kipercrow · 4 months ago
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Help me find this show
Need some help finding a Korean Show/Drama/Sitcom (not sure how it falls)
The show was multicam, so I think it's from 90's-early 2000's
I can only remember one scene and it has to do with farts, so it may be very hard to search. (The entire scene doesn't have to do with farts but like the main part does)
I remember it being funny so i really want to see it
Scene Description:
It starts out with 3 men in a room, one is on the phone, I'm guessing with his girlfriend on the lower left side of the room. 2 men are fighting on the right side of the men over sharing a bed, and when trying to grab the blanet from each other start farting, and doing dutch ovens to get the other to get out of the bed, until the man on the phone screams at them. So the 2 men leave the room and still arguing with each other, bump into 2 girls that they knew (I assume family or friends) they're all in their pjs and start talking.
More Info:
I saw the entire episode of the show uploaded to YouTube, I'm not sure what channel but I assume it was an official upload that was uploaded to a throwback type channel of the network
Thanks to any help that you can bring
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S.E.S. starring as a special guest on the SBS sitcom "Soonpoong Clinic", 1998.
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mcr-themed-brain · 7 months ago
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Im on season 2 of mash and ive determined that if this show came out today the same people who watched it religiously in the 70s would call it woke propaganda
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benjitoum · 2 months ago
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Untitled
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Looks like a fun job as a broken ankle extra on "M*A*S*H"!! They can sometimes be seen applying actual plaster casts to the actors.
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thelatecaptainpierce · 1 year ago
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shout out to this episode of mash which contains tobacco depictions and is rated for 0 year olds
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inakialistelizarralde · 2 months ago
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Floorplans of the store and apartment from "Kim's Convenience". A or B?
@angryappa @jeanyoon88 @andrea.bang @simuliu
NOTE: The original house doesn't have the attic area on its front where the daughter's bedroom is supposed to be. (It's a fake element that was removed from the roof after filming was finished)
The problem with this set is the location of the staircase that leads to the upper floor since, being where it is, it should be inside the store... and it's not there.
This error is aggravated at the upperf floors, as the staircase is oriented towards the central part of the house, which would make it impossible for it to lead to the front area of ​​the attic with the daughter's bedroom.
I don't understand why this kind of thing is done sometimes. The solution to having a coherent design was so simple. Anyway...
"BEHIND THE SCREENS: Illustrated Floor Plans and Scenes from the Best TV Shows of All Time" (ISBN: 179721943X) is already in bookstores.
If you are interested in a handmade original or other prints visit my store on ETSY: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TVFLOORPLANSandMORE or write me to [email protected]
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selfieignite · 2 years ago
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This American show was more like a Korean drama
Selfie (2014) - Karen Gillan, John Cho, Giacomo Gianniotti 
Modern adaptation of Pygmalion/My Fair Lady.
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kdramachingoo · 1 year ago
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This one left a lasting impression. The Kdrama is Boyhood. Based out of rural late 1980s, the Kdrama is about a teenage boy who is known as the biggest loser and is often a victim of bullying and beaten up everyday. I saw him becoming the Blue Dragon from a sullen loser and it felt just so good. I wish if I ever forget my memories I get to revisit this kdrama again. 🌸
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thesundanceghost · 1 year ago
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Oh yeah I dreamt about mash having a saw episode last night. That was weird.
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nerdby · 2 years ago
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🚨TW Suicide Mention🚨
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Holy shit, modern emo music ain't got shit on this. Go watch MASH* if you haven't yet by the way. Its a masterpiece dramedy from the 1970s that will never stop being relevant. It's available to stream on Hulu, FrndlyTV, or you can watch for free on METv with an antenna.
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dreamingsushi · 2 years ago
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Apple of my Eye - Episode 3
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I’m actually quite into this. I know, I’m repeating myself, but I have the soul of an old lady, so was I told when I was 12 years old and that was maybe twenty years ago. Anyways, I didn’t strictly watch the episode one shot, I did other stuff in between, and with this technique of reviewing... it seems my memory doesn’t work so well.
Mi Rae gets the job at the art gallery. The grandfather doesn’t actually dislike her that much, it’s just that she makes him think of someone else and it pains him. We’ll probably learn of this person later on.
Kang San’s father visits him to set him up on a blind date. The lady said that she’ll buy him a car if the date went well, however Kang San ruins it all with saying he’s married with a daughter and that he lives with his mother-in-law. His dad is super upset about Kang San still hung up on his disappeared wife. He doesn’t like it that he takes care of her family. Kang San won’t change his mind and will stay with them for the sake of Jan Di.
Jan Di passed her audition, even though she thought she failed it. On her way back home I guess, when she crosses the street, she’s about to get hit by a very distressed Mi Rae, reliving awful moments of her childhood before she got adopted, thanks to her sister-in-law. We don’t know yet if she stops in time of not.
Jun Pyo’s mother is really despicable. She only thinks of money and is super mean to Mi Rae, the poor thing. Actually, I love how every character is big stereotype. Mi Rae the perfect girl with a sad past, mistreated by her family members (except for her mom). The grumpy granddad. The feisty granny. The mean mother. The bully at school. Everything’s there and it somehow manages to make sense. Love it.
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vintagetvstars · 5 months ago
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Alan Alda Vs. Robin Williams
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Propaganda
Alan Alda - (M*A*S*H) - He is both the saddest wettest little meow meow and your kindly grandfather and your favourite eccentric uncle (mom's side). Somehow it works. Passionate Democrat, feminist, great writer, he and his books are hilarious. Did a cartwheel when he won an Emmy! How he met his wife is the best meet cute of the last two centuries, and they've now been married over 60 years!!!
Robin Williams - (Mork & Mindy) - Mork & Mindy will forever be iconic. Robin Williams is such a gem on this show! Nanu Nanu <3
- No Negative Propaganda Please -
Master Poll List | How to submit propaganda | What is vintage? (FAQ)
Additional propaganda below the cut
Alan Alda:
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he’s just so good in MASH
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he put so much bisexuality into hawkeye i think it fundamentally changed me when i was little and watching mash for the first time. anyway do we all know the story about how he met his wife when they were at a party together and they were the only two people eating the cake that fell on the floor and he fell in love with her over her laugh. i just think hes neat :) i love when theres a strange looking man. also feel it necessary to say that the guy that wrote the book mash was based on wrote himself as hawkeye and HATED alda's hawkeye bc he displayed his morals too much (alda had it in his contract for the show that every episode had to have an operating room scene bc otherwise you arent backdropping the fact that war is Not fun. actually. he almost didnt take the role bc he thought a war comedy would make too much light of the horrors)
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please please please use this picture of him, he's so hot in it
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His comedic delivery in MASH...
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The story of how he met his wife is charming and sweet, and they've now been married 65 years
Just look at him. He's the most beautiful man I've ever seen but also he's completely average. He's got a weak jawlines and a round face and these big soft eyes and he's just so beautiful. He's capable of playing a silly charismatic sitcom protagonist in one scene, and a jaded army surgeon haunted by the deaths he's witnessed in the next. He's so hot that my dad once told me he decided to apply to medical school because of how much he was attracted to Hawkeye Pierce. That's literally how I learned that my father was bisexual.
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He's also just a really great dude? He's been outspoken about his political beliefs for a long time, and has always been strongly and vocally anti-war, pro-feminist, and pro lgbt. He served a tour in the Korean war, and his experiences there informed his performance in the show. He (and honestly the entire cast, but especially him) really just soared above and beyond the standard for comedies of the day.
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He's so funny and his eyes are pretty
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He loves and is a champion of science (Source).
Robin Williams:
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taahko · 1 year ago
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I just found your blog today can you please explain or point out a post that explains the MASH timeloop thing? I love the show but I've never heard anyone talk abt it that way before
oh yay hurray ive been waiting for an excuse to talk about this lmao sorry this is long
ok so basically maeve (my gf) and i started watching mash for the first time about a month ago and we started joking about it being like the characters were stuck in a time loop mostly because the same basic episode format is repeated over and over, because it's a sitcom from the 70s and the episodes arent meant to be watched en masse where you can start noticing all the little repetitions and plot holes and inconsistencies that naturally occur in longform tv
but then i started to pay attention to the dates being mentioned in the show - famously the korean war never technically ended, but american troops were involved in active on the ground fighting between 1950 and 1953, so the entire 11 seasons of mash have to be squeezed into that three year period. with 251 episodes occurring within 1,129 days, that gives every episode about 4.5 days of real time. so it works right? no time loop right? well wait a sec
for the first 5 seasons or so of mash they give very consistent dates about when things are happening. for example, bj arrives in korea in september of 1952, at the start of season 4. colonel potter arrives about a week after him, and talks about how he has 18 months left before his retirement. that gives us about 7 months for the shows final 7 seasons to take place in, meaning that by the episode 'point of view' in season 7 we should be around december of 1952. in that episode the pov character starts writing a letter home and in the corner he writes the date:
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september of 1951. ok, could be that this episode isn't meant to take place in the regular timeline of the season - maybe for some reason its just like, a random flashback episode. but bj, charles, and potter are all present, even though none of them got to korea until 1952. now i KNOW that this is not like, the True Hidden Secret Lore of MASH, this is the writers realizing they were running out of road and turning back the clock a bit to accommodate for how long the show was running on. but play in my time loop space with me please
more talking points:
consistent jokes about time zones and how difficult it is to call the states because "our today is their yesterday but if you call them now it might not reach them until our tomorrow and by that point our yesterday will be their today"
hawkeye's increasing mania over the seasons and his conviction that the war will never end, comparing the camp to dante's inferno multiple times. maeve once pointed out that the closer hawkeye comes to realizing that he's trapped in a time loop the closer he gets to being institutionalized - and what does the series finale cold open onto ? hawkeye in a mental institution. the only way out is to lose yourself etc. sidenote frank also escaped the time loop by going insane and getting institutionalized
in a war for all seasons bj potter and charles are all present at the 1951 new years party as well as the 1952 new years party
there are three christmas episodes, two of which bj is present for even though he should only have spent one christmas in korea
details of people's families and lives shift around - sometimes potter's got multiple grandchildren, sometimes he only has one, sometimes its a girl, sometimes its a boy, sometimes she's 5, sometimes he's 2
we're not the first people to talk about this either, here's a good video compilation posted a couple yrs ago of time loop moments
overall ive been using the time loop thesis to add another layer to my mash viewing experience. it increases the already present sense of constant dread, anger, frustration, and disgust with their situation that the characters feel, plus it feels like a very poignant take on the united states' constant warmongering and violent existence. it really never ends, it just goes on an on. the future's been canceled by the war department- we're just gonna replay the past.
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episodeoftv · 1 year ago
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Quarterfinals: Round 6 of 8
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propaganda and summaries are under the cut (May include spoilers)
The Good Place: 1.13 Michael’s Gambit
Shawn has decided that Fake Eleanor, Chidi, Jason, and Tahani must decide among themselves in thirty minutes which two of them should go to The Bad Place. Chaos and confusion ensues.
I’m a firm believer in spoilers not ruining a plot twist if the twist is good enough and this is the best proof I’ve seen of that. Yes, it was intended to be shocking, but it made perfect sense with everything we’d seen before. Every scene leading up to this episode had a double meaning, one you get the first time you watch if you haven’t been spoiled, and one you get every time you rewatch. Also the fact that this show was a network sitcom and yet it was plotty enough that you couldn’t just turn it on at any episode and get what was happening is so groundbreaking, and this episode turned it up to 11 by blowing up its entire premise.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%27s_Gambit
M*A*S*H: 11.16 Goodbye, Farewell and Amen
In the closing days of the Korean War, the staff of the 4077 M*A*S*H Unit find themselves facing irrevocable changes in their lives.
LITERALLY the most episode ever. For American television broadcasts it remains the most-watched primetime television episode ever, beaten only by a number of Super Bowls, the moon landing, and the Nixon resignation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodbye,_Farewell_and_Amen
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dapper-nahrwhale · 3 months ago
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Every time I tell people mash is one of my favorite shows they always say "wait mash that sitcom, the Korean war one, from like the 50s? THAT mash?"
And I have to say "it's actually from 1972 it's set in the 50s"
Then someone else says "how are you surprised by this, this tracks?"
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coffeeandacig · 1 year ago
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HUGE M*A*S*H NEWS!
Direct of the MASH Matters Facebook Page
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M*A*S*H: THE COMEDY THAT CHANGED TELEVISION, AN ALL-NEW TWO-HOUR CELEBRATION OF TELEVISION’S MOST INFLUENTIAL SITCOM
NEW ORIGINAL SPECIAL AIRS MONDAY, JANUARY 1, ON FOX
Featuring New Interviews with Cast Members Alan Alda, Gary Burghoff,
William Christopher, Jamie Farr, Mike Farrell, Wayne Rogers and Loretta Swit,
as well as Original Series Executive Producers Gene Reynolds and Burt Metcalfe
Plus Rarely-Seen Archival Interviews with Writer/Producer Larry Gelbart,
and Stars Larry Linville, Harry Morgan, McLean Stevenson and David Ogden Stiers
In the all-new two-hour special, M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television, premiering Monday, January 1 (8:00-10:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX, join the men and women who made M*A*S*H as they celebrate one of the most beloved, enduringly popular, often quoted and influential comedies ever created.
As the definitive look at the 14-time Emmy-winning television classic, the special centers around new interviews with original cast members Alan Alda (Capt. Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce), Gary Burghoff (Cpl. Walter "Radar" O'Reilly), William Christopher (Father Francis Mulcahy), Jamie Farr (Cpl./Sgt. Maxwell Q. "Max" Klinger), Mike Farrell (Capt. B.J. Hunnicutt), Wayne Rogers (Capt. "Trapper" John McIntyre) and Loretta Swit (Maj. Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan) and series executive producers Gene Reynolds and Burt Metcalfe. In these intimate, highly personal remembrances, the creation and evolution of the show’s iconic characters are revealed, alongside rare and never-before-seen behind-the-scenes footage, photos and stories.
Writer/producer Larry Gelbart, as well as additional series stars Larry Linville (Maj. Frank Burns), Harry Morgan (Col. Sherman T. Potter), McLean Stevenson (Lt. Col. Henry Blake) and David Ogden Stiers (Maj. Charles Emerson Winchester III) are remembered through a vibrant collection of clips from the series as well as in rarely-seen archival interviews. With unique experiences, observations and memories from 11 seasons of M*A*S*H, this special will make audiences laugh, touch their heartstrings, and leave them on a nostalgic high while celebrating the sustained brilliance of the iconic sitcom.
“M*A*S*H is not only a great television series, it is a cultural phenomenon. It has made multiple generations of viewers laugh, cry and think, often in the same episode,” said Executive Producers John Scheinfeld and Andy Kaplan. “We are excited to team with FOX to create this unprecedented window into an innovative television classic.”
"M*A*S*H is among the most iconic sitcoms in the annals of television history. It's a timeless show that comedically captures the 4077th medical corps and how they managed to maintain their sanity while saving lives on the front lines of the Korean War,” said Dan Harrison, EVP, Program Planning & Content Strategy, FOX Entertainment. “Larry Gelbart, Gene Reynolds and Burt Metcalfe brought this incredible comedy to life thanks to their ensemble cast led by the incomparable Alan Alda. FOX is proud to celebrate the landmark achievements of one of the best comedies ever created."
The M*A*S*H two-and-a-half-hour series finale that first aired on CBS in 1983 remains the highest rated telecast in television history, delivering an incredible 77 audience share and 60.2 rating. To-date, the show has never left the air, continuously running in syndication, on basic cable and now streaming on Hulu. The series was produced by 20th Television.
M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television is directed by John Scheinfeld (Reinventing Elvis: The ’68 Comeback, The U.S. vs. John Lennon and What The Hell Happened To Blood, Sweat & Tears?) with Scheinfeld and Andy Kaplan as Executive Producers.
Viewers can watch M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television next day on Hulu, Fox.com, On Demand and FOX Entertainment’s streaming platform, Tubi. On Demand is available for customers of Cox Contour TV, DIRECTV, DISH, fuboTV, Hulu + Live TV, Optimum, Spectrum, Verizon FiOS, XFINITY, YouTube TV and many more.
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