then there's character development, some seasoning of every possible trope that any drama can have.
The rich male lead who's arrogant, rude and not knowing many ways of living meets a bit silly, hardworking and poor (this is very necessary) female lead they end up being boss-employee. this kinda story is sooo predictable, cliche, having many skippable parts, and garnished with many second-hand embarrassments moments with cringe-worthy scenes. Now at this point, knowing how it ended maybe I should just stop caring for my dropped list. I decided to give it try just for sake of my never-ending dropping list. Suddenly, Na Young Won starts to ask herself if she would be better off buying her own house.or beginning on an unlikely romance with her firm’s CEO!ġ01 ways to ruin the ending. But as the duo starts to get to know one another, their attitudes toward the real estate market – and one another – start to change. For him, buying the house Na Young Won lives in is little more than another financial transaction. He grew up in poverty, initially working in the construction industry, but determined to make his fortune through real estate investment. Yoo Ja Sung proves to be a very difficult landlord to keep happy. But when the magazine’s CEO Yoo Ja Sung buys the house and becomes her fussy new landlord, she is in for a shock. In fact, she lives alone in a rented house and happily makes adjustments as she sees fit. Although her glittering journalistic career spans a decade, her home situation is not quite as idyllic as those she spends her time reporting on. Na Young Won is a successful senior editor at the hit monthly magazine Monthly House.