After finishing a Korean drama, don't say I'm vulgar. I'm almost a grown man, and yet I still watch Korean dramas. But indeed, "Coffee Prince" is quite good-looking [here's the viewing address]. It's a bit different from the Korean dramas I've watched before. Although it's as dragging and verbose as other Korean dramas, at least it's not one of those dramas where you love me, why don't you love me, why do you love others.
Watching "Coffee Prince" was very interesting. If there were more stories about the young people's struggle in the coffee shop, it might have been an inspiring TV series, but this TV series didn't have that.
When I say this TV series is interesting, I'm not referring to the plot. All Korean dramas' plots are like constipation, wanting to come out but can't. But in the end, they still slowly come out like drops of feces.
I think this TV series is interesting because of the characters inside, such as the super disgusting and dirty boss barista Hong something. That's the president. I think I am usually also quite disgusting. But after seeing him, he is even more disgusting than me. He puts his finger with nose boogers in his mouth, washes his socks with chopsticks, eats the chewing gum others have chewed and thrown on the ground...
And then there's Min something, a young man from society who is timid as a mouse but strong as a bull. The male lead and the second male lead are still the stereotypical characters in Korean dramas. They come from good family backgrounds but have bad personalities, which is still the old cliché of Korean dramas. However, the female lead, who played Eun-chan dressed as a man in "Gyeoul Yeonga", unfortunately, is also the same as the typical Korean drama cliché.