To her grandma’s consternation, Dal-mi has idealized Do-san to the point that she rejects any romantic interest shown by guys around her. The real Do-san is a struggling entrepreneur working on an image-recognition technology for his start-up Samsan Tech.Īfter the lecture, Ji-pyeong follows Dal-mi and sees her with Grandma Choi. Later, she regrets taking up In-jae’s challenge because she has never met Do-san in person and it has been 15 years since their last letters to each other. Dal-mi impulsively accepts the invitation and says that she’ll attend the party with her business partner, Do-san. In-jae scorns Dal-mi for her choices in life to further humiliate Dal-mi, she invites her to attend The Morning Group’s networking party. Meanwhile, her sister In-jae has become the CEO of The Morning Group, with her stepfather Won Doo-Jung as Chairman. While working as a temporary employee, Dal-mi helps her grandmother in the corn dog stand, but she dreams of becoming a successful businesswoman. She tells Ji-pyeong never to visit her even if he becomes a successful businessman. Grandma Choi gives Ji-pyeong all of the money that he earned from his investments. While he’s rushing to a business meeting, Dal-mi’s father gets hit by a car he dies on the way home. But to his dismay, Grandma Choi withdraws all the money and closes the account she gives the money to Dal-mi’s father who’s still struggling to promote his business idea.Įpisode 2: “F F F (Family, Friends, Fools)” Ji-pyeong secretly uses Grandma Choi’s bank account and succeeds in getting huge returns on his investments. Concerned about how lonely Dal-mi is with her parents’ divorce and her separation from her sister, she asks Ji-pyeong to write friendly letters to Dal-mi they use the name of Nam Do-san, a young genius who had just won the Math Olympiad, as the letter sender. Later on, she fights with her sister when their mother marries a rich businessman and decides to immigrate to the USA.ĭal-mi’s grandmother gives Ji-pyeong, a talented but homeless, orphaned high school student food and a place to stay. Their grandmother, however, says that she can’t do anything about the situation.Īfter her parents get a divorce, Dal-mi stays with her father, while her sister goes with her mother. During the open forum, a young woman named Seo Dal-mi grabs the microphone from someone and calls Won In-jae by a different surname.ĭal-mi and her older sister plead with their grandmother, Choi Won-deuk, to patch things up between their parents - their father wants to resign from his job and start his own business, but their mother threatens to divorce him. Han Ji-pyeong is a top executive of SH Venture Capital, and Won In-jae is the CEO of Nature Morning, a subsidiary of The Morning Group, 46th biggest company in Korea they’re the main speakers in the “Start-Up Relay Lecture” in Sand Box, Korea’s equivalent of Silicon Valley. Reason - people who have not seen this drama want to know whether it has a good/happy ending or a sad ending before they invest their time in watching it. With Episode 16 (Finale), however, I included spoilers. But because you have already watched the video of the previous episode, they aren’t spoilers anymore.Ĥ. At the beginning of each summary starting with Episode 2, I placed in a table a recap of the major twists and turns of the previous episode. I narrated some of the main actions in each episode, without revealing the plot’s twists and turns.ģ. I assumed that you will be reading these summaries and watching the videos chronologically.Ģ. How I wrote these episode summaries with no spoilersġ. “Start-Up” is written by Park Hye-ryun her previous dramas are “Dream High” (2011), “I Can Hear Your Voice” (2013), “Pinocchio” (2014-2015), and “While You Were Sleeping” (2017). It is available for streaming on Netflix. The series revolves around a woman who has dreams of becoming an entrepreneur like Steve Jobs, a man who is secretly her first love, and another man who is pretending to be her first love. Jump to synopsis of Episode 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 (Finale) How I wrote these episode summaries with no spoilers Historical / cultural backgrounders and other information Analysis of the drama’s references to “wind” or “breeze” Lessons in photography from “Start-Up” with in-depth analysis of its cinematographyįrom Wikipedia: “Start-Up” is a 2020 South Korean television series starring Bae Suzy, Nam Joo-hyuk, Kim Seon-ho, and Kang Han-na.
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